Barnard College - Mortarboard Yearbook (New York, NY) - Class of 1925 Page 1 of 232
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Tiffany Co. Jewelry Silverware Stationery Time -Tried Dependability Mail Inquiries Given Prompt Attention Fifth Avenue 37™ Street NewYork WHAT really does make Prance? . . . Not her land and sky and water, but her people. What they have builded . . . what they have lived ! A thousand years of daring. Joan of Arc . . . Louis XIV . . . Napoleon . . . the Marne? And this child of France, the French Line . . . whence comes its amazing differences? Not so many boats on so many seas — so many tours across the sands. But the life that beats in those boats like the heart in the body. The splendor of vision that caught North Africa in the Gallic The lipmanee that is fFrcmce Awaits You! spell. The art that makes a little poem of a breakfast tray — the gayety that turns a six-day crossing into an adventure! If you ' re going to France, walk into France right up the gang-plank and land at a covered pier at Havre, which is the port of Paris, only three hours away. Get six days more of France. Be- gin to understand France before you ' ve dropped Sandy Hook astern . . . Whether you plan a quick trip on an express liner or a leisurely crossing, the French Line service provides the route ideale. ( 3r 3 enehilae Compagnie Generale Transatlantique, 19 S f ate Street, New York Offices and Agencies in Principal Cities of Europe and the United States r ! [ Seven ] f Eight J Nine ] Acknowledgments Advertisements Index PAGE 183 199-218 198 Athletics 65-75 A. A. Officers and Managers 66 A. A. Banquet and Circus 72 A. A. Snapshots 71 Baseball 69 Basketball 68 Bear Mountain 75 Field Day and Tennis 70 Final Awards — A. A. Banquet 73 Swimming 67 Alumnae 37-50 Class of 1899 48-50 Snapshots 48 Twenty-five Years Ago 49-50 Class of 1923 38-47 Commencement Exercises 39 Phi Beta Kappa 38 Senior Banquet 42 Senior Play 41 Senior Week Program and Class Day 40 Officers of Associate Alumnae 37 The Answer Man 47 Where, O, Where Can They Be? 43-46 Campus Section 13-19 Clubs 103-116 Botanical Club 112 Classical Club 113 Dance and Music Club 114-115 Debating Council 116 French Club 109 Geology Club 110 Italian Club 108 Math.-Science Club 111 Menorah 107 Newman Club 106 Spanish Club 108 Y. W. C. A. 104 Silver Bay Snapshots 105 page Dedication 8-9 Directory of Students 184-196 Dormitories Brooks Hall 62 John Jay Hall 63 Dramatics 91-94 French Club Plays 93 Miracle Plays 94 Wigs and Cues 91-93 Faculty 23-36 Aristarchean Anthology 34 Faculty Records 26-29 Mother Goose at Barnard 32-33 Officers of the University 31 Other Officers of Instruction 30 Snapshots 35, 36, 74 Foreword Greek Games Athletics Cartoons Christopher Morley ' s Appre ciation Freshman Year History of Greek Games Sophomore Year 77-90 88-89 90 80-83 79 84-87 Minor Activities 117-136 Alumnae Day 126 Barnard in the Intercollegiate World 120-121 College Assemblies 118 College Teas 129 Forum Luncheons 119 Mysteries 125 Sing Song 122 Step Singing 127 Student Friendship Drive 124 page Miscellaneous Absurdities 134 Character Book 132 Class Notes 136 Copyright 5 Faculty Children 128 ' 27 and ' 26 135 Mrs. Liggett 22 Officers of Administration 21 Old Favorites (Songs) 123 Snapshots of Familiar People 133 To a Passing Elevator and ' Lunch 130-131 Organizations 51-61 Classes 1924 54-55 1925 56-57 1926 58-59 1927 60-61 Undergraduate Association 52-53 Publications 95-102 Barnacle 100-101 Bulletin 98-99 Mortarboard 96-97, 102 1925 Section 137-182 Class Ballot 170 Class History 171-174 Individual Members of the Class 141-168 Junior Picture 138-139 Junior Week 175 Junior Prom 176 Junior Show 177-180 Other Members and Fo rmer Members of 1925 169 Snapshots 181-182 Trustees 20 [ Eleven ] [ Thirteen ] { V our teen [ Fifteen ] [ Sixteen ] [ Seventeen ] [ Eighteen ] [ Nineteen ] TRVSTEES Chairman John G. Milburn, 54 Wall Street Vice-Chairman Miss Mabel Choate, 8 East 63rd Street Clerk Piekrf. Jay, 15 Nassau Street Treasurer George A. Plimpton. 61 Park Avenue Mrs. Joseph H. Choate, 8 East 63rd Street Mrs. Alfred Meyer, 12 East 86th Street George A.Plimpton. 61 Park Avenue Mrs. James Talcott Mrs. Henry Fairfield Osborn, 998 Fifth Avenue Edward W. Sheldon, 46 Park Ave- nue Nicholas Murray Rutler, Columbia University Albert G. Milbank, 49 Wall Street Miss Clara B. Spence Howard Townsend, 27 Cedar Street John G. Milburn, Manhasset, Long Island Miss Charlotte S. Baker, 26 West 55th Street Pierre Jay, 15 Nassau Street Mrs. Charles Carv Rumsey, Wheat- ly Hills, Westbury, New York Mrs. Ogden Mills Reid, 35 West 53rd Street Miss Mabel Choate, 8 East 63rd Street George W. Wickersham, 125 East 73rd Street James R. Sheffield, 45 East 67th Street Mrs. Alfred F. Hess, 16 West 86th Street {Alumnae Trustee 1919-1923) Lucius H. Beers, 25 Broadway The Very Reverend Howard C. Rob- bins, The Deanery, Cathedral Close Mrs. George V. Mullan, 118 West 183rd Street (Alumnae Trustee 1921-1925) Mrs. Henry Wise Miller, 138 East 55th Street Gano Dunn, 20 Washington Square Deceased. | Twenty ] Officers of Administration N. W. Liggett, A.B : Bursar Anna E. H. Meyer, A.B sjj Registrar Katharine S. Doty, A.M Secretary Bertha L. Rockwell Librarian of Barnard College Henry A. Griffin, M.D Comptroller of Barnard College Mabel Foote Weeks, A.B. . . .Assistant to the Dean in Charge of Social Activities Helen Page Abbott, A.B Assistant to the Dean in Charge of Residence Halls Gulielma F. Alsop, M.D College Physician Harriet Jameson -Director of the House and Commons Margaret Harrison. . • Secretary to the Dean Julia R. Clark • Assistant Secretary to the Dean Mary V. Libby, A.B Assistant to the Dean Elizabeth Boddington Assistant to Miss Libby Ann C. Phelps Secretary to the Faculty Edna Wetterer, A.B Assistant to the Secretary Emily G. Lambert, A.B Assistant to the Bursar Helen M. Bishop, A.B Assistant to the Registrar Alice M. Brett, A.B Secretary to the Registrar Evelyn B. Dudley Secretary to the Comptroller Harriet Chamberlain, A.B. . Secretary to the Department of Physical Education Ruth B. Manser, A.B Assistant to Miss Abbott Alsie French Assistant to Miss Abbott William H. Carpenter, Pii.D Acting Librarian of the University Frederick A. Goetze, M.Sc Comptroller of the University Rev. Raymond C. Knox, S.T.I ) Chaplain of the University William H. McCastline, M.D Universitv Medical Officer [ Twenty-one ] Mrs. Liggett has chosen to retire at the end of this year. The whole college has heard this news with the deepest regret; but to the alumnae it sounds incredible — just as if someone said that Barnard itself was going to close; for Barnard without Mrs. Liggett is almost inconceivable. Herself a graduate of Vassar, she came to our infant college as Secretary in June, 1890, when it was less than one year old, and the student body numbered thirty-six. When I called, in the autumn of 1894. to inquire about entering, she was sitting in the back hall bedroom in the little old house at 343 Madison Avenue, enthusiastically running the whole institution, performing the duties, apparently, of Dean, Registrar, Bursar, Secretary, and every other administrative job. Not until 1897 did she confine herself to the position of Bursar alone. In all these early years she contributed immensely to the creation of Barnard. This is not the place for an appreciation of the business side of her work. Few bursars ' offices have ever been so well run ; practically every dollar owing t he college has been collected. However, this does not interest the average alumna or student. On the more human side, hundreds of us, in all these years, have learned to know and to love her. She has exhorted and admonished us, discussed our clothes, our manners, our matrimonial ventures. Her intense interest in Barnard, her devotion to it, her gallant spirit, her fearlessness, her humor, her ever youthful enthusiasm, all these have been most precious to us. Without her vivid personality college will seem dull and flat. She has brought us all up. And though she may retire from her active professional work she cannot lose interest in her children. She will still watch us closely, we hope; and will think we do her credit, we trust. In any event, she will carry with her always our gratitude and our very warm affection. Virginia C Gildersleeve, ' 99. [ Twenty-two ] [ Twenty-three } NICHOLAS MURRAY BUTLER President A.B., Columbia, 1882; A.M., 1883; Ph.D., 1884; Ll.D., Syracuse, 1898; Tulane, 1901; Johns Hopkins, Prince- ton, Yale and University of Pennsylvania, 1902; Chicago, 1903; Manchester and St. Andrews, 1905; Cam- bridge, 1907; Williams, 1908; Harvard and Dartmouth, 1909; Brown, 1914; Toronto, 1915; Wesleyan, 1916; J.U.D., Breslau, 1911; Litt.D., Oxford, 1905; Jur.D., University of Strasbourg, 1919; Ph.D., University of Prague, 1921; LL.D., Glasgow, 1923; Poloma Restituta (Second Class), 1923; Officier de la Legion d ' Hon- neur, 1906; Commandeur, 1912; Commander of the Red Eagle (Prussia), 1910; Grand Officer of the Royal Order of the Redeemer of Greece, First Class, 1919; 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; Hon- orary Member of Augusta, Ga., Bar Association, 1920; Member of the American Academy of Arts and Let- ters, 1911 ; Trustee of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, and of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace; President of the Association for International Conciliation (American Branch); Assistant in Philosophy, 1885; Tutor, 1887; also Lecturer on History and Institutes of Education, 1888; Adjunct Professor of Philosophy, Ethics and Psychology, 1889; Professor of same, also Lecturer on Education, 1890; Professor of Philosophy and Education, 1895; Dean of Faculty of Philosophy, 1890; Direc- tor of Summer Session, 1900 and 1901 ; President of the University, 1902. | Twenty- four ] VIRGINIA CROCHERON GILDERSLEEVE Dean and Professor of English A.B., Columbia University, 1899; A.M., 1900; Ph.D., 1908; LED., Rutgers, 1916; Assistant. Barnard College, 1900-190.?; Tutor, 1903-1907; Lecturer 1908-1910; Assistant Professor, 1910-1911; Dean and Professor, 1911- ; Phi Beta Kappa. [ Twenty- five ] Faculty EDWARD DELAVAN PERRY Jay Professor of Greek A.B., Columbia, 1875; Ph.D., Tubingen, 1879; LL.D., Columbia, 1904; Columbia Tutor in Greek and Sans- krit, 1880-1883 ; Tutor in Greek and Instructor in Sans- krit, 1883-1891; Professor of Sanskrit, 1891-1895; Jay Professor of Greek, 1895- ; Phi Beta Kappa. FRANKLIN W. 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; LLD., Iowa, 1922; 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., Harvard, 1886; Lect- urer in Mathematics, Harvard, 1885-1887; Instructor and Assistant Professor of Mathematics, University of Michigan, 1888-1895; Professor of Mathematics, Colum- bia, 1895-. WILLIAM P. TRENT Professor of English Literature A.M., University of Virginia, 1884; LL.D., Lake Forest College, 1889; D.C.L., University of the South, 1905; University of the South, 1888-1900; Columbia, 1900- ; Acting Provost of Barnard College, 1911-1912. NELSON GLENN McCREA Anthon Professor of the Latin Language and Literature A.B., Columbia, 1885; A.M., 1886; Ph.D., 1888; Uni- versity Fellow in Classical Philology, 1885-1888; Tutorial Fellow in Latin, 1885-1889; Tutor, 1889-1895; Instructor, 1895-1900; Adjunct Professor, 1900-1903; Professor, 1903; Anthon Professor of the Latin Lan- guage and Literature, 1911- ; Phi Beta Kappa. HENRY E. CRAMPTON Professor of Zoology A.B., Columbia University, 1893; Ph.D., Columbia University, 1899; Columbia University, 1893-1895; Massachusetts 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 Institution, 1903- ; Curator of Invertebrate Zoology, American Museum of Natural History, 1909-1920; Associate of Bishop Museum of Honolulu, 1920; Act- ing Provost, 1918-1919; Sigma Xi; Phi Beta Kappa. WILLIAM TENNEY BREWSTER Professor of English A.B., Harvard, 1892; A.M., 1893; Assistant, Harvard College and Radcliffe College, 1893-1894; Tutor, Co- lumbia College and Barnard College, 1894-1900; In structor, 1900-1902; Adjunct Professor, Barnard Col- lege, 1902-1906; Professor, 1906; Acting Dean, 1907- 1910; Provost, 1910-1922; Phi Beta Kappa. CHARLES KNAPP Professor of Greek and Latin A.B., Columbia, 1887; A.M., 1888; Ph.D., 1890; Prize Fellow in Classics, Columbia, 1887-1890; Tutorial Fel- low in Classics, Columbia, 1890-1891 ; Barnard Instruc- tor, 1891-1902; Adjunct Professor, 1902-1906; Pro- fessor, 1906- ; Summer Session, Chicago University ; 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 Fellow, 1895-1896; Tutor, Barnard, 1896-1898; Instruc- tor, Barnard, 1898-1902; Adjunct Professor, Barnard, 1902-1906; Professor, Barnard, 1906- ; President Torrey Botanical Club, 1917-. MARGARET E. MALTBY Associate Professor of Physics A.B., Oberlin. 1882; S.B., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1891; A.M.. Oberlin, 1891; Ph.D., Goet- tingen University, 1895; Physics Department, Wellesley College. 1889-1893 and 1896-1897; Lake Erie College, 1897-1898; Clark University. 1899-1900; Phvsikalisch- Technische Reichanstalt, 1898-1899; Barnard College, Department of Chemistry, Instructor, 1900-1903; De- partment of Physics, Adjunct Professor. 1903-1910; Assistant Professor, 1910; Associate Professor, 1913-. [ Tzventy-si.v ] 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 Romance Languages and Literatures, 1893-1900; Instructor, 1900-1904; Ad- junct Professor, 1904-1910; Assistant Professor, 1910- 1914; Associate Professor, 1913-. JAMES T. SHOTWELL Professor of History A. B., Toronto, 1898 ; Ph.D., Columbia, 1903 ; Colum- bia University Scholar in European History, 1898-1899; Fellow in European History, 1899-1900 ; Assistant, 1900- 1901; Lecturer. 1901-1903; Instructor, 1903-1905; Ad- junct Professor, 1905-1908; Professor, 1908-. EDWARD KASNER Professor of Mathematics B. S., College of the City of New York, 1896; A.M., Columbia University, 1897; Ph.D., 1899; Barnard, 1900- ; Phi Beta Kappa ; National Academy of Sciences ; Editor of Transactions of the American Mathematical Society, 1923-. WILLIAM P. MONTAGUE Professor of Philosophy A.B., Harvard, 1896; A.M., 1897; Ph.D., 1898; Har- vard. 1898-1899; University of California. 1899-1903; Columbia Lecturer, 1903-1904; Tutor, 1904-1905; In- structor, 1905-1907; Adjunct Professor, 1907-1910; Associate Professor. 1910-1920; Professor, 1920- ; Presi- dent of American Philosophical Association (Eastern Division ), 1923-. GRACE A. HUBBARD Associate Professor of English A.B.. Smith; A. M., Cornell, 1892; Sorbonne, 1898- 1899; Columbia, 1904-1906; Assistant, Instructor, Asso- ciate Professor, Smith, 1892-1904; Barnard Lecturer, 1905-1907; Associate Professor, 1907- ; Phi Beta Kappa. MARIE REIMER Professor of Chemistry A.B., Vassar, 1897; Ph.D., Brvn Mawr, 1904; Vassar College, 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 Professor, 1910-1921; Professor, 1921- ; Phi Beta Kappa. ADAM LEROY JONES Director of U niversity Admissions A.B., 1895, Williams College; Ph.D., 1898, Columbia University; Assistant in Philosophy, Columbia Univer- sity, 1898-1901; Lecturer, 1901-1902; Tutor, 1902-1905; Preceptor in Philosophy, Princeton University, 1905- 1909; Associate Professor of Philosophy and Director of Admissions, 1909-. RAYMOND WEEKS Professor of Romance Philology A.B., Harvard, 1890; A.M., 1891; Ph.D., 1897; Uni- versity of Michigan, 1891-1893; Traveling Fellow of Harvard University, 1903-1905 (Universities of Paris and Berlin); University of Missouri, 1895-1908; Stu- dent at University of Paris, 1904-1905; University of Illinois, 1908-1909; Columbia and Barnard, 1909- ; Chevalier de la Legion d ' Honneur, 1918. WILLIAM ALFRED BRAUN Associate Professor of Germanic Language and Literature A.B., Toronto University, 1895; Ph.D., Columbia, 1903; Fellow in German, Chicago UJniversity, 1898- 1899 ; Fellow in German, Columbia University, 1899- 1900; Barnard Assistant, 1900-1901; Tutor, 1901-1906; Instructor, 1906-1910; Assistant Professor, 1910-1911; Associate Professor, 191 1-; Visiting Professor, Zurich, 1922. TRACY ELLIOT HAZEN Assistant Professor of Botany A.B., University of Vermont, 1897 ; A.M., Columbia University, 1899; Ph.D., 1900; Director of Fairbanks Museum of Natural Science, St. Tolmsbury, Vermont, 1901-1902; Assistant at Columbia, 1902; Tutor at Bar- nard, 1903-1907; Instructor, 1907-1910; Assistant Pro- fessor, 1910- ; Phi Beta Kappa; Sigma Xi. JOHN LAWRENCE GERIG Associate Professor of Celtic A.B., 1898; A.M.. University of Missouri, 1899; Ph.D., University of Nebraska, 1902; University of Nebraska. Instructor in Romance Languages, Sanskrit and Comparative Philology, 1899-1903 ; Instructor in Romance Languages, Williams College, 1905-1906; Lec- turer, Columbia University, 1906; Instructor, 1909; As- sistant Professor of Romance Languages, 1910; Asso- ciate Professor, 1912- ; Phi Beta Kappa. [ Tzv en ty- seven ] 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 Classical Studies, Athens, Greece, 1901-1902; Acting Professor of Greek, University of Colorado, 1902-1903; Instructor, Washington University, St. Louis, 1904 ; Preceptor, Princeton University, 1905-1910; Associate Professor, Columbia University, 1910-1920; Professor, 1920-. CHARLES SEARS BALDWIN Professor of Rhetoric and English Composition A.B., Columbia, 1888; A.M., 1889; Ph.D., 1894; Fel- low in English, Columbia, 1888-1891; Tutor in Rhetoric, 1891-1894; Instructor, 1894-1895; Instructor in Rhet- oric, Yale, 1895-1898; Assistant Professor, 1898-1908; Professor, 1909-1911; Professor of Rhetoric, Barnard College, 191 1-. ROBERT E. CHADDOCK Professor of Statistics A.B., Wooster, 1900; A.M., Columbia, 1906; Ph.D., 1908; Instructor, Wooster, 1900-1905; University Fel- low and Honorarv Fellow in Sociology, Columbia, 1906-1907, 1907-1908; Instructor, University of Pennsyl- vania, 1909-1911; Assistant Professor and Director of Statistical Laboratory, Columbia, 1911-1912; Associate Professor, 1912-1922; Professor, 1922-. DAVID SAVILLE MUZZEY Professor of Hist or A.B., Harvard, 1893; B.D., New York University, 1897; Ph.D., Columbia, 1907; Teacher in Mathematics, Roberts College, Constantinople, 1893-1894; Teacher of Classics and History, Ethical Culture School, 1899- 1905; Head of History Department, Ethical Culture School. 1905-1911; Barnard, Associate Professor, 1911- 1920; Professor, 1920-. GERTRUDE M. HIRST Associate Professor of Greek and Latin Cambridge Cla ssical Tripos (Part I), 1890; A.M., Columbia University, 1900; Ph.D., 1902; Barnard, As- sistant, 1901-1903; Tutor, 1903-1905; Instructor, 1905- 1912; Assistant Professor, 1912-1923; Associate Pro- fessor, 1923- ; Phi Beta Kappa. IDA H. OGILVIE Associate Professor of Geoloqv A.B., Bryn Mawr. 1900; Ph.D., Columbia. 1903; Bar- nard, Lecturer, 1903-1905; Instructor, 1905-1912; As- sistant Professor, 1912-1916; Associate Professor, 1916- ; Sigma Xi. HENRI F. MULLER Assistant Professor of Prench B.csL, Paris, 1897; Ph.D., Columbia. 1912; Tutor, Barnard College, 1905-1909; Instructor, 1909-1914; As- sistant Professor, 191 4-. HARRY L. HOLLING WORTH Professor of Psychology A.B., Nebraska, 1906; Ph.D. Columbia, 1909; As- sistant. Tutor, Instructor, Assistant Professor, Colum- bia, 1909-1916; Associate Professor, 1916; Assistant Professor, 1916-1921 ; Professor, 1921 ; Phi Beta Kappa ; Sigma Xi. LOUISE HOYT GREGORY Assistant Professor of Zoology A. B., Vassar, 1903; A.M., Columbia, ' 1907; Ph.D., Columbia, 1909. 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. WILLIAM HALLER Assistant Professor of English A.B., Amherst, 1908; A.M., Columbia, 1911; Ph.D., 1917; Instructor in English, Amherst, 1908-1909; As- sistant and Instructor in English, Barnard, 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, Wellesley, 1904-1908; Scholar of the Society of American Women in London, 1908-1910; Student at Oxford University, 1908-1910; Adviser to Women Students in Journalism, Columbia University, 1916-1922; President of the Associate Alumnae of Bar- nard College, 1915-1917. EMILIE J. HUTCHINSON Assistant Professor of Economics V.B., Columbia University, 1905; A.M., 1908; Ph.D., 1919; Instructor in Economics, Mt. Holyoke College, 1907-1910; Welleslev College, 1910-1911, 1912-1913; Bar- nard College, 1913-1919; Assistant Professor, 1919- ; Alice Freeman Palmer Fellowship, 1921-1922. [ Twenty-eight ] GEORGE WALKER MULLINS Associate Professor of Mathematics A.B., University of Arkansas, 1904; A.M., Columbia University, 1913; Ph.D.. 1917; Professor of Mathe- matics, Simmons College, Texas, 1905-1912; Instructor in Mathematics, Barnard College, 1913-1919; Assistant Professor, 1919-1923; Associate Professor, 1923-. WILLIAM FIELDING OGBURN Professor of Sociology B.S., Mercer College, 1905; A.M., Columbia Univer- sity, 1909; Ph.D., 1912; Instructor in Economics, His- tory and Politics, Princeton University. 1911-1912; Pro- fessor 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, Na- tional Labor Board. 1918 ; Special Agent, United States Bureau of Labor Statistics. 1919; Professor of Soci- ology, Barnard College, 1919-. AGNES R. WAYMAN Assistant Professor of Physical Education A. B., University of Chicago, 1903; Instructor in Phys- ical Education, University of Chicago, 1903-1906; In- structor and Student, Yale Summer School, 1905-1906; Physical Director State Normal School, Trenton, N. J., 1906-1910; Director of Athletics, University of Chi- cago. 1910-1916; Instructor of Athletics, Normal School of Physical Education. Battle Creek, Michigan, Sum- mer, 1915; Physical Director. Winthrop Industrial and Normal College, Rock Hill S. C, 1916-1917; Teacher, Wadleigh High School. New York City. 1917-1918; Instructor, Barnard College. 1918-1919; Assistant Pro- fessor, Barnard Co ' ' ege. 1919- ; Lecturer in Chicago Normal School of Physical Education, April. MELVIN M. KNIGHT Assistant Professor of History A.B., Texas Christian University, 1913; A.M.. 1914; Ph.D., Chrk University 1917; Assistant Professor of History Texas Christian University. 1913-1914; Pro- fessor, 1914-1917; Balkan Historian Commission, 1919; Assistant Professor of Political Science. Hunter Col- lege, 1920; Assistant Professor of Economics Univer- sity of Utah, 1920-1921 ; Lecturer in Economic History and Theory, University of California Summer Ses- sion, 1921 ; Assistant Professor of History, Barnard, 1921 -. HUGH WILEY PUCKETT Assistant Professor of German A.B., Southern University, 1905; A.M., Tulane Uni- versity. 1907; Harvard University, 1913; Ph.D., Uni- versity of Munich, 1914; Teaching Fellow of Latin at Tulane University, 1906-1907; Instructor in Latin, Tu- lane University, 1907-1908; Professor of Modern Lan- guages, Birmingham College, 1908-1911; Instructor in German, Tufts College, 1912-1913; Parker Fellow from Harvard, 1913-1914; Instructor in German, Rochester University, 1914-1915; Instructor, University of Illi- nois, 1915-1916; Lecturer in Germanic Languages and Literatures, Barnard College, 1916-1922; Assistant Pro- fessor of German, Barnard College, 1922-. RAYMOND MOLEY Associate Professor of Government A.B., Baldwin Wallace College, 1906; Superintendent of Schools, Olmsted Falls. Ohio, 1906-1910; Instruc- tor, West High School, Cleveland, 1912-1914; A.M., Oberlin, 1913; Instructor and Assistant Professor of Government, Western Reserve University, 1916-1919; Ph.D., Columbia, 1918; Director Cleveland Foundation, 1919-1923; Associate Professor of Government, 1923-. ERNEST THEODORE DE WALD Assistant Professor of Fine Arts A.B., Rutgers, 1911; M.A.. Princeton, 1914; Ph.D., Princeton, 1916; Phi Beta Kappa; Rutgers, 1920-1923, Assistant Professor of Fine Arts. MARGUERITE MESPOULET Visiting Lecturer in French Literature Agregee de L ' Univcrsite de Paris. DR. SANTA BORGHESE Lecturer in Italian Licenza Liceale, Rome, 1916; Diploma Universitario di l ' o grado di abilota ; zione all ' insegnamento della lingua inglese, Rome, 1919; Laurea in Filosofia, Bologna, 1922. MABEL FOOTE WEEKS Associate in English A.B., RadclifFe, 1894; Dr. Sachs ' School for Girls; Barnard. Adjunct Professor 1907-1910; Associate, 1910- ; Mistress of Brooks Hall. 1908-1922; Assistant to the Dean in Charge of Social Affairs. 1922-. HELEN P. ABBOTT Assistant ) the Dean in Charge of Resident Halls A.B. Vassar, 1904; Student at University of Berlin. 1904-1906; Teacher of German, 1906-1918; Director of Hostess Houses. 1918-1919; Barnard, Director of Co- operative Dormitory, 1919-1920; Director of Tohn Jay Hall. 1920-1922; Assistant to the Dean in Charge of Residence Halls, 1922. | wenty-nine ] OTHER OFFICERS OF INSTRUCTION Emily James Putnam, A.B Associate in Greek and Latin Carolina Marcial-Dorado, A.M Associate in Spanish Arthur Cushman McGiffert, Ph.D., D.D., LL.D Associate in Religious Instruction Hugh Black, D.D., D.Litt Associate in Religious Instruction Eugene William Lyman, D.D Associate in Religious Instruction Grace Langford, S.B Instructor in Physics Ethei. Sturtevant, A.M Instructor in English Minor W. Latham, A.M Instructor in English Florence de Loiselle Lowther, A..M Instructor in Zoology 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 Grace Potter Rice, Ph.D Instructor in Chemistry Elizabeth Faulkner Baker, A.M Instructor in Economics Gertrude Ware, Ph.D Instructor in Chemistry Lelia M. Finan Instructor in Physical Education Cornelia L. Carey, Ph.D Instructor in Botany Meryle Hauser Instructor in Physical Education Florrie Holzwasser, A.M Instructor in Geology Rene E. G. Vaillant, A.B., LL.M Instructor in Romance Languages and Literatures Helene Bieler Instructor in Romance Languages Mary Dillon Instructor in Physical Education Georgina Stickland Gates, Ph.D Instructor in Psychology J. Emilie Young, A.B Instructor in History Mary G. Springer, A.M Instructor in Zoology Candace Howard Lecturer in Physical Education Dorothy Nye Lecturer in Physical Education Olive Spear Assistant in Zoology Clara Eliot, A.B Instructor in Economics Horace Taylor Lecturer in Economics Thomas Preston Peardon, A.M Instructor in History Gladys Reichard, Ph.D Instructor in Anthropology Marion E. Richards, A.M Lecturer in Botany Blanche Prenez Lecturer in French Isabel Leavenworth, A.B Lecturer in Philosophy Estelle H. Davis Lecturer in English Arnold Whitridge, A.B Lecturer in English Ruth B. Manser, A.B Lecturer in English William M. Gafafer, A.M Lecturer in Mathematics Herbert J. Philips, A.B Lecturer in Philosophy Thomas James Riley, Ph.D Lecturer in Sociology Frances Orr Severinghaus, A.M Assistant in Physics Catherine Blood Assistant in Botany Helen Martin, A.B Assistant in Chemistry Janet H. Robb, A.B Assistant in History Rachel V. Metcalf Assistant in Zoology Marie Hopper Assistant in Botany F. A. Kilinski Assistant in Geology Frederick H. Lund, A.M Assistant in Psychology f Thirty ] 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 Professor Marie Reimer Department of Chemistry Professor William F. Ogburn Department of Economics Professor Charles S. Baldwin • Department of English Associate Professor Ida S. Ogilvie Department of Geology Associate Professor William Braun. . . .Department of Germanic Languages and Literatures Associate Professor Raymond Moley 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 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 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 S. Butler Murray Assistant Professor of Fine Arts Arthur F. J. Remy, Ph.D Associate Professor of Germanic Philology George P. Krapp ..Professor of English Willystine Goodsell, Ph.D Assistant Professor of Education Wendell T. Bush, Ph.D Associate Professor of Philosophy Dino Bigongiari, A.B Associate Professor of Italian Ernest H. Wright, Ph.D Assistant Professor of English Mary Theodora Whitley, Ph.D Assistant Professor of Educational Psychology Dixon R. Fox, Ph.D Assistant Professor of History Clinton W. Keyes • Instructor in Greek and Latin Vito G. Toglia Instructor in Italian [ Thirty-one ] f Thirty-two ] f 7 hirty-three 1 An Aristarchean Anthology (With Apologies to E. L. M.) Secret of Freshmen expectation Secret of Sophomores elevation Secret of Juniors procrastination Secret of Seniors emancipation Secret of Alumnae realization Our secret lies here revealed BILLIE BENNIE BOOSTER LEONORE TELLER Critic and Gentleman Savant I was a provost, My mind was a mirror, Flunked in and flunked out It saw what it saw, it knew what it knew. Everyone I could. T showed it to my chem. classes, I was later professor But they saw nothing. And I went on flunking. INA WITE SLATHAM „ W ' D I G G ETT Apostle of Freedom Guardian of the Exchequer t 1 .1 .