Swarthmore College CATALOGUE i89^-'96. SWARTHMORE COLLEGE 7T7 ODBfi? Author: Swarthmore college Title: Catalogue Class .: 8WARTHM0REANA LD5186 .C3 V.27 Ace .no 114301 7n2 Twenty- Seventh Annual Catalogue OF Swarthmore College Swarthmore, Pa. • 189^-96. PHILADELPHIA : FRANKLIN PRINTING COMPANY, 516-518 MINOR STREET, 1S95. Contents. The Calendar, 3 Admission without Examina- for Higher 26 tions, The Corporation, 4 Board of Managers, Officers and Committees, The 27 Classes, 4 ... 6 8 Faculty, Officers of Instruction, Examinations .... 9 Partial Courses of Study, Biology, Chemistry, . 11 Sophomore Freshman Class, Class, 12 13 14 16 16 ...... Unclassified Students, .... Summary, General Information. Buildings and Grounds, ... Principal College Building, Science Hall, Astronomical Observatory, Other Buildings, 17 .17 . 17 .18 . Libraries, Friends' Historical Library, 18 18 . .19 Reading-Room, 19 19 19 Literary Societies, Gymnasiums, General Regulations. . . 28 30 • ... Painting, Expenses. For Resident Students, . . 32 32 21 22 22 22 23 Payments, Fellowships, Scholarships, Pecuniary Aid, Arts, 33 • • English Language and Litera- 36 ture, French Language and Litera- 40 ture, German Language and Litera- ture, 41 Greek, .42 History and Political Economy, 43 Latin, 44 Mathematics, Pedagogics, Philosophy, 45 46 46 47 47 Physical Culture, Physics, General Remarks on Courses OF Study, 49 of Courses of Study. Course Com-se Course Course 5^ 53 54 in Arts in Letters, in Science, in Engineering, .... 55 Graduation and Degrees. Degree of Bachelor, Degree of Master, Degree of Civil Engineer, . . 5^ 56 56 Officers of the Alumni Associ- Examinations for Admission. ation, Introductory, Time and Conditions of Admission, Summer Examinations, 1896, Fall Examinations, 1896, . ... Admission, Mechanic .21 Students, for Engineering and Arrangement 20 Commencement and Vacations, 20 21 The Household, Religious Exercises, Requirements . History of Art, Senior Class, Junior Class, For Day .27 . Courses of Instruction. Drawing and List of Students. . . 23 24 24 24 25 57 List of Graduates Honorary Degrees Conferred, 58 . 69 Committee on Trusts, Endow70 ments, and Scholarships, . Calendar. 1895-96. 1895. Ninth Month, 17th, " Ninth Month, 17th, Third-day, Meeting of the Board of Managers. Third-day, New Fourth-day, Examinations for Admission. Students an-ive. " Ninth Month, " Ninth Month, 19th, Ninth Month, 20th, Fifth-day, Old Students " Sixth-day, Regulai* Exercises begin. " Twelfth Month, 2d, Second-day, Meeting of the Board of Managers. " Twelfth Month, 3d, Third-day, Annual Meeting of " Twelfth Month, 3d, Third-day, Meeting of the Board of Managers. " Twelfth Month, 20th, Sixth-day, 1 8th, 1896. First Month, 2d, " First Month, 3d, " Second Month, 1st, return. the Stockholders. Winter Recess begins. Fifth-day, Students return. Sixth-day, Regular Exercises begin. Seventh-day, First Semester ends. " Second Month, 3d, Second-day, " Third Morith, loth, Third-day, " Third Month, 28th, Second Semester begins. Meeting of the Board of Managers. Seventh-day, Spring Recess begins. ". Fourth Month, 6th, Second-day, Students return. " Fourth Month, 24th, Sixth-day, Graduating Essays due from Senior Class. " Fifth Month, i8th, Se'cond-day, Senior Examinations begin. Fifth Month, 25th, Second-day, Senior Examinations completed, and the Second-day, Final Examinations begin. <' results " '•• " '•' Sixth Month, 1st, announced. Sixth Month, 5th, Sixth-da}', Sixth Month, 6th, Seventh-day, Sixth Month, 8th, Second-day, Meeting of the Board of Managers. V Examinations for Admission. J " Sixth Month, 8th, Second-day, Class-Day Exercises. " Sixth Month, 9th, Third-day, Commencement. " Ninth Month, 15th, Third-day, Meeting of the Board of Managers. " Ninth Month, 15th, Third-day, New " Ninth Month, i6th. Fourth-day, Examinations Students arrive. for Admission begin, and old Students return. " Ninth Month, 17th, Fifth-day, " Eleventh Month, 30th, Second-day, " Twelfth Month, 1st, Third-day, " Twelfth Month, 1st, Third-day, " Twelfth Month, 23d, Fourth-day, 1897. First Month, 4th, •' First Month, 5th, Examinations for Admission completed, and Regular Exercises begin. Meeting of the Board of Managers. Annual Meeting of the Stockholders. Meeting of the Board of Managers. Winter Recess begins. Second-day, Students return. Third-day, Regular Exercises becfin. Corporation, OFFICERS. Clerks, ROBERT M. JANNEY, 112 Drexel Building, Philadelphia. ABBY W. MILLER, 1203 Delaware Avenue, Wilmington. Treasurer. ROBERT BIDDLE, 507 Commerce Street, Philadelphia. Board of Managers. Term expires Twelfth Month, l8g6. Catharine Underhill, Edward H. Ogden, 314 Vine Street, Philadelphia. McCulloh St.,r)aUimore, Md. Jr., 3 South Street, Baltimore, Md. Hannah H. Woodnutt, Anna M. Hunt, 1732 Girard Avenue, Philadeli)hJa. Susan W. Lippixxott, Cinnamiiison, ^. I. Edward Stabler, Eli M. Lamb, I.'1.32 Jericho, L. J. 1S16 Arch Howard W. Street, Philadelphia. Lippincott, ^^Z Drexel Building, Philadelphia. . SWARTHMORE COLLEGE. 1 . Ter7n expires Twelfth Monih, i8gj John T. Jane Willets, 303 Pearl Street, New York. Sarah H. Powell, Charles M. Biddle, 507 Commerce Street, Philadelphia. Daniel Underhill, Jericho, L. West Emmor Roberts, Station, Philadelphia. Fannie W. Lowthorp, Sth and Market Streets, Philadelphia. Trenton, N. J. Edmund Webster, James V. Watson, Street, Philadelphia, Herman Hoopes, 1156 S. Broad Street, Philadelphia. Emma McIlvain Cooper, 436 Drexel Building, Philadelphia. Annie Shoemaker, Riverton, N. Rebecca 112 Carpenter Street, Germantown, Sharon C. Hill, J. Longstreth, Delaware Co., Pa. expires Twelfth Month, i8gg. Mary Joseph Wharton, P. O. Bo.\ 1332, Philadelphia. Willets, Manasquan, N. York. expires Tivelfth Month, i8g8. Isaac H. Clothier, Mary New Chester, Pa. Logan Term Street, Joanna W. Lippincott, J. Term 718 Franklin 324 West 58th Elizabeth B. Passmore, I. Fellowship, N. Downing, P. 1613 Race Street, Philadelphia. Pa. William M. Jackson, 335 W. 8th Street, New 1 J. Lydia H. Hall, York. Rachel W. Hillborn, Swarthmore, Pa. Wilson M. Powell, 324 W. 58th Street, New C. Clothier, Wynnewood, Swarthmore, Pa. Edward Martin, M. York. 415 S. D., 15th Street, Philadelphia. and Committees of Officers the Board. President. JOSEPH WHARTON. Secretary. HERMAN HOOPES. Auditors. Herman Hoopes, John T. Willets. Executive. Emmor Roberts, Mary Willets, Daniel Underhill, Charles M. Biddle, Robert M. Janney, Edmund Webster, Jane Howard W, P. Downing, Anna M. Hunt, Lippincott, Eli M. Lamb, Edward Martin, Ex- Officio, Susan W. Lippincott, Emma McIlvain Cooper, Hannah H. Woodnutt, Mary C. Clothier, Elizabeth B. Passmore, Herman Hoopes. Finance, Charles M. Biddle, James V. Watson, Edward H. Ogden. SWARTHMORE COLLEGE. Instruction. Annie Shoemaker, Lydia H. Hall, Emmor Roberts, Herman Hoopes, Mary Willets, Susan W. Lippincott, Anna M. Hunt, Fannie W. Lowthorp, Rachel W. Hillborn, Edward Martin. Building and Property, Edward H. Ogden, Emmor Roberts, Daniel Underhill, P. Downing, Jane Edmund Webster, Rachel W. Hillborn, Howard W. Lippincott, Robert M. Janney. Museum and Mary C Clothier, William M. Jackson, Laboratories. Mary Willets, Edward Martin. Friends' Historical Library. Lydia H. Hall, Edward Stabler, Trusts, Jr., Isaac H. Clothier, Rebecca C. Longstreth. Endowments, and Scholarships. Edward H. Ogden, Daniel Underhill, Edmund Webster, Trustees of Isaac H. Clothier, Emmor Roberts, Susan W. Lippincott, Rebecca C. Longstreth, Endowed Professorships. Edward H. Ogden, Emmor Roberts. Library. Lydia H. Hall, Rachel W. Hillborn, Edward Stabler, John T. Willets. Jr., Secretary. Faculty.* 1895-96. CHARLES DeGARMO, President. ELIZABETH POWELL BOND, Dean. Prof. Prof. Prof. EDWARD H. MAGILL, ARTHUR BEARDSLEY. WILLIAM HYDE APPLETON. SuPT. SUSAN J. CUNNINGHAM. WILLIAM J. HALL. Prof. WILLIAM Prof. FERRIS W. PRICE. Prof. C. DAY. Prof. GEORGE Prof. RICHARD JONES. HULL. WILLIAM HOADLEY. Prof. SPENCER TROTTER. ESTHER T. MOORE. Prof. MARIE A. KEMP HOADLEY. f Prof. A. I. " The President, Dean, and such of the resident Professors and others as may * By-Laws be elected by the Board, shall constitute the Faculty. They shall hold regular meetings, arrange the course of study, determine the qualifications for admission and for graduation, decide upon rules of order, and determine all questions pertaining to the discipline or instruction, subject to the approval of the Executive Committee, to whom they shall report monthly." f On leave of absence for the year. . Officers of Instruction.* CHARLES De GARMO, Ph.D., President, and Professor of Philosopliy. ELIZABETH POWELL BOND, Dean. EDWARD M AGILE, H. Professor of the French ARTHUR BEARDSLEY, I. A.M., LL.D., Language and C.E., Ph.D., V. Williamson Professor of Engineering, and Director of the Workshops. WILLIAM HYDE APPLETON, Professor of SUSAN Literature. CUNNINGHAM, J. A.M., LL.B., Ph.D., Greek and of Early English. Edward H. Magill Sc.D., Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy. WILLIAM CATHCART DAY, Ph.D., Professor of Chemistry'. SPENCER TROTTER, M.D., Professor of Biology and Geology. GEORGE A. HOADLEY, C.E., A.M., Professor of Physics. FERRIS W. PRICE, A.M., Isaac MARIE H. Clothier Professor of the Latin Language and A. KEMP HOADLEY, Professor of the I. Literature. A.M., Ph.D., Professor of the English WILLIAM A.M.,t German Language and RICHARD JONES, HULL, Language and Literature. Ph.D., Joseph Wharton Professor of History and Arranged On Political Economy. with the exception of the President and Dean, in the order of appointment, as; Professors, Assistant Professors, and other Instructors, t Literature leave of absence for the year. SWARTHMORE COLLEGE. JO MYRTIE FURMAN, E. M.O., Assistant Professor in charge of Elocution. J. RUSSELL HAYES, A.B., LL.B., Assistant Professor of English. BEATRICE MAGILL, Instructor in J. K. Drawing and Painting. SHELL, M.D., Director of Physical Culture for the EMILY HUNT, G. Young Men. M.D., Lecturer on Physiology and Hygiene to the JOSEPH BAYLEY, Jr., Assistant in Engineering, HENRY Shop GUMMERE, V. Young Women. Practice. A.M., Assistant in Mathematics. MARY MITCHELL GREEN, V. Director of Physical Culture for the M.D., Young Women. MARION HUNTER, Assistant in WILLIAM H. Department of Physical Culture. ADEY, C.E., Assistant in Engineering, Field Practice ESTHER T. MOORE, and Drawing. A.B., Secretary to the President, and Registrar. SARAH M. Librarian. NOWELL, Students. Resident Graduates. Elizabeth H. Taylor, Roland Woodstown, N. '75, Wilmington, G. Kent, '95, Undergraduates. SENIOR CLASS. Name. Residence. Course. London Grove, Pa. Arts Bartram Engineering Dover, N. J. Leopold W. Bierwirth Rising Sun, Md. Arts Albert L. Buffington Unionville, Pa. Letters Carolien H. Chambers Charles Chandler .... Engineering- Bushnell, 111. Wynnewood, Pa. Arts Isaac H. Clothier, Jr. Glen Mills, Pa. Frances Darlington .... Arts Malvern, Pa. Letters AidaT. Evans Engineering Moorestown, N. J. George B. Ferrier, Jr. Engineering East Williston, N. Y. E. Harper Firth Swarthmore, Pa. Science Sylvester S. Garrett Engineering Cornwall, Pa. T. RusSEL Gleim New York, N. Y. Arts Ellen Gunton Rising Sun, Md. Letters Hallie H. Haines Rising Sun, Md. ViOLETTE T. Haines .... Arts Belvidere, 111. Arts loLENE M. Hollenshead Philadelphia, Pa. Howard C. Johnson .... Letters Engineering Emporia, Fla. Charles Kaighn Mary S. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Knauer McDowell Arabella E. Moore Arts . . . Warwick, Pa. Arts . . . New . . Philadelphia, Pa. William Science . . Letters . . Philip Mary S. S. J. .... .... Morrison .... Percival Parrish Letters York, N. Y. El Paso, 111. Newport, R. I. (11) J. Del.. SWARTHMORE COLLEGE. 12 Name. N. .... Charles A. Schooley Mary T. Shoemaker .... J. Chauncey Shortlidge Lauretta T. Smedley A. Ella Spicer Albert H. Taylor . . . John E. Wells Hanson Z. Wilson Residence. Course. WiLMER Plummer . Engineering Frederick, Md. Engineering Sparta, Canada. Letters Philomont, Va. . . . . . . Arts . . . Arts . . . Arts . . . Baltimore, Md. Engineering Philadelphia, Pa. Letters ..... Concordville, Pa. Willistown Inn, Pa. . Philadelphia, Pa. . Enginee7-ing Sylmar, Md. JUNIOR CLASS. Name. Mary S. Sarah Bancroft Mary E. Bartleson Reuben G. Bennett Mellie E. Bishop Irregular Science .... .... William B. Chapin Bouic L. Clark Alice V. Corson Daisy R. Corson M. Louise Curtiss Jared W. Darlington C. De Garmo . . . Irregular Letters . Letters . Philadelphia, Pa. Wilmington, Del. . . Letters Irregular Grace A. Brosius Thomas Cahall Walter Residence. Course. Ash Chester, Pa. . Freeport, Ohio. . Normal, 111. . Lancaster, Pa. . Frederica, Del. Engineering Washington, D. C. Irregular Science Science Letters Md. . Sligo, . . Norristown, Pa. . . Norristown, Pa. . . Woodside, Md. . . . Engineering Darling, Pa. . . . Engineering Swarthmore, Pa. George Gleim, Jr. ..... Engineering Cornwall, Pa. Sarah P. Godfrey Passaic, N. J. Letters Marietta Hicks Westbury Station, N. Y. Letters Clarence B. Hoadley Swarthmore, Pa. Science Charles G. Hodge .... Irregular Washington, D. C. . . . . . . . . . , Edith H. Johns Irregular Nellie Lodge Science Manley Walker Matteson Robert Mary E. McAllister Laura C. Miller C. .... .... .... . . Media, Pa. . Philadelphia, Pa. Engineering Washington, D. C. Arts Arts Arts . . . . . . . Roslyn, N. Y. . Colorado Springs, Col. . New York, N. Y. SWARTHMORE COLLEGE. Name. Course. Ellwood C. Parry Robert Pyle Samuel Riddle E. . Wyncote, Pa. . . . London Grove, . Pa. Engineering Media, Pa. Miriam Sener Franklin D. Walton Channing Way Lydia p. Williams Keturah Residence. Letters Arts la Letters .... . Letters London Grove, Pa. . . . West Chester, Pa. Letters . . Philadelphia, Pa. Science . . Easton, Arts Yeo Lancaster, Pa. . . . Md. SOPHOMORE class Name. Course. Susan W. Atkinson Frederic D. Barber William I. Battin Frank G. Blair Charles T. Brown . , B. Callender Helen M. Catlin William W. Curtiss . loLA K. Eastburn . George S. Essig Margaret Eves Harrie H. Fouse . . A\'NA C. Holmes Mary S. Howell W. Jefferis Edith Lamb .... Oborn G. L. Lewis Caroline A. Lukens Jesse . . Arts . William B. Miller Albert C. Myers . . . . . . . . . . . Mt. Vernon, 111. West Chester, Pa. Irregular Arts Irregular . Arts . . 