Barnard College - Mortarboard Yearbook (New York, NY)

 - Class of 1922

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Barnard College - Mortarboard Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1922 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 240 of the 1922 volume:

Tiffany Co. Jewelry and Silverware a stock unique in Scope, Quality and Value Purchases may be made by Mail Fifth Avenue 37 - Street New York On the Six th jy JcALPIN courtesy has set apart the entire sixth floor for un- escorted women guests. There they will find a separate drawing room, well stocked library, hair dressing or, seamstress service and com- petent ladies ' maids. Mrs. Lois Peirce - Hughes, Hostess and Club- woman in charge. W omen will find at the McAlpin an unusually desirable home. HOTEL M £ ALPIN Broadway at Thirty -Fourth Street, NewTfork Under the direction of L. M. Boomer Copyright, 1921, by Evelyn Orne Arranged and Printed by CHARLES L. WILLARD 154 Nassau Street, New York City ®0 Jn uitjmn tljat mry urrtu Hat atwmilte Ah allr trnutlfp txnb all? grntilleaa? Hyaimm, Ijnmmr, frrhom unb unirtljmpaap. tio] [ 11] Chairman John G. Milburn Vice-Chairman Mrs. A. A. Anderson Clerk Pierre Jay Treasurer George A. Plimpton Mrs. Joseph H. Choate Mrs. Alfred Meyer George A. Plimpton Mrs. James Talcott Mrs. Henry Fairfield Osborn Mrs. A. A. Anderson Edward W. Sheldon Frederic B. Jennings Nicholas Murray Butler, Ph.D., Jur.D., LL.D. (Cantab.), D.Litt. (Oxon) Albert G. Milbank Miss Clara B. Spence Howard Townsend Deceased. 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) Lucius H. Beers The Very Rev. Howard C. Robbins 3n ilmnnam Jacob H. Schiff was a member of the original Board of Trustees of Barnard College, and its Treasurer during the first four years of its existence. He always retained an interest in the College, and in 1915, wishing to do something for the city in commemoration of the fiftieth anniversary of his landing in this country as a young man, he decided to present to Barnard College the building which was completed in 1917 and which is known as Students Hall. Mr Schiff was particularly interested in the idea of a college community where young women of different classes and creeds could meet and learn to know one another, so that they could work together in future for the good of the city and nation. In his deed of gift he stipulated that there should be no discrimination made in favor of any particular religious group or class in the use of the building, and also that it should serve as far as possible as a center for meetings of women students of Teachers College and Columbia University, as well as of Barnard. His broadmindedness and vision were shown in his realization of the ethical and social results which may be obtained from the intercourse of students in College. Together with the almost countless other organizations and institutions which benefited by his generosity and wisdom, Barnard College grieves for his loss. Frederic B. Jennings, a distinguished lawyer of this city, was a member of the Board of Trustees of Barnard College from November, 1900, and Clerk of the Board from December, 1910, until his death in May, 1920. He was one of the best friends of the College, giving much time and thought to the legal and financial problems with which the Board of Trustees and its various com- mittees have to deal. His judgment, his careful and conscientious attention, and his knowledge, were deeply appreciated by his colleagues on the Board, and by the Administration. Shortly before his death, he worked long and patiently on the revision of the By-Laws and Statutes of the College. Barnard is most grateful for his friendly interest and help, and feels that in his death it has lost one of its most valued officers. [14] REAL PORTRAITS Intellectual progress is dangerous when it is entirely an inner process, lacking contact with the world of reality. In Pater ' s portrait of Sebastian Van Storck, imaginary though it be, there is a poig- nant realistic glimpse of an inner life of intellectual strivings. We have sensed his melancholy, his longing to break away from the abstract facts of hard, dry reasoning, the call of humanity urging him to bring his inner life into a closer contact with the outer world, and his utter loneliness when the pillars of the outer world faded, and left only transitory gleams of light, beautiful, but then felt to be dim and unreal. But we have only sensed these moods — sensed them just enough to realize that we have escaped them. We do not feel, like Sebastian, that to be of service to the world, we must give up our lives. We have faith that we are constructing a world of greater life, of greater beauty, and of greater under- standing. This faith comes from an external guidance, which provides a real and stabilizing link with the outer world. It comes from the older spirits of those about us, who reflect and magnify our striv- ings, and who give reality and beauty to the goal we are seeking. They are not what might be attained, or shadowy visions of an unreal life. They are what has been attained. They are real portraits. 1 15] President NICHOLAS MURRAY BUTLER A.B., Columbia, 1882; A.M., 1883; Ph.D., 1884; LL.D., Syracuse, 1898; Tulane, 1901; Johns Hopkins, Princeton, Yale, and University of Pennsylvania, 1902; Chicago, 1903; Manchester and St. Andrews, 1905; Cambridge, 1907; Williams, 1908; Harvard and Dartmouth, 1909; Brown, 1914; Toronto, 1915; Wesleyan, 1916; J.U.D., Breslau, 1911; D. Litt., Oxford, 1905; Jur. D., University of Strasbourg, 1919; Officier de la Legion D ' Honneur, 1906; Commandeur, 1912; Com- mander of the Red Eagle (Prussia), 1910; Grand Officer of the Royal Order of the Redeemer of Greece, First Class, 1918; Grand Cross of the Order of St. Sava (Serbia), First Class, 1919; Vice-President of the Congress of the Royal Institute of Public Health, London, 1920; Honorary Member of Augusta (Ga.) Bar Association, 1920; Member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters, 1911; Trustee of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching and of the Carnegie Endow- ment for International Peace; President of the Association for International Conciliation (American Branch); 1885, Assistant in Philosophy; 1887, Tutor; 1888, also Lecturer on History and Institutes of Education ; 1889, Adjunct Professor of Philosophy, ] Ethics and Psychology; 1890, Professor of same, also Lecturer on Education; 1895, Professor of Philosophy and Education; 1890, Dean of Faculty of Philosophy; 1900 and 1901, Director of Summer Session; 1902, President of the University. VIRGINIA CROCHERON GILDERSLEEVE Dean and Professor of English A.B., Columbia University, 1899; A.M., Columbia, 1900; Ph.D., Columbia, 1908; LL.D., Rutgers, 1916; Assistant, Barnard College, 1900-1903; Tutor, 1903-1907; Lecturer, 1908-1910; Assistant Professor, 1910-1911; Dean and Professor, 1911-. Phi Beta Kappa. [17] 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. [ 18] EDWARD DELAVAN PERRY Jay Professor of Greek A.B., Columbia, 1875; Ph.D., Tubingen, 1891; 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; Tau Beta Pi. FRANK NELSON COLE Professor of Mathematics A.B., Harvard, 1882; Ph.D., Hdrv ' ard, 1886; Lecturer in Mathematics, Harvard, 1885-1887; Instructor and As- sistant Professor of Mathematics, University of Michigan, 1888-1895; ' Professor of Mathematics, Columbia, 1895-. 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, 1888-1900; Columbia, 1900; Acting Provost of Barnard College, 1911-1912. j 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 Fellow 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 Literature, 191 1-; 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, Woods Hole, 1895-1903; Biological Laboratory, Cold Spring Harbor, 1904-1906; Columbia University, 1896- ; Associate of Carnegie Institute, 1903- ; Curator of Invertebrate Zoology, American Museum of Natural His- tory, 1909-; Acting-Provost, 1918-1919; Sigma Xi; Phi Beta Kappa. CHARLES KNAPP Professor of Greek arid Latin A.B., Columbia University, 1887; A.M., 1888; Ph.D., 1890; Prize Fellow in Classics, Columbia, 1887-1890; Tu- torial Fellow in Classics, Columbia 1890-1891; 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- low, 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., Goetlingen University, 1895; Physics Department, Welleslev College, 1889-1893 and 1896-1897; Lake Erie College, 1897-1898; Physikalisch-Technische Reichanstalt, 1898-1899; Clark University, 1899-1900; Barnard College, Department of Chemistry, Instructor, 1900-1903; Department of Physics, Adjunct Professor, 1903-1910; Assistant Professor, 1910; Associate Professor, 19 13-. LOUIS A. LOISEAUX Associate Professor of French Certificat d ' Etudes Primaires Superieures, Academie de Dijon, 1887; Brevet d ' Instituteur, 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 Professor, 1910-1914; Associate Pro- fessor, 1913-. 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; Fellow 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. JAMES T. SHOTWELL Professor of History A.B., Toronto, 1898; Ph.D., Columbia, 1903; Columbia University Scholar in European History, 1898-1899; Fel- low in European History, 1899-1900; Assistant, 1900-1901; Lecturer, 19v)l-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 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, 1910-20; Professor, 1920-. GRACE A. HUBBARD Associate Professor of English A.B., Smith College, 1887; A.M., Cornell, 1892; Smith College, 1892-1904; Barnard, Lecturer, 1905-1910; Asso- ciate Professor, 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., 90 ;Ph.D., 1897; University of Michigan, 1891-1893; Traveling Fellow of Harvard Uni- versity, 1893-1895 {Universities of Paris and Berlin); Uni- versity of Missouri, 1895-1908; Student at University of Paris, 1904-1905; University of Illinois, 1908-1909; Colum- bia and Barnard, 1909- ; Chevalier de la Legion d ' Honneur , 1918. WILHELM ALFRED BRAUN Associate Professor of Germanic Languages and Literatures 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, 191 1-. 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, Vt., 1901-1902; Assistant at Columbia, 1902; Tutor at Barnard, 1903-1907; Instructor 1907-1910; Assistant Professor, 1910- ; Phi Beta Kappa; Sigma Xi. 20] 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 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, 1910-1920; Professor, 1920-. DAVID S. MUZZEY 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, 1905-1911; Bar- nard, Associate Professor, 1911-1920; Professor, 1920-. 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 Manor, 1900; Ph.D., Columbia, 1903; Barnard, Lecturer, 1903-1905; Instructor, 1905-1912; Assistant Pro- fessor, 1912-1916; Associate Professor, 1916-. CHARLES SEARS BALDWIN Professor of Rhetoric and English Composition A.B., Columbia, 1888; A.M., 1889; Ph.D., 1894; Fellowin 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, Barnard College, 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 Fellow and Honorary Fellow 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, 19 12-. 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, 19 14-. HARRY L. HOLLING WORTH 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; Sigma Xi. LOUISE HOYT GREGORY Assistant Professor of Zoology A.B., Vassar, 1903; A.M., Columbia, 1907; Ph.D., Co- lumbia, IQOQ. MAUDE ALINE HUTTMAN Assistant Professor of History B.S., Columbia University, 1904; A.M., 1905; Ph.D. 1914. ELEANOR KELLER Assistant Professor of Chemistry A.B., Columbia, 1900; A.M., Columbia, 1905. [21 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. 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 in London, 1908-1910; Student at Oxford University, 1908-1910; Advisor to Women Students in Journalism, Columbia University, 19 16- ; President of the Associate Alumnae of Barnard College, 1915-1917. 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. Holyoke College, 1907-1910; Wellesley College, 1910-1911, 1912-1913; Barnard College, 1913-1919; Assistant Professor at Barnard College, 19 19-. GEORGE WALKER MULLINS Assistant Professor of Mathematics A.B., University of Arkansas, 1904; A.M., 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-. WILLIAM FIELDING OGBURN Professor of Sociology B.S., Mercer College, 1905;. A. M., Columbia University, 1909; Ph.D., Columbia University, 19 12;. Instructor in Eco- nomics, History and Politics, Princeton University, .1911- 1912; Professor of Sociology and Economics, Reed College, 1912-1917; Professor of Economics, Summer Session, Uni- versity 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 Normal School, Summer, .1914; Professor Physical Education, Elmira College, 1914-1915; Supervisor City Recreation, 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, 19 19-. MABEL FOOTE WEEKS Associate in English A.B., Radcliffe, 1894; Dr. Sd ' chs ' School for Girls; Bar- nard, Adjunct Professor, 1907-1910; Associate, 19 10-; Mis- tress of Brooks Hall, 1908-. CAROLINE F. E. SPURGEON Visiting Professor of English Literature Final English Honors, Oxford, 1899; Fellow of King ' s College, University of London, 1899; Assistant Lecturer in English, Bedford College, London, 1901-1905; Lecturer in English Literature, 1905-1913; Docteur de I ' Universite de Paris (Leltres), 1911; Professor of English Literature in the University of London, 1913-; Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature, 1915; Member of British Educational Mission to the U. S. A., 1918; Litt. D., Michigan, 1918; President of the British Federation of University Women, 1919- ; President of the International Federation of University Women, 1920- OTHER OFFICERS OF INSTRUCTION Emily James Putnam, A.B., Associate in Greek and Latin. John Douglas Adams, D.D., Associate in Religion. Carolina Marcial Dorado, A.M., Associate in Spanish. Ralph B. Pomeroy, B.D., A.M., Associate in Religion. Grace Langford, S.B., Instructor in Physics. Luther Herbert Alexander, Ph.D., Instructor in 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 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. Estelle H. Davis, Instructor in English. Grace Potter Rice, Ph.D., Instructor in Chemistry. Katherine M. Cooper, B.S., Instructor in Physical Education. Elizabeth Faulkner Baker, A.M., Instructor in Economics. Gertrude Ware, Ph.D., Instructor in Chemistry. Lelia M. Finan, Instructor in Physical Education. Mary Wotherspoon Coutant, A.M., Instructor in Botany. Eleanor Doty, Instructor in Physical Education. Marion E. Richards, A.M., Lecturer in Botany. Hugh Wiley Puckett, Ph.D., Lecturer in Germanic Languages and Literatures. Blanche Prenez, Lecturer in Romance Languages and Literatures. Florrie Holzwasser, A.M., Lecturer in Geology. Sally P. Hughes Schrader, A.B., Lecturer in Zoology. Edna Henry Bennett, A.B., Lecturer in Zoology. Helene Bieler, Lecturer in Romance Languages and Literatures. Maurice Picard, Ph.D., Lecturer in Philosophy. Isabel Foote Leavenworth, A.B., Lecturer in Philosophy. Louise Ropes Loomis, Ph.D., Lecturer in History. Juliana S. Haskell, Ph.D., Lecturer in Germanic Languages and Literatures. Rene E. G. Vaillant, A.B., LL.B., LL.M., Lecturer in Romance Languages and Literatures. Georgiana S. Gates, Ph.D., Assistant in Psychology. Cornelia L. Carey, A.B., Assistant in Botany. Vivian Tappan, A.M., Assistant in Zoology. Frances O. Severinghaus, A.B., Assistant in Physics. Rhoda W. Benham, A.M., Assistant in Botany. Lucia H. Smith, A.B., Assistant in Chemistry. Helen Clark, B.S., Assistant in Chemistry. J. Emilie Young, A.B., Assistant in History. Erna L. Gunther, A.B., Assistant in Anthropology. Dorothy Burne, A.B., Assistant in History. Clara Eliot, A.B., Assistant in Economics. Imogene Neer, A.M., Assistant in English. Theresa Wolfson, A.B , Assistant in Government. Deceased. 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. Harry M. Ayres, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of English. 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. Edward H. Reisner, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Education. Arthur Whittier Macmahon, A.M., Instructor in Politics. Wallace E. Caldwell, Ph.D., Instructor in History. William W. Rankin, Jr., A.M., Instructor in Mathematics. CHAIRMEN OF BARNARD SECTIONS OF THE UNIVERSITY DEPARTMENTS Professor Franz Boas, Department of Anthropology. Professor Harold Jacoby, Department of Astronomy. Professor Herbert M. Richards, Department of Botany. Associate Professor Marie Reimer, Department of Chemistry. Professor William F. Ogburn, Department of Economics. Professor Charles S. Baldwin, Department of English. Associate Professor Ida H. Ogilvie, Department of Geology. Associate Professor W. A. Braun, Department of Germanic Languages and Literatures. Professor Howard L. McBain, Department of Government. Professor Charles Knapp, Department of Greek and Latin. Professor David S. Muzzey, Department of History. Professor Frank N. Cole, Department of Mathematics. Professor William P. Montague, Department of Philosophy. Assistant Professor Agnes R. Wayman, Department of Physical Education. Associate Professor Margaret E. Maltby, Department of Physics. Associate Professor Harry L. Hollingworth, Department of Psychology. Chaplain Raymond C. Knox, Department of Religion. Associate Professor Louis A. Loiseaux, Department of Romance Languages and Literatures. Professor Henry E. Crampton, Department of Zoology. 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. Helen P. Abbott, A.B., Director of John Jay Hall. Helen Hermine Haller, A.B., Secretary of Residence Halls. Gulielma F. Alsop, M.D., College Physician. Harriet C. Jameson, Director of House and Commons. Virginia Tucker Boyd, A.B., Assistant to House Director. Eloise Cummings, A.B., Director of Religious and Social Work. Fanny Aurill Bishop, A.M., Secretary to the Dean. Carol L. Hier, A B., Assistant to the Dean. Mary V. Libby, A.B., Assistant to the Dean. L. Margaret Giddings, A.B., Assistant to the Registrar. Hope Newcombe, Secretary to the Provost. Martha H. Miller, A.B., Assistant to the Secretary. A. Mildred Kerner, A.B., Assistant to the Secretary. Marie Bernholz, A.B., Secretary to the Department of Physical Education. Marjorie R. Salmon, Assistant to the Bursar. Beatrice Whyte, A.B., Assistant to the Bursar. Etta Weldon, R.N., Resident Nurse Brooks Hall. Edna J. Beal, R.N., Resident Nurse John Jay Hall. Wanda Fraiken, A.M., Assistant to Director of John Jay Hall. 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. [26] YOU NEVER CAN TELL When an undergraduate at Barnard, DEAN GILDERSLEEVE was MISS GOODALE was MISS HOWARD was MISS HUTCHINSON was MRS. LOWTHER was MISS MEYER was MISS DOTY was MISS BISHOP played on was Did you know all that? not here — not now. Sophomore and Senior President of her class. On the literary board of Mortarboard. A wonderful man in her fraternity plays. One of the two Barnard representatives on the literary board of that distinguished University magazine, the Morningside. Editor-in-chief of Mortarboard. On Morningside Board. Solicited for the first time the famous Clark and Wilkins Ad. which still flourishes (See Ads). On account of her fondness for Kipling was called Fuzzy Wuzzy. Chairman of Soph Show. Editor-in-chief of Mortarboard. A Barnard representative on the literary board of the Morningside. Class Historian for all four years. Senior President. Freshman Vice-President. Sophomore President. Editor-in-chief of Mortarboard. Undergraduate President. Chairman of Student Council the year it was organized. Class Treasurer in her Sophomore year. President of the Societe Francaise. In charge of programmes and knocks on Senior Week Committee. Played Sir William in Trelawney of the Wells. Senior President. Freshman President. Business Manager of Mortarboard. Vice-President of Societe Francaise. President of Deutscher Kreis. Member of Undergraduate Executive Committee. Chairman of Executive Committee. Vale dictorian. Varsity Basket Ball Team. Class Hockey Team. On the Editorial Board of Bulletin. Y. W. C. A. Cabinet. President of the Classical Club. Well, its all true and (Hush!) we know lots more. Another time perhaps — another place — BARNARD FACULTY STAR ON DIAMOND GAME CALLED Scrap Ends Faculty Ball Game It must have been Manager Perry ' s well known influence with Helios, that caused that gentleman to shine in such splendor, when the faculty baseball game took place this afternoon on Raphael ' s field. The weather was ideal and everything went smoothly until a commotion arose at the gate. Door- collector Liggett was refusing to cash rain checks without written proof that it had rained on the day originally set for the game. Thousands of fans, in- cluding the owners themselves, were being turned away. Finally one of the bat-slingers, Doty, vouchsafed the in- formation that three and six-hun- dredths inches of rain had fallen be- tween one fifty-seven and two thirty- nine on the previous day, and after she had also identified each of the checks by number the fans were admitted. Manager Perry ' s team trotted onto the field clad in brand new togs, cut and fitted in the most authentic manner. They took their places and waited a minute for Manager Wayman ' s team, who were finishing their careful training by walking three times around the bench. It was then that the cheers burst forth which never diminished in volume throughout the game, so efficient and untiring was Cheer Leader Davis ( ' twas whispered she wasn ' t even hoarse). At last all the players were in place and Umpire Knapp shouted, Play Ball! which Pitcher Latham did with such enthusiasm that Player Maltby exclaimed, Isn ' t that a beautiful example of a curve! 1ST INNING: The beautiful curve tricked the veteran Perry into a strike. Two more followed in close succession and he went out. Braun, who followed, was killed with the same dexterity. Montague next grabbed a bat and banged one out to left field. He easily made first, second and even third, but there he became preoccupied. Arriving home late he was put out by the ever prompt and efficient Doty. 2ND INNING: Ogburn deliberated forty seconds before running and was ruled out. Jacoby reached first on balls, but missed two good chances of stealing second. His star gazing is ruining his career this season. Huttman, who in the last analysis proved to be a very steady player, smashed a whiz, but Wayman and Finan intercepted it with remarkable teamwork and sped it to first. Brewster there, who had been amusing himself reading themes, laid them aside, took off his glasses and tagged out Jacoby with a yawn. Prenez was too excited to do any- thing but strike out. 3RD INNING: Lamson ' s logarithms showed the score 0-0, but the odds seemed against Perry ' s team. They came to bat full of fight. With a lusty wallop Baldwin drove the sphere on a long foul. The next one hit him and he was awarded base. With his usual chivalry, he re- fused to take advantage of a lady ' s aim and walked to the bench. Hirst, who had been practicing speed around the field, was up next. She swung the stick and hit a homer. She streaked around the bags and was almost home when Short Stop Boyd slammed the spheroid at Ogburn, who gloved it cleverly. He is living up to his rep as catch of the season. Someone from the bench yelled, Where did Boyd get that ball? It was an unfortunate question as the fact was then disclosed that Boyd ' s mascot, Rags, had chased the ball and retrieved it with such speed that Boyd was able to put Hirst out. But had Rags a right to play? He certainly was not on the official faculty, but he was essential to Boyd ' s playing. Then was he to be kept off the team for not being on the faculty, or kept on it being part of Boyd, as it were? This theoretical question so intrigued the players that they became more and more excited and argued more and more vehemently until they were all shouting at once and Trainer Alsop edged hopefully near with slings and water pail. Umpire Knapp ' s efforts to restore peace and order were futile. He was muttering about wanting to knock someone ' s heads together (whose we could not ascertain), when Referee Gildersleeve came forward, and suggested with her usual tact that the last play be dis- carded because it had been made after five o ' clock closing time. This was such an admirable suggestion that both teams agreed eagerly and they all adjourned to Jameson ' s cafe for grape- nut icecream and cheese custard. REGISTRATION To enter: I. Procure a catalogue — a law school is maintained across the street for the purpose of interpreting it for you. II. Before interviewing Miss Doty the following exercises will be helpful: 1. Put a new record on your victrola. 2. Set it at top speed. 3. Practice until you can distinguish each word without hesitation. III. Make a special appointment for registering. IV. Pay all Bursar ' s fees in small change. UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE A University bookstore is maintained to provide an alibi for bookless students. UNIVERSITY LIBRARY The facilities of the University library are available to Barnard students who have no classes for three consecutive days. ADVICE TO STUDENTS To arrange your program: I. Avoid consultations with the Faculty in regard to choice of courses (Freshman are incapable of discounting complexes). II. Avoid all early and Saturday classes. Avoid all late classes. Leave time in the middle of the morning for a study hour. Avoid all classes that come immediately before or after lunch. Remember your health comes first. III. Do not take courses with long reading lists. Avoid courses that stick to a textbook. Intensive courses are always too detailed. Survey courses are too general. IV. Take your program to a student adviser. She will tell you that none of your courses are worth taking. She knows — she has had them. V. Take your program to the Provost. He will veto ninety percent of your courses. The other ten percent are required. VI. After attending your classes for a week, consult with the Physical Education Department and change your entire program. DEPARTMENTAL STATEMENTS Chemistry 5-6. In accord with the government requirements of military training. The students will be innured to all poison gases by the time of the next war. Economics A1-A2. The lectures deal with big ideas ; the examinations with minute data. English 25, 26. Why are you alive? Take Drama and find out. It is quite the vogue. English X. If you have always believed that your nose ruins your looks, escape this course. Otherwise, you will be- come morbid, when you learn that its presence also ruins your speech. Physical Education A, B, C, D. These courses assist the student in acquiring speed and accuracy in dressing at close quarters. Physical Edu cation A3. A vast new field is opened to the student. She learns to eat, sleep, breathe and bathe. Psychology 7-8. Students spend delightful afternoons sticking pins in one another, playing with puzzles, and unearthing each other ' s evil tendencies. Psychology 109. After completing this course the student either is an expert alienist or needs one. Zoology 1-2. An exhaustive survey of your family tree from earthworm to you. Destroys all vanity and false pride. Recommended for Sophomores. [30] RAPHAEL Raphael ' s small, but he is doughty, And the things he says to you Are not taught in Freshman English, Nor, indeed, Italian 2! Though his language is not fluent, Still with gestures he atones: He conveys a world of meanings With his shoulders and his bones. On the tennis courts this summer Fifty-seven times, I think, I displayed that little permit Of a loud, aggressive pink. Once I lost it! I was serving, And the score was forty love, When it seemed a crash of thunder Came a-volleying from above. No play tennis without permit! But I ' ve played — He was annoyed, And he shouted, Must show permit! You go see-a Miss-da-Boyd! How my dignity was outraged! I felt Freshmanlike and small Till by chance I was a witness Of an incident last Fall. For I saw one hazy morning Our venerated Dean, Walking dignified, majestic, Right across the campus green Raphael saw her and he shouted, Hey, you, get-a off da grass! Me professor of da garden, You professor of da class! Then what passed, alas, I know not, Nor can I tell you to this day, Save the Dean stepped off the greensward. And I gently swooned away. 3 ASSOCIATION E BOARD OF DIRECTORS Mrs. Paul S. Achilles, ' 14 Miss Sarah Butler, ' 15 First Vice-President Mrs. George Endicott, ' 00 Miss Gertrude Geer, ' 12 Miss Ruth Guernsey, ' 14 President Mrs. Alfred Hess, ' 00 Ex-officio Mrs. Ely J. Kahn, ' 10 Secretary Mrs. James Lees Laidlaw, ' 02 Miss Mrs. Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss Mrs. Mrs. Priscilla Lockwood, ' 13 George McAneny, ' 99 Katherine McGiffert, ' 16 Myra McLean, ' 09 Treasurer , Estelle O ' Brien, ' 16 Eleanor Osborne, ' 98 Mabel Parsons, ' 95 Pamela Poor, ' 12 Israel Strauss, ' 00 Second Vice-President Frederick Van de Water, Jr., ' 09 ALUMNAE COUNCIL Mrs. George Endicott, ' 00, Chairman Mrs. John Bates, ' 02 Mrs. Alfred Compton, ' 01 Mrs. George Mullan, ' 98 Miss Virginia Newcomb, ' 00 Mrs. S. G. Stacey, ' 95 CHAIRMEN OF COMMITTEES Finance — Miss Sarah Butler, ' 14 Membership and Statistics — Miss Theodora Baldwin, ' 00 Students ' Aid — Miss Mabel Parsons, ' 95 Reunion — Mrs. Israel Strauss, ' 00 By-Laws and Legislation — Miss Edith Striker, ' 99 Employment — Miss Agnes Dickson, ' 99 Publicity — Miss Sophie Woodman, ' 07 John Jay Alumnae Committee on Social Activities — Miss Mabel Parsons, ' 95 Brooks Hall Alumnae Committee on Social Activities — Miss Mabel Parsons, ' 95 Alumnae Committee on Social Activities of Students Living off the Campus — Mrs. Dudley H. Miles, ' 10 Alumnae Trustee — Mrs. Alfred Hess, ' 00 Executive Secretary — Miss Anna Reiley, ' 05 Clerk — Miss Elsa Mehler, ' 12 [32] Did You know all this? The famous class of Barnard ' 99 brought forth two Deans — one, our own Miss Gildersleeve, and the other, Mrs. Mabel S. Douglass, head of the New Jersey College for Women. Not only is she its Dean, but she was the prime mover in its organization as the only State-aided college for women in New Jersey. While President of the College Club of Jersey City — a remarkably active club, by the way, with many Barnard Alumnae on its roll — Mrs. Douglass, in 1912, started a campaign of investigation and propaganda with a view to securing admission for women to Rutgers, New Jersey ' s State College. In the spring of 1917, the Trustees of that college finally established an affiliated college for women, and appointed Mrs. Douglass Dean. Though hindered by financial limitations, the enrollment in- creased in three years from 50 to 181 and the number of buildings from 2 to 11, 5 of which are owned and 6 rented. Dean Douglass ascribes much of her unfailing faith in the possibilities of this institut ion to the fact that her first two years at Barnard were spent at 343 Madison Avenue. Mrs. Alice Duer Miller also graduated in ' 99, but her literary career started earlier than that. In- spired by examinations in a unique way, she wrote during a mid-years her first published article. It was called A Fable for Youths and was taken by Harper ' s. Since then, she has written more novels than she likes to think about, among them The Modern Obstacle, The Blue Arch, Come Out of the Kitchen, dramatized by Mr. A. E. Thomas, The Charm School, which she and Mr. Robert Milton dramatized together, and The Beauty and the Bolshevist. Add to this striking list two small volumes of suffrage propaganda, Are Women People? and Women Are People, reprints from a column she once ran in the Sunday Tribune, and, last, but to her most important, a volume of serious verse, Wings in the Night. Barnard ' s Honor Roll would fall short indeed if it did not include a suffrage leader, and that it has in Mrs. James Lees Laidlaw (Harriet Burton ' 02). She was active at the time of the Constitutional Revision of 1895, and for some time served as Secretary of the Collegiate Equal Suffrage League. From 1908-1915, she was Manhattan Borough Chairman of the New York Woman Suffrage Party, meanwhile heading various campaign and parade committees. In 1915, she became Chairman of the Legislative Committee. During all these busy years, she was closely associated with the late Dr. Anna Howard Shaw on the National Board of the National Woman Suffrage Association. Since the Suffrage Amend- ment, Mrs. Laidlaw has not lost her interest in politics, but for two years was Chairman of the New York State League of Women Voters, and on the board of the Citizens ' Union, not to mention many other civic organizations. As war work, she took the State Chairmanship of the Educational Section of the U. S. Food Administration. Those undergraduates who occasionally glance at their reading lists will be likely to find at least a couple of books by Mrs. Herbert Parsons, Ph.D., who was Elsie Clews, Barnard ' 96. Her best known works are Fear and Conventionality, The Old-Fashioned Woman, Social Freedom, and Social Rule. The Family is also much read, being a text book based on lectures she gave while a Fellow and Lecturer at Barnard College. She is widely known as a contributor to many anthropological, sociological, and folk-lore journals, and is active in several societies of a similar nature. Mrs. Parsons started her energetic career while an undergraduate by organizing the Barnard Chapter of the College Settlements Association. For several years she was treasurer of the New York College Settlement. She has also been on local school boards of New York City and the district committee of the Charity Organization Society, and has been a visitor for the State Charities Aid Association. I 3-1 ] 137] R. Jones G. Schoedler E. Cahn N. Weathers G Brown M. Fisher M. Marks H. Jones K. Coffey E. Sheehan Undergraduate Association OFFICERS Helen B. Jones, 1921 ... - ------- President Marjorie Marks, 1921 . Vice-President Katherine Coffey, 1922 - - Treasurer Edythe Sheehan, 1923 - - Secretary Maude Fisher, 1921 ------ - - - Executive Chairman Leone Newton, 1923 ------ Assistant Treasurer STUDENT COUNCIL Helen B. Jones, 1921 Chairman Marjorie Marks, 1921 Edith Cahn, 1922 Maude Fisher, 1921 Katherine Coffey, 1922 Gertrud Schoedler, 1921 Garda Brown, 1923 Nelle Weathers, 1924 Edythe Sheehan, 1923 Ruth Jones, 1921 — First Semester Ruth Kingsley, 1922 — Second Semester BOARD OF STUDENT PRESIDENTS Beatrice Wormser, 1921 - - - - - - - Chairman Ethel Ramage, 1921 - Secretary EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Helen Shire, 1921 Edith Cahn, 1922 Helen Muhlfield, 1921 Garda Brown, 1923 Eleanor Tieman, 1921 (TS £ [39] Class of 1924 Nelle Weathers - -- -- -- -- -- -- - President Virginia Harrington - - Vice-President Barbara Kruger Treasurer Edna Trull ------------ - Recording Secretary Eleanor Kortheuer - -- -- -- -- -- -- Historian Ruth Hicks Cheer Leader Motto - - To Tcpeicov {Proportion) Colors - - - - Buff and Blue Mascot ... - Dragon Flower - Tea Rose YELL Dragon, rah-rah! 2-4 Hurrah! 1-9-2-4 Barnard! |42] Class o 1923 Garda Brown - - • President Winifred Lane - - Vice-President Margaret Bliss ... Treasurer Gertrude Cahill - -- -- -- -- -- - Recording Secretary Helen Pattenden ------- - Historian Charlotte Towson - - Cheer Leader Motto - SuvaOAouvts? (Working together) Colors - Red and White Mascot Indian Flower - Red and White Carnation YELL Whew Boom— Ah ! 00-00-00-00-00-00 Indian ! [44] Class of 1922 Edith Cahn President Eve Jacoby Vice-Pre sident Louise Schlichting ----- Treasurer Eva Hutchison Recording Secretary Edith Shearn Historian Helen Coops Cheer Leader Motto - - Ni ' tiyjv vtxav (To win the victory) Colors .... Brown and Gold Mascot .... Lion Flower .... Sunset rose YELL Roar! Lion ' Roar! Roar! More and More! 1-9-2-2! Roar! Roar! Roar! (7 s - Sife ' ?-D [45 c Class of 1921 Gertrud ScHOEDLF.R President Frances Marlatt - Vice-President Dorothy Lino - - Treasurer Eloise Boeker Recording Secretary Alice Johnson Corresponding Secretary Ruth Clendenin ------ - ______ , Historian Clara Weiss - -- -- -- -- -- -- - Cheer Leader Motto - r _-i o ; xpog (opicp (Shoulder to Shoulder) Colors - Green and White Mascot - Bulldog FLOWER - White Carnation YELL Woof, wool, Yip, yip! G-r-r-r-r! Twenty -one ! Brooks Hall OFFICERS Ruth Jones - President Ethel Ramage - -- -- -- -- -- -- Vice-President Frances Cocke - -- -- -- -- -- - Secretary-Treasurer Margaret Benz - -- -- -- -- -- -- Social Chairman Eleanor Castle - -- -- -- Fire Captain Nan Kimball - -- -- Librarian Excursions, parties, picnics! My! It seems, one Freshman said, as though when you are staying at Brooks, you don ' t use very many books! And then the mid-term quizzes came apace — and oh, the gloom now on that Freshman ' s face! [ 48] John Jay Hal OFFICERS Ruth Kingsley - President Helen Carroll -------------- Vice-President Elizabeth MacArthur ----------- Secretary-Treasurer Margaret Meade - -- -- -- -- -- - Social Chairman House Members of Executive Committee Winifred Gorton Rosalind Jones Who is John Jay? John Jay is the apartment house that introduced Claremont Avenue to New York City. What is its purpose? Three of its apartments contain Barnard girls. The remainder of the building is filled with immovable tenants. What relation is John Jay to Jim Nasium? The latter very kindly sheltered the girls until the former was ready for occupancy. What and where is 606 ? 606 is the apartment house on 116th Street where the girls who have been unable to get into John Jay Hall are living. What does the elevator boy say about the John Jay-ers ? Lawsey! what a bunch! ' Nuff to drive an ordinary man plumb crazy! [49] O. Holden College Leader c L L E G E C. Towson ' 23 Leader R. Hicks ' 24 Leader C. Weiss ' 21 Leader MURMURS OF THE MOB At College Song Practice What a hard job a college song leader ' s must be — Just where did you tell her we ' d sit? Let ' s follow poor Billy and keep on the key. Did you know that my theme made a hit? Just where did you tell her we ' d sit? Fair Barnard we thy daughters raise Did you know that my theme made a hit? Our all united hymn of praise Fair Barnard we thy daughters raise- We should know the words by this time! Our all united hymn of praise My dear, could you lend me a dime? We should know the words by this time. Who is the girl sitting way over there? My dear, could you lend me a dime? Have you seen Martha since she bobbed her hair? Who is that girl sitting way over there? Those symbols are driving me mad! Have you seen Martha since she bobbed her hair? I don ' t think that course is so bad. Those symbols are driving me mad! Don ' t talk to me now — I must finish this book — I don ' t think that course is so bad. I ' ve waved to her twice — say, why doesn ' t she look! Don ' t talk to me now — I must finish this book. Your voice is remarkably strong. I ' ve waved to her twice — say, why doesn ' t she look! This practice is awfully long. Your voice is remarkably strong. Let ' s follow poor Billy and keep on the key. This practice is awfully long. What a hard job a college song leader ' s must be! H Coops ' 22 Leader s I N G I N G [50 ] BARNARD BULLETIN VOL. XXV No. 4 Published weekly throughout the College year, except the last two weeks in January, by the Students of Barnard College, in the interests of the Undergraduate Association. BOARD OF EDITORS Editor-in-Chief Aldine Carter, ' 21 News Editor Frances Marltt, ' 21 A. A. Editor Lila North, ' 22 Associate Editors G. Van Brunt, ' 21 L. Andrews, ' 21 R. Geissler, ' 21 D. McGrayne, ' 22 O Holden, ' 22 Assistant Editors H. Carroll, ' 21 M. Wing, ' 22 M. Durgin, ' 22 M. Trusler, ' 23 E. Brooks, ' 22 V. Harrington, ' 24 H. Prince, ' 22 H. LePage, ' 24 BUSINESS BOARD Business Manager Madeleine Metcalf, ' 22 Advertising Manager E. Wise, ' 23 Assistants L. Goldsmith, ' 21 K. Seymour, ' 23 L. Rissland, ' 22 K. Shea, ' 23 M. Talley, ' 22 K. Bryant, ' 24 Subscription — One Year $1.75 —Mailing Price 2.00 Strictly in advance. [53] The BARNARD BEAR Vol. XVI DECEMBER, 1920 No. 3 BOARD OF EDITORS Marjorie C. Marks, 1921, Editor-in-Chief Eleanor DeLamater, 192.? Isabel E. Rathborne, 1922 Ruth A. Ehrich, 1921 Elizabeth Reynard, 1922 Virginia deF. Herring, 1923 Edith P. Shearn, 1922 Mary A. Jennings, 1921 Jewel Wurtzbaugh, 1921 Sarah Kitay, 1921, Business Manager Assistants Constance Auerbach, 1923 Edna Muhlfeld, 1923 Ruth Koehler, 1922 SUBSCRIPTIONS Bear . . . . . $1.50 Single copies of Bear ...... .20 Bear and Bulletin for Faculty and Alumnae . 2.75 Bear with postage . .... 3.00 [56] The 1922 Mortarboard Editor-in-Chief — Evelyn Orne Assistant Editor-in-Chief — Eve Jacoby LITERARY BOARD Edith Mendel Edith Shearn Isabel Rathborne Helen Warren Edith Cahn, ex-officio ART EDITOR Edith Veit ART BOARD Doris Craven Valentine Guercken Roberta Dunbacker Elise Ludlam Iris Wilder SNAP SHOTS Celeste Nason BUSINESS MANAGER Emily Delafield BUSINESS BOARD Mary Taliaferro Nina Tonks Edna Wetterer ADVERTISEMENT Mary Taliaferro - - - Helen Frankenstain A. Routh Ogden Louise Rissland Kathryn Schaefer Ruth Stahl COMMITTEE - - Chairman Eleonore Starke Pearl Wachman Cicely Applebaum, ' 24 Olga Frankenstein, ' 24 Fanny Steinschneider, ' Resigned wvw flr mm m m ui W6 CAN BRAy,tUHPfl« A HMttlfc RUN rO AU-THMf UAV6 S Hitia Ui whip m on tot iAttoi or Tins ! I 58] To the Shades of Bygone Mortarboards! We pass aside your funny hats, Your pompadours and lack of spats, And in our office, 405, We marvel there were once alive Such founts of genius, art, and wit, And moan, Why can ' t we think of it? Or, when we have a thought brand new, We find that once you had it too. Well, what of that? For no one looks, ' Cept us, into that pile of books! MORTARBOARD ALMANAC ABRIDGED May, 1920. October 18th, October 18th. October 22nd November 1st. November 22nd December 3rd. December 8th. December 13th. December 16th. December 20th. January 6th. January 12th. January 19th. January 26th. February 8th. February 15th. February 16th. February 17th March 1st. April 1st. April 1st. April 2nd. 1930. 1983. E. Orne begins work. 12:00 M. Junior Class begins to have its picture taken. 4:00 P. M. Photographer goes home to rest. . Board asks Mary Jones for a comic jingle. Proofs of individual photos begin to come in. Suicide rate rises. Board receives Mary Jones ' jingle. Board accepts Mary Jones ' jingle. Class votes on statistics. Board decides not to use Mary Jones ' jingle. Results of statistics announced to Board. Many friendships shattered. Mortarboard Candy Sale. Doctor ' s office runs out of Bicarbonate of Soda. Board agrees unanimously on a knock — of an absent member. Mary Jones asked to rewrite her jingle. Office empty for an hour while Board crams for midyears. Board laughs at a comic contribution — and finds it was plagiarized from Life. Board decides to use Mary Jones ' jingle as it was originally written. Mary Jones ' jingle discarded. Mortarboard goes to press, to March 1st. Board sleeps. Professors amazed at sudden influx of unfamiliar faces into their classes. Mortarboard appears. (?) Board retires to a respectful distance up State. Lawsuits begin. Last editor gets a reprieve. Printer is paid. I 59 j College Spirit To Barnard young Clarissa came, And from her Freshman year it Seemed that she was doomed to fame — She had such College Spirit. She wrote a song, Oh, we are for Dear Barnard and revere it; Our Alma Mater we adore! What charming College Spirit! From Lab she ' d scurry off to teas; Food, skillfully she ' d steer it, Be bored by the celebrities, And all for College Spirit. Whene ' er the Varsity would play, Red-faced, Clarissa ' d cheer it. She could not use her voice next day. Ah, that was College Spirit! At every meeting she would speak, And missing lunch, not fear it, So daily grew more thin and weak Because of College Spirit. They called her name in class, of course; She was not there to hear it. For in Greek Games she was a horse Displaying College Spirit. Whene ' er a line of Odds passed by Then loudly would she jeer it; She thought, They ' re just as good as I, But I must show my spirit! Exhaustion came; she soon was dead They dropped for her a tear. It Is quite too bad, alas, they said, She had such College Spirit! Jhek [61] ( )FFICERS President - .... Kleanor Tiemann, ' 21 Vice-P resident - - - Lila North, ' 22 Secretary - - ....... . Orrilla Holden, ' 22 Treastirer - - Anne Schmidt, ' 22 MANAGERS OF SPORTS - - - - Edna Wetterer, ' 22 Eve Jacoby, ' 22 Aldine Carter, ' 22 Hanna Mann, ' 22 Kleanor DeLamater, ' 23 [62| Basketball Swimming Baseball T ennis Field Dav OFFICERS Directo: ' President of I. C. S. A . President of Newman Club President of Y. W. C. A . Eloise H. Cummings Natalie Weiner, ' 21 Helen Muhlfeld, ' 21 Helen Ball, ' 21 The religious and social organizations include the Newman Club, the Young Women ' s Christian Association, and the Intercollegiate Community Service Association. The religious organizations aim to interpret to students today the fundamental religious ideals of life and to study the implications of those ideals in college, community, national, and in ernational problems. Through the work of the social service organization, opportunity is given to serve our fellow workers in the community, to see what actual community needs and problems are, and to know the character and aims of movements making tor social reconstruction. Young Women ' s Christian Association President Helen Ball, ' 21 Vice-President Alice Johnson, ' 21 Secretary - -- -- -- -- -- - Dorothy Houghton, ' 23 Treasurer - -- -- -- -- -- -- - Ruth Shaw, ' 23 U. F. R. ------------ Edyth Ahrens, ' 21 CABINET The Officers Helen LePage, ' 24 Katherine Bassler, ' 22 Frances Marlatt, ' 21 Orrilla Holden, 22 Dorothy McGrayne, ' 22 The Y. W. C.A. is an organization which ' through its activities ' endeavors to understand and work out the Christian way of life. Through its discussions it aims to interpret Christian ideals in the light of present day problems, and further offers an opportunity for the expression of these ideals in some form of service in the community. Silver Bay — 1920 Edyth Ahrens Alice Johnson Dorothy Robb Evelyn Baldwin Helen Jones Dorothy Rhoades Helen Ball Gladys Lindsay Florence Schaeffer Maybelle Beith Marjorie Lockhart Isobel Strang Aldine Carter Celeste Nason Veeva Sworts Louise Cox Florida Omeis Eleanor Tiemann Natalie Gorton Louise Pott Marie Uhrbrock Winifred Gorton Isabel Rathborne Mildred Uhrbrock Orrilla Holden Amy Raynor Marta Wallberg Dorothy Houghton Christine Reynolds Edna Wetterer Miss Katherine Cooper Mrs. Paul Gray [64] I. C. S. A. Questionnaire NAME: Intercollegiate Community Service Association. ADDRESS: 21 Eastern Colleges. New York Address — Barnard. CLASS: First. AGE: 11? I! MAJOR OBJECT: Crossing the great divide between the college girl and the community. WHAT ARE YOUR OBJECTS IN COLLEGE? 1 — To arouse, direct, and stimulate the interest of college girls in community problems and needs. 2 — To develop the sense of social justice and responsibility by bringing the college girl into contact with different forms of community service. 3 — To provide training while in college for future leaders in social reconstruction. 4 — To help in the support of the college settlements in Boston, Philadelphia, and New York, and of Mt. Ivy, the summer camp for mothers and children. HOW DO YOU PURSUE YOUR OBJECT? 1 — By means of meetings with speakers noted in their fields of work. 2 — By means of observation trips to institutions of social interest in and near New York. 3 — By presenting members — through the volunteer workers ' exchange, which I run — with opportunities for practical social work. 4 — By gathering together workers from time to time to compare experiences and obtain mutual help. 5 — By aiding in the support of college settlements and Mt. Ivy. WHAT ARE YOUR VITAL ORGANS? Elector: Natalie Weiner, ' 21 Secretary-Treasurer: Suzanne Pay ton, ' 21 Cabinet: Alice Brady, ' 21 Edith Cahn, y 22 Ruth Strauss, ' 23 Edith Veit, ' 22 Ebba Wahlquist, ' 22 (Y. W. C. A. Social Service Chairman.) Newman Club Chaplain - Rev. H. C. Riley, C.S.P. Adviser ............ Mrs. Carlton J. H. Hayes President - Helen Muhlfeld, ' 21 Vice-President Marie Naulty, ' 23 Secretary - -- -- -- -- -- -- - Helen Dowd, ' 22 Treasurer .......... . Agnes MacDonald, ' 23 Executive Chairman ----------- Louise Byrne, ' 21 The Newman Club of Barnard College is a club for Catholic girls and those who are especially interested in Catholic Christianity Its aim is twofold. In the first place, it is organized to study the teachings, the history, and the culture of the Church, particularly the contemporary Catholic social movement in this country and abroad. Secondly, its members are endeavoring to do what they can in the field of social service, and especially to make contacts in this field so that they may more easily enter it after graduation, either as volunteer or professional workers. These aims are so comprehensive that the club is forced to limit its study to some one aspect of the whole, shifting the emphasis from year to year. This year the club is studying a remarkable piece of social work, the Survey of Catholic Charities, which was done in 1919 under the direction of His Grace the Archbishop of New York. Certain aspects of this survey are stressed by the club, notably the accounts of Girls ' and Boys ' Clubs, of Scouting, and of Day Nurseries, with the expectation that the members will take an active interest in these matters and be of greater future usefulness to the community. All the meetings of the club are public and anyone who would be interested is cordially invited to attend. Hebrew Culture Societv President - - - - - - - - - - - - - Deborah Kaplan, ' 21 Vice-President ------------ Pearl Wachman, ' 22 Secretary ------- Leah Josephson, ' 22 Treasurer ------------ Elizabeth Kleix, ' 23 This society was organized for the purpose of affording an oppo rtunity for the study of the literature and problems of the Hebrew people. In pursuance of this aim, there have been many informal dis- cussions, often aided by the presence of men of prominence in various fields ot Hebrew activity. R. Ehrich R. Lazar E. Mayer M. Gerdau M. Jennings H. Muhlfeld [68] Board of Directors Spring Semester- Marion Kaufman, ' 20 Mary Jennings, ' 21 Maude Fisher, ' 21 - Ruth A. Ehrich, ' 21 - Anne Hopkins, ' 20 - Rhoda Hessburg, ' 21 - Eleonore Starke, ' 22 - -1920 Chairman Choice of Play Stage Management - Costumes Program Finance Secretary Fall Semester — 1920 - Mary Jennings, ' 21 -Ruth A. Ehrich, ' 21 - Marguerite Gerdau, ' 22 - Helen Muhlfeld, ' 21 Ruth Lazar, ' 21 - Elizabeth Mayer, ' 21 Kathryn Schaefer, ' 22 Mary Taliaferro, ' 22 Agnes Cooper, ' 24 Wigs and Cues is the dramatic organization of Barnard College. It undertakes every year to present two finished dramatic productions to which anyone may come. In these productions its aim is to give as much practical experience as possible to the girls working on the plays. For this reason the scenery and costumes are generally homemade, and perhaps in some future day the coaching may also be done by the girls. A Dramatic Workshop has been also established by Wigs and Cues, for the purpose of giving more experience in acting, costuming, coaching, etc. to its members, and also to try out student plays. There are two workshop performances a year, to which only the college is admitted. (69] President ------------- Anne Schmidt, ' 21 Vice-President -------- - Alice Peterson, ' 22 Secretary-Treasurer - LlLA NORTH, ' 22 Chairman of Production - - - Ruth Lazar, 2 1 Chairman of Membership ---------- Louise Pott, ' 22 Chairman of Costumes ------- Margaret Fezandie, ' 22 Chairman of Staging - - - Natalie Weiner, ' 21 Chairman of Business -------- Ruth A. Ehrich, ' 21 ACTIVE MEMBERS Edyth Ahrens Katherinc Coffey Doris Craven Eva Daniels Helen Dayton Ruth A. Ehrich Margot Emerson Margaret Fezandie Phoebe Guthrie Mary Jennings Alice Johnson Deborah Kaplan Ruth Lazar Frances Marlatt Madeleine Metcalf Celeste Nason Lila North Alice Peterson Louise Pott Anne Schmidt Gertrud Schoedler Ruth Sims Edna Wetterer Iris Wilder INACTIVE MEMBERS Elsie Johnson Helen Mack Marie Mayer Virginia Stewart Ruth Ward Natalie Weiner Clara Weiss The purpose of Dance Club is to provide a means for Juniors and Seniors to satisfy their Terpsichorean instinct, which, after Sophomore year, without our organization, would have to be suppressed. The distinction between active and inactive members is based on the following requirements. It is necessary for the active members to attend a Dance Club class twice a week. The inactive members support the club, but do not take part in recitals, nor regularly attend practises. All members are chosen on the basis of their technical ability by means of try-outs. 170] Dance Club Recital March 12th, 1920 PART I Bleaching Song, Schumann - - - - - Glee Club Funeral March, Beethoven - - .... . Dance Club Prelude, Chopin ------------- Anne Schmidt PART II Memories, Joseph Suk ------------- Glee Club Oriental Sketch a. Dance of the Slaves, Verdi - - - - - - Dance Club b. Hymn to the Sun, Rimsky-Karsakov .... - . Esther Schwartz PART III Chit Chat, Alfred Moffat - Glee Club Three Fair Maids, Pauline Yiardot ---------- Glee Club Prelude, Chopin - -- -- -- - .... Dance Club Waltz, Brahms .... - Phoebe Guthrie, Claire Schenk, Esther Schwartz Seventh Symphony, Presto, Beethoven - -- -- -- -- Phoebe Guthrie The Hunt, Mendelssohn ----- ... . Dance Club Athletes of Greece, Schubert - - - - Dance Club PART IV Wynken, Blynken, and Nod, John Worth -------- (;i ee Club Childhood Fantasy a. Game of Ball, Schumann ----- - Helen Shire, Anne Schmidt b. Slumber Song, Schumann c. Polichenelle, Rachmaninoff - - Katherine Brosnan, Clara Weiss, Gertrud Schoedler d. Silhouette, Dvorak e. Spirits of Play, Grieg ----- Dance Club COMMITTEE President ■ - Phoebe Guthrie Chairman of Productions ---------- Juliette Meylan Costumes - -- -- - - Ruth A. Ehrich Property and Decorations - - - - - - , - - - - Katherine Brosnan Business Manager - -- -- -- -- -- -- Clara Weiss Adviser - - - - - - Miss Bird Larson President Louise Schlichting, ' 22 Vice-President - -- -- -- Margaret Wing, ' 22 Secretary ------ - Deborah Kaplan, ' 21 Corresponding Secretary Katherine McElroy, ' 23 Treasurer - -- -- Gladys Van Brunt, ' 21 Chairman of Material - -- -- -- -- Lucy Lewton, ' 22 What We Do RESOLVED: That the Barnard Debating Club best carries out the Quintilian Idea. INTRODUCTION ORIGIN: In the well working mental mechanism of a Debater. NATURE: Foolishly serious. DEFINITION OF TERMS: Quintilian — A wise old Roman. (Ref. Ency. Brit. 11 Ed. Vol. 22, p. 761.) His Idea — To debate together is the main thing, the only sensible and sane thing. Debating Club — A group of happy girls ready to argue anything provided the material committee supplies the facts. BRIEF PROPER (Properly brief) The Barnard Debating Club offers great opportunities for practice in debate by 1. Semi-monthly meetings. a. Popular discussion of live subjects followed by constructive criticism. 