• C . , I knew the feeling of gold— I almost won the nomina ion for most be- Go , d mQ cold m hands . loved of all the faculty fiut h d within m And somehow it was known through all j stem co nsel tQ Freshmen my classes m feared me Qld d learned How individual I was, rj, , , . . . . tt„ i t i To catch the twinkle in my eyes; How much I knew; -™ e -j T . t , . , j 1 hey were never afraid. But I was not elected ; J I was outvoted by the girls I flunked. ELLEN CAGE HABOT ROSELLE SAVUS Warden Exponent of Voice Culture I had no objection at all Ye mortals, sin bevond sin J° .having them sing in the choir, Is the sin of exposing to the future a Vlslt , museums or attend the lectures of throaty voice; „ the scholarly— And jov beyond joy is the joy But to promenade unlighted bvways Of breathing from your diaphragm At ni R ht - alone and unprotected— And exploding on A. [t made me sad. H. FRANCES FULLER CALVIN WHITE Idealiste Warrior and Teacher I was a professor I shocked many times Talked about, dreamed about, The classes that were sent to me. Lover of Romance They sat with bent heads, not daring to Who disclosed to my students argue. A world beyond their world. In truth, I spoke not of history, but of life. [ Thirty-four ] [ Thirty-five ] f 7 hirty-six ] ALVMNAE OFFICERS OF THE ASSOCIATE ALUMNAE 1923-24 President Margaret Yates, ' 08 Vic e-President and Chairman of Finance Committee Sarah Butler, ' 15 Vice-President and Chairman of Reunion Committee Dorothy Herod, ' 14 Secretary Louise Odencrantz, ' 07 Treasurer Mildred Blout, ' 18 Dr. Anna von Sholly, ' 98 Mary Voorhees Jaques, ' 10 Christine McKim Gillespie (Mrs. Katharine Gay, ' 11 James P.), ' 01 _ „ , , J Marv Polhemus Olvphant (Mrs. juliana Shields Haskel (Mrs. Henry), Murray) ' 11 ' 04 ' Alice Brett, IS Jean Loomis Frame (Mrs. James E.), - , Q4 J Dorothy Leet, 1 Jessie Cochran Reymond (Mrs. Rob- Margaret Giddings, ' 18 ert ) . ' 09 Evelyn Orne, ' 22 OTHER OFFICERS I Helen St. Clair Mullan (Mrs. George), ' 98 Alumnae 1 rustees .{ „ , r , ■.,, „ , . , T N )r n | Eleanor Gay v an de Water (Mrs. rredenck, Jr.), W Executive Secretary, Alumnae Day Committee Anna Reilev, ' 05 Chairman . .Helen Blumenthal Valen- ,, „ ., tine (Mrs. Irving), ' 15 Alumnae Council m ■-en- r -i T7 a ' Alumnae Association Fund Chairman .... Ellinor Reilev Endicott _ ' , , m Committee (Mrs. George), Uu „, . , ,. „ M - v 8 ' ' Chairman Alice Brett, 15 Students ' Aid Committee a. A. U. W. Councillor Marjorie Chairman Mabel Parsons, ' 95 Jacobi McAneny (Mrs. George), ' 99 | Thirty-seven New York Delta (Columbia University) Chapter of Phi Beta Kappa Fraternity BARNARD SECTION OFFICERS Vivian Tappan, 1919 President Cornelia Carey, 1919 Vice-President Emilie Young, 1919 Secretary Alma Ruhl, 1917 Treasurer Charter Ofeicers Louise Stabler Parker (Mrs. G. H.), Tessie Wallace Hughan, 1898 1893 Helen St. Clair Mullan (Mrs. G. V), Ella Fitzgerald Bryson (Mrs. F. G), 1898 1894 Susan Isabelle Meyers, 1898 Caroline Brombaker Stacy (Mrs. S. Martha Ornstein Brenner (Mrs. J. G), 1895 B.), 1899 Anna Cole Mellick, 1896 Virginia Crocheron Gildersleeve, 1899 Gertrude Wolff Oppenheimer (Mrs. Grace Harriet Goodale, 1899 E.), 1896 Elsie Mabel Kupfer, 1899 Elsie Clews Parsons (Mrs. H.), 1896 Ellinor Reilev Endicott (Mrs. G), Louise Brisbin Dunn, 1897 1900 Adaline Caswell Wheelock, 1897 Jeanette Bliss Gillespy, 1900 Honorary Members Laura Drake Gill Elected 1901 Gertrude M. Hirst Elected 1911 Amy Lowell Elected 1920 Caroline F. E. Spurgeon Elected 1920 Members Elected in 1923 Alice Boehringer Valentina Janicke Effie Morehouse Garda Brown Harriet Dryden Jones Leone Newton Margaret Craton Marguerite Loud Dorothy Roman Hazel Dean Ruth Lustbader Dorothy Scholze Denver Frankel Agnes MacDonald Katherine Shea Marie Gregory Hanna Mann Lois Strong Georgene Hoffman Margaret Mead Margaret Trusler [ Thirty-eight ] 169th Annual Commencement of Columbia University 1923 Duror Memorial Graduate Fellowship 1923 1923 Nelly Jacob, 1924 KoIih Prize in Mathematics Effie Morehouse, 1923 Helen Prince Memorial Prize Lucia Blanca Alzamora, 1924 1926 1923 1923 DEGREES WITH HONORS Psychology: Georgene Janet Hoffman French: Valentina Janicke English: Marguerite Loud Margaret Trusler Classical: Dorothy Frances Scholze Physics: Katherine Shea With Honorable Mention: Hazel Dean Ruth Lea Lustbader Agnes MacDonald Hanna Mann Margaret Mead Dorothy Roman [ Thirty-nine ] «G= © SMIW C33 - 43 Program of Senior Week Senior Show — Friday, June 1st, and Saturday, June 2nd., Brinckerhoff. Baccalaureate Service — Sunday, June 3rd, 4 :L)0 P. M., St. Paul ' s Chapel. Senior Dance— Monday, June 4th, 9:00 P. M., Students ' Hall. Class Day Exercises — Tuesday, June 5th, 2 :30 P. M., Gymnasium. Campus Night — Tuesday, June 5th, 8:00 P. M., Columbia Campus. Commencement — Wednesday, June 6th, 10:30 A. M., Columbia Gymnasium. Trustees ' Lunch — Wednesday, June 6th, Students ' Hall. Play — Given bv Class of 1908, Wednesday, Tune 6th, Brinckerhoff. Tea— Given by Class of 1918, Wednesday, ' June 6th, 5:00 P. M., North Terrace, Students ' Hall. Play— Given by Class of 1913, Wednesday, June 6th, 8:30 P. M., Brinckerhoff. Ivy Ceremony — Thursday, June 7th, 6:00 P. M., Students ' Hall. Senior Banquet — Thursday, June 7th, 7:00 P. M., Students ' Hall. SENIOR WEEK COMMITTEE Irene Lewis, Chairman Minnie Mae Fleming Katherine Seymour Yvonne Mden Mary Weeks Dorothy Maloney Edna Moreau, Secretary Helen Goldstone EX OFFICIO Edvthe Sheehan Gertrude Cahill PROGRAM. OF CLASS DAY EXERCISES Processional Class Song Salutatory Gertrude Cahill Class History Denver Frankel Knocks As arranged by Parrish Little and Committee Presentation of 1923 ' s gift to Barnard Irene Lewis Announcement of the Phi Beta Kappa Elections Miss Vivian Tappan Valedictory Edvthe Sheehan Sunset Song Recessional CLASS DAY COMMITTEE Irene Lewis, Chairman Helen Pattenden Elizabeth Wood Parrish Little Katherine Shea Gertrude Cahill, Ex Officio- [ Forty ] The Class of 1923 presents Tut Tut Act. 1. On board ship bound for Egypt We ' re Off Ensemble First You Say You ' re Sorry Edythe Sheehan and Denver Frankel Hear the Home Ties Calling Jean Murray The Three-mile Limit Ensemble Act. 2. Outside the tomb Tootsie Rolls Nadine Sinclair, Mary Weeks, Jessie Beers, Margaret Craton and Olga Autenreith Egyptian Dance Edythe Sheehan, Denver Frankel and Margaret Spotz Always Help the Wretched and the Poor Jean Murray Act. 3. Inside the tomb Lady of Romance Edythe Sheehan and Denver Frankel Dance of the Pharaohs, Hazel Dean, Dorothy Barta, Valentina Janicke, Helen Balder Tut Tnt Ensemble Senior Show Committee Chairman — Yvonne Moen Minnie Mae Fleming Director Mary Weeks Chairman of Costuming Eleanor Marples Chairman of Staging Margaret Spotz Chairman of Music Olga Autenreith Chairman of Dancing Ethel Wise Business Manager Ex Officio Irene Lewis Gertrude Cahill Edythe Sheehan f Forty-one ] Senior Banquet in the Happy Eating Grounds POW WOW OF THE NUN BUTT SQUAWS Witch Doctors Peppysqua Silver Tongue Goodfriend, Chief of the Nun Butt Squaws Laughing Ha Ha, Heap Big Chief Maid of the Week Huntresses oe the Provender Maude Cabot Charlotte Bradley Marion Mettler Constance Dunne Katherine Browne Katharine Newcomer Gertrude Gottschall Viola Travis Fern Yates Kate Jackson Margaret Melosh Madeleine Hooke Naomi Lubell Eleanor Wood Margaret Irish Katharine Ashworth Alice Mendham Meta Hailparn Marion Pinkussohn Elsa Preische Committee Katherine Seymour, Chairman Katherine Shea Margaret Miller Hanna Mann Margaret Craton Ex Officio Gertrude Cahill Edythe Sheehan Irene Lewis [ Forty-two ] Where, O Where, Can They Be? Adler, Ruth Mathematical clerk in the Occupational Rating Department of the Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. Alderman, Maydelle In charge of the subscriptions for the Big Shrine Auditorium, Whittier, California Allen, Lylias B Arnold, Margaret Autenrieth, O lga Assistant in order department, Gotham Hosiery Co. Balder, Helen Working on a poultry farm, Bridgehampton, Long Island Barta, Dorothy Substitute teacher of mathematics in the Bushwick High School, Brooklyn Becker, Grace Studying at Columbia Beers, Jessie A Benczur, Helen Bingham, Esther M Stenographer for the National Life Insurance Co., Madison, Wisconsin Blauvelt, Anna Teaching in the high school at Fort Edward, New York Boas, Frances Taking a course at the Arts and Crafts School, Breslau, Germany Boehringer, Alice Teaching in Smithtown Branch, New York Bowman, Irene Teaching in Schenectady, New York Bowtell, Margaret Teaching in Hudson Falls, New York Boyd, Nancy Research assistant at the National Industrial Conference Board Bradshaw, Helen Louise Teaching in Coudersport, Pennsylvania Brandt, Marie Brink, Frances Brown, Garda Teaching at Wadleigh High School Brown, Louise Teaching in Evansville, Indiana Bull, Muriel Burbank, Alice Teaching in the Collegiate School in Richmond, Virginia Cahill, Gertrude Clerk in the Farmers ' Loan and Trust Company Cahen, Simone Campanero, Rose Teaching in St. Agnes ' Seminary, Brooklyn Case, Teresa Laboratory assistant and clerk at the H. A. Metz chemical laboratories Catoggio, Rose Statistician for the Bureau of Home Economics Clay, Katherine B [ Forty-three ] Cook, Dorothy Studying Law at Yale Collins, Julia Teaching school in Xaturita, Colorado Corse, Elizabeth Craton, Margaret Teaching at St. Katherine ' s Hall in Davenport, Iowa Craven, Doris Dean, Hazel Studying at Columbia Danchakoff, Vera De Voy, Catherine Elizabeth Dockstader, Dorothy Clerk in the Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences Donahue, May Teaching in a high school in New Jersey Donavan, Mary E Teaching in the high school at Fort Edward, New York Dunbrack, Winifred Teaching in the Spelman Seminary in Atlanta, Georgia Fahs, Virginia Foxell, Mary E Frankel, Denver Fulcher, Pauline Teaching in Pearl River, New York Galt, Emily H Studying stenography at the Washington School for Secretaries Gleichman, Leah Field worker in training with the Hebrew Guardian Sheltering Society Godfrey, Miriam Cecilia Goldstone, Helen Married Richard C. Kitzinger Haber, Florence Social worker with the Women ' s Protective Association in Cleveland Haig, Phyllis Hall, Mary E Harris, Dorothy E Havre, Sylvia Hoff, Rhoda Part time clerk in Dr. Alsop ' s office Hattorff. Elsa Studying at Columbia Hemstreet, Myrtle Substitute in the city public schools Hoffman, Georgene Studying at Columbia Hoffman, Helen Studying at Columbia Hoctor, Eloise - ssistant investigator for the Legal Aid Society Houghton, Dorothy Teaching at Packer Collegiate Institute, Brooklyn Hughes, Anita Statistical clerk with the Standard Oil Co. Issertell, Edna Assistant in Philosophy at Bryn Mawr Janicke, Valentina Teaching in Beacon, New York Iaros, Natalie Taking a secretarial course Jennings, Esther Teacher in the high school, Belleville, Xew Jersey Jones, Harriet Teaching in the Baldwin School, Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania Tones, Rosalind Sales correspondent for E. H. Rollins Son Bond Brokers Kassner. Mildred Teaching in the Boys ' High School, Brooklyn Kerrigan, Katherine. f F orty-four ] Kingman, Marion Clerk with Matthews Co., Kingston, New York Klein, Elizabeth 1 Medical translator for Dr. Weisberg KOLLER, HORTENSE W , K rom an, Edna Langton, Maky Lewis, Ethel Teaching in Stow, Massachusetts Lewis, Irene Teaching in Mount Holley, New Jersey Little, Parrish .. Secretary to Prof. Warren at Princeton and Editorial assistant on the Psychological Review Loftus, Clare Teaching in Belvedere, New Jersey Loud, Marguerite Duror Graduate Fellow, studying at the Sorbonne Lustbader, Ruth Studying at Bryn Mawr Mann, Hanna Social Service Work at the Hebrew Health Centre MacDonald, Agnes Teaching Latin in Mrs. Merril ' s School in Mamaroneck, New York MacNamara, Charlotte Studying at Columbia Maloney, Dorothy Studying at Columbia Marpi.es, Eleanor Laboratory assistant and clerk at the H. A. Metz chemical laboratories Marshall, Jean Studying medicine in England Martens, Emily Mathematical clerk and engineer ' s assistant with the New York Telephone Co. Martin, Anna Teaching in Cooperstown, New York McCall, Mary A Secretary with the U. S. Metals Refining Co., Carteret, New Jersey McElroy, Katherine L McGuire, Elizabeth C Office assistant with the Magna Vox Co. Marx, Emily Studying Law at Yale McIlvaine, Ruth Studying singing Mead, Magaret, Ass ' t to Prof. Ogburn and taking graduate courses in Psychology (Married to L. S. Cressman) Meyer, Frances C Teaching in a Junior high school in Brooklyn (Married to Mr. Stadholz) Miller, Hortense Married Miller, Margaret Mathematical clerk for the Bell Telephone Co. Morehouse, Effie Moran, Geraldine Taking a secretarial course in the School of Business, Columbia University Moreau, Edna Teaching in West New York, New Jersey Mosher, Muriel Teaching in Sherrill, New York Murden, Leah C Murray, Jean Clerk with the New York Telephone Co. Near, Arcadia Statistician with the Institute of Economics, Washington Newton, Leone O ' Brien, Katherine Teaching in the Ursuline Academy, New York City Pattenden, Helen Statistical clerk with the American Telephone Telegraph Co. Phelps, Eleanor Working with the National Student Forum Prince, Ruth Purdy, Agnes Studying at the New York School of Social Work [ Forty-five ] Raphael, Estella Teaching at Wadleigh High School Rice, Elinor Saleswoman with McDevitt Wilson Co., Inc., Publishers Richardson, Inez Richardson, Mary M Married to Charles H. Lutterlock Robinson, Wilhelmina Traveling abroad Roman, Dorothy Statistical clerk with the East Harlem Nursing and Health Center Rothschild, Dorothy Resident worker in a settlement house, East Side House, 540 East 76th St Schneeweiss, Margarete L Shatz, Dorothy Scholze, Dorothy Teaching in Southold, New York Seymour, Katherine Teaching in Pearl River, New York Shea, Katherine Has a Graduate Scholarship at Radcliffe Shea, Aileen Sheehan, Edythe Teaching in Washington Irving High School Silbert, Doris Teaching music at Smith College Simpson, Gertrude Teaching in Pine Plains. New Jersey Sinclair, Nadine Draughtsman and statistical clerk with the Western Electrical Co. Slaughter, Mary L Smith, Anita Teaching in Bay Ridge High School Spotz, Margaret J. .Teaching music in New Rochelle, and studying at the American Institute of Applied Music Stauffer, Edna Teaching in Swarthmore, Pennsylvania Strong, Lois Has a scholarship for study at the University of Toulouse, France Strauss, Ruth H Symon, Vera M Swartz, Thelma Teaching in Belleville, New Jersey Trantum, Emily V Teaching in Absecon, New Jersey Truax, Rhoda Trusler, Margaret Teaching Fellow in English at the University of Chicago Weaver, Mildred Weeks, Mary Teaching in St. John Baptist School, Ralston, New Jersey Werner, Helen M Studying at Columbia White, Mildred Studying at Columbia Whyte, Lucy Williams, Alice Secretary to Miss Hatcher, of the Southern Women ' s Educational Alliance Williford, Annie M Studying at Columbia Wood, Elizabeth Teaching in Hawley, Pennsylvania Wise, Ethel H Working with Thomas Co., Publishers Wright, Ada M [ Forty-six ] The Answer Man This department is for information of local inter- All inquiries should contain the name and address est only. Those desiring answers by mail must en- of the writer. No crush letters, personal questiona close stamped, addressed envelope. or poison pen letters will be answered. Frannie Freshman: Yes, Edythe Sheehan is from Barnard. She and I were great friends. I used to help her write all her speeches when she was Under- grad. President. That ' s why they were so good. Yes, she is writing a musical comedy, but she doesn ' t let it interfere with her chosen career. For more specific information address Tammany Hall. Please write again soon. We like your pink paper. Mid-term Madness: Thanks for the gum. Every chew will be a thought of you. Yes, you may be- come a Grecian dancer without being born a Greek. I recommend Frances Boas to you. She ' s in Ger- many now, but it ' s really worth looking her up, even there. She ' ll teach you to shake a mean foot. You ' re welcome, come again. Barbara Barnard: You evidently have a very sweet disposition; but from your description of yourself I do not think that Denver Frankel would consider you such good material for the stage. Why not join a discussion group instead? If you insist on seeing her, try to slide past the doorman in Artists and Models. Constance College: No, I never went in for higher education. The nearest I ever got to it was knowing Gertrude Cahill. Yes, I think she might answer your letter. She is five feet three inches, blond, with blue eyes, and the friendliest soul in the world. Xo, she is not married. If brother wants to write, too, he will have lots of competition. All I can do is to wish him luck. Caffie Tearia: No, you have misjudged me. I am intensely interested in prospective social workers — especially in Hanna Mann (to whom you refer), because she was prospective for such a long time. My advice to you is — dodge Phi Beta Kappa and hunt a job. Athletic Ada: So you perform cm the parallel bars. Look out! Many a beautiful girl has been ruined by a broken nose. Is that really the onlv way you could attain your ambition of emulating Mac? It will probably be a great shock to you to learn that she has finally decided between the two possible careers open to her of an athlete or a stu- dent, in favor of the latter. She still visits the Barnard Gym. every day or two for old times ' sake and stands looking on at the basketball with her old cheery smile. K. Seymour, whom you also asked me about, is leading the Rural Life, and the village brass band in Pearl River. She went there for a little peace after all the noise the Seniors made w hen she told them to last year. Hattie Highbrozv: I like your nom-de-plume. Are you as intellectual as you sound? No, I have not read Marguerite Loud ' s How I Introduced the Honor System in the Sorbonne. I do not under- stand that kind of language. Yes, I am very proud of Marguerite. She gave an intellectual touch to the college — and she was no grind, either. Susie Psychic: So you hear that Margaret Mead Cressman is writing a book on The Psychology of Managing a Husband, Cooking String Beans and Getting an M.A. Maybe she is ! I hear that she is extremely busy, but she may analyze your hand- writing. If you don ' t find her bending over the kitchen-stove you may catch her in the Ec Depart- ment office correcting quizzes. Sorry I am not a fortune teller. There is a personal touch in your letter that sort of appeals to me. I just tipped the ink-bottle over and the type- writer ribbon is shot. Further inquiries will be answered in our next. Au rcvoir a toute a l ' heure ! [ Forty-seven ] [ Forty-eight ] Twenty-five Years Ago Good morning, girls ! said Mrs. Liggett, as the class of ' 99 came to college early one September morning for the first time. Go hang your clothes in the butler ' s pantry or, if there isn ' t room there, put them down in the cellar. Those were the days when Barnard College still occupied that historic little building at 343 Madison Avenue. And thus the class of ' 99 began its history. All through Fresh- man and part of Sophomore year they attended classes there and ate their lunch off the top of the ice-box. Then in the ir Sophomore year, ' 99, with the rest of the undergraduate body moved up to Morningside Heights. The class of ' 99 consisted of twenty-one members. In spite of the fact that their college career was not very spectacular, they always managed to get teamwork. There was never a kicking minority. In those days class colors were not preordained and ' 99 carried on desperate arguments in meetings as to what the colors should be. When it was finally voted to have white carnation and green fern, all the conscientious objectors, who had been in favor of yellow, became loyal supporters of the choice. There is another tale that tells not only of ' 99 ' s teamwork but also of its collective good sense. When the members of ' 98 initiated the Freshmen and made them swear the formidable Eleusinian oath, which, by the way, was taken on a Liddell and Scott Abridged Greek Lexicon, ' 98 requested that they pledge themselves not to wear caps and gowns until Sophomore year. The pledge was called for more or less as a good joke. But the ' 98 Sophomores were bitterly surprised, for. when ' 99 was asked to repeat the part of the pledge concerning caps and gowns, there was a dead silence in the darkened room. ' 98 failed to overawe ' 99 in a question such as this. The Freshmen considered the request uncalled for, and maintained their privilege of wearing cap and gown. College life then did not exact the toll of time and energy that it does now. ' 99 entered heartily into all activities such as the class in social dancing and the Society for the Prevention of Gloom. Athletics were confined to a Bicycle Club which flourished for a time, with several girls from ' 99 as charter members. In academic life, this was the last class to fight its way through the old iron-clad curriculum. Many were the instructors who were gleefully burned in effigy for their conservatism. Although the girls of ' 99 did not sing or act or draw, they produced an enduring Mortarboard. Theirs was only the second Barnard Mortarboard, and it can well be im- agined how worried they must have been about it, since the first Mortarboard had gone three hundred dollars in debt the year before. ' 99, however, came out with flying colors and the profit cleared became the nucleus for a curtain fund for the theatre. This happy result was due, in great part, to the efficient work of Miss Grace Goodale, who was editor-in-chief. It was popularly supposed that ' 99 did not have much class spirit. This was probably [ Forty-nine ] due to the fact that the members of the class had a scholarly turn of mind. A certain young lady, named Miss Virginia Gildersleeve set the standard of scholastic excellence, which was firmly upheld by the class. As they had progressed in college, so they continued to advance in their respective and individual lines afterwards. Much of the work of the members of the class of 1899 is already familiar to the students of the present day. A record of the histories of a few of the more prominent graduates of this class has a sociological, as well as personal, interest. Virginia Crocheron Gildersleeve (the president of her class) began her career by taking graduate work in History and Sociology at Columbia. Later she took English and Comparative Literature. In 1900 she received her M.A. and, in 1908, her Ph.D. One year after graduation she had begun teaching at Barnard as assistant in English. She remained from 1900 to 1905 and from 1908 on. In 1911 she was appointed dean and Pro- fesso r of English. During the war Dean Gildersleeve served on the Executive Committee of Mayor Mitchel ' s Committee of Women for National Defense. She was also the chairman of the Sub-committee on Agriculture, which turned many women workers into the land army. Here at Columbia she was chairman of the Columbia University Committee on Women ' s War Work. For the last few years Miss Gildersleeve has been especially interested in the International Federation of University Women. Anna Mabel Smith married William Shipman Douglas. She became very active in the work carried on by the New Jersey Federation of Women ' s Clubs for a State College for Women. When such a college, The New Jersey State College for Women, was opened, in 1911, she was made dean. Under her management the college has grown steadily in numbers, in strength, and in scholastic reputation. Alice Duer married Henry Wise Miller, a few months after graduation. She has written stories, poems and novels. Some of these are The Happiest Time of Their Lives, The Charm School, Come Out of the Kitchen and Manslaughter. Mrs. Miller was also very active in the Woman Suffrage Movement. She has always taken a vital interest in the alumnae, having served as the vice-president of the Associate Alumnae for two years. She was also one of the group of alumnae who first organized an employment committee in 1902 to help both students and graduates. This is the work which has now developed into the Occupational Bureau. Grace Harriet Goodale (the class poet) taught for a year in a district school, after graduation. The following fall she began teaching in a private school in New York City, where she stayed three years. After that she became secretary to a neurologist. When she left this position she stopped definite work for a short time and devoted herself to writing. In 1910 Miss Goodale returned to Barnard, where she has ably helped Miss Gildersleeve to carry on the spirit of a truly remarkahle class. [ Fifty ] H. Robinson E. Waterman M. Mettler M.Cabot D. Fetterly H. Le Page M. Mansfield M. Hailparn N. Weathers E. Trull B. Kruger M. Turner | Fifty-tivo 1 Undergraduate Association OFFICERS Edna Trull, 1924 President Nelle Weathers, 1924 Vice-President Meta Hailparn, 1925 Treasurer Margaret Hatfield, 1926 Secretary (resigned) Madge Turner, 1926 Secretary Mary Armstrong, 1926 Assistant Treasurer Barbara Kruger, 1924 Executive Chairman STUDENT COUNCIL Edna Trull, 1924, Chairman Nelle Weathers, 1924 Helen LePage, 1924 Barbara Kruger, 1924 Maud Cabot, 1925 (resigned) Meta Hailparn, 1925 Viola Travis, 1925 Marion Mettler, 1925 Marion Mansfield, 1926 Madge Turner, 1926 Helen Robinson, 1927 Dorothy Fetterlv, 1924 First Semester Elizabeth Waterman, 1924 Second Semester EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE OF BOARD OF STUDENT PRESIDENTS Marion Mettler, 1925 President Laura Bang, 1924 Secretary Helen LePage, 1924 Marion Mansfield, 1926 Elizabeth Waterman, 1924 Agnes Cooper, 1924 Gertrude Gottschall, 1925 Maud Cabot, 1925 [ Fifty-three ] f Fifty-four ] Class of 1924 Helen LePage President Ruth Mehrer Vice-President Fannie Steinsciineider Treasurer Gilda Monzillo Recording Secretary Alice DeSola Historian Margaretta Weed Cheer Leader Motto To jcpex-ov (Proportion) Colors Buff and Blue Mascot Dragon Flower Tea Rose YELL Hoorah ! Hoorah ! D— R— A— G— O— N ! ' 24— ' 24— ' 24 ! [ Fift y- five ] I Fifty-six ] Class of 1925 Maud Cabot Viola Travis Madf.leine Hooke. . Katherine Browne Estelle Blanc Dorothy Hogue. . . . Margaret Melosh.. Prcsid cut ( resign cd ) President Vice-President Treasurer .Recording Secretary Historian Cheer Leader Motto. .Vires acquiret eundo (Gain strength in going) Colors Green and White Mascot Bulldog Flower IVhitc Carnation and Fern YELL Grrr — ow, Grrr — ow Bulldog, bulldog, bow-wow-wow ! Yea ! 