Slike strani
PDF
ePub

THE CORNELL INFIRMARY.

The mansion of the late Hon. Henry W. Sage was in 1897 presented to the University by his sons Dean Sage and William H. Sage, to be known and used as the Cornell Infirmary. To this gift the donors added an endowment of $100,000, and during the summer of 1898 they refitted the mansion for its new purpose at their own expense.

The building is a structure of Medina brownstone 96 x 88 feet, including verandas and porches, and three stories in height besides a basement. A wide hall runs through the first floor from south to north, having on the right a sitting room for young women, the dining-room, pantry, and kitchen; on the left the library, which will be used as a sitting room for young men, the Matron's office, bath room, lavatory and telephone closet, and an emergency room. On the second floor are four large rooms for the sick, two nurses' rooms, two large bath rooms, a small nurses' kitchen, a large room for surgical work, with an instrument room containing sink, cold and hot water, and a slop closet, not connected with the bath rooms. On the third floor is the Matron's room, two large rooms for patients, two nurses' rooms, three servants' rooms, a bath room, nurses' kitchen, slop closet, store rooms, linen closets, etc. The basement contains a laundry, servants' bath room, and the heating apparatus.

The house is supplied throughout with both gas and electric lighting; and heated by a system of hot water. The height of the rooms that of the rooms in the

in the first story is 121⁄2 feet in the clear;

second story is 11 feet; and the rooms on the third story are 10%1⁄2 feet in the clear. There is also a high attic. There is a balcony opening from one third-story room, upon which a bed can be rolled, and there

are large verandas.

SUMMER SESSION.

FACULTY.

JACOB GOULD SCHURMAN, A.M., D.Sc., LL.D., President.

CHARLES DE GARMO, Ph.D., Dean of the Faculty, Professor of the Science and Art of Education.

ISAAC PHILLIPS ROBERTS, M.Agr., Professor of Agriculture in charge of Nature-Study on the Farm.

HORATIO STEVENS WHITE, A.B., Professor of the German Language and Literature.

JOHN HENRY COMSTOCK, B.S., Professor of Entomology, in charge of Nature-Study in Insect Life.

LIBERTY HYDE BAILEY, M.S., Professor of Horticulture in charge of Nature-Study in Plant Life.

LUCIEN AUGUSTUS WAIT, A.B., Professor of Mathematics.

GEORGE LINCOLN BURR, A.B., Professor of History.

CHARLES EDWIN BENNETT, A.B., Professor of Latin.

EDWARD BRADFORD TITCHENER, A.M., Ph.D., Sage Professor of Psychology.

GEORGE FRANCIS ATKINSON, Ph.B., Professor of Botany. RALPH STOCKMAN TARR, B.S., Professor of Geology and Physical Geography.

GEORGE PRENTICE BRISTOL, A.M., Professor of Greek.

EVANDER BRADLEY MCGILVARY, A.B., Ph.D., Sage Professor of Moral Philosophy.

Professor of Political Science.

Professor of English Literature.

PIERRE AUGUSTINE FISH, B.S., D.Sc., D.V.S., Assistant Professor of Physiology.

EVERETT WARD OLMSTED, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of the Romance Languages.

WILLIAM STRUNK, JR., A.B., Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Rhetoric and English Philology.

ANNA BOTSFORD COMSTOCK, B.S., Assistant Professor of Zoology with reference to Nature-Study in Insect Life.

Assistant Professor of Vertebrate Zoology.

Assistant Professor of Psychology.

HIRAM SAMUEL GUTSELL, B.P., A.M., Instructor in Drawing and Industrial Art.

JOHN SIMPSON REID, Instructor in Mechanical Drawing and Designing.

FREDERICK JOHN ROGERS, M.S., Instructor in Physics.

JOHN SANDFORD SHEARER, B.S., Instructor in Physics.

DANIEL ALEXANDER MURRAY, Ph.D., Instructor in Mathematics.

BLIN SILL CUSHMAN, B.S., Instructor in Chemistry.

THEODORE WHITTELSEY, A.B., Ph.D., Instructor in Chemistry. GEORGE ABRAM MILLER, A.M., Ph.D., Instructor in Mathe

matics.

HEINRICH RIES, Ph.D., Instructor in Economic Geology.