2. Annual debate with two other colleges. a. Both sides of question are debated. (Affirmative at home; negative abroad.) b. Educational and social advantages gained by formally scrapping and informally entertaining other college teams. CONCLUSION This question has but one side — the side of the right and of the gods. [72] Intercollegiate Debates March 20th, 1920 RESOLVED: That the recognition of Trade Union officials is essential to successful collective bargaining. A ffirmative Anne Johnson, ' 20 Margaret Myers, ' 20 Frances Williamson, ' 21 Alternates Dorothy Falk, ' 21 Deborah Kaplan, ' 21 Beatrice Wormser, ' 21 BARNARD VERSUS VASSAR (At Barnard) BARNARD VERSUS MT. HOLYOKE (At Mt. Holyoke) Negative Marion Levi, ' 20 Frances Marlatt, ' 21 Louise Schlichting, ' 22 Alternates Rosina Lynn Geissler, ' 21 Isabel Rathborne, ' 22 Margaret Wing, ' 22 Affirmative Team Won — Negative Team Lost At Smith At Wellesley At Radcliffe STUDENT JUDGES Elizabeth Mayer, ' 21 Juliette Meylan, ' 20 Bertha Wallerstein, ' 20 Honorary President President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Dr. Mullins Marion Haskell, ' 21 Edna Gibson, ' 21 Katharine Bassler, ' 22 Eleanor Castle, ' 21 Given: the Barnard Mathematics Club with monthly meetings and an annual dance. To prove: that every Barnard girl should belong to Math Club. CONSTRUCTION Let Dr. Mullins be the honorary president. (1) Let the speakers at the meetings be chosen from famous outsiders, famous Faculty, and famous members of the club. (2) PROOF Anything Dr. Mullins supervises is a success; (Ax. 15) Dr. Mullins supervises Math Club; (Const. 1) . ' . Math Club is a success. (Ax. 1 — Things equal to the same thing are equal to each other.) Every girl delights in dancing; (Ax. 13) Math Club gives a good annual dance; (Hyp.) . . Math Club delights every girl. (Ax. 1) Girls like good refreshments; Math Club is famous for its refreshments; . ' . Math Club refreshes every girl. (Ax. 23) (Propositions 1898 thru 1920) (Ax. 1) Math Club speakers, being truly famous, speak in language simple enough for the most unmathematical to understand; (Const. 2) To understand Math is to be interested in it; (Def.) . ' . Math Club is interesting to all. (Ax. 1) But — Every Barnard girl likes a successful, delightful, refreshing, and interesting club; . ' . Every Barnard should belong to Math Club. Q. E. D. I 74] President - - Ethel Ramage, ' 21 Business Manager ------------ Ruth Strauss, ' 23 Secretary - -- -- -- -- Edith Baird, ' 22 Treasurer - -- -- -- -- -- -- Helga Gaarder, ' 22 Librarian - - Agnes Bennet, ' 22 Social Chairman - ... Ruth Hall, ' 21 G — Go, hasten to Barnard, advised a Trustee, L — Let nothing deter you, for there you will see E — Enshrined in that college a club of fair name E — Each one of whose members deserves highest fame. C — Could program be better than that which they sang? L — Loud praise of their talent on every side rang U — Upon that occasion. Each year it is true — ■ B — But see for yourself — I leave it to you! 75 President Thelma DeGraff, ' 21 Secretary-Treasurer - Ruth Paterson, ' 21 Once a maiden seeking knowledge, Seeking joy of life and laughter, Came to Barnard, and they told her, If you ' d be both glad and blithesome, If you ' d seek the fount of wisdom, We will lead you to its source. To a cheerful room they led her, Filled with happy-looking maidens Listening with rapt expressions To a speaker while he told them Of the part that Vulgar Latin Played in building the foundation Of la charmante langue Jranqaise. When he ' d finished, and the murmurs Of approval had subsided, Then she saw the maidens mingle, Saw them join in conversation, Heard the music of the teacups, And she longed to join their numbers. Finally, she gathered courage, Walked into the happy company. May I join your ranks? she sought them, I would fain be of your number. You are welcome, said the maidens, Join us in our joy and laughter, Join us in our quest for knowledge. We are servants of the Muses, Of the Muses and bright Hebe; And sometimes we walk in Athens, Sometimes, too, we tread the Forum, But we come back to the present With the treasures of the past. We are students of the classics From whose bright and golden pages We have learned of life, of people, Of the hopes and aspirations That endure unchanged, eternal. Come and learn of joy and wisdom! Join our wise and merry throng! [76] Faculty Adviser President Vice-President Secretary Miss Caroline M. Dorado Margaret Ada Beney, ' 21 - Elsie M. Guerdan, ' 21 Marion R. Burroughs, ' 21 Baird, Edith Bay, Theodosia Beney, Ada Bennet, Agnes Binzen, Vera Bradway, Elizabeth Brooks, Majel Burroughs, Marion Claflin, Evelyn Comstock, Mary Cooley, Charlotte Cossow, Alice Fetterly, Dorothy Frankenstein, Helen Fulladosa, Olallita Gaarder, Helga Groehl, Marion MEMBERS Guerdan, Elsie Halsell, Maurine Horn, Lillian Lincoln, Anna Lindsay, Gladys Lithauer, Donah Mannis, Gertrude Meehan, Helen Milbank, Venn Montgomery, Margaret Morales, Lucila Moreau, Edna Munnell, Mary Ogden, Routh Partridge, M ' Liss Peterson, Mildred Pickhardt, Phyllis Pincus, Mary Ragains, Winifred Reichard, Dorothe Reynolds, Irma Rissinger, Mary Roman, Dorothy Santelli, Catharine Saxon, Catherine Scott, Mary Sebree, Georgette Sinnigen, Grace Soley, Marie Steinschneider, Fanny Vincent, Marion White, Mildred Williams, Alice FACULTY MEMBERS Gertrude M. Hirst Mabel Foote Weeks As the newest club in college, like the youngest daughter in the fairy tale, we have been endowed with all the magic gifts a fairy godmother could grant — with all the color and sunshine of Spain, all the gaiety and grace of her song and dance, all the charm and dignity of her literature, — for it is our aim to come into closer touch with Spanish life than we can hope to do in three hours a week of class room work. The land of the hidalgo has come to us here in New York; in many a store window we see the sign, Se habla espanol, and often we hear a chatter that sounds strangely familiar — though alas, all too often we can distinguish no more than an occasional, Si, senor. So we have taken that sign for our motto. Our meet- ings mean not only sitting solemnly in rows, listening to learned lectures, but also playing Spanish games, singing Spanish songs, and discussing Spanish topics. We are as firm in our resolve to speak only Spanish as Don Quijote was in his determination to conquer the windmills. [77] Dcutscher Kreis President Beatrice VVokmsek, ' 21 Vice-President Hannah Hoffman, ' 22 Secretary-Treasurer Dorothy Dockstadter, ' 23 Wissen sie a fact that true iss? English to us very new iss. Ye spoke German two years vor: Ve don ' t speak it any more. Often come beruhmte Leute Deutscher topics of the Heute To talk about — und then wir essen Kuchen not to be vergessen. Dieses Jahr es freut uns sehr To velcome that geehrter Herr Professor Hayes, who veil did speak About das deutsche Republik; Und Doktor Holmes, another veek, he Told us von den Bolsheviki. Ja, our meetings sind doch nice! Belter join the Deutscher Kreis! Cubs Elizabeth Harlow, BETWEEN YOU AND US We are children of the Bear, And we ' re very much aware Of the power that lies in matters literary. We ' ll admit we ' re far from high-brow, But we cannot tell a lie, now — We are slightly disputatious — sometimes very! It the urge is on you strong, Bring your stuff and come along; When your brainchild in the box is fairly landed, Then with no red tape or fuss, now, Just between yourself and us, now, You will get a criticism loud and candid. Geology Club President Secretary- Treasurer Delia Marble, Special Dorothy Houghton, ' 23 There ' s a new and fearful species, Said the Cambrian Trilobite, That has landed with a thud on Manhattan schist and mud, And we ' d better draw our tails up out of sight. For it thrives on teas and parties, Takes a week end auto-lark, Climbing hill and digging ditch, seeking gleaming crystals which Have belonged to gnomes and fairies since the ark. I have Proterozoic shivers, Wailed a Gastropoding Snail, As he covered up his head in a porous limestone bed, While young Ammonites and Spirifers turned pale. Bah, who fears this vaunted species? Spoke a Saw-tooth Tiger cub. Why, you Paleozoic cowards in your inland basin tub, They bow down and kneel before us — yea, they worship and adore us — ' Tis a new Geology Club! Music Club Honorary Member President Secretary-Treasurer Dr. K. W. Lamson Virginia Herring, ' 23 Elizabeth Wood, ' 23 The Music Club has not yet celebrated its first birthday, but already shows signs of unusual precocity. With becoming modesty, however, because of its tender age, the club has decided to post- pone its formal debut until next year. We are sorry to have to keep the public waiting so long. This year we are contenting ourselves with a college musicale and tea. Watch the bill-boards for our picture! MEMBERS Alice Crook Helen Davis Adele Henry Amanda Hoff Dorothy Roman Margaret Spotz Catherine DeVoy Helen Gahagan Carol Gibbs Helen Guinesburg Suzanne Jobert Isabel London Louise Midelfart Lillian Overton Katharine Thirlwall Natalie Weiner Alice Williams c Press Club (From our own correspondent) Special to the 1922 Mortarboard COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY, 1920-1921.— Barnard College has the distinction of being represented on every large New York newspaper by a Press Club correspondent, who sends it all the college news that ' s fit to print. As all members are active, Press Club serves not only to link Barnard with the world outside its cloisters, but also to give its members journalistic train- ing. The officers and members are as follows: President - Marie Mayer, ' 21 Secretary-Treasurer - Elizabeth Brooks, ' 22 MEMBERS Globe ------- Leonora Andrews, ' 21 American - Elizabeth Brooks, ' 22 Spectator - Garda Brown, ' 23 Sun - Edith Cahn, ' 22 Times Ruth A. Ehrich, ' 21 Herald Rhoda Hessburg, ' 21 Tribune Marie Mayer, ' 21 Post - Elizabeth Schellhase, ' 21 World - -- - - -- -- Dorothy Thomas, ' 22 Mail ----------- - Emily Trantum, ' 22 Brooklyn Eagle Margaret Wing, ' 22 Contemporary Verse Club Executive Officer Treasurer Rosina Lynn Geissler, ' 21 Gertrude Dana, ' 21 Miss Ethel Sturtevant Professor Charles Sears Baldwin Executive Committee Gertrude Dana Rosina Lynn Geissler The Contemporary Verse Club is an informal group whose members meet once a week for an hour ' s enjoyment of contemporary English and American verse, with an occasional meeting devoted to foreign poetry. The membership is open to the students, Alumnae, and Faculty of Barnard College. The dues are appropriated for the purchase of books of modern verse for the use of the club, and at the end of the year are given to the Ella Weed Library for general use. 81 Ill 1 Chairman Se rctav y- Treasurer - Helen Shire, ' 21 Dorothy Thomas, ' 22 STATED PURPOSE: (See constitution) This club shall exist for the purpose of studying and discuss- ing social and political problems. REAL PURPOSE: (See Little Parlor Monday nights) To give the members the joy and privilege of airing their pet theories to their hearts ' content, such theories to start with the subject under dis- cussion and to end with the Russian Revolution. KLIGIBILITY RULES: A student shall be eligible for membership who has one or more of the fol- lowing qualifications: 1. A revolution or two in mind. 2. Marked conservative tendencies. 3. Bobbed hair. 4. Ground gripper, orpic, or other unattractive and approved shoes. Circolo Italiano Honorary President - Professor Bigoniari Honorary Member - Professor Gerig President - - Catharine Raffaela Santelli, ' 21 Secretary-Treasurer - - Rose CAMPANARO, ' 23 Graduate Members Undergraduate Members Mrs. Charles Sears Baldwin Helen Borre Catherine Accurso Rose Campanaro Irma Liccione Mary Ognibene Concettina Scancarello Mabel Pirazzini Theresa Tusa Catharine Santelli Lilian Weygaunt Georgette Sebree Gladys Van Brunt The Circolo Italiano is interested in tutte le cose Italiane. It unites with Columbia to give a play and dance every year. [82] THtnaia sa full ur Anuriftra bf things — I 83 I [84] [85] WIGS AND CUES SPRING PLAYS— 1920 Ml HEARTS ENDURING By Prof. John Erskine She He Scene: Far away. M. E. Opuyke, ' 20 L. Marsh, ' 20 Time: Long ago. THE WAY OUT By Aline MacMahon, 1920 Mary A. MacMahon, ' 20 Ma Brockway - - - - - J. Wallace, ' 22 Nancy M. Taliaferro, ' 22 Johnny ----- B. Wallerstein, ' 20 Doctor Glenn - - - - L. Schlichting, ' 22 Donald Glenn - - - - L. Rissland, ' 22 Scene: A farmhouse somewhere in southern New Jersey. Time: The Present. THE MAN WHO MARRIED A DUMB WIFE By Anatole France Giles Boiscourtier The Chickweed Man Alison, Leonard Botal ' s Servant - - Master Adam Futnee, Lawyer - ' - . ... Leonard Botal, Judge - Catherine, Leonard Botal ' s Wife - -- -- -- -- -- A Blind Man Master Simon Collins, Doctor . . Master Jean Mangier, Surgeon ... Master Seraphin Dulauries, Apothecary - The Candle Man - Mademoiselle de la Garandiere - A large room in Judge Leonard Botal ' s house in Paris. The same. Four or five hours have elapsed. Coached by Miss Grace Henry. Scene: Act I. Act II. M. Cannon, M. Wing, R. Granger, L. Schlichting, E. Armstrong, C. Benjamin, C. Nason, Thirlwall, M. Benz, . Sternberg, E. Mayer, M. Metcalf, K. ' 22 ' 22 ' 21 ' 22 ' 20 ' 23 ' 22 ' 22 ' 21 ' 20 ' 21 ' 22 [88] WIGS AND CUES FALL PLAY 1020 CAESAR AND CLEOPATRA By G. Bernard Shaw Nubian Sentinel C. Applebaum Belzanor - L- Rissland Persian E. Marples Bel Affris - - M. Fezandie Ftatateeta - - ' - Clelia Benjamin Julius Caesar E. Jacoby Cleopatra Dorothy McGrayne Pothmus L- Schlichting Theddotus M. Beard Ptolemy -_ R. Rasmussen Achillas L- Lewton Rufio - M. Finley Britannus A. Cooper Lucius Septimius M. White Soldier Wounded W. Springer Apollodorus H. Mack j ras - Leah Josephson Charmian A. Louise Moore Major Domo - C. Nason Egyptian Priest E. Daniels Roman Centurion D. Craven Maids to Cleopatra, slaves and soldiers, etc. E. Ahrens, ' 21 L. Alzamora, ' 24 O. Autenreith, ' 23 E. DeLamater, ' 23 G. Marks, ' 24 E. Schumm, ' 21 Time: 48 B. C. Place: Egypt Coached by Miss Vida Sutton. ' 24 ' 22 ' 23 ' 22 ' 23 ' 22 ' 22 ' 22 ' 22 ' 22 ' 22 ' 22 ' 24 ' 23 ' 24 ' 22 ' 22 ' 23 ' 22 ' 24 ' 22 [89] 1021 JUNIOR SHOW ■ m MINI S THE HIGHNESS or LOVE IS KING Presented by the Class of 1921, March 26th, 1920 Libretto by Andrews, Clendenin, Marks, and Van Brunt Music by Marks and Van Brunt, assisted by Andrews and Schoedler Chairman ----- LEONORA ANDREWS Arizona - - Gertrud Schoedler Heliotrope Gladys Van Brunt The Prince of Whales ................. H. B. Jones Sir Reginald, his confident - ... - E. Ramage The M id - - Mere Conventionalities - - Rae Granger The Butler ....... D. Kaplan Anthropoid ------- Conservatives - ------ A. Carter Chimpanzee - -- -- -- ------ - A. Schmidt Honeysuckle - -- -- -- Helen Muhlfeld Wisteria ....... ...... Winifred Gorton Chrysanthemum - Zuzu Children - - Mae Belle Beith Jack-in-the-Pulpit - -- -- ------ - A. Johnson Dandelion - - R. Hessburg Sweet William ...... ....... ' B. Wormser The Knitting Lady - Clara Weiss The Movie Hopeful - ...... Ruth Clendenin The A nti- Everything - Psvcho-Pathetics - - - Adelaide Von Holten The Canfield Man ... - - R. A. Ehrich The Wilson Man N. Weiner The Advertisement Mane ----- - B. Tompkins Choruses of Zuzus, Monkeys, Bootblacks, and Psycho-Pathetics Scenes: New Zuland, a bootblack stand in the Bronx, and Psychopathia, New York City. 1922 JUNIOR SHOW HUMPH Presented by the Class of 1922, March 4th and 5th, 1921 Libretto 1 Central Committee. Score l y Music Committee Idea of Scenario by I lope Satterthwaite, ' 22J Prudinella . . . Noemie Bryan Pied Piper _ Eve Jacobs Elder Gray - Agnes Bennet Sir Promise .Shipman - . . Emm Mendel Pirate Chief - - - Loi [SE Schlichting Minister - Ruth Pilpel Puritan Maids - - Leah Josephson, Dorothy McGrayne, Mary Taliaferro, Edith Veit Puritans ' Prey - - Helen Frankenstein, Orrii.la Holden, Helen Meehan, Alice Peterson Jolly Jack Tars - Roberta Dunbacker, Rl th Rasmussen, Eleonore Starke, Helen V rhfn Pirates: Members of the I. A. F. T N. L. N. Elizabeth Brooks, Doris Craven, Marion Durgin, Louise Rissland Peddlers ----- Dorothy Dwyer, Elsbeth Freudenthal, Marguerite LaPorte, Celeste Nam is Girls - - Eva Hutchinson, Elsie Johnson, Katherine Kraft, Hudythe Levin, Anne Ratchford, Emily Trantuw Blue Laws - Helen Dayton, Elsie Johnson COMMITTEES Helen Mack Chairman CENTRAL MUSIC- HELEN Mack, Chairman Louise Pott, Chairman Edith Cahn, Ex-officio Edith Cahn Leah Josephson Noreen Lahiff Edith Mendel Alice Peterson Helen Warren Isobel Strang BUSINESS COSTUMES Roberta Dunbacker, Chairman Edith Shearn, Chairman STAGING Marguerite Gerdau, Chairman I 1| 1921 SENIOR PLAY ALICE SIT-BY-THE-FIRE By Sir James M. Barrie Presented by the Class of 1921, November 19th and 20th, 1920 Cosmo - - - - - - - - - ■ ■ - - - - - A. Schmidt Amy .......... . ... . Jean Lambert Fanny, the Maid . ........... Winifred Gorton Ginevra - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Natalie Weiner Nurse .............. Mary Jennings Alice --------------- Olive Riley Colonel Grey - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - M. Benz Stephen Rollo __. Mayer Richardson ------------- Helen Muhlfeld ACT. I : Amy ' s room (and the family dining-room as well) in the Grey ' s home in Brompton, London. Afternoon. ACT II: Steve ' s lodgings. 8:30 that night. ACT III: The same as Act I. 11:30 that night. Time: The Present. COMMITTEE Gertrude Bendheim Chairman Dorothy Lind Finance Edyth Ahrens Secretary Gertrud Schoedler - - ex-Officio Choice of Play Scenery Costumes Decoration Elizabeth Mayer Leona Goldsmith Rhoda Hessburg Vera Binzen Ruth A. Ehrich Rae Souhami Publicity Staging Programs Clara Weiss Ruth A. Ehrich Evelyn Shrifte Maude Fisher Ruth Lazar Ruth J. Ehrich Miriam Davidson he 3uWwitnt of Solatium 3nxh 7 her Deaths SftrcoarU Qecemb? Jfc + - anno tam ' mi mcmxx [93| M vsteries GIVEN BY THE CLASS OF 192,? FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1920 PROGRA M Mysteries Supper Mysteries Show The Revelations of Ouija Greek Games Home Brew Chasem and the Golden Fleas The Lunchroom Orchestra The Court of No Appeal - Ye Sophomores, Judges The Execution of the Sentence Mysteries Dance on the Campus Indian Council - - - Supplication ok the Great Chief Presentation of the Mysteries Book to the Class of 1924 Katherine Helena Shea - - Chairman Olga Autenreith - ... - Dance COMMITTEE Hanna Mann Leone Newton Business Supper Clelia Benjamin Elizabeth Kingman Eleanor DeLamater Margaret Trusler Garda Brown, ex-offi,cio c WINNERS OF THE B DURING 1919-1920 BASEBALL TENNIS SWIMMING L. Eyre, ' 20 M. Marks, ' 21 A. Brady, ' 21 A. Carter, ' 21 R. Jeremiah, ' 21 R. Crabtree, ' 21 E. Jacoby, ' 22 L. Frost, ' 21 M. LaPorte, ' 22 E. Tiemann, ' 21 E. Orne, ' 22 H. Mack, ' 22 G. Lehmann, ' 23 F. Boas, ' 23 D. Weil, ' 23 WINNERS OF NUMERALS DURING 1919-1920 1920 I . Everson K. Himmelberger M. Kydd I). Lemcke C. Gruggel E. Kennard H. Kriegsman L. Rafter M. Wilkens E. Armstrong A. Barrington I. Everson L. Eyre E. Fox M. Garner J. Macdonald A. Raynor M. Wilkens 1921 L. Butler G. Dana R. Ehrich B. Kafka M. Marks D. Reichhard A. Schmidt A. Brady H. Carroll A. Carter R. Clendennin A. Hoff R. Jeremiah A. Johnson A. Carter R. Crabtree R. Ehrich D. Falk L. Frost R. Hessburg H. Mauch D. Reichhard A. Schmidt E. Tiemann L. Eyre M. Marks Winner of Big Cup Winner of Swimming Cup Winner of Field Day Banner 1922 BASKETBALL L. Emerson M. Fezandie K. Sadler R. Sims E. Wetterer I. Wilder SWIMMING R. Dunbacker E. Freudenthal R. Johnson M. LaPorte L. North E. Orne BASEBALL E. Freudenthal H. Gaarder O. Holden H. Mack C. Nason A. Osterhaut K. Schaefer TENNIS I. Wilder 1923 F. Boas E. DeLamater R. Hoff E. Lewis I. London K. Perry H. Pratt D. Weil G. Lehmann M. Perazzini F. Boas G. Brown G. Lehmann I. London L. Murden H. Pratt D. Weil D. Weil 1921 1922 1922 [96] Interclass Swimming 1919-1920 INTERCLASS MEET Diving for Form - -- -- -- -- -- Lehmann, ' 23; Johnson, ' 22; Kriegsman, ' 20 20- Yard Dash - - - Kriegsman, ' 20; Bradv, ' 21; Orne, ' 22 Breast Stroke for Form North, ' 22; Hoff, ' 21 ; Rietmann, ' 23 Back Stroke for Speed - - Kriegsman, ' 20; LaPorte, ' 22; Jeremiah, ' 21 Side Stroke for Form - - - Wilkens, ' 20; Littauer, ' 21; Freudenthal, ' 22 40- Yard Dash - - - Johnson, ' 22; Brady, ' 21; Lehmann, ' 23 10-Second Plunge for Distance - - - ... Carroll, ' 21; Dunbacker, ' 22; Rafter, ' 20 Trudgeon for Form ----------- North, ' 22; Carter, ' 21; Lehmann, ' 23 Relay --------- 1922 (Dunbacker, Freudenthal, Johnson, LaPorte, Orne); 1921 First Place - - - 1922, 37 points Third Place - - - 1920, 22 points Second Place - - 1921, 28 points Fourth Place - - - 1923, 14 points Individual First Place ------ Helen Kriegsman, ' 20 Varsity Swimming 1919-1920 VARSITY MEET TEACHERS COLLEGE POOL 20-Yard Dash (12 4-5 ) ... - Noble, T. C; King, T. C; Brady, B. C. Breast Stroke for Form -------- Kriegsman, B. C. ; Hoff, B. C. ; Janes, T. C. Back Stroke for Speed (17 1-5 ) - - Kriegsman, B. C; Jeremiah, B. C; Diefendorff, T. C. Crawl for Form - -- -- -- -- -- - Brady, B. C. ; Orne, B. C. ; Grau, T. C. Diving for Form ---------- Noble, T. C. ; Kriegsman, B. C. ; Cole, T. C. 40- Yard Dash (31 4-5 ) - - - Merrick, T. C; Heritage, T. C; Orne, B. C. Life Saving for Speed (26 ) Jeremiah, B. C; Gill, T. C; Burdett, T. C. 10-Second Plunge for Distance (34 ft 9 in ) Heritage, T. C. ; Jacobv, B. C. ; Gates, T. C. Relay (1 ' 59 ) T. C; B. C. (Brady, Clark, Hoff, Jacoby, E. Johnson, Lehmann, Orne, Wilkens) First Place ------ Teachers College, 40 points Second Place ------ Barnard College, 37 points [97] Intcrclass Basketball 1919-1920 ( LASS GAMES 1920 vs. 1921— Won by 1921 1922 vs. 1923— Won bv 1923 1920 vs. 1923— Won by 1923 First Place Second Place Third Place 41-0 37-7 27-2 1922 vs. 1921— Won bv 1921 1920 vs. 1922— Won by 1922 1921 vs. 1923— Won by 1923 32-4 13-7 24-23 F. Boas, Manager J. Byers F. Boas, ' 23 L. Butler, ' 21 G. Dana, ' 21 E. DeLamater, ' 23 L. Emerson, ' 22 1923 SQUAD E. DeLamater, Captain I. London R. Hoff K. McElroy I. Lewis K. Perry Varsity Basketball 1919-1920 NO VARSITY GAMES VARSITY SQUAD I. Everson, ' 20 M. Marks, ' 21 L. Eyre, ' 20 K. McElrov, ' 23 M. Fezandie, ' 22 K. Perrv, ' 23 R. Hoff, ' 23 H. Pratt, ' 23 M. Lehmann, ' 22 A. Raynor, ' 20 A. Schmidt ' 21, Captain 1 923 1921 1922 H. Pratt D. Weil I). Reich hard, ' 21 K. Sadler, ' 22 R. Sims, ' 22 D. Weil, ' 23 E. Wetterer, ' 22 981 Interclass Baseball 1919-1920 CLASS GAMES 1922 vs. 1923— Won by 1923 - ... . K) 23 1920 vs. 1921— Won by 1921 - - 47-12 1922 vs. 1920— Won by 1920 16-14 1923 vs. 1921— Won by 1921 47-18 First Place 1921 Second Place - 1923 Third Place 1920 1921 TEAM A. Carter R. J. Ehrich R. Hessburg A. Schmidt R. Crabtree, Manager D. Falk H. Mauch E. Tiemann, Captain L. Frost D. Reichhard Varsity Baseball 1919 1920 VARSITY GAMES Barnard vs. Teachers College — Won by Teachers College 30-10 Barnard vs. Teachers College — Won by Teachers College - - 33-14 VARSITY TEAM F. Boas, ' 23 L. Eyre, ' 20 D. Reichhard, ' 21 D. Weil, ' 23 R. Crabtree, ' 21 L. Frost, ' 21 A. Schmidt, ' 21 M. Wilkens, ' 21 H. Mack, ' 22 E. Tiemann, ' 21 A. Carter, ' 21, Captain [99] Juliet Clark, ' 21 Field Day OCTOBER 25th, 1920 COMMITTEE Edna Wetterer, ' 22 Judith Byers, ' 23 Eleanor DeLamater, ' 23, Chairman EVENTS Grace Kahrs, ' 24 20- Yard lst- 2nd- 3rd- 40- Yard lst- 2nd- 3rd- 40- Yard lst- 2nd- 3rd- Dash — 3 2-5 seconds -E. Tiemann, ' 21 — L. Alzamora, ' 24 -D. Weil, ' 23 Dash — 5 4-5 seconds -E. Wetterer, ' 22 -A. Grant, ' 24 -D. Lind, ' 21 Hurdles — 6 4-5 seconds -I. Wilder, ' 22 — E. Tiemann, ' 21 -D. Weil, ' 23 Basketball Throw— 75 ft., 11 ins. 1st — C. McNamara, ' 23 2nd — E. Orne, ' 22 3rd— L. Morales, ' 24 Javelin Throw — 75 ft. 1st— C. McNamara, ' 23 2nd— E. Wetterer, ' 22 3rd — I. London, ' 23 High Jump — 4 ft., 3% ins. 1st — R. Dunbacker, ' 22 2nd— E. Wetterer, ' 22 3rd— D. Reichhard, ' 21 Interclass Relay — 25 seconds lst -1923 (Sheehan, Gait, Byers, DeLamater) 2nd— 1924 (Kahrs, Grant, Huxtable, Morales) 3rd — 1922 (Warren, Dayton, Sims, Holden) Odd-Even Entrance Odd-Even Chariot Race Won by Evens - Won by Odds Class First Place— 1922, Second Place — 1923, Third Place— 1921, Fourth Place— 1924, 24 points 18 points 10 points 7 points RESULTS Individual First Place — E. Wetterer, 11 points Second Place — C. McNamara, 10 points Third Place — E. Tiemann, 8 points Tennis FALL of 1920 M. Marks, ' 21 CLASS CHAMPIONS K. Cauldwell, ' 22 R. Hoff, ' 23 M. Reinheimer, ' 24 COLLEGE CHAMPION Katharine Cauldwell, ' 22 [101] The Barnard Credo With apologies to H. L. Mencken All Professors have Phi Beta Kappa keys. You can really get water from the drinking fountains. The Library hates to give out its books. There is something queer about people majoring in Math. One hour on Tuesday is set aside for catching up with one ' s reading. Conservatism should be concealed. You can cure a cold by going to bed. There is something wrong about the club system at Barnard. Miss Latham means everything she says. Anyone who eats at Biacake belongs to the idle rich. Some day we shall have a free Cut System. Professor Ogburn has been voting only three years. All Western colleges have good Ec departments. Your Mortarboard picture does not do you justice. Zoo and Drama are required by public opinion. It is the acme of conceit to be at ease before a quiz. English is the easiest major — next to Astronomy. All transfers come from obscure Southern towns. Junior Prom is the climax of a college education. Going without lunch is a sign of importance. Vacations wear you out. The English system of education is more strenuous than the American. Tact plus pep equals success in life. All good fellows are posted. You are much sleepier than anyone else. Something should be abolished at once. [103| [104] Greek Games: An Appreciation Greek Games are poetic in the Greek sense of imaginative composition. They unite the arts of song and choral dance; and they are Greek most of all in their constant movement. Their beauty of color and grouping does not distinguish them from the pageantry of other colleges; but their movement, from the play of individual emotion to the choral progress of the mythical theme, ranges quite beyond pageantry. No other college festival opens a wider field for communal artistic creation. We nominate tor the Hall of Fame Kitty Coftey Because she wrought an artistic and unified production out of unknown and untried Freshman material; because, though defeated, she came up smiling; because, upon the resignation of the Sophomore Chair- man, she took up the work where it had been left and lead the class to a well-won victory; but especially because she always put before her own interests the interests and ambitions of 1922. I 106 | F R E S H M A N Katherine Coffey 1921 Frances Swan Brown Anne Schmidt - Olive Riley - Gertrude Bendheim Frances Cocke Juliet Clark - Edvth Ahrens Y E A R COMMITTEES Chairman Chairman of Dance Chairman of Costumes Chairman of Music Chairman of Lyrics Chairman of Athletics Chairman of Finance - 1922 ( :hairman 1922 Katherine ( !offey - Madeleine Lehmann - Bertha Kraus - Ispbel Strang - Edith Shearn Helen Mack Eleonore Starke Dan ce Mr. Adolph Bohni Miss Gertrude Colby Miss Marguerite Heaten Costumes Professor Grace McCurdy Mrs. Emily Putnam Mrs. Theodore Eeslie Shear CENTRAE COMMITTEE 1921 Frances Swan Brown, Chairman Eeonora Andrews Aldine Carter Mary Granger Gertrud Schoedler, ex-officio Supervisor, Miss Bird Larson JUDGES Music Mr. David Bispham Mr. Tertius Noble- Mr. John Dyneley Prince Lyrics Professor Paul Elmer More Professor Harrison R. Steves Mr. Louis Untermyer 1922 Katherine Coffey, Chairman Lucy O. Lewton Dorothy McGrayne Evelyn Orne, ex-officio Reading of Lyrics Miss Henrietta Prentice Mr. Franklin H. Sergeant Athletics Eleanor Goss Isabel Greenbaum Rosemary Lawrence Gladys Pearson Bernadine Yunck | 107| SYNOPSIS OF THE ENTRANCE The shadows of autumn have stolen quietly over the country. The rustle of the leaves, the music of the brooks, and the songs of the birds have been banished with the short-lived summer. All nature will be silenced until Pan, God of the Woodland, shall seek Syrinx, the voice of nature, who has fled him and her Arcadian groves. Saddened by the quiet of nature, the rustic folk, joined by a band of victorious athletes, beseech Pan with offerings and prayers to reawaken the music of the woods. As they kneel in silence before the altar, there comes the sound of distant singing — oinos, oionos. They cry — An o men from Pan, and, rejoicing in the favor of the god, they depart in triumphant chorus. SYNOPSIS OF THE DANCE At Spring ' s bidding the snows have freed the captive water spirits, and down the mountain streams they come to the lake bed in the valley. Syrinx, too, at spring ' s call, comes from her winter hiding place, and, rejoicing to be once more in her beloved woods, dances joyfully, when suddenly she finds herself enveloped by the lake spirits, who have long been jealous of the music which she has brought to the woods. At Pan ' s bidding his Fauns come in search of Syrinx. They trace her to the water ' s edge, but neither pleas nor threats can make the lake relinquish its prize until Pan, moved by the prayers of the people, sounds his pipes. The lake spirits, recognizing the call of the wood god, retreat in silence, and still in the thrall of his piping, the fauns carry Syrinx off in triumph. The prayer of the people is answered. [108] ♦ Lyrics PAN Edith Petty Shear n, 1922 I am Pan ! I shout from the clouds my glorious name As I stride knee-deep through the smoking mists, God of the green glimmering woods and hills, God of the tremulous streams — not I ! I am Pan — god of everything! The sky is my home and the stars are my toys, The gleaming eyes of my myriad bats Evilly winking throughout the long night, Elitting and drifting on velvet wings, Till I fling my sun out into the sky. I laugh as my sun rolls higher and higher, And I juggle with moon and sun and world. One I threw far out to the boundless north But the wind sent it back on an icy blast Sailing high, sailing swift with the lean grey geese, And my world, it was charred and black, Its soul was all ashes and it came back a moon. Another I threw to the gates of Olympus, And Jove held it high in his broad-fingered hand, And all hot from the frowns of that mighty god, Lit by a spark from his burning eyes, He flung back my world — a sun. One I threw far over the great blue wall Built twixt the dreams of gods and men And the gods tossed it back with a dreamer ' s soul — A thing of the marshlands and dim distant hills, The moan of the waves and the rain on the leaves, Caught from the wind-swept harp of the gods — My world was no longer a plaything of clay! I stop in my game with my giant toys And stand ga zing long on that tremulous soul So strange and so new to my wondering eyes, And when the aching soul flits forth On dusky wings through the ancient pines To brood o ' er black-mouthed tarns, I venture in search of its hidden grief And find it alone in the quiet woods Sipping faint drops of immortality Which drip from the rocks of silence and the dark. Then I hear the faint prayers of that soul Seeking the waters of eternal light And my heart sings aloud with the joy of my strength And the power to give to my plaything its wish. So striding down through the glorious clouds I lead the soul still further on To some far distant brooding hill Seared with great scars of rough gray stone; I stand beside it, silent and stark As some great oak Twisting its branches into the western sky Black against molten gold. And here I give the soul long draughts Of space and stars and unseen moons Till I see mirrored deep in its shining depths The gold gleaming dust of my pointed stars And the slow silent drift of the quiet snow As Jove shakes the years from his hoary beard, And the sigh of the wind as it wings through space; The soul has drunk deep of the dreams of the gods, My toys and the gods — they are one! And what care I for the wrath of the gods? LO, THIS IS PAN! Edith M. Mendel, 1922 A silence filled the wood; silence as deep As that of a young mother bending o ' er her babe asleep. Silence as dread As the first agony when one conceives A loved one dead. Black stillness shrouded all the purple trees And darkness crushed the whisper of a breeze. Then broke the ebon quiet of the night. The woods shrilled with a sound Like cries of women borne away as slaves, And shrieks of children tortured by a man The traveler heard; rigid he sensed The pipes of Pan. Pan— His trampling hoofs stained red With mangled berries that had bled; A nymph with torn hair and dust white face Eled from the leering god ' s embrace. Harshly as on he crashed his savage way He laughed to see a bearded satyr cease from play And in his terror kill a moth; its pale wings fluttered, then were still; Nearby a young faun cowered; quivering, his comrades ran before the half beast ravaging; The youth crouched low, and sobbed, Lo, this is Pan ! II Behind the vaporous hills arose the sun, Laughed at his kiss the waters one by one. The youth awoke, The soft warm air Moved langorously through his hair. And at his feet a violet smiled, lustrous with drops of dew That fell from the veiled, slender puffs of cloud Which dotted Heaven ' s blue. Then filled the misty quiet of the dawn Such strains as lovers ' voices, little children ' s laughter, and the smileful tears Of one who greets a warrior home from battle after years. Joyous the youth beheld the great god Pan. Pan— His cloven hoofs Trod lightly on the flower dappled sod. A little faun crept close, embracing his great knee; Nearby a satyr caught a butterfly; its bright wings fluttered, then he let it fly in glee. Of sylvan nymphs appeared a riant band, Who danced, hand in locked hand About the gentle god, half man. Their floating garments made An opalescence round him as he played. Exulted then the youth: Lo, this is Pan! I am Pan! I ride on the lightning ' s forked flashes And rock in the northwind ' s wild gile, Hurling the comets out into the night I laugh at the starshine which follows their trail. [109) Score ENTRANCE Idea Execution of Idea . ( hoicc of Music Execution of Music Costumes Words Total Points 4 5 2 4 5 3 23 1921 2% 3 V 2 o 12 1 )22 2 3 Laurel Gertrude Bendheim, ' 21 Olive Riley, ' 21 Isabel Rathborne, ' 22 11 COSTUMES AND DANCE Story of Dance Execution of Dance.. Original Music Execution of Music Words of Music- Cost times Total. 10 8 38 2V% m 3 2Yi 1 14; ' « 2Y 2 6H 5 4% 2 4% 23J Madeleine Lehmann, ' 22 Isobel Strang, ' 22 Isabel Rathborne, ' 22 Madeleine Lehmann, ' 22 LYRICS Lyrics 11 Reading of Lyrics 3 Total . ATHLETICS Hurdling for Form 1st Place 2nd Place 3rd Place... Discus 1st Place... 2nd Place . 3rd Place. I loop-Rolling 1st Place... Torch Race 1st Place.. Chariot for Form . 1st Place . Total 14 ( ■rand I Ol al 25 100 1 1 4 5 20 59V 2 1A o 3 wy 2 Frances Cocke, ' 21 Helen Shire, ' 21 Aldine Carter, ' 21 Edna Wetterer, ' 22 Alice Johnson, ' 21 Elsbeth Freudenthal, ' 22 ( Juliet Clark, ' 21 j Helen Jones, ' 21 L. Andrews, M. Beith, L. Frost, D. Lind, ' 21 L. Frost, E. Kohn, D. Lind, ' 21 A. Brady, G. Evans, M. Fisher, D. Keichhard, R. Ward, ' 21 [112] s o p H O M O R E Katherine Coffey - .... 1922 Chairman Y E A R 1922 1923 Katherine Coffey Margaret Fezandie Eve Jacoby Eleanor Janeway Isabel Rathborne Edna Wetterer Mary Taliaferro 1922 COMMITTEES Chairman - Chairman of Dance ... Chairman of Costumes - Chairman of Music ... - Chairman of Lyrics - - Chairman of A thletics .... Chairman of Finance CENTRAL COMMITTEE 1923 Garda Brown, Chairman Hortense Koller Germaine Lehmann Dorothy Maloney Judith Byers, ex-officio Garda Brown Alice Williams - Rhoda Hoff - Leone Newton Margaret Trusler - Frances Boas Margaret Bliss Katherine Coffey, Acting Chairman Edith Cahn Louise Emerson Orrilla Holden Evelyn Orne Dorothy McGrayne, Honorary Chairman Supervisor, Miss Bird Larson Entrance Miss Minor Latham and Dance Judges Dance Miss Helen Frost Mr. Vassos Kanellos Miss Marion Morgan Costumes Mr. Robert Edmond Jones Miss Gisela Richter Professor Theodore Leslie Shear JUDGES Music Professor Charles H. Farnsworth Father William Finn Professor Cornelius M. Rybner Lyrics Professor Helen Gray Cone Professor Jefferson B. Fletcher Miss Jessie Belle Rittenhouse Reading of Lyrics Mrs. Shelley Hull Professor Erastus Palmer Athletics Helen Dana Dorothy Graff Dorothy Keck Georgia Stanbrough Bernadine Yunck [ H3] SYNOPSIS OF THE ENTRANCE There is silence at the altar of Helios. It is the day of the Sun God ' s festival, but the discus, the hurdles, the proud chariot, all lie abandoned. The strong-limbed athletes of Rhodes have gone beyond the city walls to help their fellow-warriors withstand a sudden attack of the Amazons. A group of women and children gather on the city walls to watch for the signal torches of victory — but on all the hills the messengers stand with empty torches. The High Priest and his attendants come to the altar to pro- pitiate the god with prayers and gifts. About them gather the fairest maidens of the city. As their song fades upon the st ' llness of the air. a cry breaks forth from the women and children watching on the walls. Vast rumblings are heard from afar. They grow nearer and nearer. A messenger bursts in, his torch aflame. Dashing up the steps of the altar, he sets ablaze the smouldering embers. Close at his heels comes a joyous, frenzied mob in whose midst march the triumphant soldiers. Straight to the altar the soldiers come, where they are crowned with laurel . . . and as they celebrate with games and revels, the flames of victory climb ever higher. SYNOPSIS OF THE DANCE Although repulsed in battle, the Amazons have succeeded in capturing the king ' s son whom they have borne away with them on their retreat. The boy finally manages to evade his captors, and, blood- stained and weary, reaches the sacred temple of Helios. By a supreme effort he breaks his bonds only to sink exhausted before the temple gates. Helios, taking pity upon the boy, sends his sunbeams to his rescue. Just as the Amazons appear in furious pursuit they lead him to safety within the temple while they themselves withdraw behind a cloud. Upon discovering the boy ' s broken chains the Amazons believe that they have their victim within their grasp. In their hot eagerness they would dare to desecrate the temple of Helios did not his sunbeams suddenly pierce them with their all-conquering light. Dazed, the Amazons fall back from the temple steps. Their leader sinks to the ground, mortally wounded. Blinded and in darkness they realize for the first time the supreme power of the Sun-god. They grope their way to the altar and beg that he in his compassion will restore their sight. Helios, taking pity upon their helpless agony, touches their eyes with light. In silence the Amazons turn and bear away their fallen leader. Mill Lyrics HYMN TO HELIOS Edith Petty Shearn 1922 I Helios — .sing the .song of your flames Red as the blade of my two-edged sword Which has found out the heart of my enemy As a snake finds the heel in the, thirsty dust. I stand before you on the Eastern hills, Gray hills that rise above the mist-hung sea, And wait your coming from the starry ways. And as I stand and wait above the dead, The dead I slew — I and my flame-dipped sword, I rattle spear on shield to drive the night Bark from my dead, back to that land beyond The walls of fog built on the sliding waves. I thrust my sword into the face of night And send my words out on the running winds To climb from star to star into the East As ships climb wave on wave to reach their port, Until my song of triumph reaches you And in the East your mirth shakes all the skies, Your red-lipped laughter sears with burning breath The dead who lie about me on the hills. Helios—1 laugh with you for my heart is red With the flames of your fire. II Helios — sing the song of your light White as a sail on a windy sea, A sun-filled sail on a sea of light That dips and drinks at the black waves ' edge. My hands are a cup to hold your gleaming light I scatter your warmth upon the ground which lies A wrinkled thing beneath my feet. My seeds Which were all white and smooth are touched with light And climb like threads of smoke into the day. I stand among the vineyards where the vines ( luster like flocks upon the ragged hills. The swollen grapes beneath the leaves are soft, Soft as the curve upon my horse ' s neck, And round and golden with your rays of light. Your warmth, your whiteness lies on all my hills Even as the gulls lie resting on the sea. And in my heart the reddened dawn of vengeance Fades, and I am strong with the quiet strength Of your warmth and light. Ill Helios — sing the song of your gold. Cold like the sea-fire my oars enkindled As they cut with their blades the midnight sea And the spray turned to stars of a mystic light Gold as the Autumn leaves that rise and sink Like yellow-breasted birds upon the wind. I stand upon the hills above the sea And send my words like arrows through the air To where your gold has stained the Western sky TO HELIOS Isabel Elizabeth Rathbokni;, 1922 The world is heavy with a great despair. The festering wrong of Man-enslaved Man Pollute the ancient temples of the air Earth ' s cry of anguish beats against the stars, Haunting the gods in their untroubled seat. The heart-break of humanity ' s defeat, The throbbing bitterness of life is there. Each prisoned spirit, straining at its bars, Uplifts the agony of fruitless prayer. . . . The gods have closed their eyes, And drunk nepenthe lest they learn to weep. They will not see the struggle that repeats An age-old cycle of sad destinies. They hug their boon of undisturbed sleep, Light-hearted waking, passion without pain, Whereon dependeth their divinity. What can they know of Man? His useless cries Fall heavy on the laboring earth again. Helios, thou alone, Bright, valiant god, to whom fear-darkened men First prayed as source of ever-flaming Truth, Art called All-seeing by a grateful throng. Where tortured souls in darkness wandered long Is shed the light of courage and of youth. Thy radiance penetrates the foulest den, Nor shrinks from laying bare each hidden wrong. And lo, thou hast a glory overspread O ' er every place of dark unspoken shame, Brighter than any opiate dream could shed, Or vision of some shadow-land divine. Truth only purges with unsparing flame The ill we shrink from. Man shall lift his head To see at hand this radiant promise shine. And leap exultant from the bonds of dread, To hurl defiance at the careless height, And stand a god in thy transforming light. As if the riches heaped upon your bier Had melted in the flames and spilt like wine. I stand and watch you as you slowly go Down through the waves to where the slumbrous Styx Burrows beneath this darkening world of mine. Your warmth, your light fade slowly from my hills. Night treads upon the waters. All the meadows Blossom with fireflies. It is the time W hen fear draws close his mantle round my thro.it, But my heart is unafraid. Peep in the sk The Western clouds still flame with glowing light Like happy isles upon a sunlit sea, A golden promise of to-morrow ' s dawn And of that East where I shall some day rise To stride among the lofty morning stars. 115 ] Score ENTRANCE Idea Execution of Music. Choice of Music. . . . Execution of Music Words of Music. . . . Costumes COSTUMES AND DANCE Story of Dance Execution of Dance... Original Music Words of Music Execution of Music... Costumes LYRICS ATHLETICS 1st Place.. 2nd Place. . 3rd Place. . Discus 1st Place.. 2nd Place. . 3rd Place . . Torch Race 1st Place.. Hoop-Rolling 1st Place.. Chariot for Form. Execution . . Grand Total . Points 1922 1923 Laurel 4 m 2% 5 3 2 2 M 4 3 1 Janet Wallace, ' 22 2 l A Isabel Rathborne, ' 22 10 Eve Jacoby, ' 22 27 16% 4 2V 2 10 5V 3 Margaret Fezandie, ' 22 6 2% Virginia Herring, ' 23 3 1 2 Eleanor DeLamater, ' 23 6 4 2 Janet Wallace, ' 22 5 2?« Madeleine Lehmann, ' 22 34 18 15M 11 10% Edith Shearn, ' 22 3 lk Helen Mack ' 22 14 12 A S o 3 Frances Boas ' 23 Mildred Black, ' 23 V2 Helen Dayton, ' 22 5 j Orrilla Holden, ' 22 3 Elsbeth Freudenthal, ' 22 n A iin f A VT X! rOVCDT ' 99 t 1 ' K 1 .A IN :N . UVC Kl , Deborah Weil, ' 23 5 5 M. Black, C. McNamara, Deborah Weil, ' 23 5 5 E. Cahn, L. Emerson, D. Litthauer, R. Rasmussen, ' 22 5 3H H. Mack, W. Roe, E. Wetterer I. Wilder, M. Lehmann, ' 22 25 13M 11 100 60 Ji 39 [ 116 1 [ 117] AMONG US IMMORTALS Apologies to W. E. HILL Professor Young is draping Daisy ' s costume according to the latest Hellenic styles, while Daisy is wondering which would be less indelicate — to explain to him that it isn ' t sewed or to let him find , it out for himself. 4. 1 The aesthetic delights of Greek Games bring no thrills to little Mrs. Smith. Just look at my Carrie there trapesing around in a bit of cheese cloth and no shoes or stockings — she ' ll catch her death! V The head usher ' s well-known tact and savior faire is somewhat disturbed by the arrival of the celebrated judge of music, Serge Trallallasky and gu est. Just as she is about to carry her gift to the alter Sarah Jane discovers that she has forgotten to remove the adornments of modern civilization. I 1 19 I I 120| [ Endowment Fund Drive The Associated Alumnae during 1919-1920 organized a campaign to increase the Endowment of Barnard College. Because of the steady rise in prices since 1914, funds were needed to raise the salaries of the professors and to meet the higher cost of the general upkeep of the college. The drive raised enough money to complete the conditions required by the General Education Board for its $200,000 contribution, and has therein finished the SI ,000, 000 Endowment Fund started sev eral years ago. Towards the endowment of the Anna Howard Shaw Memorial ( hair of Citizenship nearly $11,000 has been paid or pledged. For the remainder of the $100,000 a committee is again campaigning in 1920-1921. The Undergraduates helped the drive not only by allowing their various activities to be photographed, but also by canvassing and personal donations. Officers of Endowment Fi i Executive Committee Mrs. George McAneny, Chairman Miss Mabel Parsons, Secretary Mrs. Israel Strauss, Executive Secretary George A. Plimpton, Treasurer ( )I ' Ficers of Undergraduates for Endowment Fund Miss Marion Travis, Chairman Miss Marion Levi, Chairman 1920 Miss SUZANNE Payton, Chairman 1921 Miss Emily Delafield, Chairman 1922 Miss Ruth Strauss, Chairman 1923 Collected by Alumnae - Collected by Undergraduates - $112,227 $7,074 I 122 1 To charm the public into generous support of the drive, Barnard undergraduates appeared- -very reluctantly, of course — before the camera man upon the fall of an opportune snow storm. At the noon hour, after a shovel parade, thirty girls began to clear the snow from the pavement in front of Students Hall. Furiously (?) Barnard shovelled, until word came down the line that the camera man had not yet started to take the moving pictures With this as a lesson, the girls awaited their cues from the photographers before getting too energetic. A few weeks later, on a biting cold day at noontime, tin- Blue and White performed before the camera. This was an Odd-Even hockey game played at the Notlek ice-skating rink. So successful was this event that, not long alter, every one who could stand on a pair of skates went to the ice carnival directed by the Endowment Campaigners and the Athletic Association. But it was not only as the frivolous that Barnard was pictured. Cameras penetrated the laboratories to see professors and students at work. Perhaps on these days experiments were even more interesting than usual! By jove! said the man at the show, That ' s Barnard at work shovelling snow. Education ' s no bluff, Those girls have the stuff! (But ' twas just for ten minutes, you know.) In hockey our team displayed pluck With shinny and sweater and puck; The press near and far Proclaimed each a star — Who stayed on her skates with much luck! College and University Assembly Speakers 1920 February 17th March 2nd March 9th March 16th March 23rd March 30th April 6th April 20th May 4th September 28th October 12th October 19th October 26th November 16th November 30th December 14th December 21st 1921 January 11th January 18th Mr. Henry Morgenthau on the Near East Alumnae speakers on Alumnae War Work Abbe Ernest Dimnet on Leaders of France Miss Emma P. Hirth on Vocational Opportunities, to Juniors and Seniors Miss Emma P. Hirth on Vocational Opportunities, to Freshmen and Sophomores Dean Virginia C. Gildersleeve Rev. John Kelman, D D., on Anglo-American Relations Mr. John Spargo on Bolshevism Professor James T. Shotwell on the European Situation President Nicholas Murray Butler on Education Dean Virginia C. Gildersleeve to Juniors and Seniors Dean Virginia C. Gildersleeve to Freshmen and Sophomores Mr. Frederic Coudert and Dr. F. Lynch on the League of Nations as a Campaign Issue Professor John Erskine on Poetry Dr. Rosalie Slaughter Morton on Jugo-Slavia: Past, Present, and Future College singing conducted by Professor Walter Henry Hall and address by Dean Gildersleeve Carol service in St. Paul ' s and address by Dr. Henry Sloane Coffin Dr. Dwight Morrow on Foreign Exchange Professor Edward Delavan Perry on Greek Costumes, to Freshmen and Sophomores Barnard is Part of a Great University — Who is the fun-ny man, mam-ma, Who wears the fun-ny tie? It ' s green and pink and blue, mam-ma; It really hurts my eye. He has a fun-ny hat-band, too, And such a fun-ny face, And look, he walks around, mam-ma, As if he owned the place. ' My child, my child, the mother then did say, ' He is an Undergraduate from just across the way. Who is the fun-ny girl, mam-ma? Her hair is combed so tight! Her skirts are much too long, mam-ma, Oh, does she think that ' s right? She never seems to smile, mam-ma. And has with her a book That ' s called, ' The Life of Calories; Or, Chemicals to Cook. ' ' My child, my child, the mother then did say, ' She comes from Teachers College that ' s just across the way. ' Who is the fun-ny girl, mam-ma, Her heels are very high, Her cheeks are much too red, mam-ma, Oh, won ' t you teil me why? She eats her lunch at Bi-a-cake With different men each day; She ' s chewing gum — oh, dear mam-ma, Why does she act that way? ' My child, my child, the mother then did say, ' She is a Business Student from just across the way And who, please is that fun-ny man? His collar is not clean; His hair stands up on end, mam-ma — D ' ye see the one I mean? He ' s shout-ing ' Down with riches! ' And he ought to shine his shoes, He talks an aw-ful lot, mam-ma, What language does he use? ' My child, my child, the mother then did say, ' He comes from Journalism right there across the way. Oh, see the fun-ny man, mam-ma, And watch the way he acts. He ' s al-ways, al-ways ar-gu-ing, And says the points, the facts. He ' s car-ry-ing a ton of books: What does he do that for? Oh, mam-ma, if he knows so much, Why does he study more? ' My child, my child, the mother then did say, ' He is a Law School student from just across the way. Oh, who ' s the pret-ty girl, mam-ma? Oh, doesn ' t she look sweet! She ' s car-ry-ing a brief case and She looks so very neat. I like her best of all, mam-ma, I like her best of all: She ' s not too sad or gay, mam-ma, Too short nor yet too tall. ' My child, my child, the mother then did say, You need not ask — of course, she comes from Barnard on Broadway. [125] Junior Prom Hotel Biltmore ( ' ■ivcn by the Class of 1922 on January 31st. COMMITTEE CHAPERONES Eva Hutchison, Chairman Dorothy McGrayne Isobel Strang Maurine Halsell Adrianna Covert Helen Meehan A. Routh Ogden Katharine Mills Edith Cahn, ex-officio Dean Virginia C. Gildersleeve Professor and Mrs. Harold Jacoby Mr. and Mrs. Emmanuel S. Cahn Mr. David C. Hutchison Miss Mary Y. Libby MUSIC Joseph C. Smith ' s Orchestra Ego Collegialis i Am the College Woman. Product of Aeons of Darwinian Evolution- Formed as I am by the Mendelian Theory— Physiologically glorious with my Eight Systems — A Self -conscious, Thinking Being, according to the Stimuli which pass through my Neurones from Axone to Dendrites — Limited by Complexes — Actuated by Economic Motives- Member of a Group subject to Sociological Influences, and Innately Primitive — Heiress of all the Ages of History, Philosophy, and Literature- Rending the Shackles with which my Fore-mothers were bound — I Am the College Woman. My dear, what shall I wear to Junior Prom? [128] I U  l Program for Senior Week SENIOR PLAY, Friday, May 28th, and Saturday, May 29th, Brinckerhoff Theatre. BACCALAUREATE SERVICE, May 30th, 4:00 P. M., St. Paul ' s Chapel. Speaker: Rev. Raymond C. Knox, Chaplain of the University. SENIOR DANCE, Monday, May 31st, Students Hall. CLASS DAY EXERCISES, June 1st, 2:30 P. M., Students Hall. COMMENCEMENT, June 2nd, 10:30 A. M., Columbia. TRUSTEES LUNCHEON, June 2nd, 1:00 P. M., Students Hall. IVY CEREMONY, June 3rd, 6:30 P. M., Students Hall. SENIOR BANQUET, June 3rd, 7:00 P. M., Students Hall. Helen C. Barton, Chairman Marion Levi Amy S. Jennings, ex officio SENIOR WEEK COMMITTEE Evelyn Baldwin Dorothy Burne Marion Kaufman Dorothy Butler Felice J a reeky Dorothy Robb, ex officio Program ot Class Dav Exercises Processional ... - - ... Mary Ellis Opdycke Class Song — Senior Song - - Music by Margaret A. Nolan Words by Mary Ellis Opdycke Salutatory - -- -- ------- - Dorothy A. Robb History of IQ20 - - Mary Ellis Opdycke Class Day Poem - Beatrice Lamberton Becker Knocks - -- -- -- -- -- -- - Louisa Lear Eyre Aline Laveen MacMahon Presentation of icjzo ' s Gift to Barnard - - - - Helen C. Barton Announcements of Phi Beta Kappa Elections - - - Miss Harriet Seibert Valedictory - -- -- -- -- -- -- - Amy S. Jennings Sunset Song - -- -- -- -- -- -- Lillian Closson, ' 09 Recessional. CLASS DAY COMMITTEE Helen C. Barton. Chairman Alice Barrington Eleanor Curry Louisa Eyre Mary Opdyke Louise Rothschild c One Hundred and Sixtv-Sixth Annual Commencement Caroline Daror Fellotvship Sylvia Beatrice Kopald, 1920, Brooklyn, N. Y. Gerard Medal Esther Schwartz, 1920 New York City Ilerrman Prize Carolyn Oldenbusch, 1920 Brooklyn, N. Y. Kohn Prize Florence Louise Schaeffer, 1920 Jersey City, N. J. Speranza Prize Catherine Raffaela Santelli, 1921 Long Island City, N. Y. Tatlock Prize Katherine Helena Shea, 1923 Charlestown, Mass. Von Wahl Prize Lillian Sternberg, 1920 New York City Reed Prize Louise Granville Henry Meixall, 1920 New York City Botany Carolyn Oldenbusch, Third Year Honors Economics Sylvia Beatrice Kopald, Third Year Honors English Winifred Francis Bostwick, Third Year Honors Margaret Erskine Nicholson, Third Year Honors Mary Ellis Opdycke, Final Honors Dorothy Piza Weil, Third Year Honors DEPARTMENTAL HONORS Philosophy Margaret Erskine Nicholson, First Year Honors Psychology Evelyn Garfiel, Third Year Honors Mathematics Mary Louise Cox, Third Year Honors Veronica Dorothy Jentz, Third Year Honors Elaine Muriel Kennard, Third Year Honors Florence Louise Schaeffer, Third Year Honors Music Mary Ellis Opdycke, Third Year Honors MAGNA CUM LAUDE Sylvia B. Kopald Elizabeth Valerie Rabe CUM LAUDE Aline Buchman Auerbach Beatrice Mack Margaret Good Myers Mary Ellis Opdycke Florence Louise Schaeffer Sophie Koerner Dorothy Burne Evelyn Garfiel Marion Ella Levi [ 132] 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 Beatrice Lowndes Earle (Mrs. E. M.), 1917 - - - Secretary Elma G. Ruhl, 1917 -------- Treasurer CHARTER MEMBERS Louise Stabler Parker (Mrs. G. H.), 1893 Helen St. Clair Mullan (Mrs. G. V.), 1898 Ella Fitzgerald Bryson (Mrs. F. G.), 1894 Susan Isabelle Mvers, 1898 Caroline Brombaker Stacy (Mrs. S. G.), 1895 Martha Ornstein Brenner (Mrs. J. B.), 1899 Anna Cole Mellick, 1896 Virginia Crocheron Gildersleeve, 1899 Gertrude Wolff Oppenheimer (Mrs. E.), 1896 Grace Harriet Goodale, 1899 Elsie Clews Parsons (Mrs. H.), 1896 Elsie Mabel Kupfer 1899 Louise Brisbin Dunn, 1897 Ellinor Reilev Endicott (Mrs. G.), 1900 Adaline Caswell Wheelock, 1897 Jeannette Bliss Gillespy, 1900 Jessie Wallace Hughan, 1898 HONORARY MEMBERS Laura Drake Gill ------- Elected 1901 Gertrude M. Hirst ------- Elected 1911 Caroline Spurgeon ------- Elected 1920 MEMBERS ELECTED 1920 Aline Buchman Auerbach Marion Ella Levi Helen Carolyne Barton Beatrice Mack Dorothy Burne Margaret Good Myers Louisa Lear Eyre Margaret Erskine Nicholson Evelyn Garfiel Mary Ellis Opdycke Veronica Jentz Elizabeth Valerie Rabe Sophie Koerner Louisa Theresa Rothschild Silvia Beatrice Kopald Florence Louise Shaeffer Senior Dance MONDAY, MAY 31, GYMNASIUM COMMITTEE Marion Kaufman Helen Hicks Juliette Meylan Lillian Sternberg Dorothy Robb Chair ma n lix-officio Josephine McDonald Lucy Rafter Frances Thompson Helen C. Barton Setting Sun Banquet Editorial Staff Editor-in-Chief - Chief Contributor to this Issue - Head of Ouija Board - From the Statistical Bureau Effusion - - - - - Chief Perpetrator - Dorothy Robh - Mary Opdycke Bkrtha Wallerstein - Helen Kriegsman Beatrice Becker Felice Jarecky Cahn Guercken Mack Rissland Coffey Holden North Schlichting REPORTERS FROM 1922 Delafield Jacoby Orne Strang Fezandie Lehman Rathborne Taliaferro Wallace SLNIOR P LAV Trelawney of the Wells By Sir Arthur Pinero BRIXKERHOFF THFATRF Presented by the Class of 1920 Dramatis Personae Theatrical Folk Tom Wench - -- -- -- -- -- -- - Lucile Marsh Ferdinand Gadd - - Agnes Piel James Telfer - Jean Brown Augustus Colpoys ... . Margaret Myers Rose Trelawney - - Aline MacMahon Avonia Bunn - - Anne Johnston Mrs. Telfer (Miss Violet) - Lillian Sternberg Imogen Parrott - - Mary Opdycke O ' Dwyer, prompter at Pantheon Theatre - - Louisa Eyre Doorkeeper of Pantheon Theatre - - Marion Tyndall Non-Theatrical Folk Vice-Chancellor Sir William Gower, A . - - Helen Kriegsman Arthur Gower - - Juliette Meylan Clara de Foenix - - Winifred Bostwick Miss Trafalgar Gower, Sir 11 iUiam ' s Sister - - Gertrude Ressmeyer Captain de Foenix, Clara ' s Husband - ...... Louise Rothschild Mrs. Mossap, a Landlady - - Esther Bien Mr. Ablett, a Grocer - Helen Barton Charles, a Butler - - - Julia Lesser COMMITTEE Dorothy Burne - Chairman Ethel Kossman Margaret Rawson Marion Travis Anne Hopkins Elizabeth Armstrong Bertha Wallerstein Dorothy Robb, ex-officio Helen Barton, ex -officio I 135 1 A Retrospect oi Senior Week We sleep once more till seven, And retire before eleven, And in spite of counter lunches, why, our cheeks are growing pink, But still we pale and tremble, And a mystic smile dissemble, When upon the dissipation of last Senior Week we think. For in terms of mathematics, We had need of hydrostatics, To prevent our heads from bursting when ' twas ninety in the shade If our tempers stood at zero, We could sympathize with Nero As he sweated at the bonfire he so carefully had made. First came Senior Play, a warning To all future full adorning Of a cast in hoops and bustles when the atmosphere is hot; Such a play is hardly merry When the only drink is sherry Which you smile and drink politely as if stale tea ' twere not! No, an Eden garb is better, Where no dress at all can fetter, Or a little classic drama, — how their drapery excels! But if Senior Play is shifted Then this curse of heat is lifted, And we need not cite that mocking name: Trelawney of the Wells. ' Baccalaureate was the one day Of the seven — being Sunday — When at crushed and crumpled clothing we had no need to weep; For no refreshments soiled us, No torrid dancing spoiled us, For once we could rest quietly, — who said we shouldn ' t sleep? Senior Dance showed gay disguises And remarkable surprises For the pill we gave a duty dance had brought a charming man. And the tender conversation Of the ball ' s abomination, The engaged man, was a secret joy, not hinted in our plan. Class Day, decorously hearty, Was a formal little party, Where we made our charming pleasantries and didn ' t shock a soul; Later though, at past ten-thirty We arrayed in pumps and shirty And indulged in brands of humor that were just a bit more droll. If on Wednesday we ' d been choosing, We ' d have missed the most amusing Little feature of the Springtime, when we got our brave A. B. ' s; But despite prognostications, (Followed by its cold collations) It was lots of fun to graduate with Pershing if you please! For the hoods were red and yellow, And the music it was mellow, And they played that march from Athalie some 20,000 times. But we heard the rite so often As our feeble brains to soften, And the Chemist Pharmaceutical still in our memory chimes. Well, the week ' s delightful story Ended in a burst of glory With an Ivy speech and Banquet that will ever rank as first, Yes, we ' d better call it glory Than some term a bit more gory, For if minus fifty hours ' sleep, some blood vessel must burst! Yes, sitting up is pleasant If your frame is like a peasant, And it doesn ' t really matter if you don ' t look very sleek, But in that strain terrific We acquired a taste pacific And we ' re rather glad we needn ' t face another Senior Week! Mary Ellis Opdycke, 1920 on the First Rung to Fame Armstrong, E., 32 E. 61st Street. At home. Ashley, H., 346 Lexington Avenue Studying for M. A. in Psychology at Columbia. Auerbach, A. Buchman (Mrs. Howard L.), Ridgeway, Gedney Farm, White Plains, N. Y. At home. Baldwin, E., 47 Euclid Avenue, Hackensack, N. J. En- gineer ' s Assistant in Long Lines Dept. of American Telephone and Telegraph Co. Harrington, A., 3089 Broadway. Assistant to Managing Editor of Credit Monthly. Barten, H. M., 1678 First Avenue. Teaching English and French in Setauket, L. I. Barton, H. C, 431 W. 12 1st Street. In Information Service Bureau at Robert H. Ingersoll Bros. Benton, P., 440 Riverside Drive. Traveling in Hawaii and doing psychological work in Army schools. Bien, E., 243 VV 98th Street. Studying at Columbia. Borden, J., 182 W. 58th Street. Studying singing. Borst, H., 91 Maurice Avenue, Elmhurst, L. I. Assistant in business office of Y. W. C A. Bostwick, W., Seymour Hall, Montclair, N. J. Teaching English and Algebra in Kimberly School of Montclair. Boucher, M., 165 Madison Street, Brooklyn. Assistant in Library of National City Co. Breaker, H. (Mrs. Cornelius Hearn, Jr.), 711 Ocean Avenue, Brooklyn. At home. Brill, B., Secretary in Wyeth Chemical Co. Brosnan, K., 501 W. 169th Street. Dancing on stage. Engaged to Mr. Robert C. W. Brown. Brown, J., 307 W. 98th Street. Doing City Editorial work at College of Physicians and Surgeons, Dept. of Surgery. Brubaker, R., Mountain View, N. J. Teaching in Orient , L. I. Burne, D , 547 Riverside Drive. Assistant in History at Barnard. Butler, D., 14 Locust Hill, Yonkers. Editorial Assistant for American Association for International Conciliation. Calhoun, H., 247 Division Avenue, Hasbrouck Heights, N. J Taking a secretarial course. Carbonara, T., 169a Utica Avenue, Brooklyn. Studying for M. A. in Italian at Columbia. Chalmers, R., 2654 Marion Avenue. Teaching Ancient History and Latin in Robert Louis Stevenson School, New York. Chase, J., Spring Brook, Wis. Principal of State Graded School in Spring Brook. Clarke, H., 52 Larch Avenue, Bogota, N. J. Teaching Mathematics. Latin and French in High School at Red Hook, N. Y. Coi.UCCl, E., 512 Classon Avenue, Brooklyn. Teaching in Goodground, L I. Costello, M., Behrens Park, [rvington-on-Hudson, N. Y. Secretarial work. Cox, I.., 36 ( .rove Street, Cranford, N. J. In the Commercial Engineering Department of the American Telephone and Telegraph Co. ( randall, I.., Furnald Hall, Columbia University. Studying for M. A. in English at Columbia. Crowley, M., 512 W. 122nd Street. Scholarship lor study in France. Cupp, L., Junction City, Ark. Teaching English and Science in June! ion City High School. Curry, E. (Mrs. Samuel Parkins, Jr.), care II. J. Heinz Co , Princeton, Ind. Volunteer Social Service worker among factory girls. Douglas, J., East Lake, Decatur, Ga. At home. Studying piano and dancing. Everson, I., 259 St. Marks Place, New Brighton, Staten Island. In charge of Editors ' library of American Book Co. Eyre, L., 16 Louisberg Square, Boston, Mass. Assistant in Physics department of Massachusetts Institute of Tech- nology, and studying for M. S. Fishberg, E., 170 W. 59th Street. Studying on graduate scholarship. nt: la Fontaine, E., 208 W. 69th Street. Acting and study- ing producing. Friedman, P., 172 Sterling Place, Brooklyn. Assistant manager of Claim department of ( ' . B. Richard Co., bankers. Garfiel, E., 5426 Ingleside Avenue, Chicago) III. Studying on graduate scholarship tor Psychology at University of Chicago. Garner, M., Wantagh, L. I. Clerk in Foreign department o! Guarantee Trust Co. Garritson, M., 2400 Broadway, Logansport, Ind. At home. Goforth, W. (Mrs. E. Eybers), Stellenbosch, South Africa. At home. Gotheii , F., 14S W. 75th Street, Studying painting at Art Students League. Gruggel, C, 29th Street and 16th Avenue, Whitestone, N. Y. Laboratory technician in New York University and Bellevue Medical College. Harris, A., St. Mary ' s College, Dallas, Texas. Teaching English in St. Mary ' s. Hicks, II., 227 Roseville Avenue, Newark, N. J. Training junior employees ol L. Bamberger Co., Newark. Engaged to Mr. Edward Healy. Himmelberger, K., 60 Linden Avenue, Jersey City, N. J. Librarian in children ' s room of Seward Park Branch of N. Y. Public Library. Hobe, E., 110 Morningside Drive. Editorial assistant in Educational department of Macmillan Publishing Co. Jarecky, F., 138 W. 86th Street. Editorial assistant in C. A. Nichols Publishing Co. Jennings, A., 44 E. 80th Street. Doing social research work Jentz, V., 92 Sherman Place, Jersey City, N. J. Teaching in Manhasset, L. I. Johnston, A., 1719 Fifth Avenue, Council Bluffs, Iowa. Teaching English and public speaking in High School, of Omaha, Neb. Kaufmann, M., 316 W. 101st Street. Studying poster advertising at New York School for Fine and Applied Art. Keehn, H., 14 North York Street, Paterson, N. J. Studying at Columbia and doing part time work for Prof. Boas. Kennard, E., care Mrs. Baillie, Closter, N. J. Teaching Science and Mathematics in Closter High School and studying for M. A. at Teachers College. Kerr, G., 418 VV. 118th Street. Secretary and research worker in Chase National Bank. Koerner, S. (Mrs. Bernhardt Gottlieb), 6 Wilmont Place, Buffalo, N. Y. Teaching Mathematics in High School. Kopald, S., 629 Gates Avenue, Brooklyn. Studying on Duror graduate fellowship at Columbia. Kossman, E., 220 Cathedral Parkway. Editorial assistant in C. A. Nichols Publishing Co. Kriegsman, H., 272 W. 90th Street. Studying at Columbia. Kydd, M., 61 E. 70th Street. Spending winter in California and studying at Berkeley College. Landauer, T., 62 W. State Street, Albion, N. Y. At home. Lane, M., 34 Revere St , Springfield, Mass. Working in City Clerk ' s office in Springfield Leding, A., 59 Union Street, Ridgewood, N. J. Taking secretarial course. Lemcke, D., 14 Van Ness Place. Laboratory assistant in City Health Department. Leslie, A., 55 E. 76th Street. Clerk with Guarantee Trust Co. Lesser, J., 795 St. Nicholas Avenue. In Labor and Service department of Westinghouse Lamp Co., in Bloomfield, N. J. Levi, M., 18 W. 88th Street. Volunteer social service worker, especially for Federation of Jewish Charities. Lockhart, M., Lambertville, N. J. Teaching in Lambert- ville. Maas, A., 130 E. 72nd Street. Social service worker at Lenox Hill Hospital. MacDonald, J., 169 W. 76th Street. Studying physical education at Teachers College. Mack, B., 318 W. 100th Street. Studying singing, and sing- ing in church choir. MacMahon, A., 70 Morningside Drive. On stage. Magoon, A., 2120 Harrison Avenue. Working for State Charity Aid Association. Mahneke, P., 65 Weberfields Avenue, Freeport, L. I. Geologist for Amerada Petroleum Corp. Changed name to Manley. Marsh, A., 414 W., 118th Street. Studying at Columbia. Marsh, L., 844 Colorado Avenue, Bridgeport, Conn. In- structor in department of Oral English at Smith College. McK enzie, J., Deposit, N. Y. Teaching English in Deposit High School. McLean, E. Assistant in Columbia Library. McNab, M., 2119 McKinney Avenue, Dallas, Texas. Doing Y. W. C. A. social work. Meissner, E., 315 Oak Street, West Hoboken, N. J. Taking secretarial course. Meixall, L., 540 W. 122nd Street. Studying at Columbia. M EYLAN, J., 468 W. 141st Street. Teaching in Foxwood School, Flushing, L. I. and Director of Camp Arcadia, Casco, Me. Mochrie, M., 21 Ash Street, Flushing, L. I. In classifica- tion department of Community Service, Inc. Myers, M., 183 North Parkway, East Orange, N. J. Doing statistical research for Federal Reserve Bank and study- ing for M. A. at Columbia. Nance, M., 2161 Ludlow Avenue. Doing French and Spanish correspondence work with Speyer Co. Nicholson, M., Iradell, N. J. Studying philosophy on graduate scholarship at Bryn Mawr. Nolan, M., 204 W. 78th Street. Teaching in Ursuline Academy, New York. O ' Brian, M., 191 Brighton Avenue, Perth Amboy, N. J. Teach- ing at Harrisville, N. Y. Oldenbusch, C, 72 Marlborough Road, Brooklyn. Study- ing for M. A. at Columbia. Omeis, F., 2884 Valentine Avenue, Bedford Park, N. V. C. Studying for M. A. at Columbia and teacher-in-training in biology at Wadleigh High School, New York. Opdyke, M., 117 E. 69th Street. Assistant to Music Critic on N. Y. Sun and in charge of foreign news on Musical Digest. Piel, A., Hewlett, L. I. Studying at New York School of Social Work. Piersall, C, 109 South Third Avenue, Mt. Vernon, N. Y. A chief statistician for General Chemical Co. Pope, R., 20 Crane Street, Caldwell, N. J. Stenographer in Library Bureau, New York. Rabe, E.,348 E. 23rd Street, Brooklyn. Taking secretarial course. Rafter, L., Port Washington, L. I. In the Operation and Engineering department of American Telephone and Telegraph Co. Engaged to Mr. Alvan Richev, Jr. Rawson, M., Box 214, R. F. D. 1, Asbury Park, N. J. ' Assistant in personnel work at McCreery ' s. Engaged to Mr. Norman Sibley. Raynor, A., Islip, L. I. Teaching Latin and English in High School at Stony Point, N. Y. Rf.ssmeyer, G., 348 W. 122nd Street. Laboratory assistant in City Health Department. Robb, D., 482 Greene Avenue, Brooklyn. An engineer ' s assistant in department of Development and Research of American Telephone and Telegraph Co. Robb, J., 35 E. 64th Street. Doing graduate study at Columbia. Rosenberg, M., 57 E. 77th Street. Clerk with Common- wealth Fund. Rothschild, L., 823 West End Avenue. Studying at Columbia. Russell. O., Teaching French and English in High School in Brunswick, Ga. Scancarello, C, 104 2 Amity Street, Flushing, L. I. Studying for M. A. at Columbia. Schaeffer, F., Mt. Holyoke College, South Hadley, Mass. Fellow and assistant in Organic Chemistry at Mt. Holyoke. Schwartz, E., 151 Central Park West. Teacher-in-training in history in Washington Irving High School, New York. Scott. M. E., Port Republic, Va. Scholarship for study in France. Seidman, H , 580 High Street, Newark, N. J. Studying at Columbia. Sexton, C, 172 Cleveland Street, Orange, N. J. Doing secretarial work. Stlbert, D., 755 W. 7th Street, Plainfield, N. J. Assistant in seed test work at Rutgers College. Silver, E., 14° Prospect Park, S. W., Brooklyn. Taking secretarial course. Simons, B., 350 W. 88th Street. Studying singing. Smith, G., 277 Canistro Street, Hornell, N. Y. Clerk in Accounting department of Erie R. R. at Hornell. Smith, K. (Mrs. T. Charles Gower), 310 Perry Avenue, Greenville, S. C. At home. Sternberg, L., 13 E. 94th Street. Studying art at National Academy of Design and studying geology. Sutton, M., 149 Clinton Avenue, Jersey City, N.J. Teaching English history and biology in Shelter Island High School. Tewes, M., 511 Broadway, Astoria, I.. I. In Personal Trust department of Guarantee Trust Co. Thomas, ( ' .., 5800 Darlington Road, Pittsburg, Pa. Labora- tory assistant in School of Medicine at University of Pittsburg. Travis, M., 29 W. 12th Street. Clerk in Public Library in Newark. Tyndall, M., 109 Montague Street, Brooklyn. Secretary to Educational Director in American Social Hygiene Association. Uhrbrock, M., 379 Sterling Place, Brooklyn. In American Telephone and Telegraph Co. Vernon, L., 144 E. 37th Street. Assistant librarian of Asso- ciation of the Bar of New York. Wallerstein, B., 334 Highland Avenue, Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Industrial Unions organizer. Walser, V., 150 E. 35th Street. Editorial assistant in Foreign department of Women ' s Wear. Weil, D., 736 West End Avenue. Teaching in Jewish Center, New York. White. C, 408 Eighth Avenue, Brooklyn. Doing settlement work. Engaged to Mr. Ralph C. Walker Whyte, B., 14 Benedict Avenue, Tarrytown, N. Y. An assistant to the Bursar at Barnard. Widrevitz, L., 2151 Walton Avenue. Doing French and Spanish correspondence work. Wilkens, M., 284 Alexander Avenue. Teacher-in-training in mathematics at Evander Childs High School, New York. Wood, L., 478 State Street, Brooklyn. Teacher-in-training in Fnglish at Manual Training High School, Brooklyn. Also tutoring. Wood, M., 2 South Broadway, Tarrytown, N. Y. Classifica- tion worker with Community Service, Inc. 5 1 10 15 20 25 1 1 1 1 1 1 ! 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 30 1 1 1 35 1 1 1 1 Business Clerks and Secretaries — 27% Teachers — 23 % Postgraduate Students — 20% Unoccupied — 8% Social Workers — 7% Married Engaged-69( Editorial Ass ' ts — 6% Music Art Students Laboratory Workers Librarians 4 ' On Stage | 5% 5% 2% Portrait of 132 Members of the Class of 1920 141 [143| Edith Black Baird Elizabeth, N. J. Sara Baird Dallas, Texas Josephine M. Ball New York City Katherine R. Bassler Leah L. Bates Miriam Lockwood Beard Cincinnati, Ohio Franklinville, N. Y. New York City [144] Florence Bleecker Elizabeth Graham Brooks Majel K. Brooks Chicago, 111. New Rochelle, X. Y. New York City [ 1451 Kdith J. Cahn Ruth Callax Marjorie Sue Cannon Far Rockaway, N. Y. C. New York City Gainesville, Fla. [ 146] Katharine Cauldwell New York City Carolyn Vandegrift Cherry Little Rock, Ark. Mabel H. Churchill New York City Ruth R. Clark Brooklyn, N. Y. C Katherine Coffey New York City Anna C. Coffin Newark. N. J. [148] Helen D. Dayton Emily Delafield May Frances Denton Brooklyn, N. Y. C. New York City Paterson, N. J. [149] I ISO] Margot Emerson New York City M A RGA R KT FEZA NDI K New York City Marion Foote (Mean, N. Y. [152] Maurine Halsell Margaret L. Hannum Elizabeth Harlow Dallas, Texas Leonia, N. J New York City I 153] Edith Helen Heymann Hannah Hoffman Orrilla Anne W. Holdex New York City New Haven, C onn. Yonkers, N. Y. [ 154) Ethel Ruth Johnson Leah Josephson Gertrude M. Kkilev Lynbrook, N. V. New Ybr.k City Brooklyn, N. Y. C. [ 155) Nellie L. Kellner Nan Kimball Ruth S. Kingsley New York City Waco, Texas Rome, N. Y. Katie Inez Kinzie Miriam Haveley Knox Ruth Beverley Koehler Troutville, Va. Waynesburg, Pa. New York City [156] Noreex C. Lahiff Marguerite A. LaPorte Hudythe Muriel Levin New York City New York City New York City [157] Julia Lowe Elise H. Ludlam Betsy Mac Arthur Tottenville, N. Y. C. Bayonne, N. J. East Orange, N. J. i 158] ( Iladys MacKechnie Port Tervis, N. Y. Sarah McCarty Birmingham, Ala. ' lorence E. McConaughy Holdrege, Neb. Dorothy McGrayne Rutherford, N. J. Helen Mack New York City Adelaide B. Martin Port Chester, N. Y. [159] Edith M. Mendel Madeleine Metcalf C. Frances Meyer New York City Yonkers, N. Y. New York City [ 160] Celeste Nasox Alice Parker Newman Margaret Nixon New York City Brooklyn, N. Y. C. Augusta, Ga. ( 161] Alice O. Peterson Eleanor Mix Phelps M. Louise Pott New Brighton, N. Y. C. New York City New York City - I If 2 1 Anne Ratchford [sabel Elisabeth Rathborne Elizabeth Reynard Danbury, Conn. New York City Fall River, Mass. I 16-?] C. Christine Reynolds Mary W. Rissinger Louise Quade Rissland Succasunna, N. J. Hazleton, Pa. Boston, Mass. Winnifred Roe Jean Bertram Ruhl Vera L. Sack New York City New York City New York City [ 164] Kathryn Christine Schaefer Louise Justine Schlichting Edith Petty Shearn New York City Hoboken, N. J. New York City Helen Clark Sheehan Newark, N. J. Ruth Hairston Sims Berry Hill, Va. Ruth E. Stahl New York City Isobkl W. Strang Veeva C. Sworts Mary Taliaferro New York City Dundee, N. Y. New York City I 166 | Margaret Rebecca Talley Rahway, X. J. Pauline Taylor New York City Katherine ( ' . Thirlwall White Plains, N. V. Dorothy Swaine Thomas Baltimore, Md. Nina Toxks New York City Emily Tran n m Ingold, . ( ' . [167| Marion Vincent Pearl Wachman Marta I. Wallberg New York City New York City Saratoga Springs, N. Y. [ 168] Margaret M. Wing Brooklyn, N. Y. C. Rose Wohl New York City Katherine Wright Morriston, Tenn. Other Members of 1922 Eleanor Brinsmade New York City Elizabeth Corse Minneapolis, Minn. Sylvia Donnellan Newark, N. J. Elsa Schrepfer Paterson, N. Mildred Finley Los Angeles, Cal. Annetta G. Goldman Milwaukee, Wis. Ruth E. Holmes Cleveland, O. Lillian Krieger Pittsburgh, Pa. Ruth Pilpel New York City Mary Eunice Rodgers Macomb, 111. Adele Sicular New York Citv TRANSFERRED TO JOURNALISM Dorothy Caske Grace Hooper Madeleine Leof Priscilla McPherson Hope Satterthwaite Dorothy Wilder Donna Degen Baer H. Louise Carpenter Maude Coe Hertha Fink Eleanor Janeway Honorary Members oi 1922 Though our friends are widely scattered, We ' re one in sisterhood. Polly Kerkow Madeleine Lehmann Gertrude Lerner Katharine Mackay Marion Marshall Anna Osterhaut Dorothy Rice Gladys Rosenthal Schwartz Alice Dewey Smith Mildred Steimle Janet Wallace 3Jn Utrmnrtam ftatbarinr JlrJhitnah a lrr August 23ri . 192fl ilarurry Ntxim § tmth Niiurmbrr 14tb. 192U Who ' s Who In Twentv-Two AS WE SEE OURSELVES Routh Ogden Nellie Kellner i Edith Shearn Katharine Mills Katherine Coffey - Evelyn Orne Eve Jacoby - Frances Meyer Nellie Kellner - Evelyn Orxe - Jean Ruhl - Edith Shearn - Eva Hutchison - Dorothy Thomas - Eva Hutchison - Most Attractive Best Dressed Most Decorative Most Useful Best-All-Around Most Impressive Most Irrepressible Most Bored Busiest Busiest Looking First in Race to Fame Marry First Most Emancipated The Eternal Feminine AS 1921 SEES US Routh Ogden Edith Shearn - Edith Shearn - Katherine Coffey Eve Jacoby Katherine Coffey - Orrilla Holden - Jane Dewey - Evelyn Orne Eve Jacoby - Isabel Rathborne Routh Ogden - Dorothy Thomas Eva Hutchison Look at our pictures. Would you ever suspect that Ethel M. Dell is our favorite novelist, and the Saturday Evening Post our favorite magazine? Or, on the other hand, does it surprise you that the Atlantic Monthly is our second choice, and Shakespeare our preferred dramatist? Though we have this Elizabethan leaning, Wigs and Cues seems to be educating us up to Barrie, for he comes only one vote behind. Our poetic taste ranges widely from Chaucer to Robert W. Service, giving just a slight preference to Rupert Brooke and Shelley. With proverbial collegiate radicalism, almost all of us read the Times, and it must have been Twenty-Two that swung the Republican election. On the stage, we enjoy many actresses, especially Ethel Barrymore and Maude Adams, but as to our matinee idol — there we know our mind ! Who else could it be but the Captivating John? We regret to say that Columbia is not first in the hearts of its countrywomen, yet at least we can offer it the honor of being linked with Harvard in third place. Princeton leads oft , followed by Yale. Among girls ' colleges, other than Barnard, we favor Yassar, then Wellesley. To turn to more intimate matters, we confide that our present taste in beverage lies somewhere around Grape Juice and Aqua Pura. Some suggestions hint of the past, however. One of us simply breathes, Alas! The beauty you were so struck by in our pictures is the product of soap, powder, and cold cream (together?!). Our favorite brand of cosmetics is Djer-Kiss. In spite of our apparent health — we average five feet four in height and 124 lbs. in weight — at least 59 of us do not wear ground grippers and our average bed-time is 11 :17. More of us do not smoke than do, but most of us swear — oh, gentle words, of course, like damn and ye gods. When asked if we have ever been kissed, we burst into rhetoric of surprise. Our answers are rather too original to be here transcribed. In brief, approximately two-thirds of us — er — osculate. Again we say — look at our pictures! I 171) [172] [173] [ 174] HISTORY OF WESTERN COLUMBIA JIMINY- HOWWE • ROBBEDHIMSOME [175] [176] AN INTRODUCTION TO THE HISTORY OF WESTERN COLUMBIA BY JIMINY HOWWE ROBBEDHIMSOME History is not easy stuff; its subject very hard to bluff. FUSTEL DE COULANGES WITH COMIC SUPPLEMENT GRINN AND COMPANY YONKERS • NEWARK ■ CORONA • HOBOKEN ■ BRONX WESTCHESTER ■ PEEKSKILL ■ SAN ANTONIO [ 178] INTRODUCTION TO THE HISTORY OF WESTERN COLUMBIA CHAPTER I THE BABARIAN INVASION 1. Previous to the year 1918 the attempts of the A horde of barbarians to penetrate into the countries of the continent f rus ! of Barnard were frustrated by the Faculty who, relying way into the on their requirements, their advanced guard of officials, Empire, and their entanglements of red tape, had up to this time succeeded in preventing the barbarians from violently occupying their territory. But suddenly a new force appeared which thrust their way into the weakened empire. These were the cohorts of 1922, who, by com- bining brain with brawn, succeeded in establishing themselves within the sacred precincts. The horrors of entrance had been increased by the The fubonic deadly flubonic plague which appeared on the Barnard jg J u continent late in 1918. This disease, like other terrible mon ' | y ca n e d epidemics, came from the theatres, Fifth Avenue, and theFiu. the Plaza Grill. In September it reached Brooks Hall; by October it was devastating Students; it then spread over the campus attacking every part of the country except the scholastic districts of Milbank. The civil authorities, taking advantage of the debilitating effect 1 2 History of Western Columbia of the plague, revoked long standing civil rights, thus depriving the people of the right of assemblage, and the freedom of speech and sneezing. It is impossible to tell what proportion of the population perished, due to overstudy and a lack of recreation. 