Swarthmore College CATALOGUE 1901-1902 H* H > O ifO CO- O 3 -JO _ * tag >-i •=s . • o •" OUl» CD a CO a oiuHf CO 03 a>2 . Main College Building Science Hall—Laboratories and Shops Meeting House. Observatory and Professor The Benjamin West House and Professor Residence. President Gymnasium for Young Men. Boiler Rooms and Laundry. Field. SWARTHMORE COLLEGE, BUILDINGS AND GROUNDS Digitized by the Internet Archive in Lyrasis 2010 with funding from Members and Sloan Foundation http://www.archive.org/details/annualcatalogueo1901swar The Thirty-third Annual Catalogue OF Swarthmore College Swarthmore, Pa. I 9OI- 902 I PHILADELPHIA FRANKLIN PRINTING COMPANY 514-520 LUDLOW STREET 1902 TABLE OF CONTENTS. Calendar of the College Year 3 The Corporation The Board Elocution and Oratory. .44 Contests and Oratorical Prizes 4 Managers... 4 Officers and Committees of of 44 French German 45 46 6 Board Officers of Instruction and Administration 8 Greek 48 The Household Latin the 9 Faculty Committees Register of Students Fellows and Scholars, 10 11 1901- 1902 18 SWARTHMORE COLLEGE: History and Political Econ- omy 49 51 Mathematics and Astron- omy 52 Pedagogy 53 Physical Training 53 Physics 54 Psychology phy Location and History Buildings Religious Culture 21 Social Life 21 Courses for the Bachelor's Degree: 21 Introductory Statement. 19 19 Physical Culture Students' Societies and Publications and Libraries The Museum Expenses Fellowships and Irregular 23 Courses Preparatory Course Scholar26 Requirements for Admis- sion 29 Admission by Certificate. Departments of . . .31 Instruc33 Biology and Geology 33 Chemistry 35 3Drawing and Painting Engineering and the Mechanic Arts 38 English: English Literature 42 World 43 Literature Rhetoric tion and . . .56 The The The The 57 Partial 57 Medical 58 Course in Arts 59 60 Course in Letters 61 Course in Science Course in Engineer- ing 62 Graduation and Degrees: The Degree of Bachelor. .63 The Degree of Master 63 The Engineering Degrees, 63 Honorary Degrees Conferred 64 Graduates 65 Holders of Fellowships. .83 . tion: Biblical Literature 55 and 22 24 26 ships Philoso- List of Electives Reading- Room and Composi43 . The Alumni . Association. .84 on Trusts, En- Committee dowments, and arships . . Schol85 CALENDAR OF THE COLLEGE YEAR igoi-1902 1901, Ninth Month, 1902, Second Month, 19th. Fifth-day, 1st. College year began. Seventh-day, First semester ends. " Second Month, '• Third Month, nth, Third-day, (: Third Month, 29th, Seventh-day, Spring recess begins. " Fourth Month, Third-day, '•' Fifth Month, 19th, " Fifth Month, 24th, Seventh-day, Senior examinations completed. " Sixth Month, 2d, Second-day, Final examinations begin. 6th. Sixth-day, j Seventh-day, J 3d, 8th, Second-day, Second semester begins. Meeting of the Board of Managers. College work resumed, 8.30 a. m. Second-day, Senior examinations begin. " Sixth Month. " Sixth Month 7th. " Sixth Month, 9th. Second-day, Meeting of the Board of Managers. " Sixth Month, 9th, Second-day, Class-day exercises. " Sixth Month, 10th. > Examinations . tor admission. Third-day, Commencement. " Ninth Month, 16th. Third-day, Meeting " Ninth Month, 17th, Fourth-day, Examinations for admission. " Ninth Month, 18th. " Twelfth Month, " Twelfth Month, 2d, " Twelfth. " Month, 1st, 2d. Fifth-day, of the Board of Managers. College work begins, 8.30 a. m. Second-day, Meeting of the Board of Managers. Third-day, Annual Meeting of Third-day, Meeting of the the Stockholders. Board of Managers. Twelfth Month, 20th, Seventh-day, Winter recess begins. 1003, First Month, 5th, Second-day, College work resumed 8.30 a. m. OFFICERS OF THE CORPORATION CLERKS ROBERT M. JANNEY, 112 Drexel Building, Philadelphia. ABBY W. MILLER, 1203 Delaware Avenue, Wilmington. TREASURER CHARLES 513 Commerce M. BIDDLE, Street, Philadelphia. THE BOARD OF MANAGERS Term expires Twelfth Month, 1902 Fannie W. Lowthorp, Isaac H. Clothier, Eighth & Market Sts., Phila. Howard M. Jenkins, P. O. Box 924, Philadelphia. Charles Paxson, Swarthmore, Pa. Annie Shoemaker, Swarthmore, Pa. Trenton, N. J. Edmund Webster, 1156 S. Emma Broad St., Philadelphia. AIcIlvain Cooper, 715 Cooper Rebecca St., Camden, N. C Longstreth, Haverford, Pa. J. SWARTHMORE COLLEGE Term expires Twelfth Month, 1905 Joseph Wharton, P. O. Box 1332. Philadelphia William M. Jackson, 50 Beekman St., New Mary Willets, Rachel W. Hillborn, Sea Girt. N. Swarthmore, Pa. J. Lydia H. Hall, Edward Martin, M.D., Swarthmore. Pa. Mary 415 S. 15th Pa. 37 Term St.. Edward Stabler, Philadelphia. Eli M. Lamb, 1432 C. St., Cinnaminson, N. St., Jr., Baltimore, Md. Westbury Jane New York. Howard Cooper Johnson, Philadelphia. Daniel Underhill, Emmor Roberts, Fellowship, N. P. 1613 Station, N. Y. Downing, St., Philadelphia. Elizabeth B. Passmore, Oxford, Pa. Joanna W. Lippincott, Station, Philadelphia. Marianna J. Philadelphia. Lippincott, Race Logan I. St., expires Tzvelfth Month, 1905 T. Willets, 303 Pearl Street. St., 1816 Arch Mary W. Albertson, J. Term Jericho, L. York. 509 Real Estate Trust Building, Philadelphia. Susan W. Lippincott, 709 Walnut 6 South Howard W. Bancroft, Wilmington, Del. John New Hannah H. Woodnutt, McCulloh Baltimore, Md, Emma Columbus Ave., expires Tzvelfth Month, 1904 Edward H. Ogden, 314 Vine Philadelphia. St., Albert A. Merritt, C. Clothier, Wynnewood, York. S. 226 E. 16th Rawson, St., New York. OFFICERS AND COMMITTEES OF THE EOARD OF MANAGERS PRESIDENT JOSEPH WHARTON. SECRETARY ABBY W. MILLER. AUDITORS Isaac H. Clothier, John T. Willets. EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Emmor Roberts, Isaac H. Clothier, Howard M. Jenkins, Edmund Webster, Howard W. Lippincott, Jane P. Downing, Susan W. Lippincott, Emma McIlvain Cooper, Hannah H. Woodnutt, Mary C. Clothier, Elizabeth B. Passmore, John T. Willets, Edward Martin, Joanna W. Lippincott, Robert M. Janney, Emma C. Bancroft, Abby W. Miller, ex-ofRcio. FINANCE COMMITTEE Edward H. Ogden, Robert M. Janney, Charles Paxson. INSTRUCTION COMMITTEE Abby W. Miller, Annie Shoemaker, Mary Willets, Rachel W. Hillborn, Edward Martin, Marian na S. Rawson, Susan W. Lippincott, Rebecca Lydia H. Hall, Howard M. Jenkins, C. Longstreth, Howard Cooper Johnson. SWARTHMORE COLLEGE / COMMITTEE ON BUILDINGS AND PROPERTY Edmund Webster, Rachel W. Hillborn, Edward H, Ogden, Howard W. Lippincott, Emmor Roberts Robert M. Janney, Jane P. Downing, John T. Willets. committee on museum and laboratories Mary Willets, Edward Martin, Eli M. Lamb, Mary W. Albertson, Daniel Underhill. COMMITTEE ON THE FRIENDS' HISTORICAL LIBRARY Lydia H. Hall, Edward Stabler, Isaac H. Clothier, Rebecca C. Longstreth, Jr., Albert A. Merritt. COMMITTEE ON TRUSTS, ENDOWMENTS, AND SCHOLARSHIPS Edmund Webster, Edward H. Ogden, Susan W. Lippincott, John T. Willets, Emmor Rebecca Roberts, C. Longstreth, TRUSTEES OF ENDOWED PROFESSORSHIPS Edward H. Ogden, Isaac H. Clothier, Emmor Roberts. committee on the library Lydia H. Hall, Charles Paxson, Rachel W. Hillborn, Joanna W. Lippincott, Albert A. Merritt. Sec'y. OFFICERS OF INSTRUCTION AND ADMINISTRATION WILLIAM W. BIRDSALL, A.M., President. ELIZABETH POWELL BOND, A.M., Dean. EDWARD MAGILL, H. A.M., LL.D., Emeritus Professor of the French Language and Literature, and Lecturer on French Literature. ARTHUR BEARDSLEY, C.E., Ph.D., Emeritus Professor of Engineering, and Librarian of the Friends' Historical Library. WILLIAM HYDE APPLETON, A.M., LL.B., Ph.D., Professor of Greek and of Early English. SUSAN CUNNINGHAM, J. Sc.D., Edward H. Magill Professor SPENCER TROTTER, of Mathematics and Astronomy. M.D., Professor of Biology and Geology. GEORGE HOADLEY, A. C.E., A.M., Professor of Physics. FERRIS W. PRICE, H. Isaac A.M., Clothier Professor of the Latin Language and Literature. WILLIAM I. HULL, Ph.D., Joseph Wharton Professor of History and Political Economy. WILBUR I. M. STINE, Ph.D., V. Williamson Professor of Engineering. JESSE H. HOLMES, Ph.D., Professor of History and Biblical Literature. MYRTIE E. FURMAN, M.O., Assistant Professor in charge of Elocution. JOHN RUSSELL HAYES, A.B, LL.B., Assistant Professor of English. SWARTHMORE BENJAMIN F. BATTIN, COLLEGE. 9 Ph.D., Assistant Professor of German. GREGORY PAUL BAXTER, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Chemistry. ISABELLE BRONK, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of the French Language and Literature. BEATRICE MAGILL, Lecturer on the History of Painting, and Director of the Studio. J. PAUL J. WILLIAMS, M.S., Assistant in Engineering. MARY CORWIN LANE, A.B., Assistant in Greek and Latin. GUSTAV A. KLEENE, Instructor in THOMAS Ph.D., Economics and Social Science. W. HESLIN, Instructor in the Shops. MARY V. MITCHELL GREEN, M.D., Director of Physical Training for the W. SINNOTT CUMMINGS, Women Students. M.D., Director of Physical Training for the Men Students. SARAH BROOKE FARQUHAR, Instructor in the Department of Physical Training. SARAH M. NOWELL, Librarian. ALBERT COOK MYERS, M.L., Registrar and Secretary to the President. JAMES D. HULL, Superintendent. THE HOUSEHOLD SARAH D. Matron COALE, of ELLA MICHENER, West Wing. Matron ELLEN ROBERTS, CAROLINE Director of Laundry. MARY of East R. Matron A. LUKENS, of Central Building. SATTERTHWAITE, l [( itisekeeper. Wing. OFFICERS AND STANDING COMMITTEES OF THE FACULTY President: Wm. W. Birdsall, ex Secretary: Professor J. officio. Russell Hayes. Library: Professors Appleton, Hayes, and Stine. Diplomas and Commencement: Professors Trotter and Price. Students' Societies: Professors Cunningham and Hoadley. College Publications: Professors Hayes, Stine, and Beatrice Magill. Receptions: The President and the Dean. Entrance Examinations : Professor Price and the Registrar. Public Lectures: Professors Appleton and Holmes. Preparatory Schools: Professors Magill, Cunningham, and Price. Catalogue: Professors Athletics: Professors Programme Hull and Stine. Hoadley and Trotter. of Class-work: The President and the Registrar. Advisers for Students in Arts: Professors Price and Appleton. Advisers for Students in Letters: Professors Advisers for Students in Science: Hull and Hayes. Professors Hoadley Trotter. Adviser for Students in Engineering: Professor Stine. and STUDENTS SENIOR CLASS Name Course Residence M. Ida Alley Elizabeth N. Baker S. Roscoe Bateman Letters Coatesville. Science Grenloch, N. Ethel Beardsley Arts Swarthmore. Edith Coale Edith H. Cooley Charles C. Corson Lina B. Dillistin Helen McIlvain Eastwick Edith G. Elmore Rebecca M. Ely Letters Science Arts Science Letters . Lagrangeville, N. Y. Riverton, N. . J. J. N. J. Plymouth Meeting. Paterson, N. J. Plainfield, Letters Philadelphia. Letters Brooklyn, N. Y. Letters Philadelphia. Marion Farquhar Letters Sandy Spring, Md. Lewis Fussell Ernest L. Green Gertrude P. Griscom J. Milton Griscom Science Media. Emma Edson Mary F. S. B. Arts Media. Letters Pottsville. Science Salem, N. J. Gladwyne. Hamilton Letters Harris Engineering, Philadelphia. Arts Piedmont, Ala. Hawke Amelia E. Himes John Howard Hopkins. Elsie H. Koenig Letters . . New Oxford. .Engineering, Ruxton, Letters Md. Lewistown. Lewistown. Stella L. Koenig Letters Margaretta W. Lamb Letters Baltimore, Alice R. Linvill Letters Marion Lukens Letters Nathan H. Mannakee Science Cyrus D. Martek T. Stockton Matthews Roy McVaugh Swarthmore. Swarthmore. Washington, D. C. Camden, N. J. Science Baltimore, Letters Hockessin, Del. Letters Md. Md. 1 SWARTHMORE COLLEGE 12 Name Course Allen R. Mitchell, Jr Letters Margaret M. Patterson .... Science Anna R. Paxson Letters Robert L. Pearson Frances Preston Elliott Richardson Residence Langhorne. ...... Philadelphia. Langhorne. Engineering, Fern Rock. Letters Tayloria. Engineering, Torresdale. Helen W. Speakman Arts Alice P. Tabor Ernest J. Taylor Margaret H. Taylor Letters Elmor Engineering, Lionville. J. Wilmington, Del. Rochester, N. Y. Engineering, Nuttallburg, W. Va. Letters Woodstown, N. J. Temple Clara M. Thomas Arts AVest Chester. William W. Turner Edith L. Verlenden Letters Betterton, Letters Darby. Md. Robert H. Walker Science Baltimore, Anna W. Waters Arts Stroudsburg. Maude Arts Media. L. Watters Albert M. Williams George S. Worth 1 Ida Md. Engineering, Holicong. Engineering, Coatesville. Wright Letters Brooklyn, N. Y. junior class Name Course Byron Beans Walker M. Bond Elizabeth M. Booth Letters Residence Hartsville. Engineering, Winchester, Va. Letters Chester. Letters Caroline Clothier Letters West Chester. Wynnewood. Edmund Cocks Science Cornwall, N. Y. Horace Ervien Howard S. Evans Albert P. Hall, Jr William E. Hannum Annie S. Hawke Engineering, Ogontz. Frederic C. Brinton, Jr. J. 1 . . . Engineering, Yeadon. Engineering, West Chester. Science Ward. Letters Piedmont, Ala. Is taking all the work required for the bachelor's degree, but has not yet (First Month, 1902) fulfilled the requirements for formal admission to the Senior Class. SWARTHMORE COLLEGE Name Mabel 1 Course Residence Hollinshead Elizabeth W. Jackson Science Moorestown, N. Letters Bartville. Carrie B. Kilgore Fannie B. Kilgore Arts Arts Philadelphia. E. Philadelphia. Robert E. Lamb Engineering, Baltimore, Md. Helen E. Lease Edward R. Meredith Clara Price Newport Letters Norman S. Passmore Marion V. Peirce William E. Roberts Annie Ross Nora L. Stabler Helen D. Souder Samuel T. Stewart Elizabeth Sutton J. Hibberd Taylor Louis E. Thompson Sarah E. Tracy Norman D. Vernon Lulu Von Ramdohr Asa P. Way Pennock M. Way • Salem, Ohio. Engineering, Calcium. Arts Swarthmore. Oxford. Arts Arts West Letters New Chester, Pa. Letters Hope. Flushing, N. Y. Sandy Spring, Md. Woodstown, N. J. Arts Cleveland, Ohio. Letters Letters Letters New Letters West Chester. Wycombe. Cornish, N. H. Letters Letters York, N. Y. Engineering, Pomeroy. Letters New Engineering, St. Science Fairville. York, N. Y. Thomas, Ont., Can. sophomore class Elva L. Name Course Ash Letters Edward M. Bassett M. Louise Bartlett Thomas C. Bell Alytn C. Birdsali Charlotte R. Bogert Floyd H. Bradley Blanche E. Brown Arthur Brosius Martha K. Buyers Margukrd Campion )•: J. Residence Coatesville. Engineering, Salem, N. Letters Baltimore, J. Md. Engineering, Bayside, N. Y. Arts Swarthmore. New York, N. Y. Camden, N. J. Cornwall, N. Y. Science Avondale. Letters Honey Brook. Arts Swarthmore. Letters Arts Letters SWARTHMORE COLLEGE 14 Name Course Helen M. Carre'. Gertrude F. Anna Letters Chandler. .Letters . . L. Curtis Margaret S. Darlington. . . Residence Philadelphia. Bethlehem. Science New Letters Concordia, Kan. York, N. Y. Helen N. Emley Louise C. Fahnestock Dorothy F. Green Letters Philadelphia. Letters Harrisburg. Arts Bartow, Fla. Edgar T. Greene Mary A. Gutelius Maurice T. Hansell Science Philadelphia. Arts Swarthmore. Bougher, N. J. Letters Anne W. Holme Letters Baltimore, Hallie G. Hulburt Halliday R. Jackson Emily Janney Herbert E. Jenks Frank H. Leonard M. Elma Lewis Brittain E. Lukens Millo M. McCain Alice P. Merriman Anna J. E. Nichols Mary A. Parry Letters Swarthmore. Arts West Letters Philadelphia. Edmund R. Week, Jr Chester. Engineering Byberry. Engineering, Lansdowne. Letters Md. Baltimore, Engineering, Philadelphia. Marriott Price Mabel Pryor Maude E. Rice George Satterthwaite Agnes H. Sibbald Anna L. Smedley Alice R. Sullivan C. Marshall Taylor William J. L. Walker. Catharine E. Way Md. Letters Philadelphia. Letters Letters South Bethlehem. Wilmington, Del. Letters Jenkintown. Engineering, Baltimore, Md. Letters Langhorne. Arts Newtown. Engineering, Swarthmore. . . . Letters Fox Letters Willistown Inn. Chase. Arts Moorestown, N. Science West Chester. Letters Gap. Science Philadelphia. Engineering, Alexandria, Ind. Edith M. West Aldus Wilbur Letters Chester. Letters New William W. Wilson Engineering, Bridgeport. York, N. Y. J, SWARTHMORE COLLEGE Name Anna Course Wolff Sarah E. Wood K. 1 Residence Letters Philadelphia. Letters Linwood. FRESHMAN CLASS Name Course Caroline B. Angell Letters Archie D. Arnold Helen Bachrach Letters James R. Baldridge Abbie L. Bonsall S. Dean Caldwell, Margaret Craig Frank C. Eves Lydia Decatur, 111. Engineering, Charleston, Arts Jr.,. ... W. Foulke Esther Esther Residence Haworth, N. J. Engineering, Pawling, N. Y. Gallagher C. Garwood F. Bramwell Geddes Hamilton H. Gilkyson, C. Philadelphia. Letters Millville. Letters West Letters Cincinnati, Ohio. Arts Arts Salem, Ohio. Jr. , Science Chester. Swarthmore. Phoenixville. Frederic E. Griest E. Griest Engineering, Guernsey. Elizabeth Hall Science Media. Helen Heed Letters West Philip M. Hicks Science Avondale. Albert L. Hood Percy M. Hoopes Arts West West Elsie P. Hoyt Letters Margaret D. Leiper William H. Linton James J. Lippincott W. Bayne Lynne L. Helen E. Lidie T. McFarland Marshall Merritt Miller Serena H. Miller Marie de Montalvo Va. Engineering, Bethesda, Md. Science Maurice Ralph G. Jackson Harry W. Knight, Jr W. Salem, Ohio. Engineering, Flora Dale. Science Chester. Chester. Chester. Seven Oaks, Engineering, Nine Points. Fla. Engineering, Harrisburg. Arts Wallingford. Science Moorestown, N. Engineering, Philadelphia. Letters Conshohocken. Arts Allegheny. Arts Swarthmore. Letters Pottsville. Arts Germantown. Arts New York, N. Y. J. SWARTHMORE COLLEGE 1 Name Course Residence Harold W. Mowery Arts Edith Cook Myers Alice Paul Edward G. Poole Edith N. Powell Kennett Square. Moorestown, N. Engineering, Wilmington, Del. Letters Trappe, Md. Arts Swarthmore. Henry .. Marietta. . Letters Science F. Price Alice M. Ridings Edmund G. Robinson Louis N. Robinson Esther L. Rogers Phebe E. Scheibley Robert P. Lansdowne. Wilmington, Del. Tunkhannock. Letters