Orange Bowl Queen, Ruthie Garst, n, smiles at her Miami subjects as she rides on the Regal Float in the Orange Bowl Jamboree Parade New Year's Eve, said to be the most spectacular one in the eighteen years of the festivities and witnessed by the largest crowd ever assembled in Miami. -Miami Daily News Photo

• SIGMA KAJPPA 6frt·~ng_le Winter 195IL Official Magazine of Sigma Kappa Sorority

Founded at Colby College 1 November1 1874 Editor-in-Chief, FRANCES WARREN BAKER

Contents VOL. 45 NO.4 Ruthie Garst Reigns Regall y Over Orange Bowl Festivities 3 Theo Hunnicutt, ~ . Is W oman of the Year in Houston . . 6 W e'll Really See the Country on Our Special Trip to Con- NATIONAL COUNCIL vention ...... 7 Registration Blanks fo r 195 2 Convention ...... 8, 9, 12 The Huntington Will M ake Us Right W elcome 10 National PreJident-Katha'rine Tener Lowry (Mrs. Swift Lowry) 12700 High U . S. Officials Are Enthusiastic in Praise of American Shaker Blvd., Cleveland, Ohio Farm School in Greece 10 Clara l ee Edgar Pioneers with Guidance Clinic ...... 11 For Poetry and Police Work the H artman Si sters Win National FirJt Vier Pr

• SIGMA KAJPPA 6frt·~ng_le Winter 195IL Official Magazine of Sigma Kappa Sorority

Founded at Colby College 1 November1 1874 Editor-in-Chief, FRANCES WARREN BAKER

Contents VOL. 45 NO.4 Ruthie Garst Reigns Regall y Over Orange Bowl Festivities 3 Theo Hunnicutt, ~ . Is W oman of the Year in Houston . . 6 W e'll Really See the Country on Our Special Trip to Con- NATIONAL COUNCIL vention ...... 7 Registration Blanks fo r 195 2 Convention ...... 8, 9, 12 The Huntington Will M ake Us Right W elcome 10 National PreJident-Katha'rine Tener Lowry (Mrs. Swift Lowry) 12700 High U . S. Officials Are Enthusiastic in Praise of American Shaker Blvd., Cleveland, Ohio Farm School in Greece 10 Clara l ee Edgar Pioneers with Guidance Clinic ...... 11 For Poetry and Police Work the H artman Si sters Win National FirJt Vier Pr

UTHIE GARST, · n '53, blonde at half a million persons, the largest crowd "package of personality" from Flori­ ever assembled in Miami according to the R da State university, was chosen by police. The spectacle had all the pageantry five judges from finalists selected from an that Miamians have become used to--forty original field of 100 candidates to be Miami's floats, two dozen bands, 724 pretty girls, 1952 Orange Bowl Queen and reign with marching men, and giant balloons. graciousness and charm over the week long "Blossomtiine on New Year's Day" was Orange Bowl Festival. the theme of the 1952 half time extravaganza Winning honors is nothing new for Ruthie, at the Orange Bowl football classic, at which popular 19 year old junior at Florida State. Georgia Tech nosed out Baylor 17 to 14. She was chosen "Miss Tallahassee" last spring A huge fruit bowl moved out to the center and during the summer was voted "Miss of the field between halves. Band after band, Southern Belle" at Daytona Beach and was one corps of majorettes after another, dancers, runner up in the "Miss Dixie" contest. She baton twirlers, cadets, cavalettes and ,glee also is a former "Campus Cutie" at FSU and clubs took the field. Some played, others was a member of the Homecoming Queen's danced, some leaped high in acrobatic display court. This was not her first appearance in while still others ran to the central float and the Orange Bowl, for she was the "Statue came forth drawing long flower-festooned of Liberty" in the half time show when FSU streamers which they carried to the corners played the University of Miami this fall. and ends of the field until the whole area She was officially presented in her royal was a riot of flowers and color. role for the first time at the Orange Bowl From the fruit bowl in the center a flower Kickoff luncheon Dec. 27 in the Bayfront with closed petals began to rise. Everybody Park auditorium, where 1400 persons rev­ in the stadium who had ever seen an Orange elled in the heady mixture of food, fun, Bowl game in recent years knew what was football chatter, and beauty. There were jokes going to happen next-and in this they by Comedian Joe E. Brown, music by a 100 weren't surprised. piece Marine b'and, and a rapid succession of The petals fell back and Queen Ruthie celebrities of the sports and entertainment Garst stood revealed in a white gown before worlds coming to the platform. the record crowd of 65,83 7. The most colorful part of the varied lunch­ By winning the crown Ruthie receives a eon program came last-the formal debut of $500 scholarship in the school of her choice the festival's royalty. Up the aisle came Queen and an elaborate wardrobe, including a beau­ Ruthie Garst, spectacularly gowned in a tiful white evening gown from Paris, in ad­ white hoop-skirted gown and wearing a dition to the privilege of presiding over the sparkling tiara on her blonde hair. She festivities. walked arm in arm with Stuart W . Patton; A Sigma Kappa coffee was given in her committee president, and was followed by her honor Dec. 29 at the home of Dr. and Mrs. four princesses, each accompanied by a civic James Anderson (Eunice Parker, U) by the leader. Miami alumnre chapter. Actives home from At the Orange Bowl Regatta at Haulover college for the holidays were special guests. Beach Dec. 30 Ruthie presented the Queen's College Sigma Kappas met at the Miamian Cup to the winner. She and her princesses restaurant for luncheon together following were guests of honor one day at the Tropical the coffee. Park races. The Miami Herald of Dec. 9 gave this Queen Ruthie and her court rode on the "introduction" to the new Queen, whose lavish float which climaxed the Orange Bowl choice had just been announced: Jamboree, held on Miami's warmest New Orange Bowl Queen Ruthie Garst is just Year's Eve in nineteen years. For an hour and as popular with the girls as she is with the a half the parade rolled past a crowd estimated boys who keep the telephone ringing con-

WINTER 1951 3 tinually at the Sigma Kappa house. her unoffi cial FSU circus title. Her natural, unaffected manner, her sweet Ruthie is the Sigma Kappa at FSU, smile and ability to talk to anyone on any plays on the volleyball team and is trying out subject have won her scores of friends since for basketball. She also plays tennis, is "wild" she first came to FSU las t February as a about swimming, and does a tap dance transfer from Maryv iile college, Maryv ille, routine. Weekends at her home in Bradenton, Tenn. Fla. she spends her time riding and looking Ruthie is one of those lucky people who ca n after her colt "Sig." budget her time so that she has plenty of time She estimated that she went to bat 75 times for study and plenty of time for dates. She ·in the FSU sorority soft ball league and "was manages to maintain a B average in her class put out only once-on a fly to the outfield." work (Ruthie's a secretarial science major) That would give athletically inclined Ruthie and still accept a movie or dinner date every 7 4 hits out of 7 5 times or a fantastic night of the ·week. .987 batting average' She has no "steady". "I haven't even nar­ Ruthie lives at the Sigma Kappa house in rowed my dating down to just a few yet" she Tallahassee. "I love it because there's always co nfides in her soft spoken drawl. The more so much going on" she says. A bridge fiend, friends she makes-male or female-the she is always working up a game. better she likes it. Like most young people today, Ruthie's She loves her work with the FSU Circus ambition is to travel abroad after college. She best of all her athleti c activiti es and she's hopes to find a job in foreign service, al­ looking forward to the circus road trips in though the only language she's stuoied in col­ the spring. "Girl on the Flying Trapeze" is lege is German.

4 SIGMA KAPPA TRIANGLE ...... "'Bowl Queen Ruthie And Court Learn The Good New~

Class Theo Hunnicutt Is Woman of the Year in Houston

OUSTON'S Woman of the Year is studi ~s teacher at Deady Junior High School, Mrs. J. Perry Hunnicutt, dean of a position she held until 1939 when she was H women at the University of Houston, named guidance director and counselor there. who for years has devoted her life to the edu­ She served in this capacity until 1943 when cation of youth. She was selected by the Busi­ she was transferred to Austin High School ness and Professional Women's Club of and appointed registrar. Houston, which made its annual award to ob­ She became affiliated with the University serve National Business Women's Week. of Houston as assistant registrar and women's Mrs. Hunnicutt will be honor guest at a counselor in 1946 and was made dean of luncheon today at the Shamrock Hotel which women in 1950. will open the week's activities. Mrs. Jessie Mrs. Hunnicutt has taken an active part Dunnington, president of the club, will wel­ in the work of the Y.W.C.A., serving on its come the guests, and Dr. Lucille Robey, committees and board. At present she is chairman of the committee on National Busi­ chairman of the membership committee. She ness Women's Week, will preside and pre­ also is sponsor for Alpha Gamma Chi, service sent Mrs. Hunnicutt and introduce the guests. sorority on the campus. Mrs. Mildred White will be the speaker. Among the many organizations she be­ Mrs. Hunnicutt is the former Theo M. longs to are the Honor Society of the univer­ Monihan, daughter of Theodore Irvington sity, National Deans of Women, Delta and Mary Ada Will Monihan. She was gradu­ Kappa Gamma, Sigma Kappa, Faculty As­ ated from Kidd-Key College in Sherman sociation, Faculty Women's Association, in 1922 and received her A.B. degree from American Association of University Women, Southern Methodist University in 1925 and Downtown Club, executive Council of Kappa her A.M. degree from Columbia University Delta Pi, the Methodist Church and the Col­ in 1940. During the summers of 1924 and lege Women's Club, serving as its president 1925 she was a member of the circulation 1949-1950. department of the New York Public Library. Her son, Lt. J. Perry Hunnicutt, Jr., Her teaching career, which began in 1925 U.S.A.F., is a graduate of West Point. He as head of the history department of the Bay has completed his pilot training and is now City High School, and interrupted by her taking a gunnery course at Luke Air Force marriage to Mr. Hunnicutt in 1926, was re­ Base. sumed in 1935 when she became social -Houston Chronicle, Sept. 23, '51

6 SIGMA KAPPA TRIANGLE We111 Really See the Country on Our Special Trip to Convention

E HOPE you're planning to join You will awaken to find yourself in Cali­ the happy group headed for our fornia. W 195 2 convention to be .held at Pasa­ Arrive East Los Angeles, 10:00 A.M., July 6. Our buses wi ll be waiting for us and will dena, Calif. July 6-11, '52. transport us immediately to the Hotel Hunt­ We have made arrangements through the ington at Pasadena, which will be our head­ Chicago North Western and Union Pacific quarters during the convention period. Railroads for the operation of a special train to leave Chicago shortly after noon on July Delegates from the East and South, of 3, '52. course, will join the special at Chicago, and after luncheon, the afternoon will be spent Arrive Omaha, 10:30 P.M., July 3. Leave Omaha, Union Pacific Railroad, 11:00 in reminiscing with old acquaintances and P.M., July 3. get-togethers with new-found friends. Continuing on West, we will pass through At Fulton, Ill., our train will cross the the states of Nebraska and Eastern Colorado mighty Mississippi, and we will leave Illi­ for our first stopover point, D enver, the mile high city. nois and enter Iowa. The Wide Muddy Mis­ Arrive D enver, 8:10A.M., July 4. souri separates the neighboring states of Iowa The Rocky Mountain Motor Transportation and N ebraska, and we will make a short Company buses will be waiting for us, and service stop at Omaha, the largest city in immediately after breakfast we wi ll leave for a short visit to our D enver Sigma Kappa N ebraska. Chapter H ouse and then continue to Estes Delegate-s from Minnesota, Northern Iowa Park for luncheon at the Chalet Ranch. After and various Missouri points· including St. a few hours of recreation and relaxation, we Louis, could use train schedules arrivi ng at will again board our buses for Greeley, Colo­ rado, passing through the Big Thompson Can­ Omaha in sufficient time to join the special yon, en route. Upon arrival at Greeley, we train which is scheduled to leave at 11:00 wi II go to the Colorado State College, for P.M., July 3. Delegates from N ebraska, dinner and return to the Union Pacific Rail­ Wyoming and Utah could conveniently ar­ road Station for continuance West. Leave Greeley, Union Pacific Railroad, 7:30 range to join the special train en route. P.M., July 4. During the night we will pass Independence Day morning will find us through Colorado, Wyoming and Eastern viewing the Rocky Mountain Range from the Utah, crossing the Continental Divide en route, thence into Salt Lake City, the State train, and at Denver, the mile high city, our Capital and home of the Mormons. members from the Southwest may join the Arrive Salt Lake City, Union Pacific Railroad, group and include the delightful tour of 9:00 A.M. , July 5. Rocky Mountain-Estes National Park. Upon arriva l at Salt" Lake City, our group will be met by luxurious Gray Line motor The Rocky Mountain Motor Transporta­ coaches which wi ll transport us to the Uni­ tion Company coaches ~i ll take us, right after versity of Utah f-or breakfast, after which breakfast, for a short visit to our Denver a sight-seeing tour of this magic city has been Sigma Kappa house and then continue to arranged, schedule being such that we wi ll arrive at the Mormon Temple grounds in Estes Park for luncheon at the Chalet Ranch. time for the organ recital on one of the After a few hours of relaxation we will aga in world's largest pipe organs. Immediately after board our buses for Greeley, Colo., via the the recital, our buses will return us to the Big Thompson canyon. We will visit our University of Utah for luncheon. The balance of the afternoon will be left open for indi­ Gamma Alpha chapter house at Greeley and vidual activities; however we will all meet then have dinner on the Colorado State cam­ again at the H otel Utah at 5:00 P.M. for pus before returning to the train at Greeley. return trip to the Union Pacific Railroad Sta­ We hope to work in a stop at our Beta ti on. Leave Salt Lake City, Union Pacific Railroad, Kappa chapter house at Fort Collins, Colo. 5:30P.M., July 5. Delegates from Kansas, Oklahoma and Leaving Salt Lake City, our train skirts the various points in the South and Southwest Great Salt Lake, traveling southward and sea­ could conveniently join the group at Denver ward. The evenin~ passes rapidly and pleas­ antly as we watch the breath-taking scenery. upon arrival of the special train at 8:10A.M.

WINTER 1951 7 Our train will be waiting for us at Greeley, will be enjoyed. Luncheon will be served and during the even ing we will travel into at the Universi ty of Utah and the afternoon Wyoming ; through Cheyenne, Capital of the will be free until we board the train at 5:30 State; cross Sherman Hill, possessing an P.M. elevation of 8,013 feet and having the honor The evening will find us boarding our of being the highest point on the Union special departing for California. En route, the Pacific; on into Utah pass, Devil's Slide, two tempting great salt lake is seen once again, parallel lines of limestone, 20 feet apart ris­ as are the peaks of the Wasatch Range. W e ing to a height of 40 feet above the mountain­ will glide through Lund, Utah, gateway to side ; through Weber Canyon and the Dev il 's the Southern Utah-Arizona National Parks, Gate, fl anked by rugged rock walls and tower­ namely, Zion, Bryce, the Grand Canyon, ing peaks. Kaibab N ational Forest, and Cedar Breaks Shortly thereafter, we leave this rock N ational Monument; Las Vegas, the stop-off formation and enter upon a broad fertile point for visitors of Lake Me11 de, Hoover valley dotted with many farms and catch our Dam , and Death Valley, and then- Cali ­ fi rst glimpse of Ogden, the gateway to North­ fornia. ern California. Traveling from Ogden to Orange groves, date palms, and mountain Salt Lake City, on the eastern edge of the peaks meet our eyes as we enter this Vacation Valley of the Great Salt Lake, the Wasatch Wonderland. San Bernardino, Riverside, to­ Mountains appear and Salt Lake City, Utah, gether with many other California towns are home of the Mormon Church. soon behind us, and all too soon-East Los In Salt Lake City, delegates from Butte, Angeles, where awaiting buses transport us Helena, Missoula, Boise, Seattle, Portland, to the Hotel Huntington, our convention Spokane and other Pacific Northwest points headquarters. may avail themselves of this advance get­ So, plan now to be with our happy group together with friends already aboard, and as it winds its way through the glorious west enjoy the exciting day at Salt Lake City, by to Pasadena-the site of our 1952 convention. planning to meet the special arriving at 9:00 Sigmas who might be inte1·ested in a two A.M. , July 5. Many features resembling the weeks' trip to Mexico after convention are Holy Land are to be found in this sector, asked to write to Matgaret Davis, AE, 904 chiefl y, a Dead Sea, a River Jordan, and a Hinman ave., Evanston, Ill. Pethaps the1·e Lake of Galilee. will be enough "foreign minded" Sigmas to Gray Line Motor coaches will take us to plan and organize a special tour, and they the University of Utah for breakfast after should get together by mail early enough to which a sight-seeing tour of this magic city make the an·angements. ·------­ ------3. Mail to: Sigma Kappa Convention Registration, Hotel Huntington, Pasadena, California N ame . .. . Address

Coll ege chapter . Yea r .A lumn ~ Chapter N ational Offi cer D elegate Visitor ...... wi ll attend all days ...... 4 days ...... 3 days .. . . 2 days ...... 1 day ...... ( specify which dates) will arrive by at . . o"clock M y choice of roommate:. (Note: All offi cers and /Jaid (by N ati onal) or officia l d e l e~at~s a.re ~~si~~~d . ;;;~~. ~ ~ d . ;o·o·~:n·a~~s· . GHls who w1 sh to room together MUST SEND IN THEIR REGISTRATION BLANKS TO THE HOTEL IN THE SAME ENVELOPE. * ) prefer a single room ...... ...... three in a room * Please .coop:::r.tte in this ru o min~ business, for y~ u may im agine what a headache it ca n be if Susie writes she wishes t<;rroom hwJ th !:1 ary, . ~u t J'1ary regJsters _to room With Jane, and l ane doesn't even write in lt all' Y ou'd make your ~P ~ ~h~s offiacfi;JY d~le~~~es. o er to room With any Sigma sister, pre erabl y lfrom 3 d is tant chapter- th at's ho w we team

8 SIGMA KAPPA TRIANGLE Monnon Temple, Salt Lake. One of the sif!,hts we'll see en route to convention.

REGISTRATION BLANKS FOR 1952 CONVENTION Please note there will be three separate blanks for you to send in. 1- General registration information, for the convention chairman, Mrs. Richard Wick. 2- Traveling information for Mrs. E. D. Taggart. 3-Hotel registration, for the Hotel Huntington (girls who wish to room together MUST send in their registrations to the hotel in the same en­ velope) (See page 12 for Blank 2; page 8 for Blank 3)

1. Mail to Mrs. Richard M. Wick, Route 60, Allentown, Pa. Na.me (maiden and married ) Address .. . ·.... College Chapter ...... Year Alumnre Chapter .. National officer ...... Delegate ...... Visitor ...... Advisory Board Member . I will attend all 5 days .. _. .. 4 days . . 3 days ... 2 days. .1 day ( specify which day, if part time) I will arrive by train ...... Special train plane car at . . . . . o'clock M embership in Honorary Societies :

Other Sigma Kappa Conventions attended: Sigma Kappa Relatives: ......

Birthday (day and month) ...... My choice of roommate: ...... (Officers and paid del egates will be assigned room and roommate; all others may choose their own roommates but must send their blanks in tbe same envelope· to the hotel.) Do yo u plan to take the sight-seeing trip to the movie studios? ...... (This is not a definite reservation, which must be paid for upon arrival at the hotel, but is for the general planning for numbers.)

WINTER 1951 9 The Huntington Will MaJke U§ Right Welcome

. HE Huntington Hotel in Pasadena, made in the same factory as similar chande­ site for 1952 California convention, liers for the palaces of Ludwig, The Mad T is tops when it comes to locale, at­ King of Bavaria. tractions and services. You'll see the unusual decor in the grand The Huntington is a "resort" hotel which ballroom and you should particularly note is different from a commercial hotel in that the collection of beautiful ships' models in the its facilities and services are designed for the Ship Room. We'll also be meeting in The holiday and vacation minded. That is why Garden Room, The Mirror Room-each most The Huntington is situated in its own 29¥2 attractive in its own way. acres of beautiful gardens right in the fash­ Almost Number One on your "look pa­ ionable Oak Knoll residential area of Pasa­ rade" should be the famous picture bridge. dena. This "all California" bridge is built of Naturally, while we are at The Huntington massive redwood and overlooks· the swim­ on July 6-11 all delegates who are staying in ming pool and the Oriental Gardens. It is the Hotel are expected to use its facilities. a covered bridge and overhead, as one The delightful swimming pool is yours to crosses, one sees forty-two lovely murals, use as much as you like- between sessions, depicting California scenes and history with · of course-as are the tennis courts and the descriptive verses. badminton court. There is a nice little pitch The site of The Huntington was as and putt course in the horseshoe gardens. coveted in the days of early California as it The Huntington is favorably known the is today. Because of its commanding position world over. The "bungalows" that are clus­ it figured in many a battle in Spanish days tered around the main building offer the and not infrequently gardeners have . dug epitome of California living. Some of these up an old cannon ball-crude but no doubt bungalows have over 15 rooms! The dining effective in that long ago pre-atom bomb era. room is unusually attractive overlooking, on The Huntington-named after the great one side, the garden swimming pool, and, Californian and railroad builder is under the on the other a lovely patio. The huge crystal control and management of Stephen W. chandeliers that are a feature of this room Royce. have quite a story. They are of the same de­ It is a wonderful place for a convention­ sign- same material and workmanship-and and we'll all have a wonderful time there.

High U. S. Officials Are Enthusiastic in Praise of American Farm School in Greece Our New Ambassador To Greece, Hon. covery of Greece which the American Farm John E. Peurifoy, wrote Mr. Charles House School is making under your inspiring lead- after visiting the School: "I want . . . to tell ership . . .. I can think of no institution in you how enthusiastic I have been over the Greece more eminently qualified to carry on fine work you and Mrs. House have been this agricultural work and I trust that its doing over these many years in Salonica, and many friends, both American and Greek, to pledge to you my support in any possible will join hands in continuing to support way that I can ." And ·Mr. Paul R. Porter, it. " Chief Of The ECA Mission To Greece, Sigma Kappa has contributed $2,400 a year wrote: "I . .. congratulate you on the very for several years to provide scholarships for significant contribution to the economic re- four girls at the school.

10 SIGMA KAPPA TRIANGLE C laura Lee Edgar Pioneers with Guidance Clinic

OTION pictures, fiction and his­ Clcn·a Lee Edgar, Phi '44, psychologist and execu· tories teem with accounts of tive secretary of the Valley Children's H ospital and pioneer women, sunbonneted and Guidance Clinic, shown testin!( a student, one of M the techniques of the testing p1·ogram in use at the Mother Hubbard-clad, in the 1800's. Clinic, only one in a hundred mile radius itz the The 1900's also have their pioneer women, San ] oaquin Valley. one of whom is Clara Lee Edgar, '44, psychologist and executive secretary of the And that is how in May, '47, Clara Lee Child Guidance section of the San Joaquin Edgar found herself, with the aid of two Valley, Calif., Children's Hospital and Guid­ local volunteer psychiatrists, starting a clinic ance Clinic, to which she has devoted nearly at the San Joaquin Valley county hospital, five years. under the joint sponsorship of the Fresno Now located in a building furnished by chapter of the Am.erican Red Cross, the the Fresno State College, the clinic plans to County of Fresno, the Fresno City schools, move into new quarters as soon as the new and Fresno State college. Moved after a few Valley Children's Hospital and Guidance months, because of a need for more room, to Clinic is completed. Fresno State College quarters, the Clinic from Clara first became interested in clinical May, '47 to January, '50 waged a continual services to exceptional children while en­ battle for funds to keep the agency going. rolled as a student in Rhode Island State's In the summer of 1949 the Clinic merged Child Development and Family Relations with the newly formed Valley Children's Course. Following receipt of a B.S. in 1944, Hospital, and by June, '51, funds were avail­ she studied in the field of guidance at the able to hire a social worker and begin con­ University of Chicago, receiving her M.A. struction of the hospital and separate clinic in Education, Field of Guidance. While in buildings into which the Clinic hopes to Chicago Clara was employed in · the Ortho­ move by June, '52. genic School, a University-of-Chicago-main­ Clinical services of the Fresno Child tained school for emotionally disturbed chil­ Guidance Clinic, the only agency of its kind dren. An interneship in clinical psychology in a hundred mile radius in the San Joaquin at the Institute for Juvenile Research in Valley, are limited to the treatment of emo­ Chicago, an agency of the State of Illinois tionally disturbed children and brief diag­ for clinical treatment of children, preceding nostic studies. Because the services of several six months additional training while part­ consulting psychologists have been available, time employee at the Michael Reese Hospital more patients have been accepted for diag­ in Chicago, brought Clara to February, '47, nostic study than for treatment. Most cases and a California trip during which i.n April referred to the clinic represent severe home, she discovered that some social agencies in school and community problems. Fresno were about to set up a child guidance Cases accepted for treatment have been clinic. those in which emotional maladjustment is

WINTER 1951 11 the most important consideration, and psy­ Regarding her personal life, Clara tells us, chotherapy has been the chief method em­ "I live quietly in a small apartment with two ployed. In other words, the children work cats named Elizabeth and Aersie. My favorite out their private troubles through play and summer pastime is driving to the mountains, consultation. Statistics-wise 498 cases were Yosemite, Sequoia, and the Kings Canyon referred to the center from its opening May National Parks. My canoe goes along wher­ 1, 1947, to Nov. 10, 1950. ever there is water. Music runs a strong What psychologists call primary behavior second choice. Before professional activities disorders accounted for 156 of the cases claimed most of my time, I played in the referred to the clinic; that is, excessive nerv­ College Symphony, second fiddle. I am not ousness, disorderly habits, or misconduct suf­ definitely any kind of fiddle playe r, and did ficient to cause worry. Next largest group in­ not practice, so often the conductor would cluded 147 children in whom mental de­ murmur in my direction, 'It takes brains to ficiency was the primary cause of trouble. play a violin, you know.' Records and local Patients ranged in age from 1 to 20 years. concerts now take the orchestra's place! " As the foregoing would indicate, the Clinic's program is varied: di agnostic tes ting San Joaquin Alumna? Help for the Welfare D ept., the Juvenile Courts, Clara has enjoyed the San Joaquin Sigma the schools; collaborative treatment of par­ Kappa alumn~ since discovering and joining ents and children who are emotionally di s­ the group a summer ago. They are currently turbed; speaking in small communities ; con­ interested in sponsoring a project to aid the sultation services to doctors, workers from Hospital and Clinic. They trimmed a Christ­ other agencies, teachers and parents, as well mas tree for the waiting room and filled as the numerous activities concerned with stockings for about sixty children who came trying to develop a sound financial basis. in around Christmas. "This," to quote Clara, "has been in turn "Of course it thrills me to have all my challenging, rewarding, discouraging, inter­ own sorority sisters pulling for the clinic," est ing, and more than a full time job! Clara confesses, and adds that for three years "When it became evident this summer that the Chi Omegas have been providing chil­ things were indeed looking up, I took time dren's magazines for the waiting room. off for the fir~t time in four years fo r addi­ As a Sigma Kappa at Rhode Island State, tional stud y and attended four weeks of which she attended her last two years of intensified training in projecti ve techniques college, Clara's chief contribution to the (Rorschach and other tests). The Hospital chapter was to write an occasional song with very kindly set aside some money for this roommate,: Janet Beauregard (now Mc­ purpose. At present it looks as though we Laughlin) . Some she says were ridiculous, shall have a new clin ic, the basic 'team' of but one the chapter sang at a song contest staff with which to it, and about a and to Phi's surprise and delight, won! That $30,000 budget. Additional social workers song was "Sigma's Together," still used at are to be added in time and funds are avai l­ Phi an d taught as one of the required so ngs able for research. " fo r pledges each year.

------2. Mail to Mrs. E. D. Taggart, 129 E. Market Bldg., Indianapolis 4, Ind. N ame (maid en and married) .. • • • .. . ' . . ' . ' . • • .I . • • ' . • • ·. • . . Address ......

College chapter ...... Year ...... Alumnre Chapter ......

N ational Offi cer . D elegate . Visitor I will boa rd the Spec ial Train at: ......

Enclosed is m y 15 registrati on fee:

12 SIGMA KAPPA TRIANGLE For Poetry aumd Police Work the H artman Sisters Win Plaudits

HE Hartman sisters have had their "But inside these purses-that's a different share of publicity this year. story. There she has little room for the array T The South Bend, Ind. Tribune ran of feminine trinkets usually found in a a series of five articles on South Bend's only woman's purse. Instead she carries a ring of police woman, Elnora H artman, T. Elnora's keys as big as your fist ; the gold-plated many activities were described and her pic­ badge of her office in a leather folder ; a tures taken at her work accompanied each notebook and pencil ; a packet of case cards, article .• This was the beginning of many re­ and most important of all , a .25 caliber pistol, quests for Elnora to appear as guest speaker which she knows how to use. at many South Bend civic organizations. " 'I carry it strictly for self protection,' she Marcella H artman, T, has had honors this says. 'I have not yet used it in an arrest.' She year also. She is the author of the poem titled attends every monthly pistol practice of the "Admonition" which exhorts those unharmed police department and her average in marks­ by the war to be grateful for the joys of life manship is right up with the high average of of which so many were deprived. A new or­ the .men. chestra composition by Carl Van Buskirk, of " 'Yes, I'm supposed to have on the tip the Indiana University school of music, of my tongue all the solutions to domestic Bloomington, has been composed as a setting troubles, to be able to hand out magic advice for the poem. It was performed at the univer­ on everything from love to finance. I'm sity in January by the university's glee club supposed to be able to wave a magic wand and orchestra. It is the first poem to be used and put my fin ger immediately on a missing by Prof. Van Buskirk for an original compo­ gi rl who left home days or weeks before, sition. Marcella attended the performance as without clews as to her plans .. And when a guest of the university. we find her I am supposed to wave another Here are interesting excerpts from the wand and transform her whole attitude.' series of articles about Elnora Hartman "Her day's routine, if indeed her job could which were written by Pearl E. Hafstrom ever be described that way, is wound about for the South Bend Tt"ibtm e. searching for missing perso ns, investigating "Ten years ago a school teacher, who had cases of child neglect or neglect of the aged, majored in music left the teaching profession of apprehending persons who molest women and turned policewoman. She was graduated or children, looking into many cases of from Indiana university, taught in St. Joseph neglect of the home. county schools from 1933 to 1936, later "The only 'routine' she has is in the 1natter taught music in several Michigan schools, and of working hours. She goes on duty in the summers took graduate studies in science and early afternoon and works through the education at Northwestern university. evening as a member of the police depart­ " 'To deal with individuals who are not ment's plain clothes detective squad. able to get along successfully in normal " 'The scope of my job is made plenty society' was Miss Hartman's conception of broad when you merely say that my beat the purpose of the police position w.hich she covers all cases of offense against women, . was seeking. And it won her the JOb over children, and the home, Miss Hartman sums fifty other applicants. it up. Her work is closely allied with the "You'd never guess to look at Miss Hart­ work of the juvenile probation, family wel­ man, that she is a policewoman. There is fare and other social se rvi ce organizations. nothing of the stern matron about her; no She also investigates many cases of shop mannishness in attire, no harshness in voice lifting and has even been called upon a few or manner. She has a quiet way, a soft voice, times for the gruesome and unhappy duty a ready smile, and a quick sense of humor. of identifying dead bodies." She is smartly feminine in appearance with Marcella H artman, T, who joined the a Aair for modish clothes and becoming hats. faculty of the South Bend Center of Indiana

WINTER 1951 13 Marcella Hartman, Tau Elnora Pearl Hartman, Tau

university when it opened in 1933, is her­ REJECTION SLIP self an honor graduate of Indiana university, (such as Saint Peter will undoubtedly send me) where she was elected to Phi Beta Kappa. Y our soul, so kindly submitted for our considera- She received an MA degree in French from tion Northwestern university, and did subsequent Is here returned to you with deep appreciation; No criticism of its merit is implied, language study at the University of Wiscon­ But H eaven is at present very well supplied. sin and Middlebury French School. She has STANZAS STEMMING FROM A STATE OF SHOCK taught in high schools at Oak Park, Ill. and Chicago Heights, Ill. and during World As I'd apolied m~self correctly A nd finished high in Psych. Abnormal, War II was employed by the Studebaker I diagnosed my case directly Export Division. By tests both forma l and informal. While education has been her vocation, I found I'm starkly schizophrenic; writing (with particular emphasis on verse) My personality is splitting; has been her avocation. She has gained rec­ My nature's darkly nem·asthenic; ognition as an accomplished reader of her My phobic fears a•·e unremitting. own verse by appearing before dozens of M y symptoms, soundly scientific, clubs, classes and organizations in the middle Re veal repression and self-pity; My will has conflicts so terrific West. Her verses have been widely published. I'm fouled up woue than lValter Mitty. She confesses that she has two conflicting Had I not had this education, aspirations, which she believes may lead to Perhaps I'd never have di.rco vered schizophrenia: one is to write a lyric of M y chronic psychic abenation such beauty that it will have appeal for list­ And could, untreated, have recovered; eners of all ages, and the other is to write a But since, by psychiatric credo piece of humorous verse so funny that it will I've proved that I've been badly battered amuse and be quoted by all who read it. By both my ego and libido, This psychopath is sunk.' She's shattered.' She believes that her best effort to date in the latter field has been a quatrain published MARCELLA HARTMAN, T -From Chicago Tribune "A Line 0' T ype more than a decade ago in Sc1'ihne1'' s: 01' Ttil 0 11

14 SIGMA KAPPA TRIANGLE Left to •·ight: Emma E. Kinne, E, guest of honor for Alpha Sigma's 25th Amziversary; Pauline Christos president of Alpha Sigma chapter, •·eceiving a silver tray from the Pittsburgh alumnce chapter; and Betsy Stafford, BZ, P1·ovmce IV P••eJtdent who was Alpha Srgma' s f?ttest for the celebration. Alpha Sigma Celebrates Silver Anniversary at Westminster

By PEG SNYDER, Alpha Sigma

PHA SIGMA chapter at Westminster was held for college members and alumna: College, New Wilmington, Pa., at the Castleton hotel in New Castle, Pa., X celebrated its 25th anniversary Toastmistress at the dinner was Pauline Sept. 29, '51. In honor of this occasion many Christo;. The after dinner program, with alumna: returned to their alma mater for a speakers who were charter members of Alpha tea which was held in the Tavern in New Sigma, was: "The Background"-Rebecca Wilmington for them, wqmen of the ad­ Gibson Wolfe ; "The Growth"- Margaret ministrative staff of the college and other Fraser Vogan ; "The Fruition"-Helen Win­ sorority and independent women. Pouring ters Greer. Other charter members present at the tea were Mrs. Caroline Downs, house who saw their local Sigma Phi Delta receive mother for the chapter, Frances Williams recognition from Sigma Kappa in 1926 Taylor, A~; Louise Johnson Galbreath, A~; were, Mary Forest Barnes, Katherine King Lois Davenport Arnold, A~; Mrs. John Maxwell, Mabel Wallace Shadle and Janet Forry, and Mrs. L. H. Wagenhorst, all Alpha Elias Kirchenbower. We were all intrigued Sigma patronesses. as we listened to them tell of college and Betsy Stafford, president of Province IV sorority conditions in those days. Some of spent the week-end as guest of the chapter. the charter members exhibited their Sigma She, with Pauline Christos, president of Al­ Phi Delta pins which they had designed pha Sigma chapter, and Helen Papazickos, themselves. . president of the New Castle alumna: chapter, Our guest of honor for this affair, Emma formed the receiving line at the tea. E. Kinne of Pittsburgh, former grand sec­ In the evening a silver anniversary dinner retary and grand historian who was help-

WINTER 1951 known by many was presented with a gift from the Alpha Sigma chapter. High light of the evening was the presenta­ tion by Mrs. Kirchenbower of a complete sterling silver tea set, a gift from all Alpha Sigma alumn~. Then Lois Davenport Arnold presented as a gift from the New Castle alumn~ chapter a set of combination silver candle . stick holders and compotes. Ruth Stoehr, representing the Pittsburgh alumn~ chapter, presented a large sterling silver tray. Beta Iota chapter at Carnegie Tech sent a handsome bowl. Helen Papazickos presented " Alumn~ Left to right: Emma Kinne, and Jan et Elias Greetings" and the dinner was concluded Kirchen bower, Rebecca Gibso n W olje, Mabel 111' al­ with group singing. It was a wonderful day lace Shadle, cmd Katherine Kill!!, M axwell, all which the current actives enjoyed as much charter members of Alphcl Sigma. as the alumn~. We are all looking forward ful in forming Alpha Sigma, attended the to many more wonderful years which will dinner a!1d spoke on "Our Heritage." M iss call for anniversary celebrations as nice as Kinne whose kindness and hard work are this one!

