PCW Mandoline Club in 1916-1917 Yearbook
Page from the Pennsylvania College for Women (now Chatham University) yearbook of 1916-1917 picturing members of the Mandoline Club.
Color Day 1918
Class of 1918 at the Pennsylvania College for Women gathers for a panoramic photograph on Color Day, 1918.
Class of 1918 Update in the June 1923 Alumnae Recorder
Update on the class of 1918 printed in the Alumnae Recorder of June 1923 describing a 1923 letter from Kamala Cornelius in which a class color system similar to one at PCW is described as having been implemented.
Letter from Kamala Cornelius Reprinted in the June 1922 Alumnae Recorder
Letter from Kamala Cornelius (Pennsylvania College for Women Class of 1918) reprinted in the June 1922 issue of the Alumnae Recorder. The letter is dated April 3, 1922 and from Nellore, S. India. The letter begins with a discussion of Cornelius' return to work in Nellore and continues for three additional pages.
Letter from Kamala Cornelius Reprinted in the June 1921 Alumnae Recorder
Letter from Kamala Cornelius (Pennsylvania College for Women Class of 1918) reprinted in the June 1921 issue of the Alumnae Recorder. The letter is dated April 3, 1921 from the A.B.M. Girls' High School and addressed to the Alumnae Association of the Pennsylvania College for Women (now Chatham University).
Letter from Kamala Cornelius
Page one of letter from Kamala Cornelius (Pennsylvania College for Women Class of 1918) reprinted in the June 1919 issue of the Alumnae Recorder. The letter includes a discussion of Cornelius' work in Madras, India and how coursework at PCW served to prepare her. The letter offers congratulations to the class of 1919 and is continued on the second page.
"First Hindu Woman Here Studying Medicine Is a Brilliant Student"
Photograph in a newspaper of Premala Shahane of Maharashtra, student at the Woman’s Medical College of Pennsylvania, circa 1928-29. The caption indicates that Shahane's first name is 'Pamela', though elsewhere she is identified as 'Premala'. The caption also incorrectly states that Shahane was the first "Hindu Woman" at the Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania.