The words you are searching are inside this book. To get more targeted content, please make full-text search by clicking here.
Discover the best professional documents and content resources in AnyFlip Document Base.
Search
Published by Alpha Omicron Pi, 2015-08-13 16:24:57

1934 May - To Dragma

Vol. XXIX, No. 4

48
To DRAGMA

United States. She will discuss recent impor-
tant events Tuesday. Mrs. Sherry will
heard Wednesday afternoon.

The program for Good Friday afternoon
will feature sacred music by the "Triology,"
organ and piano duo heard regularly on the
"Woman's Point of View."—Milwaukee Jour-
nal.

Florence Summerbell Crawford
Featured in "Baton" of Phi Beta

Hcdvic Lens, lota, is a member of -+- FLORENCE SUMMERBELL CRAWFORD ( K G ) ,
Shorter Board, active in Woman's League an Alpha Omicron Pi, has won outstand-

and attended Axe-Grinders' Ball. ing success for herself and reflected glory for
Phi Beta in the field of photograph)*. A grad-
Miss Morrow's Experiment uate of U.C.L.A., Flo studied at the Clarence
A Success H. White School in New York City, and bad
the privilege of living at the Three Arts Club
-f- T H E DANIEL FARLEY'S are a large family while in the East. Her work has been dis-
with most of the children small. They played in exhibits both in New York and
Washington, D. C. In a New York exhibit
have a cow, hut the place they have been where fourteen of her prints were shown, her
farming is very poor and Dan never made fine work received highly favorable comment
more than corn enough to "bread" the family, from Anton Bruebl, connected with Vogue
much less feed the livestock. For two or three Magazine. The summer before her return,
winters j»ast we have supplied feed for the Flo taught photography in a summer camp in
cow to keep her from starving. Last spring Maine. Back in Los Angeles, she started in
we decided to try soy beans and fertilizer, business and opened a studio in the lovely
on one of the thin-soiled fields. The soy beans, home where Phi Beta has frequently enter-
the inoculation stuff for the seed (to insure tained. In a setting of modern simplicity and
the maximum germination), the fertilizer and elegance are displayed many of Flo's finest
the hauling of everything cost $19.27. prints, striking for their originality and mod*
em feeling. Among the collection are com-
The bay that came off that field has fed the mercial displays, portraits—some professional,
cow and heifer calf all this winter and there some child portraits—and pictorial studies. An
is still plenty to carry through until spring. attitude of sulxlued and interested amusement
In fact, if Dan can get hold of a nag for with things in general is a characteristic part
the spring plowing, as he is trying to do, that of Flo's personality. And to see her work is
hay will also constitute a very valuable part to realize that this very quality gives her stud-
of the nag's feed during crop-raising time.— ies both freshness and originality.—By Lillian
The F. N. S. Quarterly Bulletin. Helen Schloesser.

Mrs. Greely Gives Lectures W. S. A. Elect Walker Next
President
-f- HIGHLIGHTS I N T H E "Woman's Point of
View" program, now directed bv Alpha MARY GARRISON W A L K E R (O) was elected
president of the Women's Sport Associa-
Stalson, formerly of W M A Q and WCCO, are tion in the election held Thursday, March 22.
the first of a series of talks on current events Other officers selected at this time were Rosa-
by Mrs. Helen Hoy Greeley (N) and the sec- lind Warrum, vice president; June Robinson,
ond in a series of poems by Mrs. I aura secretary; and Margaret Gridley, treasurer.
Sherry. The programs are broadcast daily ex- These co-eds will hold office for the school
cept Saturday and Sunday at 3:45 p. m. year 1934-1935.
The out-going officials are Kay Ferree, pres-
Mrs. Greeley, a member of the Wisconsin ident ; Kay Richards, vice president; Rosalind
and New York bar, was formerly a govern- Warrum, secretary; and Mildred Small, treas-
ment delegate to the international congress urer.
on forestry held in Rome, and later made a Installation of the new officers will take
study on forest conservation abroad for the place May 1.—DePauw Newspaper.

News Bits About Alpha
Omicron Pi's

-+- MRS. LINCOLN K . NELSON (P) played the
part of exiled King Georges of Constantia

Felix when members of the Twentieth * <
tury Gub of Park Ridge gave, "Her Friend,
the King" at the Mar)- Wilson House.—Chi-
cago Tribune.

MAY. 1934

Yearbook Appoints Dodds,
Herion Aids

-f- MAK<;ARET Donns ( T ) , junior in home eco-
nomics, and George Herion, senior in

forestry, were appointed to the editorial staff
of the 1934 Gopher yesterday by David Dono-
van, editor.

Student life on the farm campus will be a
feature of the 1934 Gopher. The section de-
voted to activities on the farm camnus will
be much larger than in previous editions.—
Minnesota Daily.

Xi Lawyer Is Officer In

Lawyer's Club

Martha McKinny, Virginia Rossman. -4- Miss MARY FRANCIS^ Oklahoma City, was
Ruth Braeutigam, Winning Bowling elected president of the Women Lawyers
Team at DePauw brought a cup
( lub at an organization meeting Monday night,
Theta. attended by 20 women from over the state.

Knoxville Panhellenic Picks Other officers named are Mrs. L . M. Black,
Officers, Plans Meeting Yukon, vice president; Mrs. Ann Dillard,
Waurika, second vice president: Mrs. Mildred
T H E RECENTLY ORGANIZED City Panhellenic Hover, Oklahoma City, recording secretary;
association, composed of sorority women Mrs. Hester Gilford, Oklahoma City, corre-
in the city, will have its first big meeting Sat- sponding secretary; Miss Berneice Berry ( 2 ) ,
urday when it will entertain with a luncheon Enid, treasurer; Miss Olive Rittenhouse, Okla-
at Cherokee Country Club. homa City, parliamentarian; and Mrs. Mamie
Officers of the new group are pictured to- Pitts, Watonga. Miss Maude Romsavillc,
day. They are: Mrs. Robert Watson, presi- Tulsa, and Miss Eulelilia Ewing, Eufaula, ex-
dent, an alumna; of Sigma Kappa Sorority; ecutive committee members.
Miss Edith Belle Layman, chairman of the
membership committee, and member of Zeta The club will meet the first Monday in each
Tau Alpha; Mrs. W. C. Alford, chairman of month at the Biltmore hotel and will have
publicity, and member of Alpha Delta P i ; quarterly meetings at various cities over the
Mrs. D. L . Earnest, chairman of the program state. The state meetings will be the night
committee, and member of Alpha Delta P i ; before the business session of the state bar
Mrs. Judson Robertson, vice president, and association's convention.—The Daily Oklaho-
member of Delta Delta Delta; Mrs. Lynn Mor- mdn.
ris, treasurer, and member of Phi Mu; Miss
Lucy Morgan, secretary, and member of Alpha Alice Dyer Prominent
Omicron Pi. On Maine Campus
Miss Marie White of T V A will be speaker
at the luncheon at 1 p. m., Saturday. Her -+- UPON A L I C E C. D Y E R ( r ) , a senior from
subject will be "House Planning." A musical Freeport, devolves the duties of guiding
program will also be given. the activities of Women's Student Government
All sorority women in the city are invited I Association of which
to attend Miss Edith Belle Laymann, 2-1249, she is president, a
will take reservations or they may be made position generally re-
with sorority alumna? representatives before garded as one of the
noon, Thursday.—The Knoxville Ncics-Senti- most important on the
nel. campus.
Miss Dyer started
Kappa Violinist Owns Amati Violin preparing for this re-
s p o n s i b i l i t y during
-f- T H E DEPARTMENT OF Mrsic presented its her first year, when
Christmas program on the evening of De- she showed m a r k e d
activity in the " Y .
cember 17, in the Smith Memorial auditorium. jfl^^ \ \ , " The Outing
The Glee Club of sixty voices was assisted Club, Campus Board.
by an antiphonal choir and by the College §E§k i i i i and S p a n i s h Club.
String Ensemble. Her qualities of lead-
ership brought her
Ruby Reed (K '34), a leading violinist in the election as president of the class honorary so-
ensemble, used an Amati violin which she re- ciety, Sophomore Eagles. She has served as
cently purchased from a member of the Chi- both secretary and treasurer of the Women's
cago Symphony Orchestra. This violin was Student Government, all of which prepared
made by Nicolo Amati, the third Nicolo of her well for the present office. She is an All
the generations of the famous Amati family Maine Woman, a member of the honorary so-
who arc said to have been the first Italian ciety of Phi Sigma, and of Alpha Omicron
violin makers, dating back to 1555—R.M.ll.C. Pi sorority.—Maine Alumnus.
Alit 111110" Bulletin.

50 To DRAGMA

Omicron Pi Member Executive Committee Announces
Wins Car Convention

— -+- T H E NEXT national convention will be held
in Chicago in 1935 with Rho and Chicago

Alumnae Giapters as hostesses. The location
was chosen by the majority of members. The
exact location and dates will be announced in
October.

Authors and other creators, please send your
handiwork to Mrs. Perry instead of the Cen-
tral Office as was formerly announced. Mrs.
Perry uses them in her historical exhibits at
convention.

Ruth Holten ( T ) sends a good suggestion
which we hasten to print in May so that each
reader will have an opportunity to render
service before alumna? personals are collected
for the fall issue. Ruth suggests that each of
you, scattered as you are about the globe, send
a note about yourself together with your ad-
dress to your chapter correspondent. It won't
take but a penny postal card and a minute for
you to do it and think of the joy each of you
will have reading about all your classmates
when fall comes 'round.

-+- C A N YOU IMAGINE the thrill Alda Weber Indiana U Prom Queen
(Oil) experienced in Cleveland, when she Is Alpha Omicron Pi

heard it broadcast over the radio that she -4- Miss L E L A SCOTT (B<f>) of Griffith, queen
had won a Ford Tudor Sedan. Her telephone of the 1934 Junior Prom at Indiana Uni-
began to buzz as her friends called to say
how happy they were for her. versity, will be presented to the dancers at
11 o'clock tonight at the gala social event of
The last of January, the Higbee Store con- the year at the university. Miss Scott, with
ducted a contest and awarded three Fords Robert Cook of Bloomington, president of the
daily for the entire month to the person who junior class, will lead the grand march of the
answered, in fifty words, in the best manner, danqe immediately following the presentation.
about the performance of the car. The dance will start at 10 o'clock tonight in
Alumni hall of the Union building. Approxi-
Alda is employed during the daytime and mately 450 couples will attend the affair, Ben
during her absence the day after she won the Siebenthal of Bloomington, Prom chairman,
car it was delivered to her door, a tank full stated Thursday.—Bloomington (Ind.) Star.
of gas, in an escort of eleven tooting Fords.
She had kind neighbors who cared for her
prize.

Never before has Alda Weber owned or
operated a car. She hadn't ever entered a
contest and she now claims—"it is only the
beginning." Can you blame her?—By Alice
IVessels Burlingame, OIL

-+- " T H R E E CORNERED MOON," a comedy farce

by Gertrude Contonogy, will be presented
by the Penn State Players in Schwab audito-
rium on Saturday, May 12, as a part of the
Mothers' Day Program and will be under the
direction of Prof. Arthur C. Cloetingth, of
the department of English Literature. Enid A.
Stage ( E A '35) has been cast for the leading
role with Wickliffe W. Crider ('36) playing
opposite her.—Penn State Collegian.

Mary Louise Fox Squyres, Xi '26, the first president
of Xi Chapter, is now retiring as president of the
Oklahoma Ladies' Auxiliary of the Veterans of For-
eign Wars. During her time as president, she has in-
stalled eight new units of the auxiliary in the state.
The work of the organization is educational, patriotic,
and fraternal. Mary Louise's particular interest,
however, lies in the hospital work. She recently has
been appointed Color Bearer for the national

organisation.



52 To DRAGMA
CO

Blanche Coe, Lambda, is circulation mana- Helen Pagan, Epsilon, is the first presi-
ger of the "Stanford Quad," a member of dent of the Cornell Chapter of AAV, hon-
the Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, and vice presi- rorary women's architectural society. She
dent of the German Club at Leland Stanford. is the only woman on the Beaux Arts

Ball Committee.

KICH, MINNEAPOLIS JOURNAL.
At the Sophomore Ball at the University of Minnesota co-eds modeled gowns worn since

the eighties. Jaync Footc, Tau, leads as Miss 1884.

53

MAY, 1934

CAMERACEAFT, MINNEAPOLIS JOURNAL.

fFlteh/vJlmraiere Evlar Tau (center), and her sisters, Betty and Alice (right), an Alpha 0
seTn their father's hunting dogs which they exhaled at the Northwest
VSiomrt SSmZenf's*'ShMowortahreldBoraercde,ntlAy ATin Minneapolis. Ethylmae is president of W, A G. A.,
and the Senate Committee on Student Affairs Alice
is on the W S G. A. Social Committee, a leader of a freshman interest group, W. A. A.,
and vice president of the Y. W. C. A. Freshman Cabinet.

Enid Stage, right, Epsilon Alpha, played Mary Virginia Barnes, Kappa, is the presi-
the lead in "Redemption" at Pennsylvania dent of the Student Body Association at
State College. She is vice president of
Randolph-Macon.
the junior class.

54 9\Ua To DRAGMA

m Os

Mary Lee Davis, Alpha Pi, was elected to Lois Lippitt, Phi, was chosen as one of the
Mortar Board and KAU. She is World beauty queens in the junior class at the Uni-
Fellowship Chairman for the V. W. C. A.
versity of Kansas.

>

i Bessie Mitchell, Omicron wEansgintheeersQ' uBeeanll oaft
Hearts for Ace Day at the
Muriel Hook, Zeta, has been selected the University of Tennessee.
one of the most charming freshmen on

the University of Nebraska campus.

MAY, 1934 55

Dorothy Lauth, Kappa Theta, has taken
part in Campus Capers at U. C. L. A. for
four years. She ts a member of Spurs,
Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, vice president of <PB,
'and in the University Dramatic Society.

Ella Kate Malone, Kappa Omicron, INDIANAPOLIS NEWS
was queen of the April Fool Carni-
val at Southwestern. Last year she
was "Miss Southwestern. She be-

longs to Cap and Gown.
Mary Alice Burch, Beta Theta, represented Butler
Panhellenic at DePauw in April as well as at
N P. C. in Chicago. She is Panhellenic president,
a member of Thespis, KATT, varsity debate Jeam
and TEA. As Queen Elisabeth she will reign at

the Butler May Day festival.

56 To DRAGMA

WANTED

Addresses for
Lost Alpha Os

-4- MOVING A L P H A O'S liavc failed to keep the Mildred Menefee Moore (Mrs. Clyde) E x .
Central Office informed of their where- '22. Marie Carter Peterson (Mrs. Murrav)
Ex. '19, Nellc DcPrall Ransom (Mrs.
abouts. In publishing the following list we Harry) E x . '15.
hope that their friends will be thoughtful BO—Dorothy Allen Hermann (Mrs. Frederick
enough to send the new addresses to Alice J.) '29.
Cullnane. Registrar, Box 262, State College, X—Margaret Coe Bell (Mrs. Claude C.) '27,
Pennsylvania. We suggest that each alumna? Florence Bentley, E x . '16, Florence Burkins,
chapter go over the entire list at its next Ex. '21, Virginia Wilson Franklin (Mrs.
meeting to see if some familiar names won't G. F . ) E x . '26, Kathryn Gilcher '20, Jennie
be found and the person located. Your offi- Gooding Greene (Mrs. W. S.) '25, Eleanor
cers will appreciate your cooperation. Hammond '21, Marion Jones '21, Josephine
A—lennie Preston Bragg (Mrs. Chas. M.) '01, Owen, Ex. '24, Martha Sargent Sheals (Mrs.
Ralph) '15, Ruth Williams, E x . '32.
Helen Glenn Kllyson (Mrs ) E x . '04.
Marie Marrin dePicabia (Mrs. L . M.) E x . XA—Ruth A. Thompson '31, Mary Woods, Ex.
'07, Lucetta Pitney Johnson, '07, Elizabeth '34, Dolores Zcmke '27.
Robinson Marriott (Mrs. W. M.) '08, Elmor
Ncu Morison (Mrs. James A . ) ]12, Con- A—Mary Hall Barber (Mrs. Philip W.) '26.
stance Gcraty Phelan (Mrs. Edward) '15, Marjorie Buchanan, E x . '26, Olive Byrne '26,
Adelaide Agnes Richardson '09, Hester \deline Huntington Cooper (Mrs. Clarence
Marv Rusk '12, Helen Van Duerson Wilson EL) Ex. '16. Irene Rachdorf Flanagan (Mrs.
(Mrs. David W.) E x . '04. Leo H . ) . Dorothy Brown Fuller (Mrs. W .
AT—Ruth Robertson Fischer (Mrs. George A.) E x . "06. l.vdia Glidden '28, Constance
A.) 30, Stella Fraser Phelps (Mrs. T . A.) Handy "29, Ethel Bartletl Havward (Mrs.
'30. D. B') E x . '97, Louise D. Holt. Ex. 2 1
A*—Arleda Allen E x . '29, Etta Norcutt \ua- Helen Bishop Howell (Mrs. George R.) '27,
way (Mrs. E . T . ) '19, Imn Gene Blakeslee Mabel laeksoii, E x . '06, Isabella M. Kcllock,
'27, Rose Bowling Calona (Mrs. Valentine) Ex. '21, Margaret Kimball, E x . '19. Alice
Ex. '25, Mary Alice Powers Cassada (Mrs. Bucknam Logic (Mrs. Ernest R . ) . E x . "09,
John) '27, Mildred Hacker Johnson (Mrs. Louise Russell Loring (Mrs. Ralph A.) '23,
Raymond) E x . '31, Kathryn Kellett '31, Dora Bailey Lough (Mrs. James E . ) Ex,
Aileen Nisula E x . '31, Manila Whitlock '98, Madeline Parker, E x . '19, Dorothy I .
Richardson (Mrs. Thomas) '28, Dorothv Roller, E x . '22, Justina Kiebsattel Potter
Ropes Sid well (Mrs. L . B.) '21. Verna (Mrs. Frederick) '31, E l i z a b e t h Schnur
Willis '25, Gaynor Knowles Franklin (Mrs.) Smith (Mrs. John P.) '14, Alma Wiley "13,
E x . '31. Marjorie McCartv Zicler (Mrs. Hans W.)
'24. '
AIT—Audrey Lcddy E x . '32, Marjoric Wvlam
'28. E—Catherine Campion Alspach (Mrs. R.) '23,
Marie Hayes Blewer (Mrs. George) '33,
AP—Mary Elizabeth Smith Elliott (Mrs. J . Mabel Hanson Bright (Mrs. Henry R.) Ex.
H.) '27, Marie Reavis, Ex. '30, Irene Bum- '33. Josephine Britton '07. Lillian Miller
stead Riley (Mrs. James C.) E x . '33. Amy Burkholder (Mrs. Paul R.) E x . '30, Helen
Severson, E x . '30.

AS—Ethel Gasman, '28, Betti Kessi Goodwin
( Mrs. C. Rav) '22, Juanita Jackson Moore
(Mrs. French) '26, Edna Biles Weller (Mrs.
Kenneth) '25.

AT—Laurabellc Ashbrook, '31, Barbara Dan-
iels, E x . '34.