Lucilie M~ Alilien Directs Social Service in Korea H ospital

UCILE M. ALLEN, AB, is one of the Sigma Kappas who received a framed certificate in recognition of her serv­ ices in World W ar II and who has gone right on serving her co untry. After serving with the Ameri can Red Cross she returned to her home in Brocton, N .Y. in December, '45 and for a time fol­ lowed her social work in private agencies. She was soon reassigned to Medical Social Assignment to the Tripler General hospital in Honolulu, Oahu, T.H. and continued there until the end of a tour of service. She was then returned to California, where she entered the Mare Island N avy hospital and later was transfe rred to Oak Knoll hos­ pital in Oakland, Calif. Soon after the trouble in Korea developed she was reassigned to the USN Hospital in Yokosuka, Japan. Later she was reassigned to the Fourth Field hospital in Taegu, Korea, where she is Social Service Executive in charge of American Red Cross. H er mail ad­ dress· is Fourth Field Hospital, APO 301 cj o Postmaster, San Francisco, Calif. Lucile received her B.Sc. in Education at Social Work. Her father, Charles E. Allen, the University of Buffalo and is also a gradu­ D .D.S., received his degree in Dentistry from ate of the · University of Buffalo School of the University of Buffalo in 1901.

16 SIGMA KAPPA TRIANGLE NPC Meet§ and Work§ for High Standard§ for AXX Greek§

By AMY BuRNHAM ONKEN, Grand President and NPC Delegate of Pi Beta Phi

ITH the commemoration of the of the Office of Public Information, Depart­ 175th anniversary of Phi Beta ment of Defense, emphasizing the part which W Kappa by Interfraternity Research fraternity members as individual citizens and Advisory Council designated as a must play in the defense of America. "Thanksgiving for Freedom" celebration, NPC was highly privileged to have as each of .the associated national Panhellenics speakers at its program devoted to IRAC, must inevitably have found, as did National Judge William Bayes, Phi Delta Theta, past Panhellenic Conference, that its discussions president of NIC; Dr. Clyde Johnson, Phi and its decisions, as never before, were marked Kappa Sigma, incoming editor of the IRAC by a deep consciousness of the importance bulletin ; L. G. Balfour, Sigma Chi, past of the college fraternity as an integral, not an president of NIC, and president of IRAC; isolated, part of the American way of life and C. Robert Yeager, Pi Kappa Alpha, and of its responsibility for proving itself treasurer of IRAC. Mr. Yeager presented an effective weapon against the forces which the report of the Foundation Committee of would destroy the basic freedoms of Ameri­ NIC with its recommendations for a Public can democracy and for those which would Relations Program for The Fraternity System, preserve them. to be supported by National Interfraternity National Panhellenic Conference, at its Conference, Professional Panhellenic Associ­ 32nd Biennial Meeting, held in Williams­ ation, Professional Interfraternity Confer­ burg, Va., Nov. 27 to Dec. 1, '51, left no ence, and National Panhellenic Conference. room for doubt of its determination to work Since NPC later moved to "accept as a towards the goal set by its Chairman, Mrs. privilege its opportunity to have a part ... E. Granville Crabtree, Kappa Kappa Gamma, in the intensive effort towards excellent when in opening the convention she called public relations through the National Inter­ upon it fo "hold fast to its responsibility and fraternity Foundation," as outlined by the to implement it more effectively." Foundation Committee, this plan should Following the admission to full member­ perhaps be briefly outlined here. The Foun­ ship of the eleven national fraternities which dation Committee recommended two ways in had held associate membership for four which all fraternity members "can help years, National Panhellenic Conference met preserve the rich experience of fraternity with the longest list of full member fraterni­ living" as they have known it: by "helping ties-thirty-one-and the greatest number of raise the necessary money to improve frater­ fraternity officers present-one hundred and nity scholarship, conduct, attitudes, and pub­ fifty-five-in its history. lic acceptance"; and by taking "an active The good fellowship of the conference interest" in making their own fraternities again gave proof of the friendships between better "physically, morally, intellectually, fraternity officers which inevitably lead to and socially." understanding and mutual helpfulness be­ Fraternities as such will be asked only to tween fraternities. give space three times a year in their maga­ The special social events under this Com­ zines to the public relations program and to mittee's direction were a tea at The Inn, the planned "National Interfraternity Week" honoring the eleven new full member fra­ which would be celebrated annually during ternities; a dinner at the Lodge at which late April or early May; each member of a Lloyd Cochran, president of Alpha Sigma fraternity will be asked to make a one dollar Phi, spoke inspiringly of the value and the contribution, during each Interfraternity service of fraternities; and a formal dinner Week, to the Interfraternity Foundation; and at The Inn with Miss Margaret Banister, Panhellenic and fraternity groups will be

WINTER 1951 17 taries expressed their belief that this evaluation of big national conventions "is a practical recognition that the inflationary trends of today necessitate holding the line" financially. The regular program of NPC "again reflected the constructive work of offi- CENTRAL OFFICE EXECUTIVES cers and committees" as First row: Hannah Keenan, AXn; Ann Hughes, AOII; Irene Boughton, each standing committee t.Z; Roberta Abemethy, t.r; Leah Kartman, ~t.T. Second row: Doris gave a review of its special Corbett, A; Peg Taggart, ~K; Mary Jane Hzpp, rB; Mary Lou field and work, discussed Miner t.t.t.. Third row: Helen Sackett, KA8; Gertrude Anderson, needs and trends, and rec­ A:E:t. · 'Helen Glenn, At.II· Clara Pierce, KKr. Top row: Zenobia Kell;r,

18 SIGMA KAPPA TRIANGLE and pertinent Panhellenic in­ formation to their respective delegates, in City Panhellenics , recognizing that the varied and substantial activities of such groups witness well for Fra­ ternity. Resolved, That the N ational Panhellenic Conference re­ affirm its position of Nov. 13 , '47, that the 'National Panhel­ lenic Conference use its influ­ ence to assure the position of qualified women in administra­ tive and policy making person­ nel positions on campuses of American universities.' Resolved, That National Panhellenic Conference re­ EDITORS OF NPC MAGAZINES affirm the part of the 1949 First row: Ildra Lars on, cJ>NI ; assistant editor; Ann Hall, AXil, new agreement which reads 'that chairma1z; Marian Keyes, A , retirht~? chairman ; Christelle Ferf?US~n , no questionnaires or requests, X!1; Ann lVeaver, IlK~ . Second row: Ardis Mm·ek, r B; Katherme oral or written, will be an­ Davis, AOIT; Kay Larson, llZ ; Flo Simon, AE. Third row: Isabel swered during the coming bi­ Simmons KKr · Lillian Schippers, A~T; Betty Breen, e~T; Adele ennium until such time as these Alford, TIB. F~u rth row: Frances Baker, ~K; Kim Rose, ~~~. n~w questionnaires or requests have seo•etary-treasm·er; Tonie Eberhm·dt, Arll; Shtrley St1·out, ZTA ; Altce been reviewed by the NPC Deck, ll~E . Committee on Rdearch and Public Relations, and information released as to WENTY-FOUR of the thirty-one their validity.' Panhellenic editors met for the five­ Resolved, That NPC, in order to broaden its services to college Panhellenics, empower the T day National Panhellenic Conference members of the Executive Committee of Na­ held in Williamsburg, Va., Nov. 27 through tional Panhellenic Conference, the Chairman of Dec. 1. Under the chairmanship of Marian the College Panhellenics Committee, and the Wiley Keys, editor of the Alpha Phi Quar­ NPC College Panhellenics representative of the region involved, to send an official visitor to a terly, the sorority jo1,1rnalists compared notes campus when necessary, the expense incurred to be on the problems of Panhellenic magazines defrayed equally -by the national member groups from costs to chapter letters. having chapters on the campus to be visited, upon Plans were also made to cooperate with advance approval by National Presidents .of such chapters." the Citizenship Committee of National Pan­ hellenic in presenting special material. The concluding event for NPC and for At an "Editors' Hour," given at one of IRAC was the huge banquet held at the Hotel the general sessions of the Conference, the Chamberlin, Old Point Comfort, presided following speakers represented the editors: over by Judge Frank H. Myer, Kappa Alpha, Frances Warren Baker, Sigma Kappa TRI­ past NIC Chairman. The address was ANGLE, mistress of ceremonies ; Kim Rose, given by Dr. Arthur Sherwood Flemming, T1•iangle of Sigma Sigma Sigma, who spoke president of Ohio Wesleyan University and on the "Purposes of Our Magazines"; Julia Chairman, Manpower Policy Commission. Fuqua Ober, formerly editor of the Angelos The 1951 NPC brought a renewed ap­ of Kappa Delta (and now Kappa Delta's preciation for the privilege of fraternity national president), on "An Editor Looks at membership and interfraternity fellowship Her Past," and Dorothy Hummel Marshall, and a resulting deepened determination to director of publications, Alpha Phi, on "How make the college fraternity an increasingly Do Fraternity Magazines Further a Public recognized factor in the forming of good Relations Program?" character and in the building of good citi­ The 1951 session closed with the election zens, which must mean that the incoming of Ann Hall, editor of the Lyre of Alpha Executive Committee-Mrs. W. Harold Chi Omega, chairman for the next biennium, Hutchinson, Alpha Phi, Chairman; Mavis and Kim Rose, Tri-Sigma T riangle, secretary­ Mann, Delta Gamma, Secretary; and Mrs. treasurer. Frances Baker received a pewter George M. Simonson, Gamma Phi Beta, mug to mark her completion of 25 years as Treasurer-is assured of cooperation. an N .P.C. editor.

WINTER 1951 19 Betty Spencer Merman Brings Us Up to Date on uHer Days11

T'S see now-where did I leave off on one of the three areas which comprise the in the last TRIANG LE accounting of Depot. Inside our patio we have grass, trees L an 'ex Sigma Kappa Traveling Secre­ and flowers-outside, desert and mountains. tary? That really did start me moving, didn't Besides the Marine in the family and the it? The wanderlust bit so hard that I joined up 'ex Marine, we have almost-seven Anne, who with the Marine Corps and succeeded in get­ aspires to be both Sigma Kappa and Marine. ting to four stations in my two year stint as Completing our group are two energetic a Lieutenant in the Woman Reserves. But my pups named Nip and Tuck, whose remote traveling had only begun-for ever since and recent ancestors came from Guam, the that time I've been on the go with my poi dogs of the Islands and the haughty Marine husband. Chow family of China. They're indescrib­ So- l think the last time I said hello in able. the TRIANGLE we were living in Yokosuka, Although, perhaps because this is a small Japan after a most pleasant tour of duty in station, we have almost too many activities the Islands, at Ewa, T .H. Next we came to to keep us busy, my major effort for the Washington and during the year we spent year, as ide from our Sigma Kappa American there I helped Ruth Little Lawson get the Heritage program, is being· President of the Northern Virginia Alumnre group going. Officers' Wives club, which numbers from Alas, just as it got started we moved again eighty to a hundred wives. - this time to Camp Lejeune, N .C. for a It's good to be back in Sigma activity once back- to-school session. From there we came again-and I really have my fingers crossed to this huge Marine Corps Supply Depot that I'll be able to get to Convention next smack dab in the middle of the Mojave June. We live not much more than a hun­ Desert at Barstow, Calif. And by now we're dred miles from Pasadena-yet that's just confirmed desert rats-we even like our 115 the time we might be moving on. But I'll degree summer heat! keep hoping that I can get there THIS time. W e live in rambling rancho-like quarters Shall I see you all then?

Grace M~ Heacock Is Planner of Programs for Local Meetings

RA CE M. HEACOCK, AB, has just state, she has been active in many teachers' finished a play "H ere in America" organizations and has spent her summers G for radio use. She is one of the conducting tours to Europe and South Ameri­ frontier thinkers in the field of audio-visual ca. educa tion who has been actively interested in At the present she is a lecturer in the grad­ radio and educational motion pictures for uate division of The University of Buffalo many years. Grace holds both the bachelor and is Director of Audio-Visual Education in and master degrees from The University of the Cleveland Hill School system in a suburb Buffalo. of Buffalo, N ew York. Her experiences since college have been She has set up a complete program for wide and varied. As one of the outstanding meetings of all our chapters to observe our leaders in the field of education in N ew York American H eritage project. t' Califomia Sigma Kappas are busy plannin{\ to make 011r 1952 Pasadena Convention the "best ever." Yo11'd better plan 10 be !here.' ·

20 SIGMA KAPPA TRIANGLE I K Is Stressing Our American Heritage in National Project

By BETTY SPENCER MERMAN, AB and AZ

UR Amer.ican Heritage. What a members with prizes of $150, $100 and $50 wealth of thoughts and ideas just to be awarded for the best essays on any 0 those three wo_rds can bring to mind! phase of the subject "Our American Herit­ Just what IS our American Heritage? age." Is it the laughter and wit of the Irish, the Three of our distinguished Sigma educa­ industry and inventiveness of the Germans, tors have agreed to serve as judges in the the strength and courage of the Scandi­ contest. They are Dean Irma Voight, 0, navians, the music and artistry of the Italians Athens, Ohio; Dean Flora Rawls, AP, Mem­ -all of whom comprise the great melting phis, Tenn.; and Dr. Essie White Cohn, I, pot that became our America? Denver, Colo. The essay contest closes April Is it the foresight of those great statesmen 1, '52 and the prizes will be awarded at the who wrote the Constitution of the United Sigma Kappa Convention in June, '52. States and who set down for us the freedoms The second part of the project is a program that were to be and still are ours-who to be presented by each college and alumnre gave· us the instruments to keep pace with the chapter at one meeting during the year. We changing times by making it possible to suggested February as being an appropriate amend that same Constitution to fit any need ? time as this might be deemed our "Patriotic Is it in our right to vote as we please, to Month." A complete meeting program is be­ work as we please, live where and how we ing set up by Grace Heacock and will be please? But there is no need to go on, each sent out .in its entirety to all chapters for one of us can add many more suggestions. their use. And why has this been chosen as the theme We suggest that there might be intra­ of Sigma Kappa's project for this year? With chapter contests for essays, or that some of the firm conviction and realization that the the alumnre chapters may wish to help any things we as Americans possess are the most of the college chapters by offering prizes for valuable in the world, we have then provided such contests. Perhaps a meeting program ourselves with an impenetrable shield which can be worked up as a community project for no subversive force will be able to pierce. your group-the more people we can reach The menace today from communism or with our program the stronger our shield any other subversive group is very real. Its will become. We are endeavoring to reach twisted and deceptive ideas may find a fertile out into all sorts of groups hoping to bring to field on many a college campus, in many a all of them a better realization of the privi­ community. As an organization, Sigma Kappa leges we all enjoy in our "American Herit­ can combat this menace by making us all age." more cognizant of our own blessings-the Keep the essays coming! The Judges and things we possess in our American Heritage your Committee are anxious for many entries. - things which such communistic forces can And what a thrill to be awarded your prize never equal. at Convention ! We hope all prize winners As outlined to the chapters in various com­ will be able to be there. Won't YOU help munications, this project is divided into two to make Sigma's 195 1-52 project one of the parts. The first is an essay contest for college most successful we have ever undertaken?

Mary Lou Schaefiein, 0, was 011e of the cheerleadeu fot· Illinois in the Rose Bowl game in Pasadena. She fiew to California the day after she attended the Sigma Kappa holiday !tmcheon in Chicago Dec. 29.

WINTER 1951 21 Part of tbe Receiving Line Five Zetas Present Pounders' Day Skit Mrs. Benson is Presented to Mrs. Bm·ton in the Back row left to right-Shirley Floyd, Nancy Receiving Line. Left to rigbt-Mrs. Robert Benson, McCall, Je nny Carve/las. Fr ont row-Harriette Mrs. Augustus S. Goodyear, Mrs. Harold H . Benson, Agnes (Becky) Heon. Burton. W ashinglton D~C~ Alumnae Hear Mrs~ Burlton alt Found.erst Dinner

By DoRIS STEEVES, LT. USN, Alpha Kappa

EVENTY-SEVEN Washington, D .C. , Clara Critchfield Bennett, Z, presided as Sigmas gathered for dinner to cele­ toastmi'stress and introduced those at the S brate the seventy-seventh anniversary speakers' table, which included Virginia of the founding of Sigma Kappa Nov. 13, Kirkbride, AK, Director of Women's Activi­ 'S 1 at the Dupont Plaza hotel. ties at George Washington university, as well Mrs. Harold H. Burton, wife of the As­ as those in the receiving line. sociate Justice of the United States Supreme Members of Zeta chapter presented an Court and honor initiate of Sigma Kappa original skit depicting the five founders of at the Clevela-nd Convention, was principal Sigma Kappa in "flicker back" movie style. speaker and honor guest. Laura Whelpley Shirley Floyd, Becky Heon, Harriette Ben­ Berge, AK, and N aomi Crain Jarman, Z, son, Jenny Carvellas, and Nancy McCall took also spoke. the roles of the founders. Preceding the dinner a reception was held Mrs. Bennett also read a telegram of with Maxine Rolle Goodyear, Z, President greeting from Miss Irene Pistorio, Number of the alumnre chapter, presenting the mem­ One initiate of Zeta Chapter. bers to Mrs. Burton, Mrs. Berge, and Mrs. Kathryn Hershey Layne, Z, was chairman Jarman. Members of Zeta chapter, as well for the affair and arranged the floral center­ as aiumnre in the area, were in attendance. pieces. Each speaker received a corsage.

Did you see the fine pictures and article about the Maine Sea Coast Mission-"The Christ­ mas Boat is Coming"-in the Sunday, Dec. 23, issue of Parade? The next TRIANGLE will carry a reprint of this spread canied in Parade, magazine supplement to many Sunday news­ papers.

22 SIGMA KAPPA TRIANGLE By TERTIUS vAN DYKE Dean of Hartford Theological Seminary and President of Mailze Sea Coast Missionary Society. His father, Henry Van D yke was also a presrdent of the Maine Sea Coast Mission. This article appeared in "The Presbyterian Tribune."

HE clammy fog lifted a little as the and counsel of a little band of enthusiasts and Sunbeam under the skilful hand of her prophets. Only one of that faithful band T captain nosed her way into quiet water. survives: Thomas Searls of Bar Harbor, who The, engines reversed, and she lay still near the has served as Treasurer and invaluable coun­ seaweed covered rocks. The crane lifted the sellor of the Mission from its beginning to dinghy out of its nest and set it on the slowly the present moment. heaving tide, and the Superintendent, invit­ Tradition tells that the idea for the Mission ing me to join him, went overside and took was born when the two minister brothers up the oars. Only the wash of the waves stood together on the summit of Mount Cad­ along the rocks, the continuous cries of the illac on Mount Desert Island and gazed east gulls, the far-off drum of the lobster boat, over Schoodic Point toward Grand Manan, and the rattle of our oar-locks penetrated the and westward over Isle au Haut and a host lonely silence. of lesser islands to exclaim : "What a parish A few moments later and out- of the curl­ that would make!" ing wisps of fog we were alongside an old So it was done. And first with a little fisherman pulling lobster traps. The usual Friendship sloop named the Hope which brief but friendly salutations in the Maine journeyed fifteen hundred miles the first year manner, and then, jerking his head in the under the Rev. A. P. MacDonald's skillful direction of the invisible Sunbeam as he navigation and direction as Superintendent, pulled on a trap, the old man asked: "She until the present day with the Rev. N eal the same as the old Sunbeam inside?" Resting Bousfield as Superintendent and a crew of on his oars the Superintendent described the three to run the Sunbeam Ill on her five improvements incorporated in the third Sun­ thousand mile annual journey, and .with a beam of the Maine Sea Coast Missionary staff of nine workers deployed over islands Society. And then, as we resumed our jour­ and coastal communities, the vastly increased ney, the old man, never ceasing to haul on service continues. Churches have been built his traps, called out as we slipped away in and maintained, Sunday Schools established, the fog: "Well, anyway, ther's lots of folks is schools aided, a vast network of cooperative glad to see her anytime." enterprises launched, the lonely have been If you can balance each word and the in­ visited, the sick and injured have been tonations with which it was spoken, those brought within reach of care and healing. All phrases portray the significance of the Maine this has been done on an interdenominational Sea Coast Missionary Society and the seventy­ basis. two foot diesel-powered, fifty-five ton vessel Many have been the ministers and Church that serves the coast of Maine from Kittery to social workers who have given their vacation Calais, summer and winter. The By-Laws time to the work. It would be impossible even state: "The purpose of the Society is to to indicate the personal services and financial undertake religious and benevolent work in support that has been forthcoming, not only the neglected communities and among the from residents of the islands and coastal isolated families along the coast and on the communities themselves, but from far-off islands of Maine, and to engage in all efforts places. that are calculated to contribute to the moral The Sigma Kappa Sorority has long been and spiritual welfare of the people in ques­ a staunch supporter and maintains a definite tion." part in the program. And nothing about the Forty-six years ago two brothers, the Rev. work is more moving than the interest of A. P. MacDonald, pastor at Seal Harbor, and groups of children who swarm aboard the the Rev. A. M. MacDonald, pastor at Bar Sunbeam whenever she comes to an island Harbor, founded the Mission with the aid and who frequently conduct fairs of home-

WINTER 1951 23 The Sunbeam Ill

made products and save their pennies for stiff northwest wind whipping whitecaps off the work. the dark blue waters of Penobscot Bay we My own connection with the Mission be­ watched on the horizon the "Loom," that gan in 1912 when Mr. MacDonald laid a strange cold-weather phenomenon that makes directing hand on me between sessions of the distant islands look like odd battleships sus­ theological seminary and with his beaming pended on a narrow strip of crystal sea while smile led me aboard the Sunbeam I for a far-off waves appear to be a line of black summer cruise and a permanent experience. porpoises entering an imaginary inlet. Finally I will never forget "Ma" Peasley who has we dropped anchor in the lee of the north served on the Mission Staff for some forty end of Eagle Island just below the lighthouse years. I first met her when she was living that surmounts its highest point. on Crowley's Island in a tiny shack with a The Superintendent and one of the island tall flagpole and the stars and stripes flying pastors and I came ashore in the dinghy above. Whenever I think of the flag, that's and climbed the seventy wooden steps that what comes to my mind with Ma Peasley led up the cliff beside fantastic ice cascades. busy and laughing beneath it to liberate and Two small children playing in the snow be­ bless a little colony of men and women and side the doorstep were shy at first, but by children. Only last summer I went with her the time we were all unbundled from our on a preaching mission. Never have I heard heavy coats and boots and mittens inside the the gospel presented to a congregation better storm door, and were seated in the neat room than she does it. Her humanity and humor with their mother, the ice was all thawed. and faith are electrifying. Children and hearty The Light keeper had gone on an errand men and women and fragile old folks cluster to the other end of the island and would about her with enthusiasm. And to hear her be back shortly. Ten or twelve people were report to the annual meeting of the Mission still living on the island which had once had at Bar Harbor is not less of an experience. a community house, Church and school. Now they were a handful thrown back on their Christmas Cheer own indomitable resources, and much inter­ In early winter the S11 nbeam carries a ested in the visits of the Sunbeam. Mr. Bous­ freight of Christmas cheer among the island field had begun his connection with the Mis­ people and to the coastguardsmen in the sion almost twenty years ago with a tour of lighthouses and life saving stations along the the lighthouses and life saving stations along coast. One brilliant December day with a the coast and he has been a sturdy friend

24 SIGMA KAPPA TRIANGLE of these men all the way. When the Keeper The Sunbeam is a sort of sea-going Church. returned the visit continued. It was difficult Her sturdy form, sometimes sheathed in ice to leave. and sometimes bathed in summer sunshine, I wish I could convey to the readers of this through fair weather and foul, is like the article the interchanges of that visit (and spire of the rural Church,-it points to God. of other similar visits that I have made with Her hailing whistle as she approaches friends Mr. Bousfield by summer and occasionally or salutes them in passing on other errands in winter) . The pastoral skill and above all of mercy, is like the Church bell,-a voice to the spirit that have marked the life of the remind the lonely toiler of Him who went Christian Church since the days when Jesus about doing good. said to Peter: Feed my lambs,-feed my sheep, were beautifully exemplified. And so "For Jesus sails the sea again also as we progressed across the snow fields Along the granite coast of Maine." and called in homes.

Julia W eertman Studies Physics in Paris on Rotary Fellowship

ULIA RANDALL WEERTMAN of Pittsburgh, Pa., Beta Iota alumna of the Carnegie Institute of Technology, J is among the ninety outstanding gradu­ ate students from thirty-three countries to be awarded a Rotary Foundation Fellowship for advanced study abroad in 1951-52. Dr. Weertman will study physics at the Univer­ sity of Paris, France, in continuance of her work in that field. The first woman to be admitted to the Engineering School at t·he Carnegie Institute of Technology, Dr. Weertman received the Bachelor of Science degree in 1946, the Master of Science degree in 1947, and in June received the Ph.D. degree. She was first in her graduating class of the College of Engineering and Science at Carnegie Tech, and was also Editor-in-Chief of the Carnegie Technical during her senior year. She was elected to the Mortar Board and Phi Kappa Phi honorary scholarship societies, Tau Beta Pi engineering society, Sigma Xi scientific group and Pi Mu Epsilon, honorary mathe­ matics society. Dr. Weertman was born in Muskegon, Mich., in 1926. Her husband, Johannes W eertman, is also a physicist. Since the Rotary Foundation Fellowship program was inaugurated in 1947, Fellow­ Dr. Julia Randall Weertman, BI ships have been awarded to 284 young men and women from forty-two countries of Eu­ peace among the peoples of the earth. Grants rope Asia Africa and North, South and for the one-year Fellowships range from Central A~erica, ;s a means of promoting $1,800 to $3,400, and to date total nearly international understanding, good will and $750,000.

WINTER 1951 25 Has Your Chapter Started Work on Poster for Mission Contest?

HE rules for the Sea Coast Mission 4. Posters should be on cardboard stock and of P'"r sufficient size for display purposes. poster contest are being reprinted in 5. There will be no limit on the number of this issue of the TRIANGLE as a re­ posters which may be submitted by any one minder to college and alumnre chapters that Chapter or Club, but each poster must have the dead-line is fast approaching. the name and address of the contesting Chap­ Let's swamp the judges with posters when ter or Club on the back, near the bottom of the poster. we meet in Pasadena in July. This is one 6. No prizes will be offered to individuals. All very practical way in which the chapters can posters must be entered in the name of some help the Mission. A sizeable collection of specilic Chapter or Club. good posters, which will later become avail­ 7. The Sorority reserves the right to keep any or ' all posters submitted. In any event they able to chapters desiring exhibit material is will not be returned unless a request for their our goal. return is included with the entry, with the understanding that shipping charges will be THE National Council of Sigma Kappa will paid by the Chapter requesting their return. offer prizes for the best posters about our Na­ Source materials suggested include articles on tional Philanthropy Project, The Maine Sea Coast the Mission in back numbers of the TRIANGLE, as Mission. well as Mission bulletins and reports which have The College chapter submitting the best poster for many years been mailed three times a year to will be awarded a silver tray, and the Alumna: the Secretary of each College and Alumna: chapter. Chapter or Club for the best poster will be given I·f contestants do not have sufficient material a Life Membership Award. available, additional copies of Mission bulletins 1. Posters will be rated as follows: Appeal value may be obtained by writing to The Maine Sea 40 points, Informational value 30 points, Coast Mission, 24 Ledgelawn ave., Bar Harbor, Originality 20 points, and Neatness 10 Me. Please enclose twenty-live cents in stamps or points. coins with your request, to cover cost of mailing. 2. Deadline for posters to be submitted will be To those who have access to a library where 12 :00 Noon, July 7, '52. This is the second Saturday Evening Posts are on lile, we suggest day of the Convention. looking up the article "God's Tugboat," for May 3. Posters should be mailed to : Maine Sea Coast 29, '48. Mission Philanthropy Committee, Sigma There is a splendid article about the Mission's Kappa Convention, Hotel Huntington, Pasa­ Christmas work, entitled "The Christmas Boat is dena, Calif., or delivered to the Mission Ex­ Coming" in the Dec. 23, '51 issue of Parade (Sun­ hibit Booth. lf posters are completed far day supplement to many newspapers). in advance of Convention date, they may be Additional copies of the rules of the contest mailed to Central Office of Sigma Kappa, 129 may be obtained from The Maine Sea Coast Mis­ East Market Bldg., Indianapolis 4, Ind. sion, 24 I-edgelawn ave., Bar Harbor, Me.

These Contributors Helped The Maine Sea Coast Mission Before Nov. 20 Alumnce Chapters and Clubs San Francisco, Sr. Individuals Albuquerque, N.Mex. Santa Barbara, Calif. Beth Becket Bouslield, A Bay Cities, Calif. Spokane, Wash. Mildred Ralph Bowler, A Central Michigan Springfield, Mass. Eliza Alexander Burkholder, H Central Ohio Wichita, Kan. Mildred Z. Clarke, AH Chicago-North Side Worcester, Mass. Helen Cochrane, A Chicago-South Shore-Beverly Frances Guerin, N Dayton, Ohio Mae Guerin, N Denver Coll~f!.e Chaf>ters Stella Jones Hill, A Joliet, Ul. Zeta Lorah Monroe, H MilwauKee, Wis. Tau Clara Morrill, A Nebraska Upsilon Frances Morrill, A Orlando, Fla. Alpha Theta Lucia Morrill, A Peninsula, Calif. Alpha Iota Margaret Nash Philadelphia Beta Upsilon Rachel Foster 'Putnam, A Sacramento Gamma Alpha Edith Stene, San Francisco, Jr. Gamma Beta Kathleen Bitney Thompson, T

'26 SIGMA KAPPA TRIANGLE StGMA KAPPA HAS 20.000 MlMtlRS •SHOWS lOCATIONS Of 125 AlUMNAE CHAPTERS GREEK LETTERS SHOW lOCATION OF .59 ACTIVE otA,UIS

These attractive Sigma Kappa place mats will add a distilzctive note to entertaining done at our chapter houses and by our members. They have been prepared by the Chicago Alumnee chapter, under the direction of Ruth Rysdon Miller, 8, former President of Province X who has just moved to Miami, Fla. They are wonderful "conversation pieces" as well as a graphic presentation of the nation-wide spread of Sigma Kappa, for on the map are all of out" college chapters shown by letters and all of the alumnee chapters represented by dots. Our crest and our sorority pin and our flower, the violet, are decoratively shown on the margins. Orders for these durable paper place mats may be sent to Mrs. Arthur Lindbloom, Jr., 2249 TP. Ninety-first St., Chicago, Ill. They sell fot· $3.50 a hundred and are sent postaf!.e prepaid. Checks or money orders should be made out to Sigma Kappa Alumnee Council. Smaller quantities sell for 4 cents each mat.

The Fraternity Convention

By JOHN 0. MoSELEY, ~AE (Reprinted from The Fraternity Month)

There are three factors controlling success or and body unwearied by the distractions of the con­ failure in every situation: vention side shows. ( 1) What you put into it. ( 5) Look for the good in every event and per­ (2) What you get out of it. sonality; and assimilate the best of what you find. ( 3) What you do with what you get out of it. ( 6) Be tolerant in all things especially those Based upon the above are ten suggestions for you do not know, like or understand. successful attendance at a fraternity convention. (7) Take a long look ahead and fit everything ( 1) Read carefully and preserve for reference you see, hear and learn into the pattern of the fra­ all advance information and announcements from ternity's future. responsible sources. ( 8) Bring back to your chapter every lesson and ( 2) l)tudy beforehand the names of fellow dele­ impression received and deliver them in worthy gates and look up the fraternity service records of form and style. your fraternity leaders. (9) Give expression to your feelings of friend­ ( 3) Arrive at the convention on time, remain liness, gratitude and fraternalism to those to whom until it adjourns, and be regular and punctual at you are indebted for those feelings. all of its sessions. ( 10) Vitalize in self and chapter the experiences ( 4) Bring to every meeting a receptive mind which should be kept alive.