111. Omaha, Neb. . . Holicong, Pa. Gardner, . . Sheffield, Mass. . Lexington, Mass. Md. . jEngineerino Woodside, . Letters . . Union, Del. . Letters . . Philadelphia, Pa. . Henry A. Gawthrop Ada V, Gillespie Cxara B. Haldeman Lilla Merritt Irregular Engineering Wallingford, Pa. Letters . Irregular . LUCRETIA M. GaSKILL Residence. . . . . Arts . . Heman Jessie D. Ellis . . Letters . Science . Arts Philadelphia, Pa. . Swarthmore, Pa. . . Wilmington, Del. . . Allegheny, Pa. . Louisville, . . Millville, Pa. . . . Irregular . Letters . Arts . Irregular . . Philadelphia, Pa. . . Mt. Ephraim, N. J. Chester, Pa. Baltimore, . Letters . Engineering Paoli, Pa. . Irregular . Ky. . . Irregular . Swarthmore, Pa. . . Brooklyn, N. Y. . Engineering Media, Pa. . Letters . Md. . Kennett Square, Pa. SWARTHMORE COLLEGE. 14 Name. Residence. Course. Edna M. Nicholl Herbert L. Noxon Letters . J. . . Letters . . Woodbury, N. . . Letters . . Washington, D. C. . J. . Letters . . Christiana, Pa. . Letters . . Christiana, Pa. Letters . . . Lrregular H. Mary Sharples Elizabeth H. Smith Martha B. Stephens Elizabeth L. Stroh Marshall P. Sullivan Levi S. Taylor . . Scotch Plains, N. Enginee7'ing Ingersoll, Canada. Annie Parrish Mary W. Pierce S. Edna Pownall Ia'dia Rakestraw Eva T. Rengier M. Louise Richards Emma Thomas . . . . . . . Letters . . Letters . . Arts New York, N. Y. West Chester, Weldon, Pa. Pa. . . Winchester, Mass. . . Wilkes-Barre, Pa. . Moorestown, N. . Letters Lancaster, Pa. Lrregular Science . . Philomont, Va. Science . . Moorestown, N. J. J. Frederic L. Thomas Engineering Ashton, Md. Georgiana Titus Albert T. Verlenden Letters . . Old Westbury, N. Y. Scie?ice . . Darby, Pa. Guy Lrregular . Carmi, T. Viskniskki Henrietta F. Wanzer 111. Hurstville, N. Y. Lrregular Howard J. Webster Mary Whitson Mary J. Williams Lrregular . Philadelphia, Pa. Letters . Atglen, Pa. Joseph A. Willis Frederic F. Wilson Lrregular Alice Witbeck Letters . . Letters , . . . . Washington, D. C. Fowling Creek, Md. Engineering Jersey Shore, Pa. . FRESHMAN Name. . . Alice C. Bartram Letters Broomell Pauline Broomell Hiram D. Campbell Emily W. Carter Ella L. Cass J. Heulings Coles Arts . . . . . . Lrremlar . , . . 111. Residence. Lrregular P. Belvidere, CLASS. Course. Bird T. Baldwin John . . Marshalton, Pa. White Horse, Pa. Md. Baltimore, Christiana, Pa. Engineering Ironton, Ohio. Belmont, N. Y. Letters . . Letters . . Swarthmore, Pa. Science . . Camden, N. J. SWARTHMORE COLLEGE. Name. Course. Crowell .... Gerry B. Dudley Augusta C. Edel Anna B. Eisenhower Edith Flitcrajt Eva E. Foster Mabel C. Gillespie .... Jonathan Y. Higginson Lyman B. FIollingshead Edwin D. Hubbard .... Calvin F. . Arthur P. . Residence. . . Moorestown, N. Irregular . Ashmore, Science . Arls . Arts . . Letters . Woodbury, N. . . Lancaster, Pa. J. . . Allegheny, Pa. J. . Engineering Pine, Col. . . Irregular . Pemberton, N. Irregular . Philadelphia, Pa. J. Engineering Swarthmore, Pa. Irregular . . . Letters . Irregular G. Leiper Letters . .... Irregular ..... Letters Alice Lippincott Annie Lodge Helen S. Marshall J. Swarthmore, Pa. Norristown, Pa. . Florence M. Levick Lillian . . Irregular Arts • IlL . Hume Alfred Kappeler M. Katharine Lackey Fred S. Larison Mary . 15 McDowell . Atlantic City, N. . Stanford, . AVallingford, Pa. . Quakertown, Pa. J. 111. Riverton, N. J. Philadelphia, Pa. Science . Washington, D. C. . . . .Arts . Trenton, N. .. . . A^-ts . New J. York, N. Y. Mabel G. Miller ..... Letters Lancaster, Pa. Helen S. Moore May's Landing, N. J. Letters Mary E. Morrison Russellville, Pa. Letters Arthur L. Patton Irregulai Panola, 111. Elizabeth M. Purdy .... Letters Port Chester, N. Y. Edward Y. Rich Dyerstown, Pa. Science Edna H. Richards Letters Salem, Ohio. Norman R. Seidle Engineering Lebanon, Pa. Dewitt C. Shaff Irregular Cisco, 111. Sarah A. Shreve Philadelphia, Pa. Irregular Arthur C. Smedley .... Scie?ice Willistown Inn, Pa. George B. Stevens .... Engineering Tyrone, Pa. Emma B. Wallace Woodstown, N. J. Science Georgiana Walter .... Science Christiana, Pa. . . Louis Abner Joseph S. Walton Way E. Way p. . . . . . . Irregular . Altoona, Pa. Science . . Oxford, Pa. . Kennett Square, Pa. Irregular SWARTHMORE COLLEGE. IQ Name, Course. Abraham U. Whitson Everett F. . . . .... Willits Residence. Engineering Westbury Station, N. Y. Science . . Glen Cove, N. Y. UNCLASSIFIED STUDENTS Name. Mary C. Lucretia Anna Residence. Bell S. Bayside, N. Y. Blankenburg Philadelphia, Pa. Duncan Henrietta R. Freemont K. Easton, Md. Swarthmore, Pa. Md. Ernest A. Gill Gustavo Gomez Clarence K. LaMotte Baltimore, Walter H. Lippincott Emma G. Schooley Riverton, N. Managua, Nicaragua. Wilmington, Del. J. Sparta, Canada. Nellie D. Stewart Charles S. White Herbert Wills Mabel W. Wills Mt. Holly, N. Samuel D. Yeo Easton, Huntingdon, Pa. Atlantic Highlands, N.J. Moorestown, N. J. J. Md. summary. Resident Graduates 2 . Seniors 32 Juniors 33 52 Sophomores Freshmen 47 Unclassified 14 Total 180 ) &5 o w H-l hJ o O' ?-, I w Pi o 1^ m H oi <; ^ CA a n Z < ,55_ General Information. Buildings and Grounds. Siuarthmore College was founded in 1S64 by members of the religious Society of Friends, to provide the children of the Society and others with opportunities for higher education under guarded care. With this object in view, a property of two hundred and forty acres was secured, ten miles from Philadelphia, on the Central Division It is of the Philadelphia, Wilmington & Baltimore Railroad. by trains from the Broad Street Station, twenty-four times About half the land is used for farming purposes, providing daily. milk and vegetables for the College; the remainder is devoted to Crum Creek, which forms the western lawn and pleasure grounds. boundary of the property, affords facilities for boating, bathing, and accessible The portion of the grounds bordeVing the stream is of great picturesque beauty. The building site is high, securing perfect drainage and pure air and commanding a fine view of the surrounding skating. country for many miles. The Principal feet long. College Building It consists is a massive stone structure 348 of a central building, five stories, high, contain- ing public rooms, such as lecture-rooms, museum, library, reading- rooms, parlors, dining-hall, this building high. etc. from the two wings. The ground floors are Fire-proof compartments separate The latter are each four stories devoted to lecture and recitation rooms; the remaining floors in the east wing contain the dormitories of the young women, and in the west wing those of the young men. A number of the instructors reside in the same building with the students, and the relations between them are such that there is comparative freedom from the dangers and temptations ordinarily incident to college life. The buildings are heated throughout by steam, lighted and thoroughly ventilated. The Science Hall is constructed of stone, in the most durable manner, and was planned with special reference to the work of stu- by gas, 2 (17) : SWARTHMORE COLLEGE. -[8 dents in Engineering, Physics, and Chemistry. 162 feet, and a depth of 64 It has a frontage of The basement contains engine and feet. boiler rooms, the blacksmith shop, and the foundry of the engineering department, the electrical laboratory, and store-rooms. On the first machine shop and engineering lecture-room, the engineering laboratory, and the chemical and physical laboratories, and on the second floor are the draughting-rooms, the wood-working shop, and floor are the the chemical and physical lecture-rooms. The Astronomical Observatory is especially arranged for purposes The plan embraces a central building supporting the of instruction. dome and two which is There are four rooms wings. : a transit-room, in placed an instrument of three-inch aperture, also the mean- time clock ; a pier-room, at present utilized as a sidereal-clock a work-room in which is room ; placed a small library of reference books, the chronograph and chronometer equatorial of six inch aperture. ; and the dome, containing the In connection with this latter instru- and a spectroscope. The transit and by Warner & Swasey, of Cleveland, O., and the spectroscope by Brashear, of Allegheny, Pa. The equipment Connected with the Observatory is the Signal is ample for class-work. Service Station of the State Weather Bureau, fully provided with the ment there is a micrometer equatorial were constructed necessary meteorological and other apparatus. Other Buildings are a meeting-house, the President's house, the AVest house (birthplace of Benjamin West, now used as a professor's house), the house of the Professor of Astronomy, the Farmer's house and commodious farm-buildings, the laundry and bakery, the boilerhouse, containing the sectional boilers for heating and cooking purposes, and the gymnasium for young women. All these buildings are constructed of stone. Libraries and Reading-Room. Tlie Libraries of the College collectively contain 16,992 bound volumes, as follows The General Library, 11,424 Literary Societies' Libraries, 3j38° Friends' Historical Library, 2,188 Members of the Senior Class are permitted, under proper regu- SWARTHMORE COLLEGE. 19 lations, to consult the Philadelphia Library, containing 145,000 volumes, and the Mercantile Library, containing 150,000 volumes, as and technical well as the valuable special The General Library delphia. The libraries in the city of Phila- at all times accessible to students. is Librarian-will aid students in consulting the Library and in arranging courses of reading. Friends' Historical Library, founded by the late of Skaneateles, N. Y. , Anson Lapham, consists of a valuable collection of Friends' books, photographs of representative Friends, and manuscripts relat- ing to the Society and its Custodian, accessible to all tory of Friends. and history, upon application is, to the persons interested in the doctrines and his- This collection is stored in a fire-proof apartment, and it is hoped that Friends and others will deem it a secure place in which to deposit books and other material in their possession Avhich may be of interest in connection with the history of the Society. Such contributions, as well as additional funds for its growth and maintenance, are solicited, and should be addressed to " Friends' Historical "Arthur Beardsley, Curator, Swarthmore, Pa." The Reading- Room is supplied with the leading literary and scientific journals and the prominent newspapers of the principal cities. There are Literacy Societies are maintained by the students. two for young men and one for young women. These hold regular meetings for the reading of essays, etc., and for practice in debate. Their Libraries, under their own management, contain over three Library," or to thousand volumes and are accessible to all students. The Gymnasiums. The Gymnasium apparatus Through for young men for the exercising according and equipped gymnasium for exercise supplied with a for the Literary Society and young women has been under the Swedish system. are conducted in separate classes for the young women, and are required of Students are requested if there is set of The their built exercises men and young all. to bring from home a any cause that would make in the exercises required. full system of Dr. Sargent. Somerville the efforts of the friends a separate is to the it physician^ s certificate dangerous for them to take part SWARTHMORE COLLEGE. 20 The and beautiful grounds connected with the College which is encouraged by the authorities. On the highest and driest part of the campus a space has been prepared for athletic games, with a quarter-mile cinder running track, and a well-graded field for foot-ball and base-ball, whilst the surrounding extensive invite to out-door exercise, country offers facilities for cross-country running. General Regulations. —-While Religious Exei-cises.trine that religion is care is taken to inculcate the doc- a matter of practical daily life, and is not con- fined to the observance of set forms or the promulgation of religious tenets, the regular On assembling for religious purposes is carefully ob- morning a religious meeting is held, attended by students, teachers, members of the household, and Friends of the neighborhood. The meeting is preceded by First-day school exer- served. cises, First-day consisting of the recitation of passages of Scripture prepared by members of the and the reading of a portion of opened by a general meeting for reading selected portions of Scripture or other suitable books, and for imparting such moral lessons as circumstances seem to require, followed by a period of silence before entering upon the duties of the The Scripture. different classes, daily exercises are day. The its use, use of tobacco being strictly prohibited, those addicted to unless prepared to renounce it entirely, should not apply for admission. Commencement and Vacation. third Third-day of Ninth —The College year begins on the month, and closes with Commencement- day, which occurs on the second Third-day of Sixth month. Students are not admitted for a period lege year ; but, when vacancies exist, they less may than the current Colenter at any time dur- ing the year. Besides the summer vacation there will be a recess of about ten days at the close of the Twelfth month, and one of one week in the Third month. (See Calendar.) Students are permitted to remain at the College, under care, during the recesses, but not during the summer vacation. SWARTHMORE COLLEGE-. 