B*—Grace Drahing. E x . '30, Annabel O'Con-
nor Jeffries (Mrs. Kenneth) E x . '33, Ruth
Clapper Kcesling ( Mrs. Roscoe) E x . '19,
Mary Helen Smith McCoy (Mrs. W. L . )
'25. Anne McEall Meek ('.Mrs. S. A.) '27,

M A Y , 1934 57

Wordcn Carpenter (Mrs. Allen) '28, Deb- Ex. '08, Lillie Roberts, E x . '10. Mabel Clarke
orah Hitchcock DeCamp (Mrs. Charles B.) Rorer (Mrs. Alec) E x . '23, Harriet Wilson
E x . '21, Karen Jensenius Douglass (Mrs. Rutherford (Mrs. Brown) Ex. '09, Marion
Thomas B.) '23, Dorothy Durling, Grad., Davies Singleton (Mrs. E . H.) E x . '11, Mil-
Elspcth Grant, E x . '31, Virginia Heuser, dred Smith '25. Shade Mann Thomas (Mrs.
Ex. '27, Dorothy Hvass, E x . '33, Elizabeth Edward) E x . '35, Gladys Trabue, E x . '12.
Robbins Kenny (Mrs. George H . ) E x . '30, KO—Virginia Johnson, E x . '32, Edna Frances
Sarah Holcomb Luetweilcr (Mrs. Clarence) Misenheimer '29, Alma Young Moore (Mrs.
'27. Esther Ely Manchester (Mrs. Robert Peyton) '30, Betty Lee Spenctta, E x . '35,
H.) E x . '21, Muriel J. Miller '26, Cornelia Alice Negus Werner (Mrs. Felix) '30.
Munsell Montgomery (Mrs. James F.) '20, A—Beatrice Lee Bowles (Mrs. Thomas K . )
Helene Browne Nelson (Mrs. Harold) '32, '24, Frances Hadenfeldt Boynton (Mrs.
Marion Hunton Porch (Mrs. Francis M.) Robert) Ex. '28, Ella Cates Browne (Mrs.
'24, Elsie Schneider Sarr (Mrs. Murray) Charles E . ) E x . '13, Marian Gilbert Cole-
'28, Elizabeth Pratt Vail (Mrs. Lester) '22, man (Mrs. A. H.) '18, Marion Mack Deavcr
Rosalind Ware '22, Agnes Dobbins Watt (Mrs. P. S.) '28, Eleanor Elmendorf Gra-
(Mrs. Clyde F . ) '13, Loraine Sherman ham (Mrs. Leroy) E x . '24, Marguerite
Williams (Mrs. Arthur P.) Grad., Herta Odenheimer Gwin (Mrs. A. Perry) '18,
von Siemens Wilson '27, Phyllis Wuest, E x . Laura Davis Hamlin (Mrs. H . Howard) '21,
'21. Viola Steele Hodge (Mrs. Fred M.) '08,
II—Alice Bauer '28, Bculah Zimmerman Car- Mabel Clare Jolly (Mrs. J . P.) E x . '16, Vir-
roll (Mrs. Lawrence) '21, Lillian Dulin ginia Morris '27, Earlene Phelps Norton
Cushing (Mrs. Harry E . ) E x . '21, Norma (Mrs. John) '24, Vera Thomas Petree (Mrs.
Hennell Elliott (Mrs. Harold) '22, Margaret Neil H . ) '18, Lily Morrison Quinlan (Mrs.
Hamilton '28, Gertrude Dassler Haukwitz Earl) E x . '18, Florence Pixlcy Schlaude-
(Mrs. Reed F . ) E x . '23, Gladys Inman '32, man (Mrs. Carl) '23, Lucy Shinn, Spec,
Ruth Johnson '25, Kathrvn Tunstall Lowe Bernice Williams Varnedoe (Mrs. James)
(Mrs. Geo. C.) E x . '23, Edna Gail McElroy '28, Rea Gilbert Westenhaver (Mrs. R. E . )
(Mrs. D. E . ) E x . '22, Virginia Marks, E x . '17, Hazel Cooke Woodward (Mrs. R. S.)
*33, Elizabeth Babcock Metcalf (Mrs. Her- '09.
bert) '22, Hortense Bassett Mighton (Mrs.
Merrill) E x . '22. Mildred Schrocder Mitchell X—Helen Richtcr Allen (Mrs. Alexander)
(Mrs. W. K . Jr.) Ex. '24. Agnes Hottel Ex. '27, Madeline Doty Baldwin (Mrs.
Moses (Mrs. James) '20. Elizabeth David- Roger) '02, Helen Wheeler Bcrgcr (Mrs.)
son Nash (Mrs. Edward W . ) '27, Dorothy E x . '21, Gertrude Birmingham '22, Edna
Hardie Raff (Mrs. Frank) E x . *28, Eliza- Bosshard, E x . '31, Mary Frances Bossidy '29,
beth Rinder Reardon (Mrs. William E . ) Lillian Cue\as '29^ Margaret Drake (Mrs.
E x . '23, Jean Fisher Savery (Mrs. C. W.) Charles A . ) '25, Charlotte Dupont Durkee
'25. Grace Degan Schultz (Mrs. Glen) '22, (Mrs. Jasper) '22, Mary Figueria '22, Flora
Helen Moebs Smith (Mrs. Sheldon D.) Todd Fuller (Mrs. Bert C.) "03. Mabel W.
E x . '24. Hammer, E x . '20. Elizabeth H . Hartshorne
r—Eleanor Murray Archer (Mrs. Cay Ion R.) '18, Florence K. Hascall '02, Inez Hoagland,
'25. Frances Jones Bailey (Mrs. H. P.) E x . E x . '22, Helen Walker Homan (Mrs. D. A.)
'17, Marguerite Mills Beach (Mrs. David '19, Dorothy Yandcwaier I loyt (Mrs. Fran-
N.) E x . '20, Helen Averill Burghart (Mrs. cis, Jr-) '12, Dorothy Kenyon '17, Norma
Lloyd M.) '11, Madeline Gould Maclvers Binger Laugenbagen (Mrs. Charles) E x .
(Mrs. Robert) E x . '19, Fay Smith Merrow '28, Catherine Noyes Lawlor (Mrs. John)
(Mrs. E . L . ) '19, Vera Gellerson Robinson '23, Virginia Lee, E x . '32, Clara A. Lehing
(Mrs. A. L . ) '18. '25, Edith McCleary '22, Margaret McDonald
I—Frances E . Cassady '29, Ruth Butler Cord- Meyer (Mrs. Adolph E . ) '23, Alice Carson
ing (Mrs. H . J.) '23, Bettee M. Deming, Minton (Mrs. John M.) '19, Alison DuBois
E x . '35, Marie LeSaulnier Hoffman (Mrs. Murphy (Mrs. Deacon) E x . '17. Priscilla
A. C.) E x . '20, Kathryn H . Hughes '22, N. Myers '09, Mary Peaks '17, Helen Smart
Kathleen Conard Kilpatrick (Mrs. Douglas) Pearson '26, Elizabeth Pope '07. Winifred
E x . '34, Esther Van Doren Malcolmson Notman Prince (Mrs. David) '16, Eve
(Mrs. David K . ) '21, Marjoric Morrison '33, Radtke '07. Marjory Langley Ryan (Mrs.
Helen Parkerson Reitzcll (Mrs. W. H.) Byford) '19, Mary Rutter Towlc, E x . '10.
E x . '23, Nellie Hedgecock (Mrs. M. P.) '16, Helen Ordway VanRipcr (Mrs. C. K . ) Ex.
Lora Henion Sutherland (Mrs. A. H.) '11, '21, Helen Vollmer '15. Elizabeth Harrison
Emma DeWitt Thomas (Mrs. Daniel) '11, Walker (Mrs. J . B.) '19, Frances Welch '30.
Frances Trost '14, Cherrie Malcolmson Helen I . Williams '20, Jane King Wood
Waldo (Mrs. Allen W.) E x . '27. (Mrs. Robert) '30.
K—Marva Thompson Blair (Mrs. Jack M.)
'12, Saidee Hardy Brown (Mrs. D. A.) E x . XK—Kate Gay Albertson (Mrs. E . L . ) E x .
'15, Fannie Buttcrfield '17, Katherine Gordon '23, Nellie Sims Alexander (Mrs. Henry A.)
Cary (Mrs. J . B.) '14, Lillian Donovan '24, Elizabeth Cummings Decker (Mrs.
Giapman (Mrs. W. A.) E x . '08, Juno Nelson) E x . '21, Mary Reynolds Dixon
Wright Crabb (Mrs. C. G.) '12, Mary Little (Mrs. Thomas) '25, Nell Harris Emenhiser
Jeffries (Mrs. Guy B.) '10, Annie Linn, E x . (Mrs. T . W.) E x . '19. Cornelia Groce, E x .
'13, Frances Cherry Parks (Mrs. Frank) "19, Roberta Blewett Harper (Mrs. L . W.)
'26, Irene Pendleton Nolan (Mrs. Bryan)
Ex. '23, Jackson Pruitt Roberts (Mrs. O.

58 To DRAGMA

B.) E x . '22, Helen Smith (Mrs. Herschel '13, Nina English '23, Winifred Wilson
B.) '26, Louise Smith, E x . '25, Etta Baldwin Flack (Mrs. C. E . ) '23, Louise Norton
Woods, E x . '25. French (Mrs. C. L . ) '06, Geraldine Galvin,
NO—Annie Garrett Brown (Mrs. J . S.) '22, Ex. '21, Eunice Marthens Gemmill (Mrs.
Edna Thomason Burns (Mrs. T. J . ) E x . '31. E. H.) '19, Viola Hartman, E x . '21, Harriet
Sara Costen '21, Willie D. Halsell, Grad., Reynolds Johnson (Mrs. E . M.) E x . '29,
Lois Callahan Hindman (Mrs. L . H.) E x . Florence Kerr, Spec, Mildred Judson Lutz
'21, Sue Lanier '33, Grace McVeigh '25, (Mrs. Harry S.) E x . '25, Juanita McFar-
Douglas Legg Moore (Mrs. J . D., J r . ) . land, E x . '21, Jane Kennedy May (Mrs.
ft—Helen Simpson Frey (Mrs. F . W.) '25, Meredith R.) E x . '20, Verene Schmid
Edna Gilbert '18, Florence Keyerleber '19, Moore (Mrs. Gregory) E x . '32, Mildred
Louise Murray '26. Crane Palmer (Mrs. Willard) E x . '30, Eve-
O—Ola Hancock Brooks (Mrs. C. S.) '23, lyn Pearson '28, Ruth Carol Pearson, Ex.
Mary Bryant, E x . sp., Harriet Caldwell, E x . '31, Helen Perkins, E x . '21, Dorothy Huck-
'07, Fannie Lee Caulkins, E x . '04, Lucy Mor- ins Peterson (Mrs. — ) E x . '32, Anna Curry
rison Coltman (Mrs. W. P.) E x . '25, Eliza- Rayhill (Mrs. J . J.) '12, Elizabeth Recht '18,
beth Bickley Eason (Mrs. John F . ) '25, Eleanor Johnson Schmidt (Mrs. Henry) Ex.
Anna W. Gibson, E x . '07, Mary Elizabeth '28, Estelle Swigart '29, Ethel A. Willman
Horner, E x . '23, Christine Moore Inge (Mrs. '20.
George) E x . '24, Marjorie Pease King (Mrs. 2—Jean Armstrong '17, Helen Clowes Bald-
Charles) E x . '12, Polly Nicholson, E x . '33, win (Mrs. Louts G.) '17, Esther Naylor
Queenie McConnell Owensby (Mrs. W. S.) Barbour (Mrs. Irwin) E x . '23, Elizabeth
'07, Alfa Smith Sikes (Mrs. O. C.) '16, Morgan Barker (Mrs. Edgar E . ) '06. Anita
Mary Buchanan Thomas, E x . '10, Elizabeth Avila Bay (Mrs. Victor) '24, Elois For-
Wallace '29. syth Berglund (Mrs. Harvey M.) Ex.
'15, Narendra Blair, E x . '33, Esther Board-
Oil—Margaret Smith Davis (Mrs. F . G.) '29, man Busby (Mrs. Leonard A . ) '07, Lucille
Loraine Price Howell (Mrs. Harold) '24, Greig Campbell (Mrs. Arthur B.) E x . '21,
Dorothy A. Patton '26, Susan Crawford Grace Smith Chadbourne (Mrs. Grant) '28,
Williams (Mrs. Stuart R.) '25. Marjory Armstrong Coombs (Mrs. Tracy)
'17, Helen Thayer Daugherty (Mrs. R. B.)
*—Bernice Reed Anderson (Mrs. —) '28, E x . '14, Eugenia Davis, E x . '23, Helen Mc-
Louise Carnev, E x . '29, Frances Wilson Intyre Detrick (Mrs. Edington) E x . '23,
Cash (Mrs. George) '29, Bernice Kuhn Edith Dickenson, Spec, Exine Dunn '30,
Chandler (Mrs. George H.) E x . '22, June Margaret Haseltine Falls (Mrs. F . H.) '13,
Christopher Clark (Mrs. J . J . ) E x . '24, Zada Elizabeth Hawkins Forsyth (Mrs. E . C.) '25,
Shipley Corwin (Mrs. Ralph) E x . '23, Ruth Leonore M. Gray, E x . '23, Elizabeth Hill,
Ellen Davis, E x . '23, Dr. Ruth Ewing '20, Ex. '16, Sara Thompson Hoen (Mrs. Lewis)
Margaret Bolinger Isern (Mrs. Leonard) '23, Margaret Howard, E x . '16, Marjorie
Ex. '24, Thora Collins Judkins (Mrs. Merle) Furlong Johnson (Mrs. Alden) E x . '30,
Ex. '29, Carol McDowell '19, Marjorie Mc- Elizabeth Johnson LaRue (Mrs. Morgan E . )
Kelvy '27, Lillie Marjorie Price (Mrs. Ter- Ex. '15, Dorothy Hart Miller (Mrs. Daniel)
rill E . ) '20, Henrietta Stewart Singer (Mrs. '27, Marjorie Morris, E x . '15, Elsa Ober-
Charles V . ) "27, Blanche Potts Stucker deener, Spec, Darthea Powell O'Connell
(Mrs. Edwin G.), Grad. (Mrs. Phillip) E x . '24, Dorenda Maltby
Penfield (Mrs. S. R.) E x . '21, Eleanor Pey-
II—Adele Foster Benson (Mrs. L . K ) '30, ton, E x . '21, Beatrice St. John Searls (Mrs.
Julia Byrnes Carrico (Mrs. John) '07, D, G.) Ex. '20, Anna Bcal Shipley (Mrs.
Louise Church '24, Caroline Guyol Cook 1. B.) E x . '19, Geneva Watson Smith (Mrs.
(Mrs. Abner H . ) E x . '09, Nora O'Neill Far- J. B.) E x . '11, Kathryn Hubbard Switzer
rington (Mrs. John) '25, Emily Freret '10, (Mrs. Lewis) E x . '16, Dorothy Reichman
Susan Gillean '03, Alma Wilson Gimper Walker (Mrs. Clifton H . ) E x . '21, Esther
(Mrs. E . H . ) '00, Clara Hall '16. Helena Cardwell Wessell (Mrs ) '20, Julia Hert
Chalaron Hardy (Mrs. Judson) '28, Thelma Withington (Mrs. Dennet) '22, Helen Edsori
M. Henry '27, Eugenia McCartney '33, Mary Wixon (Mrs. Sanford) E x . '11.
Young Menise (Mrs. John) '00, Dorothy T—lone Albrecht '15, Lila Kline Barth (Mrs.
Weston Robinson (Mrs. H . H . ) '24, Jennie Harry) '20, Winifred Eliason '28, Mildred
Synder Savage (Mrs. Egbert) '16, Maia Mor- A. Hagcn, E x . '20, Vivian Watson Hark-
gan Weston (Mrs. Clement W.) '22, Adele ncss (Mrs. Earl) E x . '18, Helen McDermott
Mercier Winn (Mrs. Wm.) Ex. '02, Eliza- LaBarge (Mrs. George J.) '11, Juanita Med-
beth Johnston Wright (Mrs. Claude B.) '30. bery, '26, Elizabeth Reinertsen Mills (Mrs.
Hartzell) '24, C a r o l y n Brown Nehring
nA—Lillie Lucille Hill Day (Mrs. Wilfred) (Mrs. A. A.) '12, Lillian Tifft Overmire
'25, Nova Thompson Maclsaac (Mrs ) (Mrs. Raymond E . ) '20, June Wimer Phil-
'28, Martha Ross Temple '31, Milly Wool- lips (Mrs. W. J . ) '15, Anne Yates Rapport
man '28. (Mrs. David) Grad., Alice Staples Robbins
(Mrs. Leon R.) '12, Irma Eagan Schmidt
*—Ruth Leaf Hall (Mrs. Lincoln W.) E x . (Mrs. Edward) '19. Marjorie Doyle Stev-
'21, Virginia Kerns, E x . '21, Elizabeth Mc- ning (Mrs. Oliver) '18, Margaret Whitmore,
Owen '26, Louise Seyfcrt Miller (Mrs. G. Ex. '28.
S.) '30, Helen Millick Tucker (Mrs. Lay-
ton) '31.

P—Jane Smith Barnes (Mrs. I. L . ) E x . '29,
Lenore Thompson Cowan (Mrs. John) Ex.

MAY, 1934 59

TA—Margaret Jackson '31, Florence Hopson '23, Marguerite Oathout Wirt (Mrs. Wil-
Miller (Mrs. C. D.) '20, Lorena Norton liam) E x . '23.
Moore (Mrs. Thomas) '23, Margery Or- 2—Tuanita Stephens Brown (Mrs. Horace D.)
mond Rogers (Mrs. Lewis W.) '24, Eleanor '24, Ollie Haeber Dejernett (Mrs. Ira E . )

Webb, E x . '30, Lura Coontz Worming- '25, Mildred Donavan '27, Dorothy Mouser

ton '29. Drury (Mrs. Lloyd) '30, Berta Gibbins

0—Helen Sutton Baney (Mrs. Irvin) E x . '17, '27, Gladys C. Jackson '23, Agnes Mac Srni-
Mildred Betz Bartlett (Mrs. Clinton G.) '21,
Grace Largent Bradley (Mrs. George) '21, ka Marsh (Mrs. Cyril) '27, Algene Chiles
Louise Carter, E x . '24, Ruth Creager, E x . Metzler (Mrs. Theodore H . ) '26, Dorothy
'23, Grace Robertson Delap (Mrs. Homer) Mozley '27, Helen Burke Newcomer (Mrs.)
E x . '17, Mary Elizabeth Houck Dill (Mrs. '26, Elsie Daugherty Welch (Mrs. J. Nor-
John M.) '27, Helen Wilson Doyle (Mrs. man) E x . '23, lola Harrison Woods (Mrs.
Clinton) '25, Flora Frazier '12, Helen O'Rear Wallace) E x . '27.
Gregg (Mrs. George) '20, Beryl Hawkins
Gwartney (Mrs. Hilbert) E x . '15, Frances From Our Social Worker

[CONTINUED FROM PAGE 30J
Kelly Hughes (Mrs. Harry F . ) '17, Edna in new, and therefore to him unproved, under-
Harvey Joseph (Mrs. Allen F . ) '13, Mary takings would assume the proportions of an
Frances Carmack Kennedy (Mrs. George R.) enormous risk. Until we arc prepared to share
E x . '27, Nell Hope Leachman '14, Dorothy these risks with him, facing the reality of
Barr Lemon (Mrs.) '30, Ruth Little '19, their proportions as they appear to him, I
E v a Thompson Meissner (Mrs. John F . ) seriously question whether we can reasonably
'09, Mary Shock Moss (Mrs. Charles) E x . expect to find the mountain farmer in an
'13, Reggie O'Brien, E x . '21, Carol Phillippe effectively receptive frame of mind for our
'25, Margaret Wood Ralay (Mrs. Benton gospel of a new agronomy. And practical re-
C.) E x . '22, Ruby Kemp Remley (Mrs. C. sults must akvays await this vital factor of
Glessner) E x . '22, June Morris Silverman human energy, which spells food, enough and
(Mrs. Abraham) '21, Lucille Mason Sims of the right kind.
(Mrs. Gerald) E x . '31, Gertrude Louise
Smith '28, Fern Roberts Swinford (Mrs.) Rather prosaic subject, this business of
E x . '15, Delia Doggette Thompson (Mrs. mountain farming, though I must confide to
John M.) '27, Mary Helena Thompson, E x . you that a natural love for good black earth
'20, Margaret Vannice, E x . '33, Marjorie C. and growing things can do much to enliven
Walker, E x . *29, Mary Tillett Walker (Mrs. it! Prosaic or not, I am convinced that, what-
Russell P.) Spec, Lucille Allee Whitman ever theories one might entertain as to non-
(Mrs. Paul H . ) E x . '23, Lydia J . Wieder agricultural solutions of the mountaineer's
'28, Ruth Case Wilson (Mrs. William H . ) economic problem (and we have dozens of
'20, Beatrice Woodward '18. those too!), it is very probably true that for
T—Elinor Peterson Allen (Mrs. Carroll F . ) years to come a considerable part of the pres-
Spec, Rose Ellwood Allen (Mrs. W. A . ) ent population will still be here, making or
E x . '18, Margaret White Callahan (Mrs. trying to make the major part of their living
Lloyd) E x . '22, Elizabeth Watson Clark from the soil. Unless, along with trying to do
(Mrs. Harold M.) E x . '25, Beatrice Ober a variety of other needed things, we can do
Denman (Mrs. Samuel L . ) E x . '23, Helen something to effect a radical change in moun-
Fosdick Derryberry (Mrs. Mort) '22, Laura tain farming, the agricultural situation will
Moir Doner (Mrs. F . T . ) E x . '17, Dorothy grow progressively worse—is, in fact, growing
Smith Faulkenburg (Mrs. Merle) '28, E s - progressively and rapidly worse. Unless we
telle Wheeler Flannagan (Mrs. J . F . ) E x . can check this trend, this means that we who
'22, Esther Fleming '14, Dorothy Redmon concern ourselves with social and medical
Francis (Mrs. Nicolas) '23, Loretta Chasse problems can expect to see malnutrition, the
Fraser (Mrs.) E x . '30, Frances Dibble Gra- diseases associated therewith, acute wide-
ham (Mrs. R. S.) '20, Hilda Hendricksen, spread privation and general social backward-
E x . '19, Anna Ruth Henry '23, Bernice Jae- ness continue rampant.