WINTER 1951 27 Left: JEAN CHOQUETTE, BT, tapped for Trianon, women's honorary at Florida. Center: ALEEWAH LEIDIG, BP, had a lead part in "Ye Gods," annual San Jose campus Revelries. Right: PEGGY MILLER, BZ, elected Queen of the Bowery by Kappa Alpha fraternity at Memphis State. Contributions to Endowment Fund since Sept. I, 1951 Bay Cities, Calif ...... $10.00 Eta ...... $25.00 Buffalo ...... 10.00 Lambda ...... 5.00 Central Michigan ...... 15.00 Tau ...... 5.00 Chicago-North Side 25.00 Alpha Theta ...... 5.00 Colorado ...... 25 .00 Alpha Omicron ...... 10.00 Dayton, Ohio ...... 10.00 Alpha Tau ...... 25.00 Grand Rapids, Mich...... 10.00 Alpha Psi ...... 10.00 Hammond, Ind. 5.00 Beta Xi ...... 5.00 Joliet, Ill...... 20.00 Beta Upsilon ...... 5.00 Louisville 10.00 Beta Omega ...... 5.00 Miami ...... 10.00 Gamma Beta ...... 10.00 Northern New Jersey 5.00 Peninsula (Calif.) . 25.00 Penoual Peoria ...... 10.00 Maud Huff Fife, P ...... $10.00 Philadelphia ...... 10.00 Juliet Baxter Gilmore, A ...... 15.00 Phoenix ...... 5.00 Lulu Mann Armstrong, A ...... 10.00 St. Petersburg ...... 5.00 Grace Mulford Crary, II ...... 100.00 San Fernando Valley ...... 10.00 Helen Blackie, A ...... 10.00 San Francisco Junior ...... 10.00 San Francisco Senior ...... 50.00 In Memoriam San Jose, Cali f...... 5.00 Elda Eggert for Ruth H ardison ...... $5.00 Springfield, M ass...... 25.00 Rachel D eNick for Ruth H ardison ...... 5.00 Railroad Information about Convention Trip We are showing below the round trip coach fares which are in effect at the present time and may apply at the time our convention is held. The fifteen per cent federal tax has been included in each instance. These fares will permit returning from Pasadena via any direct route, or if desired, return may be made via San Francisco without any additional railroad ticket cost. All tickets ca rry a six months final return limit and permit stopovers on either the going or returning trip within the final limit. Here are some of the fares: Coach T ax Coach T ax Boston, Mass ...... $151.08 $22 .66 Miami, Fla ...... $135.10 $20.27 Chicago, 'lll. . . . . 90.15 13.52 New York, N.Y. Cleveland, Ohio via Standard ...... 142.40 21.36 via Standard . . .. 111.85 16.78 St. Louis, Mo...... 85 .55 12.83 D allas, Tex. San Francisco, Calif...... 21.35 3.20 via Denver ...... 68.75 10.31 Seattle, Wash...... 59.10 8.87 Denver, Colo...... 60.60 9.09 Washington, D.C...... 134 .20 20.13 Louisville, Ky. via Chicago ...... •...... •...... 102.40 15.36

;28 SIGMA KAPPA TRIANGLE Lucy O§borne Share§ Highlight§ of Memorial European Summer

By MIRIAM LIKENS SMITH, Zeta

OPULAR Fort Wayne South Side High School (approximately 1500 P pupils) teacher and program director, Lucy Osborne, Tau '25, took time out last summer for a whirlwind tour of Europe and the British Isles. Lucy· joined Dr. and Mrs. Donald Bryant (Mary Osborne, T) of St. Louis in Europe so she enjoyed a family reunion as well as travel. Lucy is a greatly beloved and admired member of the Fort Wayne alumnre chapter, of which she is a charter member. She is a conscientious worker who gives her utmost to any task that she assumes, and full of fun and wit, too. Whenever we have a "White Elephant" auction, Lucy is our auctioneer by acclaim. These sales are always a great suc­ cess because Lucy makes us laugh-and buy ! She makes her home with her mother, Mrs. L. P. Osborne, still active and very charming. · Mrs. Osborne was an honored guest at the luncheon Fort Wayne alumnre gave for Lucy shortly before her departure for Europe. Lucy Osborne, Tau '25, popular Fort JJP"ayne, Ind., High School teacher and charter member of Fort Lucy characteristically, because of her father's liP"ayne Sigma Kappa almmue chapter, tells of tm­ illness and death, transferred (in order to forgettable European tour last sttmmer. be at home) from Indiana university to Ball State Teacher's college at Muncie, Ind., from -refreshment time is always hungrily antici­ which she received her A.B. In 1938 she pated at Lucy's ! received her A.M. from Columbia university. Arriving in France May 15, Lucy spent ten When she attended her first Sigma Kappa days in Paris, highlights of which were being alumnre meeting in New York City, she was entertained in a French home, seeing the delighted to find ten Sigma Kappas whom University of Paris, attending "The Magic she had known at Indiana. Flute" at the Opera House, eating at sidewalk Since 1938 Lucy has taught in Fort Wayne. cafes, strolling through the Luxenburg gar­ In our alumnre group she has held all the dens, browsing among the open book staiis offices. Civic-wise she is a member of the along the Seine, and visiting the Art Galleries, Wayne St. Methodist Church ; has been Pan­ Tuilleries Gardens, Notre Dame Cathedral hellenic president and for eight years a and the Eiffel Tower. Y.W.C.A. Board member, directing many Grenoble, a small college town in southern programs for them ; is a member of the France, completely surrounded by snow­ P.E.O. Sisterhood; has represented A.A.U.W. capped Alps mountains, with a full moon on the Board of the Civic Theatre; in reflecting the white mountains on the !sere A.A.U.W. was secretary and Board Member River-and the beautiful song of a nightin­ for two years, also chairman of a local "sec­ gale-left a memory never to be forgotten. tion" twice; is a<;tive in P.T.A. The bus ride from Grenoble on the Route Her hobbies are photography (started with Napoleon, through the French Alps, the city the fine camera and equipment given by her Grass (fa!JlOUS for its beautiful gardens and pupils for her European trip) and cooking its manufacture of fine perfumes) to Cannes

WINTER 1951 29 and Nice was thrilling, as was the five-day South of Edinburgh she visited the old stay on the Riviera. walled city of York with its charm and an­ First high spot in England was a week tiquity, Yorkminster Cathedral, the Lord spent on Craven Hill, London, living in the Mayor's Mansion, narrow streets, and the guest house of a retired opera singer. Next assembly room described by Jane Austen in was the stay at the Swan Inn in Lamport, her books. Northamptonshire, a little village in north In Gloucester Lucy stayed with a college central England, where her party swelled the friend and visited the Gloucester School of population to seventy, and where they made Home Economics, Bristol university, Chelten­ up a fifteen-person congregation in the 13th ham Girls' High School, City of Bath, Tewks­ Century Church of England. Through the bury, Stratford-on-Avon, and rode through North West Lake country they travelled with the Cotswald country in a Rolls Royce. an English friend in his pre-war Austin. Oxford, Cambridge and London were final Scotland, where the sun set at 10:30 P.M., stops in Britain. Transportation and tele­ was another high light from the time it was phone service in London Lucy found much entered at Gretna Green, through the crossing cheaper than in America-with bus, streetcar of the Cheviot Hills to the west coast, cross­ and subway rates ranging from 1 to 4 cents, ing the Solway to the Sea, driving along the depending on the distance covered. Tele­ Firth of Clyde. Among the most interesting phone calls cost 2 cents; taxi rides were about stops was Partsonachan Inn on Loch avenue a shilling (about 14 cents) . with Colonel and Mrs. Young as hosts, where Lucy found the English a sturdy, heroic mornings they were awakened by Colonel people who welcomed her into their homes Young playing his bagpipes while he as though she were an old friend and of them marched around the inn in his kilts. she says, "They accept the rationing of food Lucy's hotel room in Edinburgh opened and fuel and the many discomforts of every­ onto Princess Street, most beautiful street in day living with a hope that something will the world with its beautiful shops, Robert save England and put her back on her former Louis Stevenson Flower clock, and statue · firm footing. Some shake their heads and of Sir Walter Scott, all literally in the front say they can't face another war; many say yard of Edinburgh Castle. She received an little, but leave the impression that they will engraved invitation to the spectacular "Pre­ meet whatever comes for the sake of old sentation of Colors by the Duke of Gloucester England. Much less is said about war there to the Scottish Grand Regiment" at Holly­ than in the United States, and there is no wood Palace, the first time this presentation hysteria. They go calmly about their business ceremony had taken place in 200 years. and pray for recovery."

Sigma Yappa Sororil'1 -.Announce:j the .Jn:Jtallation o/ (famma :JJefta chapter at Jhie/ College, (freenvi/le, Pa., Jan. 5-6, 1952 and Pledging o/ (jamma {!p:Ji/on chapter which wd/ be in:jta/led Pa., :Joon.

30 SIGMA KAPPA TRIANGLE With Our College Chapters

MARTHA JEWETT ABBEY, Editor

BRADLEY -Beta N u wrappers by which to vote. June also competed for Home­ coming queen for the Sigma Alpha Epsilons. Beta Nu was honored to h>ve Marion Race Cole, Na­ Exchang es punctuate the chapter activities, as did the tional Counselor; and Ruth Koontz Cordis, president of Founders' Day Banquet and our Children· s Christmas Province XI, as advisors during rushing. Our eighteen Party. new pledges were honored at a tea, sponsored by the Marjorie Coombs alumnae, at the chapter house Sept. 23. Actives and pledges were entertained Sept. 25 at a buffet supper given at the chapter house. A program was given to explain CALIFORNIA AT LOS ANGELES­ the various campus clubs and organizations to the new Alpha Omicron pledges. Alpha Omicrons celebrated the co nclusion of rush Exchange parties have been held with Theta Xi and week Sept. 20 with their semi-annual "Hot Pot" party. Tau Kappa Epsilon. Beta Nus and their dates had a The purpose of the party was to disclose the identity uf hayrack ride and a wiener roast Oct. 12 . the new " hot pots, " our highly honored house characters. Beta Nu reached a long desired goal, through the H ere to help in the ceremony was Ernestine Duncan Sea ­ cooperation of the Mother's 'Club and the alumnae, with man, National Vice President, honorary "h-ot pot." Sally the purchase of a grand piano which adds new dignity to Taylor was the junior character and Dee Fleury was the our living room. senior character. An honorary "hot potship" was con­ A fire-side program Oct. 30 'featured a Brides' Lane ferred on Pat Rees, visiting us from our San Jose State review of fashionable wedding ensembles. chapter. Janice Renner Sunday, Oct. 7, a three chapter party was given in honor of the new pledges of Beta Psi, Beta Chi, and Alpha Omicron with Alpha Omicron as hostess at the BUFFALO-Alpha Beta Pacific Palisades home of Mary Eister Tinglof, AO . After Alpha Beta is still cherishing fond memories of Buffalo's swimming and sports we enjoyed a barbecue. "Moving-Up-Day," during which the chapter received Ona Skinner has been selected Chi Phi Queen. She will first prize in the sorority float competition. Our entry was act as hostess at formal Chi Phi functions of the semester. " Swan Song" (Lohengrin), and the four-foot swan, with Our fall formal, the Violet Ball, was held in the his hand-cut feathers, that reigned over the float now has Garden Room of the Bel Air hotel Oct. 27. It honored a place of honor in the Alpha Beta apartment. Joni Shau eight new initiates. At a banquet preceding the dance was runner up in the Homecoming Queen contest. Dorothy Taylor was named outstanding pledge, and Anita Grace Reiter Wehe attained the highest scholastic standing. Alpha Omicron pledges gave a Halloween Party for the children of Hathaway home, our local philanthropy, CALIFORNIA AT BERKELEY-Lam bda Oct. 31. Alpha Omicron ended weeks of hard work on their There were big surprises for Lambdas on their return float for the 1951 UCLA homecoming with a dinner for to the chapter house in September. Blond mahogany bed· the fathers who had been so helpful and "constructive." room furn iture with a plain, modernistic design thrilled The theme of h-omecoming this year was "South C Holi­ us all as did the new mirrors from our Mother's Club. day." This "all-Cal" 'weekend was a wonderful time Ideas for room decorations were begun, registration ac­ for Alpha Omicrons to renew their friendships with the complished amidst the usual uncertainty of what classes girls from Lambda and Beta Chi. In celebration of should be taken with rushing the backdrop of all actiVIty homecoming, Alpha Omicron with the ·help of the young for two weeks, ending in Lambda pledging twenty-one alum group gave a dinner for the visiting alumnae the girls. Oct. 14, eight Lambdas and two Beta Rhos were night preceding the big game, Nov. 2. to be formally initiated. Elena G. Ptitsin The annual Monday evening scholarship dinner took place Oct. 22 with an unusual twist to it. Those below CALIFORNIA AT SANTA BARBARA­ a C average had to dress up for dinner, while those above that average wore their study clothes. Toastmistress was Beta Chi our dearly loved Miss Minnie Bunker, A, who offered us Our new pledges were honored at a dinner at the El some worth-while study tips. Especially honored were Mirasol Hotel Sept. 23. Special guests were Ernestine Georgia Lee Clare, Diane Day, Barbara Evans, Shaley Duncan Seaman, Nati•onal Vice-president, and Betty Green Subke, and J ulie Geary with the highest grade pmnt m D ouglas, Province president. the preceding pledge class, all w1th a better than B Beta Chis journeyed to Los Angeles for the week-end average. of Oct. 5 and 6 to be guests of Alpha Omicrons. Featured Pledge dance festivities saw the chapter house con ­ entertainment included swimming and a patio party. verted to an eerie haunted house. Beta Chis were visited by Lambda's beloved Minnie Accompanist for the big Homecoming show, "The Bunker, Oct. 8. Axtravaganza," was D arlene Johnson. Our house float Thelard Willems in the Homecoming parade utilized the "Calif: Toast of the Coast" parade theme. . . CARNEGIE TECH- Beta Iota Culturally worth-while is Lambda's membersh1p m the Symphony Forum. A candidate for the Lux Campus Queen Beta Iota continued to be active throughout the sum· contest was June Turner for whom the chapter collected mer by holding several meetings and parties. Panhellenic

WINTER 1951 31 Left: DEE FLEURY, Alpha Omicron, membe1' of Spurs (11ational sophomore honomry), Associate Board of AJIVS, and Song Leader at UCLA, Center,' NANCY MOSHER, vice president of Iota chapte1' a.t Denve1· University, is a member of Morta·r Board and art chairman of AlVS. Right: ELAINE GEIGER, Omega, one of the Florida State cil·cus queens.

Open House, which introduced the fall rushing season, CORNELL-Alpha Zeta was held Sept. 23. Beta Iota followed this with a horo­ At Cornell's annual floa t parade last May, Alpha Zeta scope tea at the Carnegie Union Sept. 29. We held our and Theta Chi joined forces to create an island of traditional South American Fiesta rush party at the Sigma Hawaiian singers inspired by Betty Fugii's talent in singing Alpha Epsilon house Oct. 11. The house was decorated and huluing. Despite pouring rain, the floa t won the cup with bright sombreros, straw baskets, Mexican dishes, pottery, shawls, and various kinds •of fruit. A six.piece for third prize. When we returned from summer vacation, the house South American band entertained, followed by singing. was sporting a new coat of white paint. Marion Race Cole, National Counselor, was our special guest. The evening ended with singing of " Little Bunch of Coffee hours following each home football game are an Alpha Zeta tradition for Alpha Zetas, their dates, and Violets," by candlelight. Patri cia Ann Curtin friends. listening in parties to away games are quickly gaining in popularity, too, accompanied with bridge and refreshments. COLBY -Alpha Alpha Zeta recently had an exchange dinner with Alpha Zeta fraternity. We attended a lecture given by Roberts Union, Colby Barbara Lawrence College by Senator Margaret Chase Smith, an Alpha alumna. FoHowing the speech, Marjorie Austin and Deborah Brush were guides for members of Senator CULVER-STOCKTON-Beta Mu Smith's party. During the summe~ the downstairs of our house was A successful picnic-supper was held jointly with Alpha completely redone with new lamps, drapes, slip-covers, Tau Omega fraternity at the camp of Pem Squire. and rugs. A recreation room was fixed up with a piano The finishing touches of new kitchen curtains and new and card-tables for general get-togethers. chair covers. were added to our · room by the pledge group Rushing started off with a Western party, fo llowed by of last spnng. We all made stuffed animals for the an island wiener·roast, and the third party was a formal children served by the Maine Sea Coast Miss ion. affair with candlelight and baby orchids ·for each rushee. Mary J ane Fitzpatrick We received twelve pledges out of the thirty-three girls going through rushing. COLORADO A & M-Beta Kappa At the Beta Sigma Gamma fraternity barn dance-talent show, the Beta Mu's came through with the first prize, a When we returned to school this fall, we were all gold trop hy. We had a skit that depicted the Roaring pleased to see that the downstairs of our house had been 'Twenties, long-waisted dresses, painted knees, spit-curls, redecorated. We then spent a week painting and redecorat· and all the trimmings of that era. ing the upstairs rooms. Ruth Voirol was in itiated into the N ational dramatic Nine girls were pledged Sept. 24. fraternity, Alpha Psi Omega. Joyce Whetzal is secretary of T.I.O., senior women's Ruth Voirol honorary, and pres~dent of Omicron Nu, home economics honorary. Ann Lou1se More is president of home economics club. These girls attended their respecti ve conventions this DENVER-Iota summer in Columbus, Ohio, and Cleveland, Ohio, Many honors have come to Iotas recently. Four girls­ Homecommg, Oct. 20, saw the chapter welcoming Luella Spargo, Greta Lea Ferris, Harriet Gleason, and alumnre with the theme " Aggies Always." An open house Ellengail Mapes Beuthel-are Phi Beta Kappas. Luella, was held following the foo tball game. Oct. 26 the actives Iota past-president, and Harriet, A WS past-president and entertained the pledges at a house dance. We have en­ M ISs University of Denver, '51, are in Who'1 Who in JOyed picniCS and firesides with different fraternities. Amer1can Colleges and Universities . Paula Hair Nancy Mosher is a member of Mortar Board, art

32 SIGMA KAPPA TRIANGLE SIGMA CAMPUS LEADERS

Top, left: LETITIA ANN BARRY, Alpha Kappa, editor of Blue Print, co-editor of Engineers' Direc­ tory, atzd member of Engineers' Exemtive Board at the University of Nebraska. Right: DOROTHY JEAN PEASE, Alpha Gamma '53, was chosen to star in Tacoma, Wash. Little Theater presentation of "Goodbye, My Fancy" after having starred in it at Washington State. She is a member of National Collegiate Players and was chosen one of the six outsta1zding women in campus activities at 117 ashington State. Bottom left: NORMAMAE MILKWICK, Alpha Nu, is on the Madem oiselle College Board, arzd a mem­ ber of Theta Sigma Phi, Mortar Board, and Kappa Tau, senior scholastic honorary, at University of Montana. Right: PATSY TEMPLE, President of Alpha Delta chapter, is also a member of Mortar Board and secretary of senior class atzd Pi Omega Pi at the University of Tenneuee. Tart initiates at Indiana University First row: Barbara Funkey Second row: Ka1'en Breithaupt, Margaret Edmiston, Margaret Calhoun, N orma Bennetts, Carol Whitted, Ann Gough. Third row: Mary Alice Patton, Jeanette Bengert, Joyce Price, Jane Jones, Joyce Saunders, Connie Weis­ man, Patricia Eisier, Mary Kay Grant, Magdeline Allen, and Jane Black. chairman of AWS, and vice-president of the chapter. The National Treasurer, and Mrs. Eugene Jenkins, Provin ce Panhellenic scholarship cup for a straight "A" grade president. average went to Va lerie Peecher. Our chapter is boasting two new Phi Beta Kappas, Ann Dorothy Johnson is junior class secretary of Arts and Price and Lois Colledge. Sciences, after serving as vice·president of the sophomore Mary Lou Stevens is in charge of the swimming meet class last year. Mary Jane Haynes Dornberg is a member this year. of the board of publications, while Sue Burritt was June Brantley awarded the board's annual award recently. Alpha Lambda Deltas from among Iota's ranks are FLORIDA-Beta Tau Francell Lee, Shirley Diehl, Norma Taylor, and Sue Burritt. Wearing sarongs, suspending palmettoes on the walls, Among the campus queens are Joanne Fallstrom and and having a vivacious monkey helped make our H awaiian Patricia Schoenfelder, who were Pi Kappa Alpha Dream rush party realistic. Rushing was climaxed with pledging Girl attendants. Dorothy Johnson was Sweetheart of ten girls. Lambda Chi Alpha, while Jane Lutz was attendant to Beta Tau was one of tW'O sororities chosen at home­ the Sweetheart of Sigma Chi. ROTC Sponsors are Rosanna coming try-outs to have a skit in Gator Growl, the all­ Milner and Shirley Diehl. campus show on the eve of the "big day. " Our skit, en · Sue Burritt titled "23-Skid-oo" depicted life in the Roaring '20 's, ~1th everythmg from a raccoon coat to a "daring" bath­ mg su1t Qf that era, and was done in pantomime to the DUKE-Alpha Psi h1t tune of that day, "Collegiate, Collegiate, Yes We Alpha Psi completed fall rush period with thirteen new Are Collegi.~ t e." Work on our homecoming float, " Sliding pledges. We are also boasting about our newly decorated to Y1ctory, kept us up until the wee hours of the morn· suite with its attractive color scheme of green and burnt ing, but we all enjoyed it. orange. Beta Tau has a new house mother this year, Mrs. Nell Phi Kappa Psi fraternity gave an Open House for Alpha Furr, of Jacksonville. Psis and the pledges. Later, we entertained Delta Tau Carole E. D owe Delta fraternity at an in-formal Halloween open house. Joan Bolmeier and Carol Bohlin were models in a FLORIDA STATE-Omega fashion show sponsored by the local Panhellenic associa· Ruthie Garst, one of our pledges, was voted Miss tion. Tallahasse_e this summer and represented the city in the Juanita McGee, Alpha Psi president, was busy again as MJSs Flonda contest. She was also chosen Miss Southern mistress of costumes in the fall Hoof 'n' Horn musical. Belle in a contest in Daytona Beach, and later was runner­ The chapter enjoyed the visit of Mrs. E. D. Taggart, up in the Miss Dixie contest also in Daytona Beach.

34 SIGMA KAPPA TRIANGLE Pledge Class, Fall 1951, Alpha Or;t~cron at U.C.L.A. Bottom row: Joan .Lewis, Dorothy Kelstrom. Top row: Patricia Hull, Barbara Reark, Margaret Williams.

Patsy Gates was the Lambda Chi Alpha's candidate for GEORGETOWN-Alpha Chi Homecoming queen, Ruthie Garst the nominee 'Of the Theta Chis, and Elaine Geiger our chapter nominee. Anna Not too long ago the Alpha Chi bouse took a trip! Marie Crane was one of the nominees for Miss Gymkana. It was placed on rollers, turned around, and rolled The annual Sigma Kappa weekend Dec. 8 was high· down a hill to a lovely lot facing the college campus. lighted by the "Winter Wonderland" dance at the Talla­ The inside of the house then got a complete face lifting. hassee Country dub. Other activities included a beach To top off the decoration, the alumn:e helped us buy a party at Dalton's cottage on the Gulf Coast and a hay­ maroon carpet for the formal living room, hall, and ride. stairs. Bryan Wolfe, a local friend, gave us a gold leaf The theme of our house decorations for Homecoming antique mirror which practically covers the entire hall this year was "Centennial, Proved 100 Years," to carry wall. out the general theme of the school's centennial. The Boat Barbara Messer and Paula Hoskins are cheerleaders again was decorated with a wishing well, this fall, with Barbara as captain. Betty Bailey is secre­ Rushing climaxed by a pledge class of fifteen, was tary of the senior class, Bette Porter, junior vice-president, carried out by various parties. One was the dramatization and Janie Hill, sophomore secretary, Barbara Messer was of "A Tale of a Freshman Green." We also put on a Georgetown's Homecoming Queen last fall and Lois Sand­ variety show and a family album skit showing Sigma ers and Gina Race were two of her attendants. Lois is Kappa through the year. Dream Girl of Pi Kappa Alpha, too. Omega is well represented in Florida State university's Lucille Hempel, chapter president, was a member of the famous circus. Besides Patsy Gates, Rutbie Garst, Elaine girls' debate team last spring, which won the national Geiger, Joan Wilson, and Barbara Gates who are already debate tournament at the national convention held at Still­ in the circus, two of our new pledges, Nancy Seavey and water, Okla. Janie Hill won second place in the state Dede Duguid, have also been chosen. The circus plays to oratorical contest. local audiences for four nights in the spring and tours Janie Hill towns all over the state giving many performances during the school year. Patsy Cooper is one of three supervisors of all dance IDAHO STATE-Beta Phi routines in the Sandspur production this year. Sandspur Our chapter won first place in the Women's Division is an operetta written, produced and directed by F.S.U. for the most original Boat in the Homecoming parade. students. Our Boat consisted of four girls dressed in the form of Marion Race Cole, National Counselor, spent a morning orchids placed in an imitation of a cellophane Bower box. with us in September and we had a special breakfast for The girls threw orchids, which were flown from Hawaii, her. Our province president, Lynette Patten, was here to to the crowd. help us with our rush program. Salt Lake alumn:e awarded the Minerva Head pin as Beverly Ward a prize for a Sophomore with highest grades during her

WINTER 1951 35 and Marilyn Welsch, classical music hours chairman. freshman year to Shirley Knowles. . M arilyn was also on the executive committee for Dad"s Mrs. Robert G. Lowder is a new patroness to Beta Pht. Barbara Savage ' 51, received a graduate scholarship at Day Weekend. Romeyn Schrock is a chairman on the the U. of Miss., Oxford, Miss. She is working for her Square Dance committee. Mary Lou Schaeflein was general chairman of the Fall master's degree in English. Dorothy Felt, pledge, was tapped for Spurs, Sophomore Registration Dance. The annual pledge dance Oct. 27 had women's honorary organization. Frances Ogawa, new a tramp theme, '" Hobo H op."' initiate, and Laura Hackworth, a pledge, were chosen Theta's welcome mat was out Nov. 3, when our dad"s members of the women's Cadettes organization. Geral· invaded the campus for the annual Dads' Weekend, and dine Peterson, Shirley Knowles, and Frances Wilson were Nov. 10 for Homecoming. chosen to sing in the !.S.C. A Cappella Choir. The chapter was hostess to the Panhellenic Presidents Shirley Knowles is campus co-editor of the Bengal, Luncheon at which the sorority house directors and Dean I.S.C. student paper. Klein were special guests. M arj mie Currence, past president of Beta Phi, is the Mary Lou Schaeflein new president of I.S.C. Panhellenic Council. Frances Ogawa INDIANA-Tau Tau began the school year by placing a finalist in the " Bachelor 'Of the Year" ' contest. Each sorority and girl"s housing unit selects a candidate from the men on campus and back them with posters, parades, etc. Tau's candidate, a member of Theta Chi fraternity, was in the five top contestants from a field of twenty. With members o·f Phi Kappa fraternity we sponsored a booth at the Fall Carnival. The booth, a dance routine, won a gold cup for us. J inny Francis, Jeannine Billau, and Joyce Price are on the staff of the campus yearbook, The ArbutuJ. At initiation of seventeen girls Oct. 13, we used for the first time the new linen tablecloths which the alum- ore gave us recently. Jane Rosenberger

INDIANA STATE TEACHERS COLLEGE­ Gamma Gamma Gamma Gamma's fall activities got underway with a "'coke party"' for freshman women who will be taking part in delayed rush in January. The theme for the party was "Convict" and was carried out with an appropriate skit and music. Recent honors and responsibilities have come to several Gamma Gammas. Lethelda Livingston was elected treas­ urer of the senior class and Colleen Case, sophomore class secretary. Lou Ann Montgomery sang the contralto ' "l ead"' in Gilbert and Sullivan's Japanese <>peretta, "'Mikado,"' presented Nov. 15 and 16. Marilyn Brown was pledged to Sigma Alpha Iota, professional music Ira· ternity for women. Marilyn Brown

ILLINOIS TECH-Beta Pi Patsy Gates, Omega, one of the queens of the We held an old-fashioned Halloween party Oct. 26 Florida State circus. Patsy is a cheerleader, and a complete with costumes, ducking for apples, and a treas­ member of Cotillion, the dancing honorary. ure hunt. Joan Nehlsen was chosen to represent our chapter in a "Some Pumpkins'' contest at an all-school dance Nov. 2. ILLINOIS-Theta Alice Frasemer was elected to represent the women's glee To end an eventful year Mary Lou Schaeflein was club in the same capacity. tapped for Shorter Board, a senior women's recognition A Founders' Day dinner was given Nov. 5 to celebrate society, of which she is now vice·president; and Joyce Sigma Kappa's founding. The pledges arranged and pre­ Stern~man was chosen for Torch, junior women's activity sented a program for the alumnre and actives present. honorary. Theta's blended their voices to sing "Get Carol Johnson H appy" in the Shi-Ai Sing given Mothers' \Xfeekend. Peggy Stone was appointed an assistant manager and KANSAS-Xi Janet Stearn an associate manager at the Illini Theatre Guild. Janet is also the 11ssociate representative to the Xi has nine new pledges. Our rush week was cut down Theatre Guild Board. Jackie Devanny was selected the to three days this year. We only had two days in which production manager for the Orchesis dance concert. we had to have our open house, invitation coke parties Due to successful rushing last June, seventeen girls are and dessert party. Since K.U. this year installed the de­ now wearing <>ur pledge pin. Shortly after school began ferred rushing system only upperclassmen went through we introduced our new house director~ Mrs. Buckley, rush. Xi chapter felt very fortunate in having Mrs. Swift at a tea. Lowry, National President, with us during rush week. Kathy Wolcott is a member of the Illini Union Board We enjoyed and appreciated her help immensely. as director of recreation. Three Thetas are on the Illini Xis were pleasantly surprised this fall to find the front Union Council: Joyce Sternaman, news publications hall of our house redecorated in a new shade of rose. chairman; Mary Lou Schaeflein, Union Hops chairman ; Other new additions to the hall were a divan and curtains.

