Smith Alumnae Quarterly . 1901, Anne P. Hincks 1900, Vivian B. Libbey 1908,Maude E. Miner 1901, Nellie J. M. Oiesen 1913, Mary C. Smith 1906, JeanFine Spahr 1883, Edith Elmer Wood 1890. With the following executive committee: Mary Van Kleeck 1904, chairman, Eleanor Hope Johnson 1894, ElizabethH. Webster 1912. Representatives of this committee have already had one meeting and outlineda course of procedure which will be of the greatest help to the School. The prospects for next session are bright. Most of the former members ofthe staff are to return to us and in addition we have the good fortune
Smith Alumnae Quarterly . 1901, Anne P. Hincks 1900, Vivian B. Libbey 1908,Maude E. Miner 1901, Nellie J. M. Oiesen 1913, Mary C. Smith 1906, JeanFine Spahr 1883, Edith Elmer Wood 1890. With the following executive committee: Mary Van Kleeck 1904, chairman, Eleanor Hope Johnson 1894, ElizabethH. Webster 1912. Representatives of this committee have already had one meeting and outlineda course of procedure which will be of the greatest help to the School. The prospects for next session are bright. Most of the former members ofthe staff are to return to us and in addition we have the good fortune of se-curing Miss Emma G. Case, Director of Visiting Teachers in Rochester, anda member of the Committee on Visiting Teachers, to act as supervisor for thetraining of visiting teachers. All of last years students who are now in train-ing expect to return to us and we already have a larger registration for the enter-ing class in the training course than we had last year at this time. THE PURCHASING AGENT OF SMITH COLLEGE. ELSIE PRESTON LEONARD On the first of March Miss Elsie Pres-ton Leonard, a graduate of the Univer-sity of Minnesota, came to the Collegeto take the position left vacant by theillness and later resignation of Brown Darling. Miss Leonardtook the degree of Bachelor of Arts in1906, and then went to Simmons for acourse in Institutional Management,receiving a certificate in InstitutionalEconomics in 1908. Then, in spite ofthe fact that she was so young, she wentto Wellesley, where she was head ofWilder Hall for two years. While DeanComstock was at the University of Min-nesota Miss Leonard was appointed toa position open there. Miss Comstocktells us that she was considered an ex-tremely efficient person of fine person-ality, expert in the management ofhouses, economical, and in every way effective. She wanted to do some teach-ing in connection with her work, however, so she left Minnesota to go toTeachers College. There she was assistant to the Director o
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