25 ! [ Fifty-seven ] Class of 1926 Marion Mansfield President Dorothy Ashworth Vice-President Florence Jenkel Treasurer Velma Brown Recording Secretary (resigned) May Seeley Recording Secretary Elizabeth Lazar • Historian Virginia Lee Cheer Leader (resigned) Hortense Opoznauer Cheer Leader Motto Loyalty Colors Brown and Gold Mascot Lion Flower Sunset Rose YELL Roar, lion bold ! Roar for Brown and Gold ! R-r-r-r-r-oar-r-r-r ! Twenty-six ! Twenty-six ! Twenty-six ! [ Fifty-nine ] [ Sixty ] Class of 1927 Helen Robinson President Catherine Baldwin Vice-President Mosetta White Recording Secretary Jean MacLeod Treasurer Marian Davis Historian Irma Rittenhouse Cheer Leader Motto Auvrj .q y.x-rx (xuvepftav (Poiver in Co-operation) Colors Red and White Mascot Indian Flower Poppy YELL Ipeciai — ciai — ciai — Ipeciai — ciai — ciai — Whoo-op ! Whoo-op ! Barnard ! [ Sixty one ] Brooks Hall OFFICERS Elizabeth L. Waterman, 1924 President Isabelle R. Harrison, 1924 Vice-President Mary Terry Goodwin, 1925 Social Chairman Mary Bliss, 1924 Secretary-Treasurer Katherine M. Browne, 1925 House Member Dorothy Avery, 1926 Fire Captain Members of Dormitory Honor Board Elizabeth L. Waterman, 1924 Katherine M. Browne, 1925 Marie Eichelbergfr, 1926 Nei.le Weathers, 1924 Chairman Ex-officio [ Sixty-lwo ] John Jay Hall OFFICERS Dorothy Fetterly, 1924 President Alice Velten, 1924 Vice-President Elsie Albansoder, 1924 Social Chairman Dorothy Robinson, 1925 Secretary Constance Dunne, 1925 House Member Ruth Smith, 1924 House Member Members of Dormitory Honor Board Dorothy Fetterly, 1924 Alice Velten, 1924 Constance Dunne, 1925 [ Sixty-three ] OFFICERS Agnes Grant, ' 24 President Fern Yates, ' 25 Vice-President Elizabeth Reynolds, ' 26 Secretary Kate Jackson, ' 25 Treasurer Nelle Weathers, ' 24 Social Chairman Managers of Sports Elsa Preische, ' 25 Naomi Lubell, ' 25 Catherine P. Johnson, ' 25 Charlotte Farquhar, ' 24 Agnes Grant, ' 24 Basketball Swimming Baseball . . Tennis. . . . Track. . . . [ Sixty-six ] K. Newcomer, G. Kahrs, V. Fisher, G. Gicldings, J. Daniels C. Einert, N. Lubell, D. Cook, E. Newcomer Swimming Captain E. Hattorff, ' 24 Manager N. Lubell, ' 25 VARSITY MEETS Date Barnard T.C. Dec. 18 39 32 Jan. 15 36 35 The cup was won for permanent possession by Barnard for winning two out of three meets a season for three consecutive years. INTERCLASS MEETS Class results : First Place 38 points 1924 Second Place 12 points 1925 Third Place 11 points 1926 Individual results : Kahrs, ' 24 15 points Giddings, ' 24 12 points Einert, ' 24 9 points [ Sixty-seven ] A. Grant L. Morales D. Cook C. MacNamara, I. Lewis M. Wallfield E. Stratton Basketball Captain C. MacNamara, ' 23 Manager I. Lewis, ' 23 VARSITY GAMES Date Barnard T.C. Dec. 14 22 24 Jan. 12 19 28 The cup was won for permanent possession by T. C. for winning two out of three games a season for three consecutive years. INTERCLASS GAMES 1925 vs. 1926 34- 7. won by 1925 1924 vs. 1923 12- 9 won by 1924 1926 vs. 1924 26-11 won by 1924 1923 vs. 1925 13-12 won by 1923 First Place 1924 Second Place 1923 Third Place 1925 [ Sixty-eight ] L. Arorales, D. Quinn, F. Yates, M. Wallfiel D. Cook, C. MaeXamara, C. lohnson Baseball Captain C. MacNamara, ' 23 Manager D. Cook, ' 23 VARSITY GAMES Date Barnard T.C. May 3 15 24 May 10 25 19 Barnard Faculty April 26 35 31 IXTERCLASS GAMES 1924 vs. 1923 13-12 won by 1923 1926 vs. 1925 12- 7 won by 1925 1924 vs. 1926 15 won by 1924 1923 vs. 1925 12- 8 won by 1925 First Place 1925 Second Place 1923 Third Place 1924 | Sixty-nine Field Dav November Agnes Grant H. Semmell, ' 27 E. Newcomer, ' 26 High Jump First Place-4.1 ft A. Grant, ' 24 ( E. Goldman, ' 26 Second Place — 4 ft - M. Irish, ' 25 I C. Ferris, ' 27 20-Yard Dash First Place M. Wallfield, ' 24 Second Place M. Alzamora, ' 26 40-Yard Dash First Place M. Wallfield, ' 24 Second Place M. Ognibcne, ' 24 Archery First Place E. Haywood, ' 24 Second Place C. Rowe. ' 25 3, 1923 , Manager E. Preische, ' 25 L. Morales, ' 24 Javelin Throw First Place— 71.9 ft C. P. Johnson, ' 25 Second Place — 52.9 ft H. Robinson, ' 27 40-Yard Hurdles First Place— 6 1 12 sec A. Grant, ' 24 Second Place E. Daniels, ' 24 Hurl Ball Throw First Place— 63.3 ft F. Yates, ' 25 Second Place— 59.65 ft E. Pepper, ' 24 Basket Ball Throw First Place— 76.5 ft M, Wallfield, ' 24 Second Place— 74.10 ft H. Semmell, ' 27 RESULTS Class Individual 1924 40 points M. Wallfield, ' 24 15 points 1925 15.3 points A. Grant, ' 24 10 points 1927 9 points F. Yates, C. P. Johnson, ' 25.... 5 points Tennis Interclass College Champion: Margery Meyers, ' 27 Class Champions: Meyers, ' 27; Wallfield, ' 24; Curtis, ' 25; Alzamora, ' 26 Varsity Singles Doubles Teachers College 3 Teachers College 1 Barnard Barnard [ Seventy ] [ Seventy-one ] A. A. Banquet May 4, 1923 T oastmistress Nelle Weathers, ' 24 Entertainment Speeches Dean Gildersleeve Miss Agnes Grant, ' 24 Miss Vivian Tappan. 1 ( Miss Charlotte McNamara, ' 23 Miss Wayman Presentation of Awards Charlotte McNamara, ' 23 Song — Beside the Waters of the Hudson. Committee Chairman Gertrude Simpson, ' 23 Publicity Elsa Hattorf, ' 23 Decorations Clare Loftus, ' 23 Entertainment Rosalind Jones, ' 23 Music Marian Mansfield, ' 26 Properties Dorothy Cook, ' 23 Business Fern Yates, ' 25 Waitress Margaret Richter, ' 26 Ex-Officio Charlotte McNamara, ' 23 A. A. Circus November 9, 1923 Chairman Mary Chamberlain, ' 26 Faculty, alumnae and undergraduates gathered together on Friday evening, November 9, in the sawdust atmosphere of one of A. A. ' s old-time circuses. The evening started with a parade in which trained animals, freaks, bareback riders and strong men took part. They filed into the gymnasium in a hilarious procession and went to their respective places. Directed by Priscilla Gates, trainer, Jean McLeod exhibited her prowess as a trained seal by keeping her skin on. Professor Seligman explained the evolution of athletics in Barnard after the manner of a Zoo. C. lecture. The museum exhibits of walking, tennis, etc., as done in 1899, were most instructive. Four fortune tellers situated at various places in the gymnasium catered to the more superstitious element of the college. Dark young men with moustaches are popular with Barnard girls, according to A. A. fortune tellers. Dancing was enjoyed during the evening, and there were delectable refreshments, con- sisting of cider, doughnuts and the inevitable hot dog. f Seventy-two ] Final Awards — A. A. Banquet May 4, 1923 SWIMMING Hattorff, ' 23 Daniels, ' 24 Newcomer, E., ' 26 Newcomer, K., ' 25 Lubell, ' 25 Kahrs, ' 24 Frankenstein, ' 24 ( iiddings, ' 24 Boas, ' 23 Wood, ' 23 1923 Hattorff Cook W : ood Williams Schlotze Loftus Brink Kingman Strauss Hoff Becker Newton Catoggio Barta VARSITY B ' S BASKETBALL MacNamara, ' 23 Cook, ' 23 Lewis, ' 23 Stratton, ' 26 Wallfield ' 24 Cirant, ' 24 Morales, ' 24 BASEBALL Cook, ' 23 Yates, ' 25 Preische, ' 25 Johnson, ' 25 Murden, ' 23 Quinn, ' 26 Wallfield, ' 24 MacNamara, ' 23 1924 Kahrs Frankenstein Finert Trull Giddings Daniels Mehrer Colgan Kanney Weathers Messinger Cerlian Bazinet Mehrer CLASS NUMERALS SWIMMING 1925 Newcomer, K. Gordon Tisdale Lubell Cook Ognibene Lewis Bang Murden Wallfield Goldstone Auerhach Strauss Ullman Marples Berliner MacNamara Cerlian Farquhar Losee FIELD DAY MEDALS First Place Gold. ... Marie Wallfield, ' 24 Second Place Silver Frances Boas, ' 23 ( Charlotte MacNamara, ' 23 BASKET BALL Lubell Irish Mcintosh Dietz Wuori Kane Melosh Johnson Burnside BASKETBALL Yates Preische Hailparn Johnson Jackson Dietz Wuori TENNIS Reinheimer, ' 24 Hoff, ' 23 Farquhar, ' 2-1 Adams, ' 25 Quinn, ' 26 1926 Newcomer, Armstrong Freidman Kalisher Lazar Lee Frank Worthington Goldman Lowry Peck Shipman Dawson Hilton Avery Quinn Burtis E. Third Place. . .Bronze. . (.Margaret Irish, ' 25 CUPS Varsity Swimming Barnard (permanently) Varsity Basketball T. C. (permanently) Yarsitv Baseball ... .Tie between Barnard and T. C. Field Day 1924 Class Swimming 1924 All Around Athletic 1924 EXPERT SWIMMING EMBLEMS Elsa Hattorff, ' 23 Dorothy Cook. ' 23 Naomi Lubell, ' 25 MANAGERS ' OLD ENGLISH B ' S Basketball Irene Lewis. ' 23 Field Day Edna Trull, ' 24 [ Seventy-three ] [ Seventy-four ] Bear Mountain Just up the hanks of the Hudson about forty miles, Bear Mountain over- shadows a clear lake high above the river. In the woods at one end of the lake stands a Government cabin, built of rough logs. Eight times a year, groups from Barnard take possession of Brentmere for happy, carefree week-ends. The college has found here what it lacks in the city — an outdoor playground where the air is crisp, and where there are winding trails over rocks and through fragrant pine groves. Minds weary of study are quickly refreshed by a day or two of skating, tobogganing, mountain climbing. The evenings, too, bring peace, for there are songs and stunts around the great open fireplace at the cabin. Here there is a little time for the sort of companionship that is so often neglected in college life. There is no one who returns to work after a week-end of joyous play who does not feel invigorated by the contemplation of tranquil wooded spaces and dim blue hills. [ Seventy- five ] [ Seventy-seven ] [ Seventy-eight] The History of Greek Games Like so many artistic productions with a tradition, Greek Games had a very simple and spontaneous origin. In the winter of 1903 the idea of a contest between the Freshman and Sophomore classes was conceived and carried out. From this beginning Greek Games continued in what we may call their rudimentary stage until 1908. After that period the dramatic side of the games began to develop. This naturally led to many innovations, and each year something was added to make the aesthetic element more complete. The next great step in the further development of the games, however, came in 1912, when Miss Porter Beagle began her work with the dance. Before 1903 there had been no athletics at Barnard. The predominant idea of the founders of Greek Games was, therefore, to provide for athletic competition. There were, however, traces of some of the phases that we find in Greek Games today. There was an invocation to the gods. Omens were read, and the choosing of contestants was by lot; there were contests in poetry, archerv, wrestling, and a tug-o ' -war. This program continued without any great altera- tion until 1908. It was in the year 1908 that a wave of pageantry swept over the country. Greek Games caught the i.dea. The outcome was the introduction of a chorus and dance. In the following year color was first used in the costumes. Another new feature was introduced in 1911. The dance, for the first time, told a story, and the chorus was dressed in sunrise colors to carry out the impression of the dawn. The crowds were becoming difficult to handle in the Thompson gymnasium, to which Greek Games had been transferred from Brinkerhoff Theatre the year before, and so tickets of admission were issued for the first time. Beginning in 1912, Greek Games developed rapidly into the naively artistic spectacle of the present college generation. The girls had become conscious of the limitless possibilities for self-expression in this thing that had been little more than an outlet for overflowing energy. In that year the Games were held for the first time in the Columbia gymnasium, to permit the accommodation of the many outsiders who were eager to watch the spectacle. Men were allowed in the audience, and outside judges were invited. It was in this year, too, that the chariot race was added to the athletics. It was also in this year that the custom of printing the synopsis of the chorus and dance originated. The entrance was still crude, however, and it was not until 1916 that it was made a dramatic spectacle instead of a procession. In 1917 the Freshman class introduced the idea of using only music that fol- lowed strictly Greek models. In 1918 Greek Games were finally moved to Students ' Hall. Grey curtains were hung in the gymnasium and an altar was designed and erected. In the contest be- tween 1923 and 1924 the Freshmen used spoken English in their entrance, instead of Greek. The joint central committee was divided, for the first time, along lines of management and business. In the following year, 1922, a change was also made in the music, original music being used for the entrance and adapted for the dance. Since the Games were dedicated to Athena, a Pan- Athenaic procession was held as in the ancient days of Greece, when white-robed maidens bore the saffron peplum to the temple of the goddess. Members from both the upper classes took part. This was not intended to become a permanent feature of the Games, however, and was not continued the following year. Tradition has made Greek Games a Freshman and Sophomore contest, and public opinion will permit no innovation that would cause any loss of youthful spontaneity. The organization of the Games today is probably as elaborate as it ever will be. Greek Games represent the highest, most sincerely striven-after achievement of student thought and activity. Well-known professional critics express their pleasure at being asked to serve as judges. Guided by their suggestions — and by the irrepressible love of artistic self-expression always char- acteristic of youth — Greek Games will naturally tend in the future to emphasize greater grace of movement, more harmonious colorings, more finished form in the athletics — in short, to interpret as perfectly as possible the Grecian spirit of beauty and completeness. f Seventy-nine ] To Athene—Story of Entrance and Dance The Greeks, encamped near Troy for nine weary years, had long been awaiting their chance to make an attack on the proud city. In the little encampment which had grown uo by the shore, the soldiers were wont to gather in front of Athene ' s temple, the only visible sign of the glories of Greece that they had left behind them. With military discipline relaxed one evening they were half-heartedly idling away the time. They lolled upon the barren ground playing at dice, drinking wine, and courting the few women that they had with them ,n the camp. Suddenly a youth burst forth in his discontent. He dashed from roup to group stirring the men with the fire of revolt that burned within his soul. A rush was made toward the leaders, a rush halted by the sound of singing. From the temple came spirits sent by Athene. Gradually the crowd became quiet as the maidens with lifted hands implored the goddess for a sign of aid. As they stood there pleading, the voice of Athene, rich, deep, melodious, was heard from the temple. One of the leaders Odysseus inspired by her words, crept silently closer to the temple ; the voice ceased. There was a moment ' s hush while Athene ' s messengers drew back into the temple. Then Odysseus rose to his feet, shouting, The horse, the horse shall save us! In a moment the mob was [ Eighty ] miraculously inspired by his idea. The men raised him upon their shoulders and carried him off with a wild song, rejoicing at their long-awaited opportunity. The dance told a different tale. A Greek warrior had heen captured by satyrs outside the walls of Troy. Delighted with their prize, these mischievous creatures teased and taunted their unhappy victim. Around and around they danced, torturing the desperate and harassed youth. Athene finally took pity, however, and sent her fearful storm to frighten the satyrs away. The wind blew the clouds, that were accompanied by the crashing of thunder and the flash of lightning, across the clear blue sky. The satyrs, panic-stricken, sped away in all directions. The warrior, free once more, and overwhelmed with wonder, knelt and, worshipping, gave thanks to Athene. [ Eighty-one ] Lyrics — Freshman Year An Athlete, Having Killed a Man in Rage After An Ignominious Defeat, Speaks. By Margaret Irish Full of hate is my soul, yet I kneel to thee, Here in the awesome hush of thy vast temple, Breaker of sanctuary, in my madness Seeking thy statue. Proudly poised figure of marble — chill smoothness, Serene features which once I trusted in vain, Calm and aloof in virginal sanctity, — They are thine, Goddess. Them will I shatter, my sin-stained hands raising, Cursing thee, who brought my bitter misfortune, Searching the fragments, where age-old dust swirling Hides thy heart of stone. Now in frenzy will I — ! Ah, that whispering murmur — Is it the fever that throbs in my brain, or the rustle Of draperies stirred by the breath Of divinity in the gathering gloom? Deep in my breast burns the memory Of ardent prayers and firm vows I had made. Thy passionless mercy is deaf. To me when I staked my all Thou showed it not. My cold fingers are twitching — Pallas Athene, thy eyes are luminous, Keen as the point of thy terror-tipped spear; Proud as the aegis, thy father ' s safeguard; Grey are they, grey as the leaves of the olive trees, Catching their color from dawn and from sky; Grey as the flying dust that shrouds the mighty dead, Muffling the thin shrieks of fair steeds in agony, Screening heroes from peril, thine own well-beloved ones ; Sea-grey, with changing depths, depths of infinite wisdom, Wisdom that knows how to pity and love. Far over my head thy shield shines in the dark ; My spirit is broken — I do not hate thee. Bright-eyed Athene, thy majesty conquers; Thy understanding. A SUPPLICATION By Beatrice Clarke 1925 Maiden Athene, casting wisdom ' s spell Over golden Athens ; long ago Thou loved it, Athens, chose it for thine own And smiting with thy spear high-poised Thyself avenged upon proud Neptune; And sons of Athens loved and sought for thee. For thee our dipping figure-heads, bright painted Breast the dashing foam, and dare Far waters duller than our wine — dark sea. For thee with heart song in the hushed vale Minstrel shepherds guard thy sacred flocks, Bind with garlands the quick nibbling heads, Or kneeling lave the curly fleece And plait with flowers the cloud-puff wool. Then hoary priests, from childhood consecrate To thee, with silver shears, chanting Reap the undefiled wool. For thee, Athene, stately dames of Theseus line The woolen thread with reverent fingers ply. The city lies hushed; the tread resounds Of worshippers, in silent awe Bearing thy resplendent robe Up the broad marble steps unto thy shrine. Maiden Athene ; We have served thee and have need of thee. Lately came barbarians, dark and fierce, — Came they in their curved ships, black-sailed, And drove swift arrows tipped with fear, against Our bravest youth ; and back we yielded Death despoiled. Then in despair Our faces still foe seeking, thee we sought With urgent prayer ; Lo ! thy aegis Heavy leaning, on the city heights, Caught the sun rays sifted from the air And hurled them against the archer foe. Blinded they staggered ; and our parched swords Were sated ; but dread terror hovers Over the rusting swords of conquerors, Shadow haunted by our vanquished foes And by fore-bodings of new foes. Aye, Goddess, hear our prayer! Upraise thy flashing spear point to the ether Let the high stars in adoration blended Chant throughout the passing of the aeons: Lo ! Athene is light, and darkness is no more! [ Eighty-tivo ] 1924 Greek Games, Freshman Year CENTRAL COMMITTEE 1925 Helen Miner Chairman Margaret Irish Ruth Mehrer Chairman of Costumes Marion Mettler Lucia Alzamora Chairman of Dance Juliet Chisholm Elizabeth Waterman Chairman of Music • • Elizabeth Abbott Ruth Cushman Chairman of Lyrics Helen Stutz Edna Trull •• Chairman of Athletics Fern Yates Helen Schultz Chairman of Business • ■Meta Hailparn T He | e Gahagan Advisory Committee S Ha ;T. et B ° Vard Isabelle Harrison) ( Elinor Curtis Agnes Cooper • • Ex-officio Viola Travis Business Manager for Greek Games, 1921-1922 Helen LePage Faculty Supervisor, Miss Bird Larson Entrance Miss Minor White Latham Miss Vida Sutton Mr. Kenneth MacGowan Costumes Professor William Dinsmoor Miss Elizabeth Grimball Mr. Warren Dahler JUDGES Music Professor Walter H. Hall Mr. Frank Damrosch Mr. Henry Krehbiel Dance Miss Gertrude Colby Miss Florence Noves Mr. Ted Shawn Lyrics Professor Charles S. Baldwin Mr. Edward Robinson Mr. Louis Ledoux Athletics Miss Helen Frost Miss Katherine Cooper Miss Dorothy Burne Miss Lilian Schoedler Miss Bernadine Yunck Score 1924 Entrance 18 5 12 Chorus and dance 13 Lyrics 6 7 12 Athletics 17 1925 22 1 12 2 5 12 Winners of Wreaths Costumes Marian Mettler Dance Juliet Chisholm Words of music Helen Stutz Chariot Race Naomi Lubell Torch Race Fern Yates Total score .... 55 45 [ Eighty-three ] To Demeter — Story of Entrance and Dance Famine lay upon the land. The people, assaulted by pangs of hunger, lingered desper- ately on from day to day. Demeter, lost in her grief for Persephone, gave no thought to the harvest. It happened that on one of these long, dreary days a procession of maidens, bearing sacrifices to propitiate the goddess, came to her temple. But as they offered up their gifts, a band of frenzied men rushed toward them. In their madness they thought to requite Demeter by sacrificing the fairest of these maidens. The leader of the men dragged forth the most beautiful among them. Deep into her breast he plunged his sword. In a fury the mob surged up. Then out of the crowd a bent old woman made her way. She stood erect, facing them. Her cloak fell from her shoulders and lo — it was Demeter! With the cloak she covered the maiden ' s body. Accusingly she pointed to the murderers, while the crowd shrank back in awe and terror. Sorrowfully the goddess walked into the temple. The maiden no longer lay upon the steps, and with a great cry of fear the murderers fled. [ Eighty-four ] The story of the dance tells how the temple of Demeter stood silent and deserted. The stillness was broken, however, by the coming of wood-sprites. Joyously they ran and played together. Looking about they suddenly realized the sanctity of the place and ceased their antics. With reverence they approached the temple steps and placed flowers before the altar. Then, as a band of revellers rushed noisily in, they concealed themselves. Ruthlessly into the air the revellers tossed the flower offerings of the sprites. Brutally they tore and destroyed them. Then, discovering the wood-sprites, they dragged them from their hiding- places. From the temple rose the clear song of the priestess telling of Dcmeter ' s wrath against the wanton Greeks. The revellers paused to listen. Their hands dropped powerless. They stood ter ror-stricken and ashamed. The wood-sprites crept softly away and called a group of nymphs, who happened to be dancing nearby. Frightened at the sight of these the revellers fled from the temple and the nymphs, rejoicing, followed them. [ Eighty- five ] Lyrics— Sophomore Year SONG OF THE SORROWING DEMETER By Marie Luhrs, 1925 Puppies will drop their petals at my breath, And leaves will brown and shatter from the branch ; Winds will move through the webbing of a tree Silently ; I shall still their singing; you will hear death. I touched the earth with flowers for my daughter — Heavy hyacinths, violets under leaves, Narcissus — stars I flung before the sea. Persephone Wound them in wreaths beside the turning water. The sea comes up, still with its curving motion. The shore is purple still beneath the leaves ; Only I do not hear her light young laughter Echoing after The nymphs as they yield to the lithe-limbed ocean. She weaves flowers in the darkness now, In darkness she binds up her yellow hair; Her singing in the dark is very low Like winds that blow Hardly turning the leaves upon the bough. The grapes will shrivel at my vengeful breath, I have no need of grapes or grain or flowers ; Winds will move through the webbing of a tree Silently; I shall still their singing; you will hear death. A Shepherd Boy Sees a Vision of Demeter on the Mountain at Night By Eleanor Wood, 1925 A starred night lies o ' er the sleeping world; Now rests the flock within the shadowed fold. Nor stir the olive trees upon the hills Where gnarled and gray like carved steel they stand. The noisy stream is hushed in drifting mist; All living things seem sunk in death-like sleep. Yet I lie wakeful in the tall, soft grass Watching the lonely night pass on her way. By starlit paths gliding on silent wings. Throughout the sleep a living spirit moves, A giant pulse beats in the depths of earth, Rhythmic with strange, undreamed-of majesty, The deep-felt soul of silent, growing strength. A night-bird calls, stirs in the grass, is still; A meteor falls along the midnight sky, Tracing a fiery track across the dark. Now as the ghostly shadows come and go, I see thee lightly tread the somber turf, A tall and awful figure in the dusk; Thy trailing robes of twilight-colored mist, Dim, glowing poppies wreathed about thy brow, Demeter, Goddess, mother of all life. Thou art the power felt within the night. Thou bringest gifts of peace through gentle strength And hatred of destroying, selfish war. Swiftly from out my heart filled with great love A prayer of thankfulness leaps to thee. [ Eighty -six J 1925 Greek Games, Sophomore Year CENTRAL COMMITTEE 1926 Marion Mettler Chairman Marion Mansfield Madeleine Hooke Chairman of Costumes Dorothy Miner Eleanor Wood Chairman of Dance Elorence Braithwaite Margaret Melosh Chairman of Music Evelyn Barton Marie Luhrs Chairman of Lyrics Wynne Byard Naomi Lubell Chairman of Athletics Margaret Richter Viola Travis Chairman of Business Elizabeth Maguire Charlotte Bradley) Advisory Committee J Y ru T , ■Beatrice Clarke f ( Mary Chamberlain Margaret Irish Ex-officio Margaret Hatfield Business Manager for Greek Games, 1922-1923 Meta Hailparn Student Supervisor, Garda Brown, 1923 Entrance Miss Amy Jennings Mr. Kenneth MacGowa n Mr. Alexander Woolcott Costumes Mr. Norman Bel-Geddes Professor Ernest T. De Wald Miss Olive Rilev JUDGES Music Mr. Arthur Bodanskv Miss Mary Ellis Opdycke Mr. Sergei Rachmaninoff Dance Miss Mary O ' Donnell Miss Anne Schmidt Mrs. Joseph Urban Lyrics Miss Babette Deutsch Mr. Ludwig Lewisohn Mr. Christopher Morlev Athletics Miss Dorothy Burne Miss Luenna Von Eltz Miss Marjorie Hillas Miss Vivian Tappan Miss Bernadine Yunck Score 1925 Entrance 22 Chorus and Dance 16 5 6 Lyrics 3 2 3 Athletics 11 1 20 1926 9y 2 9 2 3 3 1 3 13 19 20 Total Score 53 11 20 46 9 20 Winners of Wreaths Costumes Madeleine Hooke Music Margaret Melosh Dance Eleanor Wood Lyrics Marie Luhrs Hurdling Fern Yates Chariot Race Elinor Curtis Torch Race Elsa Preische I Eighty-seven ] Greek Games Athletics Discus Freshman Year Lois Bacon Kate Jackson Catherine Johnson Won by 1924 Hurdling for Form Fern Yates Gertrude Oellrich Beatrice Clarke Won by 1924 Hoop Rolling Emma Dietz Elsa Preische Naomi Lubell Elinor Curtis Winning team 1924 Chariots for Form Naomi Lubell Beatrice Clarke Marion T ' inkussohn Evelyn Kane Winning team 1925 Torch Race Elsa Preische Fern Yates Gertrude Oellrich Winning team 1925 Athletics won by 1924 Sophomore Year Constance Dunne Kate Jackson Juliet Ransome Won by 1926 Constance Dunne Gertrude Oellrich Fern Yates Won by 1925 Elinor Curtis Emma Dietz Margaret Irish Elsa Preische Winning team 1926 Beatrice Clarke Naomi Lubell Marion Pinkussohn Evelyn Kane Winning team 1925 Elsa Preische Fern Yates Gertrude Oellrich Winning team 1925 Athletics won by 1926 [ Eighty- eight ] [Eighty-nine ] EXTRACT FROM THE BOWLING GREEN, IN THE NEW YORK EVENING POST OF TUESDAY, APRIL 17, 1923. a very enchanting spectacle, the Greek Games at Barnard College. We had expected complicated manoeuvres, a bit pallid and formal, with endless gyrations of white drapery; instead of which one of the most colorful, spirited, and enthusiastic fantasies we have ever dreamed of.. . .. .. . .The games this year were dedicated to Demeter, and we feel sure she would have enjoyed them. Those brief tunics of rich, tawny colors, the hurry- ing bare legs, the antiphonal songs and taunts ejaculated by the rival classes — classic themes alternating with robust contemporary doggerel — and most of all the athletic contests, seemed to us truly in the natural, infectious spirit we imagine as Greek. The hurdling, hoop rolling, torch race and chariot race pleased us best. In the latter four young persons, pretending to be horses, tossing their bobbed manes and fidgeting and pawing like spirited equines, pull a small gilded cart, in which the charioteer utters Greek cries about Hippoi mou ! It was as beautifully mad, comic, and lovely as anything we have ever seen. [Ninety ] -t F. Yates G. Giddings C. Einert L. Harris R. Ackerman M. Pinkussohn OFFICERS Minor White Latham Faculty Director Estelle H. Davis Faculty Member Lillian Harris, 1924 President Christine Einert, 1924 Vice-President Marion Pinkussohn, 1925 Secretary Ruth Ackerman, 1924 Try-Outs Manager Georgia Giddincs, 1924 Stage Manager Fern Yates, 1925 Business Manager Mary Granger Alumna Member The purpose of the Club is to promote a high standard of college dramatics in choice of plays, acting and producing; and to give all those interested in drama an opportunity of gaining knowledge and experience in dramatic art. Wigs and Cues has been reorganized this year on a basis of honorary membership. Ackerman, R. Adams, C. Alzamora, L. Benjamin, M. Berliner, F. Blanc, E. Bradley, C. Braithwaite, F. Burleigh, T. Cabot, M. Caldor, S. Campbell, M. Chamberlain, M. Cooper, A. Corby, R. Corrigan, V. Curtis, E. Dezendorf, F. Dick, H. Dougherty, E. Finney, E. Members Felsher, F. Frankenstein, O. Generic, A. Giddings, G. Hailparn, M. Harris, L. Heidemann, A. Heller, A. Hclle, E. Hooke, M. Johnson, C. L. Kalisher, E. Kortheuer, E. Lensh, E. Le Page, H. Locke, J. Mansfield, M. Melosh, M. Mendham, A. Mettler, M. Miner, H. Miner, D. Mirsky, J. Oppenheimer, B. Parker, E. Pepper, E. Pertak, G. Pinkussohn, M. Price, E. Putney, D. Ranney, M. E. Seligman, F. Ten Broeck, D. Travis, V. Waterman, E. Weathers, N. Williams, H. Williams, I. Wood, E. Yates, F. [ Ninety-one ] Dramatics Wigs and Cues chose two one-act plays for the first work-shop performance in the fall under the new organization of the elub. A tense drama of Iceland, by Masefield — The Locked Chest — was very well presented by the major characters. The play suffered from carelessness of production, but the individual actors held their scenes adequately, and there were several powerful bits of interpretation. It was the attention to detail that the first play lacked that made the second appear more finished. Cooks and Cardinals was, too, a far happier selection to present to a Barnard audience. One of the 47 Workshop plays, it was a whimsical entertaining trifle, of kitchen romance and papal dispensations. The farcical situations, such as the conflict between the French chef and the alcoholic Irish cook were deftly handled. CAST OF THE LOCKED CHEST Vigdi Jessie Locke, ' 26 Thord Meta Hailparn, ' 25 Thorolf Helen Williams, ' 26 Ingiald Mary Benjamin, ' 25 Three Soldiers V. Travis, T. Burleigh, and C. Adams, ' 25 Coach: Ruth Ackerman, ' 24 CAST OF COOKS AND CARDINALS Kathleen Elizabeth Price, ' 24 Mrs. Donnelly Nelle Weathers, ' 24 Monsieur le Vaux Selina Caldor, ' 24 Cardinal Manducci Marian Mansfield, ' 26 Father Anselm Estelle Helle, ' 25 Teddy Gene Pertak, ' 25 Coach: Margaret Melosh, ' 25 [ Ninety-two ] Interludes Wigs and Cues innovated this year a Christmas Festival, which was celebrated on the evening of December fourteenth. The gymnasium was almost medievalized for the occasion by flaring banners and bravely gay devices. In some measure the naively informal atmosphere which prevailed at Christmastide in Old England was obtained. Miss Gildersleeve acted as the lady of the manor, and on her pleasure waited jesters and pages, ladies and courtiers, who danced with quaint seriousness, and a band of wandering carollers. For her amusement, strolling players were admitted. Enthusiastically heralded, each group in turn mounted the steps and performed an interlude with truly admirable spirit. Tom Tyler ' s Wife was presented by the Freshmen, The Play of the Weather by the Sophomores, and the Marriage of Wit and Wisdom by members of the two upper classes. The spectators entered joyously into the fun of the players, and there was the unusual spectacle of the merging of community and individual feeling with a resulting loss of self-consciousness on the part of a very modern college audience. Wigs and Cues has high hopes of making this festival an annual event of the Christmas season, and a worthy part of Barnard tradition. French Club Plavs LA SOCIETfi FRANQAISE PRESENTE LA FARCE DU CUVIER ET LA JALOUSIE DU BARBOUILLE Brinckcrhoff Theatre Le 8 Decembre, 1923 La Farce du Cuvier Jaquinot Madeleine Lorch Jeanette Gertrude Braun Jaquette Yvonne Robic Direc trice: Rita de Lodyguine La Jalousie du Barbouille Le Docteur Barbara Collison Le Barbouille Jessie Locke Angeliqite Babette Oppenheimcr Gorgibus Pearl Greenberg Valere Marie Dinkelspiel Cathau ' . Grace Barker Directrice: Alary Benjamin Presidentc des Comites Yvonne Moen Ex-officio Renee Fulton Conseillere Mile. Le Due [ Ninety-three 1 December 10, 1923 Brinckerhoff Theatre The Students of Miss Latham ' s Drama Class Present JONAH AND THE WHALE, by Anna Lincoln NOAH AND THE ARK, by Hortense Opoznauer THE JUDGMENT OF SOLOMON, by Dorothy Avery Winning play, The Judgment of Solomon, with the following cast: God Evelyn Parker Solomon Dorothy Vickery First Shrew Yelma Brown Second Shrew Gene Pertak Traveller • Edna Peterson Devil Babette Oppenheimer First place for costuming was also given to this play. Noah and the Ark won second place. Honorable mention was given to God in the latter play, and the attention of the audience was especially called to the excellent Middle English in which Jonah and the Whale was written. Producer Costumer . .Rosalie Weill Dorothy Bruce [ Ninety-four ] m0Wo00000Z0b . .  ;-- j:.:vij3:v. .;-.i ' -.- . V ■V ' ' ; . ' f f Ninety- five ] Top Row: K. Browne M. Hailparn F. Yates E. Wood M. Hooke A. Kitzinger E. Peterson E. Helle Second Roiv: I. Schall G. Pertak M. Pinkussohn R. Golclvvater A. Hughes K. Newcomer V. de Milhau E. Ludlam Bottom Rozv: D. Putney M. Cabot E. French M. Trish O. Lockwood F. Curtis F. Stern [ Ninety-six ] THE 1925 MORTARBOARD VOLUME XXXI Editor-in-chief Margaret Irish Assistant Editor-in-chief Elinor Curtis Associate Editors Helen Dick Marie Luhrs (Honorary) Gertrude Gottschall Marion Pinkussohn Alberta Hughes Idell Schall Maud Cabot (Ex-Officio) Assistant Editors Meta Hailparn Edna Peterson Dorothy Putney Katherine Newcomer, Chair man of SnapsJiots Estelle Helle, Chairman of Typists Alice Mace, Chairman of Directory Art Board Art Editor Onnie Lockwood Assistant Art Editor Frances Stern Art Staff Thelma Burleigh Ruth Goldwater Alice Demerjian Elizabeth Ludlam Ruth Dewberry Eleanor Wood Ruth Work Business Board Business Manager . Elva French Business Staff Katherine Browne Angela Kitzinger Madeleine Hooke Gene Pertak Fern Yates Advertising Committee Beatrice Stein Mary Roche Kate Jackson Catherine L. Johnson Eva Martin Estelle Blanc Ruth Gordon [ Ninety-seven ] Top Row — A. Ilertson, F. Clarke, V. Harrington, E. Wuori, H. Bierne. Second Row — C. Comegys, N. Lowenstein, E. Blumberg, I. Schall, M. Campbell, H. Kahn, E. Martin, J. O ' Connor, B. Miller. Third Rozv—M. Irish, G. Gottschall, A. Gouled, H. Apfel, L. Rosenblatt, M. Maryon, H. Le Page, L. Alzamora f Ninety-right ] BULLETIN VOL. XXVIII Published weekly throughout the College Year, except vacation and examination periods, by the Students at Barnard College, in the interests of the Undergraduate Association. BOARD OF EDITORS Editor-in-Chief Louise Rosenblatt, 1925 News Editor Margaret Maryon, 1924 Assistant Editors Lucia Alzamora, 1924 Eleanor Kortheur, 192-1 Margaret Irish, 1925 Gertrude Gottschall, 1925 Reporters Idell Schall, 1925 Edith Blumberg, 1926 Virginia Harrington, 1924 Janet O ' Connor, 1925 Hannah Kahn, 1926 Helen Le Page, 1924 Typists Celeste Comegys, 1926 Anna Ilertson, 1927 Eva Martin, 1925 Proofreader Pauline Mitchell, 1926 BUSINESS BOARD Business Manager • • Henrietta Apfel, 1925 Advertising Manager Alice Gouled, 1926 Circulation Manager Blanche Miller, 1925 Assistants Helen Beirne, 1925 Mary Campbell, 1925 Frances Clarke, 1924 Norma Lowenstein, 1926 Ellen Wuori, 1925 | Ninety-nine ] [ One Hundred ] BARNACLE VOL. II Published monthly during the College Year by the Students of Barnard College, New York City. EDITORIAL BOARD Managing Board Jeanette Mirsky, 1924 Alice E. Killeen, 1926 Virginia Lee, 1926 Literary Committee Business Committee Dorothy Miner, 1926 Madge Turner, 1926 Frances McEntee, 1926 Betty Kalisher, 1926 Barnacle was organized last spring by a group of Freshmen who felt that there was a definite place in the college life for a magazine in which the student body might express itself by means of serious or humorous stories and poems. Popular approval of the material it has presented has amply justified the constructive venture of its founders. [ One Hundred One ] [ One Hundred Two ] f One Hundred 1 liree ] OFFICERS Alice C. Mendham, 1925 Dorothy Fetterly, 1924. . Eleanor Newcomer, 1926 President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Katherine Newcomer, 1925 . . Katherine E. Ashworth, 1925 Undergraduate Representative PURPOSE The purpose of the Y. W. C. A. of Barnard College is : To bring together all those who think Christianity workable. That is, those who, believing in a good transcending mere self-interest, find that good in the life and teachings of Jesus of Nazareth. To offer companionship and greater spiritual consciousness to all those desiring it. To further by study, discussion, common worship and social service, the intelligent and sympathetic application of Christianity to present human needs. To challenge students to live according to whatever principles they honestly recognize as good and beautiful. At Silver Bay girls of the eastern colleges come together to discover a com- mon basis for thought and a plan for better living through consideration of problems of the campus, the country, and the world. SILVER BAY [ One Hundred Four ] [ One Hundred Five ] pfiuman OFFICERS May McLaughlin, 1924 President Madeleine Hooke, 1925 Vice-President Mary M. Bradley, 1924 Secretary Constance C. Dunne, 1925 Treasurer Reverend H. C. Riley, C.S.P Chaplain Mrs. Carlton J. H. Hayes Advisor PURPOSE The Newman Club of Barnard College is a club for Catholic girls and those 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, to co-operate with R.S.O. in the field of social service. [ One Hundred Six ] JHenaral) CABINET Gertrude Gottschall, 1925 Pearl Bernstein, 1925 President Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer Mary Pincus, 1924.. Ruth Mehrer, 1924. Anna Sarason, 1925 Social Service Social Service PURPOSE The study of Jewish culture and ideals is the purpose for which Menorah has been chartered. It aims to discuss various problems of Jewish interest and to examine the culture of past generations in the light of present ideals. This year an extra-curricular course on the Historical Development of Jewish Culture was conducted by Dr. Evelyn Garfiel, a Barnard alumna. The discus- sions he lped to show the relation between cultural achievements and modern social problems. [ One Hundred Seven ] Y Y Spanish Club Miss Marcial-Dorado Advisor Gertrude E. Marks, 1924 President Eva Martin, 1925 Vice-President-Treasurer Adele Bazinet, 1924 Secretary Spanish Club aims to give the student of Spanish a more intimate knowledge of the life, customs, and literature of Spain, by means of lectures and discussions, while a command of the language is obtained at the frequent informal meetings. Last year, one of the interesting social events of the season, and certainly one of the most novel, was Spanish Night. The proceeds of this entertainment went towards a scholarship to enable a Spanish student to study at Barnard. Italian Club Professor D. Bigongiari Advisor Dr. Santa Borghese Honorary President Mary Benjamin, 1925 President Helen McDermott, 1924 Secretary-Treasurer Giuseppina Mina, 1924 Chairman of Entertainment Aida Mastrangelo, 1926 Chairman of Publicity Mary Ognibene, 1924 Publicity Assistant Catherine Baldwin, 1927 Publicity Assistant II Ouindicinale aims at a higher appreciation of the influence of Italian cul- ture on modern thought. The program for the year included several teas at which speakers presented the various phases of Italian culture. An almost unique opportunity was afforded the college when, on November 22nd, at a tea-dance given by the club, the Princess Borghese spoke on the life and successes of Eleanore Duse. The annual punto culminante is the performance and tea- dance given in the spring. [ One Hundred Bight ] OFFICERS Dr. Alma Le Due Renee J. Fulton, 1926. . . . Elizabeth M. Abbott, 1925 Anne Gunther, 1926 Faculty Advisor President Secretary Treasurer PURPOSE La Societe Franchise strives to supply the much-needed opportunity to gain a further knowledge of the French language, French literature and French cus- toms through discussions, lectures and dramatics. This year, as last, each one of its one hundred and forty members is bubbling over with enthusiasm and each one is lending a hand in the work of building up a fund for a scholarship, in order to send a Barnard student to France for a year ' s study at the Sorbonne. [ One Hundred Nine | OFFICERS Prof. Ida H. Ogilvie . . Ruth Ackerman, 1924 Freda Wacht, 1925... Honorary President President Secretary-Treasurer PURPOSE Geology Club has for its goal the bringing together of both students and faculty interested in geologic problems ; to stimulate wider interest in geology, and to enlarge opportunities for field study and specimen collections. Last year Geology Club presented for the college a geologic melodrama; this year plans are under way for a geologic luncheon. [ One Hundred Ten ] OFFICERS Prof. G. W. Mullins Honorary President Margaret M. Young, 1924 President Laura M. Bang, 1924 Vice-President Anna M. K. Herrmann, 1926 Secretary-Treasurer DEPARTMENTAL REPRESENTATIVES Elizabeth Ludlam, 1925 Chemistry Barbara Herridge, 1925 Mathematics Helen Green, 1924 Physics PURPOSE To those interested in Mathematics, Chemistry, and Physics the Math-Science Club affords an opportunity of coming together to hear informal addresses and to take part in discussions on subjects relating to these sciences. [ One Hundred Eleven ] 1896-1923 OFFICERS Mary Lee Mann, 1914 President Carrie Oldenbusch, 1920 First Vice-President Hester Mary Rusk, 1912 Second Vice-President Rhoda W. Benham, 1917 Secretary Nelly Jacob, 1924 Treasurer BOARD OF DIRECTORS The Officers and Mrs. Cary Eggleston, 1904 Elizabeth Ludlam, 1925 Marion Haskell, 1921 Dorothy Rhoades, 1921 Dorothy Lemcke, 1920 Mrs. H. Mark Thomas, 1904 This club was founded in May, 1896, in the first home of Barnard College at Madison Avenue. The purpose of the club as set forth in the constitution is to promote the interests of the Botanical Department of Barnard College and to encourage friendly relations among the students of that department. Every student who has worked more than one year in the Botanical Department is eligible to membership in the club. The membership includes, therefore, not only undergraduates, but also graduate students and alumnae. The activities of the club are one or more business meetings a year, a tea, when so voted, and a lecture by some botanist of prominence. Botanical field trips and meetings for reporting and discussing scientific work occur occasionally. In celebration of its twenty- fifth anniversary in 1921 the club presented the department with an apparatus for projection of both slides and pictures, and it has made gifts from time to time to add to the equipment of the laboratories. [ One Hundred Twelve ] A55IC£iLub ' Beauty is truth, truth beauty — that is all ye know on earth and all ye need to know. — Tohn Keats. OFFICERS Gertrude Oellricii, 1925 President Henrietta Apfel, 1925 Secretary-Treasurer HONORARY MEMBERS Miss Hirst Professor Knapp Miss Goodale Professor Lodge Professor Perry Professor Van Hook Professor Young Mr. Peardon Professor McCrea PURPOSE Classical Club endeavors to unite all students and officers of the college who are interested in the life, literature, and art of ancient Greece or ancient Rome. [ One Hundred Thirteen ] Dance and Music Club OFFICERS Eleanor C. Wood, 1925. Christine Einert, 1924 Elizabeth Abbott, 1925 Muriel Potter, 1924. . . Basin ess M an aget ..Music Chairman .Dance Chairman President Dance and Music Club is a new organization, not yet a year old. Dance Club had existed until last year under faculty supervision, Music Club as an independent organization. As the arts of dancing and music are so closely related the two clubs decided to unite. The club is primarily for Juniors and Seniors who have an opportunity to continue and demonstrate the technical training begun in their first two years of college in connection with Greek Games. Freshmen and Sophomores are admit- ted as non-voting members, however, so that they may understand the ideas of the club and carry on the work by the time they are upperclassmen. [ One Hundred Fourteen 1 Dance Club Recital March 23rd, 1923 PART I Die Walkure Wagner Magic Fire — Wotan calls Loge to place a protecting ring of fire around Brunnhilde, asleep on the mountain. Loge summons flames which dart and leap about and finally completely encircle her. (The dance has no connection with the music as used in the opera.) Dance of the Odalisques Rebikoff a. Tempo Di Ballo Scarlatti b. March Slav ' Tschaikowsky Eroica Symphony, Second Movement Beethoven Ballade, No. 1 Brahms A group of workers, worn out by their monotonous labor, dies. Spirits of former workers draw them on to what they hope will be a better life. Repeated from last year ' s program. PART II Soaring Schumann Mazurka Chopin Prince Igor Borodin Der Erlkonig Schubert An attempt to give, through the dance, the story of Goethe ' s poem as suggested by the music. Pastorale Sonata Beethoven Country folk, gathering in the village square to perform their daily occupa- tions, catch the joyous spirit of two young people, and all join in a dance before returning to their work. [ One Hundred Fifteen ] Debating Council, 1923-1924 Madeline N. Hooke, 1925 Chairman Dorothy Ashworth, 1926 Vice-Chair man Joyce Whitely, 1926 Secretary Renee Fulton, 1926 Chairman of Publicity Eunice Shaughnessy, 1926 Chairman of Materials CLASS REPRESENTATIVES ADVISORY COUNCIL Ruth Mehrer, 1924 Helen Le Page Katherine Newcomer, 1925 Barbara Kruger Ruth Bass, 1926 Elizabeth Waterman Gertrude Braun, 1927 INTERCOLLEGIATE DEBATE MARCH, 1923 Resolved: That the Federal government of the LJnited States should own and control the coal mines. Affirmative Negative Barnard vs. Radcliffe (at Barnard) Barnard vs. Mt. Holyoke (at Mt. Holyoke) Gertrude Gottschall, 1925 Eleanor Marples, 1923 Eleanor Phelps, 1924 Helen Reagan, 1924 Cicely Applebaum, 1924 Dorothy Ashworth, 1926 Alternates Alternate Hannah Kahn, 1926 Ruth Bass, 1926 Dorothy Putney, 1925 Helen Williams, 1926 Affirmative won; negative won. [ One Hundred Sixteen ] I One Hundred Seventeen ] College Assemblies 1923-24 March 6 — Dr. Henry Sloane Coffin 13— Hampton Quartet 20 — Undergraduate Assembly 27 Mile. Prenez: The Ruhr April 3 — Undergraduate Assembly 10 — Professor Braun: Switzer- land 17 — Owen Lovejoy: Child Labor 24 — x lice Judson: Recent Discov- eries in Egypt May 1 — Undergraduate Assembly 8 — Undergraduate Assembly 15 — Dean Gildersleeve : Address to Seniors October 2 — University Assembly 9 — Dean Gildersleeve 16 — Dean Gildersleeve : Address to Freshman Class 23 — Undergraduate Assembly 30 — Dr. Fisher — A. A. Assembly November 13— Dr. John H. Finley 20 — Dean Gildersleeve 27 — University Assembly December 4 — Dean Gildersleeve 1 1 — President Frank Aydelotte : Honors Course in American Colleges 18 — Christmas Assembly January 8 — Dean Gildersleeve 15 — University Assembly [ One Hundred Eighteen ] Assemblies February 12 — Dean Gildersleeve : (Alumnae Day) 19 — Wigs and Cues: Tony Sarg and his Marionettes 26 — Carl Van Doren : The New- Novel for the New America -(Contd.) April 1 — University Assembly 8 — Dean Gildersleeve 15 — Vocational Assembly: Miss Hirth 22 — Columbia Glee Club March 4 — Undergraduate Meeting 11 — Dean Gildersleeve ' s Address to the Sophomores 18 — Undergraduate Meeting 25 — Undergraduate Meeting Assembly Chairman Elinor Curtis Faculty Advisor Professor William Braun Forum Luncheons Friday, November 16 Dr. Harry E. Fosdick: Liberalism Monday, November 26 Alexander Goldenweiser : Race Prejudice Wednesday, December 12 — William Pickens: Practical Application of the Race Problem Wednesday, December 19. .Professor Henry E. Crampton : Heredity and Race Friday, February 8 — Professor Franz Boaz : Cultural Environment and Race Friday, March 14 Professor William F. Ogburn: What is Barnard Thursday, March 20 Professor John Dewey: Education and Freedom Monday, March 24. . . .Professor He nry Overstreet : Discussion and Education Executive Committee in Charge of Luncheons Advisory: Marion Mettler Louise Rosenblatt Elizabeth Waterman Business Manager 1st Semester Angela Kitzinger 2nd Semester Pauline Mitchell [One Hundred Nineteen] Barnard in the Intercollegiate World Junior Month Junior month is primarily an attempt to inform the college girl as to the methods and scope of modern professional social work. Twelve colleges — Bar- nard, Bryn Mawr, Connecticut, Elmira, Goucher, Mt. Holyoke, Radcliffe, Smith, Swarthmore, Vassar, Wellesley, and Wells — are invited by the Charity Organiza- tion Society to send a Junior to New York during the month of July. The pro- gram for the month includes lectures on the various fields of social work, trips to institutions, and actual experience in district case work. Elizabeth L. Waterman, the Junior from Barnard in 1923, found that the month, aside from its educational value, afforded, because of its intercollegiate nature, an important means of con- tact with other colleges. Intercollegiate News Conference Barnard entertained the eighth annual conference of the Association of News Magazines of Womens ' Colleges on November 9 and 10, 1923. Problems con- nected with the management of a college newspaper were discussed. Dean Gildersleeve welcomed the delegates at the opening session. Freda Kirchway, managing editor of the Nation, Dr. Joseph Hart, associate editor of the Survey, and Edward Tuthill, business manager of the Columbia Spectator, also gave stim- ulating addresses. The rest of the meetings were given up to detailed discussion on the part of business and editorial board representatives of various problems and satisfactory ways of solving them. Hunter College assisted Barnard in enter- taining the twelve visiting colleges. Student Government Conference Almost every college of good standing east of the Mississippi was repre- sented at the Womens ' Intercollegiate Student Government Conference, which was held from November 21 to 25 at Oberlin College, Ohio. There were visiting delegates, too, from the West. Every conceivable problem relative to college life and government was brought up during the meetings and in informal discus- [ One Hundred Twenty ] sions. At the first session Barnard presented a paper on Student Government, which was read by Edna Trull. After the first day or two there was a general feeling among the delegates that too much attention was being paid to details and statistical reports, and that general considerations of basic importance were being neglected. A shift of emphasis to more general discussion was recommended for the conference in the Fall of 1924 at Vassar. Barnard was represented at Oberlin by Edna Trull, Margaret Irish, and Elizabeth Waterman as visiting delegate from the dormitories. Youth — the Peacemakers Sixty delegates from men ' s and women ' s colleges of the East met at Goucher College in Baltimore the week-end of December 7 and 8 to discuss the League of Nations and the future peace of the world. Madeleine Hooke, ' 25, and Madge Turner, ' 26, went from Barnard. The conference decided to petition Congress and the President in favor of the United States joining the League. The plan was also considered and adopted of having an International Conference in Eng- land in June, in order to promote international fellowship and understanding. Dramatic Conference Margaret Melosh, ' 25, was sent by Wigs and Cues to represent Barnard at the Intercollegiate Dramatic Conference at Cornell on December 7 and 8. Ques- tions were discussed such as the advisability of having professional coaches, whether plays should be given to appeal particularly to the audience, or as art for arts ' sake, and basis of membership for dramatic organizations. Forty-eight delegates were present, representing twenty-seven colleges. Intercollegiate Student Volunteer Convention The Student Volunteer Convention, which is held once in every four years, or once in a college generation, took place in 1923 at Indianapolis, Indiana, from December 28 to January 1. Nearly six thousand delegates gathered to consider the practical application of Christianity to world problems and needs at this, the ninth convention since 1891. Katherine Ashworth, Charlotte Bradley, Agnes Cooper, Alice Killeen, and Madge Turner were the representatives from Barnard. [ One Hundred Twenty-one ] Sing Song brought enough originality and spirit to fill even the gymnasium this year. The Freshmen, adorned with vivid blankets and bright feathers, set a high tone to the general enthusiasm with their singing as spirited as their war-like array. Twenty-six wore brilliant orange bands. They were accompanied by their mascot, the lion, who cavorted about in front of the judges. In spite of this fact they did not succeed in surpassing the Freshmen. The Juniors may have been too old to masquerade, but they were not too old to sing. The Seniors, how- ever, were out to win, as they announced in a lively little song. Margaretta Weed and Ruth Ackerman sang a skit of Mrs. Gallagher and Mrs. Shean which proved to be the most humorous number on the program. It was the Seniors ' Class Song, however, that contributed most toward winning the day for them. The fighting songs of 1924 and 1925 were especially good. The Barnard trio was an innovation this year. It was composed of Marie Campbell, ' 26 ; Janet O ' Connor, ' 25, and Phoebe Wilcox, ' 25. 1. Original College Song, won by 1924. Words by Music Committee. Music by Florence Seligman. 