36 SIGMA KAPPA TRIANGLE Alpha Gammas at JJV ashington State with their new dining room furniture.

Epsilon's 11ew pledf?.es seem to be thorouf?.My enjoyinf?. their cruise aboard the good ship "Showboat" at their Pledf?.e formal Nov. 10 at the chapter house in Syracuse, N.Y. J, left to right: Susie S11ider, Kathy Hiro, Adele Cunninf?.ham, Barbara Redner, Chuck Bolton, Sally Springman. liing, left to right: Carol Alvater, Jane Gates, Marianne O'Connor, Judy Clark, Ann McKaig, Cris Peterson, Phillis Robbi. >i Gillespie, Merm Nelson, Zila Cuddeback, Barbara Brewton, Connie Curreri, Patricia Gallagher. c absent: Mary Hughes, Ruth A11n Miller, Jackie Jarrett . Mary Beth Moore represented Xi in the Miss Lawrence neighbors, which was well attended and appreciated. In contest. Sue Plummer is secretary of the senior class . connection with this tea, we also presented the members We held our annual formal open house Oct. 13. _ of our corporation board with a dinner party in acknowl­ Haven Moore edgement of the work they did this summer putting the house in order. Mid-October brought us H omecoming weekend, with LOUISIANA TECH-Beta Epsilon the return of many alumnre. A coffee hour on Saturday Julie Wells, Georgia McBride, and Ann Grambling was the climax of this event. were among a group of thirty-live students and their Shirley Hathaway instructors which made a twenty-one day holiday stud y tour. They left Aug. 11 for a tour of the New England MIAMI (FLA.)- Beta Delta States and parts of Canada. Eleanor Franks has been chosen secretary for the Blue "Confucius say-go Sigma K " -was the theme used Jackets~ Louisiana Tech's marching pep organizati on. for the Beta Deltas' first rush tea. Several ·actives dressed Carolyn Hargrove is a new member of the Blue Jackets. as Chinese girls and entertained the rushees with a skit Claire Nattin was chosen cheer leader for her second which presented live Chinese girls entering the University year. Two Beta Epsilons are among those featured in the of Miami as freshmen and their conception of college '51-'52 edition of "Who's Who Among Students in li fe and dorm life. Rice cakes with fortunes inside were American ·colleges and Universities." They are Eleanor given to all the rushees. Delores Clifford sang "Loyal to Franks and Billie Lowe. Sigma K" while the guests were relaxing. Margaret Haz­ At the annual football game with N orthwestern State lett Taggart, National Treasurer, was a guest during rush. college Oct. 20, a queen and eight maids were chosen Genevieve George from Tech. Billie Lowe, Gen Burkhalter, and Carolyn Hargrove were three ·of the maids. Martha Ann Dickens MICHIGAN STATE- Alpha Tau When Alpha Taus returned to school this fall they MARlETTA-Be ta Theta found a new addition to the house. It was a brick terrace which the alumnre of Michigan gave us for our twenty· Joan McMillen is president of Intaglio. Lois McNeil is fifth anniversary on campus. secretary of Tri Beta, biology honorary, and Pat Smith is The Alpha Taus invited their fathers to the Marquette­ a member. Velma McKee and Marjorie Hamperian were Michigan State game and a banquet afterwards, Oct. 13. tapped for Phi Beta Kappa late last spring. Five girls were init"iated Oct. 21. After initiation a June Shimer, our Fiesta Queen candidate, was voted dinner was held in the chapter house. Sweetheart of Lambda Chi Alpha last May. Pat Peterso n and Pat •Pine last spring term were tapped We now have the softball trophy for last spring and for Tower Guard and Lucille Kapplinger and Barb Kunkle we also won seconJ place in bowling and basketball. for Mortar Board. "EK," a car belonging to Mary Ellen Hibbs, was Lois McCracken christened at the first football game of the season. How the car holds more than twenty people is a wonder. We are going to paint it lavender and maroon. MIDDLEBU RY -Nu Mrs. Henry Lathrop, Province V president, was a guest At Commencement last June Nu was proud of Jldara of the chapter during rushing. After pledging, a theater Elmore, who received high honors in Spanish when her party was held for all sororities and their pledges. degree was conferred magna cum laude, and she was Five Beta Thetas are on the Marietta cheer-leading squad elected to Phi Beta Kappa. Barbara Lee Glenn was grad­ - Joanne Davis, June Shimer, Barbara Widdows, Margot uated with honors in Spanish. Nana Dean was the re­ Bryden, and Ann Creighton. cipient of a religion prize, awarded at Class Day. During the summer a new paint job was done on the June 16, we entertained Nu alumnre at tea. We are kitchen and halls. A few members have painted their own proud of our new china which was used for the first rooms, too . time on that occasion. Audrey Bauerband Phyllis Mortimer has been chosen president of Forest West. senior women's dormitory. She is also a member of MARYlAND-Beta Zeta Panhellenic Council. During homecoming weekend, Nu The rushing parties of Beta Zeta were highly com­ celebrated its fortieth anniversary at a breakfast at the mended by the rushees. The title of the first party was Middlebury Inn. On the program were four speakers, each '"Comic Capers." Probably the most beautiful rush party representing ten years of Nu's activities on the Middle­ was the "Plantation Party." At the close of this party bury campus. We enjoyed having many alumn"' present. Our first visitor this fall was Barbara Browning Hunter, the rushees were presented with old fashioned bouquets. N, president of Province II, who spent several days with Another Beta Zeta is a member of the University of Maryland Band: Joyce Ames, who also supplied the us. Later, our guest list was increased by brief visits from piano background mus1c for several of the rush parties. Ada Fankhauser, '49, Ruth Durland, '49, Elizabeth Van Other Sigma Kappas in the band are Judy Martin and Splinter, '49, and Ildara Elmore, '50. Lois Harvey, majorettes. Lois Robinson is secretary of the sophomore class. Bar­ Beta Zeta has welcomed transfer Barbara Briggs. bara Brailey is again a member of the college choir. A We held an indoor picnic at the chapter house with the newcomer to the choir this fall is Elizabeth Darling. Kappa Alpha Thetas. A huge lire in the indoor fireplace Martha Ladd is vice-president of W.A.A. added to the "outdoor" atmosphere which prevailed. Barbara Brailey Lois Harvey MONTANA STATE-Alpha Nu MASSACHUSETTS-Beta Eta Val Angle, Bettyann H alleck, and Marilyn Prideaux Our first honor of the year was received when we took are pledged to Phi Chi Theta. Gen Welch was one of first prize in the annual float parade. nine swimmers to receive the "Aquamaid" first year Aiding us in rushing was Margaret Hazlett Taggart, Na· award. Peggy Griffith is Pan Hellenic treasurer this year. tiona! Treasurer, who spent Sept. 19 and 20 with us. Mu Phi. a local honorary for woman music majors The following week we sponsored a Crazy Capers party, founded last fall quarter at MSU by Betty Lou Berland and a coffee hour. Pledging of four upperclass girls took and three others, has initiated Genevieve Welch and Jane place Sept. 28. Valentine. Jane is also a new Alpha Lambda Delta. With pledging out of the way, we gave a tea for the Alpha Nu has three Spurs this year: Helen M. Lambros,

38 SIGMA KAPPA TRIANGLE president, as a guest during rush week . We feel that her presence contributed to our successful rush period. Pledges chosen for the freshman Pepster group were Mary J ane Christiansen, Joa nn Cunningham, Ruth Ellen· wood, Marjorie Lehmkuhl, Janet Wecker, and Marilyn Jackson. Not only did Alpha Kappas reap honors in the athletic fields, but the Nebraska University Theater awarded the coveted Masquer service award to Ruth Ann Richmond an:! the Purple Masque award to Mary Sigler. Norma Erickson was named a member of Masquers. On the summerstock theater stage appeared Christine Phillips, also a Masquer. Pat Wiedeman

OHIO-Beta Upsilon This fall two changes have been made in our house. The front bedroom in the basement was redecorated, and a three room apartment \vas opened over the garage. Katharine Tener Lowry, National President, was here during rushing. Our main rushing party had the theme of "Heaven and Hell." The living room was heaven with several members dressed as angels, and the chapter room. hell, with several members dressed as devils. A skit was presented, and refreshments were punch, angel food cake, and devil's food cake. We also had a pirate rushing party, which included a scavenger hunt for certain items in the house, such as a picture of a queen, homecoming float trophy, etc. Oct. 16, Beta Upsilon honored their new housemother, Miss Mary Louise Welsch, BT, with a tea. Miss Welsch completed her master's degree in psychology at Ohio uni­ versity at the end of the ·5 1 summer session. President of Ohio university, John C. Baker, faculty members, fra­ Norma E12gle, ·AK, TaSJel!, Coed Counselor, ternity, sorority. and dormitory presidents and house­ YWCA at the University of Nebraska. mothers, were among the guests. A group of college members are working at the Athen; children's home, washing windows and doing odd jobs Martha Mannen, and Jane Valentine. Last year's president as a local philanthropy project. of the women's "M" club, Marjorie Anderson, has been Frances McCoppin was chosen one of the three fina lists succeeded by another Alpha Nu, Reba Turnquist. New by the football team for H omecoming Queen. "M" club members include Colleen Fulton and Gen The annual party for college members given by the Welch, while "M" club pins for six or more athletic pledges was a wiener roast in the back yard followed by participation credits went to Joan Arnold and Peg a record party in the house. Griffith. We also retained the bowling crown, and took Mrs. E. J . Taylor, chapter adv isor, presented us with a cup for softball championship. two bamboo trees, two planters, and a silver sugar shell. Alpha Nus were proud to have the 1951 Region XVI Two local fraternities on campus have become national. Conference held at the Florence hotel in Missoula, Mont., Sigma Omicron Nu went Sigma Nu, and Beta Sigma last spring, went Alpha Kappa Lambda. Tri Gam, local fraternity, Roxana Warren has purchased a new house-one of the nicest looking ones on campus. NEBRASKA-Alpha Kappa Melissa Alden Alpha Kappas returned this fall to a newly decorated house. The three living rooms on the mainfloor were com­ OMAHA-Beta Omega pletely redone. Two paintings, one by Kay King Johnson, The following organizations number among the activi­ the other by Charlotte Kizer, served as color themes for ties in which Beta Omegas too k part-home economics two of the rooms. The girls were so enthusiastic over the club, University Players, W AA, bowling league, the Gate­ new paint that they continued the job themselves, and way staff, the Tomahawk staff, Alpha Lambda Delta completely painted and redecorated their own study rooms. (freshman girl's honorary), Corinthians (upperclass scho­ One of our most successful rush parties was an evening lastic honorary), marching and concert band, chorus, and party, "the French party." The cabaret atmosphere was completed with a chorus line, blues singer, and tenor orchestra. Nancy Spring, Beta Omega past-president, is president (deep alto variety). Eighteen pledges came to our prefer· of Feathers girls' pep organization. Bonnie Kundel is ence brunch. Alpha Kappa is impressed by the wonderful president of Home Economics club and historian of initiative of these new sisters as displayed at our annual University Players. She is past-president of Alpha Lambda pledge-active slumber party. Delta. Pat Johannsen is secretary of Home Ec club. Ivy Day saw Pat Wiedman tapped for Mortar Board Clarine Lane has been awarded the Colonial· D ames and the Alpha Kappa songsters receive fifth place in the scholarship for the year. The scholarship, S 150, goes to Ivy D ay sing. Shirley Murphy, Daily Nebraskan news· editor, was tapped for Ga=a Alpha Chi, advertising a sociology major. honorary. Shirley edited our rush booklet which was highly successful. Betty Hearn and Norma Engle are mem­ OREGON-Alpha Phi bers of Tassels, women's pep organization. Jean Davis was chosen for Alpha Lambda D elta, freshman women's Alpha Phi completed a successful rush period with a honorary, and also for YWCA cabinet. Others on YWCA breakfast welcoming the eighteen new pledges. cabinet are Barbara Bredthauer and Fay Graham. Alpha Phi was paired with Phi Kappa Psi for the Alpha Kappas had Ruth Rysdon Miller, Province X children's Halloween party. Our JOJnt party was held

WINTER 1951 39. RHODE ISLAND STATE-Phi Ruth Benson, Phi president, was tapped for Sachem and elected president of W .S.G.A. Margie Brown, presi­ dent of the H ome Ec. Club, is both vice-president of W.S.G.A. and of the junior class. Barbara Good, vice­ president of W .A.A., was elected secretary of the junior class . Phi took second place in campus scholarship with an average of 1.726. The winning average was 1.790. Pat King obtained the highest average of sorority girls in the sophomore class. Barbara Carlson was crowned Queen of the Aggie Bawl. The house took a new shine when many hands made light work of " clean up day." Ann A . Murphy

SAN DIEGO-Beta Psi Beta Psis were as busy as bees preparing for Home· coming Oct. 20. The theme of the annual event was "Illustrious Alums." Ranking high in priority among campus organizations, Beta Psi sponsored Faye Emerson as our "Illustrious Alum." Late in December came our annual J ingle Bell Ball at the La J olla Beach and Tennis club. Founders' Day was celebrated with a banquet Nov. 5. Several Beta Psi actives, alumnre, and pledges trekked to Los Angeles Oct. 7 to meet Alpha Omicrons. Beta Chis were also at the get-together. Those from San Diego who made the journey included Margaret Wilson, Beverly Anderson, Verna Koskela, Lorie Alessio, LaRue Blakeley, Jeanne Spencer, Susan H ouck, Joan Hicks. Cecilia Cox, Mary Paden, Nancy Dickson, and M aureen Walton. Athalie Wemple JVa12da Maness, Sigma chapter preside12t, and a member of Kirkos at Southern Methodist. Wanda SOUTHERN METHODIST -Sigma is secretary of Mortar Board. Sigmas were honored to have Ruth Ware Greig, Na­ tional Panhellenic delegate, here to help us with rushing. at the Phi Psi house, and 400 children were entertained Our parties included a "Nighty" party, "New Orleans" in the course of the evening. The evening was ended with party, and a formal party the last night of rush. Fifteen a huge all-campus dance. girls were pledged. Members in ·Portland for the Oregon-Washington game We are in our new chapter house this fa il-a two-story attended a brunch at the Aero Club before the game. Georgian home. The college chapter has made donations For Founders' Day Upsilon chapter entertained Alpha to pay for the downstairs carpet. Pictures and complete Phi and Alpha Phi will present a skit. details will appear in the spring TRIANGLE. Gail Savage Socially, the sophomore Sigmas entertained their dates at an informal party at the chapter house. Hamburgers, cokes, and card playing were enjoyed by all. OREGON STATE-Upsilon Arriving back on the Oregon State campus eager for SYRACUSE-Epsilon a busy fall term, Upsilons started by decorating their lounge. A green floral design was used on one wall with Ginie Shoemaker and Betti Hait are members of the a contrasting stripe covering the other three walls. We Onondagan, yearbook, art staff. H elping the officers of also painted several pieces of furniture. each freshman cottage are senior and junior guides. Pat A style show featuring campus-wise clothes was given Taylor and J anie McAlpine are senior guides and Pat is at our second date during rush. Our new housemother. also on the executive board of Campus Chest. Mrs. Marguerite Chapler, added a graceful touch model· Helping in the orientation week activities at Syracuse ing attire for the perfect hostess. this fall were Tish O'Connor, Betti H ait, and Norma Winona Keyes Averill, Province XVI president, visited Miller. during rushing and helped us with many of our prob­ Nancy McClin lems. A class of twenty-one was pledged. Cheri Knox is serving as local Pan Hellenic president this year. Cheri and Gina Johnson are active in Mortar TENNESSEE-Alpha Delta Board. Talons, sophomore women's service honorary~ This year Alpha Deltas came back to a newly decorated claims Virginia Kn·ox and Nancy Morris. Joan Edwards, suite of roOms. The chapter room is quite unusual with the >n Alpha Lambda Delta member, served as a rookess walls painted gold and the woodwork black. Accents in counselor during freshman orientation week. Also assisting the room are in coral. New cocktail benches. drapes, and were Eileen Lehman, Lorna Bryant, Sally Stillwell and chairs were selected by the room manager with the help Gerry McKendree. Gina Johnson has added the presidency of a local interior decorator. of Theta Sigma Phi~ journalism women's fraternity, to her After ·a series of successful rush parties, Alpha Delta long list of activities. pledged twenty-seven girls-eleven of them Knoxville Our fall term formal in honor of the pledges, ann11al girls. Of these four were legacies-Barbara Kiser, J oan Smorgasbord for the faculty, and homecoming were Hamilton, Mary Kate Stanberry, and Karrene Payne. pleasant fall events. Oct. 10 the chapter gave, in conjunction with the Evelyn Engelen Tennessee Delta Delta Delta chapter, the annual pledge

40 SIGMA KAPPA TRIANGLE Mu's twenty-six pledges donned lavender and maroon ribbons at the University of Washington

Alpha Delta pledf(es at University of Tennessee McCrary, j o 117ampler, Mary Frances Bird, Kanene Payne, Barbara Cahorm, Ruby Y amell,

:d row: Charlotte Atcher.y, Elna j ackson, Barbara Easterly, Suzanne McCt·ary, jean Millinf(tOil, Barbara Kiser, Clara 'rix, Lillian Bevins, Rachel Perkins, Mary fane Wampler._ I row: Mary Kate Stanberry, Patsy Payne, Virf(inia Harper, Betty Carr, Jere Griffin, Sallie Howe, Jan Thomas, June Cottr. Sewell, Glenda Rof(ers, joan Hamilton. dance for the two pledge classes. The theme of the dance, senior with the highest scholarship average was presented which was given in the Alumni Memorial auditorium, the scholarship plaque with her name on it. Kathryn Bell was Dreamland, and the pledges were presented through was given a bracelet by the alumn"' for her outstanding a cloud made from angel hair. Early this year the Knox­ work as a pledge. ville alumn"' chapter gave a party for the senior girls "Swing Sing," the annual college sing closed the year and each alumna took a senior ,.s her little sister. The for Beta Lambdas. We are proud of the fine showing we seniors will receive guidance from their big sisters in much made at the sing. We were dressed alike in white dresses the same way that the actives give guidance to the pledges. and sang two numbers. Our novelty number composed by Two of our girls were selected as ROTC sponsors­ Carmae Sorensen, Peggy Crandall, Claire Maughn and Betty Robertson and Bettye Sue Rodgers; and five girls Colleen Packer was rated as one of the best. No a wards have been selected as candidates for the Volunteer Beauty are given at the swing, but all other sororities and fra­ Ball. The beauties are Betty Robertson, Pat Norris, Jo ternities on campus congratulated us on fine singing. It Wampler, Betty Carr, and Kathyrn Mason. was announced that Beta Lambda was second in line for 'Carolyn Melton Peck the scholarship cup. We had received the cup the past two years and lost it by a small margin. A successful summer reunion was held at the home TUFTS-Omicron of Mrs. Mary Glaesar, one of our alumn.,, Ways of Omicron began the college year with fond memories of raising money for our new house were discussed. last year's activities, and enthusiastic plans for the coming A Halloween party was held Oct. 25. A scavenger hunt year. and dunking for apples were on the entertainment agenda. Hoi Lakso, president of the modern dance group, this Ida Merle Nielsen past spring, starred in a dance concert at Tufts. This year she is also Jackson editor of the centennial issue of the school yearbook. WASHINGTON-Mu In the field of sports, Nat Volmer, captain of the Mu has begun a year which promises to be the busiest swimming team, led her group to their first undefeated and best ever. Barbara Goodman did a splendid job as season in the college's history. rushing chairman, with Jan Thompson as her assistant. Last year's queen ·of the junior class, "Fioppie " Hub­ We were happy -to have Winona Keyes Averill, Province bard, has been elected president of Stratton hall, girl's president, with us during rushing. largest dormitory. Another Omicron, " Kappie" Petrash is Mu's twenty-six new pledges were honored Oct. 8 at Phi Epsilon ·Pi 's queen and candidate for the IFC queen . a banquet given by the alumn.,, The pledges also were During the summer Omicrons stayed in the news. July guests ·at a dance given by the actives Nov. 9, at the 15 , " Mike" Glover was cover girl for the Boston Globe's Seattle Tennis club. The chairman of this affair was Sunday magazine section. Petite, cute, and blonde, "Mike" Helen Randolf. posed in shorts and a polo shirt. Homecoming weekend Oct. 26 and 27 was full of Jinx Jenkins, bead cheerleader this year, has been activity for the members of Mu, especially Marilyn chosen as college board representative for Jordan Marsh, Conroy, chairman of the event, and her assistants, Maxine Boston's famous department store celebrating their cen­ Softky and Marcia Landeen. Our representative for Home­ tennial year. coming Queen was Barbara Black. \Xle sponsored a scavenger hunt for the other sororities Mu welcomed heartily Pierrette Goett, French exchange Oct. 15. The girls were divided into groups •of six and student who will live at the chapter house. Do Do, as scouted all over the campus for the required articles. After we call her, is a graduate student majoring in American the hunt, everyone returned to Omicron's rooms where civilization and American literature. She keeps us in· refreshments were served . trigued with her interesting tales of France. The Panhellenic Council sponsored a " Round Robin" A tea ·honoring National Vice-·President Ernestine Dun­ and a tea for the freshmen and transfer students. Peg can Seaman and our new house mother, Mrs. Harry Reinhalter was in charge o'f the tea. Another Panhellenic Miller, was held Nov. 8. Mary Janet Moskeland headed activity, the annual formal in November, had Anne the committee for the tea. Another November event was Whipple as Decorations Chairman. The theme was the Founders' Day banquet Nov. 13. Arabian Nights. Mu is well represented in University activities thi s year Mrs. Flint, newly appointed managing editor of the with Rhonda Barnard, chairman of Associated Students Atlantic Monthly, and wife of Professor Flint of Tufts of the University of Washington secretaries committee; College, addressed the chapter Oct. '22. Invitations to this Barbara Black, chairman of A.S.U.W. conference housing event were extended to all the other sororities on the and A.W.S. vocational committees; Kathy Long, chair­ campus. man of A. W.S. concert publicity committee and secretary Frances Wender of the sophomore class; and Maxine Softky, co-chairman of A.W.S. house announcements committee. UTAH STATE-Beta Lambda J oan Smith Many honors were received by Beta Lambdas last spring quarter. Mary Ann Sullivan was chosen attendant WASHINGTON STATE-Alpha Gamma to Sigma Pi Orchid Queen, and she was also elected Alpha Gamma's twenty-five pledges form the largest secretary of the senior class. women's pledge class on campus. Help from Winona Patsy Scholfield was elected to represent senior women Keyes Averill, Province President, who visited during on the A.W.S. council. Joyce Nielsen became a member rush week, was appreciated. Our float took the first place of Alpha Sigma Nu honorary senior social fraternity. cup from 80 entries in the H omecoming parade in Oc­ W.A.A. members chose Pat Madsen as their new vice­ tober. president. Marion Walthius is a new member of Theta A buffet dinner was held Oct. 4 for alumn"' from both Alpha Phi honorary dramatic fraternity. Alpha Eta Mu Washington and Idaho. honorary music fraternity claims Elaine W. Burgurner as Doris Dulgar, chapter president, is a member of Pi one of its top members. Lambda Theta, women· s education honorary; Bonnie Pratt During annual spring house cleaning we painted our and Eleanor Cooper are members of Phi Chi Theta, living room, dining room and the halls. women 's business honorary; and Marjorie Wagness a Steak and beans were on the menu for the picnic pledges pledge of Mu Sigma Rho, dietetic honorary. gave for the chapter. Actives ate steak and the pledges During the summer a new dining room set, refrigerator, beans. The steak was our reward for high scholarship and entrance hall-stairway rug were purchased. and beans went to the pledges for their low scholarship. Pledges Anita Coleman and Janet Anderson were chosen Senior breakfast honoring all graduating seniors was to fill two of the three drum majorette openings this fall. held at the house May 27 . Peggy Crandall, graduating Beverley Wingard

42 SIGMA KAPPA TRIANGLE for Co§tume R u§h P arty at SyracU§e

The French maids posing hz front of Schiaparelli' s Lending a distinguished air to the "American In are : Marcia Heath, Jane MacAlpine, Jane Harris, Paris" theme are four Epsilon diplomats. Left to Alice Mayo, Jean Branks, Patricia Albee, Barbara right: Jane Cabelus, Charlotte Gillespie, Sue MacDonald. B1·omso, Pat Maahs.

WESTERN MICHIGAN COLLEGE­ Correia. Gamma Beta General chairman of the annual Women's League formal held Nov. 3 was Sheila Nesbitt. Other Ga=a Betas in Ga=a Beta took first prize Sept. 20 for their freshman charge were Irene Kubovich, publicity and Sylvia St. skit at the annual carnival sponsored by the Women's Clair, decorations. League and Men's Union. Lucille Schutmaat and Evelyn Sigma Tau Ga•mma fraternity members were our guests Leopold were co-chairmen of the skit. The award was Oct. 24 at a scavenger hunt. Following selections by our fifteen dollars. Shirley McCloy was co-chairman of the trio. refreshments were served. D onna Sumrill was chair- entire carnival. man. • "Harvest Hop" was the theme of our juke box dance Sheila Nesbitt held in the ballroom Oct. 5. Stephanie Romanowski was general chairman. It was one of the largest attended dances of the semester. WISCONSIN-Psi Pi Kappa Rho, local sorority, was recently installed Psis were happy to have as our guest Province VI presi­ as the Kappa Rho chapter of Alpha Omicron Pi sorority. dent, Helen Gillespie Gellein, who gave us much good Gamma Betas were among the guests at their installation advice throughout formal rush. tea Sept. 21. This year Psis decided to be more sophisticated than Oct. 8 we enjoyed a delightful imaginary trip to Europe usual in our rush party theme: our rushees came to be with our sponsor, Miss Steckelberg, who spent her vaca­ entertained at our "Snork Club," the entertainment con ­ tion in many European countries. sisting 'Of performances by such celebrities as " April Helen Gillespie Gellein, President of Province VI, Stevens," "Beatrice Kay," and a small group of Parisian visited our chapter during the first part of October. actors. During our parties we were aJso serenaded by Joan Mullany was co-chairman of the Homecoming various fraternities, some of which offered something week-end activities. For the Hoedown parade Oct. 19, more than the usual serenades in the form of comedy Ga=a Beta had a float with the slogan, "Bronco Bear skits. In our return serenades we entertained them with Wash" having a washing machine and girl wringing out songs plus a new note of interest-the appearance of the the bears and hanging them on the line. Nancy Anderson well-known celebrity, " Hildegarde," alias Eileen Ham­ was chairman of the float. merly. The annual alumna:: luncheon was held at Chicken Oct. 12 was the date 'Of our annual fall open house. Charlie's on Homecoming Day under the chairmanship The week of Oct. 15 was Greek Week, climaxed by the of Frances Bufe. Vocal selections wer< given by Joyce traditional banquet Oct. 24. Shaffer, Joan Di=ick, and Joyce Lindsey, better known The annual campus Community Chest drive was pro­ as the Sigma Kappa Trio. Short talks were given by Miss moted by our booth for collecting the dollars. Oct. 19 we Steckelberg, Lucille Schutmaat, and one of our alumna::, had a tea honoring our new housemother, Mrs. Grace Barbara W resinski. Shultz. That evening we had also an informal Halloween Three Gamma Betas were candidates for Homecoming jeans party honoring our new pledges. Queen: J oyce Hoffman, Georgiana Lewis, and Barbara Eileen H ammerly

WINTER 1951 43 Salient News of Sigmas - sistant principal of Coventry School in Cleveland Heights, Past President MoYes Into New Home and Ruth Williams McAdon, AE, laboratory technician in Orinda, Calif. at McDonald House. Past National President Anna McCune Harper, A, and Vacationing Clevelanders included Charlotte Cromwell her family have moved to Orinda, Calif.-52 Oakwood Edwards, AM, whose family spent the surumer at their rd. All Sigmas welcome. camp in the Adirondacks, with Olive Walker Benz, AM, At the Bay Area Panhellenic Harvest Luncheon at and children as guests; Dorothy Tener Lowry, e, who Diablo Country Club in October, Mary Freese Prucha, T, was in New York to see her sister off for Europe spent a few was ticket chairman for the East Bay. hours with Edna Payne, fl, in her Westport, Conn., home; Helen Weeks Campbell, AIT, who drove East with her husband via the Adirondacks and the White Mts., to Boston Broadcast spend a week at Christmas Cove, Me. ; Maryes ther Beyer Erdene Gage, <1>, has been doing graduate work at Mink, AIT, whose two weeks touring with her husband Boston University 's Inter Session and Summer Session, took them through New England to Montreal and Quebec and staying with Lillian Perkins, 0, ·in Cambridge, Mass . City; Alfreda Dembsey, AI, who flew to New Orleans in Lillian Perkins, 0, spent a week in Buffalo, N .Y., with June to join Irene Sharp Caufield, AK, and family of Florence Turk O'Brien, AB. Dallas, Texas. In September Alfreda spent several days Doris Perkins Chandler, 0, has a new position with visiting friends at Cape Cod. the new Rehabilitation Clinic, Boston Medical Center in Eastward bound were Ruth Easton Giel, AI, and her Boston. family to visit Lake Placid and the Thousand Islands; Anne Jenkins, 0, is a member of Jordan Marsh Com­ Nancy Horn Aiken, Ar., who vacationed with her family pany's New England College Board which held a back­ at Madison-on-the-Lake, Ohio; Joy Ledin Cunningham, to-college fashion show in September in the Jordan Marsh AE, who with her husband visited in Chicago and Mil­ Fashion Center. The models were members of the board. waukee. Jeanne Roof Gross, AI, and her family spent two weeks at MacTier, Ontario. Josie B. Houchens Retires After Long Ser'Yice at Uni'Yersity of Illinois New Homes for Four Columbus Alumn~ Josie B. Houchens, e. retired from the University of Mrs. Thaddeus Czuba (Joyce Goss, X), who last year Illinois Library Staff, Sept. 1, '51 after serving for many was chaicman of the Pre-School Age Group of AAUW, years as assistant librarian for personnel and associate and her family, have rece ntly moved into their lovely new professor of Library Science. home at 1515 Cardiff rd., which they planned and built Fannie M. Brooks, e. University of Illinois associate practically by themselves. professor of health education emeritus is now with the Mr. and Mrs. Donald Bushman (Betty Carleton, M), Illinois division of the American 1(ancer Society. moved recently to 2638 Claremont, Apt. H, Buckeye Vil­ Prof. and Mrs. J ohn J. Parry (Marion J. Austin, H) lage, where they will remain until he receives his doctorate spent tv•o months in the British Isl es this summer. They in geography sometime in 1952. went especially to attend the Third International Arthurian Mrs. Paul E. Smith (Pat Carlin, BZ) , and her flyer Congress which met Aug. 13-21 at King Alfred's College, husband, are now living at 99 N . Hampton, Apt. D. Winchester, England. Professor •Parry presented a paper Another Beta Xi, Mrs. Clarence Jung (Jean Sparks~. on King Arthur and Early Welsh Poe try. The Parry's also her husband and 2\fz year old son, live at 1112 Mulford. spent some time in Wales and Scotland. Mrs. Louis Fait (Helen Coppess, X), has just returned Jo Anne Armstrong, e '51, is a research assistant in from an extensive trip abroad. and will describe her the Illinois State Geo logical Survey at the Universi ty of travels and show the colored slides that she and her Illinois. husband took, at our Founders' Day meeting in November. Mrs. John L. Candy (Peggy Reichardt, AE), is teach­ Chicago South Side Group Welcomes ing a sewing class at the Columbus YWCA. Sisters of Two Members The Chicago-South Shore-Beverly alumnre chapter now News from Cor'Yallis, O re. boasts two sets of sisters among its members. Elinor Vedel Newcomers to the Corvallis alumnre group include Betty Bagamory, BIT, has recently moved from Chicago's north Greig Pfeiffer (Mrs. J ack) I, living at 3360 Grant st. side to a new south side home. Katherine Keenan Schuetz, Betty's husband is with the Forest Products lab at Oregon B~ . who has been active for three years as secretary and State and she works with the Welfare service at nearby Vice Presi dent of the Philadelphia alumnre chapter, has Albany. recen tly been married and has moved to Chicago. Sisters Additions to the group living at Albany give Lilly of Mrs. Bagamory and Mrs. Schuetz who were already Nordgren Edwards (Mrs. Floyd) T '24, and Edith Bear members of this chapter are D orothy Vedel Reynolds, BIT, Starr (Mrs. Kenton C.) T '36, plenty of company while and Irene Kee nan Basinski, Bll. attending alumna: meetings . Teaching in the high school are Lois Burris, T ' 50, Dorys Crow, T ' 51, and Jeanette Cle'Yeland-ers Clip Around Zimmerman DeShazer (Mrs. Robert) T '50, Secretary to the superintendent is Helen Hulsman, T '51. Newly moved Among the busiest Cleveland Sigmas are Marion Patch to Albany are Ruth Young Cordon (Mrs. R. E.) T '50, Smith, AI, on the Board of the Cleveland Symphony Bonnie Riley Caton (Mrs. H. G . ) T '49, and Lois Porter­ Orchestra; Audrey Lattson MacDonald, AI, studying for field Pressler (Mrs. J. W.) T '36. her master's degree and doing substitute teaching while Lost to the ranks of Corvallis alumnre are Pat Glenn her husband is in foreign service; Ruth Brown, AI, as· Hagood (Mrs. Mel) T '45, Box 188, Ephrata, Wash.;

44 SIGMA KAPPA TRIANGLE Jean Swenson Knights (Mrs. R. P.) AN, E 4904 Com­ Delta Kappa. Gamma, honorary educational society, she merce, Spokane, Wash. ; and Dorothy Hodge McFadden I S kept busy m th at organizati on. Other "extracurricular" (Mrs. G. H.), Rt. 1, Redmond, Ore. activities are the local branch of the AAUW (Board mem ­ Teaching at Newberg, Ore., is Betty Barner, T 'SO; at ber) and the Allen County Cancer Society, of which she Molalla, Ore., Agnes Moll, T '5 1. is the vice-president. Summer brides add to the Corvallis group Norma Lou Eunice Westbrook, AI '49, teaching art in a local grade Kroeger McClenaghan (Mrs. W . A.) and Janet Brande sc hool, is extremely proud of her charges as they have H owland (Mrs. H. M.). been asked to use the newly redecorated Allen County Main Library Children's Room as an exhibition place for Two New Dayton, Ohio, Addresses their outstanding art work. Camilla Cook Quinlan (Mrs. D on, AI) with her hus­ Lucy Osborne, T, had the vacation that many of us band and two children have moved to 610 Elberon ave., dream of but never realize-a th ree -month tour of Europe. Dayton, 0. She jo·ined her sister Mary, T (Mrs. Donald Bryan t of St. Lucille Stuckey Spetn age! (Mrs. Ted, AI '42 ) and Louis ) whose husband, Dr. Bryant, was co mpl eting a family have moved from Chillicothe to 3307 Ken more, semester of research work. Lucy is scheduled to give talk s Dayton, 0. and to show her 250 pictures before several loca l groups, including the Fort Wayne Woman's club, and of course, we Sigma Kappas are looking forward w:th special en­ D enyer Reports MoYes To and From thusiasm to having her give the program for one of o ur Joanne Merrick, I '4'8, has re turned from San Fran­ meetings. cisco to Denver where she has accepted the position of Irma Illingworth Ames, 0, with her husband Edwin head nurse on the Pediatrics \X'ard of Colorado General an d daughter Charlotte will spend the Ch ristmas holi­ hospital. days in Worcester, Mass. Irma is active in the Redeemer Katheryn Riggs, '47, has left Denve r to take a new Lutheran Church, and is president of the Collectors ' club Medical Technology position in Omaha, where she is liv­ and a member of the local Goodwill Auxiliary. ing at 1113 Park ave. Miriam Likens Smith (Mrs. Arthur A.), Z, and her Mr. and Mrs. John Per rigo (Claudia H armonsen '51) husband enjoyed one of the outsta nding vacations of their have moved to Rapid City, S.D., where J ohn is stationed li ves, touring and camping in the West. with the Air Force. Mr. and Mrs. t George Argys (Sally Simpson '53) have Items About Grand Rapids Alumnte moved to 2318 Park Estates dr., Sacramento, Calif. George Mrs. Seth Anderson (Beverly Smith, AT '38), moved is California State Representative for the National Poli o Oct. 1, from Grand Rapids to a new farm home in Foundation. Allegan County, Mich. Address, R.R. 1, Otsego, Mich. Mr. and ·Mrs. Stanley Kern (Frankie Patterson "48 ) are Her husband, Farm Editor of the Grand Rapid! H erald, leaving for Casper, Wyo .. where Stan has been tr ansferred did the extensive remodeling of the house himself. by the Oldsmobile Corporati on. Mrs. Donald G. Halas (Prisci lla Parker, AT '47), re· cently moved from f\.nn Arbor to Grand Rapids, where They're Doing Thinf{s in Des Moines her husband has set up dental practice. Susan Rumbold , AT, is teach·ing thi rd grade at Alger Frances Turman Throckmorton, A, is getting settled school in Grand Rapids. after moving last month to a new home with lots of room for Sigma K appa parties; Fran has offered to be hostess Jane Andros Opens Her Own Candy for our Christmas rush party . Delores Peterson Ruby, AE, and her husband have Shop in Lansing, Mich. moved into a brand new horne. Jane Andros, AT, is going to follow in her fa ther's foo t­ Catharine Christense n, AE, has moved to Buffalo, N.Y. steps in the candy business. She is opening a modern We think the chapter there is lucky to ge t such an en­ chocolate and candy shop on one of Lansi ng's, Mich., thusiastic Sigma Kappa. main streets. Rowena Damon Cory, AE, has moved to Col orado The building is being remodeled now with an extensive Springs to be with her husband who was ca lled back into use of glass paneling and will contain a complete cand y service. kitchen with the lates t equipment and a modern sales Betty Carpenter, AE, has been transferred to Younker"s room. Jane's "father, the late Alex Andros, operated candy Iowa City store, where she will head the decorating and shops in Lansing for years, and they we re favorite drapery departments. rendezvous fo r young people. Norma Hayes Chain, AE, and her husband now are She has re cently returned from New York City where living at 83 Drake T rai ler Court. Bill will be graduated she was associated with Madame Rose Cordes, vice­ from Drake in June in pharmacy. president of the Louis Sherry Candy company, learning Lenore Smith Allen, AZ, is program chairman of the the business of candy making, packaging, shipping, and Des Moines Women's club. She is also ac tive in AAUW re tai ling. She has created numerous candy specialties as as a member of the membership committee and as the well as recipes for ch ocolates which she will feature representative to the D es Moines Civic Council of in her shop. Women. Margaret Pahl Lamond, e, is also active in AAUW and Helen Marie Swinimer, AO, Directs Recreation on the membership committee. in a Berlin SerYice Club D oris Adams , AE, is vice-president of the Des Moines Helen M arie Swinimer, AO '50, is now working and alumnre of Theta Sigma Phi and also is publicity chair­ residing in Berlin, Germ any, where she is serving under man of the Iowa H ome Economics association. the Army in Special Services. H elen is a Recreation Di­ rector for a service club in Berl in for enlisted personnel. Fort Wayne Reports TraYels, Homes, ActiYities Mary Rose Walters Schwichtenberg (Mrs. Norman), AO '49, after honeymoo ning at Coronado, Calif., has con­ Jean McLea n Blance, e. president of Fort Wayne tinued her career as a teacher in the Santa Monica alumnre chapter moved June 2 to her lovely new and School sys tem. newly furnished suburban home, Edgebrook dr., R.R. 6, June Marie Harlan Fee (Mrs. John), AO 'SO, is now Fort Wayne, where she entertained us at our open ing at 205 1 Crary, Altadena, Calif. meeting, in September. Anita Oldham (Mrs. H. J.) , T, soon will be moving into her new home, too. She is teachi ng again this year They Do More Than Sun Tan in Miami at Elmhurst High School, and is active in the loca l and During July and August, Mrs. C. A. Edmunds (Mae state teachers' associations. As the retiring president of H arnden, BIT) conducted a Thursday afternoon Story

WINTER 1951 45 Time at the American Children's Home. She was assisted Patty Marshall Brenner (Mrs. James E., A) entertained this summer at luncheon by Ann Barber, !J, and J oan Erikson, B6. Books were 1n the gardens of Allie Arts, selected from a local library and read, and a story hour Palu Alto, in honor of Peg Bradford from Denver. followed for the younger children. Helen Kunde spent six weeks this summer in New York Important Portland, Me., News c~. . Myrtice Cheney Berry, A '96, arrived at Claremont, Helen Whitten traveled south to Guatemala and EuniCe Calif., Nov. 4, having stopped en route at Williamsburg, Anderson to Mexico. Va., Eureka Springs, Ark., and Clovis, N.M. Elizabeth Peeler has been elected Chairman of the Col­ Barbara Partridge Ferguson, A '41, is President of the lege and Special Libraries Section of the Florida Library Colby Alumnre Association of Western Maine. Association. Emily Vance is the new secretary of the Elsie McCausland Rich, A '20, started a new job this Florida DAR. year as "'House Mother" at Massachusetts State College Elizabeth M. May (Betty Mardock, 9) is having a in Amherst, Mass. Elsie's son, Wallace, was selected as one man water color show in Bradenton, Fla., during one of four Maine boys to attend the Boy Scout World November. Jamboree in Austria this past summer. While he un­ doubtedly had a wonderful trip, Elsie, her daughter, and Orlando Alumna! Rush Backwards! sister, Ina McCausland, A '15, had one too-touring the United States, from Maine to Florida to California and Our final rush party was a great success! Lennie Sar­ Washington and back again via a northerly route. geant, !J , rush chairman, and Helen Carstens, !J, party •In the jewelry store and antique shop of Mrs. Stella chairman, went all out with a "backwards" party. Guests Jones Hill, A '00, and her husband, at Northeast Harbor, (and Sigmas, too) walked in backwards, dressed back­ Me. , is a notable collection of 300 anrique cl ocks, and wards, and wore name tags on their backs. Ice cream what is more, they're all kept running. For any Sigmas was served first followed by baked ham and all the trim­ planning a summer trip in this direction, it would be a mings. An "off to college" theme was also carried out sight worth seeing. in invitations (a train pulling the engine) and in games, Evelyn Whitney, A '15, attended the University of and in favors of luggage name tags. A skit was presented Ma•ine Summer School, taking a course in Lip Reading by actives and the alumnre. Susie Oslum, m:, and Ann and Auditory Training for Hard of H earing Children. She McCary, BT, were two college Sigmas who helped im­ has worked in this field for some time and has just mensely. Kathryn Shaffer Herrman, 0, visiting her mother, started the year off by testing over 3700 students in the Bessie Perdue, 0, also helped . . South Portland public schools. New pledges from whom we hope to hear when they are in town are Shurley Bennett, Orlando, pledged at Florida State University and Diane Raymond, Winter Portland, Ore., Alumna! on the Moye Park, pledged at University of Florida. New Sigma homes in Portland, Ore., are those of Mr. and Mrs. George M. Baldwin (Maurine Gregory, !1, T) 1330 S.W. Hessler dr.; Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Fraser Mary Lou Spring, Wins Scholarship for (Betty Lively, T) 7926 S.W. Thirty-first ave.; Mr. and Infantile Paralysis Study at Duke Mrs. Robert M. Bjodsrup (Helen Murdock, T) 1223 Mary Lou Spring, fl, is all aglow! She is studying N.E. Twenty-seventh; and Mrs. Loren Rutten (Kathleen physical therapy at Duke university with the help of a Hollans), M, now at 2035 S.E. Oak, Apt. 3, •Portland, National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis scholarship. Ore. This takes her through a fifteen month course, con­ Also with new Portland addresses are six Alpha Phi sisting of forty-four hours credit-of intense study. For Sigmas: Betty Green and Velma Harms now at 2081 Mary Lou this is not all new, for she has studied under N.W. Everett; Mr. and Mrs. James Angus, Jr. (Charlotte several scholarships at Florida State university. Allen) 4224 N.E. Seventeenth; Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Austin (Betsy Moffitt) '1849 S.W. Morrison; Lt. Col. and Mrs. Opal Lenigan, AN, Heads League of C. E. Bockman (Margaret Bean) 1735 S.E. Nehalem; Women Voters in Summit, N.J. also Mr. and Mrs. Eldon Foster (Marjorie H ouston) 673 7 S.W. Fifty-fifth ave. Opal Adams Lenigan, AN, has been elected President Other new addresses are those of Mr. and Mrs. Chas. of the League of Women Voters in Summit, N.J. Shoemaker (Alice Lively, A) 725 Marion ave., Palo Violet Hamilton Brooks, A, and her family are now Alto, Calif.; Mrs. Richard Hagey (Vernette Gray, T), helping with the management of THE CADILLAC (a Burns, Ore.; Jean Day!, A, who has moved to Canada; resort hotel) at 27 Webb ave., Ocean Grove, N.J. and Virginia Alley, A, Medford, Ore.; Ann Conley, T, Ivy Cotter Enderwood, A, and her husband, Bruce, have who has a new position as Personnel Mgr. for Sears, Roe· now moved into their new home at 21 Maxwell Court, buck and Co., in Spokane, Wash. Her new address ·is Morristown, N.J. W. 1910 Riverside, Apt. E, Spokane, Wash. Dorothy Bower, II, In London As An Rochester's Report Exchange Teacher This Year Elizabeth Knudsen Barker, E '46, in June visited in For those of you who are plann·ing a trip to London this New York and Princeton, N.J., with husband Trev and year, jot down Dorothy Bower's, II, address-101B son, Trevor, Jr. Hendon Lane, Church End, Finchley, London N3, Eng­ Marjorie Peacock Harper, T '31, visited her parents in land. cjo L. R. Alder. Dorothy's faithful attendance at Chicago in July, with husband. She returned to the Uni­ meetings will be missed, but we know she will receive versity of Illinois, Oct. 6 for her 20th class reunion. full enjoyment from her Fulbright teacher exchange Adeline Perkins, E; Mrs. A. W. Thompson, E; Mrs. award. In a typical Dorothy Bower letter, she tells of her William Gordon, E, and husband and daughter; Mrs. departure from New York in July, with a friend who is A. B. Lemon, AB, and husband, spent a July weekend spending the year in England. Their arrival in London with Mrs. Leonard B. Pierce, E, and husband at their was timed to include a tour of the British Isles by the summer home on Lake Honeoye., N.Y. time school opened. Before returning to the United States Sue Collins MacDonald, E, spent two weeks at "The next year, a trip of the continent is planned. Homestead" at Warm Springs, Va., and "The Green­ · Lady Luck smiled last spring on Mary Sloan Wilbur briar," White Sulphur, Springs, Va. Mrs. MacDonald (Mrs. Blake, II '22) when Mary bought a raffle ticket in spent the re st of the summer at her parents' summer a moment of generosity to help a friend who was selling home " Sunnycrest" on Lake Ontario. an allotment of tickets. Mary drew the lucky one that Mary Jo Pierce May, AI, with her husband and two awarded a prize of a trip to South America! It didn't take children moved into their new home ·in Lima, N.Y., last much convincing for Blake to tag along. April.

46 SIGMA KAPPA TRIANGLE What '51 Beta Epsilons Are Doing News from St. Petersburg, Fla. New positions and jobs for Beta Epsilon alumnae of Rosalie Simpson is teaching Spanish in one of the 1951, lind Elinor Pettiss Jlt Bastrop, La. ; Martha Nicol junior high schools. at Port Arthur, Tex. ; Shelby Meek at Monroe, La. ; a·nd D orothy Adams is active in Little Theatre work this Ann Buatt at Dallas, Tex. year. Ethel Wennerholm has a daughter in the current Sacramento's Salient News "Guys and Dolls. " Jean Millican Goff, A, moved into a new home re· cently at 330 Watt ave. Jean is - teaching Math . in the San Fernando Valley Notes El Camino High School. Louise Bates, 0, is busy making lamp shades and Marjorie Berckhan, AE, Dean o'f Girls and also head braided rugs for her modern Burbank mountain view of the H ome Economics Department at San Juan Union home. H er large living room will easily accommodate our high school, recently attended a Dean of Girls conven­ San Fernando Sigmas. tion in Santa Barbara. Francine Courtwright, :!: , has moved ·into a charming Helen Johnston Dow, AO, continues as a member of the home in Verdugo Woodlands, Glendale. Board of Managers of the California Congress of P. T.A. Ruth Broomfield, AT, had Sigma Kappas and their Her work takes ·her throughout the state sharing in vari­ husbands ·over for the annual fall barbecue dinner in ous meetings between educators and parents. their delightful pergola. Ruth and her husband have Mildred Martin Evenden, 'l', and Janice Parks Chastain, recently returned from a three weeks' trip visiting their AI. are our Panhellenic representatives for 1951-52. families in Kentucky and Mich'igan. Betty Hall King, II, teaching fourth grade at the Free­ H elen and Mary H airgrove, H, last summer enjoyed port Manor School, likes Sacramento and is happy over going back to their old home in Virden, Ill., and to the fact she has all of her daughters together for the first Bloomington to see friends of university days. En route time in years. they stopped at Mesa Verde National Park, Colo ., the Dorothea Gai nes Gallway's ·(Mrs. J. C., A) address famed mining town, Silverton and on their return ttip now is 12 B. Kailu Court, Kailu, Oahu, Territory of stopped at Estes Park, Rocky M ountain National Park, Hawaii. Grand Canyon, Bryce, and Zion Parks. Monterey lJinn Morrissey, A, who fo rmerly taught Eng­ lish in the California Junior High School, was sent to Cone Family Wins Ribbons in California /or .Canada as an exchange teacher. Her mailing address is Goats, Ducks, Racer Pigeons 414 Wiseman Ave., Outremont, Quebec, Canada. Laura Ruth Weber Hill, Ali, went to San Diego Oct. Goats hold the interest of the Marvin Cone family 26 to meet her husband who has been stationed at the (Claire Warren, A) right now. At the Devonshire Naval Base. They returned to Sacramento together as Down's Fair in September, live of their Nubian -breed he was released from the Navy Nov. 1. They have three goats took six ribbons. Candie, a pure bred registered children: Kathryn eight years, Craig three years, and blonde kid, won Junior Champion. Chris six months. Rondy, the twelve year old son made the goats' Enid Veatch Leedy, Ali, has been making her home in knotty pine barn and milk room, also a portable milking Sacramento at 1033 Eleventh ave., since her marriage stand. July 8. Enid who taught lor a number of years in the Clare's other sons are blue ribbon winners, too: Ray­ Alhambra schools was also active in the Pasadena Alum­ mond, eleven years old, exhibited Mallard ducks, and ore group. She belongs to Sacramento Branch of A.A.U.W. Jerry, seventeen, has white King and Blue Racer Pigeons. and she and her husband sponsor a Mariner group. Barbara Houchins Dutton, A, and Betty Thompson Tacoma Alumna! Are Refinishing Rooms Johnson, A, are taking an active part in the Community in Tacoma Girls Club Chest Drive. Betty is also our philanthropy cha•irman for the coming year. Tacoma alumnre are continuing with their local project of refurbishing rooms in the Tacoma Girls Club, a Red Irene Eads Merryweather, 'l', is president of the Featjler agency. Mother's Club, Camellia Assembly 108, Order of Rain­ Dorothy Wilhelmi Atkins, AI', went to Seattle this bow for Girls. fall to give a talk on her experiences during three years Diana Lowrey, A, her husband and very young son are o'f living in India, while her husband Admiral Atkins living at 2601 Roslyn Way. was Naval Attache to the U. S. Embassy, to the Seattle Yvonne Yelland Marshall, A, chairman of the newly alums at the Mu chapter house. Dorothy has been busy organized Clarksburg P.T.A. unit, is also chairman of since her return to Tacoma speaking before most of the the Clarksburg Chapter of the Junior Red Cross. women's club of Tacoma. Olive McGinness H orrell, A, expects to move into a new home in South Land Park Terrace in December. San Francisco Alumna! Acti'l'e in Virginia H arris Cook, M (Mrs. F. W.) has moved Red Cross and Na'l'al Relief to 1400 Watt ave., Sacramento from Portland, Ore. Helen Kirby Rohwer, A, was commentator for a fashion San Francisco alumnae are proud of Marjorie Urich show "Accent on Autumn" which was presented by Job's Yockey, I, for the line work she is doing with the San Daughters, Bethel 74 in the Masonic Temple. Francisco Chapter of the American Red 'Cross. Vice­ Chairman of Staff Aides Marj spends every Tuesday and Jean Boyd Ransdall, A (Mrs. J ames T., III) is teach­ Thursday regularly at her desk. During the Peace Treaty ing at Grant Union High School. Her address is 2728 Conference in September, she was on the special com­ I st. mittee to arrange for ushers for the Conference. Those of Barbara Kirby Nosier, A, is a member of the P.T.A. us who were fortunate to get inside the Opera H ouse for Executive Board at California Junior high school. She is the sessions were delighted to be greeted by her. The also co-chairman of the membership drive at C. K. Yockeys have moved to Mill Valley. McClatchy Senior high school. A new member for Sao Francisco Seniors and " Betty Bowen Tretheway, A, was chairman of our wonderful addition to our group is Susan H ys lop Duncan, Founders' D ay Luncheon held Nov. 10 at the Chuck T, who is active with Naval Relief. Captain Duncan, re­ Wagon, Town and Country Village. Co-chairmen are ti red from the Navy. is working for his Master's in Marjorie LaGrave Goulding, A, and Irene Eads Merry­ Education. weather, 'l'. San Jose News Janice Parks Chastain, AI, is on the Sacramento N a­ tional Panhelleoic Association Council H ospitality Com­ There are new homes for the Lelan Jamison 's (Florence mittee for the coming year. \Vinning, BP), 1732 Alberta ave., San Jose, and for the

WINTER 1951 47 Phoenix with her husband and son, Michael, to 519B J. W. Mercey's (Marge Chappell, BP), 628 Robin dr., S. Eleventh st., Las Vegas, Nev. Santa Clara. Carolyn Plough, BP, former president, is planning a wedding in December, after which they will . go to Topeka Topics Quantico, Va., where he will be _statiOned Wlth t~e Zelma Snydal Beardslee and family have moved to Communications Division of the Mannes. Alert all SK s Denver, Colo., 620 Race st., where her husband, Lt. L. in the area for Mrs. Raymond L. Lyon. Aldrich Beardslee, is commanding officer of the Navy Seabee Base. Southworth Family Shifts from Seattle To Frances Hadley Gray now resides at the Sunnyside Iran with Military Mission Apts., No. 22F, Lawrence, Kan., while husband Bob is on leave of absence from Topeka High to take resident Marie Wicks Southworth and her daughter, Anne, are work for his Doctor's in Education and Fran completes in Iran where Roy, now a Lieutenant Colonel, is on a her work in history. United States Military Mission with the Iranian Army. Barbara Dale Breit is in Norfolk, Neb. Their add,ess is APO 205, cjo Post Master, New York During the summer Jeanette and William Adams, Jr. , City. both worked for masters' degrees at Denver university, Katherine Mitchell Jones visited her family this sum· Jeanette in mathematics and William in business ad· mer. Katherine is in the advertising department of the ministration. This school year she teaches at Crane JuniOr City of Paris in San Francisco. . . . high in Topeka while Bill teaches in the high school. Ethel •Patton Simpson is the newly appomted pnnCJpal Jeanette is ·also teaching bridge. of Hawthorne grade school in Seattle. Mary Durning is girls advisor at Highline high school south of Seattle. Party in Vallejo, Calif. Charlotte Haughland Rosier is music instructor at Ed­ mond Meany junior high school. Vallejo area Sigma Kappas gathered this summer for a luncheon at the Green Valley country club, meeting first at Dotty Anne Richardson's to inspect her house, espe· They Come and Go in Shreveport cially the kitchen which had been pictured in S11met Three former Shreveport Alumnre who have re· magazine. Those present included among the alumna::: turned to Shreveport to live are: Billie Rhea Corley, BE, Mrs. J ames Richardson, T; Mrs. Matthew Loken, AK; from Tulsa, Okla. ; Beezie Soderman Stephens, BE, from Betty J, Berry and Bonnie Palmer, A, and Joan Condon, Killeen, Texas; and LaFaye Auger Keith, BE, from Little BP; among the college Sigmas, Margie Fitts, Audrey Bitt· Rock, Ark. man, Joan Loken, and Barbara Rump, all BP, and Nancy Peggy Sawyer Short, BE, has moved with her husband Menge, A. They are looking forward now to a Christmas and little daughter to 1012 Tate Creek Pike, Lexington, party when other Sigmas may appear, too. Ky. Previous to moving to Kentucky Peggy was Li· brarian at Centenary College, Shreveport, La., and before What's What in Washington, D.C. her marriage was librarian at Shreve Memorial Library, Etta Weaver Richwine, Z, with her husband and three Shreveport, La. children, drove to California and then returned to their Patricia Carlin Smith, BZ, has moved to Columbus, summer home on the Wocomico River in soUthern Mary­ Ohio, with her husband, Lt. Paul E. Smith, who was transferred to the air base at Columbus from Barksdale land. Mabel Brunner Waller, Z, 'has wandered even further Air Base , Shreveport, La. from home, but not on vacation. Fred is head of the Lucy Wainright Colquitt, BE, former teacher at Byrd consulate in Haifa, Israel, and Mabel writes interesting high school, and Marjorie Murchison Stephan, BE, letters about their life there. We hope to persuade her former teacher at Broadmoor junior high school, Shreve­ to write an article for the TRIANGLE in the near futu_re. port, La., have resigned their posittvns to remain at home. Miriam Smith Hickcox, N, has returned from three Peggy Somervell Van Sickler, Z '30, is children's li· brarian for the Bookmobile, District of Columbia Public months' vacation on Lake Menphremagog, Newport, Vt., where she and her three sons, Tommy, \Xloody and Library, David were joined by her husband, Charles A. Hickcox, Blanche Boyce Meyers, H , is Chairman of Membership after he completed his duties at Centenary College as for the National Board of the National League of Associate Professor of Geology. At Lake Menphremagog American Penwomen. Mim met Helen Cady, Sigma Kappa from Astoria, Ore. Another busy member is Marjorie Rhodes, Z, who is National Chairman of the American Indians Committee, National Society of Children of the American Revolution. Syracuse Alumna! Are Civic Minded As State Historian of the National Society of the Daugh­ Civic minded Syracuse Sigma Kappa alumnre capturing ters of 1812, she has just completed writing forty-eight honors this fall include Marian Pentzer Frawley, T '37, yea rs of history for the Society. First Vice-President of the Opti-Mrs. Club; Frances J ones J anet McDowell, Z, ·has been initiated into Phi Deta Farnsworth, AE '28, whose Community 1Chest Division Gamma, national graduate women's fraternity . was again this year one of the first "over the top." Anita McCord Hall, Z '21, has moved to Scarsdale, is co-chairman of the Food and Nutrition Committee for N.Y . . Syracuse and Onondaga County Chapter of the American Helen Jones Cooper, Z '25, received the degree of Red Cross; Mary Aloi Merriman, E '34, (whose husband MSW, June, 1951, from the University of Pennsylvania, is one of five directors of the Central New York Bridge School of Social Work. Association .in the American Contract Bridge League) Joan Scovell Knechtel, Z, is living at 738 Longfellow, director of both the Corinthian Clubs' weekly couples N.\Xl., Washington, D.C. and is back in school at bridge and the duplicate bridge tournament. H er sister, George Washington university to complete work towards Ann Aloi Garofalo, E '33, is in charge of donations for her degree. Joan was married in August, '49, had a son, the Syracuse General Hospital Guild's Annual Silver Tea Allen Mark, born June 4, '50, and lost her husband, Lt. for the benefit of the Guild Bed Fund. Albert J . Knechtel, in the action in Korea in Sept., '50. L. Roberta Cooper Hundredmark, E '40, is now District Irene M. Pistorio, the first member of Zeta chapter, is Manager for Hanover Fine China. one of its busiest members also. As the Organizing Re· We are happy to welcome again Eunice Mills Tillman, gent for the Lt. Thomas Wyatt Wheeler Chapter (in E '40, whose address is 102 Edtim rd ., Apt. 31, Grant honor of her grandfather) of the National Society of Village Apts., Syracuse. Daughters of the Union 1861-1864, she has just been Florence L. Turk O'Brien, AB, our Province President, appointed National Chairman of Amendments of the called upon several alumn::e and visited the chapter house Society. She was also recently elected to membership in jn October. the Society of Ark and Dove, from proof that her Rosem3ry Cousins Treacy, E '4 7, has moved from ancestor was one of the founders of Maryland. Another

48 SIGMA KAPPA TRIANGLE honor was the receipt, from the Secretary of the Interior Graduate work in Nutrition at Macdonald college on a of a certificate for meritorious service-a gold medal anci two-year scholarship. pin together with a Life Pass for all Natio nal Parks. Lois Catterson Blackwood and her husba nd are now residing in Ottawa, and Kristi ne Anderson Larsen News of Our Canadian Alu.mn~ and her husband have bought a new home at Loun Lake . B.C. Dorothy Burland Fraser, Br, and daughter took a trip th1s summer by way of the United States to Ottawa to Seattle Alumn~ Happy Over Seven Legacies visit re lati ves. Wh il e there they renewed acquaintances with Ruth Addison and Svanhuit Johannessen Josie. Ruth, Seattle alumna: are happy that among Mu's twenty-six whose new address is 126 Glenview ave Ottawa East pledges are two daughters and' five sisters. The daughters is with th e Department of Defense Prod~ ~ ti o n. Svanhuit are Jean Langlow, daughter of Helen Grant Langlow, "Tanky," and her husband reside at 261 Laurier ave. , president of Mu 's l:K corporation, and Janet Slauson, East Ottawa. She is a ca reer woman as well as a house daughter of Morda C. Slauson, TRIANGLE correspondent wife. Sti ll practising her profession of law, she is chiefly for Seattle alumn re chapter. interested in Child Welfare work and prison reform. She fi nd s time, too, to write occasional articles for th e Toronto Scattered News Items Sal11ra'ay Night . Lola Albertson Cocke (Mrs. Richard P.) H, is now at Summer in \Winnipeg brought many Sigma Kappas home 532 Bellwood ave., Tarrytown, N.Y. on vacation . Kay Watson MarshaJI , her husband and Prospecti ve new member for Phoenix alumna: chapter young soh, Bruce, arrived from Montrea l. Shirley Ring is Dorothea Coss Ravison (Mrs. Geo., II) E '43, now at returned from the east where she has taken a post­ 4133 Westview dr., Phoenix, Ariz. graduate course, and Margaret j ohns on Dryborough ar­ rived from Sherridon, Manitoba . Irene McConkey Shipley, her husband and family, Beta Phi '51 Graduates Teach have re turned from Ontario and are residing at Stonewall. Shirley Hanson, B '51, is a graduate assistant of _Co ngratulations are in order for Donna Crawfllrd, '51, psychology at Bradley U ., Peoria, 111. wmner of the T. Eaton Co. prize in Home Economics­ Julia Ward, Btl> '5 L, accepted a teaching position in a silver tea service. D onna is in Montreal doing Post An chorage, Alaska.

At the organ, Betty M oody, BN, chairman, sets the Left lo right M.trcia Bradley Schade, BN, Ruth theme for the musical tea. IP'ith Betty are Beta N u' s K oontz Condis, e, Province President, Evelyn fane Mille1· Schweister, D orothy Cowperthwaite Riege/ Ulrich, BN, a11d M ari//a McCia·nathan, Flanagan and Alma Bartelmay Gedge. Mason, BN, fJ ouring.

IGHLIGHT of the Peoria alumme organist at St. Mary's Cathedral and dean of chapter year was the annual Musical the Peoria Chapter of the American Guild H Tea held last March at the Pere of Organists. Mr. Caragher was accorded first Marquette hotel. This tea, the sixth in a place in the Horace Heidt talent show held series, was held for Sigma Kappa philan­ in Peoria. thropies. Earlier teas were given in honor Betty Moody, general chairman, was as­ of the Bradley University library in memory sisted by H arriet Schweirzer, Marcia Brad­ of various faculty members. ley Schade, Clara Rench McCraith, Dorothy Featured on the program were Thomas N . Cowperthwaite Flanagan and Jarie Miller Neal, organist (husband of Mary Doering Schweitzer. All cookies and candies left N eal, BN) ; James Caragher, tenor ; and Mrs. Hom the tea were taken to a local orphan­ Willard Johnson, dramatist. Mr. N eal is age.

WINTER 1951 49 Initiates (·.. ~, :·...... 1 .' .. \ . .. ~ ~~ t: -

BUFFALO-ALPHA BETA Mary Lou Marshall '54, 109 j efferson st., Wellsvi lle, N.Y. Sonia Alice Melius '54, 10 Van Buren st., Albany, N.Y. JoAnn Golding '54. Wilson, N.Y. Katherine Merrill '54, Wollcott, N.Y. j oan Wojciak '54, 106 E. Delaven ave., Buffalo, N.Y. Patricia Palmer '54, 189 H alland rd., Norwich, Conn. Grace Re iter '53, 124 S. Central ave., Elmsford, N .Y. Ellen Queeney '54, 707 Dartmouth rd., Cynwyd, Pa. Karin Roser '54, "Windwood," Glastonbury, Conn. CALIFORNIA AT BERKELEY-LAMBDA j oan Marie Skillicorn '54, 5 Mays ave., Hornell, N.Y. M. Pauline S)monds '53, 409 Delaware ave., Delmar, Eleanor Arturo '54, 1304 W. Eightieth st., Los Angeles, N.Y. CaJ ,f. Jean Carol Vette! '54, 24 Springfield ave., Cranford, N.J. Beverly Bateman '55, 24 The Crescent, Berkeley, Calif. . Carolyn Ch ri stian '53, 2628 Lincoln ave., Alameda, Calif. DENVER- IOTA Julie Geary '55 , 1730 Cornell dr., Alameda, Calif. . Beth Grundell '53, Rou te 2, Box 95, San Lu1 s Ob1spo, Charline Hoffman '54, Denver. Colo. Calif. j oanne Fallstrom '53, Grantsburg, Wis. Audrey Ross, ' 54, 2825 Garber st., Berkeley, Ca li f. . Nancy Wickman '52, 1304 Spruce st., Gndley, Ca l1 f. . Maril yn Williams '55, 3659 Redwood rd., Oakland, Cal 1f. FLORIDA-BETA TAU Mary Lou DeWolfe '52, Crescent Ci ty, Fla. CALIFORNIA AT LOS ANGELES- Mary J ames '54, Dade City, Fla. ALPHA OMICRON Rhoda Janes '53, Everglades Ci ty, Fla. Gwendolyn Mitchell '52, West Palm Beach, Fla. Evelyn Beattie '53, 1810 S. Third st., Alhambra , Calif. . Louise Crabb '53 326 S. Parkwood ave., Pasadena, Calif. Barbara Welsh '54, Sarasota, Fla. Helen Jones '52,'342 S. Craig ave., Pasadena, Calif. Ginger Wham '54, Orlando, Fla. Pat Rector '52, 10339 Chev1ot dr., Los Angeles, Calif. Dorothy Taylor '53, 4425 Cromwell ave., Los Angeles, FLORIDA STATE- OMEGA Calif. Ruthie Garst '53 , Bradenton, Fla. Sally Taylor '53, 4425 Cromwell ave., Los Angeles, Calif. Elaine Geiger '53, 1510 Proctor st., Tallahassee, Fla. Elizabeth Trenor '52, 954 S. Ardmore ave., Los Angeles, Marguerite Hughes '52, 402 S.W. Twelfth st. , Gainesville, Calif. Fla. Anita Wehe '53, 1414 N. Pacific, Glendale, Calif. Nancy Mueller '52, Box 75, Limona, Fla. Jean Sullivan '54, 226 Thirteenth ave., N.E., St. Peters­ CALIFORNIA AT SANTA BARBARA- BETA, CHI burg, Fla. Barbara H arris '53, 202 Collins, Balboa, Ca lif. Mary Sue Walker '52, 637 N . Main st. , Gainesvi lle, Fla . Jean Howson '54, 1626 Albemarle way, Burlingame, Ca lif. Lois Sharpe '53, 208 Tenth st., Huntington Beach, Calif. IDAHO STATE-BETA PHI T·he!ard Willems '54, 5632 Buffalo ave., Van N uys, Calif. Catherine Banks ' 52, 215 W . Buell st., Pocatello. Idaho. Sh irley Knowles '54, 226 S. Johnson ave., Pocatello, CARNEGIE TECH- BETA IOTA Idaho. Norm a Jean Horst '53, 7410 Brighton rd, Pittsburgh 2, Frances Ogawa '53, Eleele, Kauai, H awaii. Pa. Frances Wilson '53, 1116 Second ave., S., Payette, Idaho. Jean A. Reid, 819 Cen tennial ave., Sewickley, Pa. Amelia Hoffman '53, 3065 Merwyn ave., Pittsburgh 4, Pa . ILLINOIS- THETA Joy Alice Hol m '52, 918 N. Kenilworth, Oak Park, III. COLBY-ALPHA Ruth Brindley '54, 16 Broadway, Waterville, Me. ILLINOIS WESLEY AN-ETA Joyce Whitham '54, 44 Windsor rd., Port Chester, N.Y. Marjorie McRoberts '54, 2202 Central Park, Evanston, III. COLORADO A & M7'"BETA KAPPA Sharon Scott '52, 350 S. Spnng ave., La Grange, Ill . Paula Hair '54, Bridgeport, Neb. I NDIANA-TAU Georgia Shapland '52, Fort Collins, Colo. Sa lli e Winslow '54, Wheatridge, Colo. Magdelene Allen '54, 508 Lincoln Park dr., Evansville, Ind. CORNELL-ALPHA ZETA j ea nette Bengert '53, 1009 N. First ave., Evansville, Ind . Norma Bennetts '54, 2505 W . Ewing ave., Mishawaka, Mary Elizabeth Barker '54, 122 Washington st., Hackettts­ Ind. town, N.j . J ane Black '52, 911 Lyons st., H ammond, Ind. Phyllis Jean Bivins '54, 32 Park ave. , Bronxville, N.Y. Karen Breighaupt '54, 308 E. Butler, Olney, Ill. Edythe j oan Buermeyer '54, 113 H enry st., Hasbrouck Margaret Calhoun '54, 3216 Park ave., Indianapolis, Ind. Hts., N.j. Margaret Edmiston '54, 4437 Madison, Cary, Ind. Ellen Butterfield '52, 303 Mimosa dr., D ecatur, Ga. Patricia Eisler '54, Ill E. Water, Greenville, Ohio Nancy Carter '54, 90 Gregory H ill rd., Rochester, N.Y. Barbara Funkey '54, Box 715, Ogden Dunes, Gary, Ind. Marion Coon '54, Martindale, N .Y. Ann Gough '54, 628 Walnut, Mount Vernon, Ind. Joan Dole '54, 46 Woodview ave., Hamburg, N .Y. Mary Catherine Grant '54, 7139 Hahman ave., Hammond, Alace Dutton '53, River st., Middleburgh, N.Y. Ind. J ane Winafred Foster '54, Gouverneur, N.Y. Mary Jane Jones '54, 517 East blvd., Elkhart, Ind. Marilyn Gall '53, 2235 Seneca st., Buffalo 10, N.Y. Mary Alice Patton '54, 1903 Tenth st., Columbus, Ind. Beverly Gavrill '54, 18 3 Spring st., Gloversville, N.Y. Joyce Price '52, 3720 N . Meridian st., Indianapolis. Ind. Margaret j ean Hill '54, 616 Cayuga Hts. rd ., Ithaca, N.Y. Joyce Saunders ' 54, 3425 S. Boats, Marion, Ind. Shirley Ann Howard '54, 64 South rd., Kingston, R.I. Constance Weisman '53, 2818 Queen st., Fort Wayne, Margaret Joyce Hunt '53, 20 Abrams pl., Lynbrook, N.Y. Ind . Roberta Lee Kaufman '54, 125 7 Wiltshire rd , York, Pa. Carol Whitted '54, 641 Etna ave., Huntington, Ind.

50 SIGMA KAPPA TRIANGLE INDIANA STATE TEACHERS-GAMMA GAMMA Alberta Swearingen Brown '54, 441 S. Sixth E•st, .Mis· Evel yn H alas '53, 4235 Wegg st., E. Ch icago, Ind. soul a, Mont. Betty Leachman '54, 3157 N. Sixteenth st., Terre H aute, Beverly York '54, 2108 Hilda, Missoula. Mont. Ind. J anet R. Gnose '54, 72 1 Loc ust, Anaconda, Mont. Pat Long '54, 1801 S. T wenty-ninth st., Terre Haute, Ind. Gladys M. Harris ·53, Polson, Mont. Rolleen Pickard '54, Bl oomingdale, Ind. Sue C. Mann, Glasgow, Mont. Roseann Raben '54, Route 7, Evansvi ll e, In d. t orraine E. Martin '54, 524 Sixth, Helena, Mont. Rose Ann Sausaman '54, 2146 College ave., Terre Haute, Betty L Mullen '54, Hot Springs, Mont. ~ d . . Angelina M. Oberto '54 , Red t odge, Mont. Linda Stark '54, 200 N. Thirty-sixth st .. Terre Haute, Ind. JoAnn Pings '54, Lewistown, Mont. Betty Wicker '54, 1774 N. Lyndhurst dr., Speedway, Ind. Jane R. , Valentine '54, Box 518, Conrad, Mont.

