10/7/1995 – the NPC Rotation Began Anew

On October 7, 1995 at the close of the National Panhellenic Conference (NPC) meeting at which Harriet Rodenberg, Sigma Delta Tau, presided, Jean Wirths Scott, Pi Beta Phi, was installed as Chairman for the 1995-97 biennium.

I was at that meeting at the Regal Riverfront Hotel in St. Louis, as were all the Pi Beta Phis who were serving as Directors and Grand Council members during that biennium. Pi Phi’s Director’s meeting that year was purposefully scheduled to coincide with the NPC meeting. What  a thrill it was so see someone whom I  admire so very much take the lead of NPC! Jean is a remarkable woman and she has served the fraternity world at-large and our own organization with the utmost of dedication, commitment to the future, and earnestness of purpose. (I could go on with the accolades, but I know Jean would get upset with me.)

At the third NPC meeting* held at the Columbus Safety Deposit Vault in Chicago on September 16-17, 1904, it was decided by the consent of the conference body that the calling of the conferences would be in a rotation. It was also agree that the delegate of the organization calling the conference would serve as the conference’s chairman. With Jean’s installation as chairman, it marked the third time the rotation had begun. The first was in 1908; the second was in 1947. Currently, there are 26 NPC groups so it means there will usually be 52 years between service as chairman. It is quite conceivable that the woman who will serve as Pi Phi’s next NPC Chairman may not yet be a member or she may still be a collegiate member.

The rotation decided upon at that 1904 meeting is: Pi Beta Phi; Kappa Alpha Theta; Kappa Kappa Gamma; Delta Gamma; Alpha Phi; Gamma Phi Beta; Alpha Chi Omega; Delta Delta Delta; Alpha Xi Delta; Chi Omega; and Sigma Kappa. As other organizations joined, they were added to the rotation in the order in which they became a member of NPC.

Jean Wirths Scott, NPC Chairman 1995-97

Jean Wirths Scott,  NPC Chairman 1995-97

The 2013 NPC Annual Meeting will take place at the Los Angeles Airport Marriott from October 10-13.  Jane H. Sutton, Alpha Xi Delta, will chair the meeting. At the meeting’s close, Jean M. Msarek, Chi Omega, will be installed for the 2013-15 biennium.

* In 1904, NPC was the Inter-Sorority Conference. It has had several name changes since 1902. At the 1945 meeting, the name was changed for the last time – the National Panhellenic Congress became the  National Panhellenic Conference


 

 (c) Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com, 2013. All Rights Reserved.

Posted in Fraternity meetings, GLO, Greek-letter Organization, Greek-letter Organization History, National Panhellenic Conference, Notable Fraternity Women, Notable Sorority Women, Sorority History, Women's Fraternity History | Tagged , , | Comments Off on 10/7/1995 – the NPC Rotation Began Anew

Old Friends, Celebrations, and Recipes

I’m at the anniversary celebration of a chapter at which I spent six years as an alumnae advisor. I was looking at old scrapbooks when I heard the voice of someone I hadn’t seen since we left town. Greetings were quickly made. As we tried to catch each other up on our families and the women with whom we worked during those years, a name came up. “Haven’t heard from her, but I still use her shrimp dip recipe,” said my friend.

I chuckled because don’t we all have a recipe or two that we use on a regular basis from someone we haven’t seen or talked to in eons? And don’t we think of them whenever we make it? If I was home and had access to my collection of sorority cookbooks, I write about those recipes. That will have to be a post for another day.

During this trip I also had a wonderful tour of a building which has intrigued me for 30 years. That post will have to wait until I get home, too, but I will give the hint that it is the headquarters of a men’s fraternity with a goodly number of Presidents among its membership.

It’s hard to convey the emotions one feels when revisiting important places in their life. Decades have gone by. Sadly I learn that one woman, a chapter officer when I was an advisor, is no longer with us and that the new piano is a gift in her memory from the women who were in her pledge class.

Celebrations are for celebrating. And I hope that today’s celebration will bring joy to those who have come back to visit a place from their past. I know it has for me.

carnations

(c) Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com, 2013. All Rights Reserved.


 

Posted in Fran Favorite | Comments Off on Old Friends, Celebrations, and Recipes

The Magic of Mountain Day at Mount Holyoke College

Twitterdom has informed me that today is Mountain Day. It is a day which Mount Holyoke women long for all fall. The actual date varies from year to year and it is a surprise for all except the very few who get to make the decision.