2. Original College Cheer, won by 1924. Margaretta Weed. 3. Original Class Song, won by 1924. Words by Music Committee. Music by Florence Seligman. SCORE 1927 16 1926 14 2 3 1925 30 2 3 1924 38 2 3 [ One Hundred Twenty-two ] Old Favorites 1924 CLASS SONG 1-9-2-4, your dragon waits Outside your castle walls To keep you from impending fates, To guard your lofty halls. Oh dreaded beast, from days of yore, Defence and pride of ' 24, O keeper of the sacred gates, We answer to your call. 1-9-2-4, your colors fair, Beloved buff and blue, Close to our hearts we ' ll always wear In bonds of friendship true. Oh emblem of the dragon ' s might, Lead us up to the topmost height. Allegiance we will gladly swear And pledge our faith to you. 1927 CLASS SONG Hail to our valiant Indian brave, He ' ll be our guide through Barnard ' s halls, Be ' 27 ' s chief for aye, Now to the path of fame he calls, Seeking the trail we follow fast, Eager and sure in our belief, Wiser, we find the goal at last With our Indian chief. 1925 CLASS SONG Though there are ties that bind us now and keep us close, They may be severed all in coming days. Though we as classmates pal together, We may be lost in fortune ' s maze. There is one common bond that ne ' er will pass away, And ' tis the bulldog spirit in the fray, So we will always defend to the very end The class of Twenty-five. MAMA— 1924 (Tune: Mammy ) All night long I ' m crying for you, Mama, dear, The girls at College they treat me so mean, They always say that I ' m tender and green. I feel like I ' m dying. Ma, I feel so queer. Please come take your precious home, Take me right away from here. Chorus Oh, Mama, Mama, the sun shines east, the sun shines west, But I know the place where the sun shines best ; With Mama and Papa The Sophs make me jump just like a grasshopper, They took off my earrings, They won ' t let me powder my nose, Soon they ' ll make me take off almost all my clo Oh, Mama, Mama, I ' d give up my B. A. To kiss my M. A. — my Mama. CHOCOLATE ECLAIRS— 1925 (Tune: In the North Sea Lived a Whale ) The other day what did I see But two Erosh come from a bakery Eating jelly rolls, and cream puffs, and squashy chocolate eclairs. Said I in a voice of provocation, You represent Barnard on every occasion By your walk, and your talk, and by eating squashy eclairs. Said they, Now we ' d just like to ask you, When you ' re hungry what do you do, But eat jelly rolls, and cream puffs, and squashy chocolate eclairs. There ' s a nice delicatessen down the street, Where, if you- want, you can get to eat a Ham sandwich with mustard like respectable Bar- nard students. All we like is mince pie and custard, And jelly rolls, and cream puffs, and squashy choco- late eclairs. Now what would you do in a case like that, But go and sit on your high silk hat, Or a monocle, or a Freshman, or anything else that ' s helpless or useless. 1926 CLASS SONG As we follow down the pathway of this strange and unknown land We hold aloft the flaming torch kindled by some distant hand, When down the way in triumph by its radiance we have gone We will fling it back, its light undimmed, to those who follow on. ALONE, TEE-HEE, ALONE— 1925 I met a poor Freshman down in the hall Alone, tee-hee, alone. From her nose just one tear was about to fall Alone, tee-hee, alone. She looked at me quite mournfully And said, The thing that worries me. Is why Physical Ed. should examine me, Alone, tee-hee, alone. To a short English conference I just went, Alone, tee-hee, alone. To make an impression was my intent, Alone, tee-hee, alone. But how much nicer it would be To discuss on Trigonometry With just Mr. Mullins there and me, Alone, tee-hee, alone. To Jacob Schiff tablet one noontime I sped, Alone, tee-hee, alone. I was taking my Freshman out to be fed, Alone, tee-hee, alone. She brought with her two little friends, And I couldn ' t help thinking how best to spend The one dollar on which I had to depend, Alone, tee-hee, alone. [ One Hundred Twenty-three ] Student Friendship Drive NOVEMBER, 1923 ... last year the students of America gave generously through Student Friendship Fund to their extremely needy fellow students in Europe and the Near East. Seldom has such assistance been more badly needed or more gratefully acknowledged. This is particularly true with reference to the Russian students both inside and outside Russia. . . . Very sincerely yours, J. R. Mott. This excerpt from a letter received by Miss Gildersleeve from Mr. Mott, who is general chairman of the Student Friendship Fund, makes sufficiently clear the purpose of the drive which Barnard, with the other colleges of the country, supports annually. Here money is raised in various ways. Pledges are given to the limit of each individual ' s capacity. Contributions are encouraged, besides, by informal dancing for which admission is charged, by candy-selling, by bridge playing, and ever} ' other conceivable method. Competition between the classes as to which shall secure the greatest total amount of contributions has been found an effective means of securing interest in the drive. In the 1923 campaign the classes ranked as follows : 1st— 1927 3rd— 1924 2nd— 1925 4th -1926 Committee Marion Pascal, ' 26, Chairman of the Drive Mary Armstrong, ' 26, Publicity Katherine Newcomer, ' 25, Treasurer Helen MacDermott, ' 24 Margaret Richter, ' 26 Elinor Curtis, ' 25 Helen Warner, ' 27 [ One Hundred Twenty-four] Mysteries AN EXTRACT FROM THE SHIP ' S LOG ... The good ship ' 26 -weathered a stiff voyage in the fall, and came through with all timbers sound. The first stop of a rough trip zvas when we put in at Freshman Haven to ship the razvcst bunch o ' landlubbers you ever laid eyes on. They were only just big enough for cabin boys, but cussedly stubborn. Cockyf — Why, they even stole the ' boat ' s mascot and hid it in the bunk lockers. Things went from bad to worse, and at six bells on the night of the nineteenth, with a nor ' easter blowing, the green crew up and mutinied. We hove the worst to the sculleries. After ive showed the rest that we ' d do ' em no harm, the old tars enjoyed mess, and made the young ' uns scuttle around at orders. Then the boswain ' s mate brought the other landlubbers to account. It was a walloping sight. We made ' em walk the plank, and there zvas many a mighty splash as they fell into the salt. They gurgled and spluttered, and finally sank to Davy Jones ' locker. Dozen there at Davy ' s we staged some plays for ' em, just to shozv that we meant well. We gave ' em a take-off on a sailor ' s life, and a skit that hit ' em hard — They ' re Better Dead — with rollicking tunes in it, too. The green crew felt a little lozv after this, so the captain, to prove that he zvas a good fellozv and knew a bunch of live ones zvhen he sazv them, gave the leader of the greenies a book of nautical lore. The fun ended zvith everyone, all jolly tars together, singing Fifteen Men on a Dead Man ' s Chest! Mysteries Committee Eleanor Newcomer, Chairman Barbara Collison Dorothy Ashworth Elizabeth Lazar Elisabeth Reynolds Mary Chamberlain Dorothy Miner Belle Otto Marian Mansfield, Ex-officio [ One Hundred Twenty-five ] Ninth Annual Alumnae Day February 12, 1924 Classes open to all visitors during the morning. Afternoon Program 3:00: Presentation by the Alumnae Dramatic Group of two one-act work- shop plays : The Trap A dramatization of Robert Louis Stevenson ' s story, The Sire de Maletroit ' s Door, written for Professor Baldwin ' s course in play-writing by Luba Stein, 1924. Coach: Edith Halfpenny, 1913 Married On Part Time A comedy written for Miss Latham ' s course in play-writing by Edith Barnet, 1913. Coach: Joan Sperling Lewinson, 1913. Chief adviser to both plays Florence Gerrish Chairman of Executive Committee Alice Brett, 1915 4 :00 to 6 :00— Tea in College Parlor Hostesses: Class of 1911 6 :00 — Intercollegiate-Barnard Alumnae basketball game in the gymnasium. Won by Barnard with a score of 24-15. Barnard Team: C. McNamara, ' 23 Forward M. Carmody, ' 19 Side Center M. Hillas, ' 15 . : Forward E. Wetterer, ' 22 Guard L. Schoedler, ' 11 Center K. Cauldwell, ' 22 Guard [ One Hundred Twenty-six ] Step-Singing There has grown up at Barnard a custom about which we say little, but which is deeply precious to our sometime-sentimental selves — the ceremony of step-singing. Then it is that the Seniors formally affiliate themselves with the alumnae, while the Juniors move up to take their places. The Sophomores join the ranks of the upper classmen and the Freshmen are children no longer. One side of the quadrangle in front of Milbank is left — for the class who will enter in the fall. For once the competitive aspect is absent, though the classes are strongly individualized. They may sing to each other whole-heartedly and without rivalry; the outgoing Seniors have become for the moment inexpressibly dear. The old order changes before their very eves; soon they will all adjourn, laughing a little tremulously, to Senior Show, the last gay gesture of the class whose four years have gone by. The outgoing Senior president, on behalf of her class, gives to the girl who is to take her place the traditional cap and gown of her office. Her speech is the farewell ; onlv the memory of her gratitude, her good wishes, is left. There are thoughts of the old, old cry: The King is dead; Long Live the King! It is not easy to sing that last Beside the Waters of the Hudson, but one line sounds clearly, Though our friends are widely scattered, w e ' re one in sisterhood. [ One Hundred Twenty-seven ] Prominent Aeiabets o1 Ihc Younger Set ReynoWs.and William f fmriTe compwon Masters Rene Francois w Henrj Aullcr Bcnjama mli Ml Holler Helenas Barbara Oiil rcti of VdlkcrflulliRS ftstng p Their PkUks inlhtRsrk.. [ Hundred Twenty-eight ] College Teas I am the gracious presence presiding Over the samovar : I am the heart of the flowers That brighten the shadowy room ; Aline is the fragrance of lemon and cookies, Or of a fire flickering gaily On mischievous faces and eyes And always on groups of friends. I am the hungry Freshman who giggles, Edging shyly nearer the tea-cups; I am the learned professor conversing, Charming a circle of eager listeners; The humming laughter that rises and falls Like waves, is of my own making. I — am the spirit of College Tea ! Hostess — Miss Mabel Foote Weeks Chairman — Helen Cross, ' 24 lr the College Parlor, on Wednesday afternoons at four o ' clock. September 28 — Undergraduate Recep- tion October 10— All Club Day October 17 — Tea to Transfers October 31 — Barnacle November 14 — Athletic Association December 5 — Bulletin December 19 — Dance Club January 9 — French Club February 13 — Mortarboard February 20 — Class of 1927 February 27— R. S. O. March 5— Class of 1926 March 12— Math.-Science Club March 19— Class of 1925 April 16 — Wigs and Cues April 23— Italian Club April 30 — Spanish Club [ One Hundred Twenty-nine ] Sing Son HE annual competition in singing and song-writing was held on December 16 in the Theatre. The most interesting, as well as the most successful performance of the afternoon was given by the Sophomore class. Their songs were well-written and were executed with great enthusiasm. The Seniors, singing with dignity and earnestness, won second place. Third and fourth places were won, respectively, by the Juniors and Freshmen. One of the features of Sing Song this year with the delightful per- formance of the Glee Club after the class competition. The two numbers, Love Song, of Brahms, and a humorous song .entitled Oh Didn ' t It Rain, were rendered with admirable skill and spirit. COMMITTEE Mildred Lyman, 1927 Chairman Ruth Coleman, 1926 ...Secretary CLASS CHEER LEADERS Eleanor Newcomer 1926 Gertrude Hargrave .....1928 Jean Smith 1928 Florence Smith 1929 One Hundred and Thirty Alumnae Day February 12, 1926 Morning — Classes open for visitors Afternoon Program Three o ' clock — Presentation of two plays Brinkerhoff Theatre BIMBO, THE PIRATE By Booth Tarkington Bimbo . C. Straiton, ' 12 Robert D. Lazar, ' 26 Lydia ....H. Opoznauer, ' 26 Mr. Driscoll E. Halfpenny, ' 13 The Gunner .... L. Walton, ' 14 A Pirate L. Cooper, ' 22 Scene — A cabin on the Pirate Ship Time— 1725 SO, THIS IS PARIS GREEN! (A Grand Guignol Burlesque) By Kenyon Nicholson Mimi, a girl Apache.. D. Frankel, ' 24 Bobo, her husband.... M. Benjamin, ' 25 Pierre, her lover J. Mirsky, ' 24 Scene — A garret in the Rue Morgue, Paris Time — The present 4-6 — Tea in the College Parlor. 6 — Undergraduate-Alumnae Basketball Game. Score : 42-20 in favor of the Undergraduates. ALUMNAE TEAM L. Schoedler, ' 11 M. Wallfield, ' 24 M. Carmody, ' 19 Y. Yates, ' 25 C. McNamera, ' 23 N. Lubell, ' 25, part substitute for guard M. Hillis, ' 15 COMMITTEE Joan S. Lewinson, ' 13 Chairman Theodora Baldwin, ' 00 Denver Frankel, ' 24 Florence Beeckman, ' 04 Jeanette Mirsky, ' 24 Edith Halfpenny, ' 13 Christine Straiton, ' 12 One Hundred and Thirty-one The Barnard Girl — Her Character Book The Barnard Girl went back to grammar school days and filled out a page in her old Character Book. She is quite a bit more grown up now than then, and in regard to some things her opinions are decided. Often, however, she shows liberal taste. Here is what she wrote: Favorite Book — (1) The Rubaiyat, or the New Testa- ment (2) Social Change or Jane Eyre Favorite Author — • ( 1 ) Shakespeare (2) Stevenson, Hardy, Cabell or St. John Favorite Character in History — ( 1 ) Lincoln (2) Joan of Arc Favorite Flower — Rose (different varieties) Favorite Play — (1) Hamlet (2) St. Joan Favorite Car — (1) Ford (2) Packard Favorite Color — (1) Blue (2) Green Favorite Actor — John Barrymore Favorite Actress — Tane Cowl Favorite Indoor Sport — (1) Bridge (2) Basketball Favorite Outdoor Sport — ■(1) Swimming (2) Tennis Favorite Course— (1) History or Play-writing (2) Psychology Favorite Eating Place — ■(1) Home (2) The cafeteria Favorite Men ' s College — Harvard Favorite Candy — Fudge or chocolate peppermints Favorite Magazine — (1) Vanity Fair (2) Atlantic Monthly Favorite Paper — New York Times Favorite Way to Spend Summer — (1) Traveling (2) Camping What do you want to do when you grow up? — Get married [ One Hundred Thirty-two ] [ One Hundred Thirty-three ] Absurdities THE TENNIS COURT OATH Profane not my new white lines; Mine is no boasting vain, I am no common earth ; There is a greater word. I am of greater worth — His voice will now be heard ; Than fields or mines. He will uphold my claim. This is no idle threat, Place not that rough shoe here. — Those words have made you fear; — Damma, I getta you ! That lina she wet ! Helen Jones — (At the Vocational Conference). And, of course, the last requirement is a physical examination, but that is more or less a matter of form. Miss H., reading the roll; Miss Hughes, Miss Hughes? (No answer.) Miss If, looking up; Miss Hughes, you were absent last time, too, were you not? Alice: — Jane is the sweetest girl. She doesn ' t think there is anything wrong i:h anyone in the world. Betty: — I don ' t call that being sweet. That ' s just being unobserving. X. — Oh, I saw Kitty this morning. She was dressed up fit to kill. Y. — Well, why didn ' t someone? M. I — Club lists? Oh, yes! People just love to see their names in Mortarboard. M. H. — They should worry! They ' re in the directory anyway. OUR OWN ADVERTISING COLUMN Beware of substitutes — Gym. Eventually, Why not now — English C. The danger line — didn ' t understand the question. Your nose knows — Chem. Lab. Children cry for it — Food at college teas. Aids digestion — Any syllabus. It floats — The mushroom in the cream sauce. America ' s most famous dessert — Grape nut ice-cream. Why did she leave him that way? — 10:30 permission. The right start of millions for a good day ' s work — Not prepared Improves with use — Honor Code. You owe it to yourself to investigate — Zoo. C. Your best friend hates to tell you — Your F ' s and D ' s. They satisfy — C minuses. Sure to please — A ' s. (Solves every social problem } S P (Prevents embarrassing blunders) Happiness in every box — Student Mail. Ask Dad, he knows — The price of education. Fresh every hour — The men at the delicatessen. [ One Hundred Thirty-four ] [ One Hundred Thirty-five ] A PAGE FROM A BARNARD NOTE BOOK [ One Hundred Thirty-six ] Sfess if I ABBOTT, ELIZABETH Fire in her tresses, wings in her toes ; she shall have music wherever she goes. ASHWORTH, KATHERINE I hate nobody, I am in charity with the world. ADAMS, CLfiLIA Her hair was not more sunny than her heart. BACHRACH, MARION It is better to be out of the world than out of fashion. APFEL, HENRIETTA In her youth she read Virgil, Ovid, all the classics, and now that she ' s a woman she reads — Elsie Dinsmore. BAER, ETHEL How vain and dull this com- mon world must be. [ One Hundred Forty-one ] BAKER. ALICE ' I know -what study is. BATES, LORITA Reverence the faculty which produces opinion. BALL, GLADYS A wealth of witchery beneath a mild exterior. BECK, ELISE Good morning, Life, and all things glad and beautiful ! BALTZ, ROSEMARY Youth, beauty, graceful ac- tion, seldom fail. BEIHOFF, DORIS Glad, angry, but indifferent- no. [ One Hundred Forty-two ] BENJAMIN, MARY True, my power with the managers is pretty notorious. BLANC, ESTELLE Her eyes were deeper than the depth of water stilled at even. BERNSTEIN, PEARL Had I been present at the creation I would have given some useful hints for the better ordering of the universe. BRADLEY, CHARLOTTE ' Lean on me, grandpa, ' said little Lord Fauntleroy. B I ERNE, HELEN How shall we beguile the lazy time if not with some delight? BROWNE, KATHERINE My way is to begin with the beginning. f One Hundred Forty-three ] BUCKAI ASTER, MARGARET I awoke one morning and found myself famous. BUTCHER, ALISON ' Lady, wherefore talk you so? ' BURLEIGH, THELMA I live by an invisible sun within me. BYERS, ELEANOR ' O blest in temper whose un- clouded ray Can make tomorrow cheerful as today. BURNSIDE, HELEN And ease of heart her every look conveyed. BAYER, BERTHA Contentment of a firm, capa- cious mind. [ One Hundred Forty-four ] r r i r V CABOT, MAUD High erected thoughts seated in a heart of courtesy. CHAMBERLAIN, ELIZABETH My tongue within my lips I rein, For who talks much must talk in vain. CARTER, MARY ' Mary, Mary, quite contrary. CORN, ANNA We never heard her speak in haste. CAMPBELL, MARY Mark me, how still am I. CRAIGLOW, MIRIAM — and I learned about women from her. [ One Hundred Forty-five ] CROWLEY, MARY Though I am not splenitive and rash, yet have I something in me dangerous. CURTIS, ELINOR I could be bounded in a nut shell and count myself a king of infinite space. CUMMINS, HELEN And unextinguished laughter shakes the skies. DALTON, MARY JANE A sound of some joyous elf, singing sweet songs to please himself. CURREN, EDITH Satire is my weapon but I am discreet. DAVISON, ESTHER She sees life steadily and sees it whole. [ One Hundred Forty-six ] DEMERJIAN, ALICE The smiling countenance is the index of the mind. DICK, HELEN Her entrance into a room is as though another candle had been lighted. DEWBERRY, RUTH Thou who didst the stars and sunbeams know. DIETZ, EMMA It is a friend who comes tc meet us. DEZENDORF, FLORENCE And all was conscience and tendre herte. DIXON, BARBARA A rolling stone gathers nc moss, but it acquires polish. 1 One Hundred Forty-seven ] DUNNE, CONSTANCE Oh, Pallas, take away thine owl and let us have a lark in- stead. FINNEY, ELSA Yearning for the large excite- ment that the coming years will yield. EDELHURTZ, MILDRED ' The rose that all are praising Is not the rose for me. FOCKE, ANNA The fairest garden in her looks And in her mind the wisest books. EMTAGE, JUANITA A spirit that is indeed amiable and willing. FOLSOM, MARGARET An equal mixture of good humor and sensible soft melan- choly. [ One Hundred Forty-eight] FREEMAN 1 , GLADYS .Master, master, news — old news — and such as you never heard before ! GOLDWATER, RUTH Slowly provoked, she easily forgives. FRENCH, ELVA To see nothing anywhere, but what you may reach it and pass it. GOODWIN, MARY TERRY The army and navy forever ! GOELTZ, JULIA , Her silent course advances with inoffensive pace. GORDON, RUTH And then she danced — Great Heaven ! her dancing. [ One Hundred Forty-nine ] GOTTLIEB, EMMA Some touch of Nature ' s genial glow. HAILPARN, META A vast idea before me. and I glean therefrom my liberty. GOTTSCHALL, GERTRUDE Thou wouldst be great, Art not without ambition. HAMILTON, GRACE Preserving the sweetness of proportion. GOULD, DOROTHY Strong reasons make strong actions. HAMILTON, HELEN How that my thoughts pla) subtly at the spectacles around. [ One Hundred Fifty ] HANSEN, SOPHIE Cry out Liberty, Freedom and Enfranchisement ! HELLE, ESTELLE She gets the thrill that comes once in a lifetime just from reading Homer. HART, MARIAN O for a life of sensation rather than of thought ! HERRIDGE, BARBARA Why don ' t the men propose, mama, Why don ' t the men propose? HASBROUCK, MARGARET I have a secret in my heart. HOGUE, DOROTHY To me fate gave a nature sloping to the southern side. [ One Hundred Fifty-one ] HOOKE, MADELEINE Gentle in manner — strong in performance. ISHAM, FRANCES Content of spirit must from science flow. HUGHES, ALBERTA Let us make life itself our study. JACKSON, KATE With malice toward none, with firmness in the right. IRISH, MARGARET Her time is forever, every- where her place. JACOBS, JEANETTE ' I laugh and work. [ One Hundred Fifty-two ] JACOBUS, ELIZABETH So to your pleasures — I am for other than for danc- ing measures. JOHNSON, CATHERINE P. Trying- brought the Greeks to Rome. JERVIS, JESSIE I would help others out of a fellow feeling. JOHNSTON, OLIVE I have a hungering for calm. JOHNSON, CATHERINE L. Her smile is like a rainbow shining from a misty sky. JONES, MURIEL College life, I know not what thou art. f One Hundred Fifty-three ] KAHN, MARION For even though vanquished, I could still argue. KAPP, ELEANOR I look upon all as my com- patriots. KAMMERER, HELEN The gravity and stillness of your youth, the world hath noted. KELSEY, FLORENCE Every woman may be won. ' KANE, EVELYN I do not ask any more de- light ; I swim in it as in the sea. KITZINGER, ANGELA Here shall be truth and real work and talent to do it hence- forth. [ One Hundred Fifty-four ] KLAWAN, FAYE Well-timed silence hath more eloquence than speech. LEERBURGER, ANNA Going where I list, my own master total and absolute. LANG, DOROTHY I hope it is no dishonest de- sire to desire to be a woman of the world. LINDENMAN, KATHERINE ' Very pleasurably meditative. ! LEAVITT, BERNICE ' Puck masquerading. LIPARI, EMMA Whose armor is her honest thought. [ One Hundred Fifty-five ] LOCKWOOD, ONNIE She loved the principle of beauty in all things. LOTT, FLORENCE Be gone, dull Care ! I prithee be gone from me ! Be gone, dull Care ! thou and I shall never agree ! LUBELL, NAOMI O stalwart will to true occa- sion true! LOOMIS, CORNELIA To follow knowledge like a sinki ng star Beyond the utmost bound of human thought. LUDLAM, ELIZABETH One science only will one genius fit, So vast is art, so narrow human wit. LUHRS, MARIE How shone the artist in each cadenced verse. [ One Hundred Fifty-six ] McINTOSH, JEAN She shapes her speech all sil- ver fine because she loves it MARTIN, EVA Then she will talk, Good Gods, how she will talk ! MACE, ALICE ' A sweet content Passing all wisdom or its fairest flower. MASON, MARGARET Her offerings are pleasing to Apollo and to men. MANGES, DOROTHY Allured to brighter worlds outside our cloister. MATHEWS, MARY She ' s an angel in a frock, With a fascinating cock To her nose. [ One Hundred Fifty,seven ] MATULKA, BARBARA I know no disease of the soul but ignorance. METTLER, MARION Heart on her lips — and soul within her eyes. MELOSH, MARGARET ' You are the ending of all time— The world grew old to make you young. METZGER, RUTH An infinite capacity for tak ing pains. MENDHAM, ALICE Soft peace she brings ; when- ever she arrives she builds our quiet as she cheers our lives. MEYER, MARCELLE A scientific outlook from a heart of sweet generosity. [ One Hundred Fifty-eight ] DE MILHAU, VALERIE That though on pleasure she was bent, She had a frugal mind. NEWCOMER, KATHERINE Let us be happy; all will yet go well. MILLER, BLANCHE Of such a merry, nimble, stir- ring spirit. O ' CONNOR, JANET Is there not a song by the long, dusty way? NEDERBURG, FRANCES Charts, diagrams, — to add, di- vide and measure them. OELLRICH, GERTRUDE By thy winged heel we know thee. [ One Hundred Fifty-nine ] PALMER, ANNA What news on the Rialto? PETIGOR, PEARL ' My Book and Heart Must never part. PERTAK, GENE ' Animation that is infectious; You could never be tired of life. PINKUSSOHN, MARION Of infinite jest — of most ex cellent fancy. PETERSON, EDNA I take my part ; I see and hear the whole. PIPHER, ATHENA A merry heart maketh cheerful countenance. [ One Hundred Sixty ] PLENTY, ALICE She stoops to conquer — with a smile. PREISCHE, ELSA I, myself, must mix with ac- tion lest I wither with despair. PLITT, THORA A quiet reserve oft hides determination. PUTNEY, DOROTHY Neither to change, to falter, nor repent. POTTS, HELEN A privacy, — an obscure nook for me. RAN SO ME, JULIET Sweet sixteen and never been kissed. [ One Hundred Sixty-one ] ROBBIE. HELEN ' Contented wi ' little and cantie mair. ROCHE, MARY I mean what I say, and I say what I think. ROBIN, GERTRUDE ' Happy am I and from care I ' m free ! Why aren ' t they all contented like me? ROEDER, DORIS The present hour is in my power, and so I will enjoy it. ROBINSON, DOROTHY A wise skepticism is the first attribute of a good critic. ROSENBLATT, LOUISE Idle dreams belong to souls of lesser depth than mine. [ One Hundred Sixty-hvo ] ROSENTHAL, SARAH Whence is thy learning? Hath thy toil ' O ' er books consumed the midnight nil? SCHALL, IDELL Flapper and philosopher. ROWE, CORINNE A kind and gentle heart she had To comfort friends and foes. SCHNEIDER, MARGUERITE And let me live by the side of the road And be a friend to man. SARASON, ANNA It is wisdom alone that can recognize wisdom. SCOTT, JEANETTE A child of our grandmother Eve, or for thy more sweet understanding, a woman. One Hundred Sixty-three ] SCULLY, WILHELMINA If I can serve mankind, ' tis well. SIMMONS, ISABELLE I touched the sky with my finger. SHELDON, MARION Disposed to mount unto the stars. SLATTERY, KATHERINE The true wisdom is to be al- ways seasonable. SHERMAN, PHOEBE ' I reject none, I permit all. SPECTORSKY, MIRIAM Born to write, converse, and live with ease. [ One Hundred Sixty-four ] SPERRY, JOSEPHINE What delight a serene life gives. STERN, FRANCES Plainly, she said, I must give up my playthings. STEMPLE, ELIZABETH ' I travel the open road. SWOPE, HENRIETTA Action is eloquent — I do things well and with care. STERN, BEATRICE A brisk little somebody in a rage to set things right. TEARE, KATHERINE Rich with the spoils of na- ture. [One Hundred Sixty- five ] TISDALE, HOPE Soft as her clime and sunny as her skies. TRAVIS, VIOLA The one thing finished in this hasty world. VALENSTEIN, SYLVIA A little contradiction ani- mates conversation. VICKERY, DOROTHY A taste exact yet unconfined, A knowledge both of book and human kind. VOORHEES, GLADYS ' Shy one, shy one Shy one of my heart. VOSBUkGH, HELEN ' Her mind is her kingdom. [ One Hundred Sixty-six WACHT, FREDA ' Geologically speaking, she is t the super strata. WILCOX, PHOEBE There is sweet music here that softer falls. Than petals from blown roses on the grass. WEILL, ROSALIE ' ' Languor is not in your heart, Weakness is not in your word, Weariness not on your brow. WIGHT, VIRGINIA Intentions charged with pow- WITT, WILLIE CARTER ' What a case am I in ! WOOD, ELEANOR One touch of yours ennobles everything. [ One Hundred Sixty-seven ] WORK, RUTH Of Job ' s great patience hath she goodly store. YAMAGUCHI, FUMIKO A merry heart goeth all the day. WUORI, ELLEN Who lent thee, child, this meditative guise? YARD, HELEN Bright as the sun her eyes the gazer ' s strike And like the sun they shine on all alike. YAMAGUCHI, AIKO ' A kindly courtesy for all. YATES, FERN High ambition and deeds which surpass it. [ One Hundred Sixty-eight ] Other Barton, Evelyn Clayton, Marion Cogswell, Mary Cree, Martha Dorn, Dorothy Hess Fairchild, Margarita Gahagan, Lillian (Mrs. Walker) Members of the Class Heilig, Ruth Hsuing, Nora Iskian, Marie Levinson, Edna Litzinger, Katherine Middleton, Elizabeth Miller, Constance Norris, Katherine of 1925 Reimer, Alice Retan, Lucile Roberts, Dorothy Roberts, Frances Smolouchovska, Adonia Wagner, Lillian Williamson, Mildred Former Members of the Class Bacon, Lois Beatty, Sarah Bovard, Harriette Cantalupi, Mafelda Cantalupi, Yolanda Carty, Helena Chisholm, Tuliet Choate, Marion Clark, Elizabeth Clarke, Beatrice Hatch, Arline Hatch, Florence Kissock, Aileen Luh is, Marie Matthews, Eva Newkirk, Janet Soley, Marguerite Stutz, Helen Webster, Elizabeth (Mrs. Ronald Leslie) Weller, Ruth One Hundred Sixty-nine] The Ranks of the Elect (Seconds are given when the difference was ten or less.) Most Argumentative Bernstein; Hansen Most Artistic • Burleigh; Lockwood and Wood (tie) Most Attractive Travis; Irish Most Absent-minded Irish; Curtis Most Blase Curren ; Goodwin Most Collegiate Pertak Most Curious Mettler; Preische and Apfel (tie) Most Distinguished Looking Travis; Cabot M ost Essentia! ■Irish ; Melosh Most Genial Bradley; Cabot and Newcomer (tie) Most Individual Curtis; Benjamin Most Intellectual • . . Rosenblatt Most Happy-go-lucky Dunne Most Likely to he Famous Luhrs ; Rosenblatt Most Naive Hasbrouck Most Public Spirited Bradley; Mettler Most Slapstick Preische Most Talkative Martin; Kapp Most Temperamental Benjamin; Burleigh Most Versatile Melosh Most Unconventional Curtis Best All Around Irish; Melosh Best Sport • Yates Liveliest Preische ; Melosh Wittiest • Melosh ; Wood Most Successful Bluffer Wacht; Ransome [ One Hundred Seventy ] Memoirs of ' 25 Freshman Year Little Crrw Tion G-REEW RME TO THE GlG- COLLCO-E flNO RE ISTERED . WEflt ALMOST FdoLEO the PROFESSORS mo fr«T THRouc-H Her rDorrole Junior. Sister took her to the most wonderful PBRTf. THE SQPHS. MADE HER WEAR R HORRID ENoRMOl S Tfr AROUND HER (NECK, RND AT M fSTERIES.M CflRNlE SHflWEO 1 LOT Of SPIRIT RT FIELD PA y - OUT TMRT WR5 RLL. Crowes cl ss, however J lD win Sor CTH Wfr The cutest Grme - BRSEBftLL. CflRME WENT TO THE NICEST CLftSS MEETING-. THEY ELECTED ftLL THE OFFICERS . CflRNlE DiDwT KNCW flWX WflS THRILLED WITH THE RESULTS • — . p 5 - Tffnv 5 WEBS.