IOWA STATE- ALPHA EPSILON NEBRASKA- AtPHA KAPPA Evelyn Beem '54, Hornick, Iowa Janice Bull, Millard, Neb. Norma Bower ' 52 , Smithland, Iowa tois Jean Olson, Bloomfield, Neb. Phyllis Burnison '54, Marshalltown, Iowa. Gayle Roxberg, tinco ln , Neb. Jeanette H abecker '54, Rockford , Ill. Beverly Taylor, Lincoln, Neb. Hazel Hermanson '52, Story City, Iowa. Betty Kraft '54, Davenport, Iowa. OHIO- BETA UPSJtON Barbara McCandless '52 , Brookfield, !II. Mary Miller '52, Eveleth, Minn. Jo Bethardy '53, 3025 E. ! 25th st., Cleveland, Ohio. Margery ·Plummer '54, Galesburg, !II. II a tee •Elliott '54, Route 3, St. Marys, W.Va. Joan Ri ce '54, Villa Park, Ill. Jane Mcteod '52, Wertz rd ., Wheelerburg, Ohio. Eleanor Sallee '54, Arlington. Va. Olga Milicevic, 46 15 H arrison st., Bell aire, Ohio. Sue Siedl '53, Albert tea, Minn. Cami ll a Peak '54, 18003 Euclid ave., Cleveland, Ohio. Pat Thurmond '5 2, 11 24 W. Seventy-seventh st., Kansas Maralynn Purdy '54, 354 W. South st., Jackso n, Ohio. City, Mo. Pat Secres t '54, 51 1 W . Sixth st. , Manchester, Ohio. Johanna Van Bemmel '54, Ames, Iowa . Bettielee Wigner '54, 1703 Wayside rd. , Cleveland 12, Pat Williams '53, Greenville, Mich. Ohio.

MARYtANO-BETA ZETA OREGON- AtPHA PHI Joyce Ames Patri cia Smith Gai l Savage '54, 874 S. Eleventh st., Coos Bay, Ore. Vivian Cherrix Mildred Stewart Myra Wood '54, >OS A ave. , Oswego, Ore. Jea n Fi sher Mary Lou Vernon Nancy Penniman Marcia Wiebe RHODE !StAND STATE-PHI Kathl een Rai ney Mary Lou W ilkins Virginia tee '54, 28 White pkwy., Woonsocket, R.I.

MASSACHUSETTS-BETA ETA SAN DIEGO-BETA PSI Joan L Kennedy '53, 73 Edgemoor rd .. Belmont, Mass. Suza nne Elizabeth Houck, 5192 College ave. , Sa n Diego, Jacq ueline Meserve '53 , 19 Peter st., N orth Andover, Mass. Calif. SYRACUSE-EPSitON MIAMI, FLORIDA-BETA DELTA Barbara McDonald, 151 Aca demy pl. , West Hempstead, Joysann Quintel '52, 99 Chestnut st., tiberty, N .Y. . LI., N.Y. Joan Ericsson '52, 2460 S.W. Twenty-seventh terr, Mtami, Patricia Albe, Roscoe, N.Y. Fla. Marcia Heath, 619 W . First st. , Fulton, N .Y. Mary M. Sharpe '53, 1668 S.W . Thirteenth st., Miam i, Joa n H ayes, 18 24 Pri ce st. , Scranton, Pa. Fla. Patricia Maahs, 15 2 Johnson rd., Scarsdale, N.Y. Dolores Krause Clifford '52, 325 W. Seventy-seventh st., Jean Mosley, 160 Saratoga ave., Waterford, N.Y. New York. D ian ne Fettis, Route 3, Neenah, Wis. Kay Ward ' 53 , 3251 S.W. Twenty-fifth st., Miami, Fla. TENNESSEE-ALPHA DHT A MICHIGAN STATE-AtPHA TAU Mary Joyce Temple ' 54, Sevierville, Tenn. Mary Bauman '53, 362 Mou nt Vernon, Grosse Pointe, Patricia Norris '54, Lenior City, Route 1, Tenn . Mich. Josephine Holt '54, 512 Kenyon ave ., Knoxville, Tenn. Nancy Douglass '54, 19308 Snowden, Detroit, Mich. Bernice Mayes ·'5 3, 1623 Wash1ngton ave., Clmton, Tenn. Joan Follett '53, 1203 Miller rd., Kal amazoo, Mich. Maril yn H ess '53, 317 W. Washington, St. t ouis, Mich. Mitzi Morris '54, 70 1 N. Mill, Clio. Mich. TUFTS-OMICRON Ava Audet '54 . 7 Fai rview ave .. Sa lem, Mass . MIDDI.EBURY-NU D oris Busi '53, 19 Winter st., Medford , Mass. Ellen McCormick '53, 17 D ouglas rd ., Belmont, Mass . Diane Helene Schwab '54, 175 E. Seventy-ninth st., New Edwina Petrone '53, 140 Winter st. , Fall Rt ver. Mass. York , N.Y. Marilyn Ross '54, 54 H anscom ave., Readmg, Mass.

MONTANA STATE- AI.PHA NU UTAH STATE-BETA LAMBDA Jewell D . Anderson '54, Wise River, Mont. Patsy Scholfield '52 Spring City, Utah. Helen R. H ayton '54, 264 Sixth st., Kalispell, Mont. Annette Dean '52. E'p hriam. Utah . Neva A . Gnose ''54, Wise River, Mont. Margaret Greaves '54, Ri chfield. Utah. Elayne Grey '54, 350 Central Park West, New York City, Merci Ann Wann ·54, togan, Utah. N.Y. Nedra Gabrielson '54, Loga n, Utah. Helen M. tambros '54, 505 W. Babcock, Bozeman, Mont. Phyllis M. Lane '54, Three Forks, Mont. WASHINGTON STATE-AtPHA GAMMA Martha A. Mannen '54, Brady, Mont. Ruth M. Neptune '54, Glendive, Mont. . . Susan Ford '52, 2335 Maple st., Longview, Wash . Joyce M. Pikkula ' 54, 220 S. Memam, Mtles Ctty, Mont. Martha Snowden '54, Box 94, Ellensburg, W ash. Beverly H . Praetz '54, Chinook, Mont. Joann Steele '53, Route 2, Colbert, \XI'ash. Martha E. Rothie '54, Malta, Mont. Dorothy Wylie '54, Route 5, Wenatchee, Wash.

Are you making your plans to be on the Sigma Kappa Special Train _which will leave Chicago July 3 headed for our Convention at the Huntington, Pasadena, Cal•f.? Better start now.

WINTER 1951 51 Pledges

BOSTON- DELTA Barbara W orl ey '53, 11 72 S. Cockran ave., Los Angeles, Ca li f. M ary Dyshart '54, 8 East st. , Pittsfield, Mass. . Juanalie Bl ac kburn '53, 640 Twenty- ninth st. , M anhattan Gretta Gould ' 54 , 31 Forest rd., Cape El•zabeth, Mame. Beach, Cali f. . Fredrica Stone '55, 129 McAulay pl., Laguna Beach, Ca!Jf. BRADLEY- BETA NU Priscilla Simms '55 , 381 Arlington way, Menlo Park , Calif. Lynette Ackerman '55, 109 Kica poo ter., Peoria, Ill. Louise Bellport '55, 34 1 Twenty-third st., Tracy, CaliL Merle Aschenbrenner '5~. Route 3, Amboy, Ill. Shirley Lebus '55, 616 El Mercado, M onterey Park, Cal1f. Donna Barker '55, Lewiston, Ill. Beverly B. Branch '54, 15 Rubio rd ., Calif. · Ann Boyd '55, Athens, Ill. . Jean Watt '53, 668 Calle Miramar, Redondo Beach , Calif. Grace Dentino '55, 109 W . High Peona, Ill. Monica Green '55, 475 W. Moss, Peoria, Ill. Jea nie Elhen '55, 22 17 Indiana, Peoria , Ill. CARNEGIE TECH-BETA IOTA Carol Frale '55, 9352 Bishop, Ch• cago, Ill. Arden Anderson '54 111 Osborne rd., Rye, N.Y. Betty H arrelson '55, 7801 Ma rshfie ld , Ch1 cago, Ill. M arian R. Hepner '54, 4628 Bayard st., Pittsburgh 13, M ary McAvoy ' 55, 8036 S. Marshfield, Chicago, Ill. Pa. Li lli an Miskow '55, 14 14 Third ave., Arnold, Pa,. Amelia H offman '53, 3065 Merwyn ave., Pittsburg h 4, Dorothy Rosenbaum '55 , 11 113 Prospect rd ., 'Peona, Ill. Pa. Lorene Sims '55, 131 N . Douglas, Hillsboro, Ill. Barbara Myers '53, Route 6, Butler, Pa. Martha Spitz '55, 154 N. Elea nor pl., Peona, Ill. M argaret Sandow, 62 1 Thompson ave. , Clai rton, Pa. Ruth Stieger ' 55, Delavan, Ill. Alysann Bradburn ' 54, !l4 Broadway, Meyersdale, Pa. Ramona Jean Voights '55, Route 1, Streator, Ill. Lois Campsey '54, 241 Birch st. , Claysvdle, Pa. Betty Young '55, 500 Windom, Peoria , Ill. Judy Youngman '55, 1608 Seventh, Peona, Ill. COLORADO A. AND M.- BETA KAPPA CALIFORNIA AT BERKELEY- LAMBDA Janet Asher '54, Broomfield , Colo. Patri cia Breese '55 , Denver, Colo. Mimi Ashe '55, 1586 Le Roy ave., Berkeley, Calif . . Cynthia Draper '54, Denver, Colo. Ann Bakken '54, 506 Orlena ave., Long Beach. Calif. Paula Gourley '54, Denve r, Colo. Carol Ann Cavalli '53, 93 E. Blithedale. Mill Valley , Gwen Miller '54, Sterling, Colo. Calif. Eileen Mulqueen '54, Denver, Colo. Irene Loui se Fitts '55 , I ll Morningsid e ave ., Vallejo, Frankalee Richards '54, Fort Collins, Colo. Calif. Bonnie Sandelin '54, Denve r, Colo. Mary Gaines '55, 2733 Ashby pl. , Berkeley, Calif. June Zabel '54, Pueblo, Colo. Sa ll y Gosnell '53, 234 Avi lia rd ., San Mateo, Calif. Meredith Craw '55 Genevie e Gurr '53, 2828 H orace Mann ct., Bakersfield, Arlene Grisham '54 Calif. Frances Killion '55 Margaret Anne H anna '54, 526 Oak ave., Davis, Calif. Joyce Luebke ' 54 Nancy Ann H arding '53, 17091 E. McFodden, Santa Ana, Mary Jane McClain '54 Ca lif. Ramona Sandborn '55 Joan H aw '55, 1521 Thirty-n inth st., Sacramento, Calif. Donna Jackson '54, 242 Shields st., San Francisco, Calif. Darlene Johnson '55, P.O. Box 433, E. Lennox st. , Yreka, COLORADO STATE- GAMMA ALPHA Calif. Diane Lillis '55, I St. Francis dr., V allejo, Calif. M artha Brown ' 54 , 722 Iowa st. , Golden, Colo. Suzanne Marelia '55, 777 Hillview way, Route 1, Box Arden Couper '54, 4 S. Ogden st. , Denver, Colo. 121, Chico, Ca lif. Pat DiGiacomo ' 54 , Louisville, Colo. JoAnn Morgan ' 55, 101 2 Mission st., Apt. 12 , San Rafael, Janet Fowle r '53, 330 Geneva, Glen Ellyn, Ill. Cali f. Larene Herberger '54, Stratton, Colo. Jacqueline Muller ' 54, 865 Morro st., San Luis Obispo, Carol Hutchinson ' 54, 204 1 W alnut. Boulder. Colo . Ca li f. Rosemarie LaSalle ' 53 , 1137 Front st .. Lou isvi lle. Colo. Juliana Ruth Pettit '53, 33 Woodside way, Ross, Calif. Jacqueline Krier '53, Walsenberg, Colo. Eugeni e Eliza beth Saunders '54, 190 1 Grant st., Berkeley, Dorothy Monk '54, 575 S. Logan, Denver, Colo. Cali f. Frances Weber '54, 5045 Eliot, Denver, Colo. Nadin e Vernon '54 , 857 Swauston dr .. Sacramento, Calif. Donna Bollin '54 Lillian \1ifickman '55. 1304 Spruce st., G ridley , Calif. Karene George '55, 405 Seventh st., Greeley. C"lo. Shere! Lynn Young '55, 1640 Hedd in g st. , San J ose, Calif. Lucille Krings '54, 225 Seventh. Loveland, Colo. Barbara Mckinney '54, 2091 S. Linco ln , D env er, Colo. CALIFORN IA AT LOS ANGELES- ALPHA OMICRON DEN VER- JOTA Margaret Dunn '53. 14534 Kittridge st.. Van Nuys. Ca li f. Jeo nne Franz ' 52 , 11 49 S. Third st., Alhambra, Calif. Peggy Neal, Benton, Ill. Jan ice Fuller '55, 20 11 Parish pl. , Burbank, Calif. Shirley Parks, Arapahoe, W yo. Patricio H ul l ' 53 , 2880 Stoddard. Sa n Bernardino, Calif. !dora Bickel, Kearney, Neb. D oroth y Kellstrom '54, lO ll North Everett, Glendale, Mar il yn Andrews, Denve r, Colo. Calif. Norma Miller, D enver, Colo. Barbara Rea rk '53, 15 H idden Vall ey rd .. L3fayette. Ca li f. Mary Steckel , Denve r, Colo. Morgaret Williams ' 55 , 629 Atlantic ave., Los Angeles, Ca rol Schlotterback, Denver, Colv. Calif. Carol Olsen, Chicago, Ill. Joan Lewis '54, 536 outh Berendo, Los An_geles. Calif. Margie Lutz, Denver, Colo . Anita Anderson, Rapid City, S.D. CALIFORNIA AT SANTA BARBARA- BETA CHI Carolyn Peecher, D enver, Co lo. Ruth Hancock, Denver, Colo. Barbara Bailey '54, 117 Aca cia ave., Reedley, Ca lif. Patricia R. John so n '54. Rapid City. S.D . Maril yn Ril ey '55. 301 Palm ave .. Millbrae, Calif. N orm a Evan s Bernice Keiper '54, 1305 Bel haven rd., San Marino, Ca li f. Marion Allen

52 SIGMA KAPPA TRIANGLE Helen Wheeler Sue Pope '53, 925 W. Seventh st. , Anderson, Ind. Beverly Dee '55, 405 S. Franklin, Denver, Colo. Louanna Reeg '54, 48 S. Seventeenth st., RichmonJ, Ind. Bonnie Fee '55, 18 90 S. Sherman, Denver, Colo. Nancy H elvey '54, Kirby, Mont. INDIANA STATE TEACHERS-GAMMA GAMMA Margaret Vancil '55, Longmont, Colo. Linda Stark Rose Ann SausamJn FLORIDA-BETA TAU Betty Wicker Rose Ann Raben Betty Leichman Pat Long D orothy Adams '53, Boca Grande Fla. Joyce Grissom '54, St. Augustine, 'Fla. IOWA STATE-ALPHA EPSILON Marjorie Kimsey '55 , DeLand Fla . Alice Kirkland '55, J ac ksonviile, Fla. Nancy Daniels '53, Decatur, Mich. Miriam McDonald '55, St. Augustine Fl a. Patsy Gary '54, Cedar Rapids, Iowa . Kelsey Mvtt '55 , Paris, France . ' Barbara J acobson '55, Gilman, Iowa . Myra Pomar '54, Jacksonville, Fla. Barbara Johnson ' 54 , Duluth, Minn. Bobby Smith '55, J acksonville, Fla . Martha Klobe '54, Seventy-six Mo. Phyllis Warne '55, Miami, Fla. Phileann Miceli '55, Rockford', Ill. Al• ce Young '54, Cincinnati, Ohio. Nancy Nannen ·55, Pierson, Iowa. Barbara Palmer '52, Cando, N .D. Judith Pankers '55 , Webster Groves, Mo. FLORIDA STATE- OMEGA Phyllis Rowe '55, Wilmington, Del. Shirley Bennett '55, Orlando, Fla. Marylin Slauf '55, G len Ellyn, Ill. Sh1rl ey Bradshaw '54, Panama City, Fla. Judith Smith '55, Waucoma, Iowa. Beverly Browne '55, Jacksonville, Fla. Carol Sorenson '55, H artington, Neb. Patsy Cooper '55, Coral Gables, Fl a. Bette Stewart '55, Newton, Iowa. Anne Davis '55 , Marianna, Fl a. Joell yn Upham '55, Rockford, Ill. Delores Duguid '55, Jac ksonville, Fla. Jacqueline Warre n '55, Glenwood, Iowa. Gaynell e Gaynor '52, Panama City, Fla. Ann Zitzewitz '54, Evanston, Ill. J oyce Grosser '55, Jacksonville, Fla. Mary H arris '55, Quincy, Fla. KANSAS-XI Janie Helms '55 , Coral Gables, Fla. Lois Clough ' 54, 401 Mam, Seneca Kan . Katherine Kent '55, J ay, Fla. Patricia Hess ling '53, 4200 FJfty .'SJx th st. , Kansas City, Alberta Large '54, Monticell o, Fl a. Mo. Nancy Seavey '55, Jacksonvi lle, Fla. Marilyn House ' 54, 1311 W. River blvd. , Wichita, Kan. Pat Ward ' 55 , Port St. Joe, Fl a. Peggy H oward '53, Idaho Falls, Id aho. Shirley Wilson '55, Panama City, Fla. Carol Ann Kutina '53, 2503 Forest, Great Bend , Kan. Carolyn Neff '54, DO McComas, Wichita, Kan. ILLINOIS- THETA Billie Ri chards '54, Lecompton, Kan . Margaret Thompson '54, 211 S. Emporia, El Dorado, K an. Emily Beggs '55, 304 S. Euclid, Oak Park, Ill. Roberta Underwood '54, 310 Pioneer, Lyons, Kan. Phyllis Birtwell '55, Route 4, Streator, Ill. Merleen Cofel '55 , 8029 S. Essex ave., Chicago, Ill. LOUISVILLE- ALPHA THETA Carol Crisp '55, 908 N. Market, Mari on, Ill. Darlene D os ier '55, R.F.D. 1, Forest Ci ty, Ill. Patricia Webb '53, 108 N. Shawnee ter. , Loui sv ill e, Ky. Joann Drysch '55, 2208 W. ! 21st st., Blue Island, Ill. Elizabeth L. Ash?ury '55, 23 19 Sycamore, Loui sv ill e, Ky. Nancy Firth '55, W. Third st., D elavan, Ill. PatrJCJa Buen•ng_ 55,, 231 Cla remon t, Loui svi ll e, Ky. Anne Gothwaite '55, 720 1 S. Euclid ave. , Chi cago, Ill. Nanette F•tzpatnck 52, 1909 Dorothy ave. , Lou isvi lle, Ky. J anice Johnson '55, 211 T ay lor ave., Glen Ellyn, Ill. Ann Ford '55, 2377 Valley Vista, Loui sville, Ky. Darlene Munts '54, 203 W. Lincoln ave. , Strea tor, Ill. Patricia McDevit '55, 517 .Cannon's Lane, Loui svi lle, Ky. Carol Peterson '55, 530 S. Washington, Paxton, Ill. Eleanor Mcfarland '54, 2227 T albot ave. , Loui svi ll e, Ky .. Cha rlotte Phillips '55, Arthur, Ill. Helen Mohlenkamp '55, 22 00 Napoleon blvd., Lou isville, Janice Phillips '55, Arthur, Ill. Ky. Kay Robin son ' 55, 604 N . New st., Champaign, Ill. Yvonne Neff '54, 4001 N. Western pkwy., Louisville, Ky. Susan Smith '53, lOll Bridge ave. , D avenport, Iowa. Berta Wyant '53, 1214 N . Maple, Benton, Ill. MARIETTA- BETA THETA Baunelle Blume '54, 720 Fourth st. , Marietta, Ohio. ILLINOIS TECH- BETA PI Marilyn Duncan '54, 921 Phillips st. , Marietta, Oh·io. Alice Frasemer '55, 5806 S. Albany, Chicago, Ill. Patricia Fleming '54, 713 Orchard st., Marietta Ohio. Annette Lavine '54, 3936 W. Wilcox, Chicago, Ill. Barbara Fuemer '54, Muskingum dr., Marietta: Oh io . J ane Reames '55, 7351 S. Coles, Chicago, Ill. Treva Lemasters '54, Route 4, Marietta, Ohio. Ann Wiemers '54, 316 Fourth st., Marietta, Ohio. ILLINOIS WESLEYAN-ETA MARYLAND- BETA ZETA Nancy Amsteen '55, Ill Green Bay rd ., Highl and Park, Barbara Andrews, 107 Choptank ave., Cambridge, Md. Ill. Rita Bajkowska, 26 01 E. Chase st., .B altimore, Md. Carolyn Ann Cunningham '55 , 109 N. Oak st., Villa Charlene Bockl et, 101 Denver rd., Silver Spring, Md. · Grove, Ill. Carol Chenowith , Box 355, La ck H aven , Md. N ancy Frey '55, 209 Vale st., Bloo mington, Ill. Jean Cipperly, 231 Southampton dr.. Si lver Spring, Md. Jade Gardner '55, 2163 Chestnut st., H omewood, Ill. Donna Cotton, 24 S. Aberdee n st., Arlington, Va. Jane H allenbeck '55, 12622 Highland ave., Blue Island, Ann Essex, 42 15 Woodbury st., University Park , Md. Ill. Marilyn Fischer, Country Club rd., Sommerville, N.J . Patt Hartnett '55, 1704 Eighteenth st. , Rock Island, Ill. Carol Griffith, 4441 Wyoming st. , Kansas City, Mo. Shirley Hunt '55 , 73 1 Glen Oak st., Peoria , Ill. Martha McKone; 10102 Connecticut ave., Chevy Chase, Lidabell e Macfadon ' 55 , 427 Embarcadero rd ., Palo Alto, Md. Calif. Ann Mye rsh 2906 Arundel rd .. Mt. Rainier. Md. D orothy Morril ' 55, 1227 E. Washington st. , Bloo ming­ Helen Smi t . Route 2, Box 22 4C, Bel Air, Md. ton, Ill. Nancy Tucker, Route 4, Box 933 , Annapolis, Md. Barbara Olson '54, 5618 Gunnison st. , Chicago, Ill. Barbara Wiggins, 2507 Rhode Island ave. N .E., \XIash­ Audrey Sullivan '55, 609 E. Washington st., Blooming­ ington 18, D .C. ton, Ill. Nancy Lee Wilbur '55 , 266 Arnold st., Galesburg, Ill. MASSACHUSETTS-BETA ETA Marion \XfoH '55, 607 E. Washington st. , Bl oomington, Ill. Lois F. Finni ck '54, 127 Cross st., Belmont, Mass. Nancy Carroll '54, El Paso, Ill. Nancy A., J acobson '54 , Sturbridge rd ., Brookfield, Mas s. Nancy Murray '55 , 11'1 E. Indiana ave., Momence, Ill. Kathleen M . Kenea ly '54. 73 Oyer ave. , Whitman, Mass. Pauline E. Turner '54, 640 Prospect st., Methuen , Mass. I INDIANA- TAU MIAMI, FLORlDA-BETA DELTA (Second semester rushing) Lucie Gonzalez ' 53, 27 19 Riverside dr .. Tampa, Fla. Helene McLinden ' 55 , 212 N.E. Seventeent h st. , Miami, Vera Greek '53, Brucevill e, Ind. Fl a.

WINTER 1951 53 Angela Gaud ion · SS, 47S E. Eighteenth, Eugene, Ore. Mary A. Nebergall '53, 42 Plymouth st., Montclair, N .J. Roberta McCulloch ·ss, 409 W. Broadway, Eugene, Ore. Constance Penta 'SS, 1301 Union st., Schenectady, N.Y. 1 Joyce McGee ·ss , 2075 Friendly, Eugene, Ore. Marie Amerise 'SS, 3833 Alhambra ct., Coral Gables, Fa. Marianne Merrick 'S 3, Bellevue, Idaho. Nancy Edgell ·ss, 835 Main st., Wellsburg, W.Va. Nadine Mickelson · SS, !864 Charnelton, Eugene, Ore. Darl Grant ·ss, 1010 Advana ave., Coral Gables, Fla. Billie Pence ·ss, 3829 N .E. Twenty-erghth, Portland, Ore. Helen Graves 'SS, Box 1131, Stuart, Fla. . . . Dorothy Sloan 'SS. 6S•l E. Fourteenth, Eugene, Ore. Jacqueline Keane 'SS, 44S N .E. Nmety-thJCd st., M10mr Jean Piercy 'SS, S69 E. Washrngton, Hrllsboro, Ore. Shores, Fla. June Stone '53, 2010 S.W. Carter Lane, Portland I, Ore. Marilyn Muth 'SS, 861 S Fauntleroy pl., Seattle, Wash. Laura Sturges ·ss, Rt. 1, Srlberton, Ore. . Janeen Nelson ·ss, Cherry Valley, Ill. Barbara Tescher 'SS, !ISS Waverly st. , Palo Alto, Calrf. Gail Quintal 'SS, 99 Chestnut st., Lrberty, N.Y. Jeanne Wilson 'SS, 4 109 N .E. Bryce, Portland, Ore. Martha J. Sessions 'SS. S79S S.W. Srx.treth st., S. Miami, Geraldine Wolfe ·ss, 2116 N.E. Erghteenth, Portland, Fla. h' d M ' . Margaret Trainor '53, 642'l S.W. Forty-t tr st tam!, Ore. Fla. B id · ·11 Carol Van Wie ·ss, 99 W. Genesee st.. a wmsvr e, OREGON STATE-UPSILON Kathryn Kroeger 'SS, Hillsboro, Ore. Ba~b;;~ Watson '53, 62 N.E. Ni~etieth st., Miami Shores, D onna Jean Barner ·ss, McMinnville, Ore. Fla. Catherine May Cottel · SS , Portland, Ore. Joselle Alice Davis 'SS, Union, Ore. MIDDLEBURY-NV Joan Ruth Ellis 'SS, Troutdale, Ore. Leslie Harper 'S4, 42 Mayhew ave., Larchmont, N.Y. Linda Lou Franklin · SS, Klamath Falls, Ore. Patricia Masterson, S2 Pleasant st .•. Mrddlebury, Vt. Helen Joy Gard ·ss , Corvallis, Ore. Irene Mosley, 33-26 ISO pl., Flushmg, N,Y. . Joanne Gruver '54, Woodburn, Ore. Patricia Paullin, 18 C<>lumbia dr., Wrllramsvrlle. N.Y. Marlene Leota Kott ·ss, CorvalliS , Ore. . . Ann M. Tiffany, 116 Lmcoln st., Englewood, N.J. Patricia Claire Larwood · S4, Redwood Crty, Calrf. Barbara Lee McRae 'S4, Prineville, Ore. Beverly joan Marson ·ss, Mollala, Ore. MONTANA STATE- ALPHA NU Barbara Ann Meyer 'SS , Hillsboro, Ore. Bette Boyd 'S4, Misso~la , Mont. Betty Joan Perin ·ss, Corvallis, Ore. Marajean Bndensttne 55 . Mtssoula, Mont. Eleanore Nancy Reid ·ss. Corvallis, Ore. Rosemary Cosens 'S4, Billings, Mont. Sonia Joan Roen 'SS, Tillamook, Ore. Maureen Finstad 'SS, Helena, Mont. Ottillie Ruh 'SS, Corvallis, Ore. Margaret Gillman 'S4, Beach , N .D. Carol Ann Severson 'S4, Corvallis, Ore. Kaye! Martinson ·ss. Whitehall, Mont. Jacquie Stimmel ·ss, Ontario, Ore. Joan Mogan ·ss. Hinsdale, Mont. Joan Stimmel 'S3, Ontario, Ore. Roberta McGregor ·ss, Helena, Mont. Celia Weaver 'SS, Salem, Ore. Kathleen McKenna 'SS, Lewiston , Mont. Billie Rae Noyes ·ss, Billings, Mont. ~ SAN DIEGO-BETA PSI Rosalie Space Grangeville, Idaho 'SS Gayle Sweedland 'SS, Forsyth, Mont. Carol Krebs 4S69 Calavo dr., La Mesa, Calif. Janet Thomson 'SS, ~1ike Horse, Mont. Cecelia Cox', S092 E. Mountain View dr., San Diego IS , Nancv Wilson 'SS, Billings, Mont. Calif. Joan Zimmerman 'S4, Chinook, Mont. Norma Jones, 4S44 Oregon, San Diego .. Calif. . Ann Skinner, 497S College ave., San Drego, Calrf. NEBRASKA- ALPHA KAPPA Verna Koskela, 722S Princeton, La Mesa, Calrf. . Nancy Dickson 6951 Mount Vernon, Lemon Grove, Calrf. N orma Carse , Plainview, Neb. Joan Hicks, 1149 Acheson, San Diego 11 , Calif. Mary Jean Christiansen, Kimball, Neb. Dolores Alessio '54 Mary Lou Cooper, Lincoln, Neb. Joann Cunningham, Linco ln, Neb. SOUTHERN METHODIST-SIGMA Marlene Dumke, Lincoln , Neb. Ruth Ellenwood, Lincoln. Neb. Marge Ann Adickes 'SS, 6410 Belmont, Houston, Texas. Mary Lou Ginn, Council Bluffs, Iowa. Bette Jo Bagley 'SS, 423 Palmer, Dallas, Texas. Jane Grotelueschen. Creston, Neb. Ruth Ann Benton ·ss, 3008 Twenty-fifth st., Lubbock, Marilyn Jackson , Hampton, Neb. Texas. Dorothy Kahm, Lincoln, Neb. Jane Cook 'SS, !90S Old Orchard, Dallas, Texas. Elsie Larsen, Omaha, Neb. Ellen Edwards 's:;, 1911 University blvd., Houston, Texas. Marjorie Lehmkuhl, Minden, Neb. Jan Kirby 'S4, 6030 Morningside, Dallas, Texas. Carol Lundberg, Lincoln, Neb. Joyce Kohler 'SS, 3003 Calumet, Houston, Texas. Kay Seiwert, Kimball, Neb. Nancy Lackey ·ss, 6600 Thackeray, Dallas, Texas. Margaret Stamm, Lincoln, Neb. Elizabeth Ann Lee '54, Wink, Texas. Janet Wecker, Plainview, Neb. Normalin Nowlin ·ss, Highway 7S, North Sherman, Vicki Anne Wh·ite, Lincoln , Neb. Texas. Barbara Templeton, Lincoln, Neb. Ann Overbeck 'SS, 4020 Prescott, Dallas, Texas. Rosemary Thompson 'SS, 721 N. Washington, Magnolia, OHIO-BETA UPSILON Ark. Shirley Umfrees 'SS, 8 1S Columbia, Helena, Ark . Nancy Glackin 'SS, 58 S. Chestnut st., Fredericktown, Helen Sue Wolfe ·ss, 322 S. Rose.mont, Dallas, Texas. Ohio. Charlene Wright ' SS , 441 S. Westmoreland, Dallas, Beverly Barrett 'SS, 304 Clinton st., Wauseon, Ohio. Texas. Mary Lee Bomeli 'SS, 863 Sandusky st., Ashland, Ohio. Barbara Bourne 'SS, 3232 Stanford, Dallas, Texas. Sharon Gamwell 'SS, 33 Thiel st. , Glouster, Ohio. Eleanor Korecko ' SS, 12'11 3 Parkhill ave., Cleveland 20, TENNESSEE-ALPHA DELTA Ohio. Sandra Hube 'SS, 13 2S Cedar View, Springfield, Ohio. Barbara Ki se r ·ss, 709 Oglewood dr., Knoxville, Tenn. Lucille Minner ·ss, S43 S. Main st., Woodstock, Va. Suzanne McCrary 'SS, 20S I Riverside dr., Knoxvill e, Joan Woide ·ss, 1770S Glenshire ave., Cleveland 11, Tenn. Ohio. Patricia McCrary 'SS, 20SI Riverside dr., Knoxville. Tenn. Peg Polley ·ss, R.F.D. 4, Sciotsville, Ohio. Sallie Howe ·ss, 2942 Fountain Park blvd., Knoxville, JoAnne Jarvi ' S4. !54 Dean ave., Conneaut, Ohio. Tenn. Judy Evers ·54. Newark, Ohio. Clara Sue Hendrix ·ss, 362S Ashland ave., Knoxville, Joan Hurley 's s Tenn. Virginia•Harper ' SS, 3230 Ashland ave., Knoxville, Tenn. OREGON-ALPHA PHI j oan Hamilton 'S3, 3317 Orlando st., Knoxville, Tenn. june Cottrell 'SS, !80S Lumbard pl., Knoxville, Tenn. Elinor Barteman 'SS, 3243 N.E. Fifty-first, Portland, Ore. Barbara Easterly ·ss, 4I'IS' H olston dr., Knoxville, Tenn. Donna Butz 'SS, 761 J st., Crescent City, Calif. Jere Griffin 'SS, 30!8 Linden ave., Knoxville, Tenn. Barbara Carlson 'SS, 1260 W. Broadway, Eugene, Ore. Betty Carr 'S3, 3S7 Ellen st., Knoxville, Tenn. j oyce Crawford 'SS , 1731 N.E. Fiftieth, Portland, Ore. Patsy Pa yne 'SS, 2422 E. Fifth ave ., Knoxville, Tenn. Elaine Cutting '54, S927 N. Borthwick, Portland, Ore. Glenda Rogers 'SS, Sl7 Caswell ave., Knoxvi lle, Tenn.