Mountain Day is Mount Holyoke College’s oldest tradition. It began in 1838, one year after the college was founded by Mary Lyon. If it’s a perfect fall day and the college bells ring for five minutes at 7 a.m., it can mean only one thing. It’s Mountain Day! Classes are cancelled, the library is closed, and the actual Mount Holyoke becomes the center of the day’s activities. Students are invited to hike the summit and ice cream is served at the Summit House atop the mountain.

Lynn Pasquerella, the college’s 18th President and a proud MHC alumna,  greets the students who trek to the top of Mount Holyoke.

A photo from the photo album of Pearl Whitcomb Class of 1907, from the collection of Donna Albino

A photo from the photo album of Pearl Whitcomb Class of 1907, from the collection of Donna Albino.

Alumnae who do not live near South Hadley or those who live in the Pioneer Valley but cannot take time off from work just because it is Mountain Day must content themselves with hastily made plans to meet other alumnae and share ice cream. The groups try to congregate at 18:37 (6:37 p.m.) to celebrate the year the college was founded. A cone or spoon will be raised in memory of Mountain Days past.

My favorite Mount Holyoke alumna posted this on her facebook page “Happy Mountain Day Mohos! As Anne of Green Gables once put it, ‘I’m so glad I live in a world where there are Octobers.'” As am I, my dear daughter, as am I.

Posted in Mary Lyon, Mount Holyoke College | Tagged , , | Comments Off on The Magic of Mountain Day at Mount Holyoke College

Welcome New Members – Here’s to a Lifetime of Loyalty

This is one of my new favorite photos. It was taken about 100 years ago. These women are recently initiated members of a college sorority. In fact, as charter members, they are the entire chapter.  

crop wind WY A 1910

All of these women are gone. The National Panhellenic Conference (NPC) organization to which they took an oath of membership is thriving. And it, along with the 25 other NPC groups, continues to provide today’s women with leadership opportunities, philanthropic endeavors, sincere friendship and the chance to be a part of something much greater than themselves.

While the 2013 version of this picture includes women in sundresses and t-shirts, the feelings they show are much the same. Look at the pure joy in the faces of the women standing on the fence in the back row, or at the seriousness of purpose of the women in the middle row, and the happiness of the women in the front. These same emotions can be seen in the photos taken this fall after recruitment.

I implore the women of the 2013 new member classes to remember that there were young women who came before them – women who faced many challenges while earning a degree, joining the workforce, and/or raising a family. The way of today’s women has been paved by the women no longer with us, contemporaries of the women in this photo. The organization you joined needs you, the 2013 new member, to remember that you will graduate and other young women will follow in your footsteps. Work for your organization, giving of your time, talent, and treasure, for you are but one little link in a very, very long chain of women who have taken the same oath of membership.


 

(c) Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com, 2013. All Rights Reserved.

Posted in Fran Favorite, GLO, Greek-letter Organization, Greek-letter Organization History, National Panhellenic Conference, Sorority History, Women's Fraternity History | Tagged , , | Comments Off on Welcome New Members – Here’s to a Lifetime of Loyalty

Julia Bishop Coleman, Delta Zeta Founder and P.E.O. State President

At each P.E.O. Convention there is a room where the hosting state delegation can showcase the state and its history, industry and resources. I spent lots of time looking at the display of the history of the Texas State Chapter of P.E.O. There were three old copies of the P.E.O. Record on the table and while I turned to the marked pages with information about the Texas State Chapter, I also looked at every page, fascinated with the world of P.E.O. in the 1920s and 1930s.

One of the most interesting tidbits I located in the April 1928 P.E.O. Record was about the first President of P.E.O.’s Ohio State Chapter, Julia Bishop Coleman. Her name might seem familiar to Delta Zetas because she was one of the sorority’s founders. A 1904 Miami University graduate, she married Dr. John McFerren Coleman in 1911. She served on Delta Zeta’s National Council from 1920-26, first as Historian, then as Vice President and President.

Coleman became a charter member of the Loveland chapter of P.E.O. when it was organized in her home in June 1911. The chapter was installed by Mrs. Edith Prouty Prichard. The P.E.O. chapters in Ohio organized the Ohio State Chapter of P.E.O. on September 5, 1927 when 18 delegates gathered at Coleman’s home for registration for the State Convocation. The business meetings took place at the home of Bessie Lee, President of Chapter A. The Ohio State Chapter received its charter at the 1927 Supreme Convention in Oklahoma City. Coleman was elected to a second term at the first Ohio State Chapter convention.