Science Arts W. Willard Rooks Sensenderfer. . . Agnes M. Smedley Ida M. Smith W. Dulty Smith . J. Letters Pendleton, Ind. Letters Fruitland Park, Fla. Letters Duncannon. Letters Philadelphia. Letters Denver, Col. Science West Arts Rutledge. Chester. Frederick B. Terrell Engineering, San Antonio, Texas. Thatcher J. Archer Turner Elsa S. Von Ramdohr. Olga V-Dee Edith Wilson Engineering, Wilmington, Del. Herbert S. STUDENTS (With the class to Engineering, Betterton, . . . Md. Letters New Science Media. Letters Selma, Ohio. York, N. Y. IRREGULAR AND PARTIAL COURSES IN which their work most nearly corresponds. Name See p. 57.) Residence Course Jessie BartlettGinn .Senior Letters Swarthmore. Deborah G. Thomas. Senior Letters Margaret Gleim. .Junior Science Fred. A. Johnson. Junior Letters Nettie S. Blum Sophomore Letters Edith Dixon Hopkins Sophomore Letters. Philadelphia. Lansdowne. Emporium. . . . . . . . . . . . . Greenville, Miss. Los Angeles, Cal. .New York, N. Y. George V. Knipe. .Sophomore Science. Butler. Lucile Abrams Freshman Letters Woodstown, N. Samuel L. Borton. .Freshman Letters Howard H. Carpenter Freshman Engineering, Denver, Col. . . . . . J. SWARTHMORE COLLEGE Name Course 1 Residence Ethel B. Close Freshman Science New York, N. Y. Arthur D. Curtiss. .Freshman Engineering.Woodside, Md. Harold I. Comly. .Freshman Engineering,~H.orsham. Merian H. Dickinson Freshman Engineering, Atlanta, Ga. Dexter W. Draper. .Freshman Letters Boston, Mass. Evelyn I. Hadley. Freshman Letters Santa Barbara, Cal. . . . . West Chester. .Freshman Letters Freshman Engineering, Curwensville. Boston, Mass. William T. Smith. Freshman Letters Evelyn ~R.Viskniskki Freshman Letters Carmi, 111. A. Estella James. Milton D. Kirk . . . . SUMMARY BY CLASSES Seniors 50 Juniors 34 49 Sophomores Freshmen Students in Irregular and Partial Courses Total 54 20 207 SUMMARY BY STATES Pennsylvania 119 18 New York New Jersey 17 16 Maryland Delaware Ohio 6 6 Florida 3 Alabama 2 California 2 Colorado 2 Illinois 2 Indiana 2 Massachusetts 2 West Virginia Canada 2 1 Carried forward 200 SWARTHMORE COLLEGE l8 Brought forward District of 200 Columbia 1 Georgia Kansas 1 Mississippi I New Hampshire 1 Texas 1 Virginia 1 1 Total 207 FELLOWS AND SCHOLARS, Joshua Lippincott Fellotv: Mary Grey 1901-1902 Leiper, B.L., 1899; student in the University of Berlin. Lucretia Mott Fellozu: L. Winifred Rogers, A.B., 1901 student in the University of Berlin. Deborah Fisher Wharton Scholar: Margaret H. Taylor, 1902. Samuel J. Underhill Scholar: Helen E. Lease, 1903. Anson Lapham Scholar: Mary A. Gutelius, 1904. Westbury Quarterly Meeting Scholar: Aldus Wilbur, 1904. Mabel Pryor, 1903. William Ely Roberts, Helen M. Carre, 1904. Rebecca M. Atkinson Scholar: Barclay G. Atkinson Scholar: Annie Shoemaker Scholar: /. 1903. V. Williamson Scholars: Maurice J. Hansell, Friends' Central School, Philadelphia. Philip M. Hicks, Martin Academy, Kennett Square, Pa. Lynne L. Merritt, Swarthmore Public High School. Alice Paul, Friends' School, Moorestown, N. J. Edmund S. Robinson, Friends' School, Wilmington, Del. J. Archer Turner, Abington Friends' School, Jenkintown, Pa. Elsa S. Von Ramdohr, Friends' Seminary, New York. M. Elma Lewis, Friends' School, Baltimore, Md. Maurice E. Griest, George School, Pa. Friends' Seminary Association Scholar: Marie de talvo, Friends' Seminarv, New York. Mon- SWARTHMORE COLLEGE LOCATION AND HISTORY The Borough of Swarthmore is situated southwest of Phila- delphia on the Central Division of the Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore Railway. It is eleven miles distant from Broad Street Station, from which it is accessible by frequent trains; from Philadelphia by two trolley lines. The College buildings and the campus occupy a commanding position. The view includes many miles of the Delaware The ColRiver, whose nearest point is about four miles distant. includland, of lege property comprises over two hundred acres of valley rocky beautiful ing a large tract of woodland and the it is also reached Crum Creek. 1864 through the efforts of members of the Religious Society of Friends, and for the purpose of securing to the youth of the Society an opportunity for higher The College was founded in educational training under the guarded supervision and care of Other persons are admitted those of their own religious faith. upon the same terms as Friends, and nothing of a sectarian char- acter appears in the instruction or in the management of the College. The intention of founders was to its of Christian character the first make the promotion consideration, and to provide op- portunities for liberal culture while maintaining a high standard These aims have been faithfully observed in the of scholarship. administration of the institution. BUILDINGS The Main College Building, 348 feet in length, the two wings by fire-proof compartments. is a massive is separated from The central building stone structure, the central portion of which and with an extension at the rear provides for assembly room, lecture rooms, museum, library, reading room, parlors, dining hall, etc. The wings are four stories high. The ground floors are devoted to lecture and recitation rooms; is five stories in height, 19 SWARTHMORE COLLEGE 20 wing contain the dormitories of young women, and in the west wing those of the young men. The Dean and several instructors reside in the building. the remaining floors in the east the is a two-story stone building with basement, 162 devoted to the departments of Chemistry, Physics, and Engineering. It contains, besides lecture and recitation rooms, Science Hall by 64 feet, electrical, physical, engineering, and chemical laboratories; ma- chine shop, and draughting rooms; foundry, forge, and wood- working rooms; engine and boiler rooms. All departments are well equipped, and new apparatus and machinery are added as occasion demands. The Astronomical Observatory is especially arranged for purposes of instruction, and contains an equipment suitable both for class work and the prosecution of research. This includes a tranaperture, an equatorial telescope of six-inch micrometer and spectroscope attachments; a chronograph and chronometer, mean-time and sidereal clocks, and a reference library. Connected with the Observatory is the local Signal Service Station of the State Weather Bureau, fully sit of three-inch aperture, with provided with the necessary meteorological apparatus. The latest accommodates a Seismograph of the most approved construction, which records by photographic process any vibration of the crust of the earth. Other buildings upon the campus are the Meeting-house, the President's House, the Benjamin West House (birthplace of Benaddition to the building jamin West, erected in 1724, now the residence of the Professor of Greek), the house of the Professor of Astronomy, the gym- nasium for young women (Somerville Hall), the gymnasium for young men, the necessary farm buildings, etc. The Main Building, Science Hall, and the two gymnasiums A new heating sysare heated by steam from a central plant. tem for the Main Building was recently installed; it consists of two 72-inch fans at the extreme ends of the building, which force the air over coils of steam pipe and through conduits accurately graduated in size, to the various rooms, thus insuring proper heat and ventilation. 21 SWARTHMORE COLLEGE RELIGIOUS CULTURE The daily sessions of the College are assembling of students and instructors opened by a general for the reading of the Bible, or for other suitable exercises, preceded and followed by a period of silence. The students attend Meeting on First-day mornings, with the instructors, members of the household, and Friends of the neighborhood. By these means, and particularly effort to maintain in of its foundpurpose the institution a spirit in harmony with the mould the to exercised ers, it is believed that a proper care is standards. Christian characters of the students in conformity to by individual influence, and by the constant SOCIAL LIFE undertakes to an atmosphere in which manly and womanly character may develop naturally and It provides that freedom which places upon each completely. Swarthmore, as a co-educational provide college life in a home institution, setting; to supply individual the responsibility of self-control, demanding the right exercise of his judgment, while making provision for the correc- judgment and will, when necby the wise direction of those in whom his confidence may be justly placed. The students meet in the dining-hall as in their homes, and for a social hour in the reception parlor before evening work begins. There are other social occasions in the class receptions that occur during the year, and the more public tion of errors, supplementing his essary, College receptions to which friends of the institution are invited. This intercourse of the students is under the care of the Dean and her assistants, and it is the aim of the College to make it a means of social culture. PHYSICAL CULTURE The Gymnasium for Young Men, erected in 1899, is supplied new and complete outfit of apparatus after the Sargent with a System, and affords facilities for the required class and individual work, as well as for various in-door games. The Gymnasium for Young Women was erected through the efforts of the Somerville SWARTHMORE COLLEGE 22 Literary Society, and bears its name. It is furnished with ap- paratus adapted to the Swedish System. and requirements found on page 53. The in the A statement of methods department of Physical Training will be extensive and beautiful grounds invite to out-door ex- which encouraged in every reasonable way. Whittier ground for young men, provides a quarter-mile cinder track, a well-graded field for athletic sports and seats for ercise, is Field, the athletic Upon spectators. the campus are facilities for tennis, golf, and other out-door recreations for both sexes. Crosscountry running, bicycle riding, and skating on Crum Creek are basket-ball, favorite forms of exercise. STUDENTS' SOCIETIES AND PUBLICATIONS maintained by the students: the Eunomian by the young men, the Somerville by the young women. Regular meetings are held for literary exercises, which afford opportunity to acquire skill in parliamentary practice and in debate. They are regarded as valuable auxiliaries in the work of the College. Each society has, under the management of its own members, but accessible to all students, a library and a reading room containing periodicals and daily papers. The total number of books in these libraries is nearly Three literary societies are Delphic and the four thousand. The Joseph Leidy Scientific Society has for its object to keep touch with the results of modern investigation in the four branches of Physical Science and in Engineering. At its meetings, held monthly, announcements of recent discoveries are made by the various instructors, and their meaning and importance are briefly discussed. Papers are also prepared and read by the stuin dents who are members. The Swarthmore Audubon Club is designed to promote and protection of our native birds. The use securing good pictures of live birds and their nests interest in the study of the camera in is a very desirable aid in the pursuit of the study. The region about Swarthmore, especially the wooded ravine through which Crum Creek flows, affords unusual opportunities for observation. SWARTHMORE COLLEGE 23 In a walk of eight miles along this stream fifty-eight different varieties of birds have been noted, most of them being species nesting in the locality. holds weekly meetings and is open to all students in the French Department after the middle of the first year. Its object is to afford increased opportunities for acquir- The French Club ing a practical knowledge of the French language. The Deutscher Verein holds weekly sessions for the purpose of affording its members a greater ease and facility in expressing themselves in idiomatic German. more positive acquaintance with Students are thus brought into German customs, amusements, music, and literature. Friends' Association meets monthly in the College; it is open to students, members of the Faculty, and others interested in the testimonies and activities of the The Swarthmore Young Society of Friends. The for the Athletic Association is encouragement The women. Two Girls' Athletic of an organization of the young physical culture and Club is a similar organization of the periodicals are published supervision of the Faculty. voted to the interests Alumni; the Halcyon is The men athletic sports. young by the students under the Phoenix, a semi-monthly, is de- of the College community and of the published annually by the Junior Class. LIBRARIES AND READING ROOM The Libraries of the College bound volumes, collectively contain 20,950 as follows: The General Library 14,600 Literary Societies' Libraries 3^5° Friends' Historical Library 2,500 The Edgar Allen Brown Fund, established by his family in memory of Edgar Allen Brown, of the Class of 1890, and the Alumni Fund, are at present the chief sources of income for increasing the collection in the General Library. SWARTHMORE COLLEGE 24 founded by the late Anson N, Y., contains a valuable collection of Friends' books, photographs of representative Friends, and manuscripts relating to the Society and its history, and upon appliFriends' Lapham, Library, Historical of Skaneateles, cation to the Librarian, is accessible to all persons interested in the doctrines and history of Friends. This collection is stored hoped that Friends and others will deem it a secure place in which to deposit books and other material in their possession which may be of interest in connection with the history of the Society. Such contributions are solicited, and should be addressed to Friends' Historical Library, or to Arthur Beardsley, Librarian, Swarthmore, Pa. The Reading Room is supplied with reference books, the leading literary, scientific, and technical journals, and the principal in a fire-proof apartment, and it is newspapers. Besides the above, the great collections of books in the Philadelphia Library, the Mercantile Library, the Free Library of Philadelphia, and the University of Pennsylvania, as well as those in the special and technical libraries of the to the use of students city, are open under proper regulations. THE MUSEUM The Museum of the College is strictly an educational collecand the specimens from its cases are in constant use in the lecture room and laboratory. It is growing steadily, and always tion, in the direction of rendering more perfect the means of illustrating the different departments of Physical Science. It includes the following collections: i. The Joseph Leidy Collection of Minerals, the result of thirty years' discriminating collection by its founder, consists of exceed- ingly choice cabinet specimens of minerals, characteristic rocks and ores, 2. and models of the various systems of The Collection Illustrating crystallization. Comparative Osteology consists of a large series of partial and complete skeletons, prepared at Prof. Henry Ward's Natural History Establishment N. Y., and 3. illustrates the structure The Wilcox and Farnham in Rochester, and framework of vertebrates. Collection of Birds comprises SWARTHMORE COLLEGE stuffed specimens of native and foreign 25 birds. Nearly all the species visiting this State are represented. 4. The Frederick Kohl Ethnological Collection consists of Inetc., mostly from Alaska. dian implements, weapons, clothing, Parker Collection of Shells is made up of choice and marine shells. These specimens were all selected by the late Dr. Joseph Leidy from the extensive collection of the founder, C. F. Parker, who was for many years The 5. C. F. typical, land, fresh-water, the Curator in charge of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. The 6. mites is Robert R. Corson Collection of Stalactites and Stalagof specimens from the Luray Caverns, and composed illustrates the peculiar limestone formations of that and similar districts. 7. The Eckfeldt Herbarium contains over two thousand speci- mens illustrating the flora of Pennsylvania. maker Collection is a valuable addition to this. In addition to the above, there is The Annie Shoe- a large and constantly in- creasing collection of specimens of vertebrates and invertebrates (including the U. S. Fish Commission Educational Collection), of on Physiand of ology, glass and special points in vegetable and animal morphology, besides some three hundred classified diagrams and colored charts illustrating every branch of natural history. dissected specimens for demonstration in the lectures papier-mache models of invertebrates EXPENSES The $250 is cost of board payable in The tuition of non-resident students is $150 per year, of payable in advance, and the remainder on the of First Month. When luncheon is taken with the resident which $125 first and tuition is $400 per year, of which advance, and $150 on the first of First Month. is an additional charge of $50 per year. is required of each young man to defray any expense incurred by injury to property. The unexstudents there A is deposit of five dollars pended balance will be returned at the end of the year. Students purchase their own books, which the College will furnish at the lowest rates obtainable. They also buy their own stationery, drawing implements, and certain tools and materials used in the workshops, and pay a reasonable rate for laundry work done at the College. In case of illness, or trained nurse is no extra charge is made unless a physician employed. The above may be depended upon as covering all necessary expenses. PAYMENTS Payments are to be made by check or draft Charles M. Biddle, Treasurer, to the order of No. 513 Commerce Street, Philadelphia, Pa. FELLOWSHIPS AND SCHOLARSHIPS FELLOWSHIPS The Joshua Lippincott Fellowship, founded by Howard W. Lippincott, A. B., of the Class of 1875, in memory of his father, consists of a fund yielding an income of $450 per year, which is granted annually by the Faculty, with the concurrence of the Instruction Committee, to a graduate of the College to enable him to pursue advanced study under the direction or with the approval of the Faculty. The Lucretia Mott Fellowship, founded by ville the Somer- Literary Society and sustained by the contributions of 26 its SWARTHMORE COLLEGE 27 members, yields an annual income of $525. It is awarded each year by a Committee of the Faculty (selected by the Society), Members of the Society, to a young woman graduate of that year, who is to pursue advanced study at some other institution approved by this Committee. with the concurrence of the Life SCHOLARSHIPS 1. The Westbury Quarterly Meeting, N. Y., Scholarship pays all charges for board and tuition, and is awarded annually by a Committee of the Quarterly Meeting. 