Report and Register of the Associate Alumnae

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CT2. ^7-tT Report and Register of the Associate Alumnae of Barnard College 1910-1915 1915 Report and Register of the Associate Alumnae of Barnard College 1910-1915 1915 TABLE OF CONTENTS PAGE Officers and Committees of Associate Alumna ... 3 Secretaries of Classes 5 Report of President, 19 10-19 15 6 Report of Treasurer, 1909-19 14 13 Register of Alumnae, Classes 1893-19 14 . .14 Directory . .93 Associate Members H2 Necrology 143 Statistics 145 ASSOCIATE ALUMNA OF BARNARD COLLEGE OFFICERS AND COMMITTEES Note.—A date in parentheses after a name indicates the expiration of the term of office. BOARD OF DIRECTORS 1914-1915 President Alice Kohn Pollitzer (Mrs. Sigmund Pollitzer), '93 First Vice-President Amy Loveman, '01 Second Vice-President Mary Nammack, '10 Secretary Ruth Earle Lawrence (Mrs. Richard W. Lawrence), '02 Treasurer Theodora Baldwin, '00 Gratia Whithed Baldwin (Mrs. Charles S. Baldwin), '95 Adaline Caswell Wheelock, '97 Clara de Lissa Berg, '98 Agnes Lillian Dickson, '99 Elizabeth Allen, '02 Clare Maclellen Howard, '03 Charlotte Elizabeth Morgan, '04 Irma Alexander Goldfrank (Mrs. Walter S. Goldfrank), '08 Eleanor Gay, '09 Florence Wyeth McLean (Mrs. Alan D. McLean), '09 Lillian Schoedler, 'ii Viola Turck, '13 OTHER OFFICERS Alumna Trustee Elsie Clews Parsons (Mrs. Herbert Parsons), '96 (1915) Clerk Florence Gordon, '07 (1917) Assistant Treasurer Helen St. Clair Mullan (Mrs. George V. Mullan) '98 (1917) Auditor Cora Rohde Thees, '12 (1917) ALUMNA COUNCIL Sara Straus Hess (Mrs. Alfred F. Hess), '00 (1916) Ellinor Reiley Endicott (Mrs. George Endicott), '00 (19 16) Anna I. Von Sholly, '98 (19 17) Helen Louise Cohen, '03 (191 7) Elizabeth Allen, '02 (1918) Helen St. Clair Mullan (Mrs. George V. Mullan), '98 (1918) The Alumnae Trustee FINANCE COMMITTEE The First Vice-President, Chairman The Treasurer Adaline Caswell Wheelock, '97 (19 15) 3 OFFICERS AND COMMITTEES MEMBERSHIP AND STATISTICS COMMITTEE The Assistant Treasurer, Chairman Edith Rice Sackett, '97 (19 15) Marian Lathrop Gibson, '10 (1916) Viola Turck, '13 (1917) Louise Herrick Fox, '14 (191 8) Anna E. H. Meyer, '98, Registrar of the College, ex-officio Katharine Swift Doty, '04, Secretary of the College, ex-offi,cio STUDENTS' AID COMMITTEE Mabel Parsons, '95, Chairman (19 18) Florence de Loiselle Lowther (Mrs. Hugh S. Lowther), '12 (191 5) Mary Nammack, 'io (19 16) Caroline Brombacher Stacey (Mrs. Sidney G. Stacey), '95 (1917) Sara Straus Hess (Mrs. Alfred F. Hess), 'oo (1919) NOMINATING COMMITTEE Juliana Shields Haskell (Mrs. Henry S. Haskell), '04, Chairman (1915) Edith Berkeley Handy, '05 (1915) Clara de Lissa Berg, '98 (19 16) Sophie Townsend Andrews, '14 (19 16) REUNION COMMITTEE The Second Vice-President, Chairman Florence Gordon, '07 (1915) Edith Parker Striker, '99 (19 15) Priscilla Lockwood, '13 (19 1 5) Florence Wallace Read, '10 (1916) Mary Wotherspoon Stewart, '13 (1916) Elizabeth Iverson Toms, '06 (19 16) BY-LAWS, LEGISLATION AND PRINTING COMMITTEE Elsa Sauter Mehler, '12, Chairman (1915) Edith Haas, '04 (1916) Anna Cobb Hallock, '12 (1917) ATHLETICS COMMITTEE Lillian Schoedler, 'ii, Chairman (1916) Elsa Alsberg, '02 (1915) Daphne Dietrich Imbrie (Mrs. Schuyler Imbrie), ea-'io (191 7) PUBLICITY COMMITTEE Charlotte Elizabeth Morgan, '04, Chairman (1916) Elizabeth McLean, '04 (19 15) Helen Josephine Harvitt, '07 (19 17) Edith Moore Valet, '12 (1918) Aline Croquet Stratford, '97 (191 9) 1 SECRETARIES OF CLASSES EMPLOYMENT COMMITTEE Agnes Lillian Dickson, '99, Chairman Eva Sherwood Potter, '96 Pauline Hamilton Dederer, '01 Alma Wallach Liebmann (Mrs. Alfred Liebmann), '01 Edna Florence Brown, '07 BARNARD DIRECTORS, INTERCOLLEGIATE BUREAU OF OCCUPATIONS Elizabeth Allen, '02, Chairman (1915) Lucetta Pitney Johnson, '07 (19 15) Hilda Josephthal Hellman (Mrs. George S. Hellman), '01 (1916) Emilie Josephine Hutchinson, '05 (1916) BARNARD COUNCILOR, ASSOCIATION OF COLLEGIATE ALUMNA Ruth Earle Lawrence (Mrs. Richard W. Lawrence), '02 SECRETARIES OF CLASSES 1893 Mrs. Sigmund Pollitzer, 51 East 60th Street, New York City. 1894 Miss Eliza Jones, 182 Madison Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. 1895 Miss Jean W. Tatlock, 670 Lexington Avenue, New York City. 1896 Miss Mary M. Stone, 404 Ocean Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. 1897 Miss Grace L. Fenton, 17 Church Street, White Plains, N. Y. 1898 Miss Susan I. Myers, 309 West 70th Street, New York City. 1899 Miss Elsie M. Kupfer, 44 West 97th Street, New York City. 1900 Mrs. Edward J. West, 3 Davis Road, Port Washington, N. Y. 1901 Miss Pauline H. Dederer, 549 West 113th Street, New York City. 1902 Mrs. John E. Bates, 24 Summit Avenue, Mount Vernon, N. Y. 1903 Miss Marion E. Latham, Barnard College, New York City. 1904 Miss Florence L. Beeckman, 141 West 104th Street, New York City. 1905 Mrs. Charles N. Arbuckle, 64 Bruce Avenue, Yonkers, N. Y. 1906 Mrs. Millard L. Robinson, 250 West 93d Street, New York City. 1907 Miss Florence Gordon, Highwood Park, Weehawken, N. J. 1908 Miss Annie G. Turnbull, 510 West 124th Street, New York City. 1909 Miss Herlinda G. Smithers, 425 West 144th Street, New York City. 1910 Miss Elizabeth Nitchie, 129 Embree Crescent, Westfield, N. J. 191 Miss Jeannette A. Steinecke, 55a Lynch Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. 