ger '25, Emma Pohll Ladenburg (Mrs. Fran- I daresay this is quite enough about my
cis) E x . '19, Helen Ewing McAtee (Mrs. "sidelines," but the foregoing aren't all of
Earl) E x . '32, Gertrude McCanne '29, Jo- them. The protection and propagation of fish
sephine Kerns Murphy (Mrs. Carl O.) E x . and game, a "cause" which has also economic
'23, Edith Broom Nusbaum (Mrs. Dean E . ) implications, is another of the things that en-
'28, Virginia Parrish '31, Pearl Lipscomb gage my interest. Being a member of the
Parsons (Mrs. Edward A . ) E x . '22, Swan- Executive Committee of the Kentucky Con-
hild Jule Pope (Mrs. Ezra) E x . '24, Alice ference of Social Work gives me a focus also
McArdle Price (Mrs. James, Jr.) Spec, for an interest in State welfare standards and
Beth McCausland Sandusky (Mrs. O. E . ) legislation. Any number of the right people
'20, Doris Moore Sutton (Mrs. George S.) could profitably spend their entire time on that
Ex. '21, Florence McMeekin Swartz (Mrs. subject and in the effort to create a sound and
Gill) '26, Frances Moore Walters (Mrs. essential groundwork of informed, active pub-
Carl) E x . '32, Eleanor Tiedeman White lic opinion in support of a more adequate
(Mrs. Sherman A . ) E x . '31, Vivian So Relle statutory framework for public welfare in
Williams (Mrs. Robert J . ) '15, Kathleen Kentucky, adequately financed. I try to keep
Heywood Wilson (Mrs. Robert W . ) E x . them within bounds, these sidelines I am con-

JCONTINUED ON PACE 76]

To DRA

\

Mary Meyer won the ring pre- Theodora Jones, Alpha Tail, is Margaret Christilaw, Beta Tau,
sented to the best all-around
Pledqe of Theta Eta. She it president of Cap and Gown led her year in the Faculty of
at Dcnison University, vice
* anhellenic delegate and won president of W. A. A., and Household Science where she
second place in the discus is president of the graduating
throw in Creek games. She chairman of the Northeast Sec- year. She is her faculty rep-
tional Convention of the
belongs to the Leadership Athletic Federation of College resentative on "Torontoncn-
Gronp of the University of sis, University of Toronto
Cincinnati V. W. C. A. II omen; a member of the var- yearbook. She has been presi-
sity debate team.
dent of her chapter.

Stellar Alpha O's •

Elizabeth Witsell, Omicron, is president Emma Watson Delta Phi, won the United
of Cap and Gown at the University of Daughters of the Confederacy medal for
Tennessee. She captained the AOII base- her essay on the Confederacy. She is on
ball team and worked on the staff of the Deans Honor List at the University

the "Orange and White." of South Carolina.

MAY, 1934 .,1

iiai»iiif^iBi^rfm«raaii»ii

Ann Arbor Alumna; Have Annual attending the luncheon and the amount col-
Senior Breakfast lected went toward our quota f o r the national
fund. A f t e r luncheon everyone was asked
By, Margaret Underwood, O i l to remain f o r a movie depicting the work o f
the Frontier Nursing Service. I t was most
-4- Two MEETINGS of the Ann Arbor alumna: inspiring to sec the nurses and doctors in ac-
have taken place since the last report. tion and appalling to know- the handicap under
which they work.
One in February when we joined the patron-
esses of the active chapter f o r a pot-luck Dorothy Greve Jarnagin ( 0 '05), living in
supper at the home of Mrs. Inglis. We thor- Athens, gave a lovely tea f o r us, inviting sixty
oughly enjoyed getting together with them and eligible girls from the University, who were
talked over the successful bridge-bake sale I bought to be sorority material f o r a new
wbicli we had arranged to benefit our social chapter. Wc were also her guests at this af-
work in the Kentucky mountains. We also fair and together with Dorothy Jarnagin and
planned to join forces in sending clothes f o r her two charming daughters, we assisted in
the same worthy cause next year. The patron receiving and entertaining the guests. I t was
esses also made a lovely g i f t to the active a lovely tea and very much appreciated by us,
chapter of bouillon spoons. A t our A p r i l the Atlanta Alumna?. A f t e r everyone had
meeting we had dinner at the house with the gone, we settled down to a long discussion
actives and pledges. We were entertained by about the girls and our coming activities pre-
the pledges who were on "pro" and were to paratory to colonizing. After other visits to
he initiated the next evening. Afterwards we Athens and various discussions we realized
held a meeting to elect officers f o r the f o l - that i t was rather hopeless to accomplish our
lowing year. W i n i f r e d Hall ( O i l '33) is presi- purpose, since wc were trying to work at a
dent; Ruth Van Tuyl ( O i l '31), vice president distance and not sure that we wanted to con-
and editor to To DRAH.MA; Man i lla Schneider sider a local. We finally decided the safest
( A * '28), treasurer; Dorothy Woodward Bar- and only way was to have an AOII alumna
nard (Z '23), secretary. Installation of offi- matriculate and enter f o r the spring term.
cers will be held in Ypsilanti at the home of Our National Secretary wrote to Beverly
Cora Mae Lane Weidmann ( I ) . We planned Walton ( n '31), and she matriculated at the
our next meeting, which is to be a breakfast University of Georgia in March. We are-
for the seniors at the Hall Farm on the gratefully looking to Beverly to promote the
Huron River. This has become an annual arduous task of colonization. She has a splen-
event to which we all look forward with did ability, a charming personality and no
great enthusiasm. happier choice could have been made. Kath-
crine Kelly Du Bose entertained at a luncheon
Atlanta Alumnae Interested in Georgia on March 19, on Beverly's arrival f r o m her
Colonization home in New Orleans. A f t e r luncheon we
talked with Beverly about the Athens situation
By Emma Fritsch-e Garnscy, as we knew it. We also received word that
Ann Anderson Sale would arrive in Atlanta
- + . O U R ACTIVITY f o r months has been d i - on A p r i l 3. Beverly came over from Athens
rected toward the University of Georgia and, with Ann and the Alumna?, there was a
meeting and on A p r i l 4 a tea f o r Ann. The
at Athens, and to raising money f o r our con- tea was held at the home of Annie Stewart
tribution to the National Work. We are most Pearce ( I I '24), to which formal invitations
happy in our anticipation of a chapter about were issued, inviting two members f r o m each
which I shall tell you later. sorority affiliated wit 11 Panhellenic. I t was a-
pcrfect spring day, and the house and guests-
On Founders' Day, December 8, an evening took on the seasonal spirit. The house was
bridge party f o r members, their dales and bedecked with jonquils and f r u i t blossoms.
husbands, was held at the home of Elizabeth The centerpiece on the tea table, at which
MacQuiston Nichols (NK '29). A l l kinds of Hazel Hartwell Jenkins ( A ) and E d i t h
funny and appropriate trinkels were auctioned Walthal Ford poured, were the AOII red roses
off at quite a profit, the proceeds of which and candles. Elizabeth Nichols, Annie Stew-
went toward the National Work fund. art Pearce and Ann Sale received. Mary H u r t
( K ) and Marie Askew ( K ) were home f o r
After guaranteeing to bring a certain num- the holidays. Eulee t i d e (-1*) was visiting.
ber of people, a luncheon was given us by the
Sears and Roebuck Store, gratis, on January
17. together with a fashion show. A nominal
charge was made by our chapter to all those

62

Valree Lide ( A * '33), who has joined our On April 5, twenty alumna? attended Gamma

chapter and is continuing her studies in A t - Chapter's annual initiation and banquet held
lanta. I t "was a very festive occasion f o r A t - at the Bangor House, among whom were
lanta AOIT's. Ann Sale installed the officers Frances Sawyer Worcester ('27) from Jones-
port, and Frances Fuller Giddings (' 2m8i)lefsr ni
after the tea. That night Annie Stewart enter- Gardiner, who travelled the hundr ed 0 to
tained all the Alpha O's and the husbands or
dates. be with us. Frances Gidding's younger sister
Charlotte, was initiated. "Betty" Barrows'
A t our meeting on March 30 we had an "Libs" Hiliker and Grace Quarrington, all of
election of officers and the results are as f o l - '33, sent telegrams of welcome to our new-
lows: Annie Stewart Pearce ( n '24), presi- sisters. Elizabeth "Cracker" Ring ('23) wel-
dent; Edith Walthal Ford (K '30), vice presi- comed the thirteen initiates on behalf of the
dent; Valree Lide ( A * '33), secretary; [Cath- alumna? and Joyce Cheney Stevens gave a fit-
erine Kelly Du Bose (KO '28), treasurer; ting climax to the banquet with her reading
Elizabeth MacQuiston Nichols (NK '29), pub- of "The Rose."
licity director and editor to To DRAC.MA, who
will have much to tell you later about our Our sympathy is extended to Doris Savage
vital interest, colonization at Athens. We are and Ruth Savage Wiswell in the loss of their
pleased with the results of this election, and father, Charles Savage, the last of March.

wish the new officers success. We still recom-
mend selling vanilla as an easy, profitable B i r m i n g h a m A l u m n a ? E n j o y s V a r i e d
means of acquiring funds. Program
On April 4, Annie Stewart, Katherine Kelly,
Hazel Hartwcll Jenkins (A '16), Beverly Wal- By Elizabeth Morris Hackney, TA

ton and Elizabeth MacQuiston Nichols drove W E HAVE TRIED to have our meetings this
year at such times that every member
Ann Sale to Athens to inspect a local group could get to at least one meeting. We have
on the University of Georgia campus.
The Atlanta Panhellenic is giving its annual had teas, bridge parties, dinners and meetings
bridge tournament on April 28 at the Shrine at night. Our next gathering is a picnic hon-
Mosque. The money is to be used f o r a oring Tau Delta seniors. Our president. Ger-
scholarship at the University of Georgia. We trude Moore, has given us a well-balanced
are responsible f o r selling tickets f o r ten program and deserves commendation. The
tables. picnic is an annual affair and is always the
We extend our sympathy to Dorothy Grevc "big event." The alumna: like to meet the
actives and interest them in the alumna? work.
Jarnagin in the illness of her son in England.

B a n g o r A l u m n a e L e a d i n M a g a z i n e And speaking of all this is a reminder that
Gertrude, after making plans f o r the year,
Subscriptions absolutely deserted us and left her sister,
Helen, to carry them out. Gertrude had a
By Mary E. Robinson, T

- + - A T T H E JANUARY meeting of Bangor Chap- visit in Mobile and New Orleans, being there
ter, held at Eleanor Murray Archer's, we for Mardi Gras, and came back home just
felt proud to have our president read a letter in time to rush off to Washington to teach
of commendation f r o m National on our work at Arlington Hall. One of our very active
in sending in magazine subscriptions. A t that Tau Delta's of '29, Fletcher McArthur Fer-
time Bangor Chapter led the country. W i t h rebe, now of Anniston, Alabama, has been
the money f r o m this together with that raised visiting in Birmingham f o r several weeks. We
by our food sale held in December under the were glad to have her at the last meeting and
chairmanship of Estelle Beaupre, we were able hear all about her big son, John Clement, Jr.,
to nearly complete our quota f o r National and about other Tau Delta's who live in
Work. Anniston: Helen Boarchers Rae C30), an.I
Priscilla Knowlton held the February meet- Clara Pritchett Rogers Lott (Ex. '29). For :
ing. Not much business was completed because the past week we have had the pleasure of
of the absence of our president. Some dis- entertaining Mary D. Drummond and our
cussion was held on lowering dues to encour- Southern District Superintendent, Charlotte
age larger membership, as with all the AOII Kearney. Most of the entertaining was done
alumna: in Bangor and vicinity, we have only in small groups at luncheons, suppers and at
a paid membership of nineteen. different homes. The actives were hostesses
For the March meeting, we went to the at supper one night, and the alumna? enter-
home of Alice Stanley Dunham in Orono. We tained at tea, inviting members of fraternities,
voted to finish paying our National W o r k sororities and faculty at Birmingham-South-
Quota and also to continue our yearly sub- ern to meet our guests. Louise Stange, a Tau
scription to a local charity. And did the knit- Delta pledge, was initiated after the supper
ting needles fly! Bland Morrow might well party with Mary Drummond reading the ritual.
call on this chapter f o r a knitting quota f o r
her Kentuckians. We are looking forward to Our new officers have been elected and Lila
the invitation extended by Alice Phillips to Mae Cantey Thigpen is to be the president.
have the June meeting at her summer cottage Lila Mae has been one of our most active
on the coast. and most loved members and we feel sure of
a successful year with her as leader.

MAY, 1934 63

Bloomington Alumnae Give Lamp lieve the Alumnae Chapter f r o m excessive na-
Shades to Beta P h i tional assessments for the potential members.

By Analie Shazv Hcpley, M The nominating committee submitted the
following slate of officers f o r 1934-35: Presi-
ROSALIE ESAREY BORLAND ('23) had our dent, Marv Heald (A '22) ; 1st vice president,
December meeting at her home with Mary Beth Ringer (A '32) ; 2nd vice president, Mar-
Frances Marxson Wylic ( E x . '32) as her garet Amon ( 0 '18) ; corresponding secretary,
assistant hostess. We gave lamp shades to the Frances Heald (A '30) ; recording secretary,
active chapter f o r the house f o r Christmas Olive MacPherson (A '33) ; treasurer, Edna
and gifts of money to the local charity or- Woodbury Webb (A '12) ; editor to To
ganization. DRAG MA, Dorothy Hilton Downs (A '23) ;
historian, Charlotte Lowell (A '03) ; herald,
We held our Januarv meeting at the home Annette MacKnight Harvey (A '14) ; Pan-
§E Irene Ryan ('24). Helen Reiff Million hellenic delegate, Octavia Chapin (A '13);
(Ex. '25) was her assistant hostess. Charlotte hospitality committee, Beth Ringer (A '32),
Shaw Ellis ('28) and Pauline Ellis ("33) had Dorothy Bartlctt Buck (A '13), Anne White
our February meeting at Charlotte's home. ( 9 '18) ; Founders' Day, Margaret Rourke
We are planning a benefit bridge party to be (A '30), Gladys Nason (A '30), and the A
held at the chapter house sometime this spring president; membership chairman, Margaret
and a rummage sale. Burton Harter ( I '27), Elizabeth Morris (A
On March 14 we met at the home of Mvra '33) ; nominating committee, Genevieve Fos-
Esary Mayes ('22). Laura Alexander ('23) dick Sanborn (A '10), Blanche Hooper (A
was her assistant hostess. A t this meeting we '04), Jean Lamb (A '33).
elected our officers f o r the coming year. They
are as follows: Jennie Carpenter Bowen ('22), The March 24 meeting was held at Gladys
president; Helen Million, vice president; Pau- Bryant Moore's in Waban, with Lorca Jame-
line Ellis, treasurer; Rowcna Nash ('33), sec- son as her right hand assistant. We were
retary. We are making plans now f o r our most fortunate to have Eva Fulton Mellish
('06), who has been doing landscape garden-
annual bridge f o r the seniors of the active ing in and around Maiden this last year, talk
chapter. to us on the "Flowers of Old New England."
This was followed by many individual garden
Boston Alumna? Raise $50 f o r problems being discussed. Gladys' delicious
meal was consumed to the rhythm of every-
National Work one getting caught up on the latest bits of

By Mary Estelle Heald, A news. We must not forget to mention two
very fine assistants in Miss Leslie Moore and
-4- T H E JANUARY MEETING, as last year's, was Master Bill Moore who saw to it that we did
omitted that the various sectional groups not lack f o r seconds. I t is a real delight to
have so many from other chapters with us at
might hold their parties to make money f o r our meetings. This time we had Margaret
the Frontier Nursing Fund. These will net Amon ( 9 '18) and Anne White ( 6 ' 1 8 ) ;
about fifty dollars f o r this year's contribu- Ethel Packard Harkness ( r '22) ; Margaret
tion; not our f u l l quota; since we have been Burton Harter ( I '27), and Dorothy Dickinson
assessed on our entire potential membership, Daniel ( I '25) ; and Helen Wallen ( T ) , who
'it is a difficult proposition f o r the smaller is the dietitian at the Massachusetts General
active group to raise the whole of the fund. Hospital and lives on Beacon H i l l . The Delta
You, Delta alumna?, who may not live near Alumnae included Edna Woodbury Webb
enough to Boston to be an active member, do ('12), Leslie Hooper Macmillan ('14), Ann-
send your contribution to Margaret Amon ette MacKnight Harvey ('14), "Betty" Morris
who, with "Millie" Eldredge, has done so ('33), "Dot" Hilton Downs ('23). Blanche
much to make our assessment reach its total. Hooper ('04), Louise Atwood ('97), Gene-
vieve Fosdick Sanborn ('10), Octavia Chapin
On the iciest day known to Boston and one ('13). Lorea Jameson ('21), Olive MacPher-
of the many below zero days we have endured son ('32), Mildred Simpson Gersumky ('17),
this winter, the Annual Meeting took place at Dorothy Bartlett Buck ('13), Dorris Morse
Blanche Hooper's ('04) at T u f t s College, with ('17), Margaret Fessendcn Henderson ('15),
Blanche and Polly Lambert ('00) as hostesses, "Millie" Ward Eldrege ('25), Gladys Bryant
assisted by Fran and Mary Heald. Despite Moore ('22), Eva Fulton Mellish ("06), Fran
the weather, twenty were there to enjoy Heald ('30), and Mary Heald ('22).
Polly's delicious culinary creations and to stay
after f o r a talk fest with Monica Pipe ('01),
Ethel Davis ('00), and Polly as the leaders.