54 SIGMA KAPPA TRIANGLE Betty Sewell '55, 2022 Island Home blvd., Knoxville, Tenn. J aW;s;erwekk '5 5, 8325 Seventeenth. N.W .. Seattle, Lillian Bevins '55, Concord, Tenn. Karrene Pay ne '55, Kaywoods Farms, Route 4, Nashville Tenn. ' WASHINGTON STATE-ALPHA GAMMA Rachel Perkins '55, 1423 Greenland ave. Nashvill e Tenn Janet Anderson '55 , 1315 Chester Bremerton Wash Elna Jackson '55, Pound, Va. ' ' · J anet Berg '55, 3510 N. Stevens, 'Tacoma, w'ash. . Charlotte Atchley '53, 500 Park rd. Sevierville Tenn Janet Busselle ' 55, Lakota Beach, Tacoma, Wash. J an Thomas '55, 2612 Burchwood pl. , Greensb~ro , N.·c. Nora Mae Butterfield '55 , 110 W. Main, Tacoma, Wash. Johnn1e Sue Thompson '53, Copperhill , Tenn. Nola Carm1chael '55, 22 N. Delaware, Wenatchee, Wash. Mary Kate Stansberry '55, Route 3. M aryville. Tenn. An1ta Coleman '55, 415 "K, " H oquiam, Wash. Mary J ane Wampler '55, 609 Clinchfield, Kingsport, Tenn. D?nna Copeland '55, Route 3, Walla Walla, Wash. W~~nan . Joan Wampler '54, 609 Clinchfield, Kingsport, D1~: s h~allam ' 55 , 1124 Washington st. , Wenatchee, Mary Frances Bird '54, 207 Sevier ave. Greenville Tenn Carol Dunning '53, Route I, Wenatchee, Wash. Barbara Cahoon '55, 259 Reuland ave. ' Knoxville 'Tenn · Karen Ecklund ' 55 , 301 Talco tt, Sedro-Woolley, Wash. Jean Ellenburg '55, Greeneville Ten~ ' · Johannah Farmer '55, 1606 E. Seventy-th Jrd, Seattle. Irene Loy '54, 42 00 Candora ave., Kn o~ville Tenn W ash . Jean Millington ·55, 42 Bob White Lane, K ~o xvill~, Tenn. Katie Goggins '55, Route 1, Meade, Wash. RhWda~ hHalverson '55, 3628 Meridian st .. Bellingham. WASHINGTON-MU Odetta H ami lton ' 55, 501 S. Miller Wenatchee Wash. Doris Anderson '55, Route 44 ' Box 148 Renton W ash. Virginia Knox ' 55, 15 58 Tenth st. , 'Bremerton Wash. Patricia Brenner '55, 115 C st. T~mwater ' Wash. LoisLebocken ·~4, 3152 Field st. , Longview, W ash. Joyce Bu'chanan ·55, Winslow, Wash'. ' Mane McGrew 55, 30 E. Thirty, Spokane Wash. Nancy Cope '55, 7822 Meridian, Seattle, Wash. Nina Nelson '55, 5556 Thirty-fifth, N.E., 'seattle, Wash. Jean Glendinning ' 55, 1202 M arshall ave. , Richland, Leslie Tiffany '55, 9 13 E. Euclid ave., Spokane, Wash. Wash. Carol Park ' 55, 2124 Queen Anne ave., Seattle, Wash. Beverly Goodman ·55 , 3219 W . Seventieth, Seattle, Wash. JaW;s:.urcell ' 55 , Route I , Crawford st., Wenatchee. LuCie H augstad '55, 2309 Tenth ave. N., Seattle, Wash. Nancy Hirvas '55, 2324 S.E. bl vd. , Spokane, Wash. Jacquee Read '55, 800 N. "C," Tacoma Wash. Barbara Hubbert '55, 7347 Tenth, N.E., Seattle, Wash. Marilyn Riggs ' 55, Box 2354 , Ketchikan' Alaska. NW!~'h. J oukousky '55, 1539 Seventeenth. N .. Seattle, La Rae T o m~n '55, 37 E. Maple, W all a 'walla, Wash. Janet Yelle 55 , 226 E. 14, Olympia, Wash . Anne Jovic '55, 122 W. Florentia st., Seattle, Wash. D onna Knudson '55, 104 West Twelfth st., Port Angeles, WESTMINSTER-ALPHA SIGMA Wash. Ruth Edwards '54, 125 Audrey dr., Pittsburgh 27 , Pa . Jean Langlow ' 55, 7948 Seward Park ave., Seattle Wash. Mary Jane H ouse ' 54, 402 Arden rd ., Pittsburgh 16, Pa. Anne Marie LarSo n '55, 3001 W. Seventy-fifth' Seattle Wash. ' ' Carol Mattner '54, 229 Laurel ave., Pittsbu rgh 2, Pa. Miriam MacDonald '54, 1304 Carlisle st., Tarentum, Pa. Ellen Laurie '54, 4014 Mr. View dr. Bremerton Wash Beverly Sherwood ' 54, 270 Beverly rd., Pittsburgh 16, Pa. ClaWricehLikeness '55, 8803 Twenty-~ighth , N.W .. Seattle, Lou Wygant '54, Old Plank rd. , New Castle, Pa. as . Joan McCuen '54 Janice McClellan '55, Route 2, Box V98, Bellevue, Wash. Pam M off at '55, North Bend, Wash. Mary Gaw ·54, 636 Beverly rd., Pittsburgh, Pa. Carol Offer '55, 103 S. Ninth, Ellensburg, Wash. W ISCONSIN- PSI Ann Panchenko '55, 1547 Thorndyke ave., Seattle Wash. Donna Rene ' 55, 8050 Mary ave. , Seattle, W ash . ' Maryann Bearder '53, 108 Mary st., Beaver D am, Wis. J anet Slauson ' 55, 4837 Fontanelle st., Seattle. Wash. Martha va n Steenderen '55, Wooded Knoll. Barrington. Gwen Strygen '55, 6721 Thirty-second. N.W., Seattle, Ill. W ash. Joan Franz '5 3, 1010 Seventeenth st., Bloomer, Wis. Ann Trauba '55 , Veterans Hospital, Spokane, Wash. Gayle Anderson '55, 1736 W. 107th st. , Chicago, Ill. Joanne Wahlstrom '55, 18593 Ballinger way, Seattle, Marle.ue Schultz, Madison, Wis. Wash. Marion Voight, Watertown, Wis. ------Have You Married or Moved? Cut this out and mail to the Director of the Central Office, Mrs. Edward Taggart, Room 1217, 129 East Market Building, Indianapolis 4, Ind. Please change my address or name and address on the files as follows:

From Name College Chapter ...... •• Initiation number ...... Address ...... , ......

To Name Address Are you a college or alumna:: officer? ...... Date of sending information ...... Date of marriage, if sending information about marriage ......

WINTER 1951 55 Milestones - Marriages

Marjory Ann Ly ons '51 to William John Thayer '5 1, BOSTON- DELTA Sept. 1, '51. At home ,' 309 N. Madison ave., Wichita, Audrea Burnell '5 1 to Carmine Moschella. At home, 19 Kan. H arrington st., Revere, Mass . . Frances M . Steinhart to Edward B. Gall•gan, Aug. 18, CULVER-STOCKTON- BETA MU '5 1. At home, 18 Bird st. , D orchester, Mass . Audrey M aas to Lawrence W. Finney, J une 23, '5 1. At home, 8043 Eberhart ave., Chicago 19, Ill. BUFFALO- ALPHA BETA D olores Ruth J areki ' 52 to Thomas Roy Hinckley, Sept. DENVER-JOTA 8, . 51. . . . I J h Mary Marie Chamberlem 54 to Mernll Char es o nson, Ellengail Mapes '50 to Donald Beuthel '50 University of Denver, 'l'KE, in April, '51. M~~;~ ~;~ n~~~ -Hill '52 to Richard P. Jewell, July 21, '5 1. Georgia B. Frantz '54 to Kenneth Ramey, USN, June 10 , Beverl y Ann Schleuss '53 to Frederick J aege r, Sept. 22, ' 51. '5 1. M. Joy Ludwick '50 to J oseph H. Kuhn '51, University of Denver, TIKA, June 15, '5 1. CALIFORNIA AT BERKELEY- LAMBDA Betty L. Orcine '50 to Robert Hurel, University o f Wyom­ ing, Acacia, June 17 , "5 1. D orothy J ane Ingals '43 to D onald R. Christian, June Cecilia L. Guseman '50 to D ouglas Timberlake '49, Uni­ versity uf Denver, 1:AE, Aug. 8, '51. G:r'al;{;~~ Goree '48 to William P. Groves '50, Feb. 18 , M ary J ane H aynes '52 to J ohn R. D ornberg '52, Uni­ 'H. . b . ve rsity of Denver, Sept. 8, '51. J ea n T inkler '46 to \XIi lli a mH e ndrick s~ n , Ill,, In Fe. 51. Betty L. Carmichael to Dean Carson, Sept. 23, '50. At Betty H ampton '5 1 to WJ!!J am Kmg 5 1, Ar<~, Oct. 13, home, Simla, Colo. '5 1. Jeannette W oodman '53 to Jim Sheehan, Regis College, Carla Kley ·54 to Roy Larson in Aug. '5 L . April 7, '5 1. Patricia Maltby '52 to Carl Olsen USA 1n Aug. 5 1. . Alberta Piepenberg '53 to William Herfurth USAC Aprd DUKE- ALPHA PSI 6, ' 51. Beverly Skinner '50 to Robert Sherrard '50 t.T, in Aug. Mary Thomas McLeod to C. A. Groves, Jr., Duke '49, . 5 1. fiKA, Sept. 6, '5 1. Address: cjo Creole Petroleum J ane Stebbins '5 1 to Robert Ferguson ' 50, Sept. 30, '5 1. Curp., Lazunillas, Estado Zulia, Venezuela, S.A. Jean Marie Eggert to Lt. j.g. John Knox McConeghy Jr. , U.S.N. At home fo r six months: U.S. Submarine School, FLORIDA STATE- OMEGA New London, Conn. J oyce Browne "52 to D ouglas Connor '52, Florida State, CALIFORNIA AT LOS ANGELES- ALPHA OMICRON ex, June 9. '5 1. Nelle Bussey '5 1 to Charles Ball, Fl orida '50, TIKA , Oct. Sheila H alwyn H ope to Robert George Mahon, Au)!. 9, 27' '5 1. '5'l in Damascus, Syria. At home: D amascus, S1na. Virginia Gillette '5 1 to Walter Granger '5 1, Florida Virginia Reed to Charles Hartgraves Black, Oct. 20 , ' 51. State, AXA, J une 30, '5 1. At home: 858V2 N. El Molino ave., Pas adena 6, Calif. Marj one King toR. Douglas Hazen , M arch 4, '51. Jeann e Kathryn Thompso n '49 to D avid H ayward , C.l.T., Merry Reeves '5 1 to George Eubanks '50, Florida State, Se pt. 14, ·51. At home Apt. 7, 34 1 Molino, Long .l:K, j eanne Ingle '53 to Larry Seamurs '53. Aug. 4, ' 51. At home, 330 Washington st. , H empstead , Doris Stevens ' 52 to Russell \XIoods ' 52. N .Y. Barbara Sheldon ' 50 to Earl Magrath, Jr. , Aug. 18 , ' 51. CORNELL-ALPHA ZETA E v~~ in T orley to J ohn Barnes, Illinois, eK sep h E. Dunbar, ex, June 16, '5 1.

56 SIGMA KAPPA TRIANGLE ILLINOIS TECH- BETA PI Peg~y Preston to Earl Spurrier. AJ 'P. Ursula M. Lier '52 to Milton Cox '51 , Illinois Tech ~T:., Dom Marucci to Robert Martin Sept 22. '51. At home, Sept. I, '51. ' 4304 Parkton, Baltimore 29, Md. · Charlene M. Robinson '51 to Paul W. Hanse n '52 Co- lumbJa, Oct. 13, '51. ' MASSACHUSETTS- BETA ETA H~~e n E. Mcintire to Pvt. John Murphy, USA, in Aug., ILLINOIS WESLEYAN-ETA 1 Charlotte Miller to H. W. McGrath. At home, 2408 MIAMI (FLA.)-BETA DELTA Water st., Apt. C Vetsville, Boulder, Colo. Patricia Anne Ayers to Livingston Barwick Jr July 23, INDIANA- TAU '5 1. Address Box 218, Okeechabee, Fla. ' ., Kather~ne E. Keenan to Charles E. Schuetz, Chicago, Au~. Carolyn Schnaitter '51 to George Willis. 18, 51. At home, 5542 S. Nagle ave. , Chicago, III. Beverly Smith '52 to Stan Lewman '52. Nancy Colbert '52 to Joseph Seibert '5 1. MICHIGAN STATE-ALPHA TAU JanJCe Arnold '51 to William Robertson Jr '5 1 Marie Ann Lauer to Lawrence D . Flory, J~ne i6, '51. Kay Cogswell '5 1 to George Gallop, July 28 , '5 1. At Joan D1d1er to Robert I. Jackson Indiana •I•J'~ Sept 22 home, 220 W . Wilkens, Jackson, Mich . '51. ' ' . ' Nan (;urry '53 to Frederick Timmer, J r. '52, ~>K' l', Aug. 18, 51. At home, 2306 Haslett, East Lansing, Mich. INDIANA STATE TEACHERS COLLEGE­ 1udy Gardener '5 1 to Donald West '5 1, AXA, June 16, •'51. ptahome, 786 Thirty-ninth ave .. N.E .. St. Petersburg, GAMMA GAMMA 1 Marilyn Asbell '53 to Herbert G. Hays '51, Indiana Kay Hanses ' 51 to Edmund Kucik '51, ~·KT, Aug. 11. '51. State Teachers, TKE, Aug. 17, '51. Joan Leonard '51 to Donald Boyd '51, ~·K'l' , June 9, '51. Barbara Carter '52 to Charles Archer ·5 1, Rose Poly­ At home, ·1010 S. Front st., Clarksville, Tenn. technJc lnstJtute, A'l'!1, Sept. 2, '5 1. At home, 430 N. Mary Lee Purdy '49 to Charles Thorne, June 30, '51. At Center, Terre Haute, Ind. home, 180 Emery, Benton Harbor, Mich . LOJs SeJ·f '53 to William Terry, Aug. 4, '51. Garth. 51. Wallace '53 to Richard Schiffer , Indiana ' A ug. 12 ' MIDDLEBURY-NV Elizabeth Ann Scott '51 to Frank G. Lane, Aug. 11 , '51. IOWA STATE-ALPHA EPSILON MONTANA- ALPHA NU Mary Burtch '51 to James Lothringer ' 50, Iowa State (;ollege, ~T~. July 29, ' 51. Margaret Ann Drew '51 to David Harriman '5 1 April Elame Speanng 51 to Donald Kielhorn '5 1, Iowa State, 14 , ' 51. ' AcaCJa, J uly 15, '5 1. Colleen F. Fulton '51 to Marvin M. Wagner, Sept. 23, Evelyn Ward '5 1 to William Lohmann '50, Iowa State '5 1. At home, Polson, Mont. College, ~T~. July 15 , '51. Jane Helen Hannah '52 to Dona ld Edward Delaney, •M8, Betty Jeppesen '5 1 to Richard Titus '52 Iowa State March 18 , '51. College, 8~X. Aug. 5, '51. ' Grace Marie Seibert to Orville R. Cline, March 17, '51. Mary Lou Dean '53 to Richmond Trunkey '52 Iowa Marjorie Ruth Semaru to Donald Earle Akehurst. At State, Aug. 26, '51. ' home, Norwood, N.Y. Joyce Gilbert '52 to Norman Burch '51 Iowa State College, e~x. June 24, '51. ' NEBRASKA-ALPHA KAPPA Manan Ocy '51 to Roger Marsh '51 Iowa State, f~. June 23, '5 1. ' Pauline Harmon ' 51 to Milton H offman '52, Sept. 2, '5 1. Elaine June Krause '50 to Kenneth Tiekotter '52, Sept. Barbara McCandless '52 to Darrell Dorman '5' Iowa State, June 23, '51. -, 6. '5 1. Lola Banghart '5 1 to Lavern Popken '51, Sept 6, '5 1. M argaret Bradd ish '47 to Kenneth Ward '50, Simpson, AXA. Verbajean Miller '53 to John \'(/eaver '52, July 31, '5 1. KANSAS- X! OHIO-BETA UPSILON Shirley Rothberger to Irvin Hodges, Sept. 8, '51. Sue Harper '52 to Gerald Ault '52, TKE, Sept. 2, '5 1. J e~nnette Smgleton to \'(!illiam S. Adams, Jr., June 10, At home, 121 E. State st., Athens, Ohio. 51. Jeanne Oberer to Bruce Galloway, Sept. 7, '5 1.

LOUISIANA TECH-BETA EPSILON OREGON- ALPHA PHI Carolyn Tilbury to Pvt. E. A. Schofield, June 3, '5 1. Thelma Savelich '53 to Jack Jones, <1>~8 . Aug. 5, '5 1. Helen Clotdde McCasland to Robert \'(/ Bains Aug 19 At home, Eugene, Ore. '5 1. . • . • Sally Lewis '5 1 to Richard Burger, f~. Oregon State, Wilmyrth Beville to R. C. Edwards, July 28, '5 1. July 19, '5 1. At home, Prineville, Ore. Sue Turner to James R. Burdine, Aug. 10 , '5 1. Beverly Ure '50 to Robert Morris, AXA, Oregon State, LeJta Gray Baker to Clinton Bridges, June 15 , '51. Aug. 19, '5 1. At home, Bend, Ore. John Anne LewJS to James Hinson Hall, June 9, '51. Linda Stoop '54 to Richard Taylor, Sept. 9, '5 1. At home, El~~a beth Ann Butler to Lt. Edward Lyle Miller, Sept. 2, The Dalles 1 Lois Himmelsbach '51 to M arvin H art ·52, ITKA, Sept. M~rjorie Murchison to Edward M . Stephan, Jr., June 15, I, '51. At home, Eugene, Ore. 51. At home, 1535 Creswell st., Shreveport, La. Mary Enid Veatch '25 to Jay Clark Leed y, Oregon State, Sue Turner to J . Burdine, Aug. 10, '51. K.l:, July 8, '51. At home, '1033 El eve nth ave. , Sacra­ mento, Calif. Linda M. Stoop to Dale C. T ay lor, Sept. 9, '51. At MANITOBA- BETA GAMMA home, 819 E. Fourteenth, The Dalles, Ore. Norma Jukes to Keith Morrison, Sept. 1, '5 1. OREGON STATE-UPSILON MARIETTA-BETA THETA June Barnet ex-'51 to George Earl Troeh, May 25, '51. Judith Backus ' 53 to Harvey Becker '49, AXA, in Aug. '5 1. Barbara Jean Harbison ex-'5 1 to Ray Ramsey Miller, J une Arlene Brau~ '52 to Richard Cis ler '52, ~T . Sept. 4, '51 . 9, ' 51. A~~~. Hart 51 to Arthur Swenson '50, A.l:, March 17, Beverly Washburn ex-'54 to John Nasholm, June 24, '51. Janet Tillman ex-'53 to Donald Wilks, ~T. June 22, '51. Juliette DeRochie to Lou is J. Lewis, Sept. 1, '51. At Ida Fredell '50 to Sheri Melvin Dietz, June 10, '51. home, 989 Boulevard East, Weehawken, N .J. Beverly Withycombe ex- '53 to Hal Cufi'el, .l:X, June 12, '5 1. MARYLAND- BETA ZETA Ann Alee Bell ' 5'1 to James Rogers, .l:~•E , Oct. 13, '5 1. Carolyn Zimmerman '5 1 to Oliver Benjamin larson. B91T , Truth Hienton to Bill Benjamin. July 21, ' 51. Irene Muldowney to Cal Stevens, ~AE . B arbara Barrows ex-'52 to James Desi nger, Oct. 1-f, '5 1.

WINTER 1951 57 Maurine Whaley ex'~4 t,, Gerald Mills, Sept. 23, ·~1. Mary Lou Wells "50 to Fred Shanton '51, Tennessee, Audre Wallace ex-·~3 to Louis Avanzino, Sept. 1~ . ·~ 1. .l:AE, May 31 , '51. N orm a Lou Kroeger '49 to William Andrew McClenaghan, Ruth Drinnen · ~0 to Bob Bacon ' 50. f6. , Aug. 11, ·~1. At home, 14 6 N . Twelfth st., Cor­ vallis, Ore. TUFTS-OMICRON Janet Brandes '53 to H arold M . Howland, Acacia, Aug. 18, ·~1. At home, 343 N. Eighth st., Corv allis, Ore. Barbara Ann Bommer to William Tufts, Jr. , in Aug. "51. Helen Robe rta Winston '42 to John D. Watt, Sept. 10, At home, Jackson Heights, Long Island, N.Y. ·~ 1. Barbara Clark to Dwight S. Allen. At home, Eugene, Ore. UTAH STATE- BETA LAMBDA Vera Mason '48 to Elmer P. Cress. March 22, ·~ 1. At Fae Lew is '51 to Edwin K. Maughan, June 8, ·~1. home, 6 1~ N.E. Floral pl., Portland, Ore. Claire Maughn '5 1 to W. Lynn Richards · ~1. Utah State, ITKA, Sept. 12, ' 51. PURDUE- BETA SIGMA J annett Humpherys '52 to Reed L. McEntire, Sept. 10 , '51. Jean McAllister to Robert H ard ing Elrod, Sept. 7, '5 1. Shannon Fuhriman '50 to Charles H. H olmes, June 1, '51. Rodonna Cammack ·52 to Theodore A. Katseanes, Sept. 10 , '5 1. RHODE ISLAND STATE-PHI La Ree Gulbransen '52 to James T. Krygier '5'1, Utah Harriet A. Keenan '48 to John Morley , Aug. 25, '51. State Agricultural College, '51, .l:4>E, Aug. 5, '5 1. Ruth Ellen Jenison '49 to James E. Leach, June 16, ' 51. Laura Savage '52 to Keith Homer, June 28, '51. Florence Caswel l Keeher ' 52 to Andre L. Lis , M.l.T. , Colleen 'Packer '5 1 to Owen Asplund, June 19, '5 1. Oct. 6. '5 1. Claire Morrell '51 to Elwin Cammack, June 22 , '51. Beverly M. Cruicks hank '53 to Eliot C. Roberts, Rhode Maurine Hanks '5 1 to Jim Steele, June 8, '51. Island State '50, .l:IT, June 30, '5 1. At home , 35 El aine Waterman '5 1 to Robert Burgener, Aug. 16, · ~1. Marvin lane, University Heights, New Brunswick, N .] . WASHINGTON- MU SAN JOSE-BETA RHO Joanne H arrison ' 52 to Robert Evyen ·n. Washington. Doroth y Ellis '50 to Fra nk H orst '50, Dec. 31, '50. At 6.T , June 10, '5'1 . home: 3819 Magnolia, Palo Alto, Calif. Florence Hoar ' 51 to Robert Chanberlain '51, Washing­ Audrey Auerbach '49 to Leland Jordan, June 23, '50. At ton, e:::, June 16, '51. home, 740 San T omas rd., 'Campbell, Ca li f. Catherine Jones '5 3 to Wayne Boynton '52, Washington, Marjori e Luane Chappell '49 to John Will iam Mercey, A.l:, June 23, ·~ l. Mar. 10 , · ~o . At home, 628 Robin dr.. Santa Cl ara, Betty Moore '5'1 to Donald ·Perry, Wash'ngton, .l:X, Aug. Calif. 26, '51. Janice Johnson '49 to Wallace A . Van H oughton, Dec. '50. Virginia Hasler ' 52 to Wayne Maxwell '53, Sept. 2, '51. At home, 50 N. Seventh st. , Apt. B, San Jose, Calif. Colleen Wolfe ·~ 1 to John Sager ·~ 1 . Washington, Z

Birth§

BOSTON- DELTA To Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Friedrich (Jea n Rappold) a daughter, Maq orie Jean, March 14, '5 1. Living at 281 To Mr. and Mrs. Robert St. James (Edwina Smith ' 51) , Hartsdale rd ., Rochester 9, N .Y . a son, Andrew Robert, in Sept., '5'1. To Mr. and Mrs. D av id Preston (Louise McCa rron) a CALIFORNIA AT BERKELEY- LAMBDA son , David Evan, April 14, ' 51. To Mr. and Mrs. George Jnskip (Katherine Wrigley) a BRADLEY-BETA N U daughter, Margaret Ann, Sept. 15, '5'1. To Mr. and Mrs. Bert Hoover (Kay Rider) their fourth To Dr. and Mrs. Cecil Patterson (Magdalene Welcher) child, first son. D aniel McClure. a son, Glenn Ray, Oct. 3, ' 51. To Mr. and Mrs. William McDonald (Jacqueline D ay) a son, D avid Gord on, Jul y 31 , '51. Address: 1520 BUFFALO-ALPHA BETA Sixty-nrst, Des Moines, Iowa. To Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Smith (Marjorie) a son, D ouglas, To Mr. and Mrs. George Gundlock (Elizabeth B. Bauder) April '5 1. a daughter, Mary Meta, Sept. 11, '5'1. To Mr. and Mrs. Norm Pressley (Jo Ann Knudsen '50) To Mr. and M rs. Robert B. Benzon (Helen Peters) a a son, Scott, Oct. 14, ·~1. son, Gregory John, Sept. 16, '5 1. To Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Boli, lll (Ruth Swift) a daugh­ To Mr. and Mrs. Robert G. Glass (Jeanne H agerman ) ter, Joanne Elise, Aug. 13, '5 1. a son, Robert Knox, July 5, "5 1. T o Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lowrey (Diana Wilkinson) a To Mr. and Mrs. John Griffiths (Jean Horton) a son son, Clay Arthur, March 29, '5 1. John Walter, July 22, '5 1. Address: 401 Center st. ' To Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Gallway (Dorothea Gaines) a Martin's Ferry, Ohio. ' daughter, Susan, July '5 1. To Mr. and M rs. John Knight, Jr. (Helen Nauth ) a son, To Mr. and Mrs. W. Prawn (June Ruth Crook '44) a David John, March 4, "5 1. second son, Bradford William, Aug. 7, ' 51.

58 SIGMA KAPPA TRIANGLE To Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Samish (Marie Cummings ILLINOIS TECH- BETA PI '44) a second son, Richard Burke, July 18, '51. To Mr. and Mrs. Donald Paul Castronova (Barbara To Mr. and Mrs. Robert Sed lacek (Dorothy DePaul) a Smirle) a son, Donald Paul, Jr., July 10, '5 1 son, Thomas Edward, Sept. 26 , '51. To Mr. and Mrs. Caesar Munoz-Plaza (Jean Cummings '49) a second son , Vincent, Sept. 19, '51. INDIANA-TAU To Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Pfeifer (Norma Croo k '50) a son, James Craig, June 2, '51. To Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hicks (Amelia Tip!ick) a son, Robert Mark, March 31, ' 51. To Mr. and Mrs. Paul Stewart (Martha Jane Young) a UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA AT LOS ANGELES­ son, Charles Thomas, Sept. 15, '5 1. ALPHA OMICRON To Mr. and Mrs. Claude B. Smith (Jane Martin) a son, To Mr. and Mrs. Ken Templeton (Joanne Paddock) a Rodney Claude, May 7, '51. · daughter, Cynthia Kay, Sept. 19 . '51. To Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Webb (Geraldine Cook) a son, IOWA STATE- ALPHA EPSILON Mark Thomas, April 25, '5 1. To Mr. and Mrs. J ack Oates (Peggy Foor) a son, To Mr. and Mrs. AI Peterson (Edna Mack land) a son, Gregory, March 16, '51. Eric Alan, Feb. 18 , ' 51. To Mr. and Mrs. Jack Spaeth (Margaret Teague '4•1) a To Mr. and Mrs. Robert 0. Hipps (Donna Westlic) a second son. Gordon Russell, at College Point, Long daughter, Margaret Jean, Oct. 1, '51. New address: Island, N.Y. 1337 Croyden rd ., Troy, Ohio.

CALIFORNIA AT SANTA BARBARA-BETA CHI KANSAS- XI To Mr. and Mrs. Paul Starkes (1'auline Janda) a daugh· To Mr. and Mrs. Geo rge Benscheidt (Charlotte Reams) ter, Pamela Leslie, Aug. 28, '5 1. a daughter, Debora Kav, Sept. 4, '5 1. To Mr. and Mrs. Merlin Nelson (Annabelle Blue) a To Mr. and Mrs. Rex Morriss (Margaret H all) a son, daughter. Rex Greelan, Jr. , May 13, '5 1. Address : 960 E. Ninth To Mr. and Mrs. Aubrey A. Bright (Barbara H arrison), st. , Salina , Kan. a daughter, Nancy Eileen. LOUISIANA POLYTECHNIC- BETA EPSILON COLORADO A & M-BETA KAPPA To Mr. and Mrs. E. D. Stephans (Beezie Soderman) a To Mr. and Mrs. Ph1! Neal (Mary Dutton) a daughter. son, Carey Duncan, Sept. 22, '5 1. New address: 865 Julia st. , Shreveport, La. Tocr:;(;, and Mrs. Frank Perri!! (Joyce Anzeck) a son, MAR IETTA-BETA THETA CORNELL- ALPHA ZETA To Mr. and Mrs. Carnick Hamperian (Marjorie Rech) a To Mr. and Mrs. Charles Huntoon (Eugenia Gould) a son, David, in Aug., '5 1. son, Christopher Charles, Oct. 8, ' 51. New address: 650 Williamsburg rd., Birmingham, Mich. To Lt. and Mrs. Cullen 0. Henry (Patricia Shepperd '47) MARYLAND- BETA ZETA a daughter, Barbara Lynn, May 23 , '5 1. To Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Wilkinson , J r. (Joa n Brun· To Mr. and Mrs. Carl H . Search (Jean Boyd '47) a ner) a daughter, Diane Lynn, July 25, '51. Address: son, Stephen Carl , July 7, '51. 4302 Emerson st. , Hyattsville, Md. To Mr. and Mrs. Donald E. Pilcher (lois Walker) a CULVER-STOCKTON- BETA MU fourth ch ild , third daughter, Phyllis June, Aug. 27, '5 1. T o Mr. and Mrs. George R. Coleman (Helene Derby) a To Mr. and Mrs. E. All ison Ford (Betty Ford '43 ) a daughter, Patricia Lynn. Now living at 216 Flora, second daughter, Mary Katheri ne, Sept. 20, '5 1. Peona, Ill. To Mr. and Mrs. N oble F. Conner, Jr. (Margaret Barry) a daughter, Donna Celeste, June 21, '51. DENVER- IOTA T o Capt. and Mrs. Virgil A . Watson (Virginia Knauer) MIAMI (FLA. )-BETA DELTA a daughter, Kathleen Virginia, Sept. 30, '5 1, at Ladd To Mr. and Mrs. Theodore A. Basinski (Irene Keenan) Field Station Hos pital, Fairbanks, Alaska. New ad­ a son, John Alexis, N ov . 13, '50. dress: Capt. W atson M.C. , Medical Det. 0972880, To Mr. and Mrs. Roddis Locke (Marjorie Stein) a daug . 502nd AAA Gun. Bn. , APO 937, cjo PM., Seattle, ter, Nancy Ann, June 9, ' 51. Wash. To Mr. and Mrs. George F. Lawyer (Mary Hartley) a son, Stephen Hartley, April 9, '5 1. Living at 5005 MIAMI (OHIO) - ALPHA IOTA Alamagordo, El Paso, Texas . To Mr. and Mrs. Don Quinlan (Camilla Cook) a daugh· To Mr. and Mrs. Fl oyd Buchanan (Myrlee. Strain '47) a ter, Mary Eileen, April 26, ' 51. daughter, May 29, '51. To Mr. and Mrs. Carl Rud (Ruth Juergens) a son W ay ne Jay, Aug. 31, '5 1. ' DUKE-ALPHA PSI To Mr. and Mrs . Charles Stuart Hinckley (Rita Schnell) T o Mr. and Mrs. Chester Platter (Virginia Arer) a son, Ned R1 chard, July 4, '5 !. daughter, Doro thy Katherine, March 10 , '5 1. MICHIGAN STATE- ALPHA TAU FLORIDA STATE-OMEGA To Mr. and Mrs. J ack Elliott (Verda Hendrickson '47) T o Mr. and Mrs. Robert Cooper (Nancy Spach) a daughter, Janet Ruth, Oct. 7, '5 1. daughter, Karen Kay. T o Mr. and Mrs. John Kloac (Charlotte Barr) '49 a son, William John, June 17, '5 !. T o Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Johnson (Shirley White '44) GEORGE WASHINGTON-ZETA a second daughter, Kristine Anne, N ov. 20, '50 . To Mr. and Mrs. James E. Huddleston (Margaret E. To Mr. and Mrs. Thomas B. Cald we ll (Betty Lou Lynn) a so n, Harry Lynn, Feb. 17 , '51. Storck) a daughter, Janet Sue, Oct. 23 , '50. To Mr. and Mrs. D . P. McCa rthy (Mary Moran) a son, ILLINOIS-THETA Dan.el Patnck, Jr., May 22, '5 1. To Mr. and Mrs. William T onkin (Mary Napier '50) a MONTANA - ALPHA NU son, Lawrence William, July 6, '5'1. To Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Solheid (Addie Zderad) a daugh· To Mr. and Mrs. Thomas E. Lommasson (Eileen Roy ter, Cherye, Oct. 19, '5 1. Living at 200 N .W. Bishop, '49) a son, Aug. 18, ' 51. New address : 2635 N. Portland, Ore. · Monroe, Albuquerque, N .M. To Mr. and Mrs. Edwin M. Farlow (Helen Stanton) a son, Mark Elliott, July 25, '51. NEBRASKA- ALPHA KAPPA To Mr. and M rs. Robert N. Wilford, Jr. (Rosalie Smith) a daughter, Lynne Mane, June 26 , '51. She is the To Mr. and Mrs. Don Morrison (Jacqueline Anderson) granddaughter of Marianne Earhart Wilford, 9. a daughter, Julie Lee .