2. The Rebecca M. Atkinson and the Barclay G. Atkinson Scholarships yield $200 each, and are awarded annually by the Board of Managers of the College. 3. The Annie Shoemaker Scholarship pays all charges for board and tuition, and is awarded annually to a young woman graduate of Friends' Central School, Philadelphia. There are nine other similar Scholarships owned by inboard and tuition at the College. These are awarded by the owners. 5. The I. V. Williamson Scholarships for Preparatory Schools. For the year 1902- 1903 fifteen honor scholarships of the value of $150 each for resident, and $75 each for non-resident 4. dividuals, each entitling the holder to students, will be offered to members of the graduating classes of 1902 of the following-named schools upon the conditions mentioned below: 2 to Friends' Central School, 1 to Friends' Seminary, 1 to 1 to Friends' School, 1 to Friends' 1 to Friends' High School, Academy, 1 to Friends' Select School, Park Avenue Friends' High School,. Philadelphia, Pa. New .. to Moorestown, N. J. Locust Valley, N. Y. Washington, D. C. Jenkintown, Pa. to Martin George School, Pa. Chappaqua, N. Y. Swarthmore, Pa. Swarthmore, Pa. Kennett Square, Pa. Abington Friends' School, 2 to George School, 1 to Chappaqua Mountain Institute 1 to Swarthmore Preparatory School 1 to Swarthmore Public High School,.... 1 1 York, N. Y. Baltimore, Md. Wilmington, Del. Academy SWARTHMORE COLLEGE 28 These scholarships will be awarded upon competitive examNone will be ination under the direction of the College Faculty. awarded to applicants who fail to be admitted without condition Freshman class, and every holder of such scholarship must pursue in College the studies of one of the regular courses. 6. For the year 1902-1903, three honor scholarships are They are of the value of $200 offered for work in the College. each for resident, and $100 each for non-resident, students, and are awarded in each instance to that member of the class who shall be promoted without conditions, and shall have the best record of scholarship upon the regular work of the year. The Deborah Fisher Wharton Scholarship will be awarded to a member of the Junior class of 1901-1902. The Samuel J. Underhill Scholarship will be awarded to a member of the Sophomore class of 1 901-1902. The Anson Lapham Scholarship will be awarded to a member of the Freshman class of 1901-1902. If any of the Scholarships under 5 and 6 are not awarded, the to the funds thus released will be applied to Scholarships similar to those under 7. For the benefit of students needing pecuniary aid, whose previous work has demonstrated their earnestness and their ability, the following are offered. About one-fourth of them will be available for new students for the year 1902-1903. They will be awarded at the discretion of the Committee on Trusts, Endowments, and Scholarships. Application should be made to the 7. President. The Samuel Willets Scholarships: Ten scholarships of $150 and ten scholarships of $100 per year. The Isaac Stephens Scholarships: Four scholarships of year. per $50 The Mary Wood Scholarships: Two scholarships of $50 per year. REQUIREMENTS FOR ADMISSION made Application for admission should be by sible letter to the President. as early as pos- Students are not admitted for a when vacancies The College period less than the current college year, but, exist, they may enter at any time during the year. closed during vacations, is and those who desire make in College at such times are expected to remain to special arrange- ments with the Faculty. All applicants character from must present their satisfactory testimonials of former teachers, good and students coming from other colleges must offer certificates of honorable dismissal. Students admitted to the College are expected to abstain entirely from the use of tobacco. EXAMINATIONS FOR ADMISSION Examinations for admission may be taken either Summer, at the close of the college year, or in the the in Autumn. (See the Calendar on page 3 for the dates.) Candidates for admission to the Course in Arts must present six of the fourteen studies enumerated below, and tzvo of the remaining eight. Candidates for admission to the Courses in the first and Engineering, must present the and four of the remaining four optional studies must be either Letters, Science, studies enumerated below, (a) work in in one and language, in 13 fourteen studies are as follows: Mathematics. (a) Algebra. School grade. is The in two languages; two languages, with advanced work one of the two, and 13 or 14; or (c) Elementary and advanced work and 14. I. four Elementary and advanced work or (b) Elementary The first ten. —To Permutations and Combinations in a book of High- (Hall and Knight's, or C. Smith's, elementary text-book suggested.) (b) Geometry. — The whole of Plane Geometry. 29 SWARTHMORE COLLEGE 30 2. English Grammar and Composition. 3. English Literature. For 1902 (a) A general knowledge of the following works and their authors: Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice; Pope's Homer's Iliad, Books I, VI, XXII, and XXIV; the Sir Roger de Coverley Papers in The Spectator; Goldsmith's The Vicar of Wakefield; Coleridge's The Rime of the Ancient Mariner; Scott's Ivanhoe; Tennyson's The Princess; Cooper's The Last of the Mohicans; George Eliot's Silas Marner. A knowledge of the subject-matter, form, and structure of Shakespeare's Macbeth; Milton's L' Allegro, II Penseroso, Comus and Lycidas; Burke's Speech on Conciliation with America; Macaulay's Essay on Milton and Essay on Addison. (b) special the following works For : 1903 to 1905: A general knowledge of the following works and their authors: Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice and Julius Ccesar; the Sir Roger de Coverley Papers in The Spectator; Goldsmith's The Vicar of Wakefield; (a) Coleridge's The Ancient Mariner; Scott's Ivanhoe; Carlyle's Essay on Burns; Tennyson's The Princess; Lowell's The Vision of Sir Launfal; George Eliot's Silas Marner. A knowledge of the subject-matter, form, and structure of Macaulay's Essay on Milton and Essay on Addison; Burke's Speech on Conciliation with America; Shakespeare's Macbeth; Milton's Paradise Lost, Books I and II. (b) special the following 4. : History. Greece, —Any Rome, General two of the following: United States, England, History. Text-books suggested for preparation: McMaster's "School History of the United States;" Gardiner's "School History of England;" Oman's "Greece;" Allen's "Rome;" Myers's or Colby's "General History." 5. Elementary Latin. — First Latin Book; Grammar, the 6. essentials, particularly Advanced Latin. —Mneid, (including those against Cataline; Cjesar, four books; Latin paradigms and elementary syntax. six books; Cicero, seven orations Pro Milone or Pro Lege Manilia will be counted as two) Latin Composition,* the accurate translation into Latin of eas}r sentences involving words and constructions of frequent occurrence in Cicero's first Oration against Cataline. ; — Grammar (Goodwin's recommended) 7. Elementary Greek. mentary Composition; Xenophon's Anabasis, Book I. ; Ele- *The attention of teachers is especially called to the importance of Latin Composition as a foundation for College work. SWARTHMORE COLLEGE 8. Advanced Greek. Books II, III, IV; Iliad, Books I, General History of Greece to the death of Alexander. II, III; o. —Anabasis, 31 Elementary German. —Thomas's Practical German Grammar, Part I; Grimm's Mdrchen (twelve selections); Eichendorffs Aus dem Leben eines Taugenichts (Chapters VII and VIII omitted); E. S. Buchheim's Elementary Prose Composition, Part I; Schiller's Wilhelm Tell Equivalents will be accepted. (first three acts). 10. Advanced German. —Thomas's Practical German Grammar (re- Wilhelm Tell (completed); one of Riehl's Culturgeschichtliche Novellen; Freytag's Die Journalisten; Goethe's Iphigenia auf Tauris; E. S. Buchheim's Elementary Prose Composition (Parts II and III); German ballads and lyrics (seven to be memorized). viewed and continued); Schiller's Equivalents will be accepted. — Ability to read easj^ prose at sight, to 11. Elementary French. put into French simple English sentences, and to answer questions on the elements of the Grammar (Grandgent's The Essentials of French Grammar is recommended). About three hundred pages of modern prose should have been read, from the works of at least three different Candidates should be able to pronounce correctly and to reply French to questions on simple subjects. The preparation should occupy two years, with not less than three recitations per week. authors. in 12. Advanced French. French, including plays into French, to answer the syntax as presented Whitney. About seven —Ability to read at sight more difficult of the classic period, to put easy English prose questions involving an advanced knowledge of in the French Grammar of Bevier, Edgren, or hundred and fifty pages should have been read, from the writings of at least five standard authors. The preparation is expected to occupy four years, with not less than three recitations per week. 13. Science. —Two of the Geography, Physics, Zoology, School text-books. 14. following: Botany, Chemistry, Physical as presented in the better class of High- Solid Geometry, and Plane Trigonometry as presented in the text -book of Crockett, Murray, or Crawley. ADMISSION BY CERTIFICATE Graduates of Friends' Schools and of public High Schools approved by the Faculty and Instruction Committee will be admitted to the Freshman Class on certificate of the Principal, but this privilege does not secure in every case admission without condition. SWARTHMORE COLLEGE 32 Students admitted by certificate are received on trial, and the Faculty reserves the right to change their classification or to decline to continue their connection with the College, if they are found not properly prepared. The privilege of sending students on certificate may be withdrawn from any school whose pupils are found to be deficient. Principals of other schools who wish to have students admitted on their recommendation, should correspond with the President concerning each applicant. The College will accept for admission the certificates issued by the College Entrance Examination Board which was organized in 1899 by the Association of Colleges and Preparatory Schools of the Middle States and Maryland. Information as to the examinations held by this Board may be obtained from its secretary, Prof. T. S. Fiske, Station 84, New York City. DEPARTMENTS OF INSTRUCTION The figures in parenthesis after each course refer to the recitation periods per week. For tabular statement number of Courses of of Study leading to the Bachelor's Degree, see pp. 59-62. BIBLICAL LITERATURE Jesse H. Holmes, Professor The courses in Biblical Literature are entirely unsectarian, being based on the results obtained by conservative Christian scholars. It is the intention to give such a general knowledge of the Hebrew Scriptures from the religious, historical, and literary points of view as should be possessed by all intelligent persons in view of the important place those writings have filled in the history of civilization. Course I. Assigned readings in the Old Testament, supplemented by recitations, and by lectures on contemporary history, etc. Required of all Freshmen. (1.) Course Assigned readings II. in the New Old and ments, supplemented by recitations, and by lectures porary history, Course Required of etc. all Sophomores. Course III involves, Hebrew History and definite studies in New (2.) in addition to further Bible readings, be devoted to a study of the Old and years, the (1.) Detailed study of selected portions of the III. Elective for Juniors and Seniors. Bible. Testa- contem- 011 New allied subjects. Testaments Testament being considered It will in alternate Special in 1901-2. attention will be paid to the development of ethical ideas in the Old Testament and New to the culmination of that development in the Testament. BIOLOGY AND GEOLOGY Spencer Trotter, Professor The course in Biology embraces the subjects of Zoology and Botany; Mammalian and 3 Human Anatomy; Physiology; Verte33 SWARTHMORE COLLEGE 34 brate Morphology and Development (Embryology) and Normal ; Histology. facts While it is designed to give a broad and liberal view of the and problems of life as a part of the system of general culture, the course in who Biology is especially valuable to students are looking forward to the study of Medicine. Lectures, demonstrations, and text-books are used in connection with laboratory work. The courses are as follows — Lectures and laboI. a. Elements of Zoology. work covering the practical study of the main types of Course ratory vertebrates and invertebrates, and the consideration of the prob- lems of geographical distribution, environment, heredity, strucand development. Text books: Kingsley's Comparative Zoology; Trotter's Abstract of Zoology. First (4.) ture, function, semester. — b. Elements of Botany. Lectures and laboratory work. Examination of the tissues of the plant, and consideration of the physiology of cell-life and of plant morphology. This includes a course in Economic and Agricultural Botany. Text-books: Potter's Agricultural Botany; Gray's Botany. (Second (4.) semester.) The course in Botany and Zoology embraces a working knowledge of the microscope. Students desiring to do more advanced work in the study of plant structure will be given an opportunity by making special arrangements with the professor. Course II. Physiology. Mammalian and Human Anatomy and —Dissection of the cat as a type; osteology, my- ology, visceral anatomy, the blood-vessel system, and the brain and nervous structures. Detailed study of the human skeleton and the various structures of the human body as compared with those of the lower animals. Lectures and demonstrations. Text-book Anatomy of The Cat, Reighard and Jennings. Reference books Jayne's Mammalian Anatomy; Gray's Human Anatomy. (8=4.) : : — Course III. a. Physiology. Lectures, recitations, and work (includes Normal Histology microscopic examination and study of animal tissues, and practical work in laboratory — SWARTHMORE COLLEGE Physiology). tion by F. S. 35 Text-books: Huxley's Physiology (American ediLee) Foster and Langley's Practical Physiology. ; Reference: Fosters Text-book of Physiology. (8=4.) First semester. — Vertebrate Morphology and Embryology. DissecText-books Martin and Moale's Handbooks of b. tion of types. : Anatomy of Verte- on the subject. (8=4.) Vertebrate Dissection; Huxley's Comparative brates. Collateral reading of literature Second semester. Course IV. tion of all Geology. —A study and practical examina- the important types of rocks ; lectures and dynamic geology study of geological horizons, ; in relation to Sanitary Science is considered Open to all students on structural Geology etc. during the course. above the Freshman Class. (2.) CHEMISTRY Gregory Paul Baxter, Assistant Professor in charge The course years. Its in Chemistry extends through a period of four completion will enable the graduate to enter at once upon a university career as candidate for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy to enter upon professional work as analytical or technical chemist; or to engage in teaching chemistry in a fully ; equipped secondary or college preparatory school. Those who may desire to continue the study of the College course will have suitable will be provided with every beyond the limit work assigned them and facility. The Chemical Laboratory occupies a part ol Science Hall it includes rooms for work in general chemistry; qualitative and quantitative analysis, and organic chemistry; also a commodious ; experimental lecture room, balance room, library, a research laboratory, a basement room for assaying and metallurgy, and store- rooms for apparatus and chemicals. Laboratory supplies are in great part imported, duty free, from Germany, and are in all cases selected with reference to use in the most modern methods of analysis or of experimental demonstration in the lecture room and laboratory. The balances in use are of the best Troemner pattern, and from the very be- SWARTHMORE COLLEGE $6 ginning the student in quantitative analysis is allowed to use only the most exact instruments for weighing, thus cultivating from the start the delicacy of manipulation so essential to the attain- ment of precision in scientific respect to the various works of reference, journals, From Text-books. work. Conveniently located with working rooms is a library of standard etc. the beginning the student is taught to regard the text-book as an aid to the comprehension of phenom- ena and general principles in the science, and as subordinate to and the actual laboratory contact with substances their The following books Chemistry, Remsen Qualitative changes. College direct study of are at present in use Analysis, A. A. ; Noyes Quantitative Analysis, Talbot (for beginners) and Fresenius (for Organic Chemistry, Perkin and Kipping; Introduction to Physical Chemistry, Walker. In special lines, such as iron and steel analysis and technical analysis in general, such special works are used as the subjects call for. advanced students) Course ; General Descriptive Chemistry. I. A studj^ of the metals and non-metals and of the fundamental laws and theories Lectures and laboratory work. of Chemistry. Course II. laboratory work. (4.) Qualitative Analysis, basic and acid; chiefly (8=4.) Course III. a. Organic Chemistry. compounds of carbon. (2.) Lectures on the chem- istry of the b. Organic Chemistry. c. Quantitative Analysis. Chiefly laboratory work. must Course III may (4=2.) and Volumetric. Course have been preceded, by be elected separately. either be accompanied, or a. Course IV. lateral reading. b. — Gravimetric (6=2.) Courses III a and III c III b Laboratory work. a. Physical Lectures Chemistry. and col- (2.) Advanced Quantitative Analysis. Laboratory work in such department of Analytical Chemistry as future interest or occupation of the student. may (6=2.) best suit the SWARTHMORE COLLEGE IV Course a must be preceded by Course III Students electing Course IV must have A knowledge of Calculus tions. 