At the meeting Margaret Amon ( 0 '18) Chicago North Shore Alumna? Give
reported on the returns from the bridges, and Travelogue Dinner
f r o m the cards she had sent out f o r the
Frontier Nursing Fund. After this followed By Ruth Ashcraft, P
the discussion concerning the changing of the
territorial boundaries of Boston Alumnae MORE T H A N ONE hundred alumnae and ac-
Chapter. I t was decided that the active chap-
ter radius should include those towns and tives celebrated AOII's thirty-sixth anni-
cities within a twenty mile radius of Boston. versary at the annual Founders' Day banquet,
This new territory limitation does not prevent December 8, at the chapter house. As will be
any Alpha 0 living outside the area f r o m recalled, the sorority was founded January 2,
being eligible to membership, but it does re- 1897, at Barnard College, but because the date

64 To DRAGMJS

comes so close to the holidays the event is In March we met at the home of T a n e t
always celebrated December 8, the birthday of Weissmiller, assisted by Helen Laycock and
Stella George Stern Perry, first president. Edna Kline. The president made a check of
potential members on our chapter roll and
This year's event was particularly note- each one present supported the discussion of
worthy to P, which will observe its twenty- ways to develop new interests to get more
fifth anniversary in June. members to our meetings. The nominating
committee presented a list of nominees for
Gretchcn Baarsch was in charge of the pleas- office, all of whom were unanimously elected
ant program of the evening. Alice Thomson The new officers are as follows: president
of A chapter read messages f r o m members Lucille Brown; vice president, Helen Erskine'
unable to attend the affair. Because Kay Bach corresponding secretary, Helen Stevens; re-
Keller, representative of the Chicago alumnae, cording secretary, Marion Smith; Helen
was unable to be present, Grctchen substituted Brown is again treasurer; To DRACMA editor
to make remarks as the president of the North Edna Kline.
Shore alumna?. Mae Norton spoke briefly as
president of P's pledge class and Virginia The annual benefit bridge party was held at
Speirs^.president of the active chapter, extend- the Plaisance Hotel on April 7. So far, we
ed greetings. have realized a profit of approximately $35.
Helen Stevens, chairman, with Vera Riebel
Dorothy Duncan ('25) of Wilmette, State Janet Weissmiller, Helen Erskine and Helen
chairman of Alumna:, gave the principal mes- Wahl on her committee. A generous supply
sage of the evening, "The Challenge of Today of home-made candy was donated f o r our
to Fraternities and Sororities." guests. Lucretia Adomeit baked and donated
a delicious chocolate angel food cake which
Talks on the four Founders were made by was raffled at the party by Mary Alice Ford.
Merva Dolson Hennings ('10), first president The proceeds were most gratifying.
of P, Phyllis Gamphcr ('32), Jane Hupman
('34), and Marion Abele Franco-Ferreira As this is mailed we are notified that the
('17). Helen Hawk Carlisle closed the meet- April meeting will be at the home of Lucille
ing with a short talk. Brown, our new president. We are looking
forward to it, f o r we shall have ritual, as well
I t is interesting to note that approximately as installation of officers.
two hundred AOII's celebrated Founders' Day
in Chicago, including the west, south and We offer congratulations to Mary Alice and
north side groups. Kenneth Ford, whose son, James Arthur, was
born on February 3. Our sympathy goes to
Our January meeting was a travelogue din- the family of Isabella Stone ( E ) , whose death
ner at Carol Anger's in Chicago. Dorothy occurred on March 21.
Duncan gave a talk on "Going to Europe" and
Mary Dee Drummond entertained with " A Cincinnati Alumnae Interested in
Swede's Travel in the United States."
Women's Crusade
North Shore Alumnx of AOII had their
annual ritual dinner and meeting at the chap- By Frances Morris Elliott, 0 H
ter house in March. A goodly number of the
local alumnae had dinner with the chapter, after
which the ceremonies took place.

Chicago South Shore Alumnae Give -4- FRANCES IVDTS R I C H ( n ) is chairman of
Benefit Bridge
the Business Women's Division of the
By Helen Snoddy Stevens, B<P Women's Crusade in Cincinnati. This move-
ment was organized to educate the public in
- f - O U R JANUARY MEETING was held at Lucre- regard to social agencies of the city and works
in conjunction with the Community Chest.
tia Adomeit's home, Jane Schoening and Cincinnati was given a national award for the
Helen Stevens assisting. Plans were made best education in social work on the basis of
for another bridge tournament which was such the Women's Crusade. Mrs. Roosevelt has
a success both financially and socially last recommended this movement to other cities of
year: the parties to lie divided into two the nation. W i t h this work, Frances is not
groups—one an afternoon group, the other too busy to serve on the Board and the Execu-
an evening group, whereby the husbands are tive Committee of the Y.W.C.A. and to en-
also being put to work f o r A O I I . The latter joy the distinction of a membership in the Mt.
group, according to the previous year, could Auburn Literary Club.
always report of a husbands' party that had
just been given or one that was about to take The March meeting of the Cincinnati
place, and each time there was a profit to be Alumna: Chapter was held in the University
added to the fund. Y. M . C. A . with Leafy Jane Hilker (O)
and Bcrnadette Murphy ( 0 ) , as hostesses. The
Maude Nolte entertained us at her home in following officers were elected to serve the
February, assisted by Jerry Hobbs and Janet coming year: Virginia Nolloth, president;
Weissmiller. Vera Kiebel, who is a real en- Leafy Jane Hilker, vice president; Dorothy
thusiast on the Clothesline Committee, sug- Kratzer, secretary; Bernadette Murphy, treas-
gested that we start sewing on doll clothes at utvr; I'"ranees Klliott, historian and editor to
our meetings, in order to avoid the rush next To DRACMA. Preceding the business meet-
fall, and at the same time we would be able ing, a program given by the pledges was en-
to send more dolls to Kentucky f o r Christ- joyed and appreciated.
mas. We were glad to welcome Betty
Brooks ( 0 '33) as a new member. Members of the Cincinnati Alumnae Chapter
enjoyed the visit made by Mary Dee Drum-

MAY. 1934 65

mond at the April meeting. Her talk on our old and new, were delighted to see Lucille
social service work was very interesting. We Dvorak Kirk walk in. She and her two babies
were very glad to have Dayton Alumna; join were here f r o m New York, visiting her
with us and hope to have another joint meet- mother.
ing soon. Officers f o r the coming year were Now f o r some news of the girls. Jean Mit-
installed. An opportunity group f r o m the chell is working permanently at Halle Broth-
( inciimati Library presented a one-act play ers in the Shopping service department. Doris
for our entertainment. Kuhns Severance (OH) has moved back to
Detroit. We are going to miss Doris a lot.
Mary Bucher (011) has accepted a position Dorothy Renshaw ( A S ) , who used to be ac-
with the Department of Agriculture at Wash- tive in our chapter before she moved back to
ington, D. C. Gertrude Bucher ( 6 H ) is Oregon last year, has a new baby boy one
Ohio's state champion fencer. Vera Hester- month old. Ruth Riegel Schneider is thrilling
berg (GH) has announced her engagement to with the prospects of a trip to Greece in May.
Edward Shadevvald. "Eddie" is a member of Mr. Schneider's partner in business has re-
A K * . honorary commercial fraternity, at the cently inherited an estate there and wants Ed
University of Cincinnati. A girl, Alice Milli- and Ruth to go with him to assist in the set-
cent. was born to M r . and Mrs. Albert Terncy tlement of it. We know Ruth will be a real
(Alice Horner, G H ) , to January. A second help. Marjorie Miller Keller ( O i l '27) has
daughter. I'.milv Gene, was born to Mr. and moved to Chagrin Falls, Ohio, a lovely suburb
Mrs. W. E. Elliott (Frances Morris, GH), east of Cleveland. She lias not given up her
February 4. work as yet but drives back and forth. Her

address will be just Chagrin Falls, Ohio. Peg
Betz Smith (SI) has been quite ill f o r the past
Cleveland Alumnae Contribute Gifts several weeks. She is better now, however,
to Hospital and is at Green Springs, Ohio, taking a com-

By Esther Roscncrans, H plete rest f o r three weeks. Cecile Maclnness
was quite i l l also about a month ago. It's fine
-4- T H E CLEVELAND A I . U M N . E were enter- to have her well and back with us again.
Dorothy Hallin is trying out a new coopera-
tained by Edna Studebaker (Q '12) f o r tive housekeeping plan, that is working out
their January meeting. Dorothy Hallin (AS) splendidly so far. She joined with several
was assistant hostess. We were almost too other girls in leasing a large home in East
engrossed helping three of the girls plan their Cleveland, employing a housekeeper and living
trip to Florida, to consider business of any like real "landed gentry." Marian Rothhaar
kind. Barbara Rheberg (SI) had been ordered received a letter from Muriel Gray (Oil '25)
to go lor her health. I t wasn't hard to per- saying that she and her husband have gone
suade Lois Davis (Si '27) to go along as com- back to nature for a year. They are in Bcntlcy
panion and nurse. They spent two months in Springs, Missouri, where Bill has charge of
Florida and Barbara rami' home feeling fuse. planning and building a state park. The coun-
She is now back at her position with Highbee try is almost "the forest primeval" and Muriel
Company. She gave us all a surprise by is the only woman in camp but not the chief
announcing that she had been married f o r cook.
about a year. At the time, the announcement
would probably have cost her her position.
She is now Mrs. Canning. Musette Williams
Hammond (G '27) was the third girl going
south. She spent two weeks in Florida in The west side and Lakewood girls have been
February. having some very interesting meetings all their
own in between regular alumna: meetings.
Cecile Maclnness started it. Since then we have
The February meeting was held at the home taken our sewing and spent a lovely after-
Of Esther flowStex Rosencrans. The girfa each noon together at Edna Mould's (P) and Esther
brought old magazines, playing cards and Rosencranz'. Ethel Rabey Burke (SI '24)
Christmas carafe to be taken to the wards in added variety and practicality, by having us
City Hospital. We were delighted to have for luncheon at twenty-five cents per plate,
two girls from Berea, Ohio, with us that night the proceeds going to our National Work
lor the first time, Edith Dietz Kratt (SI '27) Fund. The entire alumnae group is working
and Helen Street Stocker ( P ) . Jean Green very hard preparing for the Panhellenic bridge
( B * ) is another welcome new member in our tournament in the Highbee Lounge on April
group. She is a dietitian at St. Luke's Hos- 21. We are especially interested because AOII
pital in Cleveland. is on the official committee f o r this tourna-
ment. We are also planning f o r a "get to-
Musette Hammond was hostess to our gether, of all alumna- and actives living in or
March meeting, with Ruth Meyer (G '32), near Cleveland later on this summer, after
assisting. Uuth is now working at William school is out.
Taylor and Sons Company permanently. The
sole business of this meeting was the election
of new officers. Grace Manbeck (On '30),
president; Cecite Yelland Maclnness (T '28), Dallas Alumnae Hold Bridge

vice president.; Jean Mitchell ( O i l ) , recording Foursomes
secretary; Dorothy Hallin, social secretary;
Ruth Riegel Schneider (SI '27). treasurer. We By Dorothy Killian, N K

give Marian Rothhaar (SI '26) a big vote of ANOTHER INTEREST!Nr. YEAR'S WORK is
sincere appreciation E©u carrying DS through
drawing to a close. Our March meeting
this hardest of all years. A l l the girls, both was held at the home of Mrs. W. P. Bentley.

(,(, T o DRAG MA

the guests being received by Mrs. Howard Dayton Alumna? Hear Lectures
Wcddington, Mrs. Homer Toland and Mrs.
Bentley. We had as guests two representatives By Florence Rench, Q
from other sororities in the City Panhellenic
group. Mrs. Herbert E. Emery reviewed "Poor -4- T H E PARAMOUNT item on this winter's
Splendid Wing" by Frances Winwar. Mrs. calendar was the benefit supper-bridge
A. C. Rubey and Mme. Matilde Zeek presided
at silver services at the tabic, which was at- given in February at the Homemakers' Insti-
tractively arranged with modernistic candelabra tute in the Dayton Industries Building. We
topped with red glass candle effect. A busi- cleared about $28, almost making the quota for
ness session was held before the program. our philanthropic work. Incidentally, i f any of
Reports and discussions were made on the you Ohio alumna-, not affiliated with a chap-
bridge foursomes being given to raise funds ter, who received letters f r o m Ruth Cox Se-
for our national philanthropic work. Mrs. gar, Ohio state chairman, or Florence Rench
C. F. Zeek explained the quota system which her assistant, have not as yet forwarded your
will be applied to the rushing and pledging money, remember that it still is not too late.
rules at Southern Methodist University this In March we had our annual election at the
fall. The Alumnae voted their approval of this home of Ruth Shatsnider Haas, with the
plan. following results: President, Ruth Haas; vice
president, Jean Holes; s e c r e t a r y , Eleanor
Our A p r i l meeting was held at the home of King; treasurer, Thelma Thornberry; editor to
Mrs. Edward Surgeon with Mrs. Claude To DRAGMA and historian, Florence Rench.
Moore and Mrs. Ira T. New by as co-hostesses.
Election of officers f o r the coming year was We have had two very interesting lecture
held as follows: President, Mrs. Harold Cude meetings this year. The first at Hazel Engle
(Eva Fulcher) ; vice president, Mrs. R. L . Lowes' home, where we heard S. S. Mark-
Hughston (Maurice Harris) ; secretary, Mrs. ham, a local attorney, speak on "The New
Ira T. Newby (Helen Howard) ; treasurer, Deal." For weeks, we all felt as though we
Mrs. John Ashby (Lillian Cox) ; historian- had entered a realm of understanding, which
editor To DRAGMA, Mrs. Claude Moore (Mau- all proves that we need more such stimulating
rine Garrett) ; Panhellenic delegate, Mrs. meetings to keep us informed on current hap-
Howard Wcddington (Margaret Harris) ; tel- penings. The other meeting, exactly the op-
ephone committee chairman, Mrs. J. E. Bush posite in character, but equally inspiring, was
(Gladys Bandy) ; publicity, Mrs. Ashley De held this past week. A f t e r a business meet-
W i t t ; alumna adviser, Marjoric Sigler. ing at the Dayton Engineers' Club, we visited
the Keith-Wilson Studios. M r . Wilson, a
Mrs. Newby reported on the bridge four- prominent local interior decorator, lectured to
somes held for our Kentuck}' Mountain phil- us on the fine art of planning and furnishing
anthropic work. Mrs. Cude reported on one's home, giving us i n n u m e r a b l e new
money received from the sale of playing cards schemes and ideas. He also showed us many
for the same benefit. Following this business beautiful chintz patterns and drapery mate-
session, we enjoyed a talk on "Spring Deco- rials.
rating" by Allen Richards. We were shown
lovely fabrics and given helpful ideas for our In April, Ruth Segar and Jean Boles, their
spring redecorating tasks. Later tea was cars filled with Dayton and Miamisburg AOn's,
served to forty members and guests. The tea embarked upon a jaunt to Cincinnati with a
table and house were lovely with varieties of main purpose in view, that of accepting an
spring flowers. Mrs. Howard Wcddington, invitation to visit the Cincinnati Alumnae
retiring president, presided at the silver serv- Chapter, who will at the same time entertain
ice. the members of Thcta Eta.

We eagerly await a visit from our District At present we are concentrating on a tea
Superintendent, Charlotte Voss Kearney, who to be given in May at the home of Ruth Cox
arrives soon from New Orleans. For her en- Segar in honor of the actives f r o m Miami
tertainment we have planned a buffet supper and Denison Universities. We hope all of
at Mrs. Edwards Surgeon's home and a tea the girls can arrange to come, because this
at the home of Ruth D'Arline Hogg, who is is one way in which actives and alumnae can
a member of the active chapter. become better acquainted.

Mrs. William I . Southerland (Katherine I n closing, may I suggest that those of you
Spurlock, ' 3 1 ) and her six-months-old son, who read this and have any news that would
William Inzer, Jr., have returned to their be of interest to any of us, sit down and
home in Leonard, Texas, after a visit in write a letter to me so that I will have plenty
Dallas. of news f o r the next issue. My home address
is 3134 Elliott Avenue, Dayton, Ohio.
We are glad to know that John Brodnax,
son of Mrs. Harry Brodnax, and Joan Bush, Denver Alumnae Reelect Officers
young daughter of Mrs. J. E. Bush, are re-
covering* nicely after recent illnesses. The By Florence M. White, A S
Dallas alumnae extend sincere and heartfelt
sympathy to Mrs. Cullen F. Thomas (Olga -4- T H E DENVER ALU.MN.*: is pleased to an-
Sheppard) in the loss of her brothers, W .
Clifton and John L. Sheppard, in New York nounce the hold-over of all their officers
City. except the treasurer. The officers for this
year are Dorothy Gannon ( Z ) , president;
Francis Kimsey ( X A ) , vice president; Laverne
W r i g h t ( Z ) , secretary; Nell Scott ( X A ) ,
treasurer. It has been through their tireless
effort and the cooperation of all the alumnae

M A Y . 1934 67
that we have had very interesting meetings
and practically one hundred per cent attend- the IndianaiK>lis League of Women Voters
ance. A t the next meeting the installation which will sponsor the first of a series of
of officers will take place and again head candidates' meetings in the Rauh Memorial
this chapter toward the goal of success. The Library. Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Magel announced
Denver Panhellenic organization will hold its the marriage of their daughter Aurzella Magel
annual meeting and bridge luncheon on May 5 (Ex. ' 3 3 ) to Robert Willard Osier ( A T A , De
at Denver's exclusive Lake Wood Country Pauw). M r . and Mrs. Osier will be at home
Club. This will be attended by a number after April 1 5 at 4815 East Washington Street.
of our group. The traditional senior break- The marriage of Helen Maddock of Dana,
fast f o r those graduating f r o m Chi Delta Indiana, to Russell B. McKinney was an-
Chapter is being planned and will be an i n - nounced recently. Mr. and Mrs. McKinney
troduction to the Denver alumnae and a con- are at home at 3850 Byram Avenue. M r . and
tinuation of their high standards. We arc Mrs. Ted Marbaugh (Mary Gertrude Man-
looking forward to welcoming them. Plans ley) are the proud parents of a little girl
are being made whereby the meetings f o r the born last December 26. Her name is Mary
entire year will be made in advance so d i f - Ann.
ferent subjects may be taken up and our meet-
ings will be educational as well as social. Knoxville Alumnae Give Successful
Egg Hunt
Detroit Alumnae Send Full Quota
By Elizabeth Young, 0
By Marie Edington, O i l
-4- O U R JANUARY meeting was held at the
-4- DURING T H E WINTER we put all our effort home "of Lucille Coffey Dean. We were

into raising funds for our National Social told of a tea to be given later in the month
Service W o r k and are very pleased that we for Mrs. Sale by Mrs. Thomas McCroskey
can forward our quota in full. The Detroit and Mrs. H . A. Morgan at Mrs. McCroskey's
Panhellenic Association held its annual ball lovely home. We planned to attend and assist
on January 20 at the Whittier on the Detroit with a benefit bridge party to be given by the
River. We had twenty-two couples present actives the latter part of the month. A box
and received a nice percentage of the profits of face powder was raffled off, Margaret
for our treasury. Remembering the success Dickey being the lucky one. The powder was
of our "Rathskeller Party" last fall, we de- donated by a local drug store. Elizabeth Rea-
cided to have another bridge party. Doris gan of the City Health Bureau spoke on
Bessinger Howlett graciously opened her "Some Interesting Laboratory Technique."
lovely home to us on the evening of February
17. While those of us who were not present Elizabeth McDonald McClamroch was host-
heard about the wedding of Marion Tanner ess f o r the February meeting. Elizabeth Chris-
id George Rylander on February 10, the men trup Calloway was made chairman of the
played ping-pong. Afterward they joined us annual Easter egg hunt, which was to be a
for bridge and refreshments. Helen Maynard paying proposition this year open to all chil-
Hubbard, who was chairman of the event, dren instead of just AOIT youngsters as f o r -
asked several of the girls to donate cakes merly. Elizabeth McClamroch won the pair of
and they were delicious. Our profit from stockings that was raffled off.
this party was very gratifying, too. At the
March meeting we elected the officers f o r the We went to Helen Soulier's for the March
next year and in April the following girls meeting, and at that time elected the follow-
were installed: Ruth Kimberly Witter, presi- ing officers for the coming year: President,
dent ; Mary Roach, vice president; Harriet Lucile Coffey Dean; vice presidents, Llewel-
Arnold Rohrbach, secretary; Marguerite Clark, lyn Johnson Thornton and Elizabeth Chris-
treasurer; Helen Maynard Hubbard, Panhel- trup Calloway; secretary, Elizabeth Young;
lenic delegate; Frances Sackett Patton, alter- treasurer, Frances Coykendall; editor to To
nate Panhellenic delegate; and Virginia Smith DRAGMA, Mary Moore Dominick; historian,
Keltz, editor to To DRAGMA. Eleanor Burke. Dr. C. E. Wylie made an
interesting and instructive talk on " M i l k and
Omicron Pi alumnae, particularly, will be Health." Final plans f o r the Easter egg hunt
interested to know of the marriage of Jean were perfected. As many of us as possible
Boswell to Ray Bloaker at Flint on April 7. planned to attend a Panhellenic luncheon to
Elizabeth and Ernest McCoy became the par- be given at the Cherokee Country Club,
ents of a son, Ernest Hemenger, in February. March 17.
Deviating from her usual good health, Helen
Maynard Hubbard is recuperating f r o m an The Easter egg hunt was a great success,
appendicitis operation. We are very happy financially and otherwise. Elizabeth Calloway
that Doris Kulin Severance has left Cleveland and her committee did a splendid job of put-
to live in Detroit once more. ting it on, and putting it off, too, f o r it seemed
that every time we planned to have it, we were
Indianapolis Alumnae Send Personal simply deluged with rain. About one hundred
News and thirty children, aged two to twelve years,
attended, and every one of them seemed to
By Charlotte Pecle, B6 enjoy it. We learned a lot of things not to
do next year, and got several good ideas, too.
-4- MK< LEO M . GXKHNKK is chairman of the
The April meeting was at Ailcy Peet's. I t
Efficiency in Government committee of appears that there is no rest f o r the weary
because we plunged right into plans f o r a
benefit bridge party. The date set f o r it is