21 The Household. In the organization of this College unusual care has been extended to the personal comfort and the social interests of the students. •department is in charge of the also special oversight of the Dean, with able This She has assistants. conduct and health of the young women, •and parents are desired to communicate freely with her in regard to the welfare of their daughters. The Mary under the imme- several departments of the household are diate charge of the following : Eves, Matron of Central Building. P. Rachel B. Townsend, Housekeeper. Sarah D. Coale, Matron of West Wing. Rachel A. Hicklin, Matron of East Wing. Ellen Roberts, Director of Laundry. Expenses. The is cost of Board and Tuition $450 per is payable in advance, and ^200 on the For Day Students, the price first $200 per is year, of payable in advance, and the remainder on the The day first which ^100 own the lowest obtainable rates. books, which the College will furnish They also buy their own drawing implements, and certain tools and materials used shops, and pay at a reasonable rate for laundry College. ^10 is of First month. students take lunch with the resident students. Students purchase their at which $250 year, of of First month. Students taking laboratory courses will at the rial used. beginning of the course to The unexpended balance stationery, in the work- work done at the make a deposit of cover the expense of the mate- will be returned at the end of the course. /// case of illness, no extra charge is made unless a physician be employed. The above sary expenses. figures may be depended upon as covering all neces- SWARTHMORE COLLEGE. 22 Payments. Payments are to be made by check Robert Biddle, or draft to the order of Treasurer, No. 507 Commerce Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Fellowships, Scholarships, and Pecuniary Aid. FELLOWSHIPS. founded by Howard W. The Joshua Lippincott Fellowship, Lippincott, A. B., of the Class of 1875, in memory of his father,^ an income of $450 per year, which is. granted annually by the Faculty, with the concurrence of the Instruction Committee, to a graduate of this College engaged in advanced consists of a fund yielding study under the direction or with the approval of the Faculty. The Lucretia Mott Fellowship, founded by the Somer- ville Literary Society and sustained by the contributions of its members, yields an annual income of $525, and is awarded each year by a Committee of the Faculty selected by the Society, to a young woman graduate of that year, for the purpose of pursuing advanced study at some other institution approved by this Committee. scholarships. 1. pays all The Westbury Quarterly Meeting, charges for board and tuition and is N. Y., Scholarship awarded annually- by a Committee of the Quarterly Meeting. 2. The Two Rebecca M. Atkinson Scholarships pay all charges for board and tuition and are awarded annually by the Board of Managers of the College. uals, Scholarships owned by individ3. There are nine other similar each entitling the holder 10 board and tuition at the College, and awarded by the owner. 4. Freshmen Honor Scholarships. ten honor Scholarships of the value of ^100 each for — For the year 1896-97 $200 each for resident, and nonresident students have been established. One of : SWARTHMORE COLLEGE. 23 may be awarded to a candidate named schools these Scholarships for the Freshman Class by each of the following Philadelphia, Pa. Friends' Central School, New Friends' Seminary, Friends' Friends' School, Friends' Friends' • . York, N. Y. Baltimore, High School, . Md. Wilmington, Del. . Moorestown, N. High School, Academy, J. Locust Valley, L. I. Friends' Select School, Washington, D. C. Abington Friends' School, Jenkintown, Pa. George School, Chappaqua Mountain Newtown, Pa. Chappaqua, N. Y. Institute PECUNIARY AID. Endowments, and Scholarships holds the income of which is used to aid deserving The Committee on in trust certain funds, Trusts, and needy students who are pursuing their studies at this College. Full information as to the condition and amount of such pecuniary aid may be had on application to Rebecca C. Longstreth, Secretary, Sharon Hill, Pa. Examinations for Admission. Introductory. The studies required for a Degree extend over four years. The requirements for admission are intended to be such as Friends' schools generally can meet. study, Owing and the absence of accomplished in cient preparation four years in versities. or for the is life, and is believed to afford a suffiand general culture for the the study of any of the learned pro- large, science, for pursuit enforcement of regular hours for opportunity for dissipation, the amount classics, ordinary avocations of fessions, to the all of special courses in the higher uni- " SWARTHMORE COLLEGE. 24 Time and Conditions To of Admission. secure places, application for admission should be made as early as possible by letter to the President. applicants All must submit satisfactory testimonials of good coming from another character from their last teachers, and students college must present certificates of honorable dismissal. The examinations mer for admission may be taken either in the sum- at the close of the college year, or in the fall. follows for the year 1896 Summer Sixth-day, Six th (( " month A. M. . Mathematics 10.30 A. M. . English. 2.00 P. M. . History. . Latin. (( M. <( 4.00 P. M. 6th at 8.15 A. M. (( 9.15 A. M. (( 10.15 A. M. " (I " Seventh-day, u are as Examinations, 1896. 5th, at 8.15 u The times : 3.00 P. . . Greelc. Geography. German. , French. Fall Examinations, 1896. Candidates should The examinations month 1 6th, " It " a Fifth-day, 17 th " (. 8. 15 A. M. 10.30 A. M. 2.00 P. M. 3.00 P. M. M. M. 9.15 A. M. 10.15 A M. 4.00 Students are also admitted at the College on the : . Mathematics. . English. . . History. Latin. Greek. P. 8.15 A. at 15th, 1896. occur as follows will Fourth-day, Ninth month, themselves present afternoon of Third-day, Ninth . . , Geography German. French. any time during the year, charged for the unexpired time until the close of the year. and are SWARTHMORE COLLEGE. Requirements for Admission be ex- will in the following subjects: — — Entire. Mathematics. Ariihinetic. Through Equations of 1. in 1896-7. Freshman Class All candidates for admission to the amined 25 Algebra. — Geometry. the second degree and Progressions in a book (Charles Smith's Elementary Algebra of High-School grade. suggested.) is —The whole of Plane Geometry. English Grammar and Composition. English Literature. Candidates are expected to be familiar with Milton's L' Allegro, II Penseroso, Comus and Lycidas, Shakespeare's Merchant of Veni.e and Midsummer Night's Dream, Longfellow's Evangeline, Macaulay's Essay on Milton, Webster's First Bunker Hill Oration, Irving's Tales of a Traveler, George Eliot's 2. — 3. Silas Marner, and Scott's Woodstock. The candidate will be required to write a short composition upon a subject taken from some one of the above-named works. History. 4. —A thorough preparation in the outlines of the History of the United States, and a thorough outline course in either the history of England or in general history. The amount required in each subject tained in the following textbooks is equivalent to what is con- Eggleston's School History of the United States, : Gardiner's School History of England, Barnes's General History. 5. Geography. — The general and Descriptive, of Physical, facts Political Geography, especially of the United States and Europe. In addition to the above, candidates will be examined as follows (i) For Latin. — the Classical Coitrse in Ctusar, Gallic War, four books; Virgil's .Eneid, six seven orations (including those against Catiline) particularly paradigms and elementary syntax translation into Latin of easy sentences involving met : in Cicero's first oration ; Latin ; books Grammar, the ; Cicero, essentials : Latin Composition, the accurate words and constructions commonly against Catiline. — Greek. Greek Grammar (Goodwin's recommended); elementary Greek ComXenophon Four books of the Anabasis; Homer Three books of the position; — — Iliad; General History of Greece For candidates who pass a elective after the Candidates Sophomore to the death of Alexander. satisfactory examination in the above, Greek will be year. for the Classical Course who present no Greek will be required to pursue the study during the entire four y.'ars of college Freshman year. French or German. Candidates formed — for the Classical are required to present either French or Cour^e. — a class for beginners being in the German, as Course offering no Greek prescribed in the Literary ; SWARTHMORE COLLEGE. 26 For (2) man, the Literary Course, in Latin, or in French, or in as follows Latin. — As required entrance the Classical Course. — Elements of French Grammar Super's Preparatory French Reader to for French. ; varied selections (entire) French Ger- : Series, or equivalents >^ow;«^, or equivalents ; Volumes dictees. ; ; I, II, and III of Magill's Modern Racine's Athalie, and Moliere's Bourgeois Gentil- Prose Composition. —Joynes-Meissner's German Grammar, Part Grimm's I, or equivalent Maerchen (twelve selections) Eichendorfif's Taugenichis, omitting chapters VII and VIII Buchheim's Elementary German Prose Composition, Parts I and II Wilhelni Tell and Die Journalisten or Her7}iann and Dorothea ; Ballads and Lyrics German. ; ; ; (six to be memorized), equivalents Options. French, or — Candidates German will be permitted French easy (3) maximum amount to substitute a smaller amount six : French at siglit. German be accepted. Latin — Four books of Caesar and — Elements of French Grammar and the Geri7ian — Elements of German Grammar and three languages, as follows equivalents. will not prepared to offer the of Latin, of any two of the books of Virgil, or ability to read easy the ability to read at sight. For the Engineering Course, in Latin, French, or German, as above. (4) For the Science Course, in Latin, French, or German, as above. Admission ivithout Examination. — Graduates of the following schools are admitted to the Freshman Class without examination upon presenting regular certificates properly the schools filled up by the Principals of named:* Friends' Central School, Philadelphia, Pa. Friends'' Seminary, New Friends' High School, Woodstown Academy, Md. Woodstown, N. Friends' School Wilmington, Del. York, N. Y. Baltimore, Friends' West Chester, Friends' Moorestown, N. J. Pa. High School, High School, Buckingham Friends' School Friends' Academy Locust Valley, L. Friends' Select School, Washington, D. C. Sherwood School, Sandy Spring, Md. Friends' School, . J. Lahaska, Pa. I. Kennett Square, Pa. * Other Schools may on application be added to Ihis list, if the Faculty and Instruction Committee shall be satisfied that they are taught by competent teachers and are furnishing the requisite preparation for admission. SWARTHMORE COLLEGE. 27" Providence Preparative Meeting School, Media, Pa. Oakland Boarding School, Friends' Normal Institute, Rising Sun, Abington Friends' School, Jenkintown, Pa. Fallston, Swarthmore Grammar School, . . Md. Md. Swarthmore, Pa. . George School, Newtown, Pa. Friends' School, Christiana, Pa. Blank certificates will these preparatory schools, named , be furnished each year to the Principals of and for the privilege. such private teachers as to The right is may be reserved, however, to with- draw from such school or teacher the privilege of sending pupils into College on certificates. Pupils from these Schools intending to enter the College should apply by as convenient after the completion They should present themselves at the College letter for places as of their preparation. soon on Fifth-day, Ninth month 17th, 1896. Principals of other schools on their who wish have students admitted to recommendation, should correspond with the President con- cerning each case. Examination for Higher Classes. — Candidates for classes higher than the Freshman Class must pass satisfactorily in the subjects all and students coming from other colleges must present letters of honorable dismissal, and must show that they have pursued courses of study equivalent to those taken by pursued by the lower class or classes ; the classes they wish to enter. Partial Courses of Study. —A limited other persons of fair education and may number of wish to improve themselves in particular studies without examination, and allowed to elect, classes, in Avill who be received any of the regular such work as they can pursue to advantage. all cases teachers and of sufficiently mature age correspond with the President in advance. They should in, Courses of Instruction. ALPHABETICALLY ARRANGED. For required and elective and the number of exercises per week, studies, in each, see pages 52-55. Biology. Spencer Trotter, The purpose of biological studies Professor. is to train students in the right methods of thinking and the interpretation of the continually presented to them by natural objects. Lectures, demonstrations, facts and problems and text-books are employed The nection with laboratory work. course in con- required of all Science is students. The Course is arranged as follows Freshman Class. : — Required of Science Students. — Elements of Biology (Animals and Plants). Text-books. tical — Trotter's "Abstract of Zoology ;" Colton's " Prac- Zoology;" Gray's " Botan\'." Junior Class. — Morphology and Text-books. animal. — Mivart, "Physiology;" Foster Senior Class. ography Martin & (elective). &: Physiology of a high form of "The Cat;" Huxley & Youman's Langley, " Practical Physiology." — Vertebrate Huxley, Morphology. "Anatomy Geology and Physi- of Vertebrated Animals." Moule, Hand-books of Vert. -Dissection. Independent JVork. biological subject. fessor. (28) — Preparation and writing of a Tlie time for work to thesis on some be arranged with the Pro- SWARTHMORE COLLEGE. 