3/ is c. studied Conic Sec- desirable. DRAWING AND PAINTING Beatrice Magill, Director of Studio, and Lecturer The work History of Painting. and critical down historical period Instruction to modern times. recitation. A course of collateral reading required in connection with which the student make a a historical is given by lectures illustrated by photographs is and supplemented by is of this course study of the development of painting from the earliest is expected to careful study of the photographs used for illustration in the lectures. Description and critical analysis of the works under consideration is Course also required. A I. summary of Egyptian, Assyrian, Persian, and Greek Painting, followed by a more extended study of Early ian Painting. (2.) Later Renaissance Painting in Italy. (2.) Course Painting. Flemish II. Ital- First semester. Dutch and Second semester. (2.) First semester. Painting in Germany, Spain, France, and England. (2.) Second semester. Courses I and II are given in alternate years. year 1901-1902 Course A is course of Freehand open to all. During the I is given. Aside from Drawing and its Painting, in the studio, intrinsic value as a means of culand may ture the study leads to habits of close observation, be made an important adjunct in Engineering and Science. ment is to other courses, especially those As the instruction in this depart- altogether individual and adapted to the special needs of is no course marked out for each class, but every student must pursue the following order of work each student, there Course object;;, figure). still III. life, (5=2.) casts — Drawing from geometrical (ornament, details of figure, head or Studio Practice. SWARTHMORE COLLEGE 38 Course IV. color, or pastel) Studio Practice: Painting (either in from still-life oil, water- or flowers; out-door sketching. ENGINEERING AND THE MECHANIC ARTS Wilbur M. Stine, Professor J. Paul J. Williams, Assistant T. W. Heslin, Assistant The course Engineering and the Mechanic Arts in de- is signed to afford a thorough general training for students who intend to engage in the profession of Civil, Mechanical, or Elec- Engineering. trical The location of the College is most favorable for engineering students; the ready access to Philadelphia and to the important manufacturing cities in the vicinity affords opportunities for in- structive visits to a great variety of industrial and engineering works. The course of Engineering of instruction in both the theory and practice is arranged with the view of furnishing to its graduates a liberal preparation for immediate usefulness in the works, or field, in more or less subordinate positions. By adding familiarity with commercial demands and practices to the theory and practice of the school, they may success full}'" underoffice, take the design of machinery, the superintendence of works, or the conduct of engineering enterprises. The in the instruction exercises in is given both by lectures and recitations, and shop, laboratory, and draughting- field, room there is constant opportunity for individual instruction. Throughout the entire course the student is familiarized with the methods and processes of the Mechanic Arts by systematic inThe object is to avoid struction both in wood and metal working. mere manual routine in such exercises, and to make them a means for the development of the powers of observation and judgment, as well as for the acquisition of mechanical skill. The Held equipment of the department is ample for practice in surveying and locations, and opportunity is given the student to become familiar with the use and adjustment of the apparatus. The Draughting Rooms are large, well-lighted, and furnished SWARTHMORE COLLEGE with adjustable tables, models, etc., 39 and are open for work during the greater part of the day. The Engineering Laboratory contains a ten-horse-power versteam engine, an Olsen's testing machine, arranged for compressive, and transverse tests, steam engine indicators, apparatus for hydraulic and steam engine experiments, and other tical tensile, valuable instruments and appliances. A friend of the College has recently presented an Olsen screw-gear testing machine to the Laboratory. This machine has an ultimate capacity of 100,000 pounds for tension and com- Other additions to the equipment are micrometers and deflection strains; and attachments to the smaller Olsen machine for testing specimens of pression tests. for tension, compression, cement. Shop Work. This portion of the work holds an important place in the general engineering course, being pursued through the first three years. not desired to impart the It is skill of the workman, but rather to lay a foundation in the elements of shop practice upon which mature judgment and observation trained may establish successful practice. The course in woodworking covers framing, and woodturning. instruction in joining, This preliminary work is followed by the elements of pattern making. The work in forging is based on a set of exercises involving drawing, bending, upsetting, welding, and tempering. This course is followed by a short one in foundry practice. Machine practice is pursued through two years of the course. During the first year, practice is given in bench and vise work, followed by lathe work, and exercises on the planer, shaper, and universal milling machine. tapping, screw-cutting, and The various exercises work to standard gauges. During the second year, after completing the design draft of a machine, such as a lathe, small project is also involve and pump, or engine, the completely constructed, affording the student a thor- ough experience in shop construction. The Machine Shop contains an excellent assortment of tools, SWARTHMORE COLLEGE 40 including engine screw-cutting speed lathes, (simple lathes and back geared), an iron planer, a complete universal mill- ing machine, a of set milling cutters, a shaper, a twist- emery and swivel), lathe chucks (combination, independent, scroll, and drill), a milling magrinder, upright drills, an drill centre lathe grinder, grinder, a mill grinder, (plain vises chine chuck, a rotary planer chuck, planer centres, a set of Bett's standard gauges, surface sets of twist drills, reamers, a complete set of steam etc., together with the chisels, files, etc. plates (Brown mandrels, screw plates, fitters' tools, many & Sharpe), taps and with pipe vise, ratchet dies, drill, necessary small tools, hammers, Additions are constantly being made to this by manufacture in the shops or by purchase. Power is furnished by a 10x24 Corliss steam engine and a sixty horse power return tubular boiler, the former fitted with an improved indicator, and the latter with the as collection they are needed, either necessary attachments for determining its efficiency, etc. The Woodworking Shop contains benches with vises and of woodworking tools, grindstone, and woodturning lathes. The Smith Shop contains tools, bench, and vise. forges, anvils, and sets sets of black- smith The Foundry variety of patterns, The contains a brass furnace, moulders' benches, a and full sets of moulders' tools. vary somewhat from year to year, but in general are represented by the following arrangement of details of the course the studies FRESHMAN YEAR — Use of Instruments and Elements of Structural and Machine Drawing; Representation of Materials of Construction; Projections; Pen Lettering; Drawings from Objects, these being the Exercises in Woodworking and Machine Practice, with Tracings and Blue Drafting Prints. Shop Work. —Woodworking, Forging, and Founding. SOPHOMORE YEAR Drawing— Plates Geometry; Tinting; Pen Complete Working Drawings, Tracings, and Blue Prints from a Simple Machine or Structure. Topography, in the course in Descriptive SWARTHMORE COLLEGE Work—Vise Work; Shop 41 Chipping and Filing; Machine Practice. Point, Right Line and Plane; Figures of —The Descriptive Geometry Revolution; Intersections. (First semester.) —Theory and Practice; the Use and Adjustment of Instru(Second semester.) ments. Graphics The Elements of Graphical Statics and the Investigation of Simple Structures. Surveying — JUNIOR YEAR Mechanics of Materials —Theory and Strains; of Elasticity; Stresses Applied Mechanics of Materials of Construction. Machine Design Kinematics; Simple Machines. — — — — Surveying. Shop Work— Preparation of Working Drawings, and the Construction of a Machine Project, such as a Lathe Head. Laboratory— Quantitative Determinations in the Mechanics of Ma- Structures The Materials of Construction. Thermodynamics Theory of the Heat Engine; Steam and Gas Engines. Surveying Field Practice with Level, Transit, and Plane Table; Stadia Experimental Valve Setting. terials; Work with the Steam Engine, including SENIOR YEAR Railway and Roadway Engineering — Surveys and Study of ConstrucRailway Economics Theory of Curves. Hydraulics Mechanics of Fluids; Theory and Practice of Water Motors. Theory of Errors General Discussion; Application to Engineering tion ; ; — — Calculations. Specifications —The of Complete Specifications for a Drawings and Estimates. Metallurgy Lectures on the Metallurgy of Iron and Steel. Drawing and Design The Design of a Structure or a Machine with full Working Drawings, Tracings, and Blue Prints. Bridge and Roof Preparation Structural Project, including — — Truss Design. Power Plants— Steam and Power Hydraulic Plants; Electric Lighting and Plants. ENGLISH LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE William Hyde Appleton, Anglo-Saxon and World Literature John Russell Hayes, English Literature, Rhetoric, and Composition Myrtie E. Furman, Elocution and Oratory. The course years, in instruction English Literature extends being given by recitations through four and lectures. SWARTHMORE COLLEGE 42 During with the Literature, The English Language this time the studied in connection is from the Anglo-Saxon period particular feature of the course is to the present. the critical reading in the class-room of representative authors, mainly Chaucer, Spenser, Shakespeare, Milton, Pope, Wordsworth, Tennyson, Emerson, and Whittier. Peculiarities of style and language are considered,, and every effort is made towards a thorough comprehension of The the literature studied. author's tions to the history of the time, and life is his those of his contemporaries. By the student will be enabled to form an style discussed in its rela- works are compared with this course it is expected that intelligent estimate of the and merits of the great authors of English Literature. So far as practicable, the work Rhetoric and in Literature, in Composition, and in Elocution and Oratory, is co-ordinated. from the work in Literature; and in Elocution and Oratory the development of intelligent oral expression is considered to depend upon the study, as The subjects for essays are drawn in part literature, of the selections read. a. fessor Assistant Professor English Literature. Hayes and Pro- Appleton. Course Essays of I. Lamb and Emerson ; Poetry of Words- worth, Scott, Shelley, Keats, Tennyson, Arnold, and Whittier. The aim cipline and here, as in all of literary values. is towards intellectual disthan towards an appreciation the courses, spiritual insight, no less Portions of other authors are read historical survey of the Greek and Roman literatures ; and a short is given, in order to illustrate the debt of the English to the earlier great Selected books are assigned also for private reading, and students write critical reports thereon. Required of Freshmen in Letters and Engineering. (4.) literatures. Course II. selected plays predecessors ; One of Marlowe's plays; Lodge's Rosalynde; of Shakespeare, with comparative stud;y of his Milton ; minor poets and teenth and eighteenth centuries. essayists of the seven- Lectures on the Elizabethan and Private readings and reports. Required Sophomores in Letters. (4.) For the Sophomores in Engineering a separate course following periods. of is SWARTHMORE COLLEGE 43 given, in which are read representative authors from Chaucer to Arnold. (2.) III. Anglo-Saxon: Sweet's Primer, Cynewulfs. First semesElene; Lectures on the Anglo-Saxon period. (4.) Course ter. Chaucer; Spenser's Faery Queene; private reading of contemporary authors; Lectures on the Transition and Middle English periods, and on the Development of the English Language. Second semester. (4.) Required of Juniors in Letters. Elective for Seniors and Juniors in Arts, Science, and Engineering. Besides the required class-work there is in all classes opportunity offered for students to pursue additional reading and investigation under the direction of the professors. b. World This is Professor Appleton. Literature. a course in the study of great classics, other than English, belonging to ancient and semester —and is devoted mainly to modern Homer—the literature. Iliad The first and the Odyssey Greek Drama; the second semester mainly to is conducted through the medium of standard English translations, together with lectures by the instructor, and oral discussions and written abstracts by the students. (4.) Dante. to the The course Elective for c. all Seniors and Juniors. Rhetoric and Composition. Course Assistant Professor Hayes. Practice in clear and logical expression. Studies Bunyan, De Quincey, Burke, Thackeray, Lowell, Carlyle, and Hawthorne. Required of all Freshmen. (1.) I. in the diction of Course Study of prose masterpieces of Froude, StevenNewman, and Bryce; essays and debates. Required of Sophomores in Arts, Letters, and Science. II. son, Arnold, Ruskin, (1.) Course III. Study of literary invention and expression as by Lamb, Landor, Newman, Ruskin, Pater, James, Garland, and Burroughs writing of themes and critical papers. Lectures on Prose Style. Required of Juniors in Arts, (1.) Letters, and Science. illustrated ; SWARTHMORE COLLEGE 44 Course IV. quired of d. all The preparation Elocution and Oratory. The aim cultivate Assistant Professor in this course is to stimulate Furman. mental activity, to the imagination, and to arouse the sensibilities theory being that effective expression impressions. Hence the student is is enter into the spirit of the literature Due attention is ; the a result of vivid mental given exercises whereby he learns to utilize his experiences, to vivify his thought, self. Re- of graduating theses. Seniors. and make it and thus a part of him- given to voice culture, and to certain phases of physical training which tend to bring the body into harmony with the mind and to make it a more perfect instru- ment of expression. The course extends through four years, two periods per week, and consists of voice culture and drill in enunciation; original work, including extemporaneous speech and debate; recitation of typical orations in connection with the work required under Rhetoric and Composition; careful interpretation of Shale espeare and other standard authors. Oratorical Associations The Swarthmore College annual contest, open to all and Prizes Oratorical Association conducts an students, the winner in which rep- resents the College in the annual contest of the Pennsylvania Inter- Collegiate Oratorical Association. The President's Prise of fifty dollars is contested for by Sophomore and Freshman Classes, and invested in some permanent memento of the successful class for representatives of the presentation to the College. The Delta Upsilon Prise of twenty-five dollars is competed for in the College Oratorical contest. The Sprout Testimonial of twenty-five dollars, offered by Hon. William C. Sproul, of the Class of 1891, is awarded as prizes in an oratorical contest open to members of the Junior Class. Prises for extemporaneous speaking: two prizes of twenty- SWARTHMORE COLLEGE five dollars each, the 45 one contested for by the young men and one by offered during the last three years young women, have been by a friend of the College. The Hicks Testimonial of fifteen dollars, given annually by Frederick Cocks Hicks, of the Class of 1893, is contested for by members of the Eunomian Literary Society. The Underzvood-Ponder Testimonial, a silver cup given by William G. Underwood, of the Class of 1887, and James W. Ponder, of the Class of 1890, is annually contested for by the literary societies of the College. FRENCH LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE Edward H. Magill, Professor Emeritus and Lecturer Isabelle Bronk, Assistant Professor in charge The instruction in this department has as a basis the study of ordinary colloquial French as a living language. Though reading is begun very early, colloquial French (including pronunciation) continues to receive the most attention throughout the The student will then be ready to be brought more artificial (rhetorical) forms of expresAs sion constantly occurring in the higher grades of literature. far as practicable, French is made the language of the classfirst two years. into contact with the room. In the later years a series of lectures is given on the more prominent French writers. In these lectures, the biographical element purposely receives especial attention no attempt is made ; exhaustive treatment, but the aim is to make the student familiar with the leading works of the authors chosen. at Elements of Grammar, with Composition. Beginners' Reader, followed by narrative prose (Sarcey's Le Piano de Jeanne, or Mme. de Witt's Sur la Pente, Merimee's Colomba, George Sand's La Mare au Diable) and by modern plays. (4.) Course I. Course II. Grammar continued, with prose Composition (Marcou's Exercises and Grandgent's Selections, Parts I, II, and Prose selected from the writings of A. France (Vol. Ill, III). SWARTHMORE COLLEGE 46 Magill's Series), Balzac, Daudet, Series), Victor Hugo, and J. Claretie (Vol. IV, Magill's others, with private reading; Corneille Ruy (one play), Racine (one play), Hugo's Moliere's L'Avare and Course French Literature completed). XIV court of Louis Louis XIV Prose Composition III. (ed. Bias or Hernani, Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme. in the XVIIth as a center or focus. Hachette et Cie) (4.) (Grandgent's Selections, century, with the Voltaire's Le Siecle de Literary and social tendencies . Moliere's Les Precieuses Ridicules and Les Femmes : Savantes; Le Cid; Racine, La Fontaine (ed. Hachette et Cie), The literature in the XVIIIth century: Voltaire's Prose (extracts, edited by Cohn and Woodward) Beaumarchais' Le Manage de Figaro, etc. (4.) Corneille's Boileau, etc. ; Course IV. Prose Composition continued. XVIIth century Prose authors La Bruyere. Harper's Selected Essays of de Sevigne, and others) Sainte-Beuve, with illustrative readings French Lyric Poetry, of the (Descartes, Pascal, Bossuet, Mme. ; ; Canfield's Selections, with special attention to Victor martine, and from the reading. more modern poets. earliest times to the present, Dictation, memorizing, Course V. some all collateral and conversation in French are re- who de- the four courses. If circumstances sire to specialize in XVIth accompanied by (4.) quired, throughout in Hugo, La- Lectures on French Literature French demand will be given it, students an opportunity for study restricted field of literature, such as (a) literature of the century, (b) classic letters and memoirs, (c) contemporary literature, (d) Old French. (4.) International Correspondence: Beginning in the second year, an opportunity is given to students to carry on, under direction, a correspondence with French students. GERMAN LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE Benjamin F. Battin, Assistant Professor in charge The course of study in this department is designed to afford grammatical and linguistic training, and (for those who have not SWARTHMORE COLLEGE 47 course) a degree of literary culture. It brings with the character and genius of the German touch the student into had a full classical people. Emphasis is laid upon the relations of the German to the Engsyntax lish and to the classical languages upon etymology and howcourses, The events. political and conditions social upon and ever, are literary rather than historical and philological. ; ]n the class-room translation into English is discontinued as soon as possible and expressive reading of the German text is substituted the students begin early to use the German in recitaThe idiomatic sentence and modern colloquial language tions. ; form the basis of the work in composition. Reading and trans- lating at sight are cultivated. Other texts may at times be substituted for some of those in- dicated. Course I. Thomas's Practical German Grammar, Part I Grimm's Marchen (twelve selections) EichendorfF s Aus dem Leben eines Taugenichts (Chapters VII and VIII omitted) ; E. S. Buchheim's Elementary Prose Composition, Part I; Schil(4.) ler's Wilhelm Tell (first three acts) This course is for those who have had no preliminary train. ing in German; it presupposes a discipline of several years' lan- guage work in Latin and French; and prepares for progressive and independent work. It aims to give a definite knowledge of German grammar; an ability to understand spoken German, to converse during the recitation, to summarize in German the topics discussed in class, to write easy German, to acquire a correct pronunciation, and to memorize simple lyrics. Course II. Thomas's Practical German Grammar viewed and continued) Schiller's Wilhelm Tell (completed) ; (re; one of Riehl's Culturgesc/iichtliche Novellen; Freytag's Die JournalIphigenia auf Tauris; E. S. Buchheim's islen; Goethe's Elementary Prose Composition (Parts II and III) German balLectures in German lads and lyrics (seven to be memorized). conditions. (4.) on literary characters and social This course will prepare students to read such German textbook, as may be used in the scientific and literary departments. ; SWARTHMORE COLLEGE 48 Course Harzreise; III. Lectures sen. Schiller's Wallenstein (ed. Freytag's in Aus dem Staat German on the Private reading Literature. : Selections Carruth) Friedrichs of history Heine's ; des Gros- German from Sherer's History of German Prose Literature ; Nevinson's Life of Schiller. Composition, using texts and free composition. (4.) German Course IV. Goethe's Dichtung und Wahrheit; Lessing's Nathan der Weise; Freytag's Doktor Luther; Kleist's Der Prinz Friedrich von Homburg; Grillparzer's Sappho. Private reading Sime's Life of Goethe; Gerstacker's Irrfahrten. Lectures on Goethe. Free Prose Composition. German. This course is conducted in (4.) Courses III and IV presuppose a systematic knowledge of the grammar and the ability to converse readily. summaries German in The students present of the texts read and oral discussions of as- signed topics. Course V. (1901-1902.) German Literature of the XlXth The method is largely that of the seminar. The grammar is studied from the pedagogical standpoint lectures are given by the students, on the grammar and on literary or social topics. Methods of German literary criticism are studied as well as prose and verse composition. This course is conducted in German. century. ; Admission by special application. (4.) Course V. (1902-1903.) (a.) History of the German Drama. (b.) German Scientific Readings. (1.) (c) (2.) German Lyrics and Ballads. (1.) The Deutscher Verein meets once a week for conversation and social enjoyment. International Correspondence: Students who desire it are given an opportunity to carry on, under direction, correspondence with students in German institutions. GREEK LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE William Hyde Appleton, Professor Mary Corwin Lane, Assistant The following statement is intended to give a general idea work done in the Greek department. Grcum- of the range of SWARTHMORE COLLEGE stances may at times require the authors different order, named 49 to be read in a and some substitutions may also be made. Course I. Herodotus, Books VI and VII; or Thucydides. Study of Persian and Peloponnesian Wars. Homer, The Odyssey, Books IX, X, XI, XII. Sight reading in other parts of the poem. Required in the Arts Course. (4.) Course II. Plato, Apology and Crito with parts of Phaedo. Study of Socrates from Xenophon and Plato. Exercises in Greek Composition based upon texts read. Aeschylus, Prometheus; or Sophocles, Antigone. Study of the Greek Drama. Required in the Arts Course. (4.) Course III. Greek Oratory: Lysias, Isocrates, or Demoswith a review of Greek history to the death of Alexander. Euripides, Alcestis, or Iphigenia among the Taurians. Elective. thenes, (40 Course IV. Aristophanes, one play. Theocritus, selected Lectures on Greek Literature. short course in Modern Greek as follows Gardner's Short and Easy Modern Greek A Idylls. : Grammar; Modern Greek Ballads Anna Sewall's Black Beauty, Modern Greek. Newspaper Greek, illustrated by ; as published in the Atlantis. Elective. (4.) FOR BEGINNERS IN GREEK Course V. oral and written. The Grammar, with thorough drill on forms, Xenophon, Anabasis, Book I. Some chapters of the Greek Testament. Required of Freshmen have offered no Greek for admission. (4.) in Arts who Course VI. Xenophon, Anabasis, Books II, III, IV. Homer, Iliad, Books I, II, III. Sight reading. Greek Composition. Required of Sophomores in Arts who have offered no Greek for admission. (4.) HISTORY AND POLITICAL ECONOMY Wm. I. Hull, History, Economics, and Social Science Jesse H. Holmes, History Gustav A. Kleene, Economics, and Social Science The group of tory, Politics, 4 — studies included within this department HisEconomics, and Social Science— is designed to SWARTHMORE COLLEGE 50 furnish information necessary for intelligent citizenship, and to provide a preliminary training for those who intend to engage in the practice of law, journalism, business, or the public service. given by means of lectures, text-books and collatand oral and written reports by the students on assigned topics. In the upper classes each student is required to make an independent and detailed study of some assigned or chosen subject; for this purpose the library contains a good working collection of public documents and reports, both Federal and Instruction is eral reading, State, in addition to standard treatises. In connection with the made to neighboring charitable course in Social Science, visits are and correctional institutions. History and Politics (4.) Course I. Open to Course Dr. Holmes, II. Reformation. The Ancient Orient, Greece, Rome. Freshmen and Sophomores. The Middle Ages, Renaissance, Sophomores and Freshmen. Dr. Holmes, Open (4.) to *Course III. Dr. Hull, England its History, Government, and Industry. (4.) Open to Juniors and Sophomores. Offered : in 1901-1902. *Course IV. The Old Regime and the French Revolution; Europe in the Nineteenth Century. (4.) Open to Seniors and Juniors. Offered in 1902-1903. Course V. Dr. Hull, Problems United States Biography. Open (4.) in American History; and Juniors. to Seniors Economics and Social Science Course To-day. tion; I. Elements of Economics. Industrial Problems of (Including Labor Organizations; Strikes and Arbitra- Co-operation and Profit-Sharing; Industrial Betterment; Immigration The Unemployed The EightHour Day; Women and Children in Industry; Monopolies and Trusts.) Open to Sophomores and Juniors. (4.) Course II. Public Finance. Money and Bimetallism. Banking. Open to Juniors and Seniors. (4.) Laborers' Insurance Courses III and ; IV ; are offered in alternate years. ; SWARTHMORE COLLEGE 5* Course III. Socialism Its History and Claims. Industrial Municipal Problems. Reformers of the Xineteenth Century. Not given in 1901-1902. (4.) Open to Juniors and Seniors. : Elements of Sociology. Social Problems of (Including Crime and Punishment; the Insane and Course IV. To-day. Pauperism and Charily" Tenement Houses Y\ omanhood and the Family the Children of the Poor Social Settlements Intemperance and Methods of Temperance Reform the 14. Salvation Army's Social Work the Negro the Indian. ) I. Course had who have Open to Seniors, and to Juniors Feeble-Blinded ; : : ; ; ; ; ; ; LATIN LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE Ferris W. Price. Professor ^Lvry Corwix Lake, Assistant Horace. Odes: Cicero, Letters (selections Latin Composition based on Cicero's Letters; Mythology. 4. Required in the Arts Course. Course Course XXI. XXII I. tive passages in the Horace. Satires and Episi'es: Livy. Books II. ; History of Latin Literature, lectures with from the most important authors. (4.) I. illustra- Required Arts Course. Course and other remains of early Latin Phormio; Cicero, one or more of the philosophical essays Hymns and other late Latin. Required in the Arts Course. 4. III. Inscriptions Plautus, Trinummiis and Captivi; Terence, ; 1 i Course IV. Germania (in part Catullus, a brief course |. ; Tacitus. Agrieola and Juvenal, four or five satires; Lucretius and Pliny the Younger, selections. The second semester is devoted to a study of Virgil, with special attention to the Georgics, an the last six books of the Azneid. Elective. 4. ( : ) Course V. Cicero, selections from the orations Ovid, porMetamorphoses; exercises in Latin Composition base on Cicero's oration, Pro Roscio Amerino. Elective f (4. ; tions of the ! ) students sufficiently prepared. COURSE VI. A rapid study of the essentials of Latin grammar, followed by considerable carefully graded reading; emphasis SWARTHMORE COLLEGE 52 laid upon the most important features of the Latin language and Roman life. (4.) This beginners' course is open to Juniors and Seniors who offered no Latin for admission to College and is is required of such students in the Letters Course. all Sight-reading and other collateral work required in is all the Courses. MATHEMATICS AND ASTRONOMY Susan Course Solid (a) I. Cunningham, J. Geometry Plane Trigonometry (Loney). unless presented for entrance. (6) (4.) Professor (Phillips and Fisher) Required of all Freshmen, ; Algebra (C. Smith's Treatise, Chapters XIX-XXXII, Required of Freshmen in Science and (2.) with omissions). Engineering, elective for other students. Course Differential CalII. Conic Sections (C. Smith) Elective in the Arts and Letters (Edwards). (4.) Courses, required in the Engineering Course for Science Course, ; culus ; see p. 61. Course Equations. Course, see The III. Integral Calculus (4.) Required in (Edwards) ; Differential Engineering Course; for Science p. 61. following Elective Courses are offered Modern Pure Geometry. An advanced course. Subjects Harmonic Ranges and Pencils, the theories of Involution, 1. treated : Perspective, Similar Figures, Reciprocation, Inversion, etc. Higher Algebra, beginning with the Theory of Equaand Panton) and continuing with Invariants, etc. 2. tions (Burnside Plane 3. Curves. will be Analytic The course will Geometry, including Higher Plane be a continuation of Conic Sections and based on Clebsch-Lindemann's Geometric 4. Solid Analytic Geometry (C. Smith). 5. Curve Tracing. 6. Trigonometric Series, Spherical Harmonics, 7. Elementary Quaternions (Kelland and etc. Ta.it). (Byerly). SWARTHMORE COLLEGE 8. Advanced Trigonometry (Loney). 9. Young's General Astronomy. 10. 53 Chauvenet's Spherical and Practical Astronomy. 