-CHMUTTE VICE PRCS -MORION METUER. BRftPLEY SecRETRfty e CTT(f , ce aawe h,st --« umi lobecl Cheer leader — k.newComer CftRNIE w$s 50 WFUUy Thrrleo witr REEK G6MES BFTER f LL SHe HflP HERRb RRotTT THEM WO eEC THE WORK she SHE OlDMY CRR6 AT fUL when the Sophomores won C )Rnie Decided To KEEP fl MEnOflf soo  K THE FUTURE f)T SIN6--S0WC- CMWIE OlYD HER FRIENDS CftME OUT SECONO) which HAS KEPT crrnie sw inc- £ VE Sjwce «T Freshman Luncheon BT LE VoiSlfe CaRNIE HRO THE G-RRNDeST TiflE - 8ur SHE HAT€T£ to SEE THE END OF FRESHMRN Verr. [ One Hundred Seventy-one J  4 J? , BARNARD COLLEGE Ok, tut 4, [ One Hundred Seventy-two ] V, JR. YEAR °0a, [ Owe Hundred Seventy-three ] Senior Year During Senior year Carnation began to take life seriously and assumed many responsibilities as an example to the underclassmen. She often commended herself on her perspicuity in electing as president of the class : Meta Hailparn She had also helped to elect Marion Mettler I ' ndergraduate Presi- dent in the spring, so she felt well satisfied. Carnie ' s class always played and worked well together. Carnie, beneath her cherished dignity, dreaded the day when the companion- ship of four gay years should be over. She was quite philosophic about it and, on the whole, rather brave — but sometimes there were tears in her eyes. [ One Hundred Seventy- four ] [ One Hundred Seventy- five ] Junior Promenade Class of 1925 BARNARD COLLEGE February twenty-first Nineteen hundred and twenty-four Cosmopolitan Club 135 East Fortieth Street Music by Ingraham ' s Orchestra COMMITTEE Viola Travis, Chairman Cha per ones Miss Mabel Foote Weeks Professor and Mrs. W. F. Ogburn Clelia Adams Estelle Blanc Elinor Curtis Freda Wacht Alberta Hugl Florence Kelsey [ One Hundred Seventy-six ] Even Odds Presented by THE CLASS OF 1925 ACT I 7 unc— Present Scene— Garden Scene CHARACTERS George Town Margaret Hasbrouck Polly T ech Clelia Adams Stevens Tech Gene Pertak Buck Nell Margaret Irish Yale Gertrude Robin Ann Arbor Margaret Melos ' h Girls ' Chorus Men ' s Chorus El Mira Elsa Preische Randolph Macon Kate Jackson Sara Cuse Ruth Gordon West Point Evelyn Barton Ann Apolis Gladys Freeman Ford Ham Rosemary Baltz A del Phi Barbara Dixon Wells Ley Edith Curren MUSICAL NUMBERS Eve a Secret in My Heart George and Chorus Say It With a Diamond Chorus How Do You Do? Polly, Buck and Chorus In This Modern Age of Society Ann Love Song Steve The Odds Are Even Steve, Buck and Men ' s Chorus Tn the Summertime Steve, Ann and Chorus f One Hundred Seventy-seven ] ACT II 7 ime — Two and a half months later Scene — Holland CHARACTERS Bryti Mawr Catherine L. Johnson Grandma Mawr Katherine Browne Grandpa Mawr Estelle Helle Traveling Salesman Freda Wacht Wrigley Men Fern Yates and Elsa Preische Elinor Curtis Idell Schall Helen Yard Dutch Chorus Barbara Herridge Elsa Finney Onnie Lockwood MUSICAL NUMBERS Specialty Song and Dance Yale If You Love a Girl Bryn and Dutch Chorus Salesman Song Salesman and Wrigley Men Why Don ' t You Come and Tell Me So? Ann [ One Hundred Seventy-eight ] ACT III — Two Weeks Later Scene — Hindustan CHARACTERS Mr. Arbor Meta Hailparn Prince Ton Marion Pinkussohn Specialty Dancer Barbara Dixon Specialty Dancer Ruth Gordon MUSICAL NUMBERS It Really Isn ' t Funny Buck and Ann I Don ' t Want You for My Ideal Steve So Everybody ' s Happy Polly and Ann Finale Cast COMMITTEES Chairman Margaret Melosh Coach Mary Benjamin Assistant Coach Estelle Blanc Book written by M. Melosh, M. Pinkus- sohn, E. Wood Music written by M. Melosh and F. Wacht Lyrics written by M. Melosh Costuming Chairman: Alice Mendham Mary Terry Goodwin Helen Yard Estelle Blanc Dorothy Hogue Lighting Chairman: Thclma Burleigh Dancing Chairman : Ruth Gordon Gertrude Robin Music Chairman: Freda Wacht Business Staging Chairman : Dorothy Putney Thelma Burleigh Helen Dick Charlotte Bradley Mary Roche Jessie Jervis Florence Kelsey [ One Hundred Seventy-nine ] Chairman: Marion Pinkussohn Clelia Adams Chairman of Tickets Alice Baker Secretary lean MacLeod, ' 27 ... .Chairman of Ushers Katherine Newcomer, Chairman of Publicity Viola Travis Chairman of Patrons MEN ' S CHORUS — FIRST ACT [ One Hundred Eighty ] Some of ' 25. [ One Hundred Eighty-one ] [ One Hundred Eighty-two ] Acknowledgments The 1925 Mortarboard wishes to express its gratitude and appreciation to : Miss Gildersleeve, because of her interest and helpful advice in connection with the section of the Class of 1899, and because of her tribute to Mrs. Liggett. Miss Libby, Miss Meyer, Miss Doty and Miss Reilley for their co-operation and suggestions. Miss Goodale for information regarding the Class of 1899, and for the use of snapshots. Professor Ogburn, Professor Mullins, Professor Haller, Professor Mtiller and Dr. Lamson for their kindness in lending snapshots. Other members of the faculty for their very constructive advice. Miss Weeks for her friendly supervision of the first part of the book. Mr. Schilling for his untiring efforts in behalf of the success of Mortarboard. Mr. White for his willingness and care in regard to pictures. Nelle Weathers, Dorothy Fetterly and members of the literary board of the 1924 book for their extremely valuable criticism and advice. All students in all classes who have offered advice or given snapshots ; and particularly Juniors who have helped with office work or typewriting. Helen Bierne for help with the directory, and Elsa Preische, Jeanette Jacobs, Naomi Lubell, Kate Jackson for publicity. Alice Baker, Constance Dunne, Barbara Herridge, Dorothy Hogue, Juliet Ransome and Hope Tisdale for their work on the subscription committee. Eleanor Newcomer and Roma Rudd, ' 26, for contributions. Especially the following underclassmen who tried out for and became members of the provisional board, who have been willing to help on every occasion when their services were needed, and whose spirit has been consistently enthusiastic and co-operative: 1927 — Faith Waterman, Margaret Carrigan, Ceridwyn Nolph, Ann Carr, Alice la Cour, Helen Lincoln, Charlotte Hooper, Rowena Ripin, Roslyn Schlesinger (literary) ; Katherine Kridel (business) . 1926 — Ruth Coleman, Margery Skeats, Dorothy Miner. [ One Hundred Eighty-three ] STUDENT DIRECTORY Brooks Hall 607 West 116th St., Cathedral 5187 John Jay Hall 29 Claremont Ave., Cathedral 4820 1924 Name Address Telephone Ackerman, Ruth 35 W. 81st St. Schuyler 0291 Albansoder, Elsie T., John Jay, 243 Jackson Ave., Jersey City, N. J. Alexander, Adele R 26 W. 85th St. Schuyler 7543 New Canaan, Conn. New Canaan 586 Alford, Elizabeth B., John Jay, Maxton, N. C. Allen, Ethel D 510 W. 112th St. 613 N. Third St., Temple, Texas Alzamora, Lucia, R 341 W. 84th St. Schuyler 3923 Anderson, Marjorie 24 E. 8th St. 1025 Penn St., Fort Worth, Texas Archibald, Helena A 336 W. 95th St. Riverside 8090 Auerbach, Constance. . .55 Tiemann Place Backus, Marv A., Brooks, 320 E. 19th St., Savannah, Ga. Baker, Louise IL, 123 Alsop St., Jamaica, N. Y. Bang, Laura M., Brooks, Byram Shore, Port Chester, N. Y. Barker, Juliet, Cliffdale Farm, Croton-on-Hudson, N. Y. Croton 117 Barrington, Aldene, John Jay, Cut Bank, Mont. Bazinet, Adele 1228 Amsterdam Ave. Morningside 5216 501 W. 122nd St. Morningside 7035 Bennett, May S 519 W. 121st St. 221 Buena Vista Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. Bennett, E. Roberta 519 W. 121st St. Morningside 8790 6811 Ridge Blvd., Brooklyn, N. Y. Berliner, Frieda, John Jay, 48 Mayhen Ave., Larchmont, N. Y. Larchmont 375 Bernston, Ruth C, 32 Luydig Ave., Corona, N. Y. Berry, Gladys, John Jay, Longwood Ave.. Bedford. Ya. Bier, Marjorie 2720 Broadway Academy 5600 Black. Mildred, 158 Montross Ave., Rutherford, N. J Bliss, Mary A., Brooks, 186 S. Willard St., Burlington, Vermont Burlington 2019 Blum, Gertrude. . .1352 St. Nicholas Ave. Billings 6035 Boardman, Ruth H., 26 Hudson Terrace. Edgewater, N. J. Cliffside 18-M Wadsworth St., Geneseo, N. Y. Bovle, Marion L., Brooks, 26 Notre Dame St., Glens Falls, N. Y. Bradley, Mary M 195 Midwood St. Name Address Brown, Bertha L 250 W. 103rd St. Brush, Anna L Greenwich, Conn. Bryant, Katharine, 43 Prospect Drive, Yonkers, N. Y. Buhler, Edith L 260 Fourth Ave. Caldor, Selina 408 Manhattan Ave. Candee, Marjorie, John Jay, 10 Arch St., Norwalk, Conn. Carlila, Marion, 106 Heller Parkway, Newark, N. J. Cerlian, Marie L 36 W. 56th St. Clarke, Frances M., John Jay, New Brighton, Pa. Colgan, Virginia, 253 Sterling St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Colihan, Genevieve H..612 W. 115th St. 109 N. Jay St., Rome, N. Y. Collins, Marian, Brooks, 1315 Washington St., Michigan City, Ind. Condon, Myra R 2974 Decatur Ave. Cooper, Agnes P 253 W. 93rd St. Corrigan, Viola A., Brooks, 198 Second St., Clifton, N. J. Cross, Helen M., Brooks, • Liberty, N. Y. Cushman. Ruth 311 Convent Ave. Daniels, Elna, Brooks, Sag Harbor, N. Y. Darmstadter, Hildegarde..300 Bleecker St. 2040 E. 96th St., Cleveland, O. Denholm, Florence E....154 W. 106th St. De Sola, Alice, 145 Rutland Rd., Brooklyn, N Y. Devlin, Eleanor S., Brooks, 148 Buffalo Ave., Niagara Falls. N. Y. Donovan, Rose 237 E. 194th St. Hope, Idaho. Doyle, M. Hilarion, John Jay. 418 Tenth Ave., Scranton, Pa. Dunham, Catherine K., Ill N. 17th St., East Orange, N. J. Edwards, Blanche E., Brooks, Sayville, N. Y. Edwards, Charline, Brooks, 169 Elm Ave., Rahway, N. J. Egbert, Margaret I., John Jav, 145 W. 3rd St.. Oil Citv, Pa. Einert, A. Christine 421 W. 125th St. Telephone Greenwich 314-W University 6602 B. B. 1611 Flatbush 8462 Sedge wick 7154 Riverside 6227 Passaic 2502-R x udubon 1738 Sag Harbor 140-M Spring 1654 Academy 5688 Flatbush 6053 X. F. 473- J Freemont 5800 Orange 779-R Sayville 86-M Bell 78 Morningside 6769 [ One Hundred Eighty-four } Name Address Telephone Emtage, Edith, 533 8th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. South 5648- J Englander, Norma, 260 Ft. Washington Ave. Billings 3496 Estill, Ruth, Brooks, Huntsvillc, Tex. Farquahar, Charlotte B...100 W. 94th St. Riverside 7718 210 W. Passaic Ave., Rutherford, N. J. Farr, Marian Orange, N. J. Felsher, Frances, John Jay, 278 Merrimack Ft., Manchester, N. H. Fetterly, Dorothy E., John Jay, 12 Clifton Terrace, Weehawken, N. J. Fleming, Minnie M 606 W. 116th St. Cathedral 3620 919 E. 11th St., Dallas, Tex. Fosdick, Eloise 790 Riverside Drive Billings 2900 Francis, M. Evelyn 404 W. 116th St. 120 Putnam St., Marietta, O. Frankenstein, Olga 310 W. 86th St. Schuyler 8979 Friess, Dorothy 972 Woodycrest Ave. Terome 3066 Garfunkel, Mildred B 35 E. 84th St. Butterfield 5585 Giddings, Georgia R., 244 State St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Gilkey, Caroline K. ..100 Morningside Dr. Morningside 6272 2310 Coventry Rd., Cleveland, O. Ginsberg, Helen 839 Riverside Drive Billings 5273 Grant, Agnes, 141 2 Warburton Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. Graves, Lottie. 622 W. 114th St. Cathedral 7830 302 Univ. Boulevard, Dallas, Tex. Grav, Helen, Brooks, 45 Bergen Ave., Ridgefield Park, N. J. Hackensack 393- M Green, Helen J 519 W. 121st St. Morningside 8790 637 Ridgewood Rd., Maplewood, N. J. Gross, Ada 166 Henry St. Dry Dock 9288 Gunn, Olive E 170 W. 105th St. Academy 2667 Harrington, Virginia D..328 Convent Ave. Audubon 1046 Harris, Lillian 1100 Park Ave. Harrison, Isabelle, Brooks, 527 E. 44th St., Savannah, Ga. Havward, Elizabeth, Brooks, 1710 N. Delaware St., Indianapolis, Ind. Randolph 9140 Heidcman, Alice E., 415 Glenwood Ave.. Leonia. N. T. Hevn, Edith M 318 W. 107th St. Hines, Helen M 122 E. 70th St. Rhinelander 4798 Holmes, Josephine M... Hotel Marseilles 465 Merrick Ave., Detroit, Mich. Holzberg, Ida R 410 E. 65th St. Rhinelander 0300 Hoyt, Helen, 341 S. Broad St., Elizabeth, X. J. Ex. 307 Hubbard, Marv P., John Jay, 227 E. Third St.. Flint. Mich. Flint 945 Huxtable, Ruth L 528 W. 151st St. Audubon 2658 litis, Charlotte, John Jav, 20 Concord St., Englewood, N. J. Englewood 1909-J Jacob, Nelly C, Brooks, 114 Dufourstr., St. Gall, Switzerland Jarema, Tosephine J., John Jav, 129 E. 7th St. Tobert, H. Suzanne. .. 130 Claremont Ave. Morningside 0291 Kahrs. Grace 533 W. 141st St. Audubon 6713 Karagheusian, Leila M.. 88 Central Park West Columbus 2710 Name Address Telephone Kaufman, Stella R., John Jay, Maple Ave., Sea Gate, L. I. Kellner, Nellie L 30 Fifth Ave. Kcnmore. Eleanor Handy (Mrs.), 259 Garfield PI., Brooklyn, N. Y. Sterling 2220-J King, Eleanor K., John Jay, Woodville, Rapp ' k Co., Va. Kirk, Edith S., John Jaw 233 Winfield St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Kortheucr, Eleanor P., Brooks, Kraus, Dorothy G 14 E. 94th St. Lenox 0029 Kruger, Barbara 180 Claremont Ave. Lambrecht, M. Elizabeth, 2427 Valentine Ave. Kellogg 1168 Lavers, Katherine 145 Vermilyea Ave. Wads worth 9361 Leal, Margaret V., 237 Fifth Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. Lensh, Esther R 701 W. 177th St. Le Page, Helen L., Brooks, 155 Overlook St., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Lincoln, Anna E., Brooks, 86 E. Randolph St., Chicago, 111. Lewis, Louise G 523 W. 121st St. Morningside 5271 Losee, Ruth A., 235 Monroe St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Lowenbcrg, Elsie K., Brooks, 144 W. 4th St., Bloomsburg. Pa. McAllister, Frances M. . .400 W. 118th St. McAllister, Margaret M..400 W. 118th St. McDermott, Helen M., 46 Wadsworth Terrace Billings 1832 McLaughlin, May J 136 W. 116th St. University 4296 Marks. Gertrude E., _ 98 N. Parkway, East Orange, N. J. Orange 3295-W Martin, Janet, Brooks, Beaver Brook Farm, Milford, Conn. Milford 83 Maryon, Margaret C, Brooks, Trinity Rectorv, Bristol, R. T. Matzke, Helen M 3075 Hull Ave. Mehrer, Ruth 44 W. 175th St. Bingham 6701, Ex. 5 Messinger, Olivia A., Brooks, 253 Bushkill Ave., Easton, Pa. Milgram. Lillian. 151 Chester St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Mina, Giuseppina 200 Second Ave. Stuyvesant 5746 Miner, Helen 309 W. 93rd St. Riverside 8232 Mirskv. Teannette 49 W. 83rd St. Moen. Yvonne 337 W. 70th St. Fndicott 8661 Monzillo, Tiilda. 2249 82nd St., Brooklyn. N. Y. Bensonhurst 7527-W Morales, Lucille A 249 W. 107th St. Morreli. Freda. 203 Fenimore St., Brooklyn, X. Y. Flatbush 6342-M Morrison, Laura G.. 130 W. Kingsbridee Road Kellogg 8640 104 Clinton St., Danville, Pa. Morrow. Josephine V., Brooks. 203 Branard Ave., Houston, Tex. Morse, Katherine E., Brooks, 15 Northern Ave., Bronx ville, N. Y. Mucha, Caroline H., 123 Fulton St., Elizabeth. N. J. Mu=termann, Claire, 7 Clifton Terrace, Weehawken. N. J. Union 1294-W [ One Hundre d Eighty-five] Name Address Narzisenfeld, Bessie 3657 Broadway Norton, Esther Leah, Brooks. Wellsville, N. Y. Ognibene, Mary H., 644 83rd St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Ostrander, Ida, 169 84th St, Brooklyn, N. Y Ghent, N. Y. Parker, Evelyn B, 178 State St, Brooklyn, N. Y. Peebles, Frances, Brooks, 408 N. Jefferson St, Atkins, Ala Pepper, Eleanor G..370 Central Park West Petersen, Christine E, John Jay, „ . Arlington, S. D. Petri, Emilie N, Irvington-on-Hudson, N. Y. Phelps, Christine 441 Park Ave Phillips, Eleanor M, 1146 47th St, Brooklyn , N. Y. Pincus, Mary, 584 Greene Ave, Brooklyn, N. Y Pless, Helen 789 West End Ave Potter, Muriel C 530 Riverside Drive „ . . 889 St. Nicholas Ave. Price, Elizabeth 170 W. 59th St Pyle, Mary, Brooks. _ 7328 Schoyer Ave, Swissvale, Pa Quint, Ethel 645 West End Ave Rachmaninoff, Irene S..33 Riverside Drive Kanney, Mary E, John Jay, Greenville, Mich. Kegan, C. Helen, 427 Spruce St, Roselle Park, N. I Keinheimer, Margaret 49 W 70th St Reinke, Margaret C....540 W. 189th St ' Rose, Edith 924 West End Ave Ryan, Mildred 452 Riverside Drive Sanderson, Jennie 612 W. 115th St. Agincourt, Ontario, Canada Sanial, Dorothy, 114 Horton St, Citv Island, N. Y Schwartz, Mabel N 123 E. 94th St Searcy, Helene, John Jay. e,- ■ i, Durango, Colo. Sehgmann, Florence C 108 E 81st St Sheehan, Marion C, Brooks. 27 Gould Ave, Newark. N. T. Shero, Livia F 371 W. 117th St 444 N. Main St, Greensburg, Pa Sherpick. E. Ella, John Jay. 704 Chauncey St, Brooklyn, N Y Shippen, Mary, Shippen Road. Louisville, Ky. Shuser, Dora 503 W. 122nd St. 29 John St, Newport, R. I Slayton, Alice V 162 Bush St Telephone Audubon 8793 Shoreroad 0113 Hudson River 23-F-4 Main 6587 Plaza 3656 Berkshire 3353 Lafayette 4776-W Riverside 9166 Morningside 2842 Audubon 3050 Riverside 8479 Endicott 4377 Roselle 1580-M Endicott 4663 Wadsworth 2228 Academy 0566 Cathedral 4720 Cathedral 2940 City Isle 1196 Lenox 1158 Morningside 2540 713-X Fordham 1063 Name Address Smith, E. Ruth, John Jay, Centralia, 111, Spingarn, Henriette C, 623 Willoughby Ave, Brooklyn, N. Y. Stein, Luba M 28 W. 47th St. Steinschneider, Fanny, Brooks, 2599 Briggs Ave. Stokes, Lilyan M, Brooks, W. 73rd St. and Broadway, care of U. S. Mortgage Trust Co. Stoll, Florence A 46 W. 96th St. Struck, Edna 519 W. 121st St. Webster, N. Y. Sullivan, Dorothy 618 W. 114th St. 1034 S. Main St., Anderson, S. C. Taft, Eleanor 434 W. 120th St. 53 Hilley Rd, West Hartford, Conn. Ten Broeck, Delphine L, John Jay, 1421 Glenwood Rd, Brooklyn, N. Y. Thayer, Myla T, 150 Brompton Rd, Garden City, L. I. Thompson, Lillian M, Brooks, 236 15th Ave, Columbus, O. Thompson, Mary, Brooks, Hollins, Va. Tichenor, Constance, Brooks, 59 Wickham Ave, Middletown. N. Y. Tjader, Marguerite 30 E. 60th St. Trull, Edna, 24 Claremont Ave, Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Ullman, Jeanne Hotel Hamilton Veilchenblau, Hortense, 1340 Madison Ave. Velten, Alice, 119 E. 65th St, Port Orchard, Wash. Wallfield, Marie, 1269 46th St, Brooklyn, N, Y. Warren, Alice, John Jay, 906 S. 6th St., Springfield, 111. Waterman, Elizabeth L, Brooks, 335 Park St, Bastaurx, Mass. Weathers, Nelle L, 1131 Everett Ave, Louisville, Ky. Weed, Margaretta W....324 W. 103rd St. Weil, Deborah J 35 Hamilton Place Weill, Ruth E, John Jay. .703 E. 137th St. Weiller, Mildred.. 285 Central Park West Westcot, Eleanor, 7 Lincoln Terrace, Yonkers Whitney, Caroline M, 420 Park Ave, Glen Cove, L. I, N. Y. Winiker, Marie V, Brooks, 703 Jefferson Ave, Danville, Va. Wise, Justine 23 W. 90th St. Young, Margaret M, 1120 Woodycrest Ave. Telephone Williamsburg 004 Bryant 6751 Tremont 4913 Riverside 2640 Morningside 8790 150-F-4 Cathedral 8855 43 Mansfield 1629-J Plaza 9900 Hillcrest 5679-M Endicott 4900 Lenox 4911 Rhinelander 1125 Berkshire 6080 Schuyler 2096 Schuyler 7697 Yonkers 573 Plaza 5213 867 Riverside 0073 [ One Hundred Eighty-six ] 1925 Name Address Telephone Abbott, Elizabeth M., 142 Larch Ave., Bogota, N. J. Hackensack 4383 Adams, Clelia E., 325 Clinton Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Apfel, Henrietta V., John Jay, 302 Central Park West Ashworth, Katherine, 95 Radford St., Yonkers, N. Y. Yonkers 5165-M Bachrach, Marion B 35 E. 84th St. Baer, Ethel V., The Greystone, 91st St. and Broadway Baker, Alice T., Brooks Hall, 123 Alsop St., Jamaica, N. Y. Ball, Gladys E 1750 Topping Ave. Baltz, Rosemary W 535 W. 113th St. Cathedral 7067 Barton, Evelyn O., Brooks Hall, 417 Cedar St., Boonton, N. J. Boonton 165 Bates, Lorita E., John Jay, 532 Locust Ave., Hazleton, Pa. Bayer, Bertha 763 E. 226th St. Olinville 2316 Beck, Elise, Brooks Hall, 313 Grand Ave., Hackettstown, N. J. 117x Beihoff, Doris E 70 Morningside Dr. Beirne, Helen D 153 E. 50th St. Plaza 0478 Benjamin, Mary A 154 W. 88th St. Schuyler 423-7 Bernstein, Pearl... 121 St. Nicholas Ave. Blanc, Estelle C.,465 Central Park West Academy 2678 Bradley, Charlotte 71 W. 12th St. Watkins 2911 Browne, Katherine M., Brooks, 345 E. B ' way, Salt Lake City, Utah Buckmaster, Margaret E., 80 Ashburton Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. Burleigh, Thelma, Brooks, 308 W. Green St., Olean, N. Y. Burnside, Helen, 114 Roff Ave., Morsemere, N. J. Morsemere 526-R Butcher. Alison C 403 W. 115th St. Bvers, Eleanor, 938 Salem Ave., Elizabeth, N. T. Elizabeth 3333-M Cabot, Maud 37 E. 75th St. Rhinelander 2659 Campbell, Alary A., 437 Rogers Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Carter, Mary 830 Park Ave. Chamberlain, A. Elizabeth, Columbia Place, Maspeth, N. Y. Clarke, Beatrice A., 11 Ranelegh Rd., Brighton, Mass. Clavton, Marion I., 37 Tefferson Ave., Brooklyn. N. Y. Sterling 6819-M Cogswell, Mary Van R....12 E. 11th St. Stuyvesant 2865 Corn, Anna G 130 Wadsworth Ave. Washington Hts. 1100 Craiglow, Miriam R., John Jay, 1207 N. Third St., Harrisburg, Pa. Cree, Martha. John Jay, 1520 West Ave., Richmond, Va. Boulevard 4185-W Crowley, Mary, John Jay, Mylod St., Walpole, Mass. Cummins, Helen E., John Jay. Ticonderoga, N. Y. Curren, Edith, 65 Sherman Ave., Newark, N. J. Bigelow 3086- J Name Address Telephone Curtis, Elinor 130 E. 67th St. Dalton, Mary Jane 29 W. 90th St. Riverside 7579 Davison, Esther 850 W. 179th St. Wadsworth 8433 Demerjian, Alice M., 443 16th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. South 9769 Dewberry, Ruth E, John Jay, 3133 Norw ' d Blvd., Birmingham, Ala. Dezendorf, Florence, 54 Harvard Ave., Jamaica, L. I. [amaica 2540 Dick, Helen R., 116 Warburton Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. Yonkers 2139- J Dietz, Emma M., 1108 Bushwick Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Foxcroft 3419 Dixon, Barbara, 168 St. John ' s PI., Brooklyn, N. Y. Sterling 1960 Dunne, Constance C, John Jay, 152 Oakdene Ave., Teaneck, N. J. Hackensack 4141 Edelhertz, Mildred, 412 Cathedral Parkway Audubon 3878 Emtage, Tuanita, 533 Eighth St., Brooklyn. N. Y. South 5648-J Ellerton St. George ' s, Barbados, B. W. I. Fairchild, Margarita, Brooks, Calle Bolivar 146, Monterrey, Mexico Ferris, Alice B 400 W. 118th St. Cathedral 4680 New Milford, Conn. New Mil ford 286 Finney, Elsa M., 528 72nd St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Focke, Anna, 102 Remsen St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Main 0772 Folsom, Margaret K., 3 Rydal PI., Montclair. N. J. Freeman, Gladys M 307 W. 107th St. Academy 1593 French, Elva, Brooks. . East Quogue, L. I. East Quogue 213 Goeltz, Tulia, John Jay, 28 Smull Ave., Caldwell. N. J. Caldwell 458 Goldwater, Ruth 445 Riverside Drive Cathedral 5077 Goodwin, Mary Terrv, Brooks, 1010 Orchard Hill, Roanoke, Va. Gordon, Ruth, Brooks .. 854 W. 180th St. Wash. Heights 2848 Gottlieb, Elma 780 Riverside Drive New McNeil Ave., Far Rockaway, L. I. Gottschall, Gertrude. . .15 Claremont Ave. Cathedral 4786 Gould, Dorothy 63 Hamilton Terrace Audubon 8540 Hailparn, Meta L., Brooks, 129 Addington Rd., Brookline, Mass. Hamilton, Grace 147 W. 105th St. Academy 6092 Hamilton, Helen L 415 W. 118th St. 245 N. Kenilworth, Oak Park, 111. Hansen, Sophie. 99 Longfellow St., Carteret, N. J. Hart, K. Marian, John Jay, 1611 Ave. J., Brooklyn, N. Y. Hasbrouck, Margaret B., Brooks, 85 O ' Neill St., Kingston, N. Y. Kingston 1151 Heilig. Ruth E., 1984 E. Ninth St., Brooklyn. N. Y. Conev Island 2347 Helle, Estelle 80 First St. Dry Dock 6748 Herridge, Barbara. John J ax. 25 Williams St., Dover, N. J. [ One Hundred Eighty-sei ' en ] Name Address Hess, Dorothy (Airs. Dorn), 325 Ridgewood Ave., Glen Ridge, N. J. Hogue, Dorothy, 484 Hawthorne Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. Hooke, Madeleine N., Armour Villa Park, Bronxville, N. Y. Hsuing, Nora, Tompkins Hall, 88 Shih Lu Ala Ta Chia, Peking, China Hughes, Alberta E., John Jay, 269 Berkeley Ave., Bloomfield, N. J. Irish, Alargaret H., Brooks, 507 Broadway, Troy, N. Y. Isham, Frances P 26 W. 37th St. AJanchester, Vt. Jackson, Kate 600 W. 192nd St. Jacobs, Jeanette, 65 Grand PL, Arlington, N. J. Jacobus, Elizabeth Van H., 131 W. 70th St. Jervis, Jessie L., Beacon Hill, Port Washington, N. Y. Johnson, Catherine L. . . Crestwood, N. Y. Johnson, Catherine P., Brooks, Lincoln University, Pa. Johnston, Olive 217 W. 109th St. 162 High St., Springfield, Alass. Jones, Muriel G 335 Alexander Ave. Kahn, Alarion 45 E. 82nd St. Kammerer, Helen, John Jay, 433 Bement Ave., Staten Island, N. Y. Kane, Evelvn A., 213 Boerum St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Kapp, Eleanor AI...2291 University Ave. Kelsey, Florence, 408 Hawthorne Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. Kitzinger, Angela 3694 Broadway Klawan, Faye P., John Jay, 102 Decatur St., Cumberland. Md. Lang, Dorothy E 420 Riverside Drive Leavitt, Bernice T., 35 Fort Washington Ave. Leerburgcr. Anna C 116 W. 86th St. Levinson, Edna L Cedarhurst, L. I. Lindenman. Katherinc E., 20 Dean Place, Woodhaven, N. Y. Lipari, Emma P 568 W. 261st St. Litzinger, Katherine, Brooks. Bedford, Pa. Lockwood. Onnie.432 Central Park West Loomis, Cornelia 214 W. 109th St. Ashville, N. Y. Lott, Florence 1268 President St. 143 N. Grand St., Elizabeth. N. T. Lubell, Naomi T 158 E. 179th St. Ludlam, Elizabeth L., West Shore Rd., Oyster Bav N. Y. Luhrs, Marie 203 W. 91st St. Alclntosh. Tean 2311 Grand Ave. 44 Orchard St., Pleasantville, N. Y. Aface. Alice D 4051 Seton Ave. Afanges, Dorothy 120 W. 86th St. Martin, Eva V., 3750 15th St., F.lmhurst. L. T. 1447 23rd St., Milwaukee, Wis. Telephone Glen Ridge 149 Yonkers 2075-R Bronxville 3921 Troy 2062 Fitzroy 4415 Wash. Heights 2423 Kearny 0645-A1 Endicott 0050 Port Wash. 366-R Tuckahoe 3725- J River 3332-J Butterfield 1025 Port Richmond 2752 Staeg 1918 Kellogg 2543-W Yonkers 3469 Audubon 4593 Schuyler 3668 Cedarhurst 1038 Kingsbridge 1836 Academy 4215 Bingham 9829 Oyster Bav 39- T Riverside 8459 Fordham 2688 Pleasantville 156 Woodlawn 1640-M Schuyler 9429 Havemeyer 3851 Name Address Alason, Alargaret E., 35 Fort Washington Ave. Mathews, Mary C, Seir Hill, Norwalk, Conn. Alatulka, Barbara 3495 Third Ave. Alelosh, Alargaret W., Brooks, 69 Astor Place, Jersey City, N. J. Mendham, Alice C, Brooks, Laurelton, L. I., N. Y. Alettler, Marion 878 West End Ave. Metzger, Ruth 53 W. 94th St. Meyer, Marcelle, Anderson Park, White Plains, N. Y. Middleton, Elizabeth 49 E. 10th St. 1110 Stokes Ave., Collingswood, N. J. De Alilhau, Valerie M., John Jay, 508 Allison St., Richmond, Va. Miller, Blanche. 