Julia Baker Coleman, Delta Zeta Founder and P.E.O.

Julia Bishop Coleman, Delta Zeta Founder and P.E.O. State President

© Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com, 2013. All Rights Reserved.

Posted in Delta Zeta, Fran Favorite, Miami University, P.E.O., Sorority History | Tagged , | Comments Off on Julia Bishop Coleman, Delta Zeta Founder and P.E.O. State President

We Are All Sisters Here – the 71st P.E.O. Convention in Dallas

After I picked up my registration packet at the 71st Convention of International Chapter of the P.E.O. Sisterhood, I sat down in the lobby of the Hilton Anatole Hotel in Dallas hoping to check my e-mail. The bench next to me was empty and a woman came and sat down. We greeted one another and began chatting. Turns out she is P.E.O. founder Hattie Brigg Bousquet’s great-granddaughter. How fun is that?

I think every P.E.O. should attend a state convention and an international convention. They are inspiring events and an immersion experience of the good works being done by the P.E.O. Sisterhood.

Yesterday evening, I was given three books and they will be treasured. For the past four years, I’ve had the distinct honor and pleasure of serving on the Special Committee to Study P.E.O. Ceremonies and Meeting Procedures with five other P.E.O.s (three Past State Presidents and three members at large, including me) and Susan Reese Sellers, International Chapter President. It has been a wonderful experience and I will miss the conference calls we had on a regular basis. To thank us for our service Susan gave us each a copy of As We Were Saying by Winona Evans Reeves. They were all signed by the author. I suspect finding six signed copies of this book was not an easy task. It was published in 1944 by Chapter A, Chicago, Illinois, as a tribute to the author, a member of that chapter. In addition, Reeves, an initiate of Original Chapter A, Mount Pleasant and an 1889 graduate of Iowa Wesleyan College, served as Iowa State Chapter President in 1904 and International President 1909-11. She was editor of the P.E.O. Record for decades.

20130926_075528

The two books under the blue book were given to me by Donita Mitchell, Past State President of Oklahoma State Chapter and a member of the committee. One is a history of the Oklahoma State Chapter; she was one of four Oklahoma State History Committee members to work on the book. She is a kindred spirit and was one of our go-to committee member for facts and historical information. The bottom book is a cookbook she was involved in creating.

Beulah Thornton’s introduction to As We Were Saying ends with this wonderful sentiment, “Many pleasant moments filled with jeweled thoughts will be the reward of those who read this little book.” I have a feeling that this pertains to the three latest additions to my library.

(C) Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com, 2013. All Rights Reserved.

Posted in Fran Favorite, Iowa Wesleyan College, P.E.O. | Tagged , , , | Comments Off on We Are All Sisters Here – the 71st P.E.O. Convention in Dallas

Happy Birthday Amy Burnham Onken, NPC Chairman 1945-47!

Amy Burnham Onken, an alumna of Pi Beta Phi’s chapter at Northwestern University, attended her first National Panhellenic Conference (NPC) meeting in 1917. She served on Pi Phi’s Grand Council and was a visitor at the NPC meeting. Who could have imagined the influence she would have on Pi Beta Phi and on NPC?

In 1928, as Pi Beta Phi’s Grand President she served her first term as her organization’s NPC  delegate, a position she held until 1953. From 1945-47, she served as NPC Chairman. Several important changes were made during her term as Chairman of NPC.

The 30th NPC meeting was held November 10-14, 1947 at the Broadmoor in Colorado Springs, Colorado. L. Pearle Green, Kappa Alpha Theta, served as Secretary and Edith Reese Crabtree, Kappa Kappa Gamma, was Treasurer. The acceptance of 11 organizations, including six from the Association of Education Sororities (AES), was the most important of the decisions made at the meeting. The Association of Education Sororities was founded in 1915 as the Association of Pedagogical Sororities.  In 1946, it was comprised of six national organizations, Sigma Sigma Sigma, Delta Sigma Epsilon, Pi Kappa Sigma, Alpha Sigma Alpha, Alpha Sigma Tau, and Theta Sigma Upsilon.  Its members had chapters at normal schools. In the 1940s, many of these teacher training institutions were evolving into more comprehensive institutions.  The AES and NPC merger was meant to strengthen the entire women’s fraternity system by dissolving unnecessary lines of demarcation. The former AES organizations had two years before they would be faced with competition from the NPC groups.