11. Theoretical Astronomy (Orbit Determination). PEDAGOGY President Birdsall This course is years thereafter. Senior Classes offered in 1901-1902, It is elective for who members are preparing to teach. and in alternate of the Junior and The work consists of a careful study of the history of educational progress from the time of Comenius lectures on the history of education in America and on the present school systems; a study of Method (as it is presented in the works of De Garmo and McMurry, and as it is to be observed in contemporary schools) and of the Psychological Foundations of Education (as presented in the work of William T. Harris) a special study of the doctrines of Froebel and Herbart. The course in Psychology (see p. 55) is closely related to that in Pedagogy, and mav be regarded as constituting a part of ; ; it. (4.) PHYSICAL TRAINING W. S. Cum mings, M. D., Director for the men students Mary V. Mitchell Green, M. D., Director for the women Sarah Brooke Farquhar, students Instructor The system of Physical Training is based upon a thorough and careful examination of each student. The record of measurements and other tests affords a means of noting progressive development, and is, in large part, the basis upon which exercises are prescribed. Particular attention whose physical development is is given to all individuals below the normal, special work being prescribed for such, in order to produce, as far as possible, an evenly developed and healthy organism. All athletic sports are under the immediate supervision of and only those students who are in proper physical the Directors, condition are allowed to participate. Great care is also taken to keep games and athletic contests within such limits as will make SWARTHMORE COLLEGE 54 them only a proper means of exercise and and thus of recreation, work of the College. Two periods per week of Gymnasium work is required of all Freshmen and Sophomores, and of women students throughout real assistance to the the College course. PHYSICS George A. Hoadley, The Physical Laboratory Professor provided with apparatus for determinations in the mechanics of solids and fluids, in heat, sound, light, electricity, is and magnetism ; and with apparatus suitable for Most of this has been selected with care from the best American and foreign makes some is of home manufacture. The co-operation of the Engineering Department and the increasing skill of our students enable us to make each lecture experiments. ; 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 Power for running dynamos and and special apparatus. for other purposes supplied. is FOR STUDENTS IN ARTS AND LETTERS Course I. General Physics. This course consists of the investigation of the general laws of Physics of their present application. recitations, discussed. is accompanied by experimental Open to Sophomores. (4.) Course Open The work II. and the consideration done by lectures and verification of the laws Heat, Magnetism, Electricity, and Light (4.) to Juniors. FOR STUDENTS IN SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING These courses are intended verification of the to be pre-eminently work in laws of Physics. The consisting largely of laboratory practical, the investigation and recitation work covers the topics treated in Ganot's Physics, or other text-books of equal rank, and is supplemented by lectures on the various branches of the subject. Course III. Applied Liquids, and Sound. (4.) Mechanics and Dynamics. Open to Sophomores. Gases, SWARTHMORE COLLEGE Course IV. Magnetism, Heat, 55 Electricity, and Light. Open to Juniors. Course V. Practical Measurements in Magnetism and Electricity. The work of this course is largely experimental, the (4.) design being to familiarize the student with the practice and methods of measurement. Open (2.) to Juniors. Course VI. Applied Electricity, supplementing Course V by the practical study of the application of the electric current 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 measurements of electrical quantities, is accompanied by text-book work in Thompson's Dynamo Electric Machinery, and by reading and class-discussion Visits to the electrical plants of the of current electrical journals. neighboring villages and cities are made the purpose of studying the machinery Open at convenient times, for in actual use. (8=4.) to Seniors. PSYCHOLOGY AND PHILOSOPHY Spencer Trotter, Brain Physiology Jesse H. Holmes, Psychology and Philosophy — Psychology. This course is introduced by a study of Brain Physiology and of the organs of special sense, by means of textbook, models, and dissections. Then follows an inquiry into the conditions of states of consciousness, with James's Psychology (Briefer Course) as a text-book. Philosophy. —The work the development of a basis. in (4.) First semester. Philosophy is a historical study of human thought, using Weber's text-book as Each important system is studied at least in outline, and especial attention is given to the prominent. Second semester. (4.) ethical bearings of the more COURSES FOR THE BACHELOR'S DEGREE Every candidate for the Bachelor's Degree will be required to complete one of the following four Regular Courses : Arts, and Engineering. They have been arranged with a view to making them as nearly as possible equivalent in amount of work involved, and each is intended to insure liberal Letters, Science, culture, while chosen it provides opportunity for extended study in one field. The Course course and is in Arts. —The characteristic feature of this the study of Classical Antiquity, including the language literature of the Greeks and Romans, with their phy, religion, and political and social history. art, philoso- While this course affords that broad culture which should be the foundation of anyit may be made to afford special preparation law or journalism by including electives in History and Economics; or it may be directed toward the study of medicine by choosing electives in Biology and Chemistry. It leads to the degree of Bachelor of Arts. subsequent career, for — This course, as the name language and of the great modern nations —the English-speaking peoples, Latin, the French and the Germans —being the central The Course in Letters. in- dicates, is distinctly a culture course, the literature feature. always a desirable element in general culture, may be taken throughout the course increased time is given to History and Eco; nomics. A judicious choice of electives will afford special prepa- ration for journalism, law, teaching, and other professions. It leads to the degree of Bachelor of Letters. — The Course in Science. While this course provides for advanced study in Mathematics, and for an introduction to both French and German, its characteristic feature is extended work in Physics, Chemistry, and Biology. A choice of suitable electives will secure special preparation for the study of medicine, or 56 SWARTHMORE COLLEGE 5/ for engaging in manufacturing or commercial pursuits. It leads to the degree of Bachelor of Science. The Course in Engineering. ing adapted to the needs of civil, —This course offers a train- mechanical, and electrical en- gineers, as well as of the large class who are to be concerned with the material interests of the country, with manufacturing, with any of the many other occupations embraces liberal and technical instruc- industrial pursuits, or with allied to engineering. It tion in the mathematical, physical, and graphical sciences, and their applications, in practical field engineering, in the arts of design and construction, in the use of tools, materials, and machinery, and in processes. It leads to the degree of Bachelor of Science in Engineering. — Elective Studies. The following studies, required with few exceptions in at least one of the Courses, are offered as elective in the others. The freedom of election will sometimes be restricted by the exigencies of the College programme. Astronomy, Geology, Biblical Literature, German, Biology, Greek, Chemistry, History, Drawing and Painting, Latin, History of Painting, Mathematics, Economics, Pedagogy, Elocution, Physics, English, Social Science, French, World Literature. Irregular Courses of Study may be pursued only in special cases and by approval of the Faculty. In the absence of definite arrangement in advance, students will be required to take the studies of one of the Regular Courses. —A Partial Courses of Study. limited number of teachers and other persons of sufficiently mature age, who may wish to improve themselves in particular studies, will be received without examination, and will be allowed to elect, in any of the regular SWARTHMORE COLLEGE 58 classes, such work as they can pursue to advantage. in all cases correspond in Preparatory Medical Course. Chemistry, and Physics, work the study of medicine. They should advance with the President. is — In the departments of Biology, planned to prepare students for Several leading Medical Schools of Phila- delphia and elsewhere will admit to the second year of their who present, with their diplomas, satisfactory undergraduate work equivalent to the first year of the medical course. Students who desire to take advantage of this arrangement should confer with the professors in charge of the departments of science not later than the end of their Sophomore courses students certificates of vear. THE COURSE For ARTS IN of Electives, see p. 57. list FRESHMAN YEAR FIRST SEMESTER. Greek, Latin, 1; PERIODS. 4 Greek, Latin, 4 4 4 Mathematics or Elective, Biology or History, Bible Literature, SECOND SEMESTER. PERIODS. 4 4 4 4 Mathematics or Elective, Composition, Biology or History, Elocution, 2; Gymnasium, 1; 2. SOPHOMORE YEAR Greek, One Greek, 4 4 Latin, One of the following: Mathematics, \ 4 French, German, j EconoPhysics History or or ' mics, " 1; ' mics, 4 Bible Literature, 4 of the following: Mathematics, English, 1 4 French, German, J History or Physics or Econo- English, ' 4 Latin, Composition, 1; 4 Elocution, 2; Gymnasium, 2. JUNIOR YEAR Greek or Elective, Latin, Elective, Elective, Elective, 4 Greek or 4 4 Latin, Elective, Elective, Elective, 4 2 Themes, Elective, 4 4 4 4 2 1. SENIOR YEAR Greek or Elective, 4 Psychology, 4 4 4 2 Elective, Elective, Elective, Greek or Elective, Philosophy, 4 4 4 4 2 Elective, Elective, Elective, Graduating Thesis. who present Elementary and Advanced Greek for admission Csee pp. 30-31), will be required to continue the study for two years in College, and may elect it for the remaining two years. To those who present no Greek for admission, an opportunity is afforded to begin the language in College, but they must continue it during the entire four Students years. numbered been offered for admisin the Freshman year; if it has been offered, the Elective substituted for it must be approved by the student's If sion, the Mathematics 14 (p. 31) has not Mathematics must be taken Adviser. One year of History, one year nomics are required for graduation. Two years of Modem Language in either French or German being Four years of Gymnasium work of Science, and one semester must be taken Course II in College, completed. are required of the of Eco- women students. 59 THE COURSE For list LETTERS IN of Electives, see p. 57. FRESHMAN YEAR SECOND SEMESTER. FIRST SEMESTER. PERIODS. English, 4 French or German, 4 Mathematics or Elective, 4 Biology or History or Latin, .4 French or German, Mathematics or Elective, Biology or History or Latin, 1; 4 4 4 ._ . Bible Literature, PERIODS. English, Composition, 1; Elocution, 2; Gymnasium, . .4 2. SOPHOMORE YEAR English, Two English, French or German, Two of the following: History, 4 4 French or German, of the following: History, 4 4 4 4 4 Economics, Latin, Mathematics, Physics, Bible Literature, 1; Economics, Composition, 4 4 4 "1 Latin, 4 4 Mathematics, 4 I Physics, 4 J 15 Elocution, 2; Gymnasium, | j- 2. JUNIOR YEAR English, French or German, English, 4 4 4 4 4 Elective, Elective, Elective French or German, Elective, Elective, Elective, Themes, 4 4 4 4 4 1. SENIOR YEAR French or German, French or German, 4 4 4 4 4 Psychology, Elective, Elective Elective Philosophy, Elective, Elective, Elective, 4 4 4 4 4 Graduating Thesis. Students are required to take at least two years of both French and in College, completing Course IV in either language. If the Mathematics numbered 14 (p. 31) has not been offered for admission, Mathematics must be taken in the Freshman year; if it has been offered, the Elective substituted for it must be approved by the student's German Adviser. Two years of History, one year of Science, and one year of Economics are required for graduation. Juniors and Seniors who have presented no Latin for admission are required to complete Course Four years of Gymnasium 60' VI in Latin (p. 51). work are required of the women students. COURSE IN SCIENCE For of Electives, see p. 57- list FRESHMAN YEAR PERIODS. 4 FIRST SEMESTER. Biology, Chemistry, 4 4 4 2 French or German, Mathematics or Elective, Mathematics (Algebra), Bible Literature, 1; Composition, PERIODS. SECOND SEMESTER. ...4 Biology, Chemistry, 6=4 French or German, Mathematics or Elective, Mathematics (Algebra), 4 4 2 Elocution, 2; Gymnasium, 1; 2. SOPHOMORE YEAR 8=4 Chemistry, Geology, Physics, French or German, Mathematics or English, Bible Literature, 1; Geology, 4 4 4 Physics, Composition, 8=4 Chemistry, 2 2 4 4 4 French or German, Mathematics or English, Elocution, 2; Gymnasium, 1; 2. JUNIOR YEAR 8=4 Biology, Physics, French or German, Mathematics or Elective, Chemistry or Elective, 8=4 Biology, Physics, French or German, 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 Elective, Chemistry or Elective, Themes, 1. SENIOR YEAR Biology or Physics, Chemistry Biology or 8=4 Psychology, 4 4 Elective, Elective, Elective, 4 4 or Physics, Chemistry or 8=4 Philosophy, 4 4 4 4 Elective, Elective, Elective, Graduating Thesis. Physics, Chemistry, Biology: students must take all that is offered in one of these sciences, and two years' work in each of the other two. One year of French and one year of German must be taken in College, Course II in German being completed. If the Mathematics numbered 14 (p. 31) has not been offered for admission, Mathematics (Solid Geometry and Plane Trigonometry periods) must be taken in Freshman year; if it has been offered, the Elective substituted must be approved by the student's Adviser. Students choosing Physics as their major subject must take Mathematics (through Calculus) those choosuntil the middle of Junior year ing Chemistry as their major subject must take Mathematics, two periods per week, through the Sophomore year (through Conic Sections). — ; Four years of Gymnasium work are required of the women students. 61 THE COURSE For list ENGINEERING IN of Electives, see p. 57. FRESHMAN YEAR FIRST SEMESTER. SECOND SEMESTER. Drawing, PERIODS. 6=2 6=2 Drawing, Wood Working, Mathematics or Elective, Mathematics (Algebra), English, Bible Literature, 1; 6=2 6=2 Forging, Mathematics or Elective, Mathematics (Algebra), 4 2 4 4 Chemistry, PERIODS. 4 2 4 4 Chemistry, English. Composition, 1; Summer Assigned work for Gymnasium, 2. vacation. SOPHOMORE YEAR Machine Practice, Mathematics, 8=4 Chemistry, Elocution or English, Geology, Surveying, 2 Geology 2 2 Graphical Statics, Bible Literature, Assigned work for 4 4 Physics, Chemistry, Elocution or English, 4 4 Physics, 6=2 Machine Practice, Mathematics 5=3 6=2 Descriptive Geometry, 1 ; 2 2 Gymnasium, Summer 8=4 3=1 2. vacation. JUNIOR YEAR Mechanics of Materials 4 Field Practice and Drawing, Machine Practice, Physics, 3=1 6=2 4 2 4 4 Applied Electricity, Mathematics, Elective, Thermodynamics, Practice Laboratory Drawing, Machine Practice, 4 and 3=1 6=2 Physics, 4 2 Applied Electricity, Mathematics, 4 Elective, Assigned work for Summer 4 vacation. SENIOR YEAR Railway Engineering, Laboratory and Field Prac- 6=2 tice, Theory 5 of Errors, Economics, Drawing, Elective, Elective, 2 Hydraulics, Structural Design, Power 4 10=4 2 Plants, Economics, 4 Elective 4=2 Elective, 4 4 2 4 2 Graduating Thesis. numbered 14 (p. 31) has not been offered for adMathematics (Solid Geometry and Plane Trigonometry periods) must be taken in Freshman year; if it has been offered, the Elective substituted must be approved by the student's Adviser. 62 If the Mathematics mission, — GRADUATION AND DEGREES THE DEGREE OF BACHELOR The degrees of Bachelor of Arts, Bachelor of Letters, Bachelor of Science, and Bachelor of Science in Engineering, are conferred on the completion of the corresponding Courses. THE DEGREE OF MASTER All candidates for the Master's Degree (A.M., M.L., and M.S.) must have taken the corresponding Bachelor's Degree at this College. They are required to pursue a course of study at Swarthmore, or elsewhere, under the direction of the Faculty, and to pass examination on the same. Graduates residing at the College may reasonably hope to complete the work in one year; non-residents, engaged in other work, must devote to it not less than two years. Courses of study will be assigned to candidates upon application to the Faculty stating the subject, or subjects, which they desire to pursue. A fee of $5 is charged when the course of study degree is is assigned, and an additional fee of $20 The examinations and written, and An when the conferred. extended Degree will be both oral conducted by a committee of the Faculty. bearing upon some part of the work assigned, for the Master's will be thesis, The candidate should apply to the Registrar for a more detailed statement of the requirements. will be required in all cases. THE ENGINEERING DEGREES The Degrees of Civil Engineer (C.E.), Mechanical Engineer (M.E.), and Electrical Engineer (E.E.) will be conferred upon Bachelors of Science in Engineering who shall have been engaged for not less than three years in successful professional practice in of responsibility, and who shall pursue prescribed courses of reading and present acceptable theses upon subjects pertaining to some branch of Engineering. Candidates for these Degrees should apply to the Registrar for a statement of the repositions quirements. The same fees are charged as for the Master's Degree. 63 SWARTHMORE COLLEGE 64 HONORARY DEGREES CONFERRED 1888 William Hyde Appleton, Ph.D. (A.B., Harvard, 1864; A.M., Acting President and President of Swarthmore College, 1889-1891), Professor of Greek and of Early English. Susan J. Cunningham, Sc.D., Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy. L.L.B., Harvard, 1869; 1889 Arthur Beardsley, Ph.D. (C.E., Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, 1867; Professor of Engineering and Director of Mechanic Arts, 1872-1898), Emeritus Professor of Engineering and Librarian of Friends' Historical Library. Isaac Sharpless, LL.D. (B.S., Harvard, 1873; Sc.D., Univ. of Pa., Haverford College. 1883), President of 1890 Olivia Rodham, A.B. (Assistant Librarian and Instructor 1881-1888). 