2. The invaders had not yet succumbed to the enervating influence of academic civilization, and at- tended gatherings in large numbers. With loud acclama- tions they selected their leaders. First they raised upon their shields as chieftain Euflyn (®rnr. They then pro- claimed marinn Bittrpnt next in the line of succession. The task of chronicling the bright deeds of the tribe devolved upon iEiiitlj ilrnbrl. lirlrn JffrankntBtrin was chosen Recorder of the words spoken in council hall and by the camp fire. Of the many offices one of the most influential was that of Major Domo, who had control of the coin of the realm. The warriors appointed l£ua Hutri)taim to hold this honorable position. Snutlj (igiiftt was selected to prepare the feasts, while lEua fflagnw was chosen to make beautiful the homes of the clan. The tribe proclaimed ©rrtlla Holbru their leader in battle cries and festive songs. lEfcittj Urtt and IKatljmnr IJiuum made up a council of two to advise and hearten the chieftain. Htmtu? Har iFlrmtng was appointed to arrange the annual feast of the nation. Her efforts were crowned with success. 1 Finally 2Catl)mnr (Enffry was chosen general to head the tribe in war against the hostile Sophomans. ■ Under the able leadership of their chieftain and his subordinates, the barbarians who had settled in Fresh- mance were quickly assimilated into the Empire. They were soon speaking the same conversational Lingo which was everywhere used by the people around them. This was much simpler than the elaborate and complicated language used in books. 1. Reference, menu, Commodore Hotel, May, 1919. The Barbarian Invasion 3 The barbarians strength- ened their alliance with the people of the continent through the marriage of their warrior chieftain fEurhjtt Jrne with the queen of the Juniorians. The great importance of this marriage will be seen when we come to consider the help which the Juniorians gave to the barbarians throughout the ordeals and rituals of the Sophomanic Mysteries cere- mony. 3. From the very first the Sophomans were openly hos- tile to the Freshmanians. They captured inoffensive members of the new tribe and compel- led them through threats and force to wear badges upon which were printed these Evelyn Orne words: Strictly fresh. Handle A Freshmanian Chief with Care. 2 Towards the end of October, the Sophomans held a trial of all the Freshman ians whom they had captured disobeying their Mysteries: commands. It was not a trial in the modern sense, Trial by as there was no attempt to gather and weigh evidence ordeal - and base the decision upon it, but recourse was had to the primitive ordeal. 4. The people of Freshmania showed their prowess in the athletic contests in which citizens from the neigh- boring countries joined. In the contest of Captainball, the Freshmanian athletes were victorious. Later in the year when contests were held in the older and more established sports, their efforts met with varying success. 2. Research has shown us that these terms were used in former times in reference to eggs. Marriage of Warrior Chieftain of Fresh ma nee 4 History of Western Columbia The Faculty lose the monopoly of learning. Beverage. Disastrous battle with battle with the Sophomans. 5. At the time of the Midyears, although the Faculty still directed education, students were beginning to write books as well as to read them. Scholars did not satisfy themselves permanently with the words of their masters, but began themselves to add to the fund of human knowledge. In Freshmance and the adjoining kingdoms we find groups of students who achieved unprecedented results by natural bluff. 1 The social life of the people centered about the well- nigh sacred institution of tea-drinking. Gatherings for this purpose assembled every few days. The ceremony varied but little from week to week. The one proposing to drink a cup of tea stood in line before the pourer, and when his turn came rendered him beverage ' 1 by placing his right hand in that of the pourer and declaring a set formula such as Two lumps and lemon please. There were also entertainments of a more plebian nature in the form of slap-stick comedies gotten up hastily with small regard for art or costuming. Even the most distinguished sometimes took part in them. At one time the Fresh- manians were regaled with an exhibition of this nature given them by the celebrated clan of 1918, who had sailed back across the sea from the distant island of Alumnia for this purpose. On the whole, however, the turbulent conditions of life made warfare the chief in- terest of the people. 6. Towards March the quarrel which had broken out between the Freshmanians and the Sophomans in the early days of the invasion, and which had been smoulder- ing throughout the winter, broke in all its fury. Feverish preparations for war were undertaken. Vast cauldrons of boiling water 3 were set up in the vaults of both nations and battle robes were dyed the customary blues and reds and greens. Warriors gathered daily in the great 1. The most convenient and readable account of these results is afforded in t he bi-annual list issued by the Provost. 2. Beverage is derived from the American word for drink, bevo. 3. See frontispiece. The Barbarian Invasion 5 gymnasium and practised the arts of warfare. Battle hymns and the stamping of the war dance echoed throughout the land. On April 12, 1919, the two forces clashed in one of the most celebrated battles of history. Although the proud warriors of Freshmance performed prodigies of valor, they could not hold their ground against the deadly onslaught of the Sophomans. But though defeated, the barbarians were assured of a per- manent place in the land and in the hearts of their neighbors. It required nearly a year to educate the new race into the ways of the surrounding countries. Yet the bar- barians had been by no means without influence. They had added their part to the common heritage. From the union of two great elements, the ancient civilization and the vigor and ambition of the barbarian, a new thing was formed, namely, the spirit of the clan of 1922. [ 184] THE CLAN OF jI IN NATIVE GARB [185] CHAPTER II The question of change of lands. Accession of Kitty Coffey, 1919-1920. THE EXPANSION OF SOPHOMANY. 7. Two events took place in the early fall of 1919 which fundamentally influenced the history of the Barnard continent. (1) By the emigration of the clan of 1919 to the island of Alum- nia, a vast area was set free which was occupied by the Ju- niorians; the Sophomans pene- trated into the country of the Junioiians, and the Freshman- ians, now completely civilized, took up their abode in Sopho- many. This yearly rotation from country to country was a striking peculiarity of the inhabitants of the continent. (2) A fresh horde of barbar- ians descended from the out- lying wildernesses into the land abandoned by the clan of 1922. The clan of 1922 assembled once more in its full strength and chose as Lord Pro- tector of the realm Katherine Coffey, the general who had fought so well against the Sophomanic tribes in 1919. The other officers chosen were: Vice Regent Eve Jacohy Chancellor of the Exchequer Eleonor Starke Historian Hope Satterthwaite Generalissimo of the Armies Dorothy McGrayne Town Crier Orrilla Holden Kitty Coffey Lord Protector of 1922 1. See map on p. 7 for die names and position of t lie several areas. The Expansion of Sophomany 7 8. Hostilities soon broke out between the clan of 1922 and the arrogant barbarians who had taken posses- Western Columbia at the time of the Invasion of 1922 sion of Freshmance. Though there were numerous incidents of defiance on the part of the barbarians, the race of 1922 succeeded in effectively subdueing them. They were compelled to wear green ribbons as a mark Massacre of of their servitude. Hardened rebels met severe treat- St - Mysterie. merit at the hands of the Sophomans on the night of the famous Massacre of St. Mysterie. 9. The bloody deeds of this night were soon forgotten in preparation for the annual athletic contests. The clan 8 History of Western Columbia Lord Protec tor of 1922 showed remarkable advances in physical endur- ance since the time of the Dark Ages, winning laurels in both field events and in swimming. 1 Drama. They had now reached the stage of civilization at which a love of drama first makes its appearance. Soph Show — so called in patriotic reference to the name of the country — was produced at this time. The latent dramatic qualities which are ever present in a young and vigorous people thus found expression. 10. Despite their subjection at St. Mysterie, and their total defeat on Field Day, the barbarians had the audacity to provoke the Sophomans to such a point that a declaration of war was rendered inevitable. The chal- lenge was issued with some derision on the part of the Sophomans. Nevertheless preparations for war were soon under way and both countries assumed the aspect The Dictator- of an armed camp. The Sophomans had the misfortune ship of the to lose their gallant Generalissimo, D. McGrayne. His retirement from active service was accepted with sorrow by all the people. The Lord Protector was then unani- mously proclaimed dictator, and assumed command over the armies of the nation. Under his able leadership the soldiers of Sophomany marched to victory against the barbarian hordes. Celebration The jubilation of the Sophomans because of the of the Sopho- glorious feats of their warriors extended over many manic victory wee k s j t culminated in a dancing festival which was over trie Barbarians, held towards the end of April. The great hall of the palace was gai landed with wreaths of flowers, the floors were strewn with cornstarch, and the triumphant war- riors appeared in their most gorgeous robes ot state. 11. The feeling of joy was somewhat dampened by the preparations of their allies, the Seniorians, to set sail for the island of Alumnia. The Seniorians had been staunch friends and true allies of the Sophomans even in the era of their uncouth barbarism. The thought that new tribes would appear to take their place did little to console the Sophomans for their loss. 1. The reader will find a picturesque and glowing account of these contests in YE BARNARD BULLETIN of that year, where the subject of this paragraph is treated in a more extended manner. Barnard of Today 9 In May, 1919, the Sophomans celebrated the termina- tion of their second year on the continent of Barnard. The people gathered in great numbers at a feast arranged for them by the able Vice Regent, Eve Jacoby. Here they cheered their benevolent despot until the rafters of the old hall rang, and here they listened to the glorious deeds which they had performed as chronicled by their historian. CHAPTER III BARNARD OF TODAY. 12. The clan of 1922, now a republic under President ch E. Cahn, has become an established and important power ° f upon the continent. Its physical pre-eminence is shown m in the success of its contestants in all established sports. Education, which was formerly left to the grinds, has be- come one of the more important interestsof the people. Civi- lization has reached a highlevel. The Ball of the Biltmore Palace with its regal splendor and courtly polish is the greatest single example of this advance. A revived interest in music and the drama has sprung up under the able leadership of Helen Mack, and Junior Show promises to be the dramatic achievement of the century. The musicians of this clan are among the best on the continent and carried off the laurels at the Interna- tional Song Test. So numerous have the struggles of this hardy people been that the writers and artists of the country are busy chronicling them for the guid- ance of future generations. Of the success of Mortarboard — the history of 1922 — only the future can tell. President Edith Cahn aracter modern titutions Directory of Students Brooks Hall 007 W. 116th St. Morningside 7508 John jay Hall 29 Claremont Ave. Morningside 5372 1921 A Abrahams, Estelle 107 E. 80th St. Lenox 4097 Adams, Leonie, John Jay, Hillburn, N. Y. None Ahrens, Edith, 800 E. 13th St., Brooklyn None Ammermuller, ( lertrude, 420 W. 130th St. Morningside 6077 Andrews, Leonora. . . .220 VV. 107th St. Academy 47°4 Arkins, Lucille. . . . 610 Riverside Drive Audubon 47K( Arnold, Marjorie $iq W. i2ist St., Morningside 8790 Portland, Oregon None B Ball, Helen, Brooks, 73 Boyden Ave., South Orange, N. J. South Orange 440 Y Bay, Theodosia, 43 Burnett St., Maplewood, N. J. None Becker, Beatrice 145 VV. 78th St. Schuyler 7500 Beith, Mae Belle, Washington Ave., Pelhamwood, N. Y. Pelham 1332 K Bell, Josephine. . . . 149 Claremont Ave. Morningside 447.S Bendheim, Gertrude, 333 Central Park West Beney, Ada 68 W. 95th St. Riverside 9124 Benz, Margaret, Brooks, 85 E. 4th St., Oswego, N. Y. Oswego 1145R Binzen, Vera. .251 E. Kingsbridge Rd. Fordham 0689 Boecker, Eloise 55 E. 86th St. Lenox 6804 Booth, Dorothv, Brooks, Marbledale, Conn. Marbledale 19-3 Borre, Helen 175 Worth St. Worth 2138 Brady, Alice 310 W. 93rd St. Riverside 1910 Breining, Melva 29 E. 4th St., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Hillcrest 2373- k Brower, Lillian, Brooks, Nolcnsville Rd., Nashville, Tenn. Main 3412 Burroughs, Marion, 61 Junction Ave., Corona, L. I. Newtown 2673k Bush, Margaret, 440 Homestead Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Hillcrest 5967M Butler, Lovilla, 5 Chestnut Hill Ave., White Plains, N. Y. White Plains 844J Byrne, Louise 167 W. 76th St. Schuyler 5385 C Cannon, Ediis, 362 E. 30th St., Paterson, N. J. None Carhart, Grace, Brooks, 1112 Main St, Peekskill, N. Y. Peekskill 158W Carroll, Helen, John Jay, 4817 Webster St., Omaha, Neb. Carter, Aldine 2 E. 127th St. Harlem 1852 Castle, Eleanor, Brooks, (.34 Webster Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. New Roch ' le 4528M ( Hilton, Alma, John Jay, Walnut Cove, N. C. Clark, Juliet, John Jay, Northport, L. I. Northport 119 Clendenin, Ruth, John Jay, 120 Vista PI., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Hillcrest 3158VV ( ' ocke, Frances, Brooks, Warrenton, Va. ( looke, Cert rude, 523 Lorimer St., Brooklyn Stagg 423W Cossow, Alice 609 W. 191st St. Wadsworth 3470 Crookall, Mary, Brooks, 143— 81st St., Brooklyn Shore Road 1172W D Dana, (iertrude, 612 W. 115th St., Morningside 4710 Tarrytown, N. Y. Tarrytown 148J Davidson, Miriam, Brooks, 56 E. 15th St., Brooklyn Flatbush 2468 Davis, Felice, 322 W. 88th St., Schuyler 2892 509 Central Savings Bank Bldg., Denver, Colo. De Graff, Thelma .... 141 W. 104th St. Academy 0471 Dewey, Marilla, Brooks, Toulon, 111. Toulon 16 Draehman, Mathilde. .128 W. 121st St. Morningside 3240 E Edwards, Gladys, Brooks, 709 East Main St., East Aurora, N. Y. East Aurora 45-W Ehrich, Ruth A.. . .393 West End Ave. Schuyler 8412 Ehrich, Ruth J 1 W. 72nd St. Columbus 1573 Eiseman, Anna, 39 Clermont Ave., Morningside 6480 468 Brewster St., Bridgeport, Conn. Barnum 3657 Estill, Katherine, John Jay, Huntsville, Tex. Huntsville 14 Estill, Mary, John Jay, Huntsville, Tex. Huntsville 14 Evans, Geneva, 175 Eighth Ave., Brooklyn South 0122 F Fair, Virginia, Brooks, 6 Copeland Ave., Geneva, N. Y. Falconer, Helen, 612 W. 115th St., Morningside 4710 47 Arlington Ave., Westmount, P. I., Canada Westmount 1251 Falk, Dorothy 601 W. 141st St. Audubon 8478 Fineman, Frances. . .550 W 158th St. Audubon 6344 Fisher, Maude 67 W. 50th St. Circle 2651 Fisk, Madeleine, 171 Lorraine Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Hillcrest 3754M Fox, Edna, 325 Park Ave., East Orange, N. J Market 5316 Sterling Forest, N. J. West Milford 78F2 G Geissler, Mrs. Rosina Lvnn, ' 56 W. 8th St. Spring 5347 Gibson, Edna 525 W. 141st St. Audubon 1877 ( iilbert, Agatha, 911 W. 7th St., Plainfield, N. J. Plainfield 2109 Goldsmith, Leona, 33 Bank St., Chelsea 0265 Salem, Va. Salem 74 Gorton, Winifred, John Jay, 4 Lenox Ave., White Plains, N. Y. White PIainsl977W Grafflin, Ruth 106 E. 86th St. Lenox 2139 Granger, Mary, Brooks, Savannah, Ga. None Green, Grace, 73 Paterson St., Paterson, N. J. None ( iroehl, Marion, 527 Bedford Ave., Brooklyn Williamsburg 4374 Guerdan, Elsie, 52 Hudson PI., Weehawken I Its., N.J. Union 5323 Gurnee, Lois, 168 Diamond Bridge Ave. Hawthorne, N. J. Lambert 1982J Guthrie, Phoebe 232 E. 11th St. Orchard 7616 H Hall, Mary B 311 W. 94th St. Riverside 5015 Hall, Ruth 150 W. 92nd St. Riverside 4787 Hallock, Lucy . 2244 Bronx Boulevard Olinville 3889 Haskell, Marion, J 53 S. 3rd Ave., Ml. Vernon, N. Y. Mt. Vernon 2694M ' 70 Constable St., Malone, N. Y. Malone 364R Hessburg, Rhoda 255 W. 84th St. Schuyler 2831 Hoff, Amanda, Hotel Chatham, 48th St. and Vanderbilt Ave. Vanderbilt 4800 Hoffman, Elizabeth, Williams PI., Queens, L. I. None Horn, Lillian 324 E. 67th St. Rhinelander 3703 Hutton, Edith, 134 Allen PI., New Brighton, Staten Island Tompk ' sville890M I Irwin, Winifred, 321 W. 116II1 Si. None 310 Maine St., Quincy, 111. J Jennings, Mary 44 E. 80th St. Lenox 3219 Jeremiah, Ruth 202 W. 74th St. Columbus 394S fohnson, Alice, Brooks, 29 E. 4th St., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Hillcrest 3897J Jones, Aldwyth, Brooks, 246 Tennyson Ave., Syracuse, N. Y. None Jones, Helen 357 W. 121st St. Morningside 6994 jones, Ruth, Brooks, 3013 Stanton Ave., Cincinnati, O. Woodburn 1207Y K Kafka, Beatrice. .. 1335 Madison Ave. Lenox 1684 Kahn, Laena, Brooks, 503 Selma Ave., Selma, Ala. Selma 364 Kaplan, Deborah, John Jay, 1620 Union St., Brooklyn Decatur 4349 Kellogg, Portia, 547 W. 123rd St. Morningside 5280 677 Galena Ave., Pasedena, Cal. Kitay, Sarah, 16 E. g6th St. Lenox 5930 376 B ' wav, Paterson, N. J. Paterson 5157 Kohn, Elinor 107 W 120th St. Morningside 2222 Kohnstamm, Dorothy, 611 W. 114th St. Morningside 7359 Kopeloff, Mrs. Lillian Segal, Psychiatric Institute, Wards Island Harlem 4216 Lambert, Jem, John Jay, 1032 . Prospect, Tacoma, Wash. Lazar, Ruth 701 W. 177th Si. Lind, Dorothy 71 E. 96th St. Littauer, Virginia 227 E. 116th St. Luckenbacher, Marie, 121 Greenvale Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. Luhrmann, Lillian, 71 Crescent Ave., Jersey City, N. J. M Mabie, Mildred, . - Jay, Bergenfield, . J. Mack, Enid, John Jay, 238 E. 10th St., Indianapolis, Ind. Mannis, Gertrude, Brooks, Fort Edward, X. Y. Marion, Pauline, John Jay, Lancaster, S. C. Marks, Marjorie 322 W. 100th St. Marlatt, Frances, 58 N. Columbus Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Mauch, Helen 357 W. 118th St. Mauger, Isabelle, 161 W. Passaic Ave., Rutherford, N. J. Mayer, Elizabeth. . . .601 W. 149th St. Mayer, Marie 509 W. 110th St. Milbank, Venn, John Jay, 644 Scott St., Williamsport, Pa Montgomery, Margaret, 777 W. g tli St. 401 Graves St., Syracuse, N. Y. Moore, Loretta, 195-12th St., Long Island City, I.. I. Muhlfeld, Helen . .960 Grand Concourse N Neale, Emma 620 W. 1 16th St. Neuman, Hortense. .114 W. 120th St. Norris, Eloise, John Jav, 256 Robert St., Baltimore, Md. O Overton, Lillian 554 W. 113th St. P Partridge, M ' liss. .528 Riverside Drive Paterson, Ruth 438 W. 116th St. Payton, Suzanne, Brooks, 1241 N. Kingshighway, St. Louis, Mo. l ' enn, Kathrina, Elmwood PL, Elizabeth, N. J. 218 Central Ave., Humboldt , Tenn. Peters, Marion, Brooks, Farmingdale, I.. I. Peterson, Mildred, 564-56th St., Brooklyn Phillips, Marjorie. . .35 Riverside Drive Pickhardt, Phyllis, 43-6th St., N. Pelham, N. Y. Pindar, Magdalena . .510 W. 123rd St. Porter, Mrs. Edna Lewis, 220 VV. 111st St . Pruitt, Mrs. Grace Lockhart, 64 Elliott Ave., Yonkers, X. Y. Proctor 1846 Wadsworth 8866 Lenox 0365 Harlem 301 1 None Bergen 219 Dumont 369 None Riverside 7018 Hillcrest 2483 R Morningside 7190 Rutherford 81 1W Audubon 4380 Cathedral 3850 None Riverside 5121 James 3305W Hunters Point 1807 Melrose 4797 Morningside 3596 Morningside 3540 None None Morningside 1776 Cathedral 755(1 Forest 5877J Elizabeth 668J Humboldt 29 Farmingdale 1 78W Sunset 4019J Columbus 6078 Pelham 1568W Morningside 9030 Cathedral 6224 Yonkers 3558 [ 191 I R Ramage, Ethel, Brooks, 1799 Linden Ave., Memphis, Tenn. Hemlock 770 Reaves, Harriet, 533 W. 112th St. Cathedral 7528 Greenville, Tenn. Greenville 97 Reichhard, Dorothe, 14 King St., Jamaica, L. I. Jamaica 2433 Reynolds, Irma, 182 Scarsdale Ave., Tuckahoe, N. Y. Tuckahoe 3034R Rhoades, Dorothy, 27 N. 15th St., Flushing, L. I Flushing 1825 Riley, Olive 414 W. 120th St Morningside 8760 Rivkin, Helen 305 W. 114th St. None Ross, Effie, Brooks, U. S. Hospital, Fort Bayard, N. Mexico Rudd, Frances, 542 Monroe St., Brooklyn Lafayette 9398 S Santelli, Catherine, 223 Astoria Ave., Long Island City, L. I. None Schellhase, Elizabeth, 37 W. 10th St. Watkins 8564 408 S. Front St., Wheeling, W. Va. Schenk, Claire 2114 Daly Ave. Fordham 5693W Schmidt, Anne. . . .740 Riverside Drive Audubon 4570 Schoedler, Gertrud. 249 W. 107th St. Academy 0713 Schumm, Elsie 422 W. 44th St. Longacre 1467 Scott, Mary, 06 MacDougal St. Spring 9154 2236 Monument Ave., Richmond, Va. Sebree, Georgette, 392-3rd St., Brooklyn None Seeley, Jeanette, 247 Lafayette Ave., Grantwood, N. J. None Shanley, Bernadette, 106 Morningside Dr. Morningside 8905 201 West Granite St., Butte, Mont. Butte 2300-4 Shire, Helen 342 W. 71st St. Shrifte, Evelyn, 435 Fort Washington Ave. Wadsworth 9432 Siegbert, Beryl 137 Riverside Dr. Schuyler 6263 Sinnigen, Grace, Brooks, Care Dr. W. C. Sinnigen, 542 Fifth Ave. Vanderbilt 1244 Small, Kathryn 301 E. 207th St. None Soley, Marie 429 W. 214th St. Wadsworth 3310 Souhami, Rachel 617 W. 143rd St. Audubon 4286 Stewart, Virginia, John Jay, 2235 Putnam St., Toledo, O. Main 5023 Stuart, Mary, Brooks, 800 Chamberlayne Ave., Richmond, Va. Boulevard 4506 Sutherland, Marion, John Jay, Cornwall St., New Westminster, B. C, Canada T Thompson, Frances, 24 E. 35th St. Murray Hill 2949 Care Mr. W. S. Thompson, 111 B ' way. Rector 3400 Tiemann, Eleanor, 382 Wadsworth Ave. Wadsworth 3136 Tompkins, Bertha, 13 East View Ave., White Plains, N. Y. White Plains 294J Tuttle, Lois, 338 Madison St., Brooklyn Lafayette 345 [ V Vail, Mary, 9 Petersville Rd., New Rochelle, N. Y. New Rochelle 2986 Van Brunt, Gladys, 410 W. 115th St. Cathedral 7127 816 Putnam Ave., Brooklyn Bushwick 1943 Vogel, Theresa, 601 E. 170th St. None 130 Washington Ave., Suffern, N. Y. Von Deesten, Florence, 618 Garden St., Hoboken, N. J. Hoboken 2581 Von Holten, Adelaide, 266 Franklin St., Brooklyn Greenpoint 4358 W Wagenheim, Fannie, Brooks, 117 Guy Park Ave., Amsterdam, N. Y. Amsterdam 885 Wahlquist, Ebba, Brooks, 3244 Emerson Ave., South, Minneapolis, Minn. Ward, Ruth.... 130 Wadsworth Ave. Wadsworth 9500 Weiner, Natalie. . 375 West End Ave. Schuyler 8558 Weiss, Clara 490 West End Ave. Schuvler 7329 West, Sara 431 W. 121st St Morningside 3388 Wittlinger, Bertha, 80 Sleepy Hollow Rd., N. Tarrytown, N. Y. Tarrytown 739M Wormser, Beatrice. . 210 Riverside Dr. Riverside 5684 Wurtzbaugh, Jewel, 437 W. 117th St. Morningside 4173 Jefferson, Tex. Z Zoglin, Rosalind 127 W. 82nd St. Schuyler 6958 Zwerling, Mrs. Hedwig Liebeskind, 577 Nostrand Ave., Brooklyn Lafayette 3204 A Andrews, Helen, Furnald Hall, Columbia University Morningside 1400 19 Liberty St. B Baird, Edith, 733 South St., Elizabeth, N. J. None Baird, Sara, John Jay, 3802 Maplewood Ave., Dallas, Tex. None Hall, Josephine, 13 Brownes Terrace, Englewood, N. J. Englewood 1299 Louviers, Colo. Bassler, Katherine, Brooks, 5601 Tompkins Ave., Cincinnati, O. Madison 252L Bates, Leah, John Jay, Franklinville, N. Y. Franklinville 42 Beard, Miriam, Brooks, New Milford, Conn. Bell, Frances, John Jay, 504 Whitney Ave., New Haven, Conn. Liberty 5338 Bennet, Agnes, Brooks, 238 East Main St., Port Jervis, N. Y. Port Jervis335W Berrv, Dorothv, 52 Walnut St., Montclair, N. J. Montclair 423J Bleecker, Florence, Brooks, 2138 W. 110th St., Chicago, 111. Beverly 267 Brooks, Elizabeth, 35 Woodland Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. New Rochelle 2957 Brooks, Majel. . .1928 University Ave. Fordham 1834J Bryan, Noemie, Brooks, Birmingham, Ala. Mt. Eyrie 2148 Bull, Muriel 430 W. 116th St. Cathedral 7214 C Cahn, Edith, John Jay, Seneca St., Far Rockaway, L. I. Far Rockawav 0358 Callan, Ruth 2287 University Ave. Fordham 0842 Cauldwell, Katharine. .231 W. 96th St. Riverside 1464 Cherrv, Carolvn, Brooks, 700 Rock St., Little Rock., Ark. Churchill, Mabel, 235 E. 48th St. Vanderbilt 4950 Windsor, Vt. Clark, Ruth 342-50th St., Brooklyn Sunset 9459 Clay, Mrs. Katharine Bouton, Oak Grove Rd., Caldwell, N. J. None Coffey, Katherine, 968 St. Nicholas Ave. Wadsworth 6071 Coffin, Anna, Brooks, 116 N. 9th St., Newark, N. J. Branch Brook 7220 Coleman, Agnes 213 E. 51st St. Plaza 4742 Comstock, Mary 313 W. 86th St Schuyler 6019 Coops, Helen, 519 W. 121st St., Morningside 8790 384 John St., Bridgeport, Conn. Barnum 3291 Corse, Elizabeth, Brooks, 2301 First Ave., South, Minneapolis, Minn. South 5953 Covert, Adrianna, The Drive, Kew Gardens, L. I. Rich ' nd Hill 0862J Craig, Elizabeth, Brooks, Huntsville, Tex. None Craven, Doris, 296 Woodworth Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. Yonkers 2914 D Daniels, Eva, 8730-108th St., Richmond Hill, L I Richm ' nd Hill 0678 Davis, Isabel, Brooks, 5924 Pershing Ave., St. Louis, Mo. Dayton, Helen, 4717 Sixth Ave., Brooklyn Sunset 3486 Delafield, Emily 20 W. 58th St. Plaza 2394 Denton, Mav, 519 W. 121st St., Morningside 8790 951 Madison Ave., Paterson, N. J. Lambert 5090 DeVoy, Catherine, John Jay, 202 Fairmount, Los Angeles, Cal. Garvanza 1051 Dewey, Jane, Brooks, Huntington, L. I. None Dodd, Maude, 7 Wallace Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Hillcrest 5541 Dowd, Helen 564 W. 182nd St. Wadsworth 2932 Dunbacker, Roberta. .628 W. 151st St. Audubon 7801 Durgin, Marion, 2406 University Ave. Fordham 2027 Franklin, N. H. Franklin 315-12 Dwyer, Dorothy 456 W. 153rd St. Audubon 0305 E Eckert, Marion, Vinall Court, Tarrytown, N. Y. Tarrytown 563 W Emerson, Louise. . . . 125 Riverside Dr. Schuyler 5990 Emerson, Margot. . . .125 Riverside Dr. Schuyler 5990 F Fezandie, Margaret. ... 165 E. 66th St. Rhinelander 2411 Finley, Mildred, John Jay, 945 Orange St., Los Angeles, Cal. Los Angeles 60358 Foote, Marion, John Jay, 803 Crown St., Olean, N. Y. Olean 613M Frankenstein, Helen, 472 West End Ave. Schuyler 8979 Freudenthal, Elsbeth. . . .24 W. 88th St. Schuyler 9313 G Gaarder, Helga, 17 Sterling PI., Brooklyn None Garfunkel, Elsie. . . . .145 W. 119th St. Morningside 0387 Gerdau, Marguerite, 135 Central Park West Columbus 412 Gibbs, Carol 8 W. 128th St. Harlem 5667 Goldmann, Annetta, John Jay, 1008 Shepard Ave., Milwaukee, Wis. Edgewood 2156 Gorton, Natalie, John Jay, 4 Lenox Ave., White Plains, N. Y. White Plainsl977W Guercken, Valentine, Second Floor, 44 Holland PI., W. E., London, England H Halsell, Maurine, John Jay, 3600 Crescent Ave., Dallas, Tex. Avondale 1902 Hannum, Margaret, 115 Ames Ave., Leonia, N. J. Leonia 658M Harlow, Elizabeth. . . .325 W. 86th St. Schuyler 6356 Harpootlian, Satenig, John Jay, 69 Jewel St., Forest Hills, L. I. Boulevard 6235R Heath, Eleanor, Brooks, 68 Marlboro St., Belmont, Mass. Henry, Adele, John Jay, 125 S. 30th St., Flushing, L. I. Flushing 1 144J Heymann, Edith. .440 West End Ave. Schuyler 3459 Hoffman, Hannah, Brooks, 383 Orange St., New Haven, Conn. Liberty 3483 Holden, Orrilla, 122 McLean Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. Yonkers 687 Hooper, Grace 130 W. 74th St. Columbus 3273 Hutchison, Eva 551 W. 170th St. Wadsworth 4060 J Jacoby, Eve 39 Claremont Ave. Morningside 6480 Jamieson, Irene, Brooks, Jamieson Bldg., Spokane, Wash. Johnson, Elsie, John Jay, Bayport, L. I. Bayport, 334W Johnson, Ethel, John Jav, 115 Union PI., Lynbrook, L. I. Lynbrook 1040W Josephson, Leah . . 