WINTER 1951 59 To Mr. and MrS. Roger Hosfield (Denise) a son, Robert, neis) a third daughter, Cecelia Rhea, Aug. 25 , '51. Address: 350 Farley st., Mountain View, Ca li f. July 6, '5 1. dd To Mr. and Mrs. L. Vaughn Hunkins (Mary Ma ox UTAH STATE-BETA LAMBDA '49) a daughter, Kathy Ann, Jan . 26, '5 1. To Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Wayman (Josie Barnes '5 1) OHIO-BETA UPSILON a son, Sept. 20, ' 5'1. To Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Gabrielson (Gary Freeman ·5 1) To Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Miller (Marabel Newton '49) twin son and daughter, Aug. 14, ' 51. a son, Robert Allen, Aug. 23, '51. New address: 301 To Mr. and M rs. G len Terry (Dorothy Sanford '48) a Homer st .. Clyde, Ohio. son, July 23, '5 1. To Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph Medevic (Norma Bennett '49) a daughter. To Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Arthur (Carol Shaeffer '51) a WASHINGTON-MU daughter. To Mr. and Mrs. Richard Dwyer (Patty Mahar '52) a OREGON STATE- U PSILON daug hter, Dawn Patricia, in August, '5 1. To Mr. and Mrs. Vern Swanes (Vivien Whitehead '47) T o Mr. and Mrs. Conrad J. Fortuna ( lrja Seppanen) a a so n, John Ross , July 20, '5 1. daughter, Karen Louise, March 12 , '51. To Mr. and Mrs. Leslie W. Kinca id (Juanita Mahon ) WASHINGTON STATE- ALPHA G AMMA a son, Robert Allen, Apr. 25 , '51. To Mr. and Mrs. Robert M . Bj odsrup (Helen Murdock) T o Dr. and Mrs. Richard Dubigk (Ann Fleetwood) a a so n, John Armour, May 4, '51. fourth child, first son, Ri chard Edward, Feb. 6, '5 1. To Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Burkett (Carroll Peterso n '43) To Mr. and Mrs. Frank Pratt (Zora Cairns) a daughter, a son, Christopher George, Aug. 13, '5 1. Linda Cairns. To Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Robbins (Lorraine Folsom) a To Mr. and Mrs. Bill Mayberry (Gloria Richards) a son, Bruce Wayne, Dec. 9, '5 1. daughter, Linda Sue. To Mr. and Mrs. Pete J anin (Joan Toy ) a daughter, To Mr. and Mrs. Ramsey (Guinevere Gossard '48) a Michelle Jean, Sept . 26, '5 1. daughter, Guinevere. To Mr. and Mrs. George A. Gwin, J r. (Eleanor Gray) a daughter, Linda Jean, Aug . 27 , '5 1. She joins a WISCONSIN-PSI sister, Janet Loui se born Feb. 21, ' 50. To Mr. and· Mrs. Ronald H ouck (Lois Reed) a son. To Mr. and Mrs. Don Juds (Audrey Schultz '50) a son, Gerald Houck, July 27, '51. Mark Allan, Sept. 29, ' 51. To Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Beckman (Edna Fickl in '37) a To Mr. and Mrs. William H. Cann (Mildred Allen '35) so n by adoption, Robert Oscar, Sept. 8, '5 1. a so n, Lawrence Edward, Sept. 2 1, '5 1, rounding out To Mr. and Mrs. Earl Hampton (Conni e Bodeker '42) a family of four, Bill, Jr., 8, Sharon, 6, and John a daughter and second child, Margo Lee, April 17 , '5 1. Allen. 18 months. To Mr. and Mrs. Stan le y Veltman (Patty J ackso n '50) a daughter, Vi cki e Lou, July 3, '51. · To Mr. and Mrs. Charles Morris (Jeanie Toy) a daugh­ ter, Margaret Joa n, May 16, ' 51. To Mr. and Mrs. Ra y Dah l (Dorothy Olin) a daughter, NANCY DESPER, A, a Colby college sophomore. was July, '51. drowned in Maine in Apri l, '51. PATRICIA ANN NEWELL STACHER, A, ex-'54 was RANDOLPH-MACON- RHO killed in an automobile accident in Louisiana, Oct. ll , . 51. To Mr. and Mrs. P. 0. Summey (Virgin ia Vonnegut) NORMA TAYLOR HARDING, N, died Nov. 4, '51. at 140 Ri cardo Way, a daughter, Jennifer Louise, Aug. W o rcester, Mass. She had served the Worcester alumna;: 1, '51. chapter as TRIANGLE correspondent until her death. RHODE ISLAND STATE- PHI RUTH HARDISON, A, died July 2, ' 51 , in Sa nta Paula, Cali f. To Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Hull (Jea nn ette Mann '40) a daughter, Marcia L. July 14, '5 1. To Mr. and Mrs. Ralph D. Newell (Harriet McOscar '43) a daughter, Elizabeth Anne, J ul y 17, '5 1. ~p mpatb p if> Ql:x tenbeb to To Mr. and Mrs. Alden Thompso n (Al ice Jewell '41) a son, Robert, July 17, '5 1. Laura Davis Davidson E '1 7 for the death of her husband, 'ro Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Phillips (Joan Sawyer '49 ) a Dr. D onald Robert D avidson, Z'i', AKK, J une 26, '51, daughter, Susan Joan, J uly 8, '51. at H ancock, N .Y. Pauline Lindsay Brede, Z, for the deaths of her mother SAN JOSE-BETA RHO and her husband in June, ' 51. Fe rn Johnson Ri chart, e, for the death of her husband, To Mr. and Mrs. L. B. Jamison (Florence W inning '50) Prof. Frank E. Richart, July 16, '5 1, at Urbana, Ill. a so n, Lelan Co rdey, June 28 , '5 1. Marianne Earhart Wilford, e, fo r the death of her To Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Van Houghton (Janice John­ mother, Sept. I, · 5'1. son '49) a daughter, Gale, Sept. 5, ' 51. The Hardison fami ly (five sisters, cousi ns, a niece-all To M r. and Mrs. J . F. Riley (Helen Westerberg '48) a A) for the death of Ruth H ardison, A. son, Shawn Hamilton, Sept. 22, '5 1. Ruth Norton Donnelly, A, for the death of her brother, To Mr. and Mrs. H arry Bickerton (Nona Browne) a Prof. D aniel S. N o rton, at Charlottesvi lle, Va., in daughter, Gayli e G race, Sept. 29 , '5 1. Oct. , '5 1. Mildred Rathbone Thompson, A, for the death of her SYRACUSE-EPSILON husband , Leland Thompson, in Tracy, Calif., in Aug. '51. To Mr. and Mrs. John Bull (Barbara Sayre '43 ) a daugh­ Dorothy Manchester Conway, M, for the death of her te r, Barbara Louise, Sept. 17, ' 51. mother. To Mr. and Mrs. George F. Norton, J r. (JoAnn Franken­ N oella Gendron Roas, M, for the death of her mother. berg '49) a son, Stephen George, Aug. 19, '51. Helen Ellfeldt Williams, :;:, for the death of her husband. To Mr. and Mrs. William A. MacDonald (Sue Collins Dorothy Bublitz Marol, :;:, on the death of her mother. '44) a son, Douglas William, Feb. 22, ' 51. Isabel King Bullen, AT, fo r the death of her mother. Sept. II , '51. TENNESSEE- ALPHA DELTA Beverly V. •Doty, BX , on the death of her father. Mary Havens on the death of her father, Dona ld H avens, To Mr. and Mrs. Raymond C. Rousseau (Evelyn Bren- 1n Kl amath Falls, J uly, '51.

It's tiOt too early to complete your platiS for allet~dit~g our Natio11al Coti'Yentiotl at the Huntington, Pasadetla, Calif., July 6-11, 1952.

60 SIGMA KAPPA TRIANGLE Sigma Kappa Directory

Founded at Colby College, Maine, Nov. 9, 1874 FOUNDERS FIELD ORGANIZATION Mas. L. D. CARVER, nee Mary Caffrey Low (deceased) PROVINCE !-Eastern Massachusetts, Maine, New ELIZABETH GORHAM HOAG (deceased) Hampshire and Vermont Mas. J , B. PIERCE, nee Ida M. Fuller (deceased) Provinct Pralt Chi and Alpha Psi . Lake City, Phoenix. Alumntr ChapluJ: Knoxville, Louisville, Nashville, PROVINCE XV-California and Nevada. and North Carolina. Province PreJidentJ: North Section-Mrs. John Orn­ doff, 1035 Pine St .. Apt. 606, San Francisco, Ca li f. PROVINCE VIII-Florida, Alabama, Georgia. South Section-Mrs. Edward D ouglas, J r., 1084 Pro~inu PrtJidml: Miss Lynette Patten, 2~02 Dellwood, Leighton ave. , Los Angeles, Calif. Jacksonv1lle, Fla. Slate Alumni¥ Cha1rmrn: 511111 A/Mmnt~ Cb•trmtn: California: Mrs. E. E. Blackie, -49 18th Ave., San Florida: Mrs. Charles Hayes1 Rt. 1, Box 332, Tampa. Geor&ia: Mrs. Elaine Sneoeker, 3134 W. Roxboro Francisco, Calif. Nevada: Rd., N.E., Atlanta, Ga. College ChapttrJ: Lambda, Alpha Omicron, Beta Rho, Alabama: Mrs. William Van Gelder, 370~ Mountain Beta Psi, Beta Ch1 . Park Circle, Birmingham Ala. Alumntr ChapterJ: Bay Cities, Channel Counties, Colllf,l Cht~pltrJ: Omega, Beta Delta, Beta Tau. Long Beach, Los Angeles, Pasadena, Peninsula, Al11mn.- Ch.,PitrJ: Jacksonville, Miami, Orlando, Tal­ Sacramento, San Bernardino and Riverside Valleys, lahassee, Gainesville, St. Petersburg, Tampa, Pen­ San Diego, San Fernando Valley, San Francisco sacola, and Atlanta Club. San Joaquin Valley, West Los Angeles-Brentwool PROVINCE IX-Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Okla- Santa Monica, San Jose. homa, Texas, an.d West Tennessee. · PROVI~CE XVI- Montana, Oregon, Washington. Pro~inct PrtJidenl : Mrs. Lewis F. Scherer, 1817 Sunset Pro~mtt Pre11dent : Mrs. Harry B. Averill, 310 E. Blvd., Houston, Texas. Washington St., Mt. Vernon, Wash. S11111 Al11mntr Cht~irmen : Stale Alumni¥ Chairmen: Mississippi & Western Tennessee: Miss Lois Jones, Montana: Betty Lou Berland, Conrad, Mont. 820 So. Cox St., Memphis, Tenn. Oregon: Mrs. Chris VanLeeuwen, Rt. I, Box 242, Texas: Warren, Ore. Louisiana: Washington: Mrs. John C. Worden, 304 W. 34th, Collegt Cbt~Piew Sigma, Beta Epsilon, Beta Xi. Vancouver, Wash. AJMm,.,. Cht~PitrJ: Dallas, Houston, Ft. Worth, College ChapterJ: Mu, Upsilon, Alpha Gamma Alpha Memphis, Monroe, Oklahoma City. Ruston; Nu, Alpha Phi. ' Shreveport, Tulsa. Alumntr Cht~pltrJ: Butte, Corvallis, Missoula, Olympia, PROVINCE X-lllinois (part) Portland, Seattle, Spokane, Tacoma, Walla Walla Province PreJident: Mrs. Karl Miller 1625 S.W. 12th , Willamette Valley. ' Miami , Fla. ' Sl..tt Alumntr Chairmen: lllinois: Mrs. Sherman Clough, Ravinia Station, Box ALUMNJE CHAPTERS 144, Highland Park. Colleg1 Cht~PitrJ: Theta, Beta Pi. Alumntr Chapter President Al11mn.- Cht~PitrJ: Champaign-Urbana, Hammond, Akron, 0~ Miss Mary White, Mayfl ower Hotel, Joliet, Kankakee, N . lllmois, Chicago-North Shore, Akron, Ohw. North Side, S. Shore Beverly, West Suburban, Ames, Iowa ...... Mrs. R. H. Chapman, 897 Pammel West Towns, Bus. Girls. Ct., Ames, Iowa PROVI_NCE XI-Missouri, Illinois (part) Bay Ci ties, Calif. . . Mrs. E. M. Rohde, 17 16 Vine St., Pro~lnct Pr11idenl: Mrs. William R Cordis Prince· Berkeley, Ca lif. ville, Ill. · ' Bloomington, Ill. • Mrs. Donald Breen, 1211 S. Linden , Sllllt A/11mntr Chairmen: N ormal , Il l. Missouri: Mrs . John B. Alexander, 800 Washington Bloomington, Ind. Miss H azel Shultz, 1024 E. 3rd, St.. Canton, Mo. Bloomington, Ind. Illinois: Mrs. Sherman Clough, Ravinia Station Box Boston, Mass. Miss Ruth Butterfield, 146 M yrtle 144, Highland Park. ' St., Waltham, Mass. College Cht~PitrJ: Eta, Beta Mu, Beta Nu. Buffalo Mrs . Howard Paul, 981 Beach Rd., Al11mn.- ChapltrJ: Bloomington, Canton, Peoria, St . Cheektowaga, N.Y. Louis, Springfield. Canton, Mo .••..• Miss Eleanor Daniells, Canton, Mo. PROVINCE XII~Minnesota, Wisconsin, Canada. Central Michigan . Mrs. W. E. Esdale, North Hagadorn Special Adviser to Psi, Miss Dorothy F. Williams Rd., East Lansing, Mich. 6416 N . Lakewood ave., Chicago, Ill. ' Champaign-Urbana Mrs. W. F. Coolidge, 2018 S. Race, Special Adviser to Alpha Eta and Beta Gamma. Mrs. Urbana, Ill. Lawrence Corbett, 244~ Sheridan ave., So. Minne· Chicago- apolis, Minn. Business Girls Miss Anne Atcherson, 2108 Sherman, Sllltt Al11mn.- Ch11irn1tn: Evanston, Ill. Minnesota: Mrs. Vernon Bauer ~336 Xerxes Ave. N orth Shore Mrs. George Kellner, Jr., 263 Briar South, Minneapolis. ' Lane, Highl and Park, Ill. Wisconsin: Sylvia Nicholson, 22~6 N . 72nd St., North Side . .... Miss Marion Pushee, 661 W. Sheri­ Wauwatosa. dan Rd., Chicago. Ill. Canada: Frances Macintyre, 273 Ash St., Winnipeg, South Shore Beverly Mrs. Kathryn Boand, 620 W. 87th Man. St., Chicago, Ill. . College Ch11pterJ: Psi, ·Alpha Eta, Beta Gamma. West Suburban .. Miss Roberta Hoffmeister, ~0 13 Al11mn~ ~h11PttrJ: Madison, Milwaukee, Twin Cities, Washington Blvd., Chicago, Ill. Wmmpeg. West T owns . . ... Mrs. T. C. Dougan, 4300 Hampton, Western Springs, Ill. PROVINCE XIII-Iowa, Kansas, Nebraska, N. and S. Cincinnati Miss Mary Wnght, 340~ Telford Dakota. Ave. , Cincinnati, Ohio. Province PreJident: Bonnie Voss, Millard, Neb. ClevelanJ Mrs. Alvin Benz, 984 Albon Rd., St11te Alumn11 Chairmen: Cleveland H eights, Ohio loM~in~~s. Robert Throckmorton, 8~9 -41st St., Des College Park, Md. Miss Teresa Finney, ~615 Montgom­ ery St., Chevy Chase, Md. Nebraska: Mrs. Willard Stunkel, 4218 S. 23 rd, Columbus Mrs. John Caudy, 1787 N orthwest Omaha, Neb. Blvd., Columbus. Ohio ' Co llege Cht~pt e n: Xi, Alpha Epsilon, Alpha Kappa, Dallas . . . Mrs. Louis E. Williams, ~ 6 12 Boaz, Beta Omega. Apt. B, Dallas, Tex. Alt~mnt~ Ch.,pltrJ: Ames Des Moines Eastern Iowa Davenport Mrs. Frank H. Beinhauer, 77 Forest Ka_ns~s City, Nebraska, Omaha.' Topeka, and Rd., D avenport, Iowa. W1ch1ta. Dayton Mrs. Ritter Collett, 213 Sandhurst PROVINCE XIV-Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado D r., Dayton, Ohio l.Jtah, Wyoming, and Idaho. ' Denver Mrs. Howard Larson, 1548 S. Mon­ Pro~'"" Prt11dent: Mrs. Pield Brown, 1024 S. Corona, roe. D enver. Colo. Denver, Colo. Des Moines, Iowa Miss D oris Adams, 1905 Grand, Des AJJt. to Pro~intt Prnident: Charline Birkins P 0 Moines, Jowa. Box ~87, Sterling, Colo. ' · · Detroit Miss Geraldine Matthews, 2632 Bur· St•tt Al11mntr Cht~irmen : lingame, Detroit, Mich. Id~~~h Mrs . Wm. H alsey, 1306 S. Third, Pocatello, Eastern Iowa Mrs. Ernest Bright, 220 George St., 0 University Heights, Iowa City, N . Mexico and Arizona: Mrs. Charles W. Miller Iowa. Ut~~;7 N. 17th ave., Phoenix, Ariz. ' Ft. Coll ins .. Colorado: Miss D alas J. Latimer, 1400 S. Quebec St., Ft. Wayne Mrs. A. J. Blance, 1019 Putnam Denver, Colo. St., Ft. \Vayne , Ind. Collttl. Ch•PttrJ: Iota, Beta K&ppa, Beta Lambda, Beta Gainesville Mrs. Fred M. Cone, 10~2 West Blvd., Ph1, Gamm& Alpha. Gainesville, Fla. Alumn.r Chapter Prtsidtnt Alumn~ Chapter Presidtnt Grand Forks .... . Miss Ruth J. Owen, 517 3rd ave ., S. Sacramento ...... Mrs. A. A. Olsen, 6701 Palm Ave ., Grand Forks, N.D. Fair Oaks, Cal if. Grand Rapids ... . Mrs. Robert Young, 1408 Ridge­ St. Louis •...... Mrs. James Hosman , 5728 Cates ave . . wood, S.E ., E. Grand Rapids, St. Louis, Mo. Mich. St. Petersburg Rosalie Simpson, 3026 2nd Ave. N .. Hammond. Ind ... Mrs. J oseph Wysong, 7144 Baring St. Petersburg, Fla. Pkwv .• Hammond. Ind. Salt Lake City Mrs. 0 . H. Davenport, 2,61 E. 62nd Hartford .....•. . • Mrs. Charles R. Choquette, 86 Bris· St., Salt Lake City, Utah. tol St., Hartford, Conn. San Bernardino & Mrs. Alice Gleitsman, 527 W . Olive, Hawaii Mrs. 0. E. Sette, 4490 Aukai Ave., Riverside Valleys Redlands, Calif. Honolulu, Terr. Hawaii. San Diego ...... Mrs. Beulah Dawson( 4606 Norm Helena, Mont....• Mrs. H. H. Garrett, 131, 8th, Hel­ Dr., San Diego, Ca if. ena, Mont. San Fernando Val· Miss Elizabeth Noble, 1,016 Hart Houston ••...... Mrs. Paul Trammell, 5107 Locust, ley, Calif...... land St., Van Nuys, Calif. Bellaire. Tex. San Francisco, Jr. Mrs. 0 . W. Willard, 123 Stratford Indianapolis ...... Mrs. William Tornes, 1060 Riverby Dr., San Francisco, Calif. Lane, Indianapolis, Ind. San Francisco, Sr. Mrs. L. Bollen, 171 Meadowbrook Ithaca ...... Mrs. Theodore Richards, 207 Waters Dr., San Francisco, Calif. St., Ithaca, N.Y. San Joaquin Valley, Mr.. Earl Clanton, 1035 San Pablo Jacksonville .....• Mrs. Robert Ralston, 2336 Herschel Calif...... •• Fresno, Calif. St .. Jacksonville, Fla. San jose ...... Miss Noelle Hillis, 1681 The Ala Joliet ...... • Mrs. Emmett Greweoig, 1016 Nowell meda, Apt. 20, San Jose, Calif. Ave., Joliet, Ill. Santa Barbara .. . . Mrs. James Edwards, 526 E. Michel Kanawha Valley, Mrs. Henry Lathrop, 1483 Highland torena St., Santa Barbara, Calif. W.Va ...... • Dr., St. Albans! W.Va. Schenectady ...... Mrs. C. B. Pease, Inman Rd., R.D Kansas City .. .. •• Mrs. Boyd Hen ey, 5512 Wayne, 1, Schenectady, N .Y. Kansas City, Mo. Seattle Mrs. E. N. Patty, 1303 E. 43rd St. Kn oxv ille ...... Mrs. Harold Harl ow, 2400 Parkview, Seattle, Wash. Knoxvi lle. Tenn. Shreveport Mrs. W. H. Adkins, 766 Huron Lafayette ...... Mrs . E. T. Mertz, 1149 Hilcrest Rd ., Shreveport, La. West Lafayette, Ind. Sioux City Mrs. 0. F. Crowl, 2937 Sunset Circle Long Island , N.Y. Mrs. Edward Fontaine, 23 Locust Sioux City, Iowa. Ave., Hempstead, L.J.. N.Y. South Bend Miss Marion Grassby, 1010 Bellevu I.ong Beach , Calif. Mrs. D . F. DeLong, 10623 S. Para­ Ave. , South Bend, Ind. mount Blvd., Downey, Calif. Spokane Mrs. Harold Brandt, W. 217 25t Los Angeles ...... Mrs. Wm. Douglass. 7320 Piper St., Spokane, WO'h. Ave. , Los Angeles, Calif. Springfield, Mass. Miss Anne Fay, 58 High St. , South Louisville ...... Mrs. Wally Sloan, 419 Oread Rd ., Hadley Falls Mass. Louisville, Ky. Syracuse Miss Frances Whitwell, 10 Bratt! Madison, Wis .... . Mrs. L. M. Whitmore. Jr., ,25 Mil· Rd., Syracuse, N .Y. ler Ave., Madison, WIS. Tacoma ...... Mrs. Ted Pape, 306 Harvard, Ta Marietta ...... Miss Janice Rexroad, 325 4th St., coma. Wash. Marietta, Ohio Tampa ...... Mrs. Charles Hayes , Rt. I, Bo Memphis ...... Miss Claire Hammond. 10 72 New 332. Tamoa, Fla. York St .. Memn'his, Tenn. Terre Haute Mrs. Fred Bradford, 207 Adams St. Miami ...... • Miss Elizabeth Peeler, 4465 S.W. Terre Haute, Ind. 15th St., Miami, Fla. Toledo Mrs. W . D. Lechner, 2,09 Wild Missoula ...... Miss Anna Jean Hanson. 225 W. wood, Toledo, Oh'io. Broadway, Missoula , Mont. Topeka Mrs. Donald Ward, 3105 Rocheste Nebraska Mrs . Robert Longman , 2204 S. 35th, Rd. , Topeka, Kan. Lincoln, Neb. Tulsa ...... New Castle Miss Helen Papazickns. 608 Centen· nial St., New Castle. P•. Twin Cities ...... New Jersey Subur- Mrs. Robert Griffiths, ,5 West End ban ...... Ave .• Summit, N.J. Walla Walla Mrs. F. D . Ne55ell, 723 Balm, Wall New York City .. Miss Elizabeth Daly. 33 E. 22nd, Walla, Wash. Apt. 5F. New York 10, N .Y. Washington, D.C. Mrs. A. S. Goodyear, 1630 Missouri Northern New Jer· Mrs. Wallace Yates, 820 Barnard Ave. , N .W ., Washington, D.C. sey ...... Pl., Hohokus, N .J. Westchester, N.Y.. Mrs. Robert E1dson, 65 Fayette Rd Oklahoma City .. Mrs. Frank Cassata. 401 N .W. , 1st, Scarsdale, N.Y. Oklahoma City, Okla. West Los Angeles· Mrs Karl Herwig, 46, S. Sweetzei Olympia, Wash .. . Mrs. George Warren, 1010 Mt. View Brentwood-Santa A~e., Los Angeles, Calif. Pl.. Olympia. Wash. Monica, Calif... Omaha. Neb .... . Miss Bonnie Voss, Millard, Neb. Willamette Valley, Mrs. R. M. Stevens, lOth & Juniper, Orlando ...... Mrs. Harlow Fredrick, 325 Jasmine Ore ...... Junction Citv. Ore. St., Orlando, Fla. Worcester, Mas!. Mrs. S. G. Philips, 8 Burgess Rd Pasadena ...... Mrs. Cecil Crafts, 1439 Topeka St .. Worcester, Mass. Pa sa~ena. Calif. Peninsula, Calif.. .. Mrs. L. T. Long, 1041 Sonoma, Menlo Park, Calif. Peoria ...... Mrs. Franklin Snyder, 424 Hanssler Alumttre Club Directory Pl.. Peoria, Ill. • Philadelphia ..... Miss Edith Bulow, 534 Maple Ave., Prtsitltnt Doylestown, Pa . Alumn.r Club (hqstine Masters on. 920 Milton St Pittsburgh Albuquerque . .. . . Mrs. Samuel A. Moore, 1010 S. Pittsbumh, Pa . Princeton Albuoueroue. N.M. Mrs. William Humohrey, 20'1 N . Pla infield Suburban Billings ...... Mrs. Jeanne Strauch, 523 Yellowstone N.J ...... Martine Ave. N., Fanwood, N.J. Ave., Billings, Mont. Miss Evelyn S. Whitnev. 441 Wood­ Portland, Me .... . Birmingham Mrs. R. J , Ludwick, 6 12 40 th St ford St., Portland, Me. Fairfield . Ala. Portland, Ore . . . . . Mrs. R. E. Pargeter, 2001 N.E. 92 nd, Mrs. James A. Carr, 3728 Clarke, Ft. Portbnrl , Ore. Ft. Worth Mrs. Gloria Dower. c/o Mrs . Isabelle Worth, Tex. Pullman ...... Kalamazoo Mrs. R. Schutz. 1522 Evanston St. , Armstrong. 611 Michigan St., Pull- Kalamazoo, Mich. Phoenix ...... Mrs. George Deming, 2901 E. Pier· Rhode Island .... M~ a nTh'%d~r·e Clarke, 15 Parkway son. Phoenix, Ariz. Circle. Apponaue R. T. Pueblo .....•... . Mrs. L. V. Barnhart, Rt. H, Box Rochester ...... Mrs. William MacDon•lc1 . 145 Har· 244, Pueblo, Colo. vard St., Rochester, N.Y.

In accordance with a national ru_ling passed t":'o years agi? by Natio~al Council,_ of fh~~ e~~,!~~~~ was notified, alumna: chapters not m good standmg at the time the ptrectory sectiOn o . e · goes to the publisher for the spring issue, are omitted from that d1~ecdto~y . CGood t~£tn~b mMns ~h~t alumna: dues for the current year for the group must have been rece1ve m entra ce Y arc · College Chapter Directory

CoTTesponding Prov• Preside:nt Chapter Addrm ince Chapter Institution Secretary I Alpha Colby Coll ege Edna Miller Marjorie Austin Women's Union, Mayflower Hill, I Colby College, Waterville, Me. t Beta and Gamma Consolidated with Alpha Marie Sansone joan Cunningham 131 Commonwealth Ave., Boston t6, Delta Boston Univ. Mass.t Nu Middlebury College Carol Annable Ann McAdow Chateau If, Middlebury College, Middlebury, Vt.• Omicron Tufts College Joyce Perkins Marcia Fear n Talbott Ave., Somerville, Mass. t II Phi University of Rhode Island Jean M artin Ruth Benson Sigma Kappa House, Kingston, R.I. Alpha Lambda Adelphi College JoAnne Deins Patricia Harkins c/o Sigma Kappa, Adelphi College, Garden City, L.J., N.Y. t Beta Eta Univ. of M assachusetts Lorna Hogg Joanne Martinsen Sigma Kappa House, IQ Allen St., Amherst, Mass. t

III Epsilon Syracuse Univ. Eleen Zahariou .Joan Sherley 500 University Pl., Syracuse, N.Y.t Alpha Beta Univ. of Buffalo Joan Scharff Dorothy Lee Norton Union, Univ. of Buffalo, Buffalo, N.Y. t Alpha Zeta Cornell Univ. Eleanor Sears Virginia Benham 150 Triphammer Rd., Ithaca , N.Y. t IV Zeta George Washington Univ. Mary Ann Sodd Amy Shaum 2n9 G St., N .W., Apt. l'· Wash· ington, D.C. t Alpha Sigma Westminster College Joanne Turner Pauline Christos Sigma Kappa House, N ew Wilming· ton, Pa.t Beta Zeta Univ. of M aryland Mary Garrison Doris Hamann Box l

v Alpha Iota M iami Univ. Barbara Smith Barbara Wormer Sigma Kappa Suite, South Hall, Ox· ford, Obiot Beta Theta M arietta College Lois McNeil Margaret Race Sigma Kappa House, 1"10 Second St., Marietta, Obiot Beta Upsilon Ohio University Diane Davidson Juanita Powell 95 University Terr., Athens, Ohiot

VI Tau Indiana Univ. Sally Horrell Mary E. Howard Sigma Kappa House, 300 N. Jordan Ave., Bloomington, Ind. t Alpha Tau Michigan State College Anne Phillips M argot Kahl 518 M.A.C. A ve., East Lansing, Mich.t Beta Sigma Purdue Univ. Ann Cessna Arlene Short Sigma Kappa Unit, Women"s Resi, dence Hall, Bunker Hill #r, Purdue Univ. West Lafayette, Ind. t Gamma Beta Western Michigan College Joan Dimmick M axine Johnston Walwood Hall, Western Michigan College, Kalamazoo, Mich. • Gamma Gamma Indiana State Teacher College Ardell Rivers Roberta Fox Women's Residence Hall, Indiana State Teacher's College, Terre Haute, Ind. t

VII Alpha Delta Univ. of Tenn . Jacquelyn Kersh Patsy Temple Sigma Kappa Suite, 16:11 \V. Cumber· land, Knoxville, Tenn. t Alpha Theta Univ. of Louisville M argaret Hamilton Barbara Adams >141 So. First St., Louisville, Ky .t Alpha Chi Georgetown College Bette Porter Lucille Hempel Sigma Kappa House, Georgetown, Ky.t Alpha Psi Duke Univ. Joan Corzette Juanite McGee Box #7097, Duke Univ., College Sta., Durham, N.C.t

'VIll Omega Florida State Univ. Mary Morgan Anne Godfrey 50l W. Park Ave., Sigma Kappa House, Tallahassee, Fla. t Beta Delta Univ. of Miami Peggy Wilson Julia M arku s Box :116, University Branch P.O., Coral Gables, Fla. t Beta Tau Univ. of Florida Mona Harris Jane Gillespie Ql8 S.W . ut Ave., Gainesville, Fla . t IX Sigma Southern M ethodist University Peggy J. Johnson M ary Ann Pollan l02o Daniels, Dallas, Tex. t Beta Epsilon Louisiana Polytechnic Institute Caroline Hargrove Billie R. Lowe Box fll, Tech Station, Ruston, La.t Beta Xi M emphis State College Margaret Bowdon Dorothy Danielson P.O. Box 401, M emphis State Col· lege, M emphis, Tenn. t

X Theta Univ. of Illinois Joyce Sternaman Shirley Langham 71 l \V. Ohio, Urba na~ Ill. t Beta Pi Illinois Institute of Technology Lorraine Truzynski Joan Nehlsen ?lH W. Farwell, Chicago, 111.•

XI Eta lllinois Wesleyan Univ. Joann Jennings ElleO Gantner nor N. East St., Bloomington, Ill. t Beta Mu Culver-Stockton College Helen Ogle N ancy Cramer Sigma Kappa House Canton, M o. t Beta Nu Bradley Univ. LaVerne N ylen M arian Rosenbaum 1:15 Fredonia Ave., Peoria, Ill. t XII Psi Univ. of Wisconsin .lane M oe Eileen Hammerly 2H Langdon St., M adison, Wis. t Alpha Eta Univ. of M innesota Phyllis Lea ry Elizabeth Hall 511 nth A ve., S.E., Minneapolis. Minn. Beta Gamma Univ. of M ani toba Joyce Biemond Joyce Cummings Ste. 31. Rosemount Apts.,• River Ave., Winnipeg, Man. Can.• XIII Xi Univ. of Kansas Haven M oore Pat Davis 1625 Edgehill Rd., La wrence, Kans. t Alpha Epsilon Iowa State College Patricia Hawgood Barbara Benson :133 Gray, Ames, Iowat Alpha Kappa Univ. of N ebraska Edwina Hokanson Barbara Bred thauer 626 North 16th, Lincol n, Nebr.t Beta Omega University of Omaha Darlene Lesh Carol Miles 2868 Reynolds , Oma ha, Nebr.•

XIV Iota Denver Unive rsity Dorothy Hansen Patricia Schoenfelder ~no So. Josephine, Denver, Colo. t Beta Kappa Colorado A. & M . College Beverly Edwards Joyce \Vhetzal 6n So. College A ve. , Ft. Collins, Colo. t Beta Lambda Utah State Agricultural College Renee Gillette Ca therine Chipian 71 W. lid North, Logan, Utaht Beta Phi Idaho State College Francis \Vilson Catherine Reed 6ll So. Hayes, Pocatello, Idaho• Gamma Alpha Colorado State College of Ed- N aom i Huey Wilma Stutheit '5'l 11th Ave., Greeley, Colo. t • President's Addresa. t Addre11 of 50rority bouse or rooms. (Continued on next page) College Chapter Directory

Prov~ Chop409 Warring, Berkeley, Calif. t Alpha Omicron Univ. of Calif. at Los Angeles Frances Beattie Evelyn Taylor 7>6 Hilgard Ave., West Loa Angele~ Calif.t Beta Rho San Jose College Marjorie Fitts Beta Chi Marilffj Armstrong 168 So. 11th, San Jose, Calif.t Univ. of Calif. at Santa Barbara Thelard Willems Janis ilson Beta Psi San Diego State College Kathy Moore 3l E. Valerio, Santa Barbara, Calif. t Mary Maw Room 10, House of Hospitality. Bat .. boa Park, San Diego, Calif. t XVI Mu Univ. of Washington Mary Pieroth Gloria Chapman 4~10 :1nd Ave., N.E., Seattle, Upsilon Wash.f> Oregon State College Beverly Hofstetter Marilyn Burris Alpha Gamma Sally Vinther >ll N. >6th St., Corvallis, Ore.t Alpha Nu ~~i~~i~r~"o~~~~ College Doris Dulgar 610 Campus Ave., Pullman, Wash. t Nathalie McGregor Joan Arnold lot University Ave.. Missoula, Alpha Phi Univ. of Oregon Mont.t Carolyn Welch Bernice Gartrell 8! r E. r !th St., Eugene, Ore. t • President s Address. t Address of sorority house or rooms.

Write for your FREE ~opy NOW! Thel952 BALFOUR BLUE BOOK Off the press in October!

--Presenting--

the newest in fraternity and sorority jewelry, gay favors, gifts, knitwear, and paper Rings Cuff Links products. Keys Tie Holders Pins Key Chains Mail a post card NOW Bracelets Ming China for YOUR FREE COPY! Vanities Billfolds WEAR YOUR FRATERNITY* * * PIN ALWAYS INSIGNIA PRICES Scroll border badge ...... $ 4.25 Patroness pin ...... $ 3.25 Scroll border badge, pearl points ...... • 5.75 Monogram recognition pin . . . . . • • • . • . . . • . . • • 1.50 Crown set peat>! &adge ...... 17.50 Recognition pin, 10K gold . .. • .. .. . • ...... 2.75 Crown set pearl badge, ruby points ...... ••• 19.00 Recognition pin, sterling ...... • • . . . • . . . . • • • • 1.50 Mother's pin, plain ...... 3.50 Recognition, coat of arms style ...... • • . . 1.25 REGULATIONS: Orders for badges, pledge, patroness, and Mother's pins must he received on official order blanks. Central Office address: Mrs. Edward Taggart, 129 E. Market Bldg., Room 1217, Indianapolis, Indiana.· Write for your complete price list. TAXES: To all insignia prices must he added the 20% Federal Tax and any state or city taxes in effect. OTHER BALFOUR SERVICES Over 100 representatives to call at chapter Stationery, invitations, place cards, and pro­ houses regularly with displays of Balfour grams with your crest. Samples free on request. products and insignia. SO Balfour stores located throughout the coun­ Balfour Bluecrest diamond engagement and try for your convenience. wedding rings. Write for information. Sole Official Jeweler to Sigma Kappa L. G. BALFOIJR t;OMPANY ATTLEBORO MASSACHUSETTS In Canada • •• Contact flOur nearest BIRKS' STORE. Don Gable Editor ·uE The Record of ~E F 0 Box 1856 Evanston Ill . .. · Exch 8/'!:IJ

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