431 12th St., West New York. N. J. Miller, Constance 136 E. 65th St. Nederburg, Frances E...541 W. 113th St. Newcomer, Katherinc E., 14 Lattin Drive, Yonkers, N. Y. Norris, Katharine H., John Jay, Waynesburg, Pa. O ' Connor, Janet AI 213 W. 106th St. Oellrich, Gertrude, Brooks, 67 E. Park St., East Orange, N. J. Palmer, Anne, John Jay, Bannon Lodge, Thunderbolt, Ga. Pertak, Gene, 21 Park Ave., Alt. A ' ernon, N. Y. Peterson. Edna, John Jay, 248 Fillmore St., New Brighton. Staten Island. N. Y. Pctigor, Pearl H 611 W. 152nd St. Pinkussohn. Marion, Brooks, 124 E. 49th St., Savannah, Ga. Pipher, D. Athena, John Jay, Fairchild Ave., Morris Plains, N. J. Plenty. Alice L., 343 Anderson St., Hackensack, N. 1. Plitt. Thora M, John Jay, 9 Franklin Place, Alorristown, N. J. Potts, Helen, Brooks, 2729 Pine Grove Ave., Chicago, 111. Preische, Elsa. 84 Ludlow St., Yonkers, N. Y. Putney Dorothy, 257 Alilbank Ave., Greenwich, Conn. Ransome, Juliet. Brooks, Christ Church Rectory, ATedia. Pa. Reimer. Alice E 440 Riverside Drive Retan, Lucille 49 Claremont Ave. 29 Forest Ave., W. Newton, Alass. Robbie, Helen G.. 3 Archer Place, Tarrvtown N. Y. Roberts, Dorothv T 217 W. 110th St. Roberts, Frances E 324 W. 84th St. Fort Calhoun, Neb. Robin, Gertrude. John Jav. Bayard and Gitpin Sts.. Wilmington, Del. Robinson. Dorothv C. John Jay, 8615 Euclid Ave., Cleveland, O. Telephone Norwalk 219-12 Bergen 2164 Laurelton 1946 Riverside 7968 Riverside 6880 White Plains 197 Stuyvesant 2956 Rhinelander 1127 Cathedral 7870 Yonkers 757-R Academy 3072 Hillcrcst 1987 Tompkinsville 102-W Academy 2381 Alorristown 1453-Ar Hackensack 402 Alorristown 707 Greenwich 26S-AI ATedia 426 Cathedral 5422 Cathedral 5140 Endicott 5880 [ One Hundred Eighty-eight ] Name Address Telephone Roche, Alary 2212 Aqueduct Ave. Kellogg 2988 Roeder, Doris K 547 W. 157th St. Billings 3379 Rosenblatt, Louise, Juhn Jay, Lake-wood, N. J. Lakcwood 459-J Rosenthal, Sarah, Brooks, Branford, Conn. Branford 246 Rowe, Corinne A., Cor. Bell and Maxwell Aves., Bayside, L. I. Bayside 1369-J Sarason, Anna, Brooks, 377 Central Ave., New Haven, Conn. Schall, Idell R., John Jay, 2U8 S. Broadway, Greenville, Miss. Schneider, Marguerite, 156 Nesbit St., Weehawken, N. J. Union 564 Scott, Jcanette B., 54 Fanshaw Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. Yonkers 1559 Scully, Wilhelmina D..925 West End Ave. Academy 0126 Everett Place, Englevvood, N. J. Englewood 2252 Sheldon, Marion 39 Ciaremont Ave. Cathedral 4770 Pearl River, N. Y. P. R. 238 Sherman, Phoebe, Brooks, 16 Sheldon Place, Hastings-on-Hudson, N. Y. Hastings 735 Simmons, Isabelle 415 W. 118th St. 612 N. Kenilworth Ave., Oak Park, 111. Slattery, Katherine M., John Jay, Raritan, N. J. Smolouchovska. Aldona, Brooks, 27 Studencka, Cracow, Poland Spectorsky, Miriam L 1 W. 94th St. Sperry, Josephine B 345 Park Ave. Plaza 6524 Stemplc, M. Elizabeth, Brooks, Fort Plain. N. Y. Stern, Beatrice L 4 E. 88th St. Lenox 7135 Stern, Francis M 219 W. 81st St. Schuyler 4700 Swope, Henrietta H 27 W. 67th St. The Croft, Ossining, N. Y. Croton 93-M Name Address Telephone Alexander, Frances 2033 Morris Ave. Alzamora, Maria 341 W. 84th St. Schuyler 3923 Anderson, Dorothy L., 29 Fraser St., Pelham, N. Y. Pelham 1188- W Anderson. Mabel, Brooks, 3067 Spruce St., St. Bellaire, O. Andreen, Florence M.. 12 18th St., Elmhurst. N. Y. Andujar. Amalia A 560 W. 173rd St. Wadsworth 4234 Antell, A. Eleanor, 1116 Ocean Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Mansfield 4678-R Armstrong, Mary H..548 Riverside Drive Morningside 5790 Ashworth, Dorothy G., 95 Radford St., Yonkers, N. Y. Yonkers 5165-M Avery, Dorothy, Brooks, Mt. Savage, Md. Baldwin, Aliriam, 2143 Troy Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Midwood 7471_-M Barker, Grace E 171 Audubon Ave. Wadsworth 8715 Uarkman, Leilya K., Brooks, 197 Speedwell Ave., Morristown, N. J. Name Address Telephone Teare, Katherine, John Jay, 478 E. 152nd St., Cleveland, O. Tisdale, Hope, John Jay, 1009 Old Shell Rd., Mobile, Ala. Travis, Viola 29 W. 12th St. Chelsea 7574 Valenstein, Sylvia E 515 VV. 124th St. Morningside 4859 Yickery, Dorothy S., John Jay, Steelton, Pa. Voorhces, Gladys, John Jay, 432 Elm St., Reading, Pa. Vosburgh, Helen E., John Jay, 61 Putnam Ave., Norvvalk, Conn. Wacht, Freda G 505 West End Ave. Walker, Lillian (Gahagan), 130 Parkside Ave.. Brooklyn, N. Y. Flatbush 772?-] Weill, B. Rosalie, 358 West End Ave. Endicott 2521 Wight, M. Virginia, John Jay, TJ. S. Veterans ' Hosp., Palo Alto, Cal. Wilcox, Phoebe 416 W. 122nd St. Morningside 4475 Wailuku, Maui, Hawaii Williamson, Mildred S., John Jaw 3905 Morrison St., Chevy Chase, D. C. Cleveland 2993 Witt, Willie Carter, John Jay, 901 S. Orleans St., Tampa, Fla. Wood, Eleanor C. The Wyoming, 55th St. and 7th Ave. Circle 579? Work, Ruth L, 65 Colgate Ave., Yonkers. N. Y. Yonkers 3569-1 Wuori, Ellen K 53 W. 87th St. Schuyler 7913 Colebrook, Conn. Yamaguchi, Aiko 100 Payson Ave. Wadsworth 2349 Yamaguchi, Fumiko .... 100 Payson Ave. Wadsworth 2349 Yard, Helen S 780 Riverside Drive Billings 2800 Yates, Fern, Brooks, 4414 Live Oak St., Dallas, Texas U-3589 Name Address Telephone Baruch, Renee W 6 W. 52nd St. Bass, Ruth... 85 71st St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Belo, Jane Plaza Hotel Plaza 1740 Bernstein, Frances 31 W. 85th St. Schuyler 3791 Bitter, Marietta. Tibbett Ave. and 246th St. Blumberg, Diana E 523 W. 134th St. Bokstein, Fannv, John Jay, 6 Anthony Place, Troy. N. Y. Troy 961-R Borgenicht, Estelle. . . 590 West End Aye. Bosch, Dorothy 420 Riverside Drive Braithwaite, Florence, 16 Cedar Court, Flushing, N. Y. Flushing 1573-J Brewer, Barbara, 41 Hamilton Ave., New Brighton. Staten Island, N. Y. Broads. Rosalind M., 249 Valentine Lane, Yonkers. N. Y. Brogan Helen C 122 W. 91st St. Riverside 1821 29 Holbrook St.. Port Jervis, N. Y. f One Hundred Eighty-nine} Name Address Brown, Velma L., Brooks, 50 Dunster Rd, Jamaica Plain, Mass. Bruce, Dorothy I., 144 Garfield Place, Brooklyn, N. Y. Burgum, S. Mary, Home Park, New Rochelle, N. Y. Burtis, Helen, Brooks, 194 Brower Rd., Oceanside, L. I. Byram, Marianna . . . 189 Claremont Ave. Campbell, Marie G..2015 University Ave. Carson, Mary C, 305 Glenwood Ave., Leonia, N. J. Chamberlain, Mary E., Brooks, Walnut St., Englewood, N. J. Clark, Margare t S., Brooks, Northport, N. Y. Coleman, Ruth 50 St. Mark ' s Place Collingwood, Beatrice C..860 W. 181st St. Collison, Barbara 2298 Creston Ave. Comegys, Celeste 306 W. 94th St. Conroy, Leola E., John Jay, 10 Chelsea Place, E. Orange, N. J. Corby, Ruth R 60 E. 93rd St. Costa, Elvira, John Jay, Wallingford, Conn. Crawford, Doris G...583 Riverside Drive Culver, G. Mildred, 149 N. Broadway, Yonkers, N. Y. Curran, Mildred E., John Jay, 1616 P St., Washington, D. C. Da Corte, Lina, 205 Passaic Ave., Clifton, N. J. Danner, Lois E., 47 Walnut St., Montclair, N. J. Dassori, Elise B Piermont, N. Y. Davis, Sarah L.. 4 Grove St., Ebensburg, Pa. Dermody, Rosamond, 51 Wheeler Ave., Pleasantville, N. Y. Dieterich, Vivian M. .2015 University Ave. 1216 S. Hohman St., Hammond, Ind. Dinkelspiel, Marie P., 333 Central Park W. Doscher, Charlotte K. ..1018 Nelson Ave. Dougherty, Lisa 943 Lexington Ave. Dowdney, Dorothv. . 640 Riverside Drive Duffie, Marjorie K 568 W. 149th St. Eccles, Iona, 191 Dean St., Brooklvn. N. Y. Ehrman. Virginia P 166 W. 87th St. Eichelberger, Marie F.., Brooks, 117 N. Duke St., York, Pa. Elbel, Veronica M., John Jay, 605 Portage Ave., South Bend, Ind. Ellsworth. Fanny L., 455 Quince Ave.. Flushing, N. Y. Epstein, Adele 790 Riverside Drive Epstein, Lillian 860 E. 161st St. Fadely, Sara P 105 E. 53rd St. Anderson, Ind. Farnsworth, Frances E., 124 Corona Ave., Pelh ' am, N. Y. Feagin, Frances J., John Jay, 512 S. Hull St., Montgomery, Ala. Telephone S.0579 New Rochelle 3561 Leonia 862- W Orchard 1598 Wadsworth 6353 Kellogg 1258 Riverside 6901 Yonkers 8687 Franklin 251 Passaic 2807-W Piermont 425 Pleas. 99- J Riverside 3521 Bingham 0488- W Audubon 8298 Audubon 2850 I Main 0726 Schuyler 4620 Flushing 3885 Mott Haven 4242 Plaza 4961 Pelham 1012-M Name Address Fichtmueller, Dorothy E., 1078 Richmond Turnpike, S. I., N. Y. Tampa, L. I. Field, Charlotte Pleasantville. N. Y. Fosburg, Blanche, John Jay, Sioux Falls, S. D. Francis, Dorothv, John Jay, 418 N. Washington St., Titusville, Pa. Frank, Marian 12 E. 86th St. Freidman, Leona 148 Sanford St. Frese, Dorothy A 30 W. 91st St. Friedman, Florence, 2 Webster Ave.. Jersey City, N. J. Friedman, Ruth 264 Riverside Drive Fullager, Elizabeth, John Jay, 123 Third St., Newburgh, N. Y. Fulton, Renee J. ... 70 Morningside Drive Gallagher, Marian T., 667 Ocean Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Gambrill, Winif red. . . 548 Riverside Drive Garrison, Ethel, 153 Fairview Ave., Jersey City, N. J. Gennerick, Anita L. .448 Central Park W. Hotel Bevan, Larchmont, N. Y. Goldman, Elinor D., John Jay, 337 Sylvan Ave., Leonia, N. T. Goldman, Aimee 220 W. 98th St. Goodelman, Nina.... 790 Riverside Drive Gouled, Alice, 31 Eldorado Place, Weehawken, N. J. Greenberg, Etta, John Jay, 165 Johnson Ave., Newark, N. J. Greenberg, Pearl. . . .2290 University Ave. Gunther, Anne E. . . .34 Morningside Ave. Gutkin, Geraldine 71 N. 107th St. Haas, Pauline, Brooks. 18 Neustift a w 30, Vienna, Austria Hall, Ruth E 512 W. 122nd St. Halsted. Ruth, 77 Livingston Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. Hamilton, Georgia, 2090 Washington Ave. Harding, Stella, 3 Vine St., New Brighton, S. I., N. Y. Hatfield, Margaret 1 421 W. 114th St. 27 Treno St, New Rochelle. N. Y. Hatzel, Grace K 134 W. 121st St. Hawkey, Jean S Teaneck, N. J. Heller, Anne E....2136 Amsterdam Ave. Herrmann. Anna M, 156 N. Fulton Ave, Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Heyman, Bertha L, John Jay. 940 Campbell Ave.. Hamilton, O. Hill, Mildred E.. 1142 River Rd., Cliff side. N. J. Hiller, Jeanne 260 Riverside Drive Hillyer, Eleanor, 126 Roxbury Rd, Garden City, L. I. Holmes, Dorothea M, 465 Merrick Ave, Detroit, Mich. Hopkins, Christine, 95 Dogwood Lane, Rye, N. Y. Home, Betsv W, John Jay. 341 Summit Ave, Leonia, N. J. Telephone 126-J P. R. Pleas. 143 Titusville 654 Butterfield 4000 Riverside 2142 Riverside 6431 Cathedral 4800 Flatbush 0238 Morningside 5790 Hoboken 1066 Leonia 868-M Riverside 9292 Wadsworth 1872 Uni 1199 University 7974 Clarkson 0959 Morningside 3593 Yonkers 2337 Bingham 5879 Tompkinsville 307o Morningside 2980 Wadsworth 5125 Hillcrest 2425-W Cliff side 201 -J Garden City 881 Riverside 4680 Rve 299 [One Hund, red Ninety ] Name Address Horwitz, Mary H., 3734 34th St., Elmhurst, LI. Howell, Cornelia M., John Jay, 211 Ballantine Parkway, Newark, N. J. Tclliffe, Helena W., John Jay, 64 W. 56th St. Jenkel, Florence W., 136 Urban St., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Tohnson, Olga, 256 W. Grand St., Elizabeth, N. J. Kahn, Hannah, John Jay, 493 E. 38th St., Paterson, N. J. Kalisher, E. Betty.. 333 Central Park W. Killeen, Alice E., 125 Denman St., Elmhurst, L. I. Kline, Martha C, 16 Marion St., Nyack, N. Y. Koch, Johanna K., 153 Vermilyea Ave., Mahopac, N. Y. Komarovsky, Mirra, 426 Brooklyn Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Konzelman, Marie, 1348 Myrtle Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Kraus, Eleanor R., 454 Fort Washington Ave. Kuhlenberg, Dorothy, 559 84th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Laidlaw, Laura K 404 W. 115th St. Point Pleasant, N. Y. Lakin, Eleanor P Scarsdale, N. Y. Lazar, D. Elizabeth 251 W. 95th St. Lee, Virginia A 431 Riverside Drive 622 Ridgewood Rd., Maplewood, N. J. Locke, Jessie L., 7 Myrtle St., White Plains, N. Y. de Lodvguine. Margarita, 1303 Ave. U, Brooklyn, N. Y. Loeb, Anna L 115 E. 82nd St. Loewenstein, Norma M., 213 Clerk St., Jersey City, N. J. Loewenton, Eleanor 356 Second Ave. Lorch, Madeleine D., Brooks, Serpentine Rd., Tenaflv, N. Y. Lowry, Jean B 418 Central Park W. 258 Market St., Lexington, Ky. McClelland. Mary E., 90 Maurice Ave., Elmhurst, N. Y. McEntee, Frances, 99 Joralemon St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Mcllhenny, Grace E., John Jay 1224 N. Main St., Dayton, O. McNeil, Mary E., John Jay, Cambridge. N. Y. MacMullin. Mary S 601 W. 176th St. MacRae, Lillian 12 E. 31st St. Maguire. Betsy J Harrison, N. Y. Maitland, Eleanor B., John Jay, 212 Lincoln St., Oil City, Pa. Mansfield, Marion, Brooks, 30 Mills St., Morristown. N. T. Marsh. Helen J 414 W. 118th St. 844 Colorado Ave., Bridgeport, Conn. Martin, Mabel 440 West End Ave. Telephone Havemeyer 4322 Branch Brook 0281 Circle 0811 Hillcrest 2995 Elizabeth 3671 -M Lambert 6190-R Riverside 2076 Havemeyer 2188 Nyack 246 Wadsworth 2699 Mahopac 21-F-4 Flatbush 5898 Wadsworth 0429 Shore Road 3268 Cathedral 7940 Scarsdale 47 Riverside 6295-J Cathedral 5783 White Plains 126- J Coney Island 3922 Bergen 9169-M Gramercy 7178 Main 7763-J Wadsworth 3010 Lexington 3160 Park 749-M Cathedral 4405 Endicott 9454 [ One H undred Name Address Mason, Bryna 1216 Boston Rd Mason, Eleanor, John Jay, 725 Grove St., Pt. Pleasant, N. J. Mastrangelo, Aida J 131 White St. Meade, Marian A., Brooks, Wassaic, Dutchess Co., N. Y. Miller, Helen A., 22 Forster Ave., Mount Vernon, N. Y. Millson, Anna, 1524 St. John ' s PL, Brooklyn, N. Y. Minor, Dorothy, 3 Caryl Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. Mitchell, Pauline B., John Jaw 22 W. 30th St. Moakley, Gertrude C, 211 89th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Molina, Virginia T., Brooks, 141 Dodd St., E. Orange, N. J. Moller, Myrtle R., 73 Lockman Ave., Manners Harbor, Staten Island, N. Y. Monahan, Mary E., John Jay, 764 Myrtle Ave., Bridgeport, Conn. Montrose. Julia K., John Jay, 13 Pennsylvania Ave., Newark, N. J. Moran, Helen A., John Jay Morris, Mildred P., Brooks, 7389 Amboy Rd., Tottenville, N. Y. Murray, Attracta F., 2612 Ave. T, Brooklyn, N. Y. 45 E. Bowery St., Newport, R. I. Newcomer, Eleanor, 14 Lattin Drive, Yonkers. N. Y. Newman, Daisy 300 W. 109th St. Oblatt, Shirley 251 W. 92nd St. O ' Connor, Mary R 334 W. 87th St. Olinger, Marguerite C. (Mrs.), 181 Claremont Ave. Opoznauer, Hortense J.. 518 W. 111th St. Oppenheimer, Babette. 125 Riverside Drive Otto, L. Belle, John Jav, Sayville, N. Y. Pannell, Frances M 420 W. 122nd St. 21 Ivanhoe Terrace, E. Orange. N. J. Paschal, Marian 201 W. 79th St. Patterson. Elizabeth, 11 Lawrence St., Yonkers, N. Y. Peck, Anita 419 W. 115th St. Quinn, Dorothy M...490 Riverside Drive Randell, Anna C. 329 Park Ave.. Leonia. N. T. Ray, Eleanor A 501 W. 121st St. Reichmann, Frances, 108 Grand Ave., Ridgefield Park, N. J. Reynolds. Elizabeth, 182 Scarsdale Ave., Tuckahoe, N. Y. Richter, Margaret, 160 Lee Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. Rogers, Tanet E., Brooks, 1 Wallace St., Newark. N. J. Rollman, Barbara E., John Jav, Poplar St., Mt. Joy, Pa. Ninety-one I Telephone Bingham 3403 Hillcrest 2483 Yonkers 2307 Shore Road 4572- J Orange 5382 Market 8527 Tottenville 951-M Yonkers 757-R Riverside 5862 Schuyler 5618 Cathedral 7290 Schuyler 5685 Endicott 7100 218-R Yonkers Cathedral 7127 Morningside 4886 Hackensack 4060-R Tuckahoe 3034-R Yonkers 2840 Name Address Romaine, Adelaide 130 W. 16th St., Seabright, N. J. Ruckner, Edna, 96 Westvvood Ave., Westwood, N. J. Rudd, Roma, 806 Foster Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Ruffkess, Thelma, Y. IV. C. A., 31 W. 110th St. 179 Plane St., Newark, N. J. Ruffner, Frances V. ...2298 Creston Ave. Rundlett, Helen J., 127 Farview Ave., New Brighton, Staten Island, N. Y. Safferstone, Esterle, John Jay, 2208 Arch St., Little Rock, Ark. Salinger, H. Starr 600 W. 115th St. Schlechter, Elizabeth J., John Jay, 33 S. 11th St., Allentown, Pa. Scott, Norah 606 W. 122nd St. Sealy, Christine G., 27 Forest Ave., Caldwell, N. J. Sears, Frances M., John Jay, 1761 Capouse Ave., Scranton, Pa. Seeley, May, 247 Lafayette Ave., Grantwood, N. T. Shaughnessv, Eunice 120 W. 70th St. Sheaff, Alice 226 W. 108th St. Sheldon, Frances M.. Pearl River, N. Y. Shipman. Jessica 330 W. 95th St. Shultz, Selma, 179 Windsor Place, Brooklyn, N. Y. Simanek, Edith... 2318 Loring PL, Bronx Prague, Neb. Skeats, F. Margery, Brooks, 743 Scotland Rd., Orange, N. J. Slocum, Dorothy J., John Jay, 244 E. Montgomery Ave., Ardmore, Pa. Smith, Grace AT 70 Morningside Drive Spragg, Kathryn H., John Jay, Waynesburg, Pa. Squires, Marjorie, 51 Waller Ave., White Plains, N. Y. Stahl, Edna E., 419 S. First Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Stahl, Lillian 2804 Pond Place Telephone Watkins 3689-J Rumson 402 Westwood 106-W Mansfield 4392-R Kellogg 1258 Morningside 6100 7-9525-R Cliffside 314-J Academy 5768 Kellogg 0651 Orange 7290-W Cathedral 4800 White Plains 801-W Hillcrest 2796-W Na Addr Stewart, Edith Tuxedo Park, X. Y Stillman, Nettie P., 6 Brookfield Place, Rahway, N. J Stratton, Estelle S., 201 Hillside Ave., Teaneck, N. J Stryker, Lucy K., 130 Laurel Hill Rd., Mountain Lakes, N. J Stutz, Helen 54 W. 82nd St Surut, Sylvia 525 West End Ave Tannar, Helen A., 413 Park Ave., E. Orange, N. J Taylor, Emily, 83 Essex Ave., Metuchen, N. J Timmerman, Helen L., 230 Central Ave., Leonia, N. J Torpy, Anne M 207 W. 70th St Turner, Marjorie L 523 W. 113th St Warren, Ruth. 145 Beach 92d St., Rockaway Beach, N. Y Watson, Mildred, John Jay, 446 Stratford Ave., Bridgeport, Conn Weil, Ann C 362 Riverside Drive Westerhouse, Elwin K., 36 N. 15th St, Flushing, N. Y. Wevl, Sylvia 265 W. 81st St. White, Ethel M 519 W. 123rd St. 150 High St, Reading, Mass. Whitehead, Margaret G, 81 Cleveland Ave, Rockville Center, N. Y. Whitley. Joyce, 68 Franklin Ave, Yonkers, N. Y. Wilkens, Polka C, Brooks, Oakland, Bergen County, N. J. Williams, Helen 2537 Decatur Ave. Williams, C. Isabel.. 53 Marble Hill Ave. Wilson, Lillian S, S408 Tenth Ave, Brooklyn, N. Y. Wiltbank, Edith C 526 W. 122nd St. Worthington, Anna L, Brooks, 254 King George St, Annapolis, Ind. Young, Edithe L 99 Claremont Ave. Canadian, Texas Ziglatzki. Irene C. John Jay. 27 Helen Place, Hartford, Conn. Telephone 157 Rahway 660-M Boonton 385-M Schuvler 6758 Schuvler 0540 9-R Endicott 1021 Cathedral 4553 Bel Harbor 2519-R Academy 1563 Flushing 2671 Morningside 7727 104-R Rockville Center 1280-M Yonkers 2773-M Bensonhurst 7122 Morningside 6742 Wadsworth 4087 3-3459 Name Address Telephone Achilles, Dorothy N 616 W. 135th St. Morningside 4172 Adler, Carolyn M 3544 Broadway Audubon 2790 Adler, Sarah, Brooks, 2041 N. Broad St, Philadelphia, Pa. Adley, Helen B, 208 31st St, Woodcliff, N. T. Allsheskey, Thelma C, John Jay, 14 Mount Airy Rd, Bernardsville, N. J. Alvis, Marion E 829 West End Ave. Riverside 1208 Amerman, Corinne S, 136 Cambridge Place, Brooklyn, N. Y. Prospect S166-R 1927 Name Address Telephone Apgar, Marion B, Brooks, High Bridge, N. J. Atkins, Elizabeth, 54 Leighton Ave, Yonkers, N. Y. Yonkers 2015 Bach. Ruth, 22 Whitestone Ave, Flushing, N. Y. Flushing 1725 Baldwin, Catherine, Brooks, 520 W. 114th St. Banner, Frances 50 E. 96th St. Lenox 4576 Barnes, Mildred H...460 Riverside Drive Cornwall-on-Hudson, N. Y. One Hundred Nincty-hvo ] Name Address Barrett, Anna R., John Jay, 60 Winfield St., East Norwalk, Conn. Beach, Barbara, 32 Buena Vista Ave., Hastings, N. Y. Bauman, Sara 600 West End Ave. Behrens, Evelyn, John Jay, 93 Norwood Ave. Beman, Henrietta C, John Jaw North Emporia, Va. Bird, Dorothy W., 616 Monroe Ave., Plainfield, N. T. Bissellc, Mildred E 601 W. 151st St. Bjorkman, Edith, 548 46th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Blachly, Harriette N., 33 Hamilton St., E. Orange, X. J. Blaine, Dorothy, 156 Greenwood Ave., Far Kockaway, N. Y. Block, Edith M 1200 Hoe Ave. Bond, Lillian 7 W. 24th St. Brand, Vera 537 W. 149th St. Brandeis, Irma 8 W. 83rd St. Braun, Gertrude 39 Claremont Ave. Brentano, Ada, Brooks, 282 Reynolds Terrace, Orange, N. J. Bryant, Alison C., 43 Prospect Drive, Yonkers, N. Y. Buckley, Dorothy L., 1148 River Rd., Edgewater, N. J. Bull, Catherine Van D. .702 Madison Ave. Burgemeister, Bessie 3099 Broadway Burrough, Marion. . .1492 University Ave. Burrows, Edith, 49 Ridgecrest Ave., Eltingville, L. I. Cahalone, Joan 115 St. Mark ' s Place Carr, Ann V 219 W. 106th St. Carrigan, Margaret, Brooks, 405 River Ave., Point Pleasant, N. J. Churchill, Virginia P., Brooks, 104 Traincroft, Medford, Mass. Colucci, Catherine M....1342 Fulton Ave. Cooney, Helen. .Grove St., Ovadell, N. J. Corte, Clelia F., Ill Woolsey St., Long Island City, N. Y. Coulter, Florence M., John Jay, 256 E. Walnut St., Oglesby, 111. La Cour, Alice O, 108 Jamaica Ave., Flushing. N. Y. Cowan, Camilla M 157 W. 105th St. Davis, Marion G 1316 Teller Ave. Decker, Annette C...180 Riverside Drive De Mattia, Madeleine, 140 Amsterdam Ave., Passaic, N. T. Deutsch, Helen, 1050 Hancock St.. Brooklyn, N. Y. Diamond, Ethel 1646 Monroe Ave. Dickert, Evelyn A., 675 Putnam Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Doscher, Edith A., 555 Westchester Av., Port Chester, N. Y. Doumar, Florence, 530 Morgan St., Union Hill, N. T. Dreyfus, Ruth 251 W. 98th St. Telephone Schuyler 5969 Tompkinsville 1105-R 1378- J Orange 3513 Far Rockaway 3891 Schuyler 0328 _ Morningside 4770 Cliffside 202 Regent 2698 Morningside 9740 Jerome 4020 Dougan Hills 533-J Tompkinsville 1761 Ovadell 15 Flushing 3651 Academy 3926 Bingham 4409- M Riverside 5545 Foxcroft 4942 Bingham 1639 Decatur 6684 L T nion 6872 Riverside 2015 Nana Address Driscoll, Helen E., John Jay, 33 Stemple St., E. Strondsburg, Pa. Driscoll, Jeannette K., 2227 Boulevard, Jersey City, N. J. I hi Bois, Cora, 21 Bergen Place, Rcdbank, N. J. Dunbrack, Evelyn K., 172 Arlington Ave., Jersey City, N. J. Dunham, Marguerite D., Brooks, 16 Chippewa Rd., Pontiac, Mich. Earle, Eleanor, 1335 Blvd. E., West New York, N. J. Edes, Everita 3131 Broadway Eilertson, Anna, 964 Ocean Parkway, Brooklyn, N. Y. 260 Metropolitan Ave., Roshindale, Mass. Eisig, Kate, Grassy Sprain Rd., Yonkers, N. Y. Ellis, Elizabeth S., Joint Jay, 5 Spring St., Maiden, Mass. Emelin, Marion A., John Jay, 109 Melbourne Ave., Mamaroneck, N. Y. Engelhardt, Helen G., W. 250th St. and Ficldston Rd. Farmer, Mary A., 163 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn, N. Y. News Ferry, Va. Ferris, Carolyn, 22 Westbury Rd., Garden City, L. I. Fisher, Virginia 840 West End Ave. Fitz-Hugh, Mary, Brooks, 1322 Chambers St., Vicksburg, Aliss. Flory, Edith A., John Jay, 926 N. Lockwood Ave., Chicago, 111. Frankel, Gladys B....420 Riverside Drive Frankfeld, Dorothy 69 E. 92nd St. Fraser, Faith W., John Jay, Brooklands, Coonoor, S. India Fraser, Margaret K., John Jaw Brooklands, Coonoor, S. India Frysick, Eugenia 1003 Second Ave. Fuller, Emily, 150 Palisade Ave., Jersey City, N. J. Gallucci, Evelyn, Ascan Ave. and Russell Place, Forest Hills. L. I. Gallacher, Marvel H 3099 Broadway Tampa, Fla. Gardiner, Harriet R., 239 Park Hill Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. Gardiner, Marguerite 239 Park Hill Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. Garmise, Adele 420 Riverside Drive Garwood, C. Josephine, John Jay. 682 Prospect St., Fall River, Mass. Gates, Priscilla M., Brooks, 94 Kenwood St., Boston, Mass. Gedroice, Frances, 176 Edgewood Ave., Pleasantville, N. Y. Getskay, Dorothy M 225 W. 86th St. Gibson, Louise M., 103 King Ave., Weehawken, N. J. Telephone Bargen 3192 Red Bank 686-R Bergen 2252-M 1562-W Union 9252-W Morningside 5805 Midwood 6885 Yonkers 0755 Kingsbridgc 3186-W Sterling 9451 Garden City 1248 351 Vicksburg Cathedral 4312 Lenox 6264 Montgomery 2906 Boulevard 5851 Yonkers 1142 Yonkers 1142 Pleasant Hie 665 Schuvler 10400 [ One Hundred Ninety-three ] Name Address Gillham, Elsa C 15 Claremont Ave. Gluck, Mildred 600 W. 144th St. Goldsmith, Rita 460 W. 149th St. Goodell, Margaret E 2326 Grand Ave. Goss, Doris 46 W. 73rd St. Gottschall, Louise Y..1S Claremont Ave. Gould, Elizabeth, John Jav, 95 Harrison St., E. Orange, N. J. Graziano, Mamie D 274 W. 140th St. Guenard, Carmen I., 8726 113th St., Richmond Hill, N. Y. Habberton, Margaret F. .417 W. 118th St. Halpin, Mary, 315 S. Bay View Ave., Freeport, N. Y. Haldenstein, Edith 321 W. 92nd St. Hansen, Matilda G Washington Ave. N. White Plains, N. Y. Hargrave, Gertrude S., 1036 Woodycrest Ave. Harris. Edith M., Brooks, 224 S. Whitney St., Hartford. Conn. Harris, Mary E .6 W. 66th St. Hasbrouck, F. Wilhelmine, 829 West End Ave. Hay, Betty, Brooks, 439 Cumberland Ave., Portland, Me. Heller, Lyndal 46 W. 83rd St. Henry, Emma S....333 Central Park W. Higgins, Margery A. (Mrs.), Page Terrace, S. Orange, N. J. Hindman, Phebe, Brooks, 1111 Cambria Ave., Windber, Pa. Hoffman, Evelyn V 505 W. 143rd St. Hooper, Charlotte B., Brooks, 3421 Clifton Ave. Howard, Marion E 583 E. 168th St. Huber, Gertrude 362 Riverside Drive Hults, Vivian, 34 Bayview Ave., Port Washington, L. 1. Hutchinson, Mary S 612 W. 115th St. 32 W. Market St., Bethlehem, Pa. Isaacs, Etta E., John Jay, 1309 Grandview Ave., Far Rockaway, N. Y. Tanicke, Lucia, 412 Fourth Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Joel, Eleanor 218 E. 12th St. Tungman, Henrietta, 4503 Fifteenth Ave., Brooklyn. N. Y. Keating, Rosemary V 11 E. 87th St. Kehoe, Ruth, John Jay Maysville, Ky. Kellner, Marguerite A 2 W. 89th St. Kinkade, Ida, 101-59 125th St., Richmond Hill, N. Y. Kinkade, lone, 101-59 125th St., Richmond Hill, N. Y. Kohnova, Marie 1061 Madison Ave. Krefeld, Henrietta R., 464 Riverside Drive Krejei, Laura E.. 244 Clinton St., Orange. N. J. Krenning, Katherine 18 W. 82nd St. Kridel, Katherine. . .135 Central Park W. Landen, Flora 1209 Franklin Ave. Telephone Cathedral 5529 Audubon 2928 Audubon 5810 Endicott 6847 Cathedral 4786 Audubon 1920 Richmond Hill 1166 Cathedral 4941 Freeport 575-A ' I Riverside 0848 Caledorna 9062 Jerome 0374 Columbus 4122 Riverside 6726 Portland 2711 Schuyler 0081 Riverside 3521 S. Orange 1024 Audubon 8389 Academy 1869 Port Wash. 425-R Stuyvesant 5712 Windsor 2706 Lenox 2110 Schuyler 0447 Btitterfield 3799 Cathedral 3127 Schuvler 1642 Endicott 6378 Name Address Law, Mary L 950 Park Ave. Leach, Helen A., John Jay, 116 Main St., Mt. Morris, N. J. Lee, Ellen R., John Jay, 1321 25th St., Galveston, Tex. Lincoln, Helen V 60 W. 68th St. Little, Winnifred M., 332 South St., Jamaica, L. I. Wilton, Conn. Lobo, Clarita E 777 West End Ave. Lohrke, Elsa, Brooks, 101 Prospect St., E. Orange, N. J. London, Ella I., 15 Colonial PI., New Rochelle, N. Y. Lundy, Elizabeth B., Brooks, Newtown, Bucks Co., Pa. Lyman, Mildred L 309 W. 109th St. 34 Belmont Ave., Springfield, Mass. McAlee, Ruth H, John Jay, 109 Mary St., Johnsonburg, Pa. McAvoy, Virginia 455 W. 140th St. McKee, Katherine, Brooks, 1894 Penrose Ave., E. Cleveland, O. McKelvey. Jean, John Jay, Spuyten Duyvil, New York City McKown, Madeline E, 102 Highlawn Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. McNeieJit, Mary C, 134 W. 51st St., Bayonne, N. J. MacLeod, Jean, Brooks, Cedar Knolls, Bronxville, N. Y. Mace, Nan L 4051 Seton Ave. Martin, Eleanor, Davenport Neck, New Rochelle, N. Y. Martin, Mildred D., 46 Fifth St., Kidgefield Park, N. J. Martin, Mildred L., 19 Willow Place, Yonkers, N. Y. Mehringer, Mildred T., 1427 E. 29th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Merk, Elizabeth R..3204 Bainbridge Ave. Metzger, Edna 180 St. Nicholas Ave. Metzger, Elizabeth .. .456 Riverside Drive Meyers, Margery 205 W. 88th St. Miller, Anne E..87 41st St, Corona, N. Y. Molendvk, Clara, 711 E. Third St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Moran, Helen C, John Jav, Haworth, N. J. Moses, Janice G 777 West End Ave. Mueller, Dorothy T, 1 Fourth St, Weehawken, N. J. Murnane, Mary E, John Jay, 32 Durand St, Plattsburg. N Y. Myers, Veronica ... .220 Wadsworth Ave. Marins, Sylvia 291 Henry St. Nolph, Ceridwyn, John Jay, Punxsutawney, Pa. O ' Brien, Eva 825 W. 178th St. O ' Connell. Marie E 54 E. 123rd St. O ' Neil, Ellen. 