1880 University Ave. Fordham 5872 K Keiley, Gertrude, 213 Clermont Ave., Brooklyn Prospect 1543VV Kellner, Nellie 2 W. 89th St. Riverside 8247 Kimball, Nan, Brooks, 1000 N. 15th St., Waco, Tex. Waco 3457 Kingsley, Ruth, John Jay, 512 N. George St., Rome, N. Y. Rome 15 Kinzie, Katie, John Jay, Troutville, Va. None Knox, Miriam, John Jay, 105 E. College St., Waynesburg, Pa. Schenley 592 Koehler, Ruth 815 W. 180th St. Wadsworth 9930 Kornfeld, Muriel 114 E. 71st St. Rhinelander 782 Kraft, Katherine, 8650-105th St., Richmond Hill, L. I. Richmond HU12139 Kraus, Mrs. Bertha Levi. .2345 B ' way Schuyler 7840 L Lahiff, Noreen 201 W. 106th St. None LaPorte, Marguerite . . 129 E. 91st St. Lenox 8670 Levin, Hudythe, 1433 Cornaga Ave., Far Rockaway, L. I. Far Rockawayl805 Lewton, Lucy, John Jay, King St., Port Chester, N. Y. Port Chester 855M Lindsay, Gladys 235 E. 35th St. Murray Hill 3542 Lithauer, Donah 215 W. 98th St. Riverside 9035 Lowe, Julia, John Jay, 153 Johnson Ave., Tottenville, Staten Island Tottenville 0976J Ludlam, Elise, 44 W. 37th St., Bayonne, N. J. Non e M MacArthur, Elizabeth, John Jay, 141 Heller Parkway, Newark, N. J. Branch Brook 3051 MacKechnie, Gladys, ioi W. g6th St. None 24 Mechanic St., Port Jervis, N.Y. None McCarty, Sarah, Brooks, 1025 S. 26th St., Birmingham, Ala. Birm ' gham 6819W McClay, Eunice, 519 W. 121st St., Morningside 8970 92 Mountain Ave., Summit, N. J. Summit 137W McConaughy, Florence, Brooks, 123 W. 4th Ave., Holdrege, Neb. McGrayne, Dorothy, 163 Home Ave., Rutherford, N. J. Rutherford 224J McLean, Mary 501 W. 121st St. Morningside 4886 Mack, Helen 318 W. 100th St. Riverside 0129 Martin, Adelaide, Brooks, Port Chester, N. Y. Port Chester 492 Martin, Anna, John Jay, 117 Seneca St., Hornell, N. Y. Hornell 82J Meehan, Helen . 537 W. 152nd St. Audubon 8779 Melnick, Rosalin, John Jay, Sidney, N. Y. Sidney 39J Mendel, Edith, Hotel Peter Stuyvesant, 2 W. 86th St. Schuyler 1300 Metcalf, Madeleine, 435 Van Cortlandt Park Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. None Mills, Katherine, 269 McLean Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. Yonkers 1305 Mosher, Muriel, Furnald Hall, Columbia University Morningside 1400 1925 Seventh Ave. Morningside 0732 Myers, Florence .... 599 W. 178th St. Wadsworth 2840 N Nason, Celeste 157 W. 105th St. Academy 1466 • Newman, Alice. .807 Ave. R, Brooklyn Coney Island 1033 Nixon, Margaret, John Jay, 1007 Hickman Rd., Augusta, Ga. Augusta 6464 North, Lila, John Jay, 178 Summit Ave., Upper Montclair, N. J. Montclair 2284M O Ogden, Routh 383 Park Ave. Plaza 4087 Orne, Evelyn, 18 Clyde St., Jamaica, L. I. Jamaica 1379R P Peterson, Alice, 248 Fillmore St., New Brighton, Staten Island Tompk ' sville 102W Phelps, Eleanor 244 W. 103rd St. Riverside 7816 Prince, Helen, Brooks, Wildcliff, New Rochelle, N. Y. New Rochelle 3516 R Ranson, Virginia, Brooks, 2950 Staunton Rd., Huntington, W. Va. Huntington 2363 Rasmussen, Ruth. .434 W. 120th St.. . Morningside 1256 Ratchford, Anne, John Jay, 52 South St., Danbury, Conn. Danbury 1354-2 Rathborne, Isabel 476 W. 143rd St. Audubon 5636 Reinke, Margaret 540 W. 189th St. Wadsworth 2228 Reynard, Elizabeth. .456 Riverside Dr. Morningside 9080 Care O. S. Hawes Bros.. Fall River, Mass. Fall River 107 Reynolds, Christine,. . .5IQ W. I2isl St. Morningside 8790 Succasunna, N. J. None Rissinger, Mary 600 W. 116th St. Morningside 8169 Rissland, Louise, Brooks, 86 Gainsboro St., Boston, Mass Back Bay 1967J Rodgers, Mary, John Jay, 415 E. Carroll St., Macomb, 111. Main 287 Roe, Winifred 545 W. 158th St. Audubon 5830 Ruhl, Jean 413 E. 153rd St. Melrose 7739 S Sack, Vera.. 395 Ft. Washington Ave. Wadsworth 9206 Schaefer, Kathryn . . . .327 W. 108th St. Academy 1176 Schlichting, Louise, 803 Washington St., Hoboken, N. J Hoboken 402W Shearn, Edith 308 W. 78th St. Schuyler 4232 Sheehan, Helen, Brooks, 27 Gould Ave., Newark, N. J. Branch Brook 8059 Sicular, Adele 466 W. 151st St. Audubon 6237 Sims, Ruth 153 W. 80th St. Schuyler 8781 Stahl, Ruth 1929 Andrews Ave. None Starke, Eleonore, Brooks, Oscawana-on-Hudson, N. Y. Croton 87 Stickel, Elizabeth 230 E. 35th St. None Strang, Isobel 256 W. 100th St. Riverside 1052 Sworts, Veeva, 508 W. 114th St. Cathedral 7650 Dundee, N. Y. Dundee 761 c T Taliaferro, Mary 145 E. 49th St. Plaza 6643 Talley, Margaret, John Jay, 224 Hamilton St., Rahway, N. J. None Taylor, Pauline. . . . 130 Claremont Ave. Morningside 0291 Thirlwall, Katherine, 90 Mamaroneck Ave., White Plains, N. Y. White Plains 613 Thomas, Dorothy. . . .419 W. 115th St. Cathedral 7121 29 S. Strieker St., Baltimore, Md. Tonks, Nina 87 Hamilton PI. Audubon 1200 Trantum, Emily, John Jay, Ingold, N. C. Ingold 7 U Uhrbrock, Mildred, 379 Sterling PI., Brooklyn Prospect 8267W A Adler, Ruth, Brooks, 434 Guy Park Ave., Amsterdam, N. Y. Amsterdam 1803W Alderman, Maydelle, John Jay, McConnelsville, O. McConnelsville 131 Allen, Lylias 506 W. 113th St. Cathedral 7926 Arnold, Margaret, John Jay, 126 N. Hervey St., ' Hope, Ark. Hope 131 Autenrieth, Olga. . . . 1411 Crotona Ave. Tremont 3314W B Baker, Dorothv, 3 Prospect Terrace, Park Hill, Yonkers, N. Y. Yonkers 3001 Balder, Helen, Flushing Ave., Hollis, L. I. None Barta, Dorothy, 208 Macon St., Brooklyn None Becker, Grace 322 W. 85th St. Schuyler 1128 Beers, Jessie, 1910 Bedford Ave., Brooklyn None Benczur, Helen 52 Tieman PI. Morningside 5690 Benjamin, Clelia 154 W. 88th St. Schuyler 4237 Biber, Sadie, 1014 E. 10th St., Brooklyn Midwood 2664 Black, Mildred, 158 Montross Ave., Rutherford, N. J. Rutherford 223R Blauvelt, Anna, John Jay, West Nyack, N. Y. Nyack 675M Bliss, Margaret 2226 Loring PI. Fordham 1208 Boas, Franziska, 230 Franklin Ave., Grantwood, N. J. Cliffside 60 Bowman, Irene, 452-77th St., Brooklyn Shore Road 4607 Bowtell, Margaret, John Jay, Fort Edward, N. Y. Ft. Edward 19W Boyd, Nancy, 778 Lincoln PI., Brooklyn None Bradshaw, Helen, John Jay, 158 Clymer St., Reading, Pa. None Bradway, Elizabeth, Brooks, Haverford, Pa. Ardmore 557 V Van Horn, Ruth Harrison, N. Y. Park 830R Veit, Edith, John Jay, Healy Ave., Far Rockaway, N. Y. Far Rockaway 958 Vincent, Marion 225 W. 86th St. Schuyler 10400 W Wachman, Pearl, 889 St. Nicholas Ave. Audubon 6425 Wallberg, Marta, 220 Columbia Hts., Brooklyn Main 2241 49 Franklin St., Saratoga Springs, NY. Warren, Helen, Brooks, Shore Acres, Mamaroneck, N. Y. Mamaroneck 616 Wetterer, Edna 1 124 Jackson Ave. Intervale 4205 Wilder, Iris 288 E. 10th St. Orchard 0687 Wing, Ma garet, 524 Lafayette Ave., Brooklyn None Wohl, Rose 1845 Seventh Ave. Cathedral 8814 1923 Brandt, Marie, Brooks, 411 N. Edgeworth St., Queensboro, N. C. Queensboro 439 Brattain, Helen. . . .605 W. 115th St. Morningside 3673 5728 College Ave., Indianapolis, Ind. Washington 90 Brink, Frances, Brooks, Lake Katrine, N. Y. Kingston 5F21 Broadbent, Dora, Brooks, P. O. Box 65, Lihue, Kanai, Terr, of Hawaii Brown, Garda, 434 W. 120th St. Morningside 8440 Wolf ' s Lane, Pelham Manor, N. Y. None Burbank, Alice, 131 W. 74th St. Columbus 4850 Puritan, Louisville, Ky. South 2404 Byers, Judith, Brooks, Iron River, Mich. Byrnes, Marion, 80 Franklin PI., Flushing, L. I. Flushing 0295 C Cahill, Gertrude, John Jay, 20 E. Madison St., Baltimore, Md. Mt. Vernon 4305 Campanaro, Rose, John Jay, Oyster Bay, L. I. Oyster Bay 62 Case, Teresa, Brooks, Hammondsport, N. Y. Hammondsport 5L Cataggio, Rose, 921 Hudson St., Hoboken, N. J. Hoboken 2173 Connell, Louise, 540 W. 122nd St., Morningside 4880 873 Suttes St., San Francisco, Cal. Frank 142 Cook, Dorothy, Winthrop PL. Englewood, N. Y. Englewood 964 Crook, Alice, Brooks, Champlain, N. Y. Champlain 12A D Danchakoff, Vera... 644 W. 173rd St. St. Nicholas 4140 De Botton, Grace. . 10 Manhattan Ave. Riverside 4845 Dean, Alice 780 Park Ave. Rhinelander 9766 Dean, Hazel 169 W. 228th St. Marble 3711 [195] DeLamater, Eleanor, 434 W. 120th St. Morningside 8440 Eatons Neck, Northport, L. I. Northport 32R Dockstader, Dorothy, Brooks, Fonda, N. Y. Fonda 184 Dunhrack, Winifred, 172 Arlington Ave., Jersey City, N. J. Bergen 2252M E Elsaser, Esther, 527 W. 121st St. Morningside 5271 Boonville, N. Y Boonville 32-J Etting, Irma, Brooks, 706 W. Koenig St., Grand Island, Neb. Black 1772 F Fahs, Virginia, 131 Joralemon St., Brooklyn Main 9126 Selden, Gloucester Co., Va. Ferguson, Frances, Hotel Laurel ton, 147 W. 55th St. Circle 0240 Bedford St., Stamford, Conn. None Fleming, Minnie Mae, Brooks, 919 E. 11th St., Dallas, Tex. Cliff 682 Foxell, Mary, John Jay, 271 Pawling Ave., Troy, N. Y. Trov 481W Frankel, Denver 94 Hamilton PI. Audubon 1150 Fulladosa, Olallita, 720 Warburton Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. None G Gait, Emily, Brooks, 207 Monroe Rd., Charlotte, N. C. Gies, Ortrud 249 E. 86th St. Lenox 6710 Gleichman, Leah. . . .207 Dyckman St. Wadsworth 2230 Glorieux, Lucienne, 3811 Sedgwick Ave. Kingsbridge 01 12 Goldstone, Helen 601 W. 113th St. Cathedral 8190 Gray, Helen, 175 Main St., Ridgefield Park, N. J. Hackensack 1319J H Haig, Phyllis, Brooks, Haigville, Neb. None Hall, Mary E., Care L. Michel, 6p7 Madison Ave. None Monroe, N Y. Monroe 21F3 Hankinson, Katherine, 529 W. 111th St. Cathedral 6290 Harris, Dorothy, John Jay, Stamford, N. Y Stamford 33J8 Hattorff, Elsa....30 Van Corlear PI. Marble 3738R Havre, Sylvia, John Jay, 82 Conger Ave., Akron, O. Main 5094 Hemstreet, Myrtle 117 W. 129th St. None Herring, Virginia . . 126 Claremont Ave. Morningside 6640 Hoctor, Eloise, 322 W. 57th St. Columbus 4412 Hoosick Falls, N. Y. Hoosick Falls 37M Hoff, Rhoda, Hotel Chatham, 48th St. and Vanderbilt Ave. Vanderbilt 4800 Hoffman, Georgene. . 51 Hamilton PI. Audubon 1410 Houghton, Dorothy, 453 Boulevard, Long Island City, L. I. Astoria 0641 Hughes, Anita, John Jay, 269 Berkeley Ave., Bloomfield, N. J. Bloomfield 6105 I Issertell, Edna 825 W. 180th St. Wadsworth 9372 Janicke, Valentina, 412 Fourth Ave., Brooklyn South 0492 Jaros, Natalie, 277 State St., Flushing, L. I. Flushing 2070 Jennings, Esther, John Jay, Patterson, N. Y. Patterson 20F5 Jones, Rosalind, John Jay, East Aurora, N. Y East Aurora 201J K Kassner, Mildred, 201 Hillside Ave. Jamaica, L. I. Jamaica 2385 Kerrigan, Katharine, Brooks, 499 Fulton St., Waverley, N. Y. Waverley 113J Kingman, Elizabeth, Brooks, 165 Highland Ave., Kingston, N. Y. Kingston 358M Kingman, Marion, Brooks, 165 Highland Ave., Kingston, N. Y. Kingston 358M Klein, Elizabeth 137 W. 1 19th St. Morningside 6041 Koller, Hortense . . .681 Madison Ave. Plaza 287 Kroman, Edna, John Jay, 2106 S. 17th Ave., Birmingham, Ala. Main4024 L Laf Loofy, Nagla, 28 Boerum PI., Brooklyn None Lane, Winifred, Brooks, South Rd., Poughkeepsie, N. Y. Poughkeepsie 284 Langton, Mary 420 W. 129th St. Morningside 8420 Lewis, Ethel, John Jay, Rockwell Ave., Naugatuck, Conn. Naugatuck 89-12 Lewis, Irene. .517 Macon St., Brooklyn Lafayette 5363J Lincoln, Anna, Brooks, 551 N. Central Ave., Chicago, 111. None Little, Parrish, Brooks, 912-24th Ave., Meridian, Miss. Meridian 189 Loftus, Clare, 4 5 W. 120th St. Morningside 5097 145 Chestnut St., Dunmore, Pa. Dunmore 366J London, Isabel. . . .275 East Broadway Orchard 9792 Loud, Marguerite 104 E. 40th St. Murray Hill 1638 Lustbader, Ruth 163 E. 82nd St. Lenox 1319 M MacDonald, Agnes 169 W. 76th St. Schuyler 1572 McElroy, Katharine, Brooks, Princeton, N. J. Princeton 460 McGuire, Elizabeth, John Jay, 40 State St., Monso ' n, Mass. McNamara, Charlotte . 601 W. 174th St. Wadsworth 4040 Maloney, Dorothy 83 Riverside Dr. Schuyler 8734 Mann, Hanna, 32 Winfield Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Mt. Vernon 2900 Manning, Dorothy, John Jay, 15 Lamartine Terrace, Yonkers, N. Y. Yonkers 4208 Marples, Eleanor, 87 N. 30th St., Flushing, L. I. Flushing 1268W Marshall, Jean, John Jay, 41 Heights Terrace, Ridgewood, N. J. Ridgewood 635J Martens, Emilv, John Jav, Shrub Oak, N. Y. Peekskill 17F3 Marx, Emily 222 Riverside Drive Riverside 9647 Mead, Margaret, John Jay, Holicong, Pa. Buckingham 5714 Miller, Margaret. . . .2592 Creston Ave. Fordham 4358 Moen, Yvonne 337 W. 70th St. Columbus S661 Moffatt, Edith, John Jay, Sloatsburg, Rockland Co., N. Y. Sloatsburg 300 Moran, Geraldine, 106 Morningside Dr. Morningside 8905 Moran Hotel, Deposit, N. Y. Deposit 41 Moreau, Edna, 541 Lexington Ave. Plaza 8521 102a Morgan St., Weehawken, N.J. None Morehouse, Effie, 1974 University Ave. Fordham 5589W Little Falls, N. J. Little Falls 71 Muhlfeld, Edna . .960 Grand Concourse Melrose 4797 Murden, Leah, 4 Irving PI., White Plains, N. Y. White Plains 764M Murray, Jeanette, 67 -75th St., Brooklyn Shore Road 9829 N Naulty, Marie, 144 Ralston Ave., South Orange, N. J. South Orange 258J Near, Arcadia, Brooks, 246 Juniper St., Atlanta, Ga. Hemlock 1461 Newman, Edith, John Jay, 1 18 Prospect St., Port Jefferson, L. I. Port Jeff son 94W Newton, Leone, 492-9th St., Brooklyn South 0936R O O ' Brien, Katherine. . . .Fawling, N. Y. None O ' Leary, Emily Douglaston, L. I. Bayside 1653 O Sullivan, Marion, John Jay, 15 N. Winooski Ave., Burlington, Vt. Burlington 451M P Paton, Helen, Brooks, 25 Mill St., Lindsay, Ont., Canada Lindsay 184 Pattenden, Helen, 83 St. Nicholas PI. Audubon 4690 Peters, Mabel 1517 Lurting Ave. Westchester 3549 Petri, Emily, Irvington-on-Hudson, N. Y. Irvington 1595 Phelps, Charlotte, Brooks, 5 W. Miller St., N ewark, N. Y. Newark 179M Pirazzini, Mabelle, 40 Bedford Pk. Boulevard Fordham 1996 Pless, Helen 789 West End Ave. Riverside 9166 Preston, Evelyn 903 Park Ave. Prince, Ruth, John Jay, Wildcliff, New Rochelle, N. Y. New Rochelle 3516 R Ragains, Winifred, 880 W. 181 st St. Wadsworth 9212 Salem, Ind. Salem 694 Raia, Antoinette 607 Third Ave. Vanderbilt 7299 Raphael, Estella 911 Fox St. Intervale 1391R Reynolds, Ethel, 155 Spring St., Ossining, N. Y. Ossining 825 Rice, Elinor 243 W. 99th St. Riverside 0908 Roman, Dorothy 43 W. 110th St. University 6540 S Schneeweiss, Margarete, 258-3rd St., Cliftoa, N. J. Passaic 2214 Scholze, Dorothy, 283 Alexander Ave. 800 Plainfield St., Providence, R. I. Schroeder, Dorothea, 37 S. Junction Ave., Corona, L. I. Seymour, Katharine, 470 S. Belmont Ave., Newark, N. J. Shatz, Dorothy, 2114 Albemarle Terrace, Brooklyn Shaw, Ruth, John Jay, Northfield, Vt. Shea, Katherine, Brooks, 58 Elm St., Charlestown, Mass. Sheehan, Edythe. . . .203 W. 117th St. Shrader, Elizabeth, 320 W. 107th St. 801 N. Highland Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Silbert, Doris, John Jay, Fairmount Ave., Plainfield, N. J. Simpson, Gertrude, Holleywood Ave., Crestwood, N. Y. Sinclair, Nadine, 45 Coleridge St., Manhattan Beach, L. I. Slaughter, Mary, John Jay, 16 South Prado, Atlanta, Ga. Slayton, Alice 162 Bush St. Smith, Anita, 534-76th St., Brooklyn Spencer, Alma, John Jay, 201 Park Ave., Raleigh, N. C. Spotz, Margaret 499 W. 135th St. Stauffer, Elizabeth, Brooks, Silver Spring, Pa. Stoddard, Gailey, Brooks, 5721 Stanton Ave., Detroit, Mich. Strauss, Ruth. . .333 Central Pk. West Strong, Lois, Bro.ks, 181 Eighth Ave., Brooklyn T Towson, Charlotte, Brooks, 808 Benoni Ave., Fairmount, W. Va. Trusler, Margaret, Brooks, 651 E. 23rd St., Indianapolis, Ind. Melrose 5486 Waverley 8155 Flatbush 1720 Northfield 24-14 Chas ' town 1286M Morningside 3930 Plainfield 302 None Coney Island 3053 Hemlock 892J Fordham 1063 Shore Road 4454W Raleigh 1093 R Morningside 2960 Columbia 278 Walnut 726W Riverside 3521 None Fairmount 279 None W Weaver, Mildred, Brooks, Rugby Rd., University, Va. Weeks, Mary, 615 W. 162nd St. 173 Maple Ave., Red Bank, N. J. Weil, Deborah, P. O. Box 328, Cedarhurst, L. I. Far Rockaway2173 Werner, Helen, 57 W. 2nd St., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. White, Mildred 461 W. 43rd St. Williams, Alice, 402 Roseville Ave., Newark, N. J. Wise, Ethel 550 Park Ave. Wood, Elizabeth, 197 Grafton Ave., Newark, N. J. University 228 Wadsworth 5140 Red Bank 520W Hillcrest 3334 Longacre 1154 None Plaza 1425 Branch Brook 7199 1924 A Ackerman, Ruth 162 E. 80th St. Albansoder, Elsie, 243 Jackson Ave., Jersey City, N. J. Alexander, Adele 11 W. 47th St. Alexander, Harriet . 789 West End Ave. Alzamora, Lucia 320 W. 91st St. Applebaum, Cicely. 1880 Belmont Ave. Archibald, Helen 336 W. 95th St. Auerbach, Constance, 782 West End Ave. B Backus, Alice, Brooks, 320 E. 49th St., Savannah, Ga. Baker, Louise, Brooks, 123 Alsop St., Jamaica, L. I. Bang, Laura, John Jay, Byram Shore, Port Chester, N. Y Bazinet, Adele 501 W. 122nd St. Bennett, May, 94 Saratoga Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. Bennett, Roberta, 6811 Ridge Boulevard, Brooklyn Berliner, Frieda 2 W. 94th St. Berntson, Ruth, 32 Luydig PI., Corona, L. I. Bier, Marjorie 420 W. 116th St. Bloomfield, Marie, Brooks. Blum, Gertrude, Brooks, 15 Church St., Ellenville, N. Y. Boardman, Ruth 44 Morningside Dr. 28 Wadsworth St., Geneseo, N. Y. Boyle, Marion, Brooks, 26 Notre Dame St., Glens Falls, N. Y. Bradley, Mary, 195 Midwood St., Brooklyn Broomall, Dorothy 101 E. 75th St. Brush, Annie, John Jay, North St., Greenwich, Conn Bryant, Katherine, 43 Prospect Dr., Yonkers, N. Y. C Caldor, Selina 348 Madison Ave. Claflin, Evelyn, 640 Madison Ave. 238 S. Main St., New Canaan, Conn. Colgan, Virginia. 253 Sterling St., Brooklyn Condon, Myra 2974 Decatur Ave. Cooper, Agnes 61 W. 10th St. Corrigan, Viola, John Jay, 198-2nd St., Clifton, N. J. Crafer, Beatrice, 354 State St., Brooklyn Cross, Helen, Brooks, Liberty, N. Y. Culbert, Eleanor, John Jay, Cold Spring, N. Y. Curtis, Lucile, John Jay, 618 Frederick Ave., Milwaukee, Wis. Lenox 5262 Bergen 4183 Bryant 5152 Riverside 0322 Riverside 0563 Tremont 2210M Riverside 8090 Riverside 6208 Jamaica 1139R Port Chester 701 Morningside 7035 None Shore Road 9855 Riverside 3107 Newton 0249 Cathedral 7100 Ellenville 9M Cathedral 7520 Geneseo 258M Glens Falls 1217-J Flatbush 0354 Rhinelander 3658 Greenwich 314W Yonkers 1511 Murray Hill 1270 New Canaan 193 Flatbush 8462 Fordham 9123 Chelsea 5770 Passaic 3167R Main 7540 Liberty 141 Cold Spring 57 Lakeside 2603 Cushman, Ruth. . . .311 Convent Ave. D Daniels, Elna, Brooks, Sag Harbor, L. I. Davis, Helen.... 870 Riverside Drive Denholm, Florence, 154 W. 106th St. De Sola, Alice, 145 Rutland Rd., Brooklyn Doyle, Hilarion 2734 Eighth Ave. E Edwards, Blanche, Brooks, Sayville, L. I. Einert, Christine. .. .601 W. 191st St. Elsaser, Bertha, 527 W. 121st St. Boonville, N. Y. Englander, Norma 758 Kelly St. F Farquhar, Charlotte, 216 W. Passaic Ave., Rutherford, N.J. Felsher, Frances, John Jay, 278 Merrimack St., Manchester, N. H. Fetterly, Dorothy, John Jay, 12 Clifton Terrace, Weehawken, N.J. Frankenstein, Olga, 472 West End Ave. Friess, Dorothy, 972 Woodycrest Ave. Fyfe, Jean, 84 School St., Glen Cove, L. I. G Gahagan, Helen, John Jay, 231 Lincoln PI., Brooklyn Garfunkel, Mildred, 145 W. 119th St. Gay, Mary, Brooks, East Hampton, L. I. Gibson, Alice, Hotel Holley, Washington Square West 40 Wyoming Ave., Ardmore, Pa. Giddings, Georgia, 344 State St., Brooklyn Ginsberg, Helen 969 Fox St. Grant, Agnes, 141 Vi Warburton Ave., Yonkers, N.Y. Green, Helen, 225-74th St., Brooklyn Gross, Ada 166 Henry St. Gunn, Olive 170 W. 105th St. Guy, Eleanor 101 W. 83rd St. H Hammond, Adele . 9 E. 91st St. Harring ton, Virginia, 328 Convent Ave. Harris, Lillian 1100 Park Ave. Harrison, Isabelle, Brooks, 527 E. 44th St., Savannah, Ga. Harstedt, Elva, 461 Ft. Washington Ave. Audubon 1738 None Audubon 2581 None Flatbush 6053 Audubon 9367 Sayville 86-M Wadsworth 2820 Morningside 5271 Boonville 32J Melrose 4950 Rutherford 1543 Manchester 1169R Union 4075 Schuyler 8979 Jerome 3066 Glen Cove 584J Sterling 0533 Morningside 0387 East Hampton 41 Spring 3309 Ardmore 119W Main 3170 Intervale 1037 None Shore Road 0669M Dry Dock 9288 Academy 2667 None Lenox 0028 Audubon 1046 Lenox 9880 Savannah 666 Wadsworth 4879 [198] Hay ward, Elizabeth, Brooks, 1836 N. Delaware St., Indianapolis, Ind. Randolph 9140 Hicks, Ruth, 221 Middle Neck Rd., Great Neck, L. I. Great Neck 0117 R Huxtable, Ruth 528 W. 151st St. Audubon 2754 I litis, Charlotte, John Jay, Highwood, N. J. None J Jacob, Nelly, Care Rev. Dr. Wright, 4QO Riverside Drive Morningside 2732 114 Dufourstrasse, St. Gall, Switzerland Jobert, Suzanne.. 130 Claremont Ave. Morningside 0291 Johnson, Beatrice, John Jay, Cold Spring Harbor, L. I. Cold S ' ng H ' br 842 K Kahrs, Grace 533 W. 141st St. Audubon 6713 Kill, Edna, Care Mrs. Clara Crossley, 556 W. 1 86th St. None Stony Point, N. Y. None Kleinberger, Ruth... 311 W. 97th St. Riverside 3868 Kortheuer, Eleanor, John Jay, 126 W. 91st St. Riverside 3242 Kraus, Dorothy 14 E. 94th St. Lenox 0029 Kruger, Barbara, 914 Eighth Ave., Brooklyn None L Lambrecht, Elizabeth, 2437 Valentine Ave. Fordham 5905 Lavers, Katharine, 145 Vermilyea Ave. Wadsworth 9361 Lederman, Helen 58 E. 75th St. Rhinelander 4194 Lensh, Esther 701 W. 177th St Wadsworth 2420 Le Page, Helen, 155 Overlook St., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Mt. Vernon 1161M Lewis, Louise 523 W. 121st St. Morningside 5271 Losee, Ruth, 235 Monroe St., Brooklyn Lowenberg, Elsie, Brooks, 144 W. 4th St., Bloomsburg, Pa. Bloomsburg 8M M McCann, Gladys 790 Riverside Dr. Audubon 5400 McDonald, Kathryn, 54 Chicago St., Elmhurst, N. Y. Newtown 2059M McLaughlin, May 136 W. 116th St. None Mackenzie, Ethel, 138 S. Lexington Ave., White Plains, N. Y. White Plains 651 J Marks, Gertrude, 98 N. Parkway, East Orange, N. J. Orange 3295W Martin, Janet, Brooks, 59 E. 93rd St. Lenox 6754 Marvin, Dorothy, Brooks, 5 Senior St., New Brunswick, N. J. New Br ' swick 340J Maryon, Margaret, Brooks, Care Rev. T. Penfold, 114 George St., Providence, R. I. Matzke, Helen... 1340 Webster Ave. Mehrer, Ruth . 600 W. 150th St. Audubon 4924 Messinger, Olivia, Brooks, 253 Bushkill St., Easton, Pa. Easton 1004 Milgram, Lillian, 151 Chester St., Brooklyn Glenmore 5868 Mina, Giuseppina. . . .200 Second Ave. Stuyvesant 5746 Miner, Helen 244 W. 101st St. Riverside 8232 Minge, Martha 162 W. 54th St. Circle 1941 Mirsky, Jeanette 49 W. 83rd St. Schuyler 4962 Monzillo, Gilda, 214 Bay 14th St., Brooklyn None Morales, Lucila 601 W. 110th St. Cathedral 7070 Morrell, Freda, 203 Fenimore St., Brooklyn Flatbush 6342M Mustermann, Claire, 7 Clifton Terrace, Weehawken, N. J. Union 1294W Mustonen, Anna, 4223 Seventh Ave., Brooklyn N Narzisenfeld, Bessie ... 3657 Broadway Audubon 8793 Norton, Leah, Brooks, Wellsville, N. Y. Wellsville 122W O Ognibene, Mary, 16 First St., Yonkers, N. Y. Woodlawn 1426 Ostrander, Ida, i6g-84th St., Brooklyn Shore Road 01 13 Ghent, N. Y. Columbia 916K3 P Papert, Kate 204 Ninth Ave. Watkins 7682 Peebles, Frances, Brooks, 408 N. Jefferson St., Athens, Ala. Athens 145 Pepper, Eleanor 2 E. 127th St. Harlem 1852 Phillips, Eleanore, 634 E. 4th St., Brooklyn Windsor 8158 Pincus, Mary, 177 Hooper St., Brooklyn Powers, Elizabeth. .2504 Seventh Ave. Harlem 2792 Q Quint, Ethel 314 W. 100th St. Riverside 8479 R Regan, Helen, 427 Spruce St., Roselle Park, N. J. None Reinheimer, Margaret. . .49 W. 70th St. Columbus 4663 Rose, Edith 924 West End Ave. Academv 0566 Rose, Helen 134 W. 123rd St. Morningside 4993 S Sanial, Dorothy 3120 Broadway. Morningside 1723 Schnitzer, Blanche. .. .970 Park Ave. Lenox 1453 Schultz, Helen, Brooks, P. O. Box 443, Metuchen, N. J. Metuchen 3J Schwartz, Mabel 123 E. 94th St. Lenox 1158 Seligman, Florence 100 E. 81st St. Sheehan, Marion, Brooks, 27 Gould Ave., Newark, N. J. Branch Brook 8059 Smedley, Dorothy, 7909 Ridge Boulevard, Brooklyn Shore Road 3637 Springer, Winifred 429 W. 162nd St. Wadsworth 6155 Steele, Dorothy, 795 St. Nicholas Ave. Audubon 3290 Stein, Luba 7 W. 47th St. Bryant 6751 Steinschneider, Fanny, 2599 Briggs Ave. Fordham 3493 Stokes, Mrs. Lilyan. . . .273 W. 73rd St. None Stoll, Florence 46 W. 96th St. Riverside 2640 Struck, Edna, 68o ;St. Nicholas Ave. Audubon 7090 Webster, N. Y. Webster 150F4 T Tenney, Florence, John Jay, Maple Ave., Ellenville, N. Y. Ellenville 314 Thayer, Myla...l421 University Ave. Tremont 5656 Thomason, Regina. 1559 Undercliff Ave. Tremont 1059 Tichenor, Constance, Brooks, 59 Wickham Ave., Middletown, N.Y. Middletown 62 1J Trull, Edna, 24 Claremont Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Hillcrest 5679M U Ullman, Jeanne 49 W. 88th St. Riverside 4565 V Veilchenblau, Hortense, 1340 Madison Ave. Lenox 4911 W Wallfield, Marie, 1296-46th St., Brooklyn Sunset 3744 Waterman, Elizabeth, Brooks, 335 Park St., Dorchester, Mass. Dorchester 7164M Weathers, Nelle, Brooks, Cedar St., Franklin, Ky. Franklin 87 Weed, Margaretta. . .110 Riverside Dr. Schuyler 2096 Weiller, Mildred, 285 Central Park West Riverside 5671 Westcott, Eleanor, 7 Lincoln Terrace, Yonkers, N. Y. Yonkers 573 Whittington, Ruth 510 W. 124th St. Morningside 0880 Wiesendanger, Helen, 158 Nepperhan Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. Yonkers 1235 Wood, Eleanor. .. .853 Seventh Ave. Circle 5792 Y Young, Margaret, 1 120 Woodycrest Ave. Jerome 0975 MATRICULATED SPECIALS B Brinsmade, Eleanor. .235 W. 103rd St. Academy 2960 C Cahen, Simone, John Jay, 10 Rue Euryale, Dehaynin, Paris, France Nord 49-51 Coffin, Mary 884 West End Ave. Academy 4925 D DeAssern, Marie 247 Fifth Ave. Madison Sq. 7147 E Edge, Sigrid, 57 Clinton Rd., Glen Ridge, N. J. F Fitz Gibbon, Cecilia, John Jay, 119 E. 8th St., Missouri Valley, Iowa Missouri Valley 88 G Goldman, May, 182 Runyon St., Newark, N. J. H Hodenpyl, Marion.... 37 E 63rd St. Holmes, Ruth, 434 W. 120th St. Morningside 8440 10324 Lake Ave., Cleveland, O. Edgewater 832 Hubbard, Edith, 605 W. 115th St. Morningside 3673 448 Evans St., Anderson, S. C. Anderson 10 I Hitch, Milana, 48 Scribner Ave., New Brighton, Staten Island Tompk ' sv ' le 173M 33 Kotorska, Belgrade, Serbia K Karagheusian, Leila, 870 West End Ave. Riverside 5449 M Mclntyre, Marjorie, John Jay, Blenheim, S. C. None Mason, Frances, Brooks, Pearisburg, Va. Pearisburg 30W Midelfart, Anna, 612 W. 115th St. Morningside 4710 343 Gilbert Ave., Eau Claire, Wis. Eau Claire 534 Mladenovitch, Leposava, 180 Beechwood Ave., New Brighton, Staten Island Tompk ' svillel296R 21 Molerova St., Belgrade, Serbia Morgenthau, Lucy. . . .161 W. 91st St. P Petrie, D ' Jelma, 51 W. 16th St. Chelsea 2234 Floresville, Tex. Pilpel, Ruth ... 485 Central Park West Academy 0587 Pollak, Mrs. Marion Heiprin 112 Cathedral Parkway Academy 4055 Pott, Louise. 