29 The Museum. Tlie Museum of the College the specimens from its is strictly a teaching collection, cases are in constant use in the lectures laboratories in Natural History ; it is growing and and steadily, but always in the the direction of rendering more perfect the means of illustrating of intention no with and History, Natural different departments of however articles, miscellaneous or curiosities making it a collection of interesting they may be in their way. includes the following collections It : The Joseph Leidy Collection of Minerals, the result of thirty discriminative collecting by its founder, occupies four large 1. years' double and cases, consists of exceedingly choice cabinet specimens of crystallized minerals, characteristic rocks and ores, and transparent and opaque models of the various systems of crystallization. large series 2. The Collection of Comparative Osteology consists of a of partial and complete skeletons, prepared at Prof. Henry Ward's Natural History Establishment in Rochester, N. Y., and illustrating the structure and framework of backboned animals. Collection of Birds comprises four large of native and foreign birds. Nearly specimens double cases of stuffed 3. all The Wilcox and Farnum the specimens visiting this State are represented. The Frederick Kohl Ethnological Collection consists of two of Indian implements, weapons, clothing, etc., mostly from 4. cases Alaska. is made up of six large and marine shells. These specimens were all selected by the Curator from the extensive collection of the late C. F. Parker, and render further additions to this branch needless. The founder of this collection was for many 5. The C. F. Parker Collection of Shells cases of choice typical land, fresh-water, years the Curator in charge of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. 6. The Robert R. Corson Collection of Stalactites, Stalagmites, and Luray Caverns, and illustrates the limestone formations which render these caverns the second in magnrfiHelictites represents the celebrated cence in the world. SWART H MORE COLLEGE. 30 7. The Eckfeldt Herbarium consists of over two thousand plants, illustrating the flora of Pennsylvania. In addition to the above, there is a large and constantly increas- ing collection of stuffed and alcoholic specimens of vertebrates and invertebrates (including the U. S. Fish Commission Educational Colon lection), of dissected specimens for demonstration in the lectures Physiology and Hygiene, glass and papier-mache models of inverte- and of special points in vegetable and animal morphology, besome three hundred classified diagrams and finely colored charts brates sides illustrating every branch of natural history. Chemistry. William The C. Day, P^-ofessor. course of instruction in this subject extends over a period of four years, and aims to impart a thorough understanding of the most and principles of the science, while special attention is essential facts given to the cultivation of systematic habits of manipulation, so that, besides possessing value as part of a liberal education, dation for such pursuits in life as Those who may desire it forms a foun- require this knowledge. to continue their work be) ond the limits of the regular course will have suitable work assigned them, and will find every facility for carrying on. it The Chemical Laboratory occupies rooms includes a room for work in general in Science Hall. It Chemistry and Qualitative Analy- one for Quantitative Analysis, and a basement room for Assaying and Metallurgy. Near to these are store rooms, a balance-room, and sis, a lecture-room. The Laboratory tables are covered with glazed tiles; fume-closets, suction for filtration, water and gas are provided. lecture room, with a seating capacity of one hundred, is The furnished with water, gas, fume closets, and abundant apparatus for lecture purposes. For and lecture illustration, there their salts, is an excellent collection of the metals and a cabinet of minerals (deposited by In addition to these there is Hugh Foulke). a complete set of typical preparations for use in the course in Organic Chemistry. CJiemical Library. — In all cases students are encouraged in the habit of consulting for themselves the best authorities ; and in a room SWARTHMORE COLLEGE. 31 near to the Laboratory there will be found a number of standard works on Chemistry and besides there are numerous other works on technical ; analytical subjects, current chemical journals, including plete sets of the Text- Books. some com- latter. — As the student ing text-books are used : advances in the course the follow" Elementary Chemistry," Remsen ; '-Qual- Medicus "Introduction to the Study, of the Compounds of Carbon," Remsen; "Quantitative Chemical Analysis," Fresenius " Theoretical Chemistry," Remsen. Special works in techitative Analysis," ; ; nical analysis are used as required. FRESHMAN a. Lectures {Experiinetifal'). CLASS. — General Elementary Chemistry (non-metals and metals), with examinations. b. Laboratory Work. — Special exercises on topics selected with the object of stimulating intelligent experimentation. SOPHOMORE a. Lectures. — Theoretical CLASS. Chemistry, followed by Qualitative Analysis. b. Laboratory Work. — Qualitative followed by Quantitative Chemical Analysis. JUNIOR CLASS. — Chemistry of the compounds of carbon. followed by a num— Quantitative a. Lectures. b. Laboratory Work. iVnalysis, ber of exercises in important, typical, organic transformations. SENIOR CLASS. The A course during this year consists largely of laboratory work. few special subjects are given to each student, with the understand- ing that he is and theoretical requirements of and scholarly manner. Such study of technical works and a number of the to fulfill the practical these subjects in a complete, exhaustive, work will involve the current chemical journals. Meetings will occasionally be held for the consideration of important researches, as they appear from time to time in the journals. SWART EIMORE COLLEGE. 32 Drawing" and Painting. Beatrice Magill, A Drawing and Painting is open to all. means of culture, it leads to habits course of Freehand Aside from its Instructor. intrinsic value as a and of close observation, is a very important adjunct to the other courses, especially to those of Engineering It consists and Science. of drawing from objects and casts, and painting from flowers, etc., and a series of lectures on Practical Perspective and the History of Painting. A Sketch Class is open to the students still-life, qualified to work in It is it. held one afternoon a week for out-door sketching in the Spring and Autumn, and during the Winter-time sketches are light made in the studio from casts and still-life, in color and and shade. Freshman Class. ornament, — Drawing Sophomore Class. ing from objects; cast, — Drawing from cast, details of figure. Paint- still-life. Junior Class. still-life, flowers, —Drawing from cast, details of figure. Paintings out-door sketching. — Drawing Senior Class. still-life, from geometrical still-life. from cast, head or figure. Paintings, flowers, out-door sketching. History of Art. Junior Class. — (^Elective), two periods a week. — History of Art, Renaissance. — History of Art Germany, England, and Spain. Senior Class. — two periods a week. Semester: — History of Art France; Modern Art. Second Semester — Grecian First Semester Italian : Second Semester t?ie in : (^Elective'), First in : The subjects Art. students are required to present written sketches upon the under consideration and to visit the different art exhibitions held in Philadelphia during each season. ; SWARTHMORE COLLEGE. 33 Engineering and Mechanic Arts. Arthur Beardsley, Professor; William H. Adey, This department who students is Joseph Bayley, Assistant, Field Jr., Shop Assistant, Work Work and Drawing. intended to give a good preparation to those become are expecting to either Civil or Mechanical Engineers, or to engage in any of the several specialties of engineering The practice. so arranged that the graduates become immediatel)^ useful in the office, works, or subordinate positions, and, after a field, in tice, to and exercises are studies will be prepared to fair amount of such prac- design and take charge of important works. The location of the College is most favorable for residence and study, combining the quiet of the country with ready access to Phila- delphia and the many important manufacturing cities in its vicinity, and permitting frequent visits to industrial and engineering works of every kind. The department is well provided with the necessary field instru- and each student is made and management by practical exercises in the field and draughting-room, carefully planned to illustrate the actual practice of the engineer. Included in the work of this department is a course in the Mechanic Arts, in which regular and systematic instruction is given in thoroughly-equipped workshops, and by skilled instructors in the use of tools and machinery, and in methods and ments, transits, levels, plane-table, etc., familiar with their use processes. large, well-lighted, and furnished with adjustable tables, models, etc., are well ventilated and warmed, and The Draughting- Roo7}is are are open for work during the greater part of the day. The Engineering Laboratory contains a ten-horse power vertical steam engine and boiler, an Olsen's testing- machine, arranged for tensile, compressive, and transverse tests, a steam-engine indicator, apparatus for hydraulic and steam-engine experiments, and other valuable instruments and appliances. It includes, also, several shops, familiar with the nature and properties which the students become in (iron, wood, brass, etc.), employed the materials of construction of them into the engineer, with the process of working the and by desired form for their intended uses. 3 : SWARTHMORE COLLEGE. 34 The Afachine Shop contains an excellent and complete assortment including 4 screw- cutting of tools, engine lathes, 3 speed lathes (simple and back geared), an iron planer, a complete universal milling machine^ a of milling cutters adapted for general purposes and for set making other cutters, a shaper, a twist-drill grinder, 2 upright drills, an emery grinder, a mill grinder, a grindstone, 16 vises (plain and swivel), 14 lathe chucks (combination, independent, scroll, and drill), a milling machine chuck, a rotary planer chuck, planer centres, a set & Sharpe), sets of and dies, lathe centre of Bett's standard gauges, surface plates (Brown twist drills, reamers, mandrels, screvz-plates, taps grinder, a complete set of steam-fitters' tools, with pipe vise, ratchet etc., drill, together with the tion as many necessary small tools, hammers, Additions are constantly being made to chisels, files, etc. this collec- they are needed, either by manufacture in the shops or by Power purchase. is furnished by a 10x24 Corliss steam engine and a 60-horse power return tubular boiler, the former fitted with an im- proved indicator, and the determining 20 latter with the necessary attachments for efficiency, etc. its The Wood' Working. Shop contains 20 benches with vises, and of wood-working tools, a grindstone, and 8 wood-turning sets lathes. The Smith Shop contains tools, bench, and vise. 7 forges, 10 anvils, and sets of black- smith The Foundry contains a brass-furnace, moulders' benches, a and a full set of moulders' tools. The details of the course vary somewhat from year to year, but general, are represented by the following arrangement of the variety of patterns, in studies FRESHMAN English CLASS. —Lectures on English Literature, prefaced by Lectures on the Greek and Reading in Pope's Homer's Iliad, Chaucer, Spenser, Shakespeare, Milton, and Tennyson Essay Writing and practice in Roman Literatures ; Critical ; Writing Orations. — Mathematics Algebra, Geometry, and Plane Trigonometry, completed. Chemistry Experimental Lectures General Elementary Chemistry of non-metals — and metals ; ; Special Exercises in Laboratory Practice on topics selected with the object of stimulating intelligent experimentation; Analytical tative and quantitative. Work, quali- SWARTHMORE COLLEGE. Draughting — Elements of 35 Drawing; Use of Instruments; Tinting, Shading, Grain- ing; Representation of Earthwork, Masonry, and Materials of Construction; Special Plane Geometric Problems, Projections, Lettering. Shop Work — Wood-working and Pattern-making, Blacksmithing, Foundry, Prac- tice. SOPHOMORE CLASS. Mathematics Conic Sections Differential Chemistry — Qualitative Analysis. Calculus. — Physics ; — Analytical Mechanics, Liquids, Gases, and Sound, Lectures, Recitations, and Laboratory Work. Draughting Structure and Machine Drawing Shades and Shadows Descriptive Geometry, Point, Right Line, and Plane Tangencies and Intersections Let- — ; ; ; ; tering. Shop Work —Vise Work, chipping, turning in brass and iron ; filing, scraping, tapping, reaming fitting, hand ; use of machine tools, lathe-work, turning, boring, screw-cutting, drilling, planing, milling, polishing, etc. on machine lectures ; and materials of construction. Electives— French, German, Elocution; shop work. (See Junior tools Class, shop work.) JUNIOR CLASS. — Integral Calculus. and Light, Lectures, —Heat, Magnetism, oratory work. Engineering— Surveying — Theory, adjustment, and use of Mathematics Physics Electricity, and Lab- Recitations, field instruments surveying; and trigonometrical, topographical, leveling; ; farm hydrographic surveys. Applied Mechanics and — Friction and other resistances elasticity of materials of construction ; stresses ; strength strength of beams, columns, shafts. ; Laboratory practice. — Shades, shadows, and perspective Dratighting and machine drawing Mechanism machinery and ; working drawings — Principles of mechanism topographical, structure, ; finished drawings. ; visits to ; and sketches of special structm'es. Practical Exercises — In field work ; in general engineering laboratory and building materials, the setting up, testing, and management of steam engines, boilers, and machinery shop work. Electives Physics Practical electricity, including the theory and practice of elecpractice, including the testing of metals — trical ; — measurements. Chemistry — Technical analysis of iron, steel, etc., as arranged with the Professor of Chemistry. Shop ^^rX' — Construction of a or other special project, steam engine, dynamo, lathe, mechanism or piece of machinery. draughting-rooms and shops are available at all professors and instructors accessible for advice and For this purpose the convenient times, and the assistance. — ; SWARTHMORE COLLEGE. 