HECTOR RUSSELL CARVETH, Ph.D., Instructor in Chemistry. MARY ROGERS MILLER, Instructor in Nature-Study, with special reference to Insect Life.

Instructor in Nature-Study in Insect Life. JOHN LEMUEL STONE, B.Agr., Instructor in Nature-Study in Farm Life.

LOUIS ADELBERT CLINTON, B.S., Instructor in Nature-Study in Farm Life.

GEORGE NIEMAN LAUMAN, B.S.A., Instructor in Nature-Study in Farm Life and Plant Life.

[ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small]

JAMES WISEMAN, Foreman of the Machine Shop.
WILLIAM HENRY WOOD, Foreman in Wood Shop.

JAMES WHEAT GRANGER, Foreman in Forging.

JAMES EUGENE VANDERHOEF, Foreman in Foundry.
GUY MONTROSE WHIPPLE, A.B., Assistant in Psychology.
HEINRICH HASSELBRING, B.S.A., Assistant in Botany.

ROY MANDEVILLE VOSE, Assistant in Physiology.

JUDSON FREEMAN CLARK, B.S. in Agr., A.M., Assistant in Botany.

MARGARET EVERETT SCHALLENBERGER, A.B., Assistant in Psychology.

JAMES OTIS MARTIN, B.S.A., Assistant in Geology.

FRANKLIN SHERMAN, JR., Assistant in Nature-Study in Insect Life.

EXPENSES.

The single tuition fee for the entire Summer Session is $25, and must be paid at the office of the Treasurer within ten days after registration day. No student is admitted without the payment of this fee, except as below.

The only students excused from the payment of the fee of $25, are teachers from New York State who are enrolled in the course of Nature-Study. See pages 336 and 337.

Persons from other states taking the Nature-Study course must pay the regular fee of $25.

Information about board, room and other expenses, including shop and laboratory fees, may be found on pages 55 and 56.

CREDIT FOR WORK.

Regular matriculated students of the University may receive credit to the extent of ten university hours for work done during the Summer Session.

Students of the Summer School not matriculated in the University may receive certificates of attendance and satisfactory work done.

In the announcement below, "five hours", "three hours ", etc., indicates the number of lectures and recitations given each week. Where the hours and days are not given in the announcements they will be arranged for later.

The number of university hours allowed for each course may be determined from the professor concerned.

A fuller announcement of the Summer Session will be sent on application to the Registrar.

COURSES OF INSTRUCTION.

GREEK.

A. The Greek Language.

(1) The elements of phonetics, and the analysis of sounds in Greek and in English. History of the Greek alphabet. Pronunciation in theory and in practice. Accent in speaking and in writing. The relation of Greek to Latin and to English. The Greek elements in English. T.. Th., 8. White 3 B. Professor BRISTOL.

(2) The Attic dialect in its official use at Athens. Study and interpretation of inscriptions from squeezes, lantern views and photographs. S., 8-10. White 6. Professor BRISTOL.

B. Teachers' Course in Homer. The work of the course will center in the Iliad and will consist of three parts:

(a) The reading and interpretation of selected portions of the Iliad. (b) The study of the language of the poem and its relations to the Attic dialect; the epic hexameter, its origin and development; the principles of interpretation; some features of life in the "Homeric period"; the value of archæology for the understanding of the poem; aims and methods in translating.

(c) Discussions on the teaching of Homer; the end to be kept in view; practical difficulties in the work. The most valuable books and other auxiliary helps for the teacher. M., W., F., 8. White 3 B. Professor BRISTOL.

C. Greek Lyric Poetry. Selections from the lyric fragments in Hiller's "Anthologia Lyrica." (Continuation of the reading done in 1899.) Selected idyls of Theocritus. M., T., Th., F., 9. White 3 B. Professor BRISTOL.

Persons who contemplate taking any of the above work requested to correspond with Professor Bristol.

LATIN.

A. Course for Teachers.

are

(a) Pronunciation. Evidences in support of the Roman method. Sources of knowledge. Testimony of the Roman grammarians. Evidence from philological investigation.

(b) Hidden Quantity. Should we pronounce fěstus or festus ? missus or missus? cinctus or cinctus? etc. Methods of determining the quantity of hidden vowels.

« PrejšnjaNaprej »