304 W. 99th St. Riverside 5976 R Ralli, Elaine 57 W. 10th St. S Schrepfer, Elsa, John Jay, 380 Twelfth Ave., Paterson, N. J. Lambert 1702M Schwab, Antonia 549 W. 113th St. Cathedral 10102 Secttor, Flora, 454 IF. 120th St. 2707 College Ave., Indianapolis, Ind. Seipp, Emma.... 188 Claremont Ave. Sullivan, Emily, 605 W. 115th St. Morningside 3673 1034 S. Main St., Anderson, S. C. Anderson 43 Swift, Margaret, John Jay, 392 S. Mentor Ave., Pasadena, Cal. Colorade 5357 Y Younker, Rose 1155 Park Ave. NON-MATRICULATED SPECIALS A Aldrich, Mary, 251 W. 102nd St. Crockett, Tex. B Basset, Elsie 401 W. 118th St. Betts, Olive 523 W. 121st St. Morningside 5271 Burke, Catharine 540 W. 1 12th St. Cathedral 6292 Butterworth, Elizabeth, 421 W. 11 8th St. 145 Grove St., Fall River, Mass. F Fletcher, Margaret 112 E. 22nd St. H Hansen, Mildred, 417 W. 121st St. Morningside 6886 5127 N. 18th St., Omaha, Neb. Colfax 3681 Hayward, Janet, White Plains Rd., Bronxville, N. Y Herzfeld, Lucile, Hotel Majestic, Central Park West and 72nd St. Columbus 1900 K Keller, Marie, 612 W. 115th St. 306 E. Maple St., Fairbury, 111. L Lagemann, Anna 1 W. 72nd St. Linker, Maud, Furnald Hall, Columbia University Ware, Mass. M Marble, Delia, 400 Riverside Drive Bedford, N. Y. Merck, Linn, 50 Morningside Dr. Llewellyn Park, West Orange, N. J. Porter, Agnes, 320 W. 107th St. Pen-y-Bryn, Pomfret, Conn. S Saxon, Catherine, 185 Valentine Lane, Yonkers, N. Y. Morningside 4710 Main 551 Morningside 1400 Ware 184 Morningside 5259 Bedford Village 27 Cathedral 7770 Orange 57 Academy 1379 None None Acknowledgments The 1922 Mortarboard wishes to thank: Dean Gildersleeve for her friendly interest and her In Memoriam sketch. Miss Doty, Miss Meyer, and Miss Bishop for their indispensable assistance. Professor Baldwin for his valuable literary criticism and his Greek Games Appreciation. Mr. Henry M.Polhemus for his drawing of the Memorial Gateway frontispiece. Mr. Willard and Mr. White for their unfailing courtesy and co-operation. MissReiley and Mrs. Strauss for their generous help and advice in regard to the Endowment Drive and Alumnae matters. Dean Douglas, Mrs. Laidlaw, Mrs. Miller, and Mrs. Parsons for their kind collaboration in the preparation of the Alumnae page. Mr. H. M. Levin for his gift of Endowment Drive photographs. Marjorie Marks, ' 21, and the rest of her Board for editorial counsel. Donah Lithauer for working as Subscription Manager after the resignation of E. Wetterer. Those members of the class, and F. Omeis, ' 20, L. Sternberg, ' 20, R. Shaw, ' 23, and N. Jacob, ' 24, who handed in snapshots. Those members of the class who secured advertisements. Those members of the class who submitted literary contributions. Those members of the class who submitted drawings, especially J. Dewey, M. Durgin, Helen Frankenstein, E. Hutchison, L. North, and M. Talley, who worked faithfully with the Art Board. Those members of the class who by their quiet and untiring service in doing errands, type- writing, or other prosaic work, made the publication of Mortarboard possible. INDEX OF ADVERTISERS Athletic Goods A. G. Spalding Co 228 Brooks Brothers 215 Automobiles Studebaker Corporation 210 Automobile School West Side Y. M. C. A 219 Banks Corn Exchange Bank 209 Farmer ' s Loan and Trust Co 211 Book Stores Brentano ' s 225 College Book Store 224 Columbia University Press 212 Brokers F. B. Keech Co 217 Business Schools Bird ' s Business Institute 218 Miller School 219 Paine School 224 Camps Hanoum Camps 220 Phidelah Rice Summer School 226 Caps and Gowns Cottrell Leonard 228 Carpets and Rugs Bigelow 213 Cleaners and Dyers Schwartz Forger 206 Department Stores B. Altman Co 205 Best Co 216 Oliver A. Olson Co 220 Saks Co 215 Equipment and Supplies Eimer Amend 221 Nason Manufacturing Co 222 Florist Shop J. G. Papadem Co 228 Food Jell-o 231 Gown and Millinery Shops David Meyer 223 Dorothy Ford 220 Maison Kargere 221 The Louvre Millinery 223 Groceries W. Matuson 222 Hair Dressing Parlors Anna J. Ryan 221 College Hair Shop 228 Nestle ' s 213 Hair llets Venida 223 Hotels Abbey Inn 227 McAlpin 4 Peter Stuyvesant 227 Plaza 225 Wesley House 227 House Furnishings Herman Kornahrens 227 Importers Canton Importing Co 226 W. R. Grace Co 208 Jewelry Julius Jorgenson Son 226 Tiffany Co 3 Kindling Wood Clark Wilkens Co 214 Optical Supplies McCoy Stilwell 227 Orchestra Boston Symphony Orchestra 225 Orthopedic Appliances W. H. Phelps Co 227 Pharmacies Charles Friedgen 229 College Drug Store 228 Wasself Pharmacy 224 Photography White Studio 212 Politics League of Women Voters 204 Printing Charles L. Willard 230 Christian 228 Real Estate James A Dowd 222 Tailoring A. W. Cohen 227 Tea Rooms Biacake 227 Maison Fichl 228 Theatrical Costumes Chrisdie Co 225 Victrolas and Records Blout ' s 224 [ 203] Was She Right? ONCE upon a time there was a college graduate. She was much the same as many other graduates, they all have certain general characteristics — youth with its clear skinned beauty and snappy lines, a tendency to be radical, divine discontent with existing institutions. Life was before her; college behind her, but still clinging to her garments. What career should she choose? Society? No, that was too shallow. Business? Perhaps if she needed the money, even then there would be many spare moments. Politics? Why yes, why not? What were the arguments in favor of this? Would it fit into her scheme of life? Could it stand the test of a few searching questions? 1st. To serve one ' s country: Yes, the election of honest, upright govern- ment officials. 2nd. To care for the sick and needy: Yes, City institutions, asylums, hospitals. 3rd. Preparations for a future home: Municipal housekeeping, cheap markets, clean streets. 4th. The spread of knowledge: Public schools and colleges. Should she begin by joining her local political club? A good idea, but as yet, she did not know whether she was a Republican, Democrat, Socialist, Bolshevist, or Red. What a dilemma! Brilliant thought! Why not join the League of Women Voters to gain non-partisan political knowledge for one dollar a year. The last seen of our college graduate she was dashing into the League head- quarters at 37 West 39th Street, which is a haven for young women with pro- gressive ideas. Presented by the 1 5th Assembly District League of Women Voters H Alton $c Co. Fashionable College Clothes featuring Correct Modes for tke Classroom, for the Street, for Formal occasions, and for Sports Wear The Mail Shopping Bureau is at the disposal of out-of-town patrons iEa tHnn Atmutr-iFtftlj Annum Nnu f nrk Slttrttf-fourtli %trwt ®ljtrty-ftfth Btntt CLEANERS and DYERS T HAT old garment will give the A service of a new one. Expert advice given at our stores. 125th Street and Morningside Avenue Stores: Telephones: 619 FIFTH AVENUE, near 50th St. ----- - 3266 Plaza 425 FIFTH AVENUE, Entrance 1 East 38th St. - - 5376 Murray Hill 2145 BROADWAY, bet. 75th 76th Sts. (Astor Ap ' ts) 2199 Columbus 641 MADISON AVENUE, bet. 59th to 60th Streets 4329 Plaza 922 MADISON AVENUE, bet. 73rd 74th Streets 5462 Rhinelander 125th Street MORNINGSIDE AVENUE - - - - 3210 Morningside Works, 408-410 West 125th Street - - - - - - 3210 Morningside Compliments of J. B. Taylor W. R. GRACE CO Merchants NEW YORK SEATTLE, SAN FRANCISCO, NEW ORLEANS Houses and Agencies in all the Principal cities of CENTRAL and SOUTH AMERICA, EUROPE, ASIA and AFRICA IMPORTS All Raw Materials from the Far East, Central and South America EXPORTS All American Products and Manufactures Steamship Agents GRACE LINE Direct Sailings from New York for CHILE— PERU— ECUADOR— BOLIVIA W. R. GRACE CO. ' S BANK NEW YORK The Corn Exchange Bank William and Beaver Streets, New York CAPITAL AND SURPLUS, $13,500,000 OFFICERS WILLIAM A. NASH, Chairman of the Board WALTER E. FREW, Preident FREDERICK T. MARTIN, Vice-President DUNHAM B. SHERER, Vice-President HENRY A. PATTEN, Vice-President RICHARD D. BROWN, Vice-President EDWARD S. MALMAR, Cashier JOHN S. WHEELAN, Assistant Cashier WM. E. WILLIAMS, Assistant Cashier FREDERICK K LISTER, Assistant Cashier ASTOR PLACE BRANCH Astor Place and Eighth Street ASTORIA BRANCH 75 Fulton Ave., Astoria, Borough of Queens AUDUBON BRANCH Broadway and 166th Street BROADWAY BRANCH Broadway and Spring Street BRONX BRANCH 375 East 149th Street BROOKLYN BRANCH Court and Joralemon Streets CHATHAM SQUARE BRANCH Park Row and Worth Street DYCKMAN BRANCH 207th Street and Post Avenue EAST SIDE BRANCH Norfolk and Grand Streets EIGHTY-SIXTH STREET BRANCH 126 East 86th Street ELEVENTH WARD BRANCH Avenue D and 10th Street FIFTH AVENUE BRANCH Fifth Avenue and 20th Street FIFTY-FIFTH STREET BRANCH 55th Street and Broadway FLATBUSH AVENUE BRANCH 19 and 21 Flatbush Avenue, Bklyn. FLUSHING BRANCH 116 Main Street, Flushing, Borough of Queens FORDHAM BRANCH Fordham Road and Decatur Avenue BRANCHES FORTY-SECOND STREET BRANCH 303 West 42d Street FOURTH AVENUE BRANCH Fourth Avenue and 29th Street FULTON BRANCH Northeast corner Fulton and Pearl Streets GRAND CENTRAL BRANCH 7 East 42d Street GREENPOINT BRANCH Greenpoint and Manhattan Aves., Brooklyn HARLEM BRANCH 125th Street and Lenox Avenue HUDSON RIVER BRANCH Columbus Avenue and 72d Street LEXINGTON BRANCH Lexington Avenue and 60th Street MOUNT MORRIS BRANCH 125th Street and Park Avenue MYRTLE AVENUE BRANCH Myrtle Avenue and B roadway, Brooklyn ONE HUNDRED EIGHTY-FIRST ST. BRANCH St. Nicholas Avenue and 181st St. PARK AVENUE BRANCH Northwest corner Park Avenue and 52d St., Racquet and Tennis Club Building PENNSYLVANIA STATION BRANCH Seventh Avenue and 33d Street PLAZA BRANCH Bridge Plaza and Academy Street, Borough of Queens QUEENS COUNTY BRANCH Jackson Avenue and Fourth Street, Borough of Queens SEVENTY-SECOND STREET BRANCH 72d Street and Lexington Avenue SHERIDAN SQUARE BRANCH Grove and West 4th Streets SOUTH BROOKLYN BRANCH Hamilton Avenue and Summit Street, Brooklyn STATEN ISLAND BRANCH New Brighton, Staten Island STEINWAY AVENUE BRANCH 252 Steinway Avenue, Astoria, Borough of Queens TERMINAL BRANCH Dey and Church Streets TREMONT BRANCH Tremont and Arthur Avenues TWENTY-EIGHTH STREET BRANCH 12 West 28th Street UNION SQUARE BRANCH 34 Union Square, East UNIVERSITY BRANCH Broadway and 113th Street WASHINGTON BRANCH Broadwav and Murray Street WASHINGTON HEIGHTS BRANCH Amsterdam Avenue and 143d St. ts of the STUDEBAKER CORPORATION OF AMERICA CHARTERED 1H 12 The Farmer ' s Loan and Trust Company Nos. 16, 18, 20, and 22 William Street, New York Branch: 475 Fifth Avenue, at 41st Street LONDON 15 Cockspur Street. S. W. 1. 2(. ( )! ! Broad Street, E. C. 2. PARIS 11 Boulevard Haussmann 12 Rue des Mathurins The Company is a legal depository for moneys paid into court, and is authorized to act as Executor, Administrator, Trustee, Guardian, Receiver, and in all other fiduciary capacities. Acts as Trustee under Mortgages made by Railroad and other Corporations, and as Transfer Agent and Registrar of Stocks and Bonds. Receives deposits upon Certificates of Deposit, or subject to check and allows interest on daily balances. Manages Real Estate and lends money on bond and mortgage. ill act as Agent in the transaction of any approved financial business. I nited States depository in London and Paris. Depository for Legal Reserves of State Banks and also for moneys of the City of New York. DIRECTORS Charles A. Peabody Franklin D. Locke Parker D. Handy Francis M. Bacon, Jr. John (i. Agar Edwin S. Marston John J. Biker Beekman Winthrop Percy R. Pyne Lewis Iselin Samuel Sloan Henry B. Taylor Henry Hentz Robert L. Gerry Augustus V. Heely Ogden Mills ( ieorge E. Paine OFFICERS Edwin S. Marston, President Samuel Sloan, Vice-President Vugustus V. Heely, Vice-President and Secretary William B. Cardozo, Vice-President Cornelius B. Agnew, Vice-President William . Duncan. Vice-President Horace F. How land. ice-President Henry King Smith, Vice-President D. J. Palmer, Manager Foreign Department Harry D. Sanimis, Assistant Secretary J. C. Talley, Assistant Secretary Edward J. Boyd, Assistant Secretary Irving H. Meehan, Assistant Secretary James B. Little, Assistant Secretary William A. W ilson, Assistant Secretary S. Sloan Colt, Assistant Secretary Thomas V Finn, Manager Credit Department Member Federal Reserve System and New York Clearing House BOOKS FOR STUDY AND LEISURE HOURS Columbia University Press Book Store (ON THE CAMPUS— JOURNALISM BUILDING— 2960 B ' WAY) STATIONERY SOUVENIRS KEEP SAKES Equipped with many years ' experience for making photographs of all sorts, desirable for illustrating col- lege annuals, best obtainable artists, workmanship and the capacity for prompt and unequalled service. Photographers 1922 Mortarboard Address requests for Information to our Executive Office, 1546 Broadway, New York City 212 Beauty Durability Refinement In RUGS and CARPETS is typified by the word BIGELOW The Nestle Permanent Hair Wave Not the beauty of Nestle-waved hair, (that is so obvious!), but its comfort is what you will want to know. In the first place, Nestle-waved hair is always healthy hair. No harm can re- sult from Nestles ' s process, for at Nestle ' s only experts give the wave. Second: think of rising in the morning with wavy hair, coiffing it quickly, easily, becom- ingly; racing through your thousand daily ac- tivities — classes, dances, tennis, hikes, always conscious that your hair looks well-groomed. No stringy strands, no straggly ends. At night, your hair is still wavy, and still wavy day after day, and month after month. In short, Nestle-waved hair offers you the blessing of naturally-wavy hair. Fifteen years of the public ' s confidence is our record and guarantee. Write for booklet on Nestle Waving or call NESTLE ' S C-12-14 East 49th St., just oflf Fifth Avenue Vanderbilt 9086 [21 Mllll Complimentary HARTWELL A. WILKINS. PRCS 4 TflEAS. ESTABLISHED 18T0 . ELLWOOD CLARK, SEcr. HARTWELL H. WILKINS, Vice-Pres. 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 AND HICKORY. TELEPHONES: LONGACRE 515 516 Harlem 16 566 DRY HICKORY FOR OPEN F IRES. VIRGINIA PINE KNOTS. SELECTED OAK OR HARDWOOD. LIGNUM VITAE. NEW BEDFORD DRIFTWOOD. .NORTH CAROLINA PITCH PINE. VIRGINIA PINE and OAK KINDLING WOOD [214] Barnard Girls are invited to select their toggery from the exten- sive stocks of Saks Com- pany, one of America ' s Greatest Apparel Stores. Here you will find Everything for College and Gym Wear —Shoes, Topcoats, Dainty Underthings -- in fact, everything needed to equip your wardrobe, whether it be simple or most elaborate. Prices are extremely moderate Uruaimrati at 34tli i t. LSlAEUiHED 1818 railrnwt? jfitntijsltitttj iioafts, MADISON AVENUE COR. FORTY -FOURTH STREET NEW YORK BROOKS BROTHERS ' New Building, convenient to Grand Central, Subway, and to many of the lead- ing Hotels and Clubs OF INTEREST TO WOMEN W hile we do not sell women ' s clothing, it is our experience that there is, on the part of many women, especially 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 moreappa- rently because, 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 [215 Complimentary H est Sc Co, Fifth Avenue at 35th St.— N.Y. Established 1879 One Profession The Art of Dressing Correctly Our Profession Outfitting the Girl of College Age in the Best Way from Shoes to Hat You Never Pay More at Best ' s 216] Complimen t ar y Compliments of R B. KEECH CO. [217] i 1 C 1 2 .| r ] r , u .,, Telephone j 646 Fordham BIRD ' S BUSINESS INSTITUTE A-Re-Co. Bldg., 149th St. 3rd Ave., also Fordham Road and Webster Ave., Bronx Complete Commercial, Secretarial, and Amanuenses Courses F. L. BIRD, Proprietor GEORGE W. BIRD, Founder GEORGE WOLF, Principal Complimen tary i ' i i, I ' ,-; ' ' ,,. ' !,!! :i ' i - n .1 -||.|| .1 .n n. , r , I : ■ ! i ■ i 1 , 1 ,1 .1 .r II M ' liMIl M ' . j - 1 1 , , 1 , 1 1 1 , i ' h : I ! ! I ■ i ;, i :■ M : ' I ■ M : , I r i i ; 1 1 : . i m ,. ., II .r h .; ii I 1 i ' .: : I | To College Students: % Now is the time to begin thinking about next year Your college education is a splendid loundation for special training. You ought to utilize it to the utmost. You possess a decided advantage over those who have not attended college — all you need is the specializing work of a practical finishing school to put you in the s class of trained men and women 110% of all of H the people.) H Business is today one of the leading avo- cations. You can enter that field well up the ladder of success by first taking a preparatory |§ course in the Miller School. This is a much shorter course than is that of taking a chance of working up. This would mean years of drudgery at small pay. Think this over The Miller School is now and always has H been a leader. It was one of the very first % schools in America to adopt Gregg Shorthand, now so popular all ovcr ' the world; it was the W first school in or about New York to teach touch typewriting; it was the first school in or about New York to install a Model Office finishing system. There are many other points of leadership in the Miller School. Send for a bulletin of our courses. Find out just what this modern system of training can do for you. Write now for the desired information Miller School Fifth National Bank Bldg. Lexington Ave. at 23d St. New York City § ,11 II ' ,11 ,,! .11 1! ' .1- .11 II: ill :ll. :| ,l; II ih Ml Hi ' ll II. Ih II II 1. 1, ' I. : . ' i h ■■. : !■ ;i I West Side Y.M.C.A. I I Automobile School | EIGHTEENTH CONSECUTIVE YEAR SPECIAL CLASSES FOR LADIES Automobile shop work--- engine principles. Road work- —individual driving lessons for State license examination. Elementary Electricity (theory) and Applied Electricity (self- starter, lighting and igni- tion). Practical automobile repairing. Auto Mecha- nics ' course. Special folder free on request Educational Department, West Side Branch Y.M.C.A. 318 West 57 th Street, New York City Phone 7920 Columbus iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiii |I!IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1IIIIIIIIII!IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII!IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIH ! Gowns I 2231 Broadway THE HANOUM CAMPS THETFORD, VERMONT College Club for older Girls Professor and Mrs. C. H. Farnsworth | Teachers College iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii PIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIM I Oliver A. Olson | company Broadway at 79th Street Subway Station at Door j The | Barnard Girl ' s Shop AT Yale, Harvard, and all . large colleges there are spe- cial shops to meet, the needs of students. Make our store a Barnard Shop — here you will find 26 depart- ments, completely stocked with appropriate and distinctive ap- parel, millinery, and personal ac- cessories, at less than downtown prices. j Our nearness saves you a long trip downtown into the crowded shopping district. Here you may shop at leisure — no crowded counters and inattentive clerks. A complete store for girls and women 5 Illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll ii n ii hmi ii iiur !i ii :n hi ' i; 1115 [ 220] HAIRDRESSING SHAMPOOING MASSAGE MANICURING CHIROPODY PERMANENT WAVING CURLS POMPADOURS SWITCHES TRANSFORMATIONS WIGS Formerly with L. SHAW of FIFTH AVENUE Human Hair Goods and Toilet Preparations 2896 BROADWAY Near 113th Street NEW YORK CITY Tel. Cathedral 7156 Maison Kargere 611 Fifth Avenue New York Dresses and Blouses Lingerie Table Linens PARIS 11 Bis Rue Montaigne Eimer Amend Industrial and Educational Laboratory Apparatus Bacteriological, Chemical and Metallurgical Laboratory Supplies; Chemical Reagents, Drugs, Minerals and Stains. NEW YORK CITY Third Ave., 18th to 19th Street PITTSBURGH OFFICE 2011 Jenkins Arcade [221] Telephone Morningside %5 W. MATUSON QROCER DELICATESSEN, FRUITS, VEGETABLES 2941 BROADWAY Cor. 1 1 5th Street New York | 31 Telephones, Circle -! 32 j 33 JAMES A. DOWD REAL ESTATE Selling, Renting and Management We Specialize in Supplies and Equipment For Steam, Hydraulic, (ias, Refrigerating and Sanitary Engineering We are Manufacturers of and Headquarters for Steam Traps, Separators, Feed Water Heaters, Boiler Feeders, Damper Regulators, Injectors, Pres- sure Regulators, Balance Valves, Throttle Valves, Blow-Off Valves, Pop Safety 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 Manufacturing Co. 71 Fulton Street, New York Complimentary 874 Sixth Avenue, New York (Between 49th and 50th Streets) | 222 Cathedral 7858 DAVID MEYER 2901 Broadway, N. W. Corner of 113th Street Gowns, Blouses, Suits and Smart Millinery Special Discount given to all Students THE LOUVRE MILLINERY 27b4 Broadway, Between 106thand 107th Streets NEW YORK Presentation of the latest models in Millinery Prices most moderate . Don ' t Bob your Hair ENIDA HAII NET Makes the most attractive hair dress In after years you will than): us. Complimentary [ 223 | Best Soda on Broadway WASSELF PHARMACY Broadway 1 12th Street Broadway 84th Street The College Book Store A. G. SEILER, Prop. New and Second-Hand Boofc, Stationery and College Novelties Students ' Discounts Allowed. Our Prices the Lowest 1224 Amsterdam Ave., near 120th St. Genuine Victor Victrolas and Victor Records at BLOUT ' S Broadway at 108th Street Why Go Down Town? Send for printed explination of SUMMER SESSION Secretarial Training Registered and approved by the New York State Education Department or Board of Regents. Established 1849. The PLAZA FIFTH AVENUE AT 59th STREET NEW YORK Tea, Thinner and Supper T)ances in the Grill Room Daily (Except Sunday) Music by JOSEPH C. SMITH and Orchestra CARNEGIE HALL NEW YORK FORTY-FIRST SEASON ' , 1921-1922 PIERRE MONTEUX, Conductor TWO SERIES OF FIVE CONCERTS EACH FIVE THURSDAY EVENING CONCERTS AT 8.15 November 3 December 1 January 5 February 2 March 16 FIVE SATURDAY AFTERNOON CONCERTS AT 2.30 November 5 December 3 January 7 February 4 March 18 The prices of Season Tickets for each series are as follows: BOXES (six seats) $75.00 and $60.00 PARQUET ------- 10.00 Dress Circle - - - $6.00 and $7.50 Balcony 3.00 and 5.00 NO WAR TAX The programmes of the evening and afternoon concerts are entirely different. Address W. H. Brennan, Manager, Symphony Hall, Boston. Charles Chrisdie Co. ESTABLISHED 187J THEATRICAL COSTUMERS Announce a complete variety of costumes for THE BALL MASQUE THEATRICALS Special Costumes Made to order For Hire or for Sale Costumes for School Plays completely furnished 562 SEVENTH AVENUE AT 40TH STREET NEW YORK CITY Telephone BRVANT 2449 [225 1 Julius jorgenson and son Jewelers, Silversmiths, Opticians and Stationers BROADWAY AT 83d STREET, NEW YORK Largest jewelry establishment uptown Complimentary PHIDELAH RICE Summer School of the Spoken Word At Oak Bluffs, Martha ' s Vineyard, Mass. For men and women who do not have time for study during the winter. A con- centrated short course in the art of ex- pression, embodying principles of voice building, expressive movement, public speaking, stage arts and craft. An exceptional opportunity is offered to combine study with recreation. Sailing, swimming, tannis, horseback riding and other sports. Ideal spot by the ocean for a vacation. Booklet and information. PHIDELAH RICE 286 Clark Road Brookline 46 Mass. Complimentary Phone: Riverside 7527 CANTON IMPORTING COMPANY 2647 Broadway, New York (Between 100 and I 1 st Streets) Embroideries Baskets Porcelains Perfumes Beads Novelties And all kinds of Chinese and Japanese Fane}) Qoods [226] Wadsworth 3KS ABBEY INN On The Hudson Fort Washington Ave. 198th St., N. Y. Wesley House Island Marthas Vinyard Oak Bluffs, Mass. Atmosphere of Welcome and Refinement The Wesley faces the local harbor where all the small boats have their moor- ings with Vinyard Sound just beyond. The Hotel is convenient to the Shops, Dance Hall, Movies and other places of amusement. All modern improve- ments within. The House caters to an exclusive trade. Its table abounds with local food — fresh clams, fish, lobsters, vegetables. Its rates are consistent with the best of good food and service. Excellent Golf, Tennis, Bathing, Automobiling. Hubert M. Chase, Mgr. Boston office, 40 Court St. COMPLIMENTS OF Biacake Tea Room H. T. HALL CHARLES CARTER Orthopedic Appliances W. H. PHELPS CO. 156 Washington Street BOSTON, MASS. Shoulder Braces, Back Supporters, Bandages. Canes, Crutches, Elastic Stockings, Anklets, Kneecaps, Elastic Corsets, Repairing and Sundries, Bow Leg, Knock Knee, Weak Ankle Braces, Artificial Limbs. Tel. 4691 Main SPECIALISTS IN THIS LINE Established 1832 The Oldest House in the United States TELEPHONE 9213 A. W. COHEN Ladies Tailor and Furrier French Cleaner and Dyer 1221 Amsterdam Avenue N. E. Cor. 120th St. New York City Oculists ' Prescriptions Earnestly Solicited Established 1880 McCoy Stilwell OPTICIANS 442 Madison Ave., New York BET. 4 th and 50th STREETS KODAKS, PREMOS Phone DEVELOPING. PRINTING PHOTO SUPPLIES PLAZA 2858 ENLARGING TELEPHONE 5114 BARCLAY Herman Kornahrens, Inc. House Furnishings Woodenware Cordage 107 to 111 Murray St. New York Cor. West St. Hotel Peter Stuyvesant Central Park West at 86th St. NEW YORK PHONE SCHUYLER 1300 RESTAURANT WM. F. INGOLD, Mgr. A LA CARTE H. N. TOWNSLEY, Ass ' t. Mgr. [ 227 ] Vtttrr 8 Sutt TXan Sorry Wt Ntvtr D ff fr ' «t 3 5lc=ill51 llollc=5l51l CHRISTIAN 260 WEST 123th ST. NEW YORK QUICK PRINTING {□) Engraving, Rubber Stamps ibii ■ TlUtktni ? ferx,r, i „J. 4111 MAISON FICHL DAINTIEST OF CAKES EXQUISITE LUNCHEONS PATISSERIE FRANCA I SE J TWO STORES: my 2 AMSTERDAM AVE. 304 W. 125th ST. We serve the best people College Drug Store Cut Rates 2939 BROADWAY Telephone Morningside 4382 1235 Amsterdam Avenue, Bet. I 20th I 2 1st Sts. New York Hairdressing, Scalp Treatment, Shampooing, Facial Massage Manicuring - - - 50 Cents Hair Dyeing, Bleaching, Singeing by Experts Combings made up Full Line of Human Hair Goods When you want the real thing in Athletic Equipment look for this trade mark — it represents that which is best and guarantees satisfaction and service. Catalogue on Request A. G. SPALDING BROS. 523 FIFTH AVE. 124 NASSAU ST. NEW YORK CITY Cotrell Leonard Albany, N. Y. Official Makers of Caps, Gowns and Hoods r 1521 Tel. Morningside ! 8069 [ 8606 J. G. PAPADEM CO. Florists 2953 BROADWAY Bet. iisth and ueth sts. NEW YORK COMPLIMENTS of a FRIEND [ 228] PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS CHARLES FRIEDGEN Apothecary IN BUSINESS FOR YOUR HEALTH Two Stores : Whittier Hall Opp. Livingston Hall Complimentary 229] ALL KINDS OF FINE PRI NTI NG— DESI GN I NG — ENGRA VI NG COLLEGE ANNUALS SOUVENIR CALENDARS INCLUDING PLATE WORK TELEPHONE BEEKM AN OB87 arfe £. Pillar SINCE 1908 J5-V SZumciu SlzeeZ PRINTER. BINDER AND PLATE MAKER OF MORTARBOARD W7HICH, as all the undergraduate world knows, would be a penalty more severe than restricted privileges, demerits, and the most cutting maledictions of the entire discipline committee. We are sorry Mr. MacDonall drew such a mischievous picture to place before the young, but he would do it in spite of anything we could say. Censorship committee please note our own desire to be freed of responsibility in the matter. THE GENESEE PURE FOOD COMPANY Bridgeburg, One. Le Roy, N. Y. 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Suggestions in the Barnard College - Mortarboard Yearbook (New York, NY) collection:

Barnard College - Mortarboard Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1919 Edition, Page 1

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Barnard College - Mortarboard Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1920 Edition, Page 1

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Barnard College - Mortarboard Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 1

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Barnard College - Mortarboard Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 1

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Barnard College - Mortarboard Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1924 Edition, Page 1

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Barnard College - Mortarboard Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 1

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