662 Park Place, Brooklyn, N. Y. Telephone Columbus 7760 Jamaica 0285 Riverside 6418 Orange 3618 New Rochelle 495-M Academy 5700 River 380 Audubon 2124 Bensonhurst 8934-J Woodlawn 1640-M New Rochelle 50 Yonkers 3640-J Midwood 7880-W Olinville 3995 University 3640 Cathedral 4829 Schuyler 1364 Riverside 2943 Union 5546 Wash. Heights 2828 Orchard 3713 1865 Wash. Heights 1515 Wadsworth 9937 Harlem 1063 Prospect 4059 One Hundre d Ninety-four ] Name Address Telephone Offenhauser, Agnes M., John Jav, 651 84th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Owen, Janet V 514 W. 122nd St. Morningside 3632 Palestine, Bella, 305 S. Third Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Hillcrest 5491 -R Perl, Ruth E 255 W. 108th St. Academy 0140 Philower, Clarice B., Brooks, Lock Box 226, Califon, N. J. Pyle, Elinor C, Brooks, 1064 Prospect Ave., Toledo, O. Raphael, Sylvia, 857 Manida St., Bronx, N. Y. Intervale 2064 Rayevsky, Nina L., John Jav, Liberty, N. Y. Reilly, Harriet R., 278 Sterling Place, Brooklyn, N. Y. 11 Partition St., Haverstraw, N. Y. Haverstraw 35-R Reimund, Margaret, John Jay, 8522 Linwood Ave., Cleveland, O. Remaley, Sarah E., John Jay, Springfield, Pa. Reynolds, Myrtle L 461 W. 159th St. Wadsworth 6700 Riordan, Dorothy, 626 Boulevard E., Weehawken, N. J. Ripin, Rowena 55 Central Park W. Columbus 4808 Rittenhouse, Irma M....269 W. 132nd St. Morningside 6330 317 Central Ave., Point Pleasant, N. J. Rivera, Trinita, John Jay, Carretera, 181 Santuree, Porto Rico Robertson, Kathleen.. 200 Manhattan Ave. Academy 3650 Digby, Nova Scotia Robinson, Helen H 557 W. 124th St. Morningside 3578 Rodstrom, Adelaide, 196 Horton St., City Island, N. Y. City Island 1194 Roff, Elizabeth C 26 W. 91st St. Riverside 3256 Rome, Louise, John Jay, 442 Carroll Ave., Bridgeport, Conn. Ruger, Virginia 41 Claremont Ave. Cathedral 4770 Rush, Pauline E 501 W. 121st St. 1370 Eastern Parkway Salinger, Agnes J 18 W. 83rd St. Schuyler 7222 Schiff, Roslyn M 2 W. 88th St. Schuyler 6132 Schlesinger, Roslyn C, 287 Edgecombe Ave. Audubon 8267 Schnieders, Marie H 1680 First Ave. Lenox 2360-J Schwartzman, Lillian S., 1028 Prospect Ave. Intervale 3734 Segall, Martha 894 Riverside Drive Billings 1485 Semmel, Hannah L., 90 Morningside Drive Cathedral 5651 Shepard, Cornelia, Brooks, Woodmere, L. T. Shriftc, Estelle,435 Fort Washington Ave. Wadsworth 9432 Simonton, Irma A., John Jav, 667 E 23rd St., Paterson. N. L Simpson. Jean 400 W. 118th St. Cathedral 4680 Slack, Mabel, 22 Cassilis Ave., Bronxville, N. Y. Bronxville 3900-M Sloane. Elizabeth, 134 Prospect Ave., Mamaroneck, N. Y. 410- J Smith, Dorothea R., 41 Morris St., Yonkers, N. Y. 8157-W Smith, Harriet E., Brooks, 25 Hawthorne Ave., Troy, N. Y. Name Address Telephone Smith, Helen C 463 W. 144th St. Solomons, Janet C 11 W. 88th St. Schuyler 2392 Sperry, Lucy B 345 Park Ave. Plaza 6524 Stahr, Cora L 551 W. 190th St. Wash. Heights 3600 Stamm, Anna- Jeannette. .252 W. 76th St. Endicott 6900 Sterling, Felicia M 1303 Clay Ave. Jerome 5046 San Remo Hotel, Central Park W. Sullivan, Mary E., 319 Park Ave., Nutley, N. J. Nutley 4094-M Taub, Beatrice, 426 Gregory Ave., Weehawken, N. J. Union 2127 Taylor, Marjorie, Brooks, Rocky Mount, N. C. Thomas, Lenore C 276 Haven Ave. Thompson, Louise B....531 W. 124th St. 69 Seymour St., Auburn, N. Y. Thompson, Ruby M., 109 Larch Ave., Bogota, N. J. Hackensack 403 Tiederman, Louise K., 1431 University Ave. Jerome 1330 Trousdell, Phoebe A.. 99 Claremont Ave. Morningside 4102 Yorktown Heights, N. Y. Tyler, Minice E., 469 Washington Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Prospect 5600 Van Dyck, H. Elizabeth, Wanague, N. J. Pompton Lakes 79-F-21 Van Pelt, Betsey S....696 Madison Ave. Regent 3128 Veal, Mary E., John Jay, 246 Locust Ave., Fr eeport, N. Y. Vincent, Mary E 531 W. 148th St. Audubon 6882 Vogel, Helen E., 258 Woodworth Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. Yonkers 3685-M Vogel, Lucile 172 W. 95th St. Riverside 0679 Wadsworth, Marion B., Brooks 1 Queen ' s Rd., Charlotte, N. C. Walker, Mabel L., John Jay, Harborton, Va. Warner, Hope D....382 Wadsworth Ave. Wadsworth 0210 Washburne, J. Letitia, 379 Gates Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Ticonderoga, N. Y. Waterman, Faith D., John Jay, 8 Montgomery St., Bangor, Me. Bangor 1553-W Watson, Margaret, 101 34th St., Woodcliff, N. J. Union 2507 Weldon, Mary E., 463 State St., Flushing, N. Y. Flushing 3268 West, Dorothea H., Brooks, 387 High St., Fall River. Mass. 2598-M White, Mosetta C 461 W. 43rd St. Longacre 1154 Williams. Evelyn M.. 70 Oakview Ave., Maplewood, N. J. S. Orange 1949-W Wilson, Grace E., Broad Ave., Ridgefield, N. Y. Morsemere 2192 Wolfe, Sara L., John Jav, 216 S. Franklin St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Woodbridge, Helena.. 39 Claremont Ave. Cathedral 4770 Woolley, Catherine, John Jav, 71 Park Ave., Passaic, N. T. Wright, Alice 1 44 W. 77th St. Wright. Helen E., 2529 Madison St., Ridgewood, N. T. [ One Hundred Ninety-five ] Specials Name Address Baker, Helen E 300 W. 49th St. Wheatland, Wyo. B rough ton, Beatrice, John Jay, 926 Meta St., Ventura, Cal. Cobb, Virginia M....1200 Madison Ave. Denny, Carol E., John Jay, Old Log Bush, Conn. Dodman, Shirley P., John Jay, 24 Oak Ridge Ave., Summit, N. J. von Eltz, Luenna 240 Waverly Place Fussell, Mrs. Antoinette. .. 113 E. 56th St. Gilbert, Helen E., John Jay, Hebron, Conn. Hall, Margaret E 419 W. 121st St. Hansen, Mathilde C....202 Madison Ave. Hay ward, Emeline P 69 W. 97th St. Hockaday, Neria, Brooks. ... Dallas, Tex. Hosmer, Harriet 547 W. 123rd St. National City, Cal. c o Mrs. M. E. Colburn Humphreys, Frances E..399 W. 72nd St. Humphreys, Margaret 344 W. 72nd St. Iskian, Marie 165 Audubon Ave. Jackson, Evalene, John Jay, 902 W. Peachtrce, Atlanta, Ga. Jacobson, Edith C, 271 Central Park W. Toline, Mrs. Marv E Plaza Hotel Knox, Fanona 430 W. 118th St. Pendleton, S. C. Lakin, Hettie Beauman, Scarsdale, N. Y. Lee, Laura B 125 E. 65th St. Livingston, Cornelia T 38 E. 65th St. Lukavska, Ruzena, Brooks, Prague, Czecho-Slovakia Lyman, Margaret, Parnassus Club, 612 W. 115th St. 1084 Third Ave., Salt Lake City, Utah McCann, Gladys 800 Riverside Drive McVickar, Phyllis Hotel Webster Telephone Lenox 0128 White Plains 1425-J Clarkson 1277 Endicott 5045 Wash. Heights 2460 Scarsdale 47 Rhinelander 8030 Cathedral 2940 Vanderbilt 1300 Nai Address Telephone Moore, Lucille, 39 Gramercy Park, Waverly, Pa. Nott, Elizabeth 605 W. 115th St. Noyer, Mary P 45 E. 62nd St. O ' Brien, Helen C, Morris Hall, Chatham, N. Y. Osgood, Alice M., 186 Hamilton Aye., New Brighton, Staten Island, N. Y. Osorio, Mrs. Anne Wright, 304 W. 107th St. Honolulu, Territory of Hawaii Pinder, Leona A., 401 York St., Jersey City, N. J. Robic, Yvonne T., Brooks, Lycee de Jeunes Filles, Orleans, France Satterlee, Mabel 37 E. 36th St. Sawyer, Conway 128 W. 59th St. Snell, Cornelia L., 161 Emerson Place, Brooklyn, N. Y. Spear, Olive 3077 Hull Ave. Sperry, Rosalie B 345 Park Ave. Stewart, Frances D., 1 Washington Square Swartout, Caroline H. . . .839 W. 179th St. Talmage, Mildred 12 E. 86th St. Ovster Bav, L. I.. N. Y. Taylor, Caroline 157 E. 81st St. Tentchova, Ludmila 276 Haven Ave. Train, Helen 113 E. 73rd St. Untermyer, Elsie J 35 E. 84th St. Van Alstyne, Elizabeth K., 519 W. 123rd St. Stuyvesant Rd., Kinderhook, N. Y. Walker, Marjorie A 15 E. 129th St. Weltfish, Regina L 435 W. 123rd St. Woodruff, M. Dorothy, 390 Park Ave., Paterson. N. T. Yoder, Ellen E 419 W. 118th St. West Liberty, O. Academy 5661 Murray Hill 0672 Prospect 5274 Plaza 6524 Butterfield 4000 Oyster Bay 343 Billings 4796 Lenox 7449 Morningside 7727 Morningside 1593- f One Hundred Ninety-six | [ One Hundred Ninety-seven ] INDEX PAGE ALEXANDRIA HOTEL 200 ALTMAN, B 214 AUB, THERESE . ... 201 AVEDON 218 BAND BOX CAFETERIA 207 BANG SERVICE STATIONS, INC 210 BARTRAM, F. S. C. B 204 BEHRMAN, H 208 BRENTANO ' S 210 BROOKS BROTHERS 199 BROWN, CHAS. H., FLORISTS 218 BRUCK-WEISS MILLINERY, INC 200 CABOT, F. H 201 CHEZ EUGENIE 204 CHRISDIE, CHAS., CO 211 CIRLIN, M. J 202 CLARK WILKINS CO 218 COLLEGE BOOK STORE 202 COLLINS, HARRY 211 COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY PRESS BOOK- STORE 213 COX SONS VINING 204 CUNNINGHAM BROS 207 DEUTSCHMANN BIRNSTEIN 202 DURLAND CO., THE 204 EIMER AMEND 207 FAIBISY 202. FLYING FAME, INC 206 FOX, J 207 FRANKLIN SIMON CO 205 FRENCH, W. S 202 FRENCH LINE 2 FRIEDGEN, CHAS 218 PAGE GARDEN FLORIST 210 GORDON, NETTIE, IMPORTER 204 GULBENKIAN, G, CO, RUGS 208 HAY ' S FIVE FRUIT CO 203 INK-OUT MFG. CO 215 LORRAINE, INC., MISS 203 MAIER CO., INC 213 MAILLARD 211 MAN OF WAR MIDDIES 206 MARGUERETTA HOTEL 215 MILLER, I . ' 199 MILLER SCHOOL 201 MISS BETTY 204 MOLLOY CO 218 MULLER, GEO, SON 210 PAPADEM CO, J. G, FLORISTS 200 PEDIFORME SHOE CO 210 POLLY SHOP, THE 209 PRIVATE ESTATE COFFEE CO 206 RADIO STORE CORP 215 ROYAL CHINESE RESTAURANT 209 SCHILLER, 1 208 SCHILLING PRESS, INC, THE 216 SILLS, JOHN S 200 SINGER, S 207 SPALDING, A. G, BROS 203 STERN BROS 212 •STUDIO INN - 203 TIFFANY CO , 1 VAN HART, INC, SHOES 203 WALKER ENGRAVING CO 217 WATKINS, J. Y 209 WHITE STUDIOS : 209 ZABALA MAURIN 215 [ One Hundred Ninety-eight ] The Artist ' s Influence If you will remem- ber the shoes of the last generation, you will appreciate the accomplishment of I. Miller. Today, slippers are interest- ing, artistic and beautiful. I. MILLER Beautiful Shoes FIFTH AVENUE at 46th STREET ESTABLISHED 1818 ittlfuifitja jiiniii3l)imj C}oob$, MADISON AVENUE COR. FORTY -FOURTH STREET NEW YORK Telephone Murray Hill 8800 BROOKS BROTHERS ' Building, convenient to Grand Central, Subway, and to many of the lead- ing Hotels and Chilis OF INTEREST TO WOMEN While 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 Alotor Coats, Sweaters, Wool Caps, Waistcoats, Gloves, Mufflers, Boots, Leggings, Puttees, etc., liking these articles all the more apparently because, as distinct from being mannish, they are the very things that are worn by men. Send for Historic American Buildings BOSTON Tremontcor. BOYLSTON N EWPO RT 220 Bellevue Avenue f One Hitndr, ed Ninety-nine ] Hotel Alexandria 250 West 103rd Street, New York Two Doors from Broadway Between Central Park and Riverside Drive. Subway Express Station at Door. Elevated and Riverside Bus within two blocks. Only a Few Minutes ' Walk from Barnard College. ALL OUTSIDE ROOMS Special Attention Given to Ladies Traveling Alone. Restaurant a la Carte or Table d ' Hote at Moderate Prices Excellent Facilities for Social Functions, Luncheons, Dinners, Afternoon Teas, Etc. Special Rates for the Summer Months S. L. ROOT, Mgr. Telephone: Riverside 10421 Bruck- Weiss Millinery 6 West 57th STREET NEW YORK WRAPS HATS COATS GOWNS PRICES NEVER EXCESSIVE Compliments of JOHN S. SILLS SON, Inc. We are members of Florists ' Telegraph Delivery. Flowers by Wire to All the World. Tel. Cathedral 5697-9329 J. G. PAPADEM CO. FLORISTS 2953 BROADWAY NEW YORK Bet. 115th-116th Sts. [ Tivo Hundred ] Therese Aub SECRETARIAL SCHOOL 2770 BROADWAY, at 107th STREET Special Courses for College Students The school has placed many Barnard graduates in responsible positions Booklet Sent Upon Request ACADEMY 0530 F. H. CABOT CO., Inc. Commission Merchants BLANKETS BOSTON 31 Bedford Street NEW YORK 69 Worth Street BROADWAY, at 112th St., near COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY Announces its special classes for the training of Secretaries, Bookkeepers, Stenographers Summer and Winter Sessions Full Information Mailed Upon Request Telephones : Cathedral 9001-9002 [ Two Hundred One ] FAIBISY Announces an exhibition of the latest ex- clusive models in Gowns, Suits and Wraps — for all occasions. BROADWAY, at 106th STREET NEW YORK LOCATED IN WHITTIER HALL 1224 AMSTERDAM AVENUE BETWEEN 120TH AND 121ST STREETS TELEPHONE: 5078 MORNINGSIDE M. J. CIRLIN WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN Choice Meats and Poultry Fancy Groceries, Fruits and Vegetables 3060 BROADWAY NEW YORK Corner 121st Street TELEPHONE BRYANT 1581 After May 1st, 77 WEST 47th STREET Deutschmann Birnstein Successors to COYLE DEUTSCHMANN NEW YORK Wigs, Toupees, Face Paints, Etc. Amateurs Made up for Entertainments Compliments of W. S. FRENCH Walker House, East Quogue, L. I. [ Two Hundred Two ] THE STUDIO INN EAST QUOGUE, L. I. A RESTFUL, QUIET PLACE Week-end Parties for College Girls The Best Meals in Comfortable Surroundings PHONE CATHEDRAL 3893 BEAUTY MISS LORRAINE, Inc. SALON PERMANENT WAVING Expert Service in All Branches The Progressive Application Method Used HAIR GOODS 2959 BROADWAY TOILET ARTICLES Cor. 116th St., N. Y. C. For Young Ladies — Outdoor Shoes and Outdoor Clothes Distinctive — Correct 523 Fifth Avenue (at 43rd) is the nicest drink you ' ve ever tasted- Ahealthful and delicious ' peoov ' punch for everybody,— skillfully blended from the pure juices of five fresh fruits. There are many others said to be similar but only one real Hay ' s Five Fruit. Insist on having Hay ' s Five Fruit, always in this Red Wrapped Bottle The Fresh Fruit Flavor For Drinks and Desserts Since 1900 HAY ' S TiveTruit THE DRINK THAT SATIATES THIRST For that Sturdy — Steady — Stride VAN- HART SHOE S FITTED BY EXPERTS OUR ONLY STORE IN NEW YORK 7 EAST 38th STREET NEW YORK [ Two Hundred Three ] 662 jftackp7i foenue Millinery and Sport Togs for Town and Country Phone Bryant 5520 CHEZ EUGENIE C afe — Restaurant 112-114 West 48th Street New York F. S. C. B. Bart ram PRINTING 25 BEEKMAN STREET NEW YORK COX SONS VINING fihik 131 EAST 23rd ST., NEW YORK Caps and Gowns Correct Hoods for all Degrees PHONE: CATHEDRAL 5-122 TRANSFORMATIONS CURLS AND ALL OTHER HAIR WORK MME. BETTY Beauty Salon 440 RIVERSIDE DRIVE, COR. 116th ST., NEW YORK Permanent Waving Done by Experts, Oil Process IF YOU WANT HEALTH Your doctor will tell yon to ride a horse at DURLAND ' S 66th STREET AND CENTRAL PARK WEST The most perfectly appointed Riding Academy in the world. The largest ring, well-trained horses, and skillful Riding Masters. We have for sale in our Store, Saddles, Bridles and all other Horse Equipment, made to order or imported, as you wish. Our Blacksmith Shop also on the premises. Write for Booklet THE DURLAND COMPANY [ Two Hundred Four ] franklin Simon a Co. Fifth Avenue, 37th and 38th Streets, New York R raimley Fashions Registered in the United States Patent Office The mode of the American girl TJncopiable as youtli itself Originated hy and exclusive with Franklin Simon Co. Each Season Brings its Newt Bramley Fashions Bramley Frocks Bramley Skoes Bramley Coats Bramley Suits Bramley Sweaters Bramley Bl ouses Bramley Bags Entire Contents Copyrighted, 1923, by Franklin Simon Co., Inc. [ Two Hundred Five ] FLYING FAME CAFETERIAS 1161 Amsterdam Ave., at 117th Street and 3070 Broadway — Near 121st Street Lunch At The Flying Fame Compliments of Private Estate Coffee Co. 21-25 Fulton Street New York City MAN O ' WAR MIDDY The Sloped Sides Make It Fit You can see at a glance that the MAN O ' WA sides, snug fitting neck and fine tailoring give it a Leading girl athletes in the schools and colleges a O ' WAR Middy as their own, because it comes ne any other made. Try one and you will become e On the right is a picture of Miss Camelia Sabie w Miss Sabie was one of the girls sent to France f a member of the team that brought great credit t such wonderful athletes. Ask for MAN O ' WAR Brand. Lot A-ll, white s each. R Middy is different. It has style. The Sloped trim fit that appeals. 11 over the United States have adopted the MAN arer to their ideas of what a middy should be than nthusiastic also. earing MAN O ' WAR Middy and running trunks, or the Olympic Games in Paris a short time ago, o America ' s Schools and Colleges for developing uper jean, $1.50 each. Running trunks also $1.50 For Sale By D. V. BAZINET, Whittier Hall, 122S Amsterdam Avenue, New York. Makers BRANIGAN, GREEN CO. Originators of the Sloped Side Middy 1270 Broadwaj ' New York City [ Two Hundred Six ] Phone Cathedral 5554—5260 POINCIANA JEWELRY SHOP S. SINGER Established 1907 DIAMONDS, WATCHES, JEWELRY SILVERWARE and OPTICAL GOODS Repairing of French Clocks and Complicated Watches 1215 AMSTERDAM AVENUE NEW YORK Between 119th and 120th Streets TEL. MORNINGS ' DE 4866 J. L. FOX Tailor and Furrier French Cleaner and Dyer 1221 AMSTERDAM AVENUE NEW YORK N. E. COR. 120th ST. Call at Cunningham Bros., Inc. WHOLESALE DEALERS IN BEEF, MUTTON, PORK, c. 444 WEST 14th STREET NEW YORK TELEPHONE WATKINS 8082—8083 College Girls and Salads No one is a better judge of a salad than a college girl away from home who wants something dainty and inviting. We use the best quality of ingredients that the market provides and each salad is a product of purity, taste and individuality. THE BAND BOX CAFETERIA (With the tea room atmosphere) 1165 AMSTERDAM AVENUE at 118th STREET HEADQUARTERS FOR Laboratory Apparatus, Chemical Reagents, Drugs, Minerals and Stains Prescription Department largest in New York City. Visit us or write, advising your requirements. EIMER AMEND Established 1851 Third Ave., 18th to 19th St., NEW YORK Washington, D. C. Pittsburgh, Pa. Display Room Branch Office Ev ' n ' g. Star Bldg. 8085 Jenkins Arcade [ Two Hundred Seven ] Gulbenkian Seamless Wilton Rugs The Highest Grade Wilton and Without a Seam ' FACTORY AT NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J. GULLABI GULBENKIAN CO. Sole Selling Agents 225 FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK, N. Y. Henrv Behrman Sons Produce Commission Merchants Butter, Cheese, Eggs 366 Washington and 95 No. Moore Streets NEW YORK I. SCHILLER Stationery of Distinction 2957 Broadway 116th Street [ Tzvo Hundred Eight ] JAMES Y. W ATKINS SON MANUFACTURERS OF FRENCH RANGES Cooking Utensils of Every Description, for Hotels, Restaurants and Institutions 18-20 CATHERINE STREET NEW YORK CITY Telephone: DRY DOCK 0840. 0841 Established 1830 Tel: Academy 1273— Clarkson 0088 ROYAL American and Chinese Restaurant Luncheon, 45 Cents Special and Table D ' Hote Dinner, 75 Cents 2828 BROADWAY NEW YORK CITY Between 109th and 110th Street Music and Dancing TAILORED SPORTS WEAR FOR THE MISS POLLYS Broadway, at 104th Street Com plimcnts of a Friend Established 1888 PHOTOGRAPHERS Equipped with many years ' experi- ence for making photographs of all sorts desirable for illustrating college annuals. Best obtainable artists, workmanship, and the capacity for prompt and un- equaled service. 1546 BROADWAY, NEW YORK [ Tzvo Hundred Nine ] OUUI C1I1C P nnf f nmfnrf A L j VJ I L X IkJ L L PEDIFORMES are scien- tifically correct, giving health and comfort by car- rying the weight on the outside of the feet, taking the strain from arches and tired muscles. A rare com- bination of Quality, Work- manship, Distinctive Ap- pearance and Comfort. B Foot Freedom by mail for f the entire Family. PEDI FOR ME America ' s Most PopularShoe 36 West 36th St., New York City 322 Livingston St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Telephone Circle 2 35 George Muller Son Market 932 Sixth Avenue Bet. 52d 53d Sts. New York, N. Y. Tel. Cathedral 7723 The Garden Florist Branch: 2535 Broadway 2883 Broadway Tel. Riverside 8676 New York, N. Y. PLAY SAFE For better results use that dependable Bang Gas and Bang Motor Oils. They are safeguards against motor trouble. New Service Stations at I24th Street and Morningside Avenue (near Barnard College) and Arden Street and Broadway (near Baker Field). BANG SERVICE STATIONS, Inc. Main Office: Mt. Vernon, N. Y. [ Tzvo Hundred Ten ] zARTJN T)ress ' ' The Tailored Mode 9 9 Interpreted by Harry Collins and modishly expressing, as does every Collins creation, correct- ness of line, color and fabric. Moderately Priced. PARK AVENUE at 57th ST. NEW YORK MENTHE MELANGE A J .1 1 MIXTURE 15 MINTS DELIGHTFULLY REFRESHING POUND BOX $1.00 COSTUMES THEATRICAL and MASQUERADE FO« SALE FOR HIRE We specialize in serving Schools, Colleges and all Amateur Theatricals Charles Chrisdie Co. 41 WEST 47TH STREET BET. 5th and 6th AVENUES NEW YORK TELEPHONE BRYANT 2449-0218 [ Two Hundrc cd Eleven ] Stern Brothers West Forty-Second Street and West Forty-Third Street NEW YORK CITY Complete New Wardrobes for the College Girl Smartly Designed for her M any-Sided Activities Simplicity, so rarely lovely and so expressive of youth, individualizes this college apparel — one will be delighted with the fresh originality of the styles. There is quite everything, too, for the various events of the col- lege calendar, from silver slippers for the Prom, to a raccoon coat for out-of-door sports. Frocks for Classroom or Festivities Sports Coats Hats Millinery Accessories Footwear Lingerie Fur-trimmed Cloth Wraps Fur Coats | Two Hundred Twelve ] ' PHONE 2273—2274 CIRCLE M A I E R CO, Inc. WHOLESALE AXD RETAIL DEALERS IN Meats, Poultry, Game and Provisions Hotels, Restaurants and Institutions Supplied Tea Rooms a Specialty 871 SIXTH AVE., Cor. 49th St. BRANCH: 873 NINTH AVENUE NEW YORK ' PHONE COLUMBUS 2971 Amongst Friends Are you one of those genuine booklovers who like to browse around in a book- . store unmolested by persistent salesmen? We mean one of those chummy places where books are conveniently displayed with prices marked so that you can decide for yourself whether you wish to buy or not. Our counters are based on this idea. Here you will find a greater variety of books, all reduced from list prices. It is very probable that you will find some of the books you have been contemplating for your library. In other departments you will find selected assortments of COLLEGE JEW- ELRY, ENGRAVED STATIONERY, SPORTING GOODS, FOUNTAIN PENS, BRIEF CASES, PENNANTS, at tempting prices. And seasonable articles are always displayed at the correct moment to remind you of coming events. When you visit the store we want you to feel at liberty to come behind the counters and look at the shelves. They contain so many things of interest to you that it is to your advantage to look them over carefully. Columbia University Press Bookstore On the Campus New York CitV Journalism Building 2960 Broadway S. E. corner 116th Street [ Tzvo Hundred Thirteen ] 1. Alton $c da. Fashionable College Clothes featuring Correct Modes for the Classroom, for the Street, for Formal Occasions, and for Sports Wear THE MAIL SHOPPING BUREAU Is at the Disposal of Out-of-Town Patrons jUabt on gtoenue— Jf tftf) Sbenue, Jgeto gorfe Ctyrti?4ourtI) Street C trt 4tft Street [ Tzvo Hundred Fourteen ] Specialists in Equipping New Dealers in QUALITY RADIO MERCHANDISE WHOLESALE ONLY RADIO STORES CORPORATION World Wide Distributors 218-222 WEST 34th STREET NEW YORK CITY LACKAWANNA 8980-1-2-3 SPANISH and FRENCH BOOKS ZABALA MAURIN 37 W. 47 tii St. New York City Venga a esta libreria donde encontrara, en un am- biente netamente espafiol, personas cultas que hablaran con Ud. de literatura y le ayudaran en la seleccion de sus libros. Pida nuestro catalogo general, indice insuperable de la literatura espanola e hispano-americana. THE MARGUERETTA 1209 AMSTERDAM AVENUE Between 119th 120th Streets THE MOST BEAUTIFULLY LOCATED RESTAURANT ON MORNING SIDE HEIGHTS Your meal hour should be a time of relaxation and enjoyment. If you wish to eat your meal in an atmosphere of quiet and refine- ment, where the food and service are of the best, and in a light and airy dining room facing the beautiful College Green, and where the prices are within the reach of all. COME TO THE MARGUERETTA . ' The cuisine is excellent, as it is all supervised by Mr. Carl Biehl, formerly Chef for the leading clubs of the city. A Wonderful New Single Fluid Eradicator If Your Dealer Cannot Supply You, We Will at 50 Cents per Bottle Delivered. INK-OUT MFG. CO. MOXTCLAIK. X. 1. [ Two Hundred Fifteen ] Like other of America s Leading Colleges | the Students of Barnard College |J 9 P ' 1 1 of QUALITY )RINTERS SOME OF THE LEADING COLLEGES BUYING SCHILLING PRESS PRODUCTS U. S. Military Acad emy ------- West Point, N. Y. N. Y. Military Academy -------- Cornwall, N. Y. Princeton University - -- -- -- - Princeton, N. J. Rutgers College - -- -- -- - New Brunswick, N. J. Stevens Institute - -- -- -- -- - Hoboken, N. J. Columbia University - -- -- -- -- New York City New York University - -- -- -- -- New York City Pratt Institute Brooklyn, N. Y. Barnard College New York City Teachers College - -- -- -- -- - New York City Elmira College Elmira, N. Y. St. Paul ' s Concord, N. H. Cooper Union New York City College of the City of New York ... - New York City Lawrence School - -- -- -- - Hewlett, Long Island Groton School - -- -- -- -- - Groton, Mass. Our School and College Department makes avail- able the best skilled me- chanics, modern equipment and methods, assuring you the production of the high- est type of College Annuals Manufacturers of Super Books eg) The SCHILLING PRESS, Inc. 137-139 East 25th Street :: New York City [ Two Hundred Sixteen ] ENGRAVING (9 ®5H. L.WALKER O) EPSTEAN LEXINGTON BUILDING 141-155 EAST 25TH ST f Tivo Hundred Seventeen ] ne cover for this annual was created by THE DAVID J. MOLLOY CO. 1857 N WESTERN AVE CHICAGO Sendjor Samples s? AVE BON FIFTH AVENUE at 40th Street SPECIALISTS IN YOUTHFUL, FEMIN- INE ATTIRE ESPECIALLY ADAPTED TO THE NEEDS OF COLLEGE GIRLS, BOTH IN MODE AND IN PRICE. YOUR MESSAGE Be it of love, sympathy or devotion Say It With Flowers OUR QUALITY GIVES EMPHASIS OUR SERVICE SATISFACTION THROUGH THE TELEGRAPH, CABLE AND RADIO OUR FIELD IS THE WORLD CHARLES H. BROWN 2366 BROADWAY NEW YORK CITY Phone Schuyler 5187 CHAS. FRIEDGEN PRESCRIPTIONS 1220-22 AMSTERDAM AVENUE, Cor. 120th STREET TELEPHONE 6633 MORNINGSIDE FOR ALL DEPARTMENTS Developing and Printing Perfumery and Toilet Articles THE ANNEX 501 WEST 120th STREET ARTISTIC GIFTS DELICIOUS FOOD HOME MADE ICE CREAM AND CAKE HARTWELL A. WILKINS PBES. . TREAS. ESTABLISHED 18T0. ELLWOOD CLARK Secy. HARTWELL H. WILKINS V. Pres. 511 WEST THIRTY-FOURTH STREET FOOT OF EAST 12STH 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 f INE, OAK AND HICKORY. Telephones: CHICKERING I 0515 ' 0516 HARLEM - t 016 • 0566 DRY HICKORY FOR OPEN FIRES. VIRGINIA PINE KNOTS. SELECTED HARD WOOD. LIGNUM VITAE. NEW BEDFORD DRIFTWOOD. NORTH CAROLINA LIGHT-WOOD. VIRGINIA PINE AND OAK KINDLING WOOD. [ Tzvo Hundred Eighteen ] si
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