The other groups admitted to associate membership in NPC, by a unanimous vote, were Alpha Epsilon Phi, Phi Sigma Sigma, Delta Phi Epsilon, Sigma Delta Tau and Theta Phi Alpha. A report of the conference noted that full membership was “contingent in each case, upon the elimination by June 1, 1948, of all chapters on campuses not meeting NPC requirements and of all dual membership involving NPC fraternities.”  NPC also voted that, “Not until January 1, 1949, shall any overtures leading to future chapters to be made by or given consideration by any member group of NPC, active or associate, on campuses now occupied by the present AES groups.”

It was also at this meeting that the unanimous agreement regarding dual membership was enacted. Women could be members of one NPC organization, and those who had belonged to two organizations needed to resign one of them. It was not uncommon for women to go to a Normal school to obtain a teaching degree and then transfer to a college or university. At the Normal school they could join an AES organization and later join an NPC organization.

Amy Burnham Onken was born in Chapin, Illinois on September 23, 1885, and she lived her life there. In the fall of 1904 she enrolled at Northwestern University and became a member of the Illinois Epsilon Chapter of Pi Beta Phi. She became Grand Secretary in 1912 and spent 8 years in that role. She then became Grand President and remained in that position for 31 years. She installed 38 chapters. She died in October 1963.

Amy Burnham Onken in 1934

Amy Burnham Onken in 1934

© Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com, 2013. All Rights Reserved.

Posted in Fran Favorite, Fraternity meetings, GLO, Greek-letter Organization, Greek-letter Organization History, National Panhellenic Conference, Northwestern University, Notable Sorority Women, Pi Beta Phi, Sorority History | Tagged , , , | Comments Off on Happy Birthday Amy Burnham Onken, NPC Chairman 1945-47!

Emmy Awards and the Sorority Women Who Have Won One or More

Here is a list of past winners who are sorority women, as best as I could determine. Additions, corrections, etc. are welcomed and appreciated as I’d like to make this a complete list. Please note that I’ve included regional Emmy winners as well; after all, an Emmy is an Emmy. I’ve limited this to the women who have won; there are many others who have been nominated over the past 65 years.