1912 Mrs. Harold A. Lieber, 119 West 71st Street, New York City. 1913 Miss Mary Voyse, 409 Palisade Avenue, Yonkers, N. Y. 1914 Miss Jeannette Unger, 73 East 90th Street, New York City. THE FIVE-YEARLY REPORT OF THE PRESIDENT OF THE ASSOCIATE ALUMNA OF BARNARD COLLEGE February, 191 5. The five years that have elapsed since the publication of the last Quinquennial Report and Register of the Associate Alumna of Barnard College, completing the first quarter century in the life of the college, have witnessed a fourfold growth of power in the association. In the first place, it has been internally strengthened through the simplification of its machinery by changes in the By-Laws enacted from time to time. By abolishing the system of carrying all graduates as members for three years and through the activity of the Membership Committee and individual effort it has increased its paying membership from 390 in the fiscal year ending in October, 191 1, to 682 in the year ending in October, 19 14, and at the present time it num- bers 727 active members, 46 life members, and 8 associate members, making a total membership of 781. It has, more- over, by a painstaking system of budget-making on the part of its Finance Committee, based on the estimated expenses of each committee for the year, established itself on a firm financial basis, bringing its actual expenses within ten dollars of its estimated expenses and at the same time maintaining an ample reserve. The careful revision of the card-index made by the Registrar and the thorough system of keeping it up to date inaugurated by the present Membership and Statistics Committee have facilitated and improved the handling of alumnae business. The alumnag have been kept in closer touch with one another by means of the Bulletin of the Associate Alumnce of Barnard College, published first in May, 1912, and semiannu- ally since 191 3. The publication of such a bulletin was sug- gested to the Board of Directors in November, 191 1, by the Class of 1904. The enlarged Publicity Committee, Charlotte E. Morgan, '04, chairman, with the help of a special Finance Committee and the generous cooperation of other committees, succeeded in overcoming the financial difficulties of the first 6 PRESIDENT REPORT OF THE 7 issue. Since then an appropriation for the Bulletin has been made from the association treasury. The cost has, however, mounted from $54 for the first number to $75 for the last, in December, 19 14, and has thereby enforced limiting the dis- tribution of the Bulletin to members of the Associate Alumnae, a policy long advocated by many faithful members of the association who believe that its privileges should not be ex- tended to those alumnae not contributing to its support. Growing social activities too have strengthened alumnae ties. By giving the annual luncheon a more public character and inviting prominent speakers, the Reunion Committee has succeeded in attracting a large body of members, as well as in recruiting new members and bringing about a considerable number of reinstatements by its policy of making attendance conditional on payment of back dues. This committee has also made the costume parade an attractive feature of the Commencement Reunion. Field Day and the informal Monday afternoon teas at the college, inaugurated in January, 1914, have afforded the alumnae more frequent opportunities for social intercourse. The most valuable contribution, how- ever, to the social life of the alumnae has probably been the establishment of intercollegiate athletics. The plan for this undertaking was suggested to the Board of Directors in Janu- ary, 1913, by Miss Lillian Schoedler, '11, who was made chairman of a Committee on Athletics. This committee ini- tiated its work in Thompson Gymnasium with a group of about twenty girls in March, 191 3, and by October of that year it had so fully proved its value that it was constituted a permanent committee of the Associate Alumnae. Under the auspices of this energetic committee, for a small fee, about 325 graduates of about 40 colleges now meet one evening a week at Thompson Gymnasium for basket-ball, hand-ball, hockey, swimming, and dancing, and one evening a week at the Central Park Riding Academy for horseback riding ; during the summer months outdoor sports and activities are provided. In the second place, the relationship of the Associate Alumnae with the undergraduates indicates an ever-growing spirit of friendship and hearty cooperation. The Committee 8 REPORT OF THE PRESIDENT on Student Activities has, it is true, been abolished, but only because many of its functions had been absorbed by other committees and simpler machinery was deemed more effective.
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