68

To DRAGMA

April 27, and the place, Cherokee Country Club is so interested in the chapter's activities
Club. Anne Brakebill was made chairman. and is helpful in so many ways that we are
Dr. Paul Allen made a splendid talk, as we anxious to become better acquainted w i t h
knew he would, having heard him last year. them.
I f next year is as successful as the past two The following banquet committees were an
pointed: "Zu" Campbell (Ex. '10), chairman
have been, the other alumna? chapters will of arrangements; Faye Morton ('30), chair-
be down here trying to get our recipe. man of table decorations with Ruth \'nnl
Witt (Ex. '33), Marialice Champe ('31)' and
Lincoln Alumna; Join Omaha Alumnae

at Tea Charlotte James ('31) assisting; invitations '
Jeanette Farquhar ("23).
By Charlotte James, Z The new officers f o r the year 1934-35 are

-4- T i n : FIRST M E E T I N G of the new year was as follows: President, Bonnie Hess Drake
held at the chapter house January 13. ('24) ; vice president, Ruth Culver ( H ) ; .s e c
retary, Faye Williams Morton ('30) ; treas-
There was some discussion about the new
dining-room tables which the alumnae and the urer, Ruth Anne W i t t ( E x . '33) ; contributine
Mothers' Club have bought f o r the active editor to To DRAGMA, Charlotte James O n
chapter. On February 14 we met at Annie New delegates to Panhellenic are Cornelia
Jones Rosborough's ('09) home. The com- Ayres Hallam ('30), Junior member; Faye
mittee i n charge consisted of Darina Page Williams Morton ('30), Senior member, and
('23). Helen Fitzgerald, Arline Noble ('21), Margaret Edwards ('25), campus Panhellenic
Margaret Edwards ('25), Gladys Misko (Ex. delegate. This year's activities have been so
'19), Jeanette Farquhar ('23) and Helen M i l l - very successful under the leadership of Bon-
er ('24). This meeting was a buffet supper nie Drake that we can look forward to an-
honoring the new pledges. There were fifty other very pleasant and profitable year f o r
in attendance, s e v e n t e e n of whom were Lincoln Alumna?.
pledges. A f t e r introducing the pledges and
identifying all alumnae BresenJt, a short busi-
ness meeting was held. Faye Williams Morton Los Angeles Alumnae Have Garden
('30) was elected secretary. I t was also de- Party

cided that each member should pay fifty cents By Janet Martin, K 8
for the National W o r k in Kentucky. Because
of the success of this meeting, it was decided - f - T H E STORK'S still emptying his tri-cornered
that another buffet supper would be held in satchel down Alpha O chimneys, to-wit:
March. Shirley Taylour, to Lucille English (A) ; a
.trirl to Mildred Bostwick Finney (KG "32);
This meeting was held March 21 at the and yon should see the Irish grin on the face
home of Mrs. Maude Logan with thirty-two of Rose Marie Mclnerny Grogan (KG Ex.
attending. Thelma Burgen Potars (Ex. '19), '33) as she contemplates Master James
Pauline Ryman ('23), Jennie Piper ('04), Jo Cornelius Grogan. Mary Poulton Pingree (KG
Richardson ('23), Roma Pickering (Ex. '18) '32) tells us that Sister Margaret Poulton
and Elsie Ford Piper ('04) were the assisting Necdham's (KG Ex. '32) new baby has red
hostesses. A f t e r a lovely dinner, a business hair, which is a mystery to both sides of the
meeting was held. A report of our financial family. Margaret is still down in Pensacola,
condition was given by tin- treasurer, which l-'lorida. being a good navy wife. Roosevelt's
showed necessity of a little action. Plans were still living up to campaign promises by dish-
made f o r a rummage sale which will be held ing out some jobs. Bijou Brinkop (KG '33)
April 14. There was discussion as to the is debit and credit entering f o r a liquor dis-
advisability of having a book review given f o r tributing house. The name of one o f their
the purpose of raising money, but no action customers, i t seems, is naught but Tony Drag-
was taken. ma ! Incidentally, her employer is Louise Nel-

The Omaha Alumna? invited the Lincoln son's ( K 0 Ex. '34) brother." We saw Martha
Alumna? to a tea at the home of Mrs. Victor Belle Cook (KG Ex. '33) playing tennis not
Smith on Saturday, April 7. Those going long ago, and learned that she is now secre-
were Emma Beckman, Ethel Weidner Bentlev tary to Marco of the well-known Fanchoii
C24), Mahle Williams Beachlcy ( E x . '07). and Marco duo. Beth Caldwell (KG '32) is
Cornelia Ayres Hallam C30), "Zu" Campbell working at the Title Insurance Company, and
(Ex. '11). Ruth Culver ( H ) , Bonnie Hess Petty Johnson (same) is now teaching per-
Drake ('24). Jeanette Farquhar ('23), Helen manently at Beverly Hills High School. Even
Fitzgerald, lennie and Elsie Ford Piper, your scatter-brained dopester here is Girl Fri-
Edith Hall Lansing (Ex. '13), Irma Latsch day to Fred Houser, who is president of the
('16), Maude Logan. Gladys Misko (Ex. '19), University of C a l i f o r n i a at Los Angeles
Arline Abbott Noble ('21), Blanche Wood- Alumni Association. He's also a lawyer, but
worth Potter (Ex. '12), Roma Rush Pickering you'd never know it because he spends his
(Ex. '18). Pauline Ryman C23), and Joseph- waking hours running f o r Congress right now.

ine Richardson ('23). This meeting took the We all garden partied at Mae Goodin's ( A )
place of our regular April meeting. in April. During the course of the afternoon's

Tentative plans were made f o r a tea to be sessions we took time out to hear Margaret
held at the chapter house some time in May. Lockridge ( A ) of Long Beach regale us with
This will be in honor of the Mothers' Club highlights of her recent European trip. Flor-
and the two graduating seniors. Our Mothers' ence Pierce ( 2 ) came, smartly turncrl out as

MAY. 1934

usual, with a strange gleam in her eye, which other means. The Memphis Chapter discon-
glimmered from under the tricky little fisher- linned their local social service work, which
man-style hat she was wearing. We soon consisted of a library in the Memphis General
learned that the gleam was caused by a desire Hospital, several months ago. Recently the
to go either to Mexico or South America books we had i n the library were shipped
this summer. Beulah Dimmitt (A '33) is go- to Bland Morrow f o r her Kentucky moun-
ing to take off f o r around the globe soon; taineers. We are, at present, trying to collect
either that or to the Orient, so either way clothing to send her. We were most fortunate,
she wins. Helen Dietrich ( * ) is living up recently, in having Mrs. Warren C. Drum-
North Hollywood way now. Lorry Conrad mond ( A * ) with us. She gave us a most in-
O'Conncll has a shining little house out in teresting and inspiring talk on the Frontier
Wcstwood. We hear that Virginia Davis Nursing Service in Kentucky which quickened
Nowlin ( K G ) is to be our next president. our interest in this work even further. A t
The Order of the Old Evening Dress is still our April meeting we elected the officers f o r
flourishing. Helen Haller is still collecting the new year. Elizabeth Williams Cooper
ear rings. And thus wc come to the end of (KO '30) is our new president; Elizabeth Hale
our gatherings f o r this issue, and respectfully (0 '29) ; vice president, Dorothy Vanden
submit same to whoever may be interested. (KO '29) ; secretary, Virginia Winkelman Lee
(KO '2H) ; treasurer, Martha Wheeler ( 0 ) ;
Madison Alumna; Raffle Mix-master editor to To DRAGMA ; and Nancy Clinton
( K 0 '3*1 ). historian.
J5v Marion l.ani/r. 11
Milwaukee Alumna; Have Successful
T H E JANUARY MEETING of the Madison Meetings

Alumna; Chapter with Mary Rennebohm By Olive Langwith Buboltz, 8
and Garnet Lowe as hostesses was devoted
to discussing ways and means of earning the -4- T w o IMPORTANT EVENTS have occurred
money toward our quota f o r our National
Work. I t was finally agreed to purchase an since the last report of our chapter. The
electric mix-master and sell chances on it at first was a St. Patrick's Day dinner party
ten cents each and then raffle i t off the first of which was given in Jane Zimmerman's ( H
April. Letters were sent to the alumna: mem- '22) beautiful new home with our husbands
bers of Eta Chapter, containing tickets, and and friends as guests. A cateress, represent-
with their willing cooperation and that of the ing various food manufacturers who use this
members of the active chapter, our project method of advertising, served a delicious din-
was most successful. Mrs. C. J. Jackson of ner to twenty-eight guests. The chapter paid
Madison, the mother-in-law of Alice Knauf the cateress ten cents per person which was
Jackson, was the fortunate winner of the mix- to cover the expense of any food not donated
master. The members of the Madison Alumna? by a manufacturer. Our only other expenses
Chapter wish to thank the Eta Alumna? mem- were f o r decorations and prizes, and there-
bers f o r their generous response. fore a nice profit was realized from the sixty-
five cents charged each person. Following
The A p r i l meeting was held at the chapter the serving of the hors dceuvres in the din-
house, where wc had a most enjoyable dinner ing room, we were ushered to a very modern
with the members of the active chapter. ^Offi- and interesting recreation room where the
cers for the coming year were elected. They main course was served buffet style. Cards
are: President, Helen Thomson; vice presi- were enjoyed in the evening.
dent, Sarah W a r d ; secretary, Pearl Ayres;
treasurer, Roberta Schmitz; and editor to To The second event is the appearance of an
DRAGMA, Grace Conklin. A f t e r the business AOII of note i n Milwaukee. Helen Hoy Gree-
meeting the evening was spent playing bridge. ley, distinguished lawyer and lecturer, is giv-
We have had the pleasure of welcoming Mrs. ing a course of six lectures on Current Events
Greeley ( N ) as a new member in our chapter. which is proving popular and very instruc-
tive to her audience. H e r education and ex-
Memphis Alumna; Send Books to perience has provided her with a remarkable
Kentucky knowledge of significant world events which
she presents i n a forceful and charming man-
By Elizabeth Beaslcy, K O ner. We are happy to claim Mrs. Greeley
as a resident of Wisconsin since 1922. She
-4- T H E M A I N BUSINESS of the Memphis has made frequent visits to Milwaukee as a
lecturer and as the guest of her friend, Frieda
Alumnae Chapter f o r the past few months Dorner (G). Frieda and Margaret (Madge)
has been the preparations f o r our annual Ball ( 2 ) are among the list of patronesses f o r
Easter Egg H u n t The hunt this year was the course of lectures.
unusually successful. Mrs. Henry T . Winkel-
m.m, mother of Virginia Winkelman Lee (KO Alternating our meetings, a luncheon one
'28), very graciously allowed us to use the month and an evening meeting the next, has
yard of her lovely home. We were fortunate proved quite satisfactory as a means of get-
in having a beautiful day and over two hun- ting more members to attend. Our hostesses,
dred children took part. The money which this year, have been Margaret Leipold ( H '25)
we make by selling tickets goes as our con- at a luncheon meeting in January, and Dor-
tribution to the National Social Service Work. othy Marsh Ewens ( H ) for the February eve-
We also make money tor the work by selling ning meeting. The March meeting being
chances on a punch board, which is passed
among the members and their friends and by

7 0 To DRAGMA

purely social, we shall combine its business alumna: to stage a "Cake Walk." This con-
with that of the April meeting, which is to sisted of an ingenious cake raffle, in which the
be held at the home of Margaret Ball.
persons buying tickets at ten cents apiece

New Jersey Alumnae Have " W h i t e walked around a large numbered circle to
Elephant" Sale music. The walkers stopped on signal, and
the person standing on the lucky number was

By Margaret Proche Eglin. N awarded a cake. This brought in $1.50 on

- + - N E W JERSEY A L U M N . E Chapter has had each cake, all of which were donated, besides
providing much entertainment f o r the par-
a very active and successful second year. ticipants. The annual spring banquet in honor
The regular monthly meetings were held every
third Saturday of the month at the homes o f of the seniors will be held in the first part of
members. A t these meetings bridge was
played, socks were darned, and clothes were May, and the alumna: are looking forward in
mended f o r the needy i n Kentucky. May that date.
Fouts packed and sent our contributions.
New York Alumnae Help with
In February, Lucille Burton gave a bridge
and "white elephant" sale, the proceeds Rushing
of which were used toward our quota. By Rosemary Holahan Vioni, N
On April 14, Lucille is planning another bridge
for the same purpose. She deserves a - + - OI-R FEBRUARY MEETING was a social-
great deal of credit for her efforts in behalf
of AOII. Another means of raising money business meeting and selling chances as a
painlessly, this year, has been a door prize. money-making scheme was decided upon, In
Each member drew a number and the win- addition, two parties were planned to help
ner was responsible f o r the next prize. We the actives with their rushing. The first was
are looking forward to two more meetings. a tea dance held on Washington's birthday
at the F i f t h Avenue Hotel. More than one
hundred were present, and it certainly was a
very pleasant affair, thanks, to Mabel Mac-
The April meeting will be in Summit and the Tndoe and Mary Tennant. The second party
election of officers will take place. The May was a supper at the Panhellenic on March 7.
meeting will be in Ridgcwood at the home of The alumna: were very well represented; the
Thelma Mitchell, who was the first president rushees were duly impressed, and it was alto-
of New Jersey Alumna: Chapter. Congratula- gether a successful evening. The March
tions are in order to Thelma on the birth meeting was held at Mrs. Tennant's home and
of a daughter, in February. the committee was elected f o r the yearly tea

at Panhellenic. Mrs. McDonald was invited
to address the audience on that afternoon.
New Orleans Alumnae Stage a Helena Krauss, as chairman of the nominating
"Cake W a l k " committee, presented the following slate, all
of whom were unanimously elected: Presi-
By Marion Moise, IT, Acting Editor dent, Mary Kent-Miller Tennant; vice presi-
dent, Amy Bernhard: secretary, Edith Sharps;
-+• T H E LAST FEW meetings have been very treasurer. Betty Flocke; editor to To DRAGMA,
well attended, and we have been pleased Helen Wilkinson; Panhellenic delegate, Helen
Janota. On March 15, there was a special
to welcome several newcomers into our midst. meeting at the chapter apartment to install
Our president, Beverly Walton, resigned the the new officers and run off the raffle. Prep-
first part of March in order to attend the
University of Georgia, where she is to help
colonize a chapter. Clara Mae Buchanan,
vice president, is presiding until the installa- arations were made f o r Mrs. Anderson's visit.
tion of the new officers. The March meeting
was held at the attractive apartment of Eliza-
beth Lyon Reddoch, and the officers elected Oklahoma City Alumnae Entertain
for the coining year arc as follows: president, Teachers

Margaret Lyon Pcdrick; vice president, Mary By Mary Driscol Hunt, @
Raymond Gould; treasurer, Lucie Walne; re- -4- I N DECEMBER, Ruth Black Endicott enter-
cording secretary, Louise Adams Roddy; cor-
responding secretary. Clara Mae Buchanan; tained at her home in Norman. Marjorie
editor to To DRAGMA, Dagmar Renshaw Leb- Stafford and Irene Baird Fogarty were as-
reton; historian, Rosamond Hill Schneidau. sisting hostesses. A f t e r a lovely luncheon,
The bridge clubs have been active as usual, suggestive of the holiday season, bridge was
netting us a small but certain sum each time. played. During a short business session we
On March 15, the junior bridge club, a gala decided to give a Christmas basket to a needy
affair of six tables, met at Margaret Bovard's. family, as well as gifts to our adopted fam-
It was in the nature of a farewell party f o r ily. Our January meeting was an evening
Beverly Walton, who was leaving the follow- one at Pauline Mills Edwards' ('23) home,
ing morning f o r Athens, Georgia. We hear with Camillc Cassius Lane ('27) assisting.
a joke on Beverly: that in the hurry of leav- Plans f o r the remainder of the year were
ing she forgot her pin, and several sororities discussed, as well as the party f o r teachers
began to rush her upon her arrival on the attending the meeting of the Oklahoma Edu-
Georgia campus. cational Association to be held in Oklahoma
City in February.