1897 Elizabeth Powell Bond, A.M., Dean. in Botany, GRADUATES CLASS OF 1873 Salem, N. J. Sarah H. (Acton) Hilliard, A.B., 8 Oak St Helen (Magill) White, A.B. (Ph.D., Boston University, 1877) care U. S. Embassy Berlin, Germany. Elizabeth C. (Miller) Holcomb, A.B Charlestown, N. H. Esther T. (Moore) Appleton, A.B Swarthmore, Pa. *Maria C. (Pierce) Green, A.B 1877. Lowndes Taylor, A.B., Box 1990 West Chester, Pa. CLASS OF Ellen H. (Evans) Amy W. (PIall) 1874 Price, A.M., 1884 Swarthmore, Pa. Hickman, A.B West Chester, Pa. * Alfred T. Haviland, B.S 1874. Mary (Hibbard) Thatcher, A.B, 1415 Delaware Ave Wilmington, Del, Herman Hoopes, C.E., 1879, 506 Real Estate Trust Bldg Philadelphia, Pa. Ferris W. Price, A.M., 1887 Swarthmore, Pa. Elizabeth S. (Woolston) Collins, A.M., 1901. .Swarthmore, Pa. CLASS OF 1875 John B. Booth, A.B., care J. B. Booth & Co Helen (Comly) White, A.B * Franklin H. Corlies, B.S ^Herbert G. 1898. Dow, A.B. (and Harvard. 1877) Elizabeth (Hanes) Taylor, A.B Edith R. (Hooper) Roberts, A.B Barton Hoopes, Jr., B.S., 1330 Buttonwood St *Oliver Keese, Jr., B.S *J. Reece Lewis, B.S Howard W. Pittsburgh, Pa. Lansdowne, Pa. .. 1878. Woodstown, N. — Titusville, J. Pa. Philadelphia, Pa. 1879. 1898. Lippincott, A.B., 509 Real Estate Trust Bldg Martha (McIlvain) Eastwick, and Elmwood Ave John K. Richards, A.B., 59th Philadelphia, Pa. Philadelphia, Pa. St. (and Harvard, 1877), Solicitor-General of U. S Washington, D. C. A.B., William H. Ridgway, * C.E., 1879 Coatesville, Pa. Deceased. 5 65 SWARTHMORE COLLEGE 66 CLASS OF Frank L. Bassett, B.S. 1876 (D.D.S., Phila. Dental Swarthmore, College, 1878) Pa. Cleveland, Ohio. A.B., 63 Adelbert St Frances (Linton) Sharpless, A.M., 1881 (M.D., West Chester, Pa. Woman's Medical College, Phila., 1886) Arthur W. Bradley, Haverford, Pa. Elizabeth L. (Longstreth) Boyd, A.B Philadelphia, Pa. James T. McClure, B.S., Broad St. Station Emma (McIlvain) Cooper, A.B., 715 Cooper St.. Camden, N. J. Edwin Mitchell, Jr., A.B. (B.L. and B. S. R., . Paris, France. Sorbonne, Paris, 1877) Cynwyd, Pa. R. (Price) McIntire, A.B., 1880 *Isaac G. Smedley, B.S., (M.D., Hahnemann Lucy Medical College, 1879) 1899. Herbert W. Smyth, A.B. (and Harvard, Ph.D., Gottingen, 1884), Harvard Univ Mary Willits, A.M., 1881 (M.D., 1878, Cambridge, Mass. Woman's MediNorristown, Pa. cal College, Phila., 1881), State Hospital William P. Worth, B.S Coatesville, CLASS OF Pa. 1877 Joseph T. Bunting, B.S. (LL.B., Univ. of Pa., Philadelphia, Pa. 1880) 526 Drexel Bldg Norristown, Pa. Norman B. Corson, A.B New York, N. Y. Eudora Magill, A.B., 128 W. 43d St 1900. *Jesse R. Norton, A.B. (and Harvard, 1879) Carroll R. Williams, A.M., 1882 (LL.B. Univ. of Philadelphia, Pa. Pa., 1880) Stephen Girard Bldg Norway, Pa. M. Florence Yeatman, A.M., 1897 , CLASS OF 1878 Swarthmore, Pa. Caroline E. (Burr) Hall, A.B Maybell P. (Davis) Foster, A.B., 78 Waterman Providence, R. I. Somerville, Mass. A.M., 1882, 70 Albion St Tacy A. (Gleim) Dunning, A.B., Stimson Block.. Los Angeles, Cal. 1900. William J. Hall, B.S Mary P. (Hallowell) Hough, A.M., 1881 (M.D., St Howard Dawson, Woman's Medical College, Phila., 1881) Charles A. Hawkins, A.B William Penn Holcomb, M.L., Johns Hopkins Univ., 1886) * Deceased. 1882 Ambler, Pa. York, Pa. (Ph.D., Charlestown, N. H. SWARTHMORE COLLEGE 6"J S. (Hunt) White, A.M., 1881 (M.D., Woman's Medical College, Phila., 1881) Lansdowne, Pa. Anna E. (Jackson) Monaghan, B.L Swarthmore, Pa. Rebecca Llewellyn H. Johnson, B.S Edward Martin, A.M., 1882 (M.D., Univ. Redlands, Cal. of Pa., 1883), 415 S. 15th St Francis J. Palmer, B.S., 108 Philadelphia, Pa. New Fulton St York, N. Y. Israel Roberts, B.S., 211^ Market St Camden, N. * William 1892. C. Philadelphia, Pa. Seaman, C.E., 1884 Harry Shoemaker, B.S CLASS OF 1879 Isaac R. Coles, C.E., 1880, 39 Cortlandt St William P. Fender, A.B., 448 Market St William Lea Ferris, A.B., Mills Bldg., J. Room 8,. . New York, N. Y. Williamsport, Pa. San Francisco, Cal. Joseph Fitch, A.B., 302 Broadway New York, N. Y. Ruth Anna Forsythe, A.B., 330 N. Orange St. Media, Pa. Elizabeth (Furnas) Bogardus, B.L Waynesville, Ohio. P. Lesley Hopper, A.B. (LL.B., Univ. of Mary. . land, 1881 ) Havre de Grace, Md. Marie Antoinette (Kemp) Hoadley, A.M., 1892, Swarthmore, Pa. Elisha E. Lippincott, B.S., Gallitzin, Pa. *Samuel Craig McComb, C.E., 1882 1891. Charles R. Miller, B.L. (LL.B., Univ. of Pa., Wilmington, Del. 1881), 1203 Delaware Ave Josephine (White) Breckens, A.B Cheyenne, Wyo. Abby W. (Woodnutt) Miller, B.L.,1203 Dela- ware Ave Wilmington, Del. CLASS OF Anna 1880 E. Constable, A.B., 325 Vine St Arthur Coleman Dawson, est B.L., 1882, Camden, N. Lake Forest, 111. Wilmington, Del. Washington, D. C. Univ Florence (Hall) Philips, A.B., Rockford Myra T. Hillman, A.B., 227 3d St Emily L. (Hough) Savidge, A.B. (and Univ. Minn., Edward H. 1881 of Boise, Idaho. ) Keiser, J. Lake For- M.S., 1881 (Ph.D., Johns Hopkins Univ., 1884), Washington Univ St. Louis, Mo. Georgine (Kurtz) Muhlenberg, A.B., 34 N. 4th St Reading, Pa. Albert R. Lawton, A.M., 1885 Chappaqua, N. Y. Robert J. Marcher, B.S., C.E., 1901 Syracuse, N. Y. Thomas L. Moore, A.B., 102 E. Grace St Richmond, Va. * Deceased. SWARTHMORE COLLEGE 68 Millersville, Pa. S. (Preston) Griest, A.B New York, N. Y. John Turton, B.S., 133 Maiden Lane Fannie (Willets) Lowthorp, A.B., 321 Greenwood Ave Trenton, N. J. Henry S. Wood, C.E., 1883, 106 World Bldg New York, N. Y. Ellen CLASS OF Martha Bunting, lege, 1895), B.L. (Ph.D., Bryn W. 219 Jr., Bldg Charles B. Doron, B.L., 33 B.L., Col- New 616 Pioneer York, N. Y. Press Paul, Minn. Rochester, N. Y. Philadelphia, Pa. St. Vick Park "B" Summer Elliott, B.L., 3204 J. Mawr 80th St William Canby, Mary 1881 St Emma Ithan, Pa. Kirk, B.L England. Gertrude B. Magill, A.B Eugene Paulin, Jr., A.B. (and Harvard, 1883), . North American E. (Rhinoehl) Osborn, A.B., 1329 care Martha Philadelphia, Pa. Jef- Philadelphia, Pa. erson St Edward C. Rushmore, B.S. (M.D., Columbia, Tuxedo Park, N. Y. Union Sq New York, N. Y. Charles E. Sharpless, C.E., 1884, care Berwind Wimber, Pa. White Coal Mining Co New York, N. Y. Alvin T. Shoemaker, B.L, 146 Broadway 1886) Henry *I. Seaman, B. C.E., 1884, 44 Byron Thomas, B.S 1891. Tucker, A.B. (M.D., Harvard, 1884), Portland, Ore. Marquam Bldg Ernest F. CLASS OF 1882 William Llewellyn Baner, A.B. (M.D., Columbia, 1885), 72 W. New 45th St York, N. Y. Edith B. Blackwell, A.B. (M.D., Woman's Med. Col., N. Y. Inf., 1891), 139 W. William Butler, Jr., A.B New 64th St Charlotte E. (Brewster) Jordan, M.L., 1886. . . . York, N. Y. Lansdowne, Pa. West Chester, Pa. Philadelphia, Pa. Herbert Cochran, A.B., 1426 N. 52d St Bertha (Cooper) Brewer, B.L., 215 E. Jacoby C. St Norristown, Pa. Philadelphia, Pa. Frances Foulke, A.B., 1709 Race St Mary E. (Gale) Hibbard, A.M., 1891, 176 PleasLaconia, N. H. ant St 1886. *Sarah S. (Green) Pierce, A.B P. * Deceased. SWARTHMORE COLLEGE 69 Margaret E. (Hallowell) Powell, A.B Lansdowne, Pa. ^Elizabeth E. Hart, B.L 1891. Elizabeth Haslam, B.L., 213 N. 33d St Philadelphia, Pa. Elizabeth M. Ogden, B.L Los Angeles, Cal. Charles Palmer, A.M., 1885, Box 218 Chester, Pa. *George C. Phillips, B.S 1883. Horace L. Rossiter, A.B., 42 Lohengrin St Cleveland, Ohio. *Charles B. Turton, B.S 1896. Gerrit E. H. Weaver, A.B. (and Harvard, 1884), A.M., 1886, 916 Farragut Terrace Philadelphia, Pa. Emily E. (Wilson) Lawton, A.M., 1885 Chappaqua, N. Y. Edgar M. Zavttz, A.B Coldstream, Ont., Can CLASS OF Charles A. Bunting, B.S *John L. Cochran, B.S Edgar Conrow, B.L Lydia S. (Green) Hawkins, * Florence N. Hanes, A.B Alice W. Jackson, A.B 18S3 Allentown, Pa. 1885. Moorestown, N. J. Media, Pa. A.B., Idlewild 1897. Swarthmore, Pa. William A. Kissam, Jr., B. S., 18 Exchange PI.. .New York, N. Y. Bertha (Matlack) Rue, B.L., 578 Washington Camden, N. St Guion Miller, A.M., 1888 (LL.B., J. and 1885, LL.M., 1886, Columbian Univ.) Easton, Md. Duffield Mitchell, A.B. (LL.B., Univ. of Pa.) Carnegie Bldg Pittsburgh, Pa. Edward A. Pennock, A.B., 34 Esmond St., New Dorchester Sta Boston, Mass. George L. Pennock, B.S Lansdowne, Pa. Charles S. Pyle, B.S Rising Sun, Md. Helen C. (Pyle) Bunting, B.L Allentown, Pa. Frederick A. Seaman, Jr., B.S Madison, N. J. Annie E. (Tylor) Miller, M.L., 1888 Easton, Md. James E. Verree, B.L., Boice Bldg Chicago, 111. Emma (Webb) Price, A.B Rose Valley, Pa. S. • CLASS OF Horace L. Dilworth, B.S., Friends' 1884 Central School Rebecca M. (Downing) Greene St M. Furnas, B.S * Deceased. Philadelphia, Bullock, B.L., Pa. 6439 Germantown, Pa. Waynesville, Ohio. SWARTHMORE COLLEGE 70 Sarah L. (Hall) Stirling, A.B., 1913 E. Cum- berland St Henry J. Philadelphia, Pa. Hancock, A.B. (LL.B., Univ. Bldg 1886), 801 Real Estate Trust Edwin Haviland, 1899) E. Hughes, Mary of Pa., Philadelphia, Pa. 1885 (A.M., Cornell, Jr., B.S., Potsdam, N. Y. A.B Va. Hughesville, Laura H. Satterthwaite, A.B. (M.D., Woman's Medical College, Phila., W. State Pacific Head- 1888), 45 Trenton, N. St Frederick J. Taylor, B.S., Northern J. Tacoma, Wash. quarters Willits, A.B. (M.D., Woman's Medical New York, N. Y. College, N. Y. Inf., 1898), 227 E. 18th St Mary CLASS OF 1885 *Minnie F. Baker, A.B Abigail Evans, A.B Frederic P. Moore, A.B., 71 Broadway Mary D. (Pratt) Rhodes, A.B 1901. : CLASS OF Emma S. . . 1886 New (Bones) Stone, B.L Cochran, B.S * Arthur S. J. G. Johnson, A.B., 901 W. Brighton, N. Y. 1899. Richmond, Va. Freedley, B.S., 1900 E. Cary St George Helen Cinnaminson, N. J. New York, N. Y. Bowdle, S. Dak. Williamsport, Pa. 4th St Brownsburg, Pa. Ella (Merrick) Tomlinson, A.B Media, Pa. Edgar M. Smedley, B.S Rowland J. Spencer, B.L., care Oregon Land Co., Salem, Ore. Martha M. (Watson) Sutphen, A.M., 1891, 150 W. C. 14th Holland, Mich. St Percy Willcox, B.S. (Ph.B., Yale Univ., 1887; Philadelphia, Pa. LL.B., Univ. of Pa., 1891), Betz Bldg CLASS OF Alice T. (Battin) Lewis, A.B Harriet J. (Cox) McDowell, B. 1887 Rumford S., 144 W. New St (Jenkins) Webster, A.B., 808 St * Deceased. York, N. Y. Bordentown, N. B. Goodwin, B.S Anna M. Me. Darling, Pa. Horace Darlington, B.S Harry Falls, 13th S. 2d Mankato, Minn. J. SWARTHMORE COLLEGE T. 71 (Ph.B., Univ. of Pa., Johns Hopkins Univ., 1894), Atkinson Jenkins, A.B. Ph.D., 1888; Chicago, Kimbark Ave 5437 111. Chicago, 111. Frederick K. Lane, B.S., 9215 Commercial Ave. Linda B. (Palmer) Jones, A.M., 1893, 802 WashWilmington, Del. ington St Fellowship, N. J. Horace Roberts, A.B Malvern, Pa. A.M., 1896. Reynolds, (Smedley) B. Elizabeth Purcellville, Va. Elizabeth B. (Smith) Wilson, A.B . . . William G. Underwood, B.S., 1133 S. Broad CLASS OF St. Philadelphia, Pa. . 1888 Alice M. Atkinson, A.B. (and Cornell Univ., 1889; Ph.D., Univ. of Pa., 1895), Maison Athens, Greece. er li n Washington, D. C. T. Janney Brown, B.S., 1003 F St., N. M W Frank 1896. Cawley, C.E., 1891 Woodstown, N. Jessie L. Colson, B.S Sadie M. (Conrow) Hutchinson, A.B., 46 West- ervelt N. J. York, N. Y. Clayton, N. M. Plainfield, Ave New Dudley, B.S Robert P. Ervien, B.S William E. L. Lawrence J. Philadelphia, Pa. Fell, B.S., 3639 N. 15th St Joyeuse L. (Fullerton) Sweet, A.B. (and CorDenver, Col. nell Univ., 1889), 1370 Gilpin St Swarthmore, (Gawthrop) Hayes, B.S Swarthmore, Alice (Hall) Paxson, A.B P. Sharples Hall, B.S. (M.D., Hahn. Med. Col., Philadelphia, Phila., 1891), 1604 Arch St Walter Hancock, B.S., 40th St. and Lancaster Emma Ave John Russell Hayes, A.B. (and Harvard, Pa. Pa. Philadelphia, Pa. 1889; Swarthmore, Pa. LL.B., Univ. of Pa., 1892) P. (Jones) Miller, A.B., 21 17 N. 3d St.. Harrisburg, Pa. Montgomery Lightfoot, M.S., 1890 (Ph.D., Martha T. Pa. . Univ. of Pa., 1893), 5935 Green St., GermanPhiladelphia, Pa. Riverton, N. J. London Grove, Pa. town Hetty C. (Lippincott) Miller, Ellis P. Marshall, William S. Jr., B.S Marshall, B.S. 1892), 116 E. A.B Gorham (Ph.D., Leipsic, St Pancoast, B.S Jessie Pyle, A.B. (and Cornell Univ., 1889) Aaron C. Deceased. Madison, Wis. San Antonio, Texas. London Gro ve, P a. SWARTHMORE COLLEGE 72 J. Rhoads, B.S Catherine M. Rider, B.L., 813 Franklin St William H. Seaman, B.S Joseph Jamesburg, N. J. Wilmington, Del. Glen Cove, N. Y. Amelia Skillin, A.B., 103 Potsdamerstrasse Berlin, Germany. Carroll H. Sudler, A.B., 1127 Monadnock Block, Chicago, 111. Charlotte M. Way, B.S. (A.B., Leland Stanford, Jr., Univ.) Annie E. Willits, , 64 W. New 109th St A.B Esther M. (Willits) Fell, B.L., 3639 N. 15th St Philadelphia, Pa. Franklin P. Wilson, A.B., 1320 F St., N. CLASS OF W. Alexander G. Cummins, 1889 Thacker, Jr., Va. Poughkeepsie, N. Y. A. Dill, B.S. (and Mass. Inst. Tech., Richmond, Ind. 1891 ) Horace B. Forman, Ellis M. Harvey, W. A.B. (A.M., Colum- 1898) Howard C Washington, D. . Justin K. Anderson, B.S bia, York, N. Y. Syosset, N. Y. Jr., B.S., B.S. 222 W. (M.D., New 49th St Univ. of York, N. Y. Pa., Media, Pa. 1893) Clara Haydock, B.L J. Carroll Hayes, A.B. (and Harvard, Locust Valley, N. Y. 1890), West (LL.B., Univ. of Pa., 1893) Chester, Pa. Julia Hicks, B.S., 645 Carlton Ave Brooklyn, N. Y. Mary Kirk, A.B., Bureau of the American Republics Washington, D. C. Margaret J. (Laurie) Seaman, A.B Glen Cove, N. Y. George A. Masters, B.S., 3308 Baring St Philadelphia, Pa. Alice S. Palmer, A.B., 215 E. 15th St New York, N. Y. Louella (Passmore) Hayes, A.B Frederick B. Pyle, B.S., 1345 T Ralph Stone, A.B. St., N. West W Pa. Chester, Washington, D. C. (LL.B., Univ. of Mich., 1892), 1305 Majestic Bldg Detroit, Mich. Elsie D. (Stoner) Wildes, B.L Willis W. Vail, B.S Everett, Wash. Plainfield, N. Jennie F. Waddington, M.S., 1892 Salem, N. J. CLASS OF Alvan W. Atkinson, A.B. (M.D., Med. College, Phila., 1893), 428 E. Sara H. Atkinson, A.B George H. Bartram, B.S Martha M. Biddle, B.L J. 1890 Hahnemann State St.. . .Trenton. N. J. Holicong, Pa. Lenape, Pa. Riverton, N. J. SWARTHMORE COLLEGE Emma J. 73 Broomell, B.S. (and Univ. of Mich., 1893), 2128 Bolton St — Baltimore, Md. Morris L. Clothier, B.S., 8th and Market Sts Philadelphia, Pa. Beulah W. (Darlington) Pratt, A.B., 305 N. High St Edward Darlington, B.S West Chester, Pa. Chadd's Ford June, Pa. East Orange, N. J. George Ellsler, A.B., "The Alvord" Caroline R. Gaston, A.M., 1895, 1613 N. 17th St.. Philadelphia, Pa. John C. Gifford, B.S., 1893 (D. CEc, Univ. of Munich, 1899) Ithaca, N. Y. Abby M. Hall, A.B. (and Cornell Univ., 1893) Swarthmore, Pa. Clara A. (Hughes-) Marshall, A.B., 324 N. Carroll St Madison, Wis. . Samuel R. Lippincott, B.S., 1021 Walnut William D. Lippincott, B.S., 35 N. 2d St *Willard L. Maris, M.S., 1892 . Philadelphia, Pa. St Camden, N. J. (B.S., Univ. of Mich., 1891; M.D., Univ. of Pa., 1895) 1895. Robert S. McConnell, B.S., 21 12 Ontario St., Tioga Philadelphia, Pa. Frances E. Otley, A.B., 1207 Jacinto St Austin, Texas. *Mary D. Palmer, A.B 1892. Mary E. Pancoast, B.L., 932 B St., S. Washington, D. C. James W. Ponder, A.B., 909 Market St Wilmington, Del. Ellis B. Ridgway, B.S Coatesville, Pa. Walter Roberts, A.B. (M.D., Univ. of Pa., 1893), W 26 S. 18th St Richard Frances Mary Philadelphia, Pa. Swarthmore, Pa. Moorestown, N. J. San Antonio, Texas. New Athens, Ohio. Denver, Col. Old Westbury, N. Y. Lansdowne, Pa. B.S B. (Smith) Herr, A.B F. (Soper) Pancoast, B.S C. Sellers, R. Barclay Spicer, William E. Sweet, A.B., Franklin College A.B., 1370 Gilpin St W. Titus, M.L., 1892 Mary H. (White) Bartram, A.B Alice CLASS OF 1891 Emily Atkinson, A.B Cosmelia J. (Brown) Hughes, B.L Moorestown, N. Hughesville, Va. Ridley Park, Pa. J. Louis P. Clark, B.S Hannah H. (Clothier) Hull, B.L Swarthmore, Pa. Eva M. (Daniels) Capen, B.S., 1892, 534 E. 4th East Boston, Mass. St Eliza R. Hampton, A.B Waverly, N. Y. Isaac O. Harper, B.S., 1608 Bolton St Baltimore, Md. Esther (Haviland) Cornell, B.L., 307 6th Ave. Brooklyn, N. Y. . * Deceased. SWARTHMORE COLLEGE 74 Eliza G. (Holmes) Bennett, A.B John W. Hutchinson, Jr., B.S., George School, Pa. Mutual Life New York, N. Y. Media, Pa. Bldg Dora Lewis, B.L *Lucy S. Lippincott, A.B Chester P. 1891. West Martindale, B.L Chester, Pa. Kansas City, Mo. McDonald, B.S., 1005 Locust St Sandy Spring, Md. T. (Moore) Adams, B.L Stroudsburg, Pa. A. Mitchell Palmer, A.B Ellen (Passmore) Pyle, B.L., 1345 T St., N. W., Washington, D. C. Marianna (Smith) Rawson, B.L., 226 E. 16th Harry Sarah L. New St William C. Sproul, B.S Edward B. Temple, B.S Katharine L. (Tyler) Mehaffey, Lansdowne, Pa. B.S., "The Boston, Mass. Baltimore, Md. Berkley" Frances M. White, B.L., 823 Park Ave Edward C. Wilson, B.S., Friends' Central 15th and Race Sts M. Lilian (Yarnall) De Cou, A.B CLASS OF M. Ellen (Atkinson) Jenkins, School,. Philadelphia, Pa. Trenton Junction, N. 1892 B.L., 537 Ave M. Rosamond (Baker) Haines, A.B Benjamin F. Battin, A.B., (Ph.D., Josephine Beistle, A.B Maple Oak Edward A. Jenkins, B.S, 537 Maple Ave Charles B. Ketcham, A.B., 1893, 80 Broadway. Phebe H. (Ketcham) McAllister, B.S Henry McAllister, Jr., B.L Bernard S. McIlvain, B.L John S. Murray, B.S., 3703 Woodland Ave Ellen Pyle, A.B Mary E. Stebbins, B.L., 21 15 Maryland Ave Joseph J. Walker, B.S., 330 E. 17th St Deceased. 