36 SENIOR CLASS. Engineering — Line Surveying— Theory and practice of road, railroad, and canal surveying and engineering. — Building Struchires superstructures materials ; stability of structures bridges, cranes, roofs, etc. ; Applied Mechanics theory of machines graphical ; —-Practical hydraulics ; ; foundations and statics. practical pneumatics ; genera! theory of prime movers, steam engines, turbines, ; etc. ;. measurement of power. — Mechanism Principles of mechanism, of machine design, and of the power construction and use of tools. Draughting Stereotomy structure and machine drawing plans, proworking drawings designs and investigafiles, and sections of road surveys transmission of ; — ; ; ; tions. Practical Exercises tests of building — ; the field, engineering laboratory, and shops and of machinery; preparation of graduating ^In materials thesis. Electives — Physics — x\pplied running, and electricity management under ; theory of dynamos and motors different loads ; lighting in both direct and alternating systems. care, ; application of the current to Visits to and inspection of neighboring electrical plants. Chemistry as maybe — Technical analysis of iron, steel, etc. — industrial chemistry arranged with the Professor of Chemistry. field-work. —Lectures and — Early English world History — History, Constitution, and practical Geology English literature. ; Civil Elocution. Government of the United States. — Eight Mathematics and Astronotny vanced mathematics and three The Degree conferred elective courses are offered in ad- in astronomy. at the completion of the course is Bachelor of Science in Engineering. English Language and Literature. Richard Jones, Professor. William H. Appleton, Early J. Myrtie The English. Russell Hayes, English. E. Furman, Elocution and Oratory. course in English Literature extends through four years, in- struction being given by the English Language is recitations and lectures. During this time studied in connection with the Literature SWARTHMORE COLLEGE: from the Anglo-Saxon period down 37 to the present day. lar feature of the course is the critical The particu- reading in the class-room of representative authors, such as Chaucer, Shakespeare, Milton, Pope, Tennyson. Peculiarities of style sions are looked up, and every The sion of the work in hand. to the history of the time, his contemporaries. will be enabled, from and language are considered, allumade for a thorough comprehen- effort and author's his life is studied in its relation works are compared with those of By this course his own is it expected that the student observation, to form an intelligent esti- and merits of the great authors of English Literature. work in Literature, in Rhetoric and The Composition, and in Elocution and Oratory is co-ordinated. subjects for essays are largely suggested by the work in Literature, and mate of the So style far in Elocution is as practicable, the and Oratory the study, as literature, of the literature read considered fundamental to an intelligent oral expression. The a. courses offered are as follows : Literature. FRESHMAN YEAR. L The A nineteenth century authors of England and America. few authors are selected for more exhaustive study, with the design of making the work in literature contribute toward intellectual discipline and literary values. no spiritual insight, less than toward an appreciation of Portions of other authors are read, and a short his- torical survey of the Greek and the Roman literatures is given, in order to illustrate the debt of English literature to the earlier great literatures. n. Independent of the above, there is given a special one-year In this required of Freshmen students in Engineering. course there are given lectures on English Literature, prefaced by course, lectures is on the Greek and the Roman literatures. Critical reading required in Pope's Homer's Iliad, Chaucer, Spenser, Shakespeare, Milton, and Tennyson. Essay writing throughout the course. SOPHOMORE YEAR. The work of the year is and Milton, with and poetry). largely Shakespeare readings, however, of other authors (prose SWARTHMORE COLLEGE. 38 JUNIOR YEAR. First Semester: Anglo-Saxon (Sweet's Primer and Selections), Lectures on the development of English. Second Semester Chaucer, Spenser ; outside reading of minor Lectures on the transition and contemporary authors by students. : Middle English Periods. SENIOR YEAR. A course in the Senior year. World Literature in English translation is given in The design is to give students who have not read the great works of other literatures in the original an opportunity to become to some extent some of somewhat of familiar with the thought at least of these "eternal records of eternal truth," even though the beauty of form be lost in the translation. The emphasis is, as a matter of course, placed upon the content of the poem, upon the view of life therein enshrined. In addition to the required class-work there additional reading suggested for such members as is in all classes choose to avail themselves of the opportunity offered for conference and personal advice. b. Rhetoric This course and is Composition. required of all regular students. FRESHMAN YEAR. The study of model orations, as to form and content, and practice in writing orations. SOPHOMORE YEAR. The principles and practice of versification. Text-book, Cor- son's ''Primer of English Verse." JUNIOR YEAR. Advanced Rhetoric — the study of style books, Genung's "Practical and authorship. Elements of Rhetoric" and book of Rhetorical Analysis." Text- "Hand- SWARTHMORE COLLEGE. 39 SENIOR YEAR. Graduating essays. Elocution c. Inasmuch and Orafory. as natural and effective speech is one of the most potent factors for success in life, the subjects of Elocution been combined, and the student is thought as well as the thought of an author. is to stimulate to a and arouse the expression is is and Oratory have given practice in expressing his The aim own in this course broader mental grasp, cultivate the imagination, sensibilities, the theory accepted being that effective Hence a result of vivid mental impressions. the student given exercises whereby he learns to utilize his experiences, to vivify his thought, read and to A and thus be able to enter into the make sound and soul must express spirit of the literature a part of himself. it flexible body being itself, due attention the is medium through which the given to physical training, voice culture, and enunciation. The course and Oratory extends through four years. and recitation of typical orations in connection with the work required under Rhetoric and Composition, the critical reading of the " Merchant of Venice " and ''Julius Caesar," with imaginative study and description of the characters of the dramas, in Elocution First year, original work, reading, Second year, original work continued, extemporaneous speech, voice culture, etc. continued, the critical reading of "Twelfth Night" and other standard selections. Third and fourth years, the work continued more fundavoice culture, enunciation, physical training. mentally. During the college year there are several contests in oratory and all students, which stimulate oratorical zeal. The declamation, open to members of the Senior Class give a Shakespeare evening in character, in preparation for Every effort which they receive instruction. is stimulus to thought. read, so literature. that the made A to make the work in this department a careful study course is to is required some extent a of the literature course in English SWARTHMORE COLLEGE. 40 French Language and Literature. Edward H. Magill, The Professor. objective points in the study of the French language will be wide and extensive reading, making the student as familiar as the many as possible of the best works in French end a minimum of grammar will be required, time will allow with as To literature. this and rapid reading encouraged early in the course. at sight While the classical authors of the seventeenth century will receive careful much attention, as found practicable of the literature of the present generation as be introduced into the course. will possible nor necessary to name all It is is not the various works used, as they will be changed from year to year, as circumstances and the condition of classes seem to require. Course Time, one I. regular verbs and auxiliaries pronouns Super's common ; Course continued; I, forms of irregular verbs articles, — inflections of nouns, adjectives, and general principles of syntax. ; French Reader; Preparatory Series," Vol. French Grammar year. ; Magill's "Modern French Dictees. II. Time, one year. Magill's French Grammar reviewed and "Modern French varied selections (entire) from Series," modern French Vols. writers ; II and III; Dictees; Con- versations. Course III. Time, one Racine's Britannicus and year. Esther; Corneille's Horace and Polyeucte; Moliere's Misanthrope and Les Victor Hugo's Hernani, and selections entire from modern French writers; Dictees; Lectures on French LiteraConversation and Correspondence. ture Course IV. Time, one year. Conversation and Correspondence Precieuses Ridicules ; ; in French ; Dictees, Essays, Critiques ; varied selected works (entire) of authors of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries French Literature. Course V. Time, one year. Course IV, but the authors used ; This course will be similar in class will be different. considered as equivalent to Course IV, and that students fifth year may take both, work, Courses IV and V and will Lectures on that either may count It is to who to be desire a as a fourth year's be given in alternate years. SWARTHMORE COLLEGE'. German Language and Marie A. Kemp Hoadley, 41 Literature. Professor. FIRST YEAR. Joynes-Meissner's Grimm's J/«;r/z,?/^/ German Grammar (Part I) Eichendorff, Taugetiichts ; selections ; from Wilhelm Tell Schiller, (begun); Buchheim's Elementary Prose Composition (Part I). SECOND YEAR. Joynes-Meissner's German Wilhelm 7>// (completed) Grammar (continued) ; Schiller, Die Jourtialisten ; Goethe, Hermann and Dorothea; Buchheim's Elementary German Prose Composition (Parts II and III) German ballads and lyrics. ; Freytag, ; THIRD Schiller, Wallenstein Iphigenia auf Tauris position ing ; YEAR.. lectures ; (q(1. Carruth) YltmQ, Ilarzreise ; Goethe, Buchheim's Advanced German Prose Com; on the history of German selections from Scherer's History of : Private read- literature. German Literature ; Nevin- son's Life of Schiller. FOURTH YEAR. Egmont ; Schiller, Historische Skizzen ; Freytag, Doktor Aus dem Staat Friederich des Grossen ; Buchheim's Advanced Qot'CciS.j Luther, German Prose (Knabenjahre) Composition (Part II) ; lectures ; Goethe, Dichiiing iind Wahrheit on Goethe. Private reading : Simes' Life of Goethe. FIFTH YEAR. Goethe, Dichtung iind Wahrheit (selections) ingen ; Buchheim's Deutsche Lyrik ; von Scheffel, ; Gotz von Berlich- Ekkehard ; Goethe, Faust; lectures on Faust: German prose composition. ing : Taylor's Studies in German Literature. Private read- ; : SWARTHMORE COLLEGE. 42 Greek. William H. Appleton, I. who Students present the usual College requisition in Greek page 25) will be required (see with the privilege of electing following scheme to it continue the atudy for two years, thereafter, in accordance with the : FRESHMAN YEAR (REQUIRED). or Odyssey — Homer: The —The Greek Historians Herodotus Poetry Prose Professor. Iliad (Selections). : and Thucydides (Selections). SOPHOMORE YEAR (REQUIRED). — Greek Tragedy: ^schylus, Sophocles. Apology and Prose — Xenophon's Poetry each. Plato's (A study of Crito, One play of Memorabilia. Socrates.) JUNIOR YEAR (ELECTIVE). — Euripides Several — Demosthenes The Oration on the Crown. Poetry Prose plays. : : SENIOR YEAR (ELECTIVE). —Aristophanes, Lyric Dialogues. Modern Greek. — Poetry Prose poets. Plato's and Dickson's Hand-Book, with History of Greek Literature. Note. much —All Lectures on the the classes have exercises in Greek Composition with practice in sight-reading. n. Students who present no Greek will Readings in Vincent colloquial exercises. be required, in at the admission examinations order to graduate with the degree of A. B., to take the language for the entire four years as follows FRESHMAN YEAR. White's Beginner's Greek Book Greek Testament. ; Xenophon's Anabasis, Book I SWARTHMORE COLLEGE. 