The active chapter had a Charity Ball on The Daily Oklahonian says of this party:
April 6, at which they consented to allow the "For a group of out-of-town members here

MAY. 1934 71

to attend the meeting of the Oklahoma Edtica- Philadelphia Alumnae Congratulate Psi
tional Association, the Alpha Omicron P i By Anne Warner, W
Alumna: entertained at luncheon and bridge,
Saturday, in the home of Mrs. Lloyd Lane -4- T H E A L U M N A CHAPTER wants to con-
(Camille Cassius Lane). Assisting hostesses
were Mrs. Leonard Newcomb (Bess Webb, gratulate the actives on winning the Mc-
•24), Mrs. T. Norman Welch (Fay Daugherty, Causland Cup. We're mighty, mighty proud
'23) and Mrs. J. C Holman (Zalia L i l l ) . of you!
Guests were Mrs. Charles Angus Fluty ( H a n -
nabell White, Ex. '29), Spencer; Mrs. Phares The regular mid-winter bridge party took
McFcrren (Edith Adams, * '28), Kansas place on Saturday, January 18, at Mildred
( hy: Misses Marian van Griethuysen ('28), Taylor's home in Overbrook. The proceeds
Elk City; Louise Kirkham ( * ) , Lawton; amounted to $35.00. The February alumna-
Margie Belle Yerby ('28), Poteau; Marie meeting was held at Helen Wallaurer Bt<xt
Tavlor (Ex. '32). Choctaw; Miss Martha ner's ('27) on Glen Echo Road. Dorothy
Bu'ntin (*29). Fort Cobb; Edna Mac Lloyd Cross ('28), who will get, this spring, the first
A l t u s ; Mary Elizabeth Goode ('29), Shawnee; Ph.D. in anthropology ever given to a woman
Mary Virginia Bales, Fort W o r t h ; Helen at the University of Pennsylvania, spoke on
Miles, Duncan, and Pearl Eady ('27)." her experiences in Trak when she was there
with Dr. Speiser's expedition. Dot says the
We were entertained in March in the home sands of the desert get between your toes and
of Leone Fariss Brown (Ex. '24), with Emily she hopes to go back soon. Four seen dining
Hess Hopper and Zalia L i l l Holman assist- together the other day were Patricia Steven-
ing. During the business session following son ('29), Betty Herbst Truitt ('30), Ruth
the luncheon, election of officers f o r the com- Bogaty ('31), and ye editor. Ruth is study-
ing year was held. Officers chosen arc Gene- ing A r t at the Academy, but is going to stop
vieve Bacon Herrington ('29), president; soon and look f o r a job. Betty has moved
Emily Hess Hopper, vice president; Faye to Roanoke, Virginia, with her husband. Pat
Daugherty Welch, recording secretary; Bess is the busy executive of the Philadelphia office
Webb Newcomb, corresponding secretary; of Conde Nast. A n d ye editor has opened a
Kathryn Douglas Loring (Ex. '28). treasurer; studio on Walnut Street in the Sydenham
TTelcne Brasled < iodwin ("23), reporter, and Building, over Michauld's—Come up and see
Man,' Driscol Hunt (Ex. '29), editor. me sometime! Dorothy Crumbach Noecker
('29) was in town lately. She and Johnnie
Bess Webb Newcomb entertained the alum- are living i n Scranton, where Johnnie is prac-
na? at a party on April 5. We enjoyed play- ticing medicine. U p in the toy shop at Wana-
ing bridge as well as hearing about Pauline's maker's, before Christmas, there was a great
recent trip to California. She and her three crowd around a rowing machine that's sup-
children have just returned f r o m a six weeks' posed to do all sorts of good things to both
visit in Los Angeles. Another traveler this your figure and your insides. A cute little
winter was Marjorie Stafford. She spent her blond was demonstrating it. and it turned out
Christmas vacation motoring in Old Mexico. to be Mildred Taylor ('32). A romance
which grew out of the Fine Arts Building at
We have been happy to have Pearl Eady school was culminated on Saturday, January
with us f o r the last several meetings and 18, by the marriage of Margaret Brown ('31)
hope she will continue to be near enough to and Miller Blue, at Valley Forge Chapel, Val-
come regularly. We arc also enjoying so very ley Forge, Pennsylvania. Beatrice Yeo's ('31)
much knowing Edith Adams McFerren ( • engagement to Howard Reiff has been an-
'28) and certainly wish that she might become nounced. M r . Reiff was graduated from
a permanent resident of Oklahoma City. Her Pennsylvania State College and was a member
husband is a pilot f o r United A i r Lines. of Delta Upsilon Fraternity. Howard Barrett
Pcnnell, Jr., was born to Grace McMullin
Many of our members have enjoyed attend- PenneM ( 28) and Howard Barrett Pennell on
ing the Thursday Forum at the University December 15. 1933; John Whitakcr Lord, 3rd,
Club. lectures have been given each week to Lilias Montgomery Lord ( E x . '31) and
during the winter by members of the faculty lohn Whitakcr Lord, Jr., on February 10; a
of the University of Oklahoma. They are daughter to Margaret Scott Greiner C28) and
sponsored by several city clubs, the Junior Frederick P. Greiner on January 13.
League, and city alumna? chapters. Pauline
Mills Edwards has been president of the K i n - Portland Alumnae Give Rushing Party
dergarten Mothers' Club of the school which By Mahalah Kurtz, A S
her voting daughter, Caroline Pauline, attends.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Rider (Ruth Roland. '29) -4- Oi'R PORTLAND A L U M N / K Chapter met
announce the birth of a son, born in Febru-
ary. We regret very much to learn of the January 11 f o r a brief business meeting,
death of Lloyd Drury, husband of Dorothy at the home of Mablc Walsh, and the assist-
Mouser Drury, Blair, Oklahoma. We extend ant hostesses were Irene Carlson, Emily
our sympathy to Mary Louise Fox Squyres Johnson, and Lawrelle Converse. We listened
in the loss of her mother recently and to Zalia to a very educational and entertaining talk
Holman in the death of her grandmother. on Oriental rugs by M r . A . O. Cartozian.

We had a record attendance of forty mem-
bers at our February meeting. Following the
business meeting, a lovely afghan, which was

72 To DRAGMA

made by Mrs. Elbert Vaughan, mother of Maude, Florence, Jennie, Ethel, Mabel, Muriel
two Alpha O's, was raffled. The lucky win- Merle, Louella and the secretary. Kathleel
ner was Mabel Robertson (Sigma). The sus- Haff Anthony (A '25) and Ruth Bennett K e l '
pense of the drawing was stupendous, and ley ( * '29) were our guests. Our lectures
tike money our treasury received was satis- were postponed, f o r the spirit of Christmas
fying. Mabel McCord, the hostess, and her was in the air, and, also, we were so inu-V
assistants, Helen Pease, Martha Hilands, and ested in getting acquainted with our new s j s !
Melba Johnston, served the record crowd, and ters and prospective members. I t was voted
we may safely say that their success was tre- to send five dollars to the Children's Ward in
mendous.
Our March meeting was held at the resi- the Homeopathic Hospital, which, you know
dence of Barbara Crowell, and she was as-
sisted by Roma Whisant, Catherine Mayhcw, was furnished by AOII as a memorial to our
and Isabel Crowell. A f t e r the business meet- Lillian McQuillin McCausland ( B '99), a for-
ing, the election of officers f o r the ensuing mer Grand President.
year was held: President, Evelyn Hogue;
vice president, Barbara Crowell; secretary, Isa- The Januarj meeting was held with Alia
bel Crowell; treasurer, Elizabeth Gabler; edi- Manchester Chase (B US). We were twelve
tor, Catherine Mayhew; historian, Anita Ruth Bennett Kelley ( * '29) joined our
Kellogg. group as a member, and we were delightel
to have her. Muriel Wyman gave her first
Our Alumna: Chapter gave a very delight- history lecture, and the meeting was voted a
f u l rushing tea on March 24. Mrs. J. Alden huge success.
Converse ( 2 ) was in charge, and her commit-
tee consisted of Florence Douglas, Elisc Jones, The February meeting was held at the home
Catherine Mayhew, Helen Olson, Irene Carl- of Elizabeth Darling Jackson ( K '28) with
son, Roma Whisnant, and Amy Rapp. Upon her mother. Louella Fificld Darling ( B , Ex.
arrival, the guests were received by Evelyn '01) acting as hostess. Again we were twelve
Hogue, Portland Alumna: president; Mrs. members, but this time we had two very
Bertha Larsen, housemother of the active welcome guests. Alice Spear and Octavia
chapter at Eugene; Mrs. Wynn Johnson, Chapin came from Boston, and we were all so
housemother of the active chapter at Cor- happy to have them with us again. Alice
vallis; Patricia McKcnna. president of the Spear told of some of her experiences i n
University of Oregon Chapter; Marie Dew, checking addresses, and also of the Westches-
president of the Oregon State College Giap- ter group's scheme of raising money by door
•ter. Those who poured at the tea were Mrs. prizes. Our hostess promptly offered one, and
A. M. Minor, Mrs. W. K. Hood, Mrs. E. R so a start was made in raising our quota for
Walsh, and Mrs. J. A . Beal. Numerous mem- our National Social Service Work. We had
bers of the alumna; and active chapters were our second history lecture, and a communica-
in attendance. tion was read from Anne Nichols.

The March meeting was held with Ruth
Bennett Kelley in Rum ford, Rhode Island.
There were ten of us present. Elizabeth Jack-
The April meeting was held at the home of son told of the safe embarking of Helen
Anita Kellogg, and her aides were Dora Gor- Eddy Rose ( B , Ex. "99) f r o m Boston f o r the
don Andrus, Elma Vaughan Fansett, A m y Mediterranean cruise. These trans-Atlantic
Booth, and Virginia Vaughan. A f t e r the busi- trips are getting to lie a spring habit with
ness meeting, we were entertained by a talk, Helen. I t was voted to purchase material
"Spring Styles f o r Women," by M r . Harris, and make more of the "Rainbow" napkins to
who is connected with Lipman, Wolfe & Co., sell to our friends. I t was also suggested that
as a buyer of women's apparel. We have en- we make table-covers of crepe, and sell whole
joyed many talks and discussions of value, sets as well as boxes of half-dozen napkins,
given by various and sundry folk, who are as we did a few years ago. Refreshments
specialists in their work. A l l of which have were decorated with shamrock, in honor of St.
been quite an incentive, and we arc looking Patrick.
forward to similar future opportunities. Our
past year has also held many enjoyable social
sprees, and we trust that the next year will Rochester Alumnae Welcome N e w

bring us many more. Members

Providence Alumnae Adopt Door Prize By Jessie Lewis Rice, X
Method
T H E ROCHESTER Alumna? Chapter cele-
By Grace Lawton Hubbard, B brated its fourth birthday, February 8, by
a party at the home of Jessie Lewis Rice
-4- DESPITE T H E RECORD-BREAKING cold weather (X '24). The history of the chapter was re-
viewed and any news of the original mem-
that wc New Englanders have experienced bers who have moved from Rochester was re-
this past winter, our meetings, since the last lated.
news-letter, have had an average attendance Besides being the occasion of our birthday,
of twelve members. We have seventeen names it was also a farewell party to Helen Wooster
on the mailing list, and we can't help but feel Geaves ( r '12). We are very sorry to lose
proud of our record. so active and enthusiastic a member. She has
moved to East Orange, New Jersey, and we
The December meeting was held at the know will be an addition to the New Jersey
home of our president, Merle Mosier Potter Alumna? Chapter. A committee was appointed
(E '14), with the following present: Alice,

MAY. 1934

to take charge of a benefit bridge party to into the home o i "Betty" and " W i g " Wiggin-
be held in March at the home of Charlotte ton on March 13. We were talking to Betty
Coolev Dickason ( A * '23). The purpose of recently and she says that they are moving to
the bridge party was to raise money toward Chicago soon, so we hope the Chicago alumna:
Rochester's quota f o r the Frontier Nursing take her in and make her feel at home.
Service. The report of the nominating com-
mittee was heard and approved and our new San Diego Alumnae Send Clothes to
officers elected f o r the coming year. Sadie Morgan

A delightful bridge party was held March By Margaret Coombs, B<P
10 at the lovely, new home of Charlotte
Cooley Dickason ( A * '23). Besides having T H E FEBRUARY MEETING of our chapter
a most enjoyable afternoon a substantial sum
iwas earned toward our quota for the Frontier was in the form of a benefit bridge party
Nursing Service. to raise money f o r our National Social Serv-
ice Work. Verna King Werner ( Z ) let us
Tn the afternoon of April 18, the chapter use her lovely home f o r the party. A l l the
rnet at the home of Abigail Roberts Van prizes were donated as well as the food, so
Wagenen (Oil '23). Installation of officers we had very little expense. Several of the
was followed by the regular business meet- girls sent i n money donations and we are very
ing. Afterwards, tea was served and all en- proud indeed to have raised a third of our
joyed a short social hour. The new officers quota. Much credit goes to our five active
for the coming year are: Helen Howalt Lowe members in making our contribution possible.
(X '25), president; Martha Jane Hitchener The chapter is packing a box of spring clothes
( f l '22), vice president; Abigail Roberts Van for Sadie Morgan in Kentucky.
Wagenen (on '23), secretary; Grace Murray
(T '26), treasurer; Nell Fain Lawrence (NO We feel very fortunate indeed to have as
'23), Panhellenic delegate ; and Dorothy Saxton our president f o r the next year Verna King
Westman (E '29), historian and editor to T o Werner ( Z ) . Verna was president of the
DRAGMA. We are very glad to welcome to Lincoln, Nebraska, Alumnae Chapter before
our members Eunice Barrows Cowell ( r '29). coming to San Diego to make her home. W e
feel that our chapter will grow under her
Three of our members have become the skillful leadership. Lucille English, our State
proud mothers of sons during the last year. Chairman, has been invited down f o r the in-
To Charlotte Cooley Dickason ( A * '23), Gray stallation of our new officers. We always look
David, Jr., born July 25; to Margaret Snook forward to Lucille's inspiring visits. Edna
Folwell (P '26), Robert James, born February Lee Coombs (S '30) recently married Hillus
10; and to Dorothy Saxton Westman (E '29), M . Brown of Long Beach, California. They
Donald Ross, born March 8. are making their home i n Banning. Aileen
Brown Small (A '28) has a baby daughter.
St. Louis Alumnae Use Ritual Service This is her second child, the first being a boy.

By Alice Reeves West. @ Seattle Alumna? Elect N e w Corporation
Officers
- f . OUR EVER-BEAUTIFUL ritual service was
read December 18, when we had the By Ruth Holten, Y

Founders' Day program at Betty Foxx W i g - . + - S R I N G T I M E BRINGS party-time. Seattle
ginton's ( E ) . A t that meeting, our Panhel-
lenic delegate, Eleanor Rench ( H ) reported alumna: are deeply enthralled with prepa-
that the City Panhellenic cleared about $200 rations f o r a glorious springtime dancing
at the benefit hridgc given annually f o r the party at Club Victor, A p r i l 27. Vic Meyers,
scholarship fund. Letters were received from nationally famous orchestra leader, has one
the Frontier Xursing Service saying that our such engagement in each of the largest cities
Christmas boxes were welcomed. on the coast. Alice Cole, who just recently
returned f r o m the east, is chairman o f ar-
In Januarv we met with Janice Foote Luhn rangements.
( Z ) . Luncheon was followed by a short busi-
ness meeting and bridge. A t Eleanor Pres- It's a long jump from parties to official busi-
cott Huckmann's ( A ) in February, i t was de- ness, but at the last alumna? meeting new offi-
cided to have the next meeting at Evelyn cers f o r the corporation were elected as well
Gaugcr's ( I ) in the evening. So at 7:30, on as trustees. Edith Ollason is the new presi-
March 19, the meeting opened by a short rit- dent; Alice MacLean, vice president; Cath-
ual service. This was followed by the election erine Evans, secretary; Maud Moscly, treas-
of officers. Evelyn Gauger was re-elected urer. Three new board members were elected
president; Ellen Kittinger Grover ( I ) , vice for the next two years—Catherine Evans,
president; Janice Foote Luhn ( Z ) , secretary; Edith Ollason and Alice MacLean. Other
Eleanor Prescott Huckmann, treasurer; Alice members f o r 1933-34 arc Louise Oliver, Ellen
Reeves West ( 6 ) , historian and reporter to Tolliffc, Eugenia Page and Martha Beeuwkes.
To DRAGMA. There were three tables at
bridge and the prizes went to Ella Mae John- We have some interesting news f r o m down
ston, Eleanor Huckmann, and Evelyn Gauger. California wav of Upsilon girls. The engage-
We were especially glad to welcome Louise ment of Jean Bishop ('30), San Diego, Cali-
Feldwitch Baer ( I ) and Marcella Taylor fornia, to Russell Scott Waitc of Riverside,
(*)• California, has been a n n o u n c e d . "Rusty"
graduated f r o m the Stanford Law School i n
Little Elizabeth Wigginton made her debut

74 To DRAG MA

1932, and is now practicing in Riverside. Beryl Syracuse Alumna; Sell Tickets on
Dee Glasgow ('31), M r s . Lathrop Herold Commission
since 1932, is also i n sunny Berkeley, Califor-
nia, where " L a " is a teaching fellow in the By Alice Footc Gwynn, X
Department of Geology, University of Cali- - f - SYRACUSE ALUMNAE have been so busy
fornia, and working for his Ph.D. Among our raising money that I am afraid my letter
young married set, we have Charlotte Nelson will sound more like an auditor's report than
Chanda ('31) and her husband, who have re- otherwise. A t our January meeting held at
turned home after spending a year and a half the home of Elizabeth Frank, we decided to
in Qeveland, Ohio. W e are certainly happy sell tickets for a two-weeks' play at the Civic
to see "Chad." Virginia P a r r i s h Tonkin Theater. Our first two weeks were mildly
('31) is now living i n Walla Walla, Washing- successful, but we determined to hold it over
ton, where her husband is connected with the f o r two more. L o ! and behold the players
Union O i l Company. Peggy ('30) and A l gave "Men in White." and tickets were at a
Clark are in Great Falls, Montana. " A l " was premium. We were allowed 25 per cent of the
transferred there, but Peggy thinks it's much botaH and when everything was checked up the
too isolated. Dorothy H e s s e l d e n z Walker, result came to twenty dollars. February found
who has been making her home in Oakland, us at Grace Stowell Keller's. We appointed a
California, f o r the past six years, has recently nominating committee for our spring elections
moved to Seattle. Her husband has been and discussed redecorating two rooms at the
transferred north and the Seattle Alpha O's house.
are happy to have Dorothy back among them.
Trma Tomlinson, A n n Arbor alumna, and her In March we met at Alice Footc Gwynn's.
small son, John, left Seattle April 1 for a two The election results show: president, Grace
months' visit with her mother in Cleveland. Oberlandcr; vice president, Mary Lou K e l l e y
Ohio. Edna Robinson Harms and husband treasurer, Gertrude Bailey; recording-secreta-
have been to California f o r a three-weeks' trip ry, Barbara Estey Greenman; corresponding-
by boat and motor, with Mayor-elect Smith. secretaries, Ruth Caskey S t u r d e v a n t and
Jim Harms successfully managed M r . Smith's Glenna Van Velde Richardson; historian, Es-
mayoralty campaign—and was i t hotly con- ther Hagcnbucker H i l l ; editor to To DRACMA,
tested ? I took a trip to Portland. Oregon, on Alice Foote Gwynn. We discussed our plans
a Business Girls Pacific Coast C o n v e n t i o n for the annual alumna; luncheon to be held the
about three weeks ago, and met the sweetest same day as initiation. Kay Latimer Hardy
little girl—Eileen Monks Lovely's ('30) little was appointed to make the necessary arrange-
Suzanne Eileen. She was born on November ments.
19 last year and certainly controls that house-
hold. Also of great interest to Alpha O's is Our April Meeting was held the sixth at
the announcement of a baby girl born to Rob- Mary Lou Kelley's. We were hoping Mrs.
erta Mudgctt Karrer, February 11. And Elma Anderson would be with us, but unfortunate]!
Brunner Bravender has a new baby, l l o Carey she did not arrive until the next day. Kay told
('31) is private secretary to Dr. Richard Ful- us that our luncheon would be at Schrafft's on
ler at the Seattle A r t Museum. I t seemed just the H i l l at one o'clock. The rest of the eve-
the place f o r l l o and she loves it. Catherine ning we spent talking over various plans to
Evans is there too, assisting in taking groups raise more money and decided on a rummage
of children through the museum. Melanic sale and possibly a benefit dance. We then
Peterson ('29) is busy these days playing host- adjourned until Saturday at one. Schrafft's
ess f o r her father. H e was recently appointed served a lovely luncheon and we found gath-
Royal Swedish Vice-Council of Oregon. Me- ered around the table: M r s . Anderson, State
lanie had to give up her work as librarian at College; Lucille Dewitt, A u b u r n ; Phoebe
Reed College, Portland, but I'm sure she isn't Goodwin, Weedsport; Winifred Sayre, Long
a bit sorry. Shirley Brust is leaving shortly Island; Ruth Boltwood, Buffalo; Alice Coul-
for Vienna to pursue her studies in literature. ter, Norwich; Mary Sutcliff, Morrisville;
Jessie Squires ( E x . '33) is working in her Ruth Oyer, Wolcott; and f r o m Syracuse, Ruth
home town, Chehalis, at the p r e s e n t time. Caskey Sturdevant, Gertrude Bailey, Kay Lati-
Helen Lea ('31) is teaching Biology and A r t mer Hardy, Glenna V a n Velde Richardson,
at Stadium High School in Tacoma, and plan- Grace Stowell Keller, Emily Tarbell, Elizabeth
ning to do some research in Zoology this sum- Frank, Elizabeth Spaulding, Mary Lou Kelley,
mer under Dr. Robert C. Miller at the Uni- Alice Foote Gwynn. A f t e r luncheon most
versity of Washington Oceanographic Labora- everyone returned, to the house f o r initiation.
tories in the San Juan Islands. Marion Lea
(Ex. '33), Helen's sister, has entered the The banquet was held at the Onondaga Ho-
Washington State Normal School at Belling- tel and represented to us a Royal Court.
ham, i n preparation to teaching the primary Phoebe Goodwin as toastmistrcss was Court
grades. She is working part-time in the school Herald; Jane Burlingham, an initiate, spoke
library. Ruth Jordan Peterson, has organized for the Maids in Waiting; Mildred McDuff,
and is teaching a class in textile and weaving as a duchess, f o r the sophomores; Jane Leon-
at the Women's University Club. She has a ard, a princess, f o r the juniors; Barbara Phil-
loom at home and also does very unusual knit- lips, a queen, f o r the seniors; and Alice Foote
ting. Gwynn f o r the dowager queens or alumnae.
Concluding these, Mrs. Anderson called to our
minds again the purpose of Alpha 0 and bade
us not to think of it in a narrow sense but to
take each phase and broaden ourselves and

l i AY. 1934 75

Bur outlook. Each alumna was asked to say tier Nursing under arms, in fact just any mo-
t>mcthing. Those speaking included Emily ment an AOII meets another AOII there is
f a r b e l l , who told us Alice Coulter had sent likely to be conversation that sounds as i f
^ l e r "Hello" in the f o r m of a check f o r twen- there might be cropping out an understanding
ftr-fivc dollars, Frances Meisse, Epsilon, Grace of this little matter of national philanthropic
IQbcrlander, Thelma Vinal, Florimel Jones, work.

