Ege taught school in Ohio and Colorado as a young woman. From 1895 to 1930, she was a professor of mathematics and Dean of Women at Mills College. She also coached the Mills College basketball team. From 1914 to 1916, she was the college's acting president. "Since Mills is to California what Wellesley is to the East," explained a California magazine in 1915, "it is most apparent that the leading spirit of the institution is a dominant figure in the educational activities of the state." In 1918, she chaperoned a unit of 28 Mills students in the
Woman's Land Army, providing ranch labor during wartime shortages. In 1920, the college marked her twenty-five years at Mills with a presentation and convocation. At the festivities marking the school's founder's centennial in 1925, Ege received an honorary doctorate. After her retirement in 1930, she spent some time in
Cambridge, in England. She was a regular guest at Mills College events and alumnae gatherings: in 1933 she was honored as the college's dean emerita, alongside president
Aurelia Henry Reinhardt and physician
Mariana Bertola, at an annual breakfast of the Mills Club of San Francisco. == Death ==