43. SOPHOMORE YEAR. Xenophon's Anabasis, Books II, III, IV; Plato's Apology and Crito. JUNIOR YEAR. Homer : The Iliad, or Odyssey (six books). Greek Historians (Selections). SENIOR YEAR. tures Greek Drama: Two on Greek Literature. Note. Greek Prose, Modern Greek, Lec- plays. — Greek Composition and sight-reading in all the classes. History and Political Economy. William The group of Hqll, I. Professor. studies included within this department — History, and Social Science-^is designed to furnish information necessary for intelligent citizenship, and to provide a preliminary training for those who intend to engage in the practice of Economics, Political law, journalism, business, or the public service. by means of lectures, recitations, students on assigned topics. quired to and subject. For this purpose the library State, in addition to standard treatises. : HISTORY AND POLITICAL SCIENCE. FRESHMAN YEAR. The Ancient Orient. Greece. Rome. SOPHOMORE YEAR. Middle Ages. Renaissance. Reformation. is re- some assigned contains a good both Federal and detailed study of following courses are offered given and written reports by the working collection of public documents and reports, The is In the upper classes each student make an independent and or chosen oral Instruction SWARTHMORE COLLEGE. 44 JUNIOR YEAR. French Revolution. England. Europe in the Nineteenth Cen- tury. SENIOR YEAR. United States History and Government. Civil Protection and Free Trade. ECONOMICS AND SOCIAL SCIENCE. JUNIOR YEAR. Elements of Economics. Socialism. Money and Banking. SENIOR YEAR. Primitive Culture and the Philosophy of History. Social Problems of To-day Punishment, Intemperance, : Sociology. Pauperism and Charity, Crime and Women and Children, Tenement Houses, University and College Settlements. Latin. Ferris W. Price, FRESHMAN Professor. CLASS. fforace, Odts; Cicero^ s'Lttttx?,; Latin Composition SOPHOMORE Horace, Satires and Epistles ; ; Mythology. CLASS. Lwy, Books I, XXI, and XXII ; History of Latin Literature, lectures and study of characteristic passages from the most important authors. JUNIOR CLASS. Remnants of Early Latin Plautus, Trinummus TerPhormio Cicero, De Senectute Hymns and other late Latin, Allen's -ence, ; ; ; ; . SWARTHMORE COLLEGE. 45. SENIOR CLASS. Selections from Zzicrefius a.nd Catullus; Juvenal, three satires;. Tacitus, Agricola; Vi7'gil, Georgics, and ^neid (Books VII-XII). Sight-reading throughout the course. A room, Latin Society, designed to supplement the work of the classwill meet monthly during the present year. Mathematics. -Susan J. Cunningham, Henry Professor ; FRESHMAN Gummere, V. Assistant. CLASS. Charles Smith's Treatise on Algebra; Elements of Geometry (Halsted); Plane Trigonometry (Loney). SOPHOMORE Halsted's Geometry, finished ; CLASS. Byerly's Differential Calculus ;, Charles Smith's Conic Sections. . JUNIOR CLASS. Byerly's Integral Calculus; Chauvenet's Spherical Trigonometry. ELECTIVE COURSES. 1 etry ; Modern Pure Geometry. An advanced course Harmonic Ranges and Pencils, subjects treated : in pure geom- the theories of Involution, Perspective, Similar Figures, Reciprocation, Inversion, etc. 2. Higher Algebra, beginning with the Theory of Equations (Burnside and Panton) and continuing with Invariants, 3. etc. Plane Analytic Geometry, including Higher Plane Curves ; the course will be a continuation of Conic Sections and will be based on Clebsch-Lindemann's Geometric. 4. Solid Analytic 5. Curve Tracing. Geometry (Charles Smith's). 6. Differential Equations. 7. Trigonometric 8. Elementary Quarternions (Kelland and Tait). Series, Spherical Harmonics, etc. (Byerly's). SWARTHMORE COLLEGE. 46 ASTRONOMY (ELECTIVE). 1. Young's General Astronomy. 2. Chauvenet's Spherical and Practical Astronomy. 3. Theoretical Astronomy (Orbit Determination). Pedagogics. De Garmo. President The work in this departmicnt of the growing first, dencies, interests, mind of consists of a the child, and methods of growth ; fundamental study, natural capacities, ten- its then of the choice and co-ordination of studies, together with the best methods of teaching them ; child may and, finally, of the methods whereby the character of the The works best be developed through school discipline and instruction. of Herbart and his successors are thoroughly studied. Philosophy. President De Garmo. SENIOR CLASS. Psychologv. — First Semester : Psychology. James's Special attention paid to the processes of knowledge, feeling, and volition from the standpoint of modern psychological psychology. Essays based upon a study of the nervous system, together with extensive reference to the standard literature of the various topics selected. History of Philosophy. and Modern Philosophy History of Philosophy, — Second Semester is The history from Thales to Leibnitz, especial reference to Socrates, from Descartes : taught in alternate years. to the present. nent system are dwelt upon. Plato, The and Aristotle of Ancient First course. inclusive, ; with second course, ethical bearings of each promi- SWARTHMORE COLLEGE. 47 Physical Culture. FOR YOUNG MEN. Dr. The system of Physical J. K. Shell. culture is tion of each student, carefully noting based on a thorough examinaall defects of development, and functional weakness, and the ratio existing between the tested strength and the muscularity, and on these data formulating a course of exercises such as will meet the requirement of each individual, so as to produce an evenly developed and healthy organism. The young men are required to give three hours each week for carrying out the prescription of the Director. The sports of foot^ball, fit are allowed actively to and athletics are under the and only those who are physically base-ball, direct supervision of the Director, compete ; great care be kept within proper limits, so as not to is taken that the games take too much of the students' attention or energy. FOR YOUNG WOMEN. Dr. Mary V. Mitchell Green. Marion Hunter, A tion, careful examination and the to the made is Assistant. of each student's physical condi- exercises to suit individual needs are assigned according Swedish system. Tennis, golf, and other out-door exercises are provided for the young women. Physics. George A. Hoadley, The Physical Laboratory is Professor. already provided with apparatus for determinations in the mechanics of solids and fluids, in heat, sound, and magnetism as also with a large amount for lecture experiments. Most of this has been selected with care from the best American and foreign makers, but some is of home manulight, electricity, \ SWARTHMORE COLLEGE. 48 facture ; and the co-operation of the Engineering Department and the now increasing skill of our students enable us to make each year a larger proportion for regular use in the Laboratory. It is our aim to afford students continued opportunities for instruction in the principles of construction of ordinary and special apparatus. running dynamos and for other purposes struction begins in course as follows the Sophomore is near at hand. Power for The in- and extends through the year, : FOR STUDENTS IN ARTS AND LETTERS SOPHOMORE General Physics. —This course : CLASS. consists of the investigation of the general laws of Physics and the consideration of their practical application. The work of the course is done by lectures and recitations, accompanied by experimental verification of the laws discussed, and extends over the entire year. JUNIOR CLASS. During the Junior year the course netism, Electricity, and an elective in Heat, Mag- is Light. FOR STUDENTS IN SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING. This course occupies two consecutive years, requiring two periods per week in the Sophomore year and four in the Junior. It is in- tended to be pre-eminently a practical course, consisting largely of laboratory work, in the investigation and verification of the laws of Physics. work will cover the topics treated in Ganot's text-book of equal rank, and will be suppleother some Physics, or on the various branches of the subject. lectures mented by The division of the work is as follows The recitation : SOPHOMORE CLASS.. Applied Mechanics and Dynamics. Gases, Liquids, and Sound. JUNIOR CLASS. Heat, Magnetism, Electricity, and Light. ..^s»*: ^TT' piB*° r ,t SWARTHMORE COLLEGE. 49 SENIOR CLASS. Applied Electricity. This In is this the an elective of eight periods per week, counting as four. Junior work in Magnetism and Electricity is supplemented by the practical study of their application to the telephone, telegraph, dynamo, electric light, motor, transmission of power, etc. Work in the manufacture and use of .these various appliances, as well as in the measurement of the electrical current, is accompanied by text-book work in Thompson's Dynamo Electric Machinery, and by the reading and class discussion of current electrical journals. Visits to the electrical plants of the neighboring villages and cities are made at convenient times, for the purpose of studying the machinery in actual use. General Remarks on the Courses of Study. In arranging the courses of study, while recognizing the fact that the domain of human knowledge so vast that he is best must confine his attention chiefly to endeavored not to lose sight of the equally are best equipped for work in who would succeed field, we have some chosen important fact that those any particular department who have the most extended view of the realm of learning as a whole. To secure in a measure both these results, minor courses in many of the subjects of the curriculum are required of all ; while the more extended courses in each subject are taken only by those whose and inclination lie in taste that particular direction. In pursuing this policy for several years, we have developed four distinct lines of study. which are The course. In each of them are required those subjects and natural development of the essential to the logical courses are as follows : THE COURSE The IN ARTS. characteristic feature of this course is the study of Classical Antiquity, including the language and literature of the Greeks and Romans, with their art, philosophy, religion, and political and social Combined with this are courses in Modern Languages, history. 4 SWARTHMORE COLLEGE. 50 While this Mathematics, and Science, with some elective subjects. course affords that broad culture which should be the foundation of any subsequent for Law career, or Journalism Economy, or it may be made by including may be shaped it to afford special preparation electives in History in and Political the direction of Medicine choosing electives in Biology and Chemistry. by This course leads to the degree of Bachelor of Arts. THE COURSE This course is who do not wish IN LETTERS. arranged to provide a liberal education for those nor to pursue the study of the ancient languages, to take all the science required in the Science Course. Its leading amount of English, French, and German, and It includes the amount of Matheprescribed in a college course, with a fair amount of features are a liberal of History and Political Science. matics usually Science, and some elective subjects, including Latin. This course leads to the degree oi Bachelor of Letters. THE COURSE The IN SCIENCE. characteristic feature of this course more extended is in- struction in science than in the preceding courses, together with a fair amount of Mathematics and Modern Language study, including The instruction in Physics, Chemistry, and Biology is of a English. twofold character tures ; ; first, systematic treatment in experimental lec- Thus the student and secondly, practical work in the laboratories. acquires a familiarity, not only with the more important facts fundamental principles of those sciences, but. also with the correct methods of work, so that his course may form a foundation for subseThis course leads quent higher work in any department of science. to the degree of Bachelor of Science. THE COURSE This course which is offers, in its IN ENGINEERING. various studies and exercises, a training believed to be well adapted to the needs of Civil and of Mechanical Engineers, as well as of the large class who are to be con- cerned with the material interests of the country, with manufacturing, \' .v"^ SWARTHMORE COLLEGE. with industrial pursuits, or with any of the many 51 other occupations and technical instruction in the mathematical, physical, and graphical sciences, and their applications, in practical field engineering, in the arts of design and construction, and in the use of tools, materials, and machinery, and in allied to Engineering. processes. It embraces This course leads Engineering, to the liberal degree of Bachelor of Science in The Course in Arts. REQUIRED STUDIES. Greek, 2 or 4 years; Latin, 3 years; Mathematics, 1)4. years; History, I year; Biology, Chemistry, or Physics, i year; Economics, }4. year; Psychology, j4, year;. History of Philosophy, ^ year; Elocution, 2 years; Composition, 4 years. COURSE ELECTIVES (TWO REQUIRED). Physics, ^% I year years; History, man, I to 2 years ; ; Biology, i to 2 years; English, Latin, I to 2 years I year ; i ; Chemistry, to 2 years; Mathematics, I i year French, Economics, ; I ^ to to 2 years; Ger- to 2 years. OPEN SEMESTER ELECTIVES. Government Astronomy Geology Mathematics Civil ; Mineralogy ; ; ; ; Drawing and Painting Elocution ; Botany ; ; Pedagogy Zoology ; ; Logic ; Physiology. Distribution of Studies. Freshman Year. FIRST SEMESTER. SECOND SEMESTER. PERIODS. Greek, 4 Greek, Latin, Latin, Mathematics, 4 4 Biology or History, 4 Biology or History, PERIODS. . 4 4 4 4 Mathematics, Elocution and Composition. Sophomore Year. Greek, 4 Greek 4. Latin, 4 4 Latin, 4 4 Mathematics, History, Physics, Elective, History, Physics, \ "I French, or German, / French, or German, Elocution and Composition. Junior Year. Greek, Latin, 4 4 4 4 . Economics, Elective, Greek, 4. Latin, Elective, Elective, 4 . 4 4 Composition. Senior Year. Greek, Psychology, Elective, . Elective, ; 4 4 4 Greek, 4 Elective, Philosophy, Elective, Composition. (52) 4 4 4 4 ; The Course in Letters. REQUIRED STUDIES. French and German, 6 years 'nomics, and year; History, 2 years l Philosophy, year i ; Mathematics,!^ years; English, ; Biology, Chemistry, or Physics, Elocution, 2 years ; ; i 3 years Eco- ; year; Psychology Composition, 4 years. COURSE ELECTIVES (TWO REQUIRED). Chemistry, History, I to i year 2 years ; ; Biology, English, i I to 2 years to 2 years ; ; Physics, I year Mathematics, i ; Economics, to 2 years ; i year Latin, i to -4 years. OPEN SEMESTER ELECTIVES. Civil Government; Astronomy; Drawing and Painting; Pedagogy; Logic; Mineralogy; Geology; Mathematics; Elocution; Botany; Zoology; Physiology. Distribution of Studies. Freshman Year. FIRST SEMESTER. PERIODS. IFrench or German, 4 Mathematics, 4 English, 4 4 Biology, History, or Latin, .... | I SECOND SEMESTER. French or German, PERIODS. 4 Mathematics, j | English, Biology, History, or Latin, .... 4 4 4 Elocution. Sophomore Year. French or German, Mathematics 4 French or German, 4 English, 4 English, 4 Elective, 4 History, Physics, French, History, Physics, French, "> German, or Latin, 4 German, or Latin, j "> J Elocution. Junior Year. French and German, Economics, French and German, 8 4 Economics 4 English 4 English, Elective, 4 Elective, 4 4 . . Senior Year, French and German, 8 French and German, 8 Psychology, 4 Philosophy, Elective, 4 Elective, 4 4 4 4 Elective, ; Elective, Composition. (63) The Course in Science. REQUIRED STUDIES. French or German, 3 years years; Mathematics, years ; i^ ; Chemistry, 2 years Biology, 2 years ; years; Psychology and Philosophy, I ; Physics, 2 year; Elocution, 2 Composition, 4 years. COURSE ELECTIVES (TWO REQUIRED). Chemistry, l 2 years; Biology, to years ; Economics, years ; Mathematics, 1 to 2 years ; year; Physics, i History, i to 2 years ; I , year; English, French or German, I i to 2 to 2 to 2 years. i OPEN SEMESTER ELECTIVES. Government Civil ; Astronomy Drawing and ; Painting ; Pedagogy ; Logic ; Mineralogy; Geology; Mathematics; Elocution; Botany; Zoology; Physiology. Distribution of Studies. Freshman Year, FIRST SEMESTER. PERIODS. French or German, Chemistry, 4 4 Biology, 4 Mathematics 4 SECOND SEMESTER. French or German, : I Chemistry, Biology, Mathematics, I PERIODS. 4 4 4 4 Elocution and Composition. Sophomore Year. French or German, 4 French or German, Chemistry, 4 Chemistry, Physics, 4 Physics, Mathematics, 4 Elective, 4 4 4 4 2 Biology, 2 Biology, - . Elocution and Composition. Junior Year. French or German, 4 Physics, 4 French or German, Physics, 4 4 Biology, 4 Elective, 8 | I Biology, 4 Elective, 8 , I Composition. Senior Year. Psychology, 4 Philosophy, Elective, 4 Elective 4 4 Elective, 4 Elective, 4 Elective, 8 Elective, 8- Composition. (54) The Course in Engineering. REQUIRED STUDIES. Draughting, 3 years Mathematics, 2^ years Chemistr)', 2 years English, I Engineering, Theory, 2 year; shop work, 3 years; Mechanics and Physics, 2 years ; ; ; ; years; Engineering, Applications, 2 years. COURSE ELECTIVES. Sanitary Science, year; English, I ^ year; French or German, year; Astronomy, i year; Electrical Physics, i year. I OPEN SEMESTER' ELECTIVES. Civil Drawing and Painting Logic Government Astronomy Pedagogy Geology; Mathematics; Elocution; Botany; Zoology; Physiology. ; Mineralog}' ; ; ; ; ; Distribution of Studies. Freshman Year. FIRST SEMESTER. Draughting and Shop Work, PERIODS. . . Mathematics, 7 Chemistry, 4 English, 4 SECOND SEMESTER. j 9=4 i PERIODS. Draughting and Shop Work, . Mathematics, j , 9^4 . , . 7 Chemistry, 4 English, 4 Sophomore Year. Draughting and Shop Work, Mathematics, . . 9=4 4 Mechanics, 4 Chemistry, 4 Electives, 2 I Descriptive Geometr}', etc., . . i . 9=4 Mathematics, 4 Physics, Chemistry, 4 4 Electives, 2 j [ Junior Year. Engineering, Theory, Engineering, Practice, Engineering, Theory, 8 6:=2 Physics, 6 Mathematics, 4 8 6=2 Engineering, Practice, ; | Physics, 6 Electives, 4 Senior Year. Engineering, Theory, 8 Engineering, Practice 10^4 Engineering, Theory, Engineering, Practice, Elective, 4 Elective Elective, 4 Elective, 8 .... 10=4 4 4 (55) Graduation and Degrees. As a condition of graduation, each student must submit to the Faculty a satisfactory Oration or Essay, which he must be prepared to do deliver in public, if required to The Degree The degrees so. of Bachelor. of Bachelor of Arts, of Letters, and of Science are conferred on the completion of the corresponding courses. The Degree of Master. L., and M. S.) College. They are All candidates for the Master's Degree (A. M., must have taken the Bachelor's Degree required to pursue a course of study at at this M. Swarthmore, or elsewhere, under the direction of the Faculty, and to pass examination in the Persons residing at the College and devoting their whole, time same. to the work can accomplish a resident candidates, who amount in one year for nonthe same time engaged in other work, sufficient are at ; the course must occupy not less than two years. Application should be made directly to the Faculty, and should which the applicants wish to present themselves. state the subject or sub- jects in Work will then be assigned to them by the Faculty. The Examinations Degrees will be both oral and written, for the be conducted by a Committee of the Faculty, upon whose report the Faculty will decide upon the fitness of the candidate for An extended thesis, bearing upon some part of the work the Degree. and will assigned, will in all cases be required. The Degree The Degree of Civil Engineer. of C. E. will be conferred upon Bachelors of Science of the Engineering Department less who shall have been engaged for not than three years, in successful professional practice, in positions of responsibility, and who shall present an acceptable thesis ject pertaining to engineering. made, and the ment. (56) upon a sub- Application for this Degree must be thesis presented at least three months before commence- Alumni Officers of the INCORPORATED 1 Association. 882. President. Howard W. Lippincott, '75, . . .613 Drexel Building, Phila., Pa. Vice-Presidents. Alice M. Atkinson, '88, Carroll R. Williams, '77, Morris L. Clothier, '90, .... Holicong, Pa. .... Philadelphia, Pa. .... Philadelphia, Pa. Secretary. Esther T. Moore, Swarthmore College, Pa. '73, Treasurer. William J. Hall, Swarthmore College, Pa. '78, Board of Directors. William H. Ridgway, Charles Palmer, '82, Alice Marie S. A. Palmer, '75, . . . . Chester, Pa. West Chester, '89, Kemp Hoadley, Florence Hall, '80, Joseph T. Bunting, '77, Coatesville, Pa. '79, . . Pa. Swarthmore, Pa. Swarthmore, Pa. Philadelphia, Pa. (57) Graduates. Class of 1873. Sarah H. (Acton) HiLLARD,A.B., Helen (Magill) White, A.B. (Ph.D., Salem, N. J. Boston University, Ithaca, N. V. 1877), Elizabeth C. (Miller) Holcomb, Esther T. Moore, A.B., *Maria C. (Fierce) Green, A.B. Lowndes Taylor, A. B., Pearl River, N. Y. A.B., Swarthmore College. 1877. , West Chester, Pa. Class of 1874. Swarthmore, Pa. Ellen H. (Evans) Price, A.M., 1884, Amy W. (Hall) Hickman, A.B., •^Alfred T. Haviland, B.S., Mary (Hibbard) Thatcher, A.B., West Chester, Pa. 1874. Wilmington, Del. Herman Hoopes, C.E., 1879, Ferris W. Price, A.M., 1887, Elizabeth S. (Woolston) Collins, A.B., Philadelphia, Pa. Swarthmore, Pa. Swarthmore, Pa. Class of 1875. Booth, A.B., John Helen (Comly) White, A.B., Franklin H. CoRLiES, B.S., B. *Herbert . . . Lansdowne, Pa. Philadelphia, Pa. Dow, A.B. (and Harvard, 1877), Elizabeth (Hanesj Taylor, A.B. G. , Edith R. (Hooper) Roberts, Barton Hoopes, Jr., B.S., Pittsburg, Pa. 1878. Swarthmore College. Titusville, Pa. A.B., Philadelphia, Pa. *Oliver Keese, Jr., B.S., Lewis, B.S., J. Reece Howard W. Lippincott, A.B., Martha (McIlvain) Eastwick, A.B John K. Richards, A.B. (and Harvard, William H. Ridgway, C.E., 1879, 1879. . Waynesville, N. C. Philadelphia, Pa. . Boston, Mass. 1877), Ironton, Ohio. Coatesville, Pa. Class of 1876. Frank L. Bassett, B.S. (D.D.S., Phila. Dental College, Swarthmore, Pa. 1878), Deceased. (58) SWARTHMORE COLLEGE.. r>r> Arthur \V, Bradley, A.B., Cleveland, Ohio. Frances (Linton) Sh.a.rples, A.M., 1881 (M.D., Women's West Chester, Pa. Medical College, Fhila., 1 886] Haverford, Pa. Elizabeth L. (Longstreth) Boyd, A.B., Philadelphia, Pa. James T. McClure, B.S., Rivertcn. N. L Emma (McIlvain) Cooper, A. B., Edwin Mitchkll, Jr., A.B. (B.L. and B.S.R., Sorbonne, New Paris, 1S77), Lucy R. (Price) LsAAC G McIntyre, A.B., 1S80, Smedley, B.S. (M.D., Hahnemann Medical Col- Philadelphia, Pa. lege, 1879), Herbert W. Smyth, A.B. (and Harvard, 1878, Ph.D., Bryn Gottingen, 1S84), Mary York, N. Y. Philadelphia, Pa. Mawr College, Pa.. Willits, A.m., 1881 (M.D., Women's Medical ColNorristovk-n, Pa. lege, Phila., 1881), William Worth, P. B.S. , Coatesville, Pa. Class of 1877. Joseph T. Bunting, B.S. (LL.B., Univ. of Norman B. Corson, A.B., EuDORA Magill, A.B., Pa., 1880), . . Philadelphia, Pa. Norristown, Pa. Swarthmore, Pa. Jesse R. Norton, A.B. (and Harvard, 1879), Chicago, Carroll R. Williams, A.M. 1882 (LL.B., Univ. of Pa., 1880), 111. Philadelphia, Pa. - M. Florence Yeaiman, A.B., Norway, Pa. Class of 1878. Caroline Mayrell E. (Bl'kr) Hall, A.B. Swarthmore, Pa. , (Davis) Foster, A.B., p. Howard Dawson. Providence, R. A.M., 1882, Tacy A. (Gleim) Dunning, A.B., William J. Hall, B.S., MaryP.(Hallowell) Hough, A.M. ,1881 Los Angeles, Cal. Swarthmore College. (M.D., Women's Ambler, Pa. Medical College, Phila., i88i), Charles A. Hawkins, A.B., William Penn Holcomb, M.L., 1882 York, Pa. (Ph.D., Johns HopPearl River, N. Y. kins Univ., 1S86), Rebecca S. (Hunt) White, A.M., 1S81 (M.D., Women's Medical College, Anna E. (Jackson) Phila., 1881), Monaghan, Llewellyn H. Johnson, Edward Martin, Francis J. L Boston, Mass. B.S. , B.L., Lansdowne, Pa. W^est Chester, Pa. Orange, N. J. A.M., 1882 (M.D., Univ. of Pa., 1883), Philadelphia, Pa. Palmer, B.S Brooklyn, N. Y. SWARTHMORE COLLEGE. iQQ Israel Roberts, Camden, N. B.S., ^William Seaman, C.E., 1884, C. Harry Shoemaker, B.S., J. 1892. Philadelphia, Pa. Class of 1879. Isaac R. Coles, C.E., 1880, Glen Cove, N. Y. William P. Fender, A.B., William Lea Ferris, A.B., Williamsport, Pa. Aspen, Col. Joseph Fitch, A.B., Ruth Anna Forsythe, A.B., Elizabeth (Furnas) Bogardus, B.L., P. Lesley Hopper, A.B., Marie Antoinette (Kemp) Hoadley, A.M., 1892, Elisha E. Lippincott, B.S., "*Samuel Cr.\ig McComb, C.E., 1882, Charles R. Miller, B.L. (LL.B., Univ. of Pa., 1881), Josephine (White) Breckens, A.B., Abby W. (Woodnutt) Miller, B.L., . • . New York, N. Y. Philadelphia, Pa. New . . York, N. Y. Havre de Grace, Md. Swarthmore College. Gallitzin, Pa. 1891. . . Wilmington, Del. . . Cheyenne, Wyoming. Wilmington, Del. Class of 1880. Anna E. Constable, A.B., Arthur Coleman Dawson, Camden, N.J. Lake Forest, 111. B.L., 1882, Florence Hall, A.B., Myra T. Hillman, A.B., Emily L. (Hough) Savidge, A.B. (and Univ. Swarthmore, Pa. Washington, D. C. of Minn., Boise City, Idaho. l88l) Edward H. Keiser, M.S., 1881 (Ph.D., Johns Hopkins Bryn Univ., 1884), Georgine (Kurtz) Muhlenberg, A.B., Albert R. Lawton, A.M., 1885, Robert J. Marcher, B.S., Thomas L. Mhore, A.B., Ellen S. (Preston) Griest, A.B., John Turton, B.S., Fannie (Willets) Lowthorp, A.B., Henry S. Wood, C.E., 1883 Class of Martha Mawr College, Pa. Reading, Pa. New York, N. Y. Syracuse, N. Y. Richmond, Va. Cedarville, Va. New York, N. Y. Trenton, N. J. San Francisco, Cal. 1 Bunting, B.L., 88 1. Baltimore, Md. William Canby, Jr., B.L., Charles B. Doron, B.L., St. Paul, Mary Philadelphia, Pa. J. Minn. Rochester, N. Y. Elliott, B.L. Deceased. SWARTHMORE Emma Kirk, COLLEGE.- 61 Ithan, Pa. B.L., Gertrude B. Magill, A.B Eugene Paulin, Jr., A.B. (and Harvard, Boise City, Idaho. 1883), .... Martha E. (Rhinoehl) Osborn, A.B., Edward C. Rushmore, B.S. (M.D., Columbia, 1885), Henry B. Seaman, C.E., 1884, Charles E. .Sharpless, C.E., 1884, Alvin T. Shoemaker, B.L., *I. Byron Thomas, B.S., Ernest F. Tucker, A.B. (M.D., Harvard, Bloomfield, N. M. Philadelphia, Pa. . . Tuxedo Park, N. Y. Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Philipsburg, Pa. New . 1884), York, N. Y. .1891. .... Portland, Ore. Class of 1882. William Llewellyn Baner, A. B.