Mora King, Ruth Boltwood, Mary Sutcliff,
(Elizabeth Brown, Lois Haskins, Lucille Dewitt Washington Alumnae Sponsor Plays
b i d Elizabeth Spaulding. The evening con-
Mudcd with the Lucille Dewitt announcing her By Jane H. Scu'ly, A T

engagement to Millard Brink. • + • T H E W A S H I N G T O N CHAPTER has been busy

[ The Syracuse Alumna; extend their sympa- with benefits to raise money f o r its Na-
t h y to Anna and Veronica Kallfelz on the tional Work quota. On March 1 we spon-
lideath of their father. sored three one-act plays which were produced
and directed by Betty McCall Roberts ( I I A ) ,
and we hope to raise an additional sum by a
Tulsa Alumnae Learn the Facts dance at the Hay-Adams House on April 28.
About F . N . S. Since this is our first dance in some time it
should be a success both socially and financial-
By Katherine De Buy, S ly. The annual W a s h i n g t o n Panhellenic
luncheon was held at the Mayflower Hotel on
L+. I T HAPPENS in Tulsa when the alumna? of February 10. Mrs. Roosevelt spoke on "Sub-
Alpha Omicron P i has a sixth birthday sistence Farms," one of her ]>et projects.
Mamie H u r t Baskervill ( K ) , and Mary H i g -
anniversary, life gets into an a w f u l tangle of
pie usual done in the unusual. Is not this suf-
ficient proof:
[ Since my last note on December 10 our go- gins Mathews ( N ) were hostesses at two of
ings and comings have gone and come like this the tables and there were over thirty of the
y , . planned spring party f o r husbands and chapters meeting under our banner in the lob-
lescorts, the o c c a s i o n being our first social by. New b o o k l e t s have been sent to each
ttunction of the year . . . there was a book re- member containing the programs f o r the re-
view of The Barretts of Wimpole Street (cel- mainder of the year. The attractive booklets
ebrating the appearance of Katharine Cornell) have helped to increase the interest in the
.and making money f o r the National Philan- meetings and are e x c e l l e n t reminders of
Bropic Work . . . new officers elected, such as what the chapter is doing. A t the January
Edna Mae H i l l , president; Katherine De Puy, meeting Alice Eliot ( H A ) and Lillian Ernest
vice president; Dorothy Frye, secretary; V i r - (IIA) reviewed Clever Country and Nurses
ginia Parks, treasurer; Katherine De Puy, To on Horseback, both especially interesting
EjRAGMA Editor and Historian; and Dorothy because of our work i n Kentucky. I n
J f t y e and Dorothy Kasey, Panhellenic dele- February Mrs. Howe, of the Department of
Bgates . . . a calendar of the year was selected Agriculture, spoke on the Pure Food and
I with the first program to be Citizenship . . . Drug Act now before Congress. She bad post-
i o n April 38 a Panhellenic Bridge and Style ers and pictures with which to illustrate her
tShop is scheduled, and Dorothy Kasey is to talk and i t was very interesting and valuable.
\ be the dashing model . . . Of course we made The following officers f o r 1934-35 were elected
l a dab of money by selling magazines and the at the February meeting and installed at the
•best coathangers in our closets (now our formal meeting at the P i Delta Chapter house
clothes get snagged on the rusty remainder, at the March meeting: president, Ruth Miles
but we swear and go blithely on) . . . we've
met on street corners and curbs, at Dorothy ( H A ) ; vice president, Mildred Kettler (HA) ;
Frye's, at Katherine De Puy's, at Elizabeth treasurer, Rosalie G o o d h a r t (HA) ; corre-
Elgin's and Stella Fortier's. sponding secretary, Dorothy Simpson (HA) ;
recording secretary, Frances Garratt (NK) ;
And we haven't been as stupid as we sound. historian and editor to To DRACMA, Jane
Not half. Once this spring we almost made Scully (AT); Panhellenic delegate, Emily
history i n the chapter by this decision: it was Mitchell ( K ) ; alternate, Marian Bates Dan-
this way, the Philanthropic Chairman was ab- iels (HA) ; social chairmen, Margaret Cooke
sent (she should have known better) and at (ITA) and Vivian Logue Seymour ( 0 ) .
the session i t was voted to give up all local
charity and concentrate on national philan- Dorothy Claflin (HA '33) was married on
thropy. O f course that meant the Frontier March 31 to Harold Robinson (*A0, Mary-
Nursing. That was all right, but few in the land '32). Norma Person (HA '33) was mar-
chapter had the slightest idea of what or ried i n Brooklyn, New York, on March 31 to
where or when or whatsoever the Frontier Donald Shook (6X, Maryland '27). They are
Nursing might be. Thereupon the Philan- living in Washington. Kinkead Young (HA
thropic Chairman gritted her teeth in revenge '33) has announced her engagement to Donald
and in accord with the adoption of education- Voshall (*2K, Maryland '33).

al programs f o r the year, she ferreted out Westchester Alumna; Give Covered
everything on the subject and at the next ses- Dish Luncheon
sion she doled out the material. Now Alpha
O in Tulsa goes to sleep with Frontier Nurs-
ing on the chest. AOII's go i n and out of By Helen Pierce Munro, T
shops and teas, offices and schools with Fron-
•+- O U R JANUARY MEETING was held at the

home of Matilda Petri Olrich ( X ) at Tar-

76 To DRAG MA

rytown. Jn order lo help swell our Philan- (General exit to the tune of "Tlvis is my lucky day")
thropic Fund the meeting was a covered dish During the course of the evening's entertainnicnt
luncheon. Each person who a t t e n d e d tlv
meeting paid a small charge for a buffet lunch- refreshments of ice cream and cake were served to
eon which was provided by having each OIK the guests in true cabaret fashion.
bring with her some suitable luncheon dish
Election of officers was the business of the Presenting a Personality
meeting and the following were elected: Flor-
ence Baker Nichols ( X ) , p r e s i d e n t ; Mary [ C O N T I N U E D KHOM P A G E 2 4 ]
Louise Anderson Hingsberg ( N ) , vice presi-
dent; Barbara Anderson Moses ( A ) , treasur- A l l the departments of the College of Home
er; Anne Hughes .lander ( N ) , secretary, and Economics are in this building; it has recep-
Angeline Bennett ( X ) To DRAGMA editor. tion rooms, and auditorium, a cafeteria, a tea-
room, three apartments f o r practice house
Stella Perry had promised to install these work, recreation rooms for the students and
officers for us at the February meeting but due a terrace, nurseries for child training, observa-
to a blizzard which paralyzed all means of tories for the stud) of the child, model rooins
transportation we were obliged to postpone the set up to demonstrate the principles of home
meeting until March, at which time she was furnishings, a costume shop, sewing rooms
unable to be with us. Our vice president. laboratories, and offices all planned and fur-
Mary Hingsberg ( N ) installed the new officers nished by her. She kept in close touch wifiM
in the absence of our president, Eve Adams all of the departments included in the building
Miller ( H ) . We are most happy to announce in her planning for them so that she might
the arrival in Eve's home on March 17 of a adequately fill their needs.
future Alpha O, Joanne Elizabeth. We are
all very grateful to Eve and Priscilla Sawyer She has traveled much in the last year or
Ross ( F ) , who have been our president and two, personally selecting all of the furnish-
secretary, for the great strides we have made ings f o r the building, and yet, between the
under their guidance during the first year of trips, she has found time to teach a few
our existence. classes. A new method that she originated
in her classes on Eurnishings i>- attracting much
Plans for Rushing Parties attention. She has made use of movable
wall boards, much like those used in stage
[ C O N T I N C K I I FROM I ' A C K 22] sets, to allow the pupils to construct their
own rooms to furnish. Instead of designing
She doesn't look so hot to me. lights on paper, the students have an actual room
What's to do about it? Let's to work with. Since these wall-boards arc
Shade all the light* so he can't see! adjustable, the rooms may be made of any
1 don't like her dress, do you? size and put up or taken down at will. Nat-
And her veil is ftinny, too. urally the students respond to the opportunity
What's to do about it? Let's for real imaginative work that her method
Shade all the lights and hide their view. affords.
They're growing dumber every day;
I'm sure they'll make a perfect pair, girls! Anyone who has accomplished as much as
And in a year or two. I'd say she has deserves our recognition. Most im-
They'll even he much worse, girls! portant about Grace Morin, however, is the
Girls, oh, girls! Oh, here they come! way in which she stands out apart from her
Quiet now! The fun's begun! work as a distinct personality. She has not
What's to do about it? Let's shade all the been absorbed by it until she became a part
And ain't love grand? of it, but she has made it the final expression
of herself. We are proud to know her as an
Groom lings "And so 1 married the Girl," \lpha O.

Bride sings lo the tunc of "Here Lies Love"— From Our Social Worker
To see him now, you'd not suppose
I thought he never would propose. [ C O N T I N U E D FROM P A C E 59]
He thinks this wedding was his plan;
Hurling, how like a man! tinually acquiring! So pressing, so inescapable
My dear old dad had said to me, is the awareness of a need f o r a new and
" Y o u r mother and 1 both agree better economic basis for life in the mountains,
You're not as young as you used to be. a new or re-vitalized social sense, a new in-
Daughter, go get a man!" spiration to living, I suspect you'll always find
I met him, said he'd he all right; me pursuing one idea or another as to how
I made out I went for him at sight. those things might be achieved! Grant that
Then he fell, I could tell, all was well. we may have the faith, the patience, the.
Today's the day, my day in June. energy, the devotion to make actuality of
It's not a single day too soon. whatever these ideas have of truth and worth
I'm ready to start my honeymoon. in them.

Darling, I got my m a n ! Faithfully yours, BLANn MORROW.

Parson sings to the tune of "And so I married the Renters Wanted!
girl"—
Now I pronounce you two as man and wife N u CHAPTER would like to rent their
Tied in bonds sthorohuoglyh,outot o,this apartment at 13 Christopher Street in New
Never to part mortal life York for the summer months. I t has one
T i l l she decides to sue. room with a bath and kitchenette and will ac-
Y o u arc supposed to love and cherish her, commodate two girls. Any one interested in
And you're to honor and obey; leasing it, may write to Ruth Glidden at the
But if you can't afford to cherish her. apartment f o r further information.
T r y a quick getaway.
Don't talk to her mother and her father, too.
Stay away from families and all her friends, I
tell you.
T r y to avoid the rice the crowd will toss
Pay me before you make your train;
A n d though today may prove to be your loss,
I t still will be my gain.

77

MAY, 1934

I Alpha Omicron Pi

Founded at Barnard College, New York City, January 2, 1897

CENTRAL OFFICE

Masonic Building, Box 262, State College, Pa.
Registrar—Alice Cullnane, B*.

FOUNDERS OF ALPHA OMICRON PI
Jessie Wallace Hughan, A, 171 West 12th Street. New York. N . Y .
Helen St. Clair Mullan (Mrs. George V . ) , A, 70 Pine Street. New York, N.Y.
Stella George Stern Perry (Mrs. George H . ) , A. 9 St. Luke's Place, New York, N . Y .
Elizabeth Hcywood Wyman, A, 19 Outlook Place, Glen Ridge. N.J.

OFFICERS
President—Edith Huntington Anderson ( M r s . Arthur K . ) , B«P, 127 South Sparks Street, State

College, Pa.
Secretary—Anne Jeter Nichols (Mrs. Edward J.), K, Box 262, State College, Pennsylvania.
Treasurer—Helen Haller, fi, 2138 La Salle Avenue, Los Angeles, Calif.
Vice President—Muriel Turner McKinncy (Mrs. Verne W . ) , A, 528 North Formosa Avenue,

Los Angeles, Calif.

Second Vice President—Mary Danielson Drummond (Mrs. Warren C ) , A«f>, 610 Hinman Ave-

nue, Evanston, 111.

Historian—Stella George Stern Perry (Mrs. George H ) , A, 9 St. Luke's Place, New York,

N. Y.

Assistant Historian—Elizabeth Heywood Wyman, A, 19 Outlook Place, Glen Ridge, N . J.
Editor of To DRAGMA—Wilma Smith Leland (Mrs. Leland F.), T, 2642 University Avenue, St.

Paul, Minn.

N A T I O N A L P A N H E L L E N I C CONGRESS

Chairman—Mrs. A . M . Redd, KAPPA DELTA, Peacbburg, Ala.

AOIT Panhellenic Delegate—Pinckney Estes GlantGzrbeeatrg L(aMkesr s .DEistrrinctst),(Rho.35T aCul.arEetma ,onOtmAicrvoennuPei,.

New York, N . Y. Beta T a u . Iota)—Dorothy Womrath, T a u , 3215
Irving Avenue South, Minneapolis, Minn.
DISTRICT MCNSrheUswi..PERIMNiTHdSE-tWarNleelDesttEe,rLNnLaTniSnscionDlginst,r(icMNt erbs.(. Z
Atlantic District (Nu, Delta. Gamma, Epsilon. eia, Phi. Chi Delta)—Edith
Psi, Epsilon A lpha)—Edith Ramsey Collins ( Har ry W .). Zeta. 1S37 C
G. Rowland), Nu, 302 West 12th Street,
York, N. Y . Pacific District (Sigma, Lambda, Kappa T h e t a ) —
Southern District (Kappa, Omicron, Alpha Pi, Pi Claire MacGregor, Lambda, Box 1367, Stanford
Delta, Delta P h i ) — A n n Anderson Sale (Mrs. VV. University, Calif.
Goodridge, J r . ) , Kappa, Welch, W . V a .
South Central District ( P i , T a u Delta. N u Omicron, Pacific Northwest District (Upsilon, Alpha Phi, Alpha
Sigma, Alpha Rho, Beta Kappa, Alpha Gamma)—
Kappa Omicron, Nu Kappa)—Charlotte Voss Kear- Elizabeth Stow Norgorc. (Mrs. Martin). Epsilon,
ney (Mrs. Richard A . , J r . ) , Pi, Azalea Court, Mo- 3403 West 71st Street, Seattle, Washington.
bile, Alabama.
Ohio Vallev District (Theta, Beta P h i . Omega, Beta
Theta. Theta E t a . Alpha STTaAuT)E—(OCRatPhReOriVneINDCEaviCs,H A I R M E N OF A L U M N A
AlaTbhametaa—, C2o4r0n3eliEa ast LMamarbkeRt oSutnrtereete, N( Mewr s .AWlbaalntye,r IBn.d) .. Georgia (Florida, North and South C a r o l i n a ) — E l i z a -
Nu Omicron, 216 2nd Street, Thomas Station, Birm- beth MacQuiston Nichols (Mrs. John M., J r . ) , Nu
ingham, Ala. Kappa. 1896 Wycliff Road, Atlanta, Georgia.

California—Lucile Curtis English ( M r s . Walter A . ) , Illinois— Dorothy Duncan, Rho, 225 Wood Court.
Lambda, 502 North Plymouth Boulevard, Los Wilmette. III.
Angeles, Calif.
Indiana ( K e n t u c k y ) — H a n n a h Blair Neal ( M r s .
Canada (Eastern, Foreign)—Jessie L Grant, Beta Hcrshcl), Beta Phi, 813 North Maple, Bloomington,
T a u , Apt. 107, 2 Sultan Street. Toronto, Ont., Ind.
Canada.
Kansas (Missouri)—Berneice Petersen, Phi, 5307 V i r -
Canada (Western)—Kathleen Cumming, Beta Kappa, ginia, Kansas City, Mo.

No. 2, 1994 West 3rd Avenue. Vancouver, B . C , Louisiana—Willie W y n n White, P i , Box 1550, Alex-
Canada. andria, Louisiana.
Colorado (Arizona, Nevada, New Mexico, U t a h ) — Maine (New Hampshire, Vermont)—Estella Beauprc,
Mary Virginia Wells. C h i Delta. 2929 South Broad- Gamma, 396 Hammond Street, Bangor, Me.
way, Englewooil, Colo.

78 To DRAGMA

Maryland (Delaware, District of Columbia)—Eliza- Ohio—Ruth Cox Segar ( M r s . William), Omega, 193
beth Sears Boulden ( M r s . J o h n S . ) , E t a , 6101 Benson Drive, Dayton, O. 1
Blackburn Lane, Cedarcroft, Baltimore, Md.
Oklahoma—Pauline Mills Edwards ( M r s . Warren W \
Massachusetts (Connecticut, Rhode I s l a n d ) — A l i c e J . X i , 1220 West 39th. Oklahoma City. Okla. a'>
Spear, Delta, 32 Pierce Street, Hyde Park, Mass.

Michigan—Virginia V a n Zandt Snider ( M r s . George Oregon (Idaho)—Gwendolyn Metzgar. Alpha Sivm.
R . ) , Omicron P i , 14026 Northlawn Avenue, De- 1702 S. E . 57th Avenue, Portland, Oregon.
troit, Mich.
Pennsylvania—Elizabeth Martin, Epsilon Alpha, 6139
Minnesota—Irene F r a s e r , T a u , 1214 22nd Avenue Lebanon Avenue, West Philadelphia, Pa.
North, Minneapolis, Minn.
Tennessee—Frances M c K e e , N u Omicron, Pixis An»«
Montana (North and South Dakota. W y o m i n g ) — 3, Nashville. Tenn.
Berniece Crane Lowman (Mrs. Harold), Alpha
Phi, Poison, Mont. Texas—Alvira Lehrer Stephens ( M r s . Russell S . )
Omega, 882 Santos Street, Abilene, Texas.
Nebraska (Iowa)—Margaret Moore Gorton ( M r s .
Donald), Zeta, Tecumseh, Neb. Virginia (West Virginia)—Louise Wolff, Kappa, 142
South Adams Street, Petersburg, Va.
New Jersey—Thelma Robertson Mitchell ( M r s . E d -
ward), Chi, 245 Claremont Road, Ridgewood, N . J . Washington—Beryl Dill Kneen (Mrs. Orville H.)
Upsilon, East 1107 Liberty Avenue. Spokane, Wash!
New York (Metropolitan Area)—Josephine S. Pratt,
Alpha. 250 East 105th Street. New York. N. Y . Wisconsin—Ruth Lawlor MacFadden (Mrs. Harry
A . ) , Nu, 124 Lisbon Road, Oconomowoc, Wiscon-
New York (exclusive of metropolitan district—Carol sin.
L . Kendall, Chi, Sunset Knoll, Horsehcads, N. Y .

ACTIVE CHAPTERS

Pi UPSILON

President—Halcyon Colomb. 1819 Pine Street, New House Address—1906 East 45th Street, Seattle, Wash
Orleans, I-a.
Meetings—Mondays at 4:30. President—Louise Lutey.
Mertinps—Mondays at 7:00.
Nu
House Address—13 Christopher Street, New York, Nu KAPPA

N. Y . President—Mable Robb, 7638 Gaston Road, Dallas
President—Ruth Glidden. Tex.
Meetings—Mondays at 6:00. Meetings—Mondays at 4:00.

OMICRON BETA P H I

President—Evelyn Roth. 909 Mountcastle, Knoxville, House Address—703 East 7th Street, Bloomington,
Tenn. Ind.
at 7:00. President—Ann Katherine Grcenawalt.
Meetings—Mondays

KAPPA Meetings—Monday evenings.