111. Baltimore, Md. Charleston, W. Va. Uniontown, Pa. 1897 Wallingford, Pa. Swarthmore, Pa. Doylestown, Pa. Swarthmore, Pa. Charles Hart, B.S Annie Hillborn, B.L * Park, Swarthmore, Pa. Jena, 1900) Swarthmore, Pa. Swarthmore, Pa. Mary E. Broomell, B.L., 2128 Bolton St Frederic N. Carr, A.B., 215 Shrewsbury St Howard N. Eavenson, C.E., Henry H. Garrett, B.S Howard B. Green, B.S York, N. Y. Chester, Pa. Oak . . Park, 111. New York, N. Y. Colorado Springs, Col, Colorado Springs, Col. Churchville, Md. Philadelphia, Pa. London Grove, Baltimore, Md. New Pa. York, N. Y. J. SWARTHMORE COLLEGE Wallingford, Pa. E. Walter, B.S Florence N. Wolverton, A.B Mary L. (Wolverton) Green, A.B William Vancouver, Wash. Swarthmore, Pa. CLASS OF Jane Atkinson, A.B George H. Brooke, B.S. (Ph.B., Univ. of LL.B., Univ. of Pa., 1898), 807 Bldg Francis E. Broomell, John 75 1893 Holi-.ong, Pa. Pa., 1895 Land ; Title Philadelphia, Pa. B.S., 496 Monroe Chicago, St L. Carver, B.L., Friends' Central 111. School, Philadelphia, Pa. 15th and Race Sts Joseph T. Freeman, C.E., 1899, 18 Phelps Ave. .Rochester, N. Y. Chester, Pa. Dora A. Gilbert, A.B., Broad St New York, N. Y. Charles S. Hallowell, B.S., 166 Remsen St 1895. *Clement Lodge, B.S . Lorena B. West Matlack, A.B Chester, Pa. Locust Valley, N. Y. Carlie McClure, A.B., Friends' Academy Omar B. Pancoast, B.S. (M.D., Johns Hopkins Baltimore, Union Protestant Infirmary Univ., 1897), Md. Lebanon, Pa. Jesse H. Reinhardt, B.S., 120 N. 8th St Esther E. Spicer, B.L., Johns Hopkins Hospital. Baltimore, Md. Chicago, 111. Julius Staab, A.B John B. Stetson, B.S. (M.D., Med. Chi. Col., Philadelphia, Pa. Phila., 1896) 1329 Spruce St Frances B. (Stevenson) Pettus, A.B., 273 Atlanta, Ga. Washington St New York, N. Y. George H. Strout, A.B., 7 W. 92d St Chappaqua, N. Y. Esther H. Sutton, B.L Brooklyn, N. Y. Henry C. Turner, B.S., 50 Pineapple St . , Carrie B. Way, B.L., Abington Friends' School, Jenkintown, Pa. Roslyn, N. Y. Lila K. Willets, B.L E. Newlin Williams, B.S. (M.D., Univ. of Pa., S. 1898), care Thomas Cook & Son Ellen (Williams) Battin, B.S Genevieve S. Zane, A.B., 1894, 342 W. Miner CLASS OF Mabel Alexander, Anna B.L., 1434 Paris, France. 1894 Philadelphia, Pa. N. 18th St (Atkinson) Sellers, A.B Lydia Biddle, B.L., Johns Hopkins Hospital Swarthmore, S. Edwin P. Bond, A.B., 1104 Spruce St Bertha L. Broomell, B.S., 808 Washington * Deceased. St. Swarthmore, Pa. .West Chester, Pa. Baltimore, Pa. Md. Philadelphia, Pa. St Wilmington, Del. SWARTHMORE COLLEGE 76 Emma (Chambers) S. White, "Hotel A.B., Atlantic City, N. J. Ithaca, N. Y. Elizabeth Conrow, A.B Orange, N. J. Herman Conrow, C.E., 1897, 165 Cleveland St Washington, D. C. Altha T. Coons, B.S., 1906 H St., N. Baltimore, Md. Esther L. Cox, B.L., 1516 Linden Ave Philadelphia, Pa. Joseph C. Emley, B.S., 3409 N. 17th St Frederic H. Gawthrop, B.S., 2515 W. North Ave., Baltimore, Md. John W. Gregg, B.L., Friends' School, Park Ave. Baltimore, Ma. and Laurens St New York, N. Y. George G. Griest, B.S., 195 Broadway Luray," W Mary A. (Hayes) North Ave Helen Helen Gawthrop, A.B., 2515 W. Baltimore, A.B (Hutchinson) Caples, S. B.S., 78 S. 3d Columbus, Ohio. Lansdowne, Pa. Swarthmore, Pa. St Mary B. (Janvier) Pugh, B. Md. Swarthmore, Pa. R. Hillborn, L Harriet M. (Kent) Hilton, A.B Helen P. (Lamb) Hull, B.L., 232 Laurens St. .. .Baltimore, Md. Baltimore, Md. M. Elizabeth Lamb, B.L., 1432 McCulloh St Trenton, N. J. Owen Moon, Jr., B.S Moorestown, N. Marion D. (Perkins) Jessup, A.B Philadelphia, Pa. Margaret D. Pfahler, B.S., 4046 Walnut St David B. Rushmore (M.E., Cornell Univ., 1895), C.E., 1897, care Stanley Electric Co Pittsfield, Mass. Wallingford, Pa. Meriden, Conn. New York, N. Y. Caroline P. (Sargent) Walter, A.B Philip Sellers, C.E., 1897 Cornelia J. Shoemaker, B.L., 226 E. 16th St Edward A. Staab, A.B. (and Harvard, 1896) Mary W. Titus, B.L Helen (Train) Tannehill, B.S., 1895 Daniel Underhill, Jr., B.S Mary Underhill, M.S., 1895 Allen K. White, B.S., "Hotel Luray" Stuart Wilder, B.S John M. Willis, Mary B.S., 3601 Sansom Norristown, Pa. Old Westbury, N. Y. McConnellsville, Ohio. Jericho, N. Y. Wallingford, Conn. Atlantic City, N. Philadelphia, Pa. St Los Angeles, *Susanna S. Yeo, B. L Harry P. Young, B.S Morton, Pa. CLASS OF * Deceased. Cal. 1895. 1895 Andrews, B.S. (M.E., Cornell, 1897) Elizabeth M. Baily, B.S., 902 Swede St C. J. Chestoa, Tenn. E. Yeo, B.S., 1326 Catalina St. Frank J. . . . Woodstown, N. Norristown, Pa. J. SWARTHMORE COLLEGE Barker, B.S Henry E. Bean, B.S., 822 N. Illinois St Hildegard Brooks, B.S Frances W. (Cheairs) Manning, B.L., William 3 4t h Emma Indianapolis, Ind. Newburgh, N. Y. no Trenton, N. J. Wynnewood, Pa. Princeton, N. J. Sea Breeze, Fla. 33 N. Philadelphia, Pa. st (Hutchinson) S. Cleveland Roland Lansdowne, Pa. S. Greenwood Ave Walter Clothier, B.L May Gifford, B.L Anna R. H. (Harrison) Whinfield, B.L Mary B. (Hollingshead) Hancock, A.B., 77 Conrow, B.L., 165 Orange, N. St G. Kent, A.M., 1898; Buren St Van John A. Lafore, B.L., 1896, Wilmington, Del. Overbrook, Pa. C.E., 1898; E.E., igoi Wallingford, Pa. C. Irvine Leiper, B.S., 1896 Egbert P. Lincoln, N. B.S., 1228 V. St., W Washington, D. C. Riverton, N. J. Bertha (Lippincott) Parrish, B.L Edgar Lippincott, B.S Joseph R. Lippincott, A.B Riverton, N. 131 St. J. Moorestown, N. J. Media, Pa. Elizabeth B. Miller, A.M., 1900 Charles S. Moore, B.L., Samuel C. Palmer, A.B Lydia M. Parry, A.B J. 141 James PI .... Atlantic City, N. Swarthmore, Pa. Hainesport, N. J. J. Alfred E. Pfahler, B.S., 4046 Walnut St M. Elizabeth (Pownall) Walton, B.L Philadelphia, Pa. *Frank L. Price, A.B Arthur H. Scott, B.S., care Scott Paper Co Jane C. (Shaw) Hepburn, B.L Helen B. Smith, A.M., 1899 G. Edmund Strattan, B.S., 142; nth Ave William H. Wanzer, A.B Emma A. (Wasley) Snyder, B.L Howard White, Jr., C.E., 1900 (M.S., Univ. 1896. Mich., 1896), "Hotel Christiana, Pa. S. -Batten, A.B., 100 Groveland 1896 London Grove, Ave Leopold W. Bierwirth, B.S Mellie E. Bishop, B.L., 608 E. Douglas s St * Deceased. J. Stamford, Conn. Bartram, A.B I. Philadelphia, Pa. of Jericho, N. Y. CLASS OF William Pa. Atlantic City, N. Traymore" Alice P. Willits, A.B Albert T. Yarn all, B.L., Manor School Mary Philadelphia, Avondale, Pa. Media, Pa. Altoona, Pa. Pawling, N. Y. Pa. Chicago, 111. Dover, N. J. Bloom ington, 111. SWARTHMORE COLLEGE 78 Albert L. Buffington, A.B Carolien H. Chambers, B.L Charles Chandler, B.S William B. Chapin, B.S., 122 Fort Green PI Isaac H. Clothier, Jr., A.B Frances Darlington, A.B A'ida T. Evans, B.L George B. Ferrier, Jr., B.S Rising Sun, Md. . Unionville, Pa. Bushnell, Brooklyn, 111. N. Y. Wynnewood, Pa. Glen Mills, Pa. Malvern, Pa. Moorestown, N. J. 1901. Harper Firth, C.E., 1899 Philadelphia, Pa. Harrie H. Fouse, B.S., 1898, 4335 Pine St Sylvester S. Garrett, B.S., "The Colonial," nth *E. and Spruce Sts Philadelphia, Pa. Lansdowne, Pa. T. Russell Gleim, B.S Merchantville, N. J. Ellen (Gunton) Gunnison, A.B Hallie H. (Haines) Hodge, B.L., 829 S. 49th St.. Philadelphia, Pa. Rising Sun, Md. Violette T. Haines, A.B Philadelphia, Pa. Charles G. Hodge, B.L., 829 S. 49th St. Kenwood, Cal. Iolene M. (Hollenshead) Smith, A.B Howard Cooper Johnson, B.L. (LL.B., Univ. of Philadelphia, Pa. Pa., 1899), 709 Walnut St Charles Kaighn, B.S., care Engineers' Dept, & C. O. Philip Mary Mary S. G. R. R Mobeetie, Texas. Providence, R. I. Knauer, A.B., 4 Weybosset St C. McAllister, A. B., 419 N. Cascade S. McDowell, A.B., 231 W. 135th St Ave. Colorado Springs, Col. New York, N. Y. Philadelphia, Pa. Arabella E. Moore, B.L., 2013 Arch St Trenton, N. J. William J. Morrison, B.S., 64 Prospect Ave Percival Parrish, B.L., 20th St. and WashingPhiladelphia, Pa. ton Ave Mount Pleasant, Md. N. Wilmer Plummer, B.S Dundas, Ont., Can. Charles A. Schooley, B.S George School, Pa. Mary T. Shoemaker, B.L. (and Harvard, J. Chauncey Shortlidge, A.B. Concordville, Pa.. 1898) Smedley, A.B., Friends' School, 15th and Race Sts Lauretta T. Central Philadelphia, Pa. Baltimore, Md. A. Ella Spicer, A.B., 108 W. Huntingdon St Philadelphia, Pa. Albert H. Taylor, B.S., 1745 Diamond St London Grove, Pa. Franklin D. Walton, B.L John E. Wells, ML., 1899 (A.M., Columbia, Hiram, Ohio. 1900), Hiram College Bradford, Pa. Hanson Z. Wilson, C.E., 1899, care Erie R. R Los Angeles, Cal. Keturah E. Yeo,-B.S., 1326 Catalina St * Deceased. SWARTHMORE COLLEGE CLASS OF 79 1897 Sarah (Bancroft) Clark, B.S Street, Frederic D. Barber, B.S Mary E. Bartleson, B.L., 703 Highland Ave Normal, Reuben George School, Pi. Frank G. Bennett, B.S Charleston, Grace A. (Brosius) Biddle, B.L., 617 Ivy St Thomas Cahall, B.L. (LL.B., Univ. of , 111. Chester, Pa. G. Blair, B.S 1900) England. 111. Pittsburgh, Pa. Pa., 1218 Witherspoon Bldg Philadelphia, Pa. Daisy R. Corson, B.S. (M.D., Woman's Medical College, Phila., 1901), Woman's Hospital. ... Philadelphia, Pa. W. Darlington, B.S Walter C. De Garmo, B.S Darling, Pa. Tared Ithaca, N. Y. New York, N. Y. Gerry B. Dudley, A.B., 123 E. 28th St Iola K. Eastburn, B. L., Friends' Central School, Philadelphia, Pa. 15th and Race Sts Jessie D. Ellis, B.L., 304 N. 35th St Philadelphia, Pa. Lansdowne, Pa. George Gleim, Jr., B.S Westbury Station, N. Y. Marietta Hicks, B.L Clarence B. Hoadley, B.S., "The Newport," 16th Philadelphia, Pa. and Spruce Sts Media, Pa. Edith H. John, B.L El Paso, 111. Frederic S. Larison, A.B Philadelphia, Pa. Nellie Lodge, B.S., 1623 Race St York, Pa. Robert E. Manley, B.S Roslyn, N. Y. Walker Matteson, A.B Laura C. (Miller) Curry, A.B., 62 W. 89th St. .New York, N. Y. Barkers ville, Cal. Herbert L. Noxon, B.S., care Globe Oil Co Wyncote, Pa. Ellwood C. Parry, M.L., 1900 West Grove, Pa. Robert Pyle, A.B Media, Pa. Samuel Riddle, B.S Miriam Sener, B.L., 233 Charlotte Bertha J. Smith, B.L Marshall P. Sullivan, B.L Henrietta F. Wanzer, A.B Channing Way, A.B Howard Iron J. Webster, B.S., care Lancaster, Pa. St Colorado Fuel Lincoln, Va. Moorestown, N. J. Westbury, N. Y. West Co Lydia P. (Williams) Roberts, St Joseph A. Willis, B.S Chester, Pa. & Pueblo, Col. B.L., 26 S. 18th Philadelphia, Pa. Fowling Creek, Md. SWARTHMORE COLLEGE 8o CLASS OF 1898 Charles T. Brown, A.B. (and Harvard, i? care Morley Pharmaceutical Co., N. E. 16th and Chestnut Sts.- cor. Hiram D. Campbell, B.S. 317 Ann St Eva E. (Foster) Firth, B.L., "The Hedges.". Philadelphia, Pa. Homestead, Pa. .. .Lancaster, Pa. A. Virginia (Gillespie) Viskniskki, B.L., 4720 Philadelphia, Pa. Kingsessing Ave Etna, N. H. Mabel A. Harris, B.L New York, N. Y. Jonathan Y. Higginson, B.S., 215 E. 15th St Mt. Ephraim, N. J. Mary S. Howell, A.B Somerton, Pa. Rachel Knight, B.L Govanstown, Md. Swarthmore College. Edith Lamb, B.L Caroline A. Lukens, B.L William B. Miller, C.E., 1901 (M.E., Cornell, Pittsburgh, Pa. Niagara St Swarthmore College. Albert Cook Myers, M.L., 1901 Scotch Plains, N. J. Edna M. Nichpll, B.L Port Collins, Col. Arthur L. Patton, B.S Christiana, Pa. S. Edna Pownall, B.L Salem, Ohio. Edna H. Richards, B.L Arthur C. Smedley, B.S., Friends' Seminary, New York, N. Y. Rutherford Place Doylestown, Pa. Ely J. Smith, B.L Levi S. Taylor, B.S., Friends' School, 4th and Wilmington, Del. West Sts Ashton, Md. Frederic L. Thomas, B.S 1899), 16 Abner P. Way, B.S. (M.D., Hahnemann, 1901) .Malvern, Pa. . Alice Witbeck, B.L Berlin, CLASS OF Mary Mary 1899 Lansdowne, Pa. E. Armstrong, B.L G. Ball, Germany. Merchantville, N. B.L Newark, N. Richard J. Bond, B.S., 18 E. Kinney St Levis M. Booth, B.S., 215 E. 15th St New Anna Bradbury, B.L., 308 N. 14th St John P. Broomell, A.B., Univ. of Wisconsin. Emily W. Carter, B.L., Penna. Hospital Calvin F. Crowell, B.S Anna B. Eisenhower, A.B Edith Flitcraft, A.B Helen M. Fogg, B.L., 11 14 Mt. Vernon St Mabel C. Gillespie, B.L., 1310 Western Ave .. J. J. York, N. Y. Richmond, Ind. .Madison, Wis. Philadelphia, Pa. Moorestown, N. J. Norristown, Pa. Woodstown, N. J. Philadelphia, Pa. Allegheny, Pa. SWARTHMORE COLLEGE 81 M. Katharine Lackey, B.L Benguet, Luzon, P. I. Locust Valley, N. Y. Atlantic City, N. J. Mary Berlin, Gilbert L. Hall, A.B., Galiano A. Davis Jackson, B.S., Friends' Academy G. Leiper, B.L., 77 Koniggratzerstrasse B.L., 1931 Gratz Ave Germany. Jane E. Linvill, Philadelphia, Pa. Alice Lippincott, B.L Walter H. Lippincott, B.S Annie Lodge, B.S Helen S. Moore, B.L., 131 St. James Place Marshall Pancoast, B.L, Friends' Academy. Annie B. Parrish, B.L Riverton, N. J. Riverton, N. J. . . West Mary E. Seaman, A.B., High School Benjamin A. Thomas, A.B., 3445 Walnut St Emily R. Underbill, B.L., Friends' Academy. J. Elizabeth E. Willits, B.L CLASS OF . .Locust Valley, N. Y. 1900 Moorestown, N. J. Wilmington, Del. Bird T. Baldwin, B.S Lucy Bancroft, A.B B.S., 1729 Chester, Pa. Philadelphia, Pa. Darby, Pa. Glen Cove, N. Y. Serrill Verlenden, B.S George L. Bean, Kennett Square, Pa. Atlantic City, N. J. .Locust Valley, N. Y. Woodbury, N. J. N. 19th St Philadelphia, Pa. Mary Brown, B.L Cornwall, N. Y. New York, N. Y. Robert L. Brownfield, Jr., B.S., 37 W. 32d St Bloomfield, Ont., Can. Florence E. Christy. B.L Philadelphia, Pa. Caroline F. Comly, B.L, 331 1 Arch St Darling, Pa. Paul Darlington, B.S Margaret Eves, B.L., 17th St. and Girard Ave. .Philadelphia, Pa. New York, N. Y. Roger B. Farquhar, Jr., B.S., 9 E. 39th St Anna Gillingham, A.B. (and Radcliffe, 1901), Friends' Central School, 15th and Race Sts. ..Philadelphia, Pa. Mickleton, N. J. Joseph C. Haines, B.L Brandywine Summit, Pa. Edmund A. Harvey, A.B A. Mary Haviland, B.L. (A.B., Radcliffe, Boston, Mass. Union Park Piedmont, Ala. Caroline L. Hawke, A.B New Oxford, Pa. Anna K. Himes, B.L Philadelphia, Pa. Anna C. Holmes, B.L, 1930 Chestnut St Nine Points, Pa. Otley E. Jackson, B.S Baltimore, Md. George M. Lamb, Jr., B.S., 106 South St Riverton, N. J. Anna H. Lippincott, B.L Swarthmore, Pa. Alice M. Lukens, B.S Swarthmore, Pa. fi ie M. Lukens, B.L Lancaster, Pa. Edna M. Miller, B.L, 236 W. Chestnut St Langhorne, Pa. E. Mae Myers, B.L Langhorne, Pa. Georgia Cook Myers, B.L S. 1901), 41 6 SWAETHMORE COLLEGE 82 Katharine Pfeiffer, B.L Merchantville, N. J. Margery Pyle, A.B London Grove, Pa. Helen T. Sullivan, B.L Moorestown, N. J. William H. Thatcher, B.S., 1415 Delaware Ave., Wilmington, Del. J. Ethel Thompson, B.L., 21 19 Maryland Ave. ..Baltimore, Md. CLASS OF 1901 Emily M. Atkinson, A.B Susan E. Atkinson, B.L Woodbury, N. Henry N. Benkert, B.S Fanny B. Cheney, A.B Morton, Pa. Media, Pa. Elizabeth Dinsmore, B.L., 424 W. Chelten Ave., Germantown J. Edward Downing, B.L Deborah H. Ferrier, B.S May K. Flannery, B.L., 300 Philadelphia, Pa. W. East Norwich, N. Y. Moorestown, N. J. New York, N. Y. 75th St Percival M. Fogg, B.S., 1106 Mt. Vernon St Gertrude T. B.L Gilkyson, A.B., Polo, Bulacan. Philadelphia, Pa. Flushing, N. Y. F. Gilbert, Walter Ethel Griest, B.L., 2231 Wallace W. Lyndon Hess, B.L Anna B. Howard, B.L .. .Luzon, P. I. Philadelphia, Pa. St Collingswood, N. J. Media, Pa. Mt. Crawford, Va. Edith H. (Janney) Hildebrand, B.L Arthur H. Jenkins, B.L Amy W. Knickerbocker, B.L Mabel W. Latimer, B.L., 1500 Delaware Ave Gwynedd, Pa. New Lenox, 111. Wilmington, Del. Riverton, N. J. Moorestown, N. J. .New York, N. Y. Mary W. Lippincott, B.L Warner E. Love, B.S Frank M. McVaugh, Jr., B.S., 215 E. 15th St. Phoenixville, Martha W. Moore, B.L J. Wilmer Pancoast, B.S., Abington Friends' J. . School B. Richards, B.L Winifred Rogers, A.B., . Toughkenamon, Pa. 77 KoniggratzerBerlin, strasse G. Arthur Seaman, A.B., care The Press Thistlethwaite, B.L., care The Press. William C. Tyson, B.S Edward Williams, B.L., Daraga, Cagsana Edith M. Winder, B.L M. Florence Wynn, A.B., Temple College M. Alma Young, A.B Germany. Philadelphia, Pa. Uwchlan, Pa. Ira Smedley, B.S Mark Pa. Jenkintown, Pa. Mary L. J. Earlington, Ky. .. .Philadelphia, Pa. Guernsey, Pa. Albay, P. I. Richmond, Ind. Philadelphia, Pa. Easton, Pa. HOLDERS OF THE JOSHUA LIPPINCOTT FELLOWSHIP 1893- i8g4 Atkinson Jenkins, A. Benjamin F. Battin, A. T. B., '87; Ph. D., Johns Hopkins, '94. B., '92; studied in Berlin; Ph. D., Jena, 1900. 1894- 1895 David Rushmore. B. more, B. M. '94; S., Cornell, '95; E., C. Swarth- E., '97. 1895-1896 Howard White, more, B. Jr., '95; S., M. Michigan, S., '96; C. E., Swarth- 1900. 1896-1897; 1897-1898 John W. Gregg, B. L., '94; A. M., Cornell, '99. I 898-1899 Ellwood C. Parry, more, igoo. B. 1899-1900 John E. Wells, B. L., '96; M. studied '97; L., ; L., '99; in Berlin; M. Swarth- L., 1900-1901 A. M., Columbia, 1900. 1901-1902 Mary G. Leiper, B. L., '99; studying in Berlin. HOLDERS OF THE LUCRETIA MOTT FELLOWSHIP 1895-1896 Helen B. Smith, A. Swarthmore, '99. B., studied in '95; Oxford University; A. M., 1896-1897 Mary S. A. B., '96; studied in Oxford University. McDowell, 1897-1898 Sarah Bancroft Clark, B. S., '97; studied in Newnham College, Cambridge. 1898- 1899 Edna H. Richards, B. L., 98; studied in Berlin. 1899- 1 900 Mary E. Seaman, A. B., '99; studied in I Anna Gillingham, Newnham College, Cambridge. 900-1901 A. B.. 1900; studied in Radcliffe College. 1901-1902 L. Winifred Rogers, A. B., 1901; studying in Berlin. 83 THE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION The Alumni Association was organized 1875, and incorporated First Month 16, 1882. Fifth Month 8, Its object is "to promote union and good feeling among the Alumni, and to advance in all proper ways the interests of Swarthmore College." All graduates are ipso facto members of the Association. The annual meeting and banquet are held in the afternoon and evening of Commencement Day. OFFICERS FOR 1901-1902 PRESIDENT Benjamin Swarthmore, Pa. F. Battin, '92 VICE-PRESIDENTS Esther T. Moore Appleton, Florence Hall Philips, '80 A. Mitchell Palmer, '91 Swarthmore, Pa. Wilmington, Del. '73 Stroudsburg, Pa. SECRETARY Emma Gawthrop Hayes, '88 Swarthmore, Pa. TREASURER Charles A. Bunting, Allentown, Pa. '83 BOARD OF DIRECTORS Term Expires Sixth Month, IQ02 T. Atkinson Jenkins, Morris L. Clothier, Annie Hillborn, '92 Chicago, '87 111. Philadelphia, Pa. '90 Swarthmore, Pa. Term Expires Sixth Month, ipo3 Elizabeth Woolston Collins, W. Llewellyn Baner, Samuel 84 Palmer, C. - '95 '82 '74 Swarthmore, Pa. N. Y. Swarthmore, Pa. New York, COMMITTEE ON TRUSTS, ENDOWMENTS AND SCHOLARSHIPS EDMUND WEBSTER, 1 156 South Broad Street, Philadelphia, Pa. EDWARD H. OGDEN, 314 Vine Street, Philadelphia, Pa. EMMOR ROBERTS, Fellowship, N. J. SUSAN W. LIPPTNCOTT, Cinnaminson, N. JOHN T. J. WILLETS, 303 Pearl Street, REBECCA C. New York, N. Y. LONGSTRETH, Secretary, Haverford, Pa. 85