Fran Allison, Alpha Gamma Delta

Tracy Anderson, Sigma Gamma Rho

Catherine Anaya, Alpha Phi

Kathy Bates, Alpha Delta Pi

Julie Marie Berman, Kappa Kappa Gamma

Kate Blatherwick Pickert, Pi Beta Phi

Jodi Brooks, Alpha Phi

Jann Carl, Kappa Kappa Gamma

Kristin Chenoweth, Gamma Phi Beta

Lisa Colagrossi, Alpha Phi

Olivia Cole, Alpha Kappa Alpha,

Dorothy Cooper-Foote, Chi Omega

Eleanor Coppola, Alpha Chi Omega

Katie Couric, Delta Delta Delta

Catherine Crier, Delta Delta Delta

Dawn Davenport, Alpha Chi Omega

Agnes deMille, Kappa Alpha Theta

Donna DeVarona, Kappa Kappa Gamma

Ann Elder, Kappa Kappa Gamma

Claudia Forestieri, Gamma Eta

Susan Gabbard, Phi Sigma Sigma

Phyllis George, Zeta Tau Alpha

Leeza Gibbons, Delta Delta Delta

Jennifer Gilbert, Alpha Phi

Maura Hayes, Kappa Delta

Edith Head, Delta Zeta

Patricia Heaton, Delta Gamma

Eileen Heckart, Pi Beta Phi

Charlayne Hunter-Gault, Delta Sigma Theta*

Sara James, Kappa Delta

Hope Jordan-Halliburton, Alpha Kappa Alpha

Susan Koeppen, Alpha Xi Delta

Hota Kotb, Delta Delta Delta

Christine Lahti, Delta Gamma

Melanie Lawson, Alpha Kappa Alpha

Cloris Leachman  Gamma Phi Beta

Pamela K. Long, Phi Mu

Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Delta Gamma

Ann Martin, Alpha Phi

Rue McClanahan, Kappa Alpha Theta

Miriam Melvin, Sigma Gamma Rho

Erin Moriarty, Kappa Kappa Gamma

Cindy Morrison, Kappa Alpha Theta

Terry Murphy, Delta Gamma

Agnes Nixon, Alpha Chi Omega

Deborah Norville, Delta Delta Delta

Soledad O’Brien, Delta Sigma Theta

Gail Patrick, Delta Zeta

Taylor Kay Phillips, Alpha Phi

Mary Kay Place, Kappa Alpha Theta

Esther Rolle, Zeta Phi Beta

Gina Rowlands, Kappa Kappa Gamma

Marilyn Salenger, Sigma Delta Tau

Kimberly Schlapman, Phi Mu

Savannah Sellers, Chi Omega

Dinah Shore, Alpha Epsilon Phi

Jean Smart, Alpha Delta Pi

Kim Stanley, Kappa Kappa Gamma

Marlo Thomas, Kappa Alpha Theta

Kathy Times, Alpha Kappa Alpha

Cicely Tyson, Delta Sigma Theta

Anita Vogel, Delta Gamma

Marcia Wallace, Delta Zeta

Sela Ward, Chi Omega

Lynn Whitfield, Alpha Kappa Alpha

Nancy Wilson, Delta Sigma Theta (Her show, the Nancy Wilson Show, won an Emmy)

Chi Omegas Sela Ward and Lyn Harris

Chi Omegas Sela Ward and Lyn Harris, Chi Omega’s  National Archivist


 

* Here is a wonderful article about her Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc. affiliation http://www.theroot.com/views/night-i-met-lena-horne

© Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com, 2013. All Rights Reserved.

Posted in GLO, Greek-letter Organization, Greek-letter Organization History, National Pan-Hellenic Council (NPHC), National Panhellenic Conference, Notable Sorority Women, NPHC, Sorority History, Women's Fraternity History | Tagged , | Comments Off on Emmy Awards and the Sorority Women Who Have Won One or More

For 60 Years of Loyal Membership We Are Grateful

I am mourning my friend Mary, a sister in P.E.O. She joined her mother’s P.E.O. chapter when she was a freshman at the University of Nebraska and she remained a loyal member for six decades.  Recently, she served a second (maybe third) stint as our chapter president when the nominating committee was having a hard time finding someone to take the job.

A drama teacher before she retired, she could give impassioned reasons why important parts of the P.E.O. meeting required memorization and not merely reading from a booklet. “Of course you can memorize, everyone can memorize; just do it!” she said. It was in a teacher’s voice, said with authority. Not everyone believed her, but she gave them no heed.

The last time I saw her was when she called and told me she would be picking me up for the June P.E.O. meeting (if I wanted a ride). As she stopped in my driveway after the meeting she mentioned that she would be going up to Barnes Hospital  that week for some a routine procedure. Unfortunately, when she left for that visit to Barnes, she never returned home.

She was the last of my chapter’s founding members. When we celebrate 50 years next spring, it will be without her telling us the story of how the chapter was formed. It is the only one of the four P.E.O. chapters in town with a night meeting. After her move here as a young bride, she became an unaffiliated member  paying dues to International but not belonging to a local chapter. When Chapter KL was formed, it gave her, a high school teacher, the opportunity to again be an active member. She liked to say that the group was elated when they discovered the chapter designation would be KL. Mary said it stood for “kind and loving.” She did not say “no” when asked to do something for the chapter. This spring she signed up to host a meeting in the fall, do the program at another, and she was serving as a representative to a Round Table of the four chapters in town.

I often wonder what makes someone a loyal member of an organization. What makes a person find time in their life for all that goes with being an active, engaged member of an organization? What makes someone pay dues for 60 years? Sign up to host meetings. serve as co-hostess and present programs? Isn’t it easier to sit home, read a book, watch television, knit, do nothing? And why did we not find the time or reason to honor her, save for the certificate the convention delegate picked up at the state convention and presented to Mary at the meeting in June? Maybe we would have done that when we celebrate our Golden Anniversary in the spring. Alas, it is too late.

P.E.O. wasn’t her only community involvement. She was an active member of the Jackson County Stage Company and was slated to direct one of the coming season’s plays. It was under her presidency that the Friends of the Carbondale Public Library created a plaque to honor Lifetime members prompting many patrons to contribute at that level. When the Friends give out their book scholarships in May, we’ll have to find someone else to attend the awards ceremony at the high school. Mary was always willing to go and give out the awards, even when the president (me) had no good reason for not doing the task. When SIUC halted the summer play series at McLeod Theater, she was one of the people who came together and brought the series back to life. She was active in her church. Like the Energizer bunny, she kept on buzzing around. Doing good, telling stories, prodding others to do this or that.