(M.D., Columbia, 1885), Edith B. Blackwell, A.B., Charlotte E. (Brewster) Jordan, M.L., 1886, .... William Butler, Jr., A.B., C. Herbert Cochran, A.B., Bertha (Cooper) Brewer, B.L., P. *Elizabeth E. Hart, B.L., Elizabeth Haslam, B.L., Elizabeth M. Ogden, B.L., Charles Palmer, A.M., 1885, 1886, J. Newark, Del. West Chester, Pa. Philadelphia, Pa. Rochester, N. Y. Laconia, N. H. Gale, A.M., iSgt, *Sarah S. (Green) Pierce, A.B., Margaret E. (Hallowell) Powell, A.B., E. *George C. Phillips, B.S., Horace L. Rossiter, A.B., Charles B. Turton, B.S., Gerrit E. H. Weaver, A.B. York, N. Y. Philadelphia, Pa. Fannie Foulke, A.B., Mary New El Mora, N. 1886. Lansdowne, Pa. ' 1891. Philadelphia, Pa. West Chester, Pa. Chester, Pa. 1883. Cleveland, Ohio. New York, N. Y. (and Harvard, 1884), A.M., Philadelphia, Pa. -. Emily E. (Wilson) Lawton, A.M., Edgar M. Zavitz, A.B., 1885, New York, N. Y. Coldstream, Ontario, Caa. Class of 1883. Charles A. Bunting, B.S., *JoHN L. Cochran, B.S., Edgar Conrow, B.L., Lydia S. (Green) Hawkins, A.B., Florence N. Hanes, A.B., Alice W. Jackson, A.B., William A. Kissam, Jr., B.S., Steelton, Pa. 1885. Moorestown, N. J. Media, Pa. Woodstown, N. J. Swarlhmore, Pa. Little * Deceased. Neck, N. Y. SWARTHMORE COLLEGE. ,(]9 Camden, N. Bertha (AIatlack) Rue, B.L., GuiON Miller, A.M., 1888, DuFFiELD Mitchell, A.B. (LL.B., Univ. of A; Pennock, A.B., George L. Pennock, B.S., Charles S. Pyle, E.S., S. Pa.), . . Edward Helen Lansdowne, Pa. Md. Rising Sun, Steelton, Pa. Frederick A. Seaman, Jr., B.S., Annie E. (Taylor) Miller, M.L., James E. Verree, B.L., Emma (Webb) Pittsburg, Pa. Somerville, Mass. Bunting, B.L., C. (Pyle) J. Washington, D. C. Madison, N. J. Wasliington, D. C. 1888, Philadelphia, Pa. Overbrook, Pa. Price, A.B., Class of 1884. Horace L. Dilworth, B.S., Rebecca M. (Downing) Bullock, John D. Furnas, B.S., Sarah L. (Hall) Stirling, A.B. Philadelphia, Pa. Germantown, Pa. B.L., Waynesville, Ohio. Philadelphia, Pa. , Henry Hancock A.B. J. (LL.B., Univ. of Pa., 1886), . . Philadelphia, Pa. Salt Lake City, Utah. Jr., B.S., 1885, Hughesville, Va. Hughes, A.B., Laura H. Satterthwaite, A.B. (M.D., Women's Medical Edwin Haviland, Mary E. Trenton, N. College, Phila., 1888), Frederick Mary J. Taylor, Wlllits, A J. Helena, Mont. B.S., Syosset, N. Y. B., Class of 1885. Minnie Baker, F. Washington, D. C. A.B., Cinnaminson, N. Abigail Evans, A.B., Moore, A.B. Mary D. (Pratt) Rhodes, Frederic P. J. JSTew York, N. Y. , Bowdle, A.B., S. Dak. Class of 1886. Emma S. (Bones) Arthur S. Cochran, Freedley, Rowland J. Spencer, B.L., Martha M. Watson, A.M., Percy Willcox, Richmond, Va. Muncy, Pa. Brownsbmg, Pa. A.B., Media, Pa. Salem, Ore. Trenton, N. 1891, B.S. (Ph.B., Yale Univ., 1887 Univ. of Pa., iSgi), Brighton, N. Y. Westtown, Pa. B.S. George J. B.S., Helen G. Johnson, A.B., Ella (Merrick) Tomlinson, Edgar M. Smedley, B.S., <:. New Stone, B.L., ; J. LL.B., Philadelphia, Pa. SWARTHMORE COLLEGE. 63 Class of 1887. Alice T. (Battin) Lewis, A. B., Harriet (Cox) J. McDowell, Horace Darlington, Media, Pa. New B.S., Harry B. GooDwaN, B.S., Anna M. (Jenkins) Webster, A.B., Thomas A. Jenkins, A.B.(Ph.B., Univ. of Pa., 1S88; Bordentown, N. Ph.D., Nashville, Tenn. Frederick K. Lane, B.S., Linda B. Palmer, A.M., 1893, Elizabeth Elizabeth William B. B. G. Lancaster, Pa. West . Chester, Pa. Fellowship, N. A.B., Smedley, A.B. (Smith) Wilson, A.B., Underwood, J. Mankato, Minn. Johns Hopkins Univ., 1894), Horace Roberts, York, N. Y. Darling, Pa. B.S., J. Malvern, Pa. . Lincoln, Va. Elizabeth City, N. C. B.S., Class of 1888. Alice M. Atkinson, A.B. (and Cornell Thomas Brown, B S., Frank Cawley, C.E., Univ., 1889), . Holicong, Pa. . Washington, D. C. Woodstown, N. 1891, Daretown, N. Jessie L. Colson, B.S., Sadie M. Conrow, A.B., William L. Dudley, B.S., Robert P. Ervien, B.S., E. Lawrence Joyeuse L. Cinnaminson, N. New •• J. York, N. Y. Clayton, N. M. Philadelphia, Pa. Fell, B.S., (Fullerton) Sweet, A.B. (and Cornell Univ., Denver, Col. 1889), Emma (Gawthrop) Hayes, Alice Mall, A.B., P. Sharpi.es Hall, B.S. (M.D., Swarthmore College. B.S., Swarthmore, Pa. 1891), Hahn. Med. Col., Phila., Philadelphia, Pa. • Walter Hancock, J. J. J. B.S., St. Russell Hayes, A.B. (and Harvard, 1889 ; Paul, Minn. LL.B., Univ. Swarthmore College. Harrisburg, Pa. Miller, A.B., T. Montgomery Lightfoot, M.S., 1890 (Ph.D., Univ. of of Pa., 1892), Martha P. (Jones) Philadelphia, Pa. Pa., 1893), Hetty C. (Lippincott) Miller, A.B., Marshall, Jr., B.S., William S. Marshall, B.S. (Ph. Ellis Riverton, N. Aaron C. Pancoast, D., Leipsic, 1892), . San Antonio, Texas. B.S., Rhoads, B.S., Katherine M. Rider, B.L., William H. Se.-vman, B.S., J. Pa. Madison, Wis. . London Grove, Jessie Pyle, A.B.. (and Cornell Univ., 1889), Joseph J. London Grove, P; . . Pa. PitLsburg, Pa. Brooklyn, N. Y. Glen Cove, N. Y. SWARTHMORE COLLEGE. 64 Amelia Skillin, A.B., Carroll H. Sudler, A.B., Charlotte M. Way, B.S., Annie E. Willits, A.B., Esther M. (WiLLiTs) Fell, Frank P. New Milford, Conn. Chicago, 111. Oxford, Pa. Syosset, N. Y. Philadelphia, Pa. B.L., Locust Valley, N. Y. Wilson, A.B., Class of 1889. JasTiN K. Anderson, B.S., Breading, Alexander New Howard G. Cummins, Jr., A.B., A. Dill, B. S. (and Mass. Inst. Tech., 1891), . . W. Va. York, N. Y. Indianapolis, Ind. Forman, Jr., B.S., New York, N. Y. Ellis M. Harvey, B.S. (M.D., Univ. of Pa., 1893), Media, Pa. Clara Haydock, B.L., New York, N. Y. Carroll Hayes, A.B. (and Harvard, 1890, LL.B., Univ. J. of Pa., 1893), West Chester, Pa. Horace B. . . . . Julia Hicks, B.S., Old Westbury, N. Y. Mary Kirk, A.B., Washington, D. C. Margaret J. (Laurie) Seaman, George A, Masters, B.S., Palmer, A.B., LouELLA (Passmore) Hayes, A.B. Frederick B. Pyle, B.S., Alice Glen Cove, N. Y.. A.B., Philadelphia, Pa. West West S. Ralph Stone, , Chester, Pa. Chester, Pa. Washington, D. C. Grand Rapids, Mich. A.B., Elsie D. Stoner, B.L., Columbia, Pa. Willis W. Vail, B.S., Jennie F.'Waddington, M.S., 1892, Quakertown, N. Salem, N. J. J. Class of 1890. Alvan W. Atkinson, A.B. (M.D., Hahnemann Medical Trenton, N. College, 1893), Sara H. Atkinson, A.B., George H. Bartram, B.S. Martha M. Em.ma J. Morris Lenape, Pa. Riverton, N. Biddle, B.L., Broomell, B.S. (and Univ. of Mich., 1893), . . L. Clothier, B.S., Beulah W. Darlington, Edward Darlington, George Ellsler, J. Holicong, Pa. A.B., Chaddsford, Pa. B.S., Dover, Del. A.B., Caroline R Gaston, A.M., 1895, John C. Gifford, B.S., 1893, Abby M. Hall, A.B. (and Cornell Univ., Clara A. (Hughes) Marshall, A.B., Samuel R. Lippincott, B.S., J. Newtown, Pa. Wynnewood, Pa. West Chester, Pa. Philadelphia, Pa. May's Landing, N. 1893), , . „ .... Swarthmore, Pa. Madison, Wis. Riverton, N. J. J. SWARTHMORE COLLEGE. William D. Lippincott, B.S., WillardL. Maris, M.S., 1892 (B.S., Robert S. McConnell, B.S., 65 Cinnaminson, N. Univ. of Mich., 1891), Newtown, Philadelphia, Pa. Frances E. Ottley, A.B., *Mary D. Palmer, A.B., Austin, Texas. Mary Marple, Pa. 1892. E. Pancoast, B.L., James W. Ponder, A.B., .... Wilmington, Del. Ellis B. Ridgway, B.S., Walter Roberts, A.B. (M.D., Univ. of Richard Soper, B.S., Barclay Spicer, William E. Sweet, R. . . . ... Herr, B. (Smith) Mary F. Coatesville, Pa. Pa., 1893), C. Sellers, B.S., Frances Jersey City, N. Cincinnati, Ohio. A.B., Denver, Col. Old Westbury, N. Y. Lansdowne, Pa. 1 89 1. Moorestown, N. A.B., Cosmelia J.'Brown, B.L., Louis P. Clark, B.S., Hannah H. Clothier, B.L., Eva M. (Daniels) Capen,-B.S., 1892, Eliza R. Hampton, A.B., Isaac O. Harper, B.S., Esther Haviland, B.L., Eliza G. Holmes, A.B., John W. Hutchinson, Jr., B.S., Wynnewood, Spring Brook, N. Y, Cleveland, Ohio. Brooklyn, N. Y. . Moorestown, N. J. York, N. Y. Media, Pa. B.L., 1891. West Chester, Pa. City, Mo. Sandy Spring, Md. Kansas Stroudsburg, Pa. Washington, D. C. New York, N. Y. Chester, Pa. Lansdowne, Pa. Temple, B.S., L. Tyler, B.S., Frances M. White, B.L., Edward C. Wilson, B.S., M. Lilian Yarnall, A.B. . New McDonald, B.S., Sarah T. Moore, B.L., A. Mitchell Palmer, A.B., Ellen (Passmore) Pyle, B.L., Marianna (Smith) Rawson, B.L., William C. Sproul,B.S., B. Pa. Boston, Mass. L. Katharine Philadelphia, Pa. , , Edward J. Lincoln, Va. *LucY S. Lippincott, A.B. Chester P. Martindale, B.L., Harry J. J. A.B., Class of Dora Lewis, Philadelphia, Pa. Swarthmore, Pa. Moorestown, N. A.B., Alice W. Titus, M.L., 1892, Mary H. White, A.B., Emily Atkinson, J. Pa. Philadelphia, Pa. Atlantic City, , , . . , Trenton, N. , * Deceased. N. J. Washington, D. C. J. SVVARTHMORE COLLEGE. 66 Class of 1892. M. Ellen Atkinson, B.L., M. Rosamond Baker, A.B., Benjamin F. Battin, A.B., Josephine Belstle, A.B., Mary E. Broomell, B.L., Frederic N. Carr, B.L., Howard N. Eavenson, B.S., Henry H. Garrett, B.S., Howard B. Green, B.S., Charles Hart, B.S., Annie Hillborn, B.L., Edward Henry McAllister, Newtown, Pa. Steubenville, O. Locust Valley, N. Y. Charleston, W. Va. Philadelphia, Pa. Philadelphia, Pa. Penn's Grove, N. J. Pittsburg, Pa. . Swarthmore, Pa. Gwynedd, 1893, . ; New Pa. York, N. Y. Jericho, N. Y. Colorado Springs, Col. Jr., B.L., Bernard S. McIlvain, John F. Murray, B.S., Ellen Pyle, A.B., Pa. Philadelphia, Pa. A. Jenkins, B.S., Charles B. Ketcham, A.B., Phebe H. Ketcham, B.S., Mary Buckingham, B.L., Darlington, Md. Wallingford, Pa. London Grove, St. Denis, Md. E. Stebbins, B.L., J. Walker, B.S., William E. Walter, B.S., Florence N. Wolverton, A.B., Mary L. Wolverton, A.B., Joseph Pa; Pittsburg, Pa. Philadelphia, Pa. Vancouver, Wash. Vancouver, Wash. Class of 1893. Jane Atkinson, A.B., George H. Brooke, B.S., Francis E. Broomell, B.S., John L. Carver, B.L., Joseph T. Freeman, B.S., Dora A. Gilbert, A.B., Albany, N, Y. Charles S. Hallowell, B.S., *Clement Lodge, B.S., LoRENA B. Matlack, A.B., Carlie McClure, A.B., New Omar John Hopkins Univ. Salem, N. J. Harvard Univ. B. Pancoast, University of Pa. Chicago, 111. Media, Pa. Rochester, N. Y. Chester, Pa. York, N. Y. 1895. West Chester, Pa. Girard, Pa. B.S., Jesse H. Reinhardt, B.S., Julius Staab, A.B., John B. Stetson, B.S., Esther E. Spicer, B.L., Frances B. Stevenson, A.B., Lansdale, Pa. Media, Pa. West * Deceased. Chester, Pa. SWARTHMORE COLLEGE. George H. Strout, Esther H. Sutton, Henry C. Turner, g7 A.B., Boston, Mass. B.L., . B.S., . . Carrie B. Way, B.L., LiLA K. Willets, B.L., Chappaqua, N. Y. New York, N. Y. Kennett Square, Pa, Roslyn, N. Y. Newlin Williams, B.S., Ellen (Williams) Battin, B.S., Genevieve S. Zane, A.B., 1894, E. New S. Newtown, Pa. West Chester, Hope, Pa. Pa. Class of 1894. Mabel Alexander, B.L., Anna S. Atkinson, A.B., Philadelphia, Pa. Locust Valley, N. Y. Lansdowne, Pa. Lydia Biddle, B.L., Edwin P. Bond, A.B., Bertha L. Broomell, B.S., Emma S. Chambers, A.B., Elizabeth Conrow, A.B., Herman Conrow, B.S., Altha Hetty Philadelphia, Pa. Jenkintown, Pa. Unionville Pa. Cornell University. Brockton, Mass. T. Coons, B.S., Swarthmore, Pa. L. Cox, B.L., Baltimore, Joseph C.Emley, B.S., Frederic H. Gawthrop, Md. Newtown, Pa. B.S., Baltimore, John W. Gregg, B.L., George G. Griest, B.S., Mary Mary West Chester. R. Hillborn, A.B., Hutchinson, S. B. B.S., A.B., Swarthmore, Pa. Baltimore, . Owen Moon, Baltimore, ". Jr., B.S., . Marion D. Perkins, A.B., Margaret D. Pfahler, B.S., David B. Rushmore, B.S., Caroline P. Sargent, A.B., J. Shoemaker, . Md. Md. Trenton, N. J. Moorestown, N. J. Philadelphia, Pa. Pittsburg, Pa. Paul, Minn. Hartford, Conn. B.L., Edward A. Staab, A.B., Mary W. Titus, B.L., Baltimore, Md. Harvard Univ. Old Westburj', N. Y. Helen (Train) Tannehill, Daniel Underhill, Jr., Mary Underhill, M.S., Allen K. White, B.S., . St. Philip Sellers, B.S., Cornelia Md. Baltimore, Wilmington, Del. Lamb, B.L., M. Elizabeth Lamb, B.L., P. Pa. Jenkintown, Pa. Janvier, B.L., Harriet M. Kent, Helen Hartford, Conn. A. Hayes, A.B., Helen Helen Md. Philadelphia, Pa. B.S., 1S95, McConnelsville, Ohio. B.S., Jericho, N. Y. 1895, Langhome, Pa. Atlantic City, N. [. SWARTHMORE COLLEGE. 68 Stuart Wilder, John M. Willis, Mary Johnson City, Tenn. Williamson School, Pa. B.S., B.S., Easton, Md. E. Yeo, B.S., ^^SusANNA Harry P. Yeo, B.L., Young, B.S., 1895. S. Morton, Pa. Class of 1895. Frank C. Andrews, Cornell Univ. B.S., Elizabeth M. Baily, B.S., William S. Barker, B.S., Harry E. Bean, B.S., Hildegard Brooks, B.S., Frances W. Cheairs, B.L., Walter Clothier, B.L., May Gifford, B.L., Anna R. H. Harrison, B.L., Mary B. Hollingshead, A.B Emma S. Hutchinson, B.L., RoLAiXD G. Kent, A.B., John A. Lafore, B.S., Egbert P. Lincoln, B.S., . Lansdowne, Pa. , Wynnewood, Pemberton, N. New Swarthmore College. Naples, N. Y. Moorestown, N. Hainesport, N. J. Philadelphia, Pa. Christiana, Pa. Wilna, Md. Swarthmore, Pa. Williamsport, Pa. B.L., O.xford, William H. Wanzer, A.B., Emma A. Wasley, B.L., Howard White, Jr., B.S., Hurstville, England. Altoona, Pa. N. Y. Shenandoah, Pa. Univ. of Mich. Newtown Willits, A.B., Yarnall, J. Swarthmore, Pa. Helen B. Smith, A.B., G. Edmund Strattan, B.S., T. J. Media, Pa. , Albert J. Moorestown, N. , Frank L. Price, A.B. Arthur H. Scott, B.S., P. J. York, N. Y. Philadelphia, Pa. . Alice J. Xenia, Ohio. , Shaw, Pa. May's Landing, N. Elizabeth B. Miller, A.B. Charles S. Moore, B.L., Samuel C. Palmer, A.B., Lydia M. Parry, A.B., Alfred E. Pfahler, B.S., M. Elizabeth Pownall, B.L.,. C. Philadelphia, Pa. Newburg, N. Y. Delaware City, Del. Riverton, N. Edg.ar Lippincott, B.S., Joseph R. Lippincott, A.B. Jane Norristown, Pa. Square, Pa. Woodstown, N. B.L., Deceased. J.. Honorary Deorrees Conferred. William Hyde Appleton, Ph.D. vard, 1S69), Professor of Sus.\N J. (A.B., Harvard, 1864; A.M., LL.B., Har- Greek and of English Literature. Cunningham, Sc.D., Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy. 1889. Arthur Beardsley, Ph.D. (C.E., Rensselaer Polytechnic Professor of Engineering and Director of Isaac Sharpless, LL.D. (B.S., Institute, Harvard, 1873; Sc.D., Univ. of Pa., 1883), President of Haverford College. 1890. Olivia Rodh.a.m, A.B., 1867), Mechanic Arts. late Assistant Librarian and Instructor in Botany. (69) Committee on Trusts, Endowments, and Scholarships. EDWARD H. OGDEN, 314 Vine EMMOR Street, Philadelphia, Pa. ROBERTS, Fellowship, N. J. DANIEL UNDERHILL, Jericho, L. I. EDMUND WEBSTER, 1 156 South Broad Street, Philadelphia, Pa. SUSAN W. LIPPINCOTT, Cinnaminson, N. REBECCA C. LONGSTRETH, Sharon Hill, Pa. (70) J. Secretary.