President—Nancy Gates, R . M . W . C , Lynchburg. V a . ETA
Meetings—Thursdays at 5:00. House Address—636
President—Charlotte Langdon Street, Madison, Wis.
ZETA Meetings—Mondays. Goedde.
House Address—119
House Address—1541 S Street. Lincoln. Neb. President—Marian ALPHA PRI
President—Betty Temple. Meetings—Tuesday
Meetings—Mondays at 7:00. So. 6th Street, Bozeman, Mont.
Warner.
House Address—2311 SIGMA Avenue, Berkeley. evenings.
Calif.
Prospect Nu OMICRON
President—Marjorie
Meetings—Mondays. Hearn. President—Winn Ownbey, 305 24th Avenue North,
Nashville, Tenn.
Meetings—Saturday afternoons.
THETA
Psi
House Address—AOn House. Greencastle, I n d .
President—Mary Garrison Walker. President—Marion Miller, 3-134 Sansom Street, Phila-
Meetings—Mondays at 7:00. delphia, Pa. evenings.

DELTA Meetings—Monday

President—Winona Gould, 7 Barnard Road, West Pm
Medford, Mass. at 7:15.
House Address—1144 Louisiana Street, Lawrence,
Meetings—Mondays Kan. 7:00.
President—Ruth Pyle.
GAMMA Meetings—Mondays at

President—Lucinda E . Ripley, Balentine Hall, Orono, OMEGA
Me.
President—Lois Stringfcllow, Home Economics House,
Meetings—Mondays. Oxford, Ohio.

EPSILON Meetings—Wednesday evenings.

House Address—The Knoll, Ithaca, N . Y . OMICRON P I
President—Jean Maloney. House—1319 Hill Street, A n n Arbor, Mich.
Meetings—Sunday evenings.

RJIO President—Mary Alice Emmett.
Meetings—Monday evenings.
House Address—626 Emerson Street, Evanston, 111.
President—Catherine Lang. ALPHA SIGMA
Meetings—Monday evenings.
House Address—1680 Alder Street, Eugene, Ore.
President—Jean Cook.
IOTA Meetings—Mondays at 7:00.
HoIuBse. Address—704 Urbana.
South Mathews Street,
President—Arnieta Pi DELTA
Meetings—Monday Mcislahn.
evenings. House Address—AOII House, College Park, Md.
President—Helen Wollman.
Meetings—Tuesdays at 7:00.
LAMBDA

MaCilianlgif. Address—Box 1367, Stanford University, TAU DELTA

President—Ellamac Dodds. President—Mary Allen Smith, 1301 Niazuma Ave-
nue, Birmingham, Ala.
Meetings—Mondays. Meetings—Every other Wednesday at supper.

TAO
HoMusienn.Address—1121 5th Street S. E . , Minneapolis,
KAPPA THETA

President—Irma Hammerbacher. House Address—894 Hilgard, West Los Angeles,
Calif.
Meetings—Mondays at 5:30. President—Lucile Burbeck.

House Address—603 CHI Meetings—Mondays.
N. Y . University Avenue, Syracuse,

President—Katherine Burlingham. President—Teresa KAPPA OMICRON
Meetings—Monday evenings. Meetings—Fridays
Lilly, 1591 Vinton, Memphis, Tenn.
at 2:30.

M A Y , 1934 79

A BETA TAU

ALPHA RHO
. House Address—2332 Monroe, Corvallis, Ore. House Address—Apt. 107. 2 Sultan Street, Toronto.
1 President—Marjorie Bceuwkes. Ontario, Canada.

\ Meetings—Mondays at 7:30. President—Margaret Cowan.
Meetings—Mondays at 5:30.
> C H I DELTA
House Address—1015 15th Street, Boulder, Colo.
President—Alice Woltcr. ALPHA TAU
Meetings—Mondays. President—Rebecca
Ohio. Mathews, Beaver Hall, Granville,
9 L BETA THETA
Meetings—Monday afternoons.
Preside 111— Rosemary Recap, 5427 Washington Blvd.,
Indianapolis, Ind.
Meetings—Wednesdays at 7:30. BETA KAPPA

ALPHA PI President—Alice Daniels, 4202 W . 10th Avenue, New
Westminster, B. C , Canada.
House Address—AOII House, Tallahassee, F l a .
President—Mary Louise Filer. Meetings—First and third Tuesday of month at 4:30.

'feelings—Mondays at 9:00. ALPHA GAMMA

2 EPSILON ALPHA House Address—1407 Opal Street, Pullman, W a s h .
House Address—AOII House, State College. P a .
President—Lenore Morse.

President—Nancy Stahlman. Meetings—Mondays at 7:00.
! eettngs—Monday evenings.
DELTA PH.

y THETA ETA President—Ellen LaBorde, 1116 Marion Street, Co-
- lumbia, S. C .
resident—John Alice Morris, 817 Elbcron Avenue, Meetings—Monday evenings at 8:00.
Cincinnati, Ohio.
Meetings—Mondays at 6:45.

ALUMNjE CHAPTERS

NEW YORK LYNCHBURG

President—Mary Kent-Miller Tennant (Mrs. John), President—Lucile Lamar (Mrs. H . S . ) , Kappa, 220
Norfolk Avenue, Lynchburg, Va.
Omicron P i , 62 Pierrepont Street. Brooklyn, N . Y .
Meetings—Arranged by Executive Committee. WASHINGTON

SAN FRANCISCO President—Ruth Miles, Pi Delta. 7542 Alaska Ave-
nue N. W., Washington, D. C.
President—Jean Stoll. Sigma, 851 California Street.
San Francisco, Calif. Meetings—Third Thursday of month.

Meetings—First Monday of month. DALLAS

PROVIDENCE President—Eva Fulcher Cudc (Mrs. Harold), Nu
Kappa. 5224 Milam. Dallas. Tex.
President—Merle Mosicr Potter (Mrs. Alfred L . ) , Meetings—First Friday of month at noon.
Epsilon, 209 University Avenue, Providence, R. I .
Meetings—Second Saturday of month, October to PHILADELPHIA
June. Street,
President—Marian C u l i n , P s i , 820 North 41st
President—Mary BOSTON Philadelphia, Pa.

Heald, Delta. 349 Pleasant Street, Meetings—First Saturday of month.
Maiden, Mass.
Meetings—Last Saturday of month. President—Lucile KANSAS CITY West 38th,
Kansas City,
LINCOLN Clippinger, Phi, 902
Meetings—Second Mo.
President—Bonnie Hess Drake (Mrs. Hugh), Zeta,
June. Tuesday of month.
2427 Park Avenue, Lincoln, Neb.
OMAHA
Meetings—Second Saturday noon, October to
President—Ruby Hodgskiss Hagen ( M r s . R o y ) , Alpha
Los A N G E L E S Phi, 5018 Nicholas Street, Omaha, Neb.

President—Virginia Davis Nowlin (Mrs. R. H.), Meetings—First Saturday of month.
Kappa Theta, 5535 West 3rd, Los Angeles, Cal.
Meetings—Fourth Saturday of month. September to SYRACUSE
May. Highland Ave-
President—Grace Oberlander, Chi, 406
CHICAGO nue, Syracuse, N. Y.

Central Chairman—Katherine Bach Keller (Mrs. T e d Meetings—Last F r i d a y of month.
W . ) , E t a , 6104 Woodlawn Avenue. Chicago. 111.
President—Ruth DETROIT
North Shore Chairman—Gretchen Baarsch. Rho, 2125 Omicron Pi,
Ridge Avenue, Evanston, III. Mich. Kimberly Witter (Mrs. Gordon),
16029 George Street, Highland Park,
West Side Chairman—Lola Busian Burkhardt ( M r s . Meetings—First
V i c t o r ) , Rho, 3208 Scovillc Avenue, Berwyn, 111. Monday of month at 7:30.
Meetings—By arrangement.
NASHVILLE
INDIANAPOLIS
President—Mae Rawls, N u Omicron, 2003 Blair Blvd.,
President—Gladys Hawickhorst, Beta Theta, 1448 Nashville, Tenn.
Prospect Street, Indianapolis, Ind.
Meetings—Second Saturday of month.

NEW ORLEANS CLEVELAND
President—Grace Manbeck, Omicron P i , 2613 Dysart
President—Margaret Lyon Pedrick (Mrs. Parks), Pi, Road, South Euclid, Ohio.
5673 West Furl Boulevard. New Orleans, L a .
Meetings—First Wednesday of month. Meetings—Alternate third Monday evenings and Sat-
urday noon luncheons of month.
MINNEAPOLIS
MEMPHIS
President—Mary Pettit, Tau, 45 Luverne Avenue,
Minneapolis, Minn. President—Elizabeth Williams Cooper (Mrs. A. B . ) .
Kappa Omicron, 1376 Carr Avenue, Memphis, T e n n .
Meetings—Second Tuesday of each month. Meetings—Last Wednesday of month, 3:30.

BANGOR MILWAUKEE

President—Katherine Stewart, Gamma, 247 Hammond President—Lenice Goodrich Hoffman (Mrs. Gilbert),
Street, Bangor, Me.
Eta, 3015 North Cramer Street, Milwaukee, Wis.
Meetings—Third Saturday of month from September Meetings—First Tuesday of month, 7:30.
to June.
BIRMINGHAM
PORTLAND
President—Lila Cantey Thigpcn ( M r s . George), T a u
President—Evelyn M . Hogue, Alpha Sigma, 2509 Delta, 111 Munger Avenue, Birmingham, A l a .
N . E . Flanders Street, Portland. Ore. Meetings—Second Saturday of month, 1:00 in T a u
• Thursday evening of month, Oc- Delta room.
Meetings—Second
tober to June. OKLAHOMA CITY

SEATTLE President—Genevieve Bacon Herrington (Mrs. A l -

ftwilrt jHlMll Turtle Davis (Mrs. Raymond), Up- bert), X I , 2526 N . W. 16th Street, Oklahoma City.
silon. 2220 Viewmont Way, Seattle, Wash.
Meetings—Second Monday of month at chapter Okla.

house, 8:00. Meetings—Second Thursday of month.

KNOXVILLE CHICAGO SOUTH SHORE

President—Lucille Coffey Deane (Mrs. J . C ) . Omi- President—Lucille Bliss Brown (Mrs. Leo), Zeta,
cron, Oakhurst Drive. Knoxville, Tenn.
Meetings—First Monday of month at 7:30. 8800 South Wood Street, Chicago, U L
Meetings—Second Tuesday of month at 6:30.

80 To D R A C A f ^

MADISON ROCHESTER

President—Helen Thomson, E t a , 499 East 2nd Street, President—Helen Howalt Lowe (Mrs. J . Gavlorrtv
Richland ("enter, Wis.
Meetings—Second Wednesday of month at 6:30 at Chi, 227 Mulberry Street, Rochester, N. Y . -m

Memorial Union Building. Meetings-—Fourth Tuesday evening of month.

Bt.OOMINC.TON DAYTON

President—Jennie Carpenter Bowen (Mrs. Donald). President—Ruth Shatsnider Haas (Mrs. Alfreds
Omega. 3815 East T h i r d Street. Dayton, Ohio.
Beta Phi, Washington Terrace Apts., BInomington, Meetings—First Friday of month.
bid.
SAN DIEGO

Meetings—Second and fourth Wednesdays of month. President—Verna Keanc Werner (Mrs. A . J . ) Zeta

DENVER 4645 East Talinadee Drive. San Diego, Calif.
Meetings- Fourth Thursday of month.
President—Dorothv L . Gannon, Zeta, 1301 Sherman.
Apt. 212. Denver, Colo.
Meetings—Second Monday evening of month. NEW JERSEY

CINCINNATI President—Kathryn Holden Wasserman (Mrs. E . A )
Delta. 112 Lincoln Street. East Orange, N . J . *'
President—Virginia Nolloth. Theta Eta, 3566 St. Meetings- -Third Saturday afternoon of month.
Charles Place. Cincinnati. Ohio.
Meeting!—Second Thursday of month. BUFFALO

TULSA President—Helen Downing. Chi. 40 Woodview Ave-
nue, Hamburg. N. Y .
President—Edna Mac Brooks Hill (Mrs. Murl F . ) . Meetings—Third Monday of month.
Xi._ 1048 East 37th Street. Tulsa. Okla.
Meetings—First Thursday of month at 1:00.
WESTCHESTER
A N N ARBOR
President—Winifreil Hall. Omicron Pi, 1530 Hill President—Florence Baker Nichols (Mrs. H. B.), Chi
31 Summit Avenue. New Rochcllc. N . Y .
Street, Ann Arbor. Mich. Meetings—
Meetings—First Tuesday of month.
ATLANTA
FORT WAYNE
President—Pearl Koegel Wilkens (Mrs. E. S.), Beta President—Annie Stewart Ellis Pcare.c (Mrs. Fay)
P i . 25 East 19th Street, Atlanta, Ga.
Phi, 1512 Tilden, Fort Wayne, Ind. Meetings—Second and fourth Wednesdays at 3:00.
Meetings—Second Monday of month.
BALTIMORE
ST. LOUTS

President—Evclvn Wissmath Gaugcr (Mrs.), Iota, President—Edith Burnside Whiteford (Mrs. R . S . ) ,
3211 University Street, St. Louis, Mo. Pi Delta. 3508 Clifton Avenue. Baltimore, Md.
Meetings—Third Monday of month. Meetings—First Wednesday of month.

C O M M I T T E E S ON N A T I O N A L W O R K Scholarship Officer—Alice Cul/nane, Beta Phi, Box
262. State College. Pa.
I . Fellowship Award—Honorary Chairman, Second National Library Chairman—Fay Morgan, Omicron,
Vice President; Chairman, Octavia Chapin, Delta,
102 Summer Street, Merlford, Mass. 2424 Kingston Pike, Knoxville. Term.
Committee on Examination—Chairman, Knoxie
Atlantic—Jessie Wallace Hughan, Alpha, 171 West Faulk Johnson ( M r s . Eugene), T a n Delta. 2301-
12th Street. New York. N . Y .
Southern—Dorothy Greve Jarnagin (Mrs. Milton 15th Avenue, South, Birmingham, Ala.
Atlantic—Edna Fati*t_ Rignall (Mrs. Raymond H . ) ,
P . ) , Omicron, 630 Milledge Circle. Athens, Ga. Chi, 110 North Fairview Ave., Kingston, N . Y .
South Central— Gladys Anne Renshaw, Pi. 3369
State Street Drive, New Orleans, L a . Southern—Ellen lane Keiser Heavens (Mrs. E .
A r t h u r ) , Pi Delta, 216 10th Street, S . E . , Wash-
Ohio Valley— Katharyn Hoadley Fell (Mrs. John ington, D. C .

E . ) , Beta Phi, 1935 South Armstrong Street, South Central—Frances Rodenhauser, Nu Omicron,
Kokomo, Ind. 308-20th Ave., North, Nashville. Tenn.
Ohio Valley—Mar;-orie B. Schacfer, Beta Theta,
Great Lakes—Albertina Maslen, Omicron P i , 2496 1513 High Street. Logansport. Ind.
La Salle Gardens South, Detroit. Mich.
Mid-Western—Marjorie Stafford, X i , 519 W . Com- Midwestern—Eleanor Rench, Eta, 5544 Chamber-
lain, St. Louis, Mo.
manche. Norman, Okla. Great Lakes—Edna L . Kline. Iota, 7009 Calumet
Pacific—Carrie Bright Kistler (Mrs. Lewis A.),
Sigma. 1046 South Wilton, L o s Angeles, Calif Avenue. Chicago. III.
Pacific—Cornelia Christmas Bishop ( M r s . H . F . ) ,
Pacific .\'orthwcst—Ha/el Britton, Upsilon. 638 Cen- Kappa Theta, 4628 Franklin Avenue. Los An-
tral Building, Seattle. Wash.
geles, Calif.
I I . Social Service- Chairman. Second Vice President; Pacific Northwest—
Marion Abele Franco Ferreira (Mrs. E . C ) , Rho.
1340 Glen Lake Avenue, Chicago, I I I . V e r a C O M M I T T E E ON N O M I N A T I O N
Kiebel, Rho, 1541 East 60th Street, Chicago, III.
District Superintendents. Chairman—Kathryn Bremer Matson (Mrs. Frank-
lyn I I . ) . T a u . 1600 Portland Avenue, St. Paul.
Minn.

ADMISSIONS COMMITTER Members—District Superintendents.

Chairman—Ermina Smith Price (Mrs. Chester A . ) , C O M M I T T E E ON J E W E L R Y

Iota, 515 Springfield Avenue, Wyoming, Ohio. Chairman—Stella George Stern Perry (Mrs. George
Atlantic—Marguerite Pillsbury Schoppe (Mrs. Wil- H . ) , Alpha. 9 St. Luke's Place. New York, N. Y .
liam F . ) , Gamma, R . F . D. 4, Auburn, Me. Jessie Wallace Hughan. Alpha. 171 West 12th
Southern—Mary B. Broughton, Kappa, 38 Twelfth Street, New York, N . Y .

Street. N.W.. Atlanta. Ga. TRUSTEES OF ANNIVERSARY ENDOWMENT FUND
South Central—Nannctte Tomlinson Carr (Mrs. W.
Chairman—Helen St. Clair Mullan (Mrs. George
Jollcy), Pi, Second Street, Gulfport, Miss. V . ) , Alpha, 70 Pine Street, New York, N. Y .
0*iV> Valley—Mary Gertrude Mauley Marbaugh
Term expires June, 1939.
( M r s . Theodore P . ) , Beta Phi, 5826 Winthrop Josephine S . Pratt, Alpha, 250 East 105th Street,
Avenue, Indianapolis, Ind.
Great Lakes—Eva R. / e r v i s , Rho, 208 Summit New York, N. Y . T e r m expires June, 1935.
Elizabeth Roberts Cole ( M r s . Kenneth), Sigma, 121 _
Street, Rockford, III. West 11th Street, New York, N . Y . Term ex-
Midwestern—Lillian Dickman Bihler (Mrs. Ernest),
pires June, 1937.
Zeta, 4201 North 22nd Street, Omaha, Neb.
Pacific—Virginia Clay, Kappa Theta, 364 South CONSTITUTIONAL REVISIONS COMMITTEE
Chairman—Secretary.
Cochran, Los Angeles, Calif. Members—Executive Committee.
Pacific Northwest—Kathcrine Mayhew, Alpha Sigma.
Associate Member—lone Barrett. Epsilon, Box 252,
871 Montgomery Drive, Portland, Ore. Katonah. N. Y .

C O M M I T T E E ON R I T U A L S AND T R A D I T I O N S SONG COMMITTEE

Chairman—Stella George Stern Perry (Mrs. George Chairman— Janet M. Howry, T a u , 1664 Van Buren
H . ) , Alpha, 9 St. Luke's Place, New York, N. Y . Street, St. Paul, Minn.

Life Members—The Founders, Laura Hurd, Up- C O M M I T T E E ON E X A M I N A T I O N

silon, 4756 University Way, College Center, Se- Pacific—Cornelia Christmas Bishop (Mrs. H. F.).
Kappa Theta, 5906 Easton Street, Los Angeles,
attle, Wash., Rose Gardner Gilmore (Mrs. John), Calif.
Sigma. Box 437. Davis. Calif.

place yew he FRAT bccaus<

Offices at

New York

Dnsult the FRATERN
The frattririiT prtas

Xeland Publishers, Inc

prh e P E N A L T 1(1
LEADERS HI •

BUILDING AND BAL- Leadership has always been characterized by
T^ANCING BUDGETS ties of HONOR, STRENGTH, and IN

By Maria Leonard, HONOR to hold tenaciously to our personal
Dean of Women—0. of Illinois integrity.
and Marie Freeman Palmer
STRENGTH to forge ever onward toward
tfan, centf extra by mail. greater perfection in the quality of our p -

H B B A L F OUR INITIATIVE to employ skillful workmen
ideas in manufacture.
Bf&ernity Badge Price List
Upon Request . . . these are the dominant qualities that ha<
L . G. Balfour Company indisputable leader
'Mo) Prospective Purchasers ternity jewelry field.

There are always those who—falling short
ities—fail, and nurse their envy with unsc
saults on the leader.

A company, firm in the conviction of its
bear the brunt of such attacks with dignity-
ALTY OF LEADERSHIP.

Official Jeweler to the Leading National Fraternities and Soro\

• ^ 0 W : > . i l A L F O "^^•,-;::fSR ^ - J W ^ 9 / - - 4 |

A u l e b o r oy j i e hu§

Known W h e$e-vj$ f 'TfflMf Schools and Co


Click to View FlipBook Version