With Mary Boyle’s passing, there will be a void in many organizations in town. And there will be a giant hole in the lives of her two sons, Micheal and Steve, and Steve’s wife, Jane. Mary’s beloved granddaughter Lacey, died 17 months ago, at age 23, after having lived with Rett Syndrome, a neurodevelopment disorder characterized by the lack of any verbal skills. Although Lacey could not speak, she was expressive. Lacey’s death hit Mary hard. I can only hope Mary and Lacey are talking up a storm together, making up for lost time.

7 daisies


 

(c) Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com, 2013. All Right Reserved

 

 

 

Posted in Fran Favorite, P.E.O. | Comments Off on For 60 Years of Loyal Membership We Are Grateful

1933 Chicago World’s Fair – “Panhellenic Members Please Register Here”

In 1933, a Century of Progress International Exposition was held in Chicago to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the city’s incorporation. The Chicago City (Alumnae) Panhellenic kept a guest book on the second floor of the General Exhibits Building so that members of National Panhellenic Conference (NPC) women’s fraternities/sororities could register their attendance at the fair.

According to an article in the October 1933, Fraternity Month magazine, “During the early weeks of the exposition the sign on the desk reserved by this Panhellenic group was rather small and not easily discernible  In spite of this fact many leaves of the registry were filled. Later the neat little sign was replaced by a good sized placard and those who passed noticed ‘Panhellenic Members Please Register Here.'”

Despite a few signatures by non-members, the NPC groups were “represented over and over through the leaves of this unusual book. One can read between the lines and learn that several organizations held conventions in the World’s Fair city during the summer; that many national councils had their annual meeting there; or that Panhellenic people are loyal to their respective states since they registered on their own State Day at the Century of Progress.”

Members of the City Panhellenic played “hostess for a day” and they shared some stories. “Once a lady approached very diffidently and when asked if she were a member of a Panhellenic group replied – ‘Well-er-er- I don’t know. Years ago I was a Pi Phi at Monmouth but I am not certain that we are members of Panhellenic.’ The book passed over for her signature and after writing her name carefully the visitor scanned the preceding pages exclaiming now and then: ‘Why here is the name of a woman who was in college with me – she was a Kappa and I have lost all contact with her – may I have her address?'” Another story recounted “Marian G. Brown of Tulsa – a Pi Phi – I wonder if she is the daughter of Marian Gladys Hess who married a Bob Brown right after we graduated.” It was followed by “What do you think of this? Alice Smith whom I haven’t seen for ages, is registered at the Stevens and was here yesterday! My, I must look her up at once – it would be wonderful to see her again.”

Another hostess said, “Now isn’t that thrilling? So many people have had similar experiences when they looked through these pages. Just a minute ago an elderly woman (a Kappa Alpha Theta who blushingly asked me how to make the Greek letter for Theta, when she came to the affiliation column) copied three addresses of old friends and said that this book was the most valuable to her of anything she had seen at the fair grounds and was worth the entire trip.”

The author of the article, Theodora Maltbie Collins, editor of the Lyre of Alpha Chi Omega noted, “These incidents are not exaggerated. Similar ones actually did happen and the Chicago City Panhellenic may well be proud of the enjoyment their thoughtfulness and courtesy has given Greek letter women visiting at A Century of Progress this summer.” 

A 1916 Trident of Delta Delta Delta recounted the Chicago City Panhellenic’s history, “After several years of agitation and several months of preliminary consultation and committee meetings the Chicago City Panhellenic is now well launched with representatives of seventeen of the eighteen Congress fraternities. All congress fraternity members resident in Chicago or suburbs are invited become members. “

I wonder whatever became of that register. I would love to flip through the pages and see what stories the 80 year old book could tell!

imgres© Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com, 2013. All Rights Reserved.

 

Posted in Fran Favorite, GLO, Greek-letter Organization, Greek-letter Organization History, National Panhellenic Conference, The Lyre of Alpha Chi Omega, Women's Fraternity History | Tagged , , | Comments Off on 1933 Chicago World’s Fair – “Panhellenic Members Please Register Here”