Chatham College - Cornerstone Yearbook (Pittsburgh, PA)

 - Class of 1925

Page 28 of 184

 

Chatham College - Cornerstone Yearbook (Pittsburgh, PA) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 28 of 184
Page 28 of 184



Chatham College - Cornerstone Yearbook (Pittsburgh, PA) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 27
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Page 28 text:

CCIasstral iEanguagrs ODAY when the classics are being dropped from the curricula of some of our colleges, seventeen percent of the student body at P. C. W. carry work in this department. Students are electing Latin in greater numbers and are better prepared than during the war. A new course, Classical Civilization, offered this year, has been opened to students not studying Latin or Greek to bring them in touch with the myth, art, literature and history of Greek and Rome. A collection of slides for use in Phi Pi, the flourishing departmental club, and in classes in topography and Roman life, has been beg m. LAURA C. GREEX Head of Department A.B. Wellesley College A.M. Columbia University •§rtencc : f the agencies used by society ( i ) to add to the sum-total to enhance personality; and (3) to enlarge the horizon CIEXCE is one knowledge; (2 mental vision. Pennsylvania College for Women recognizes the great utility of science in fostering culture and thus include; Astronomy, Biology, Chemistry and Physics in her curricula. Excellent individual equipment and laboratory facilities for the proper study of these branches have been provided; in fact the laboratory is thoroughly equipped to give both General and Analytical Chemistry ; Qualitative, Quan- titative, and Volumetric Analysis ; Organic Chemistry ; Food Chemistry ; Physics and Biology. JAMES B. GARNER Head of Department B.S. Wabash College M.S. Wabash College Ph.D. University of Chicago ETHEL L. B ARTLETT Instructor in Chemistry, Physics A.B. Vassar College A.M. Columbia University MARY SCOTT SK1NKER A.B. Columbia University, Teachers College A.M. Columbia University Twenty-four

Page 27 text:

ifflathematics matics. LETITI B.L. HE Department of Mathematics offers the usual courses which form the mathe- matical back-bone of every college. Beginning in 1914 the Calculus and Analyti- cal Geometry were given every year instead of alternate years as before that time. It is the plan of the department to offer Astronomy every two years. A course in statistics and statistical methods — which has proved rather popular — was added in 1922-23. The department feels proud of the fact that since 1916, one hundred and forty-seven graduates have done their major work in mathe- A BENNETT .. Oberlin College .Head of Department Music (JSIC has always been part of the curriculum of the Pennsylvania College for Wom en, even when it was founded in 1870. From 1876 on, a Certificate of Music was awarded ; four years previously the department had been reorgan- ized and was conducted practically as it is today. Beginning with 1908, the studies in this department have been counted toward the baccalaureate degree. Throughout its history, courses in the theory, history, and appreciation of music have been offered, as well as instrumental and vocal instruction. MAE B. MacKENZIE Head of Department Cosmopolitan College of Music, Chicago Pupil of Victor Heinze, Chicago Pupil of Joseph Lhevinne, Berlin MABEL DAVIS ROCKWELL Singing Ithaca Conservatory, Ithaca, N. Y. The Master School of Music, Brooklyn, N. Y. Pupil of Mrs. Fiske, Buffalo ; Dr. Muckey, New York; Mme. Jaegar, Vienna CATHERINE J. WILLIAMS Theory of Music, Piano, Pipe Organ A.B. Mt. Holyoke College A.M. Vassar College ELEANOR SPINDLER EGLI Violin Pupil of Marsick, Paris ; Ariggo Serato, Berlin ; Leopold Auer, New York LOIS M. FARR Piano A.B. Pennsylvania College for Women Tzventy-three



Page 29 text:

ilutUish HE department aims to cultivate an attitude toward literature that shall be neither purely sentimental nor rigidly scientific or philological. It seeks to study literature as literature. — which is first of all a criticism of life and offers a discipline of the spirit that is more universal, more varied, and more intimate than any other form of culture. English composition, the other branch of the department, brings about self-expression through writing 1 , and makes possible the self-recognition of genius and non-genius. The course in journalism possibly develops newspaper writers; at any rate, it makes for more intelligent newspaper readers. CARLL W. DOXSEE A.B. Wesleyan University A.M. Wesleyan University Ph.D. Princeton University LAURA BAER BREISKV A.B. Mt. Holyoke College .Head of Department .Instructor in Composition Miblxcal ffitteratun? CLEVER Frenchman once said La Bible est plus celehre que connue. The Bib- lical Department at P. C. W., recognizing ' the truth of the French dictum, aims at an intelligent grasp, for each P. C. W. graduate, of the nature of the Bible, of its contents and its literary development. Each class makes a study of Biblical history down to the close of the first Christian century; then a survey of the literature of both Old and New Testament is attempted, with emphasis upon its unique forms and character. An appreciation of these human docu- ments which taken together form the greatest collection of divine literature to which man- kind is heir is ever in the foreground of our purpose. DAVID E. CULLEY . . . Head of Department A. B. Washington and Jefferson College Ph.D. Liniversity of Leipzig D.D. Western Theological Seminary Philosophy HEN the college was founded, philosophy was taught as Evidences of Christianity, and later was extended to cover the fields of psychology, logic, ethics, and his- tory of philosophy, as well. Throughout the ensuing years it has always been a part of the curriculum, although psychology has been transferred to a depart- ment of its own, more courses added, and the original ones much enlarged in their scope. S. HERRICK LAYTON Head of Department A.B. Ohio Wesleyan University A.M. Columbia University Ph.D. Ohio Northern University Twenty-five 7,

Suggestions in the Chatham College - Cornerstone Yearbook (Pittsburgh, PA) collection:

Chatham College - Cornerstone Yearbook (Pittsburgh, PA) online collection, 1919 Edition, Page 1

1919

Chatham College - Cornerstone Yearbook (Pittsburgh, PA) online collection, 1920 Edition, Page 1

1920

Chatham College - Cornerstone Yearbook (Pittsburgh, PA) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 1

1923

Chatham College - Cornerstone Yearbook (Pittsburgh, PA) online collection, 1927 Edition, Page 1

1927

Chatham College - Cornerstone Yearbook (Pittsburgh, PA) online collection, 1928 Edition, Page 1

1928

Chatham College - Cornerstone Yearbook (Pittsburgh, PA) online collection, 1929 Edition, Page 1

1929


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