Help Needed to Solve a Jewelry Mystery

Two tie bar pins, 400 miles apart. One is in the Pi Beta Phi Archives in St. Louis. The other is in Columbus, Ohio in the Delta Gamma’s Frances Lewis Stevenson Archives.

The Delta Gamma tie bar also has a matching necklace.

Little is known about who sold these tie bars and if other designs were available. Was it perhaps a Balfour design? Was it one of the tie-bar convention favors Lloyd G. Balfour provided to the GLOs who were his clients? In a pre-Etsy world, was it something a lone jeweler sold to members in a selected area?

The tie bar with the Pi Beta Phi crest

Another archivist friend sent me this picture of a similar necklace with an Alpha Tau Omega crest on it. She added, “Do you think that these items were marketed as favors for guests at formals? Hence, the women’s crests on the tie bars, and the men’s crest on the necklace.” Maybe that’s it!

A necklace with the Alpha Tau Omega crest.

A friend who is knowledgable about antiques sent this message: 

Fran – these geometrically themed necklaces/tie bars were made during the Art Deco period, circa 1930s. The silver and colored enamel versions were often imported from Czechoslovakia. Jewelers could purchase them in bulk and then customized them by attaching various crests and other organization logos. (These crests very well could have been made by Balfour.)

Another reader sent this note:

I’ve definitely seen these in various jeweler catalogues including Balfour. Stock base, upon which you ordered your choice of coat of arms.

The mystery of the Art Deco fraternity jewelry has been solved, thanks to my Kappa Alpha Theta archivist friend, Noraleen Young. The bar-pin cost $3.50 in 1932, equivalent to about $60 today.  I also learned that Alpha Delta Pi has one of the items in their collection. 

The 1932 Balfour Blue Book which was printed in black and white.

A close-up of the items

 

 

 

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#HearHerHarvard Again; Listen This Time

Update 12/3/2018 – Six organizations filed lawsuits against Harvard University and the 26 National Panhellenic Conference sororities and the 66 North-American Interfraternity Conference fraternities threw their support behind them. Visit www.standuptoharvard.org to sign a petition and to #standuptoharvard.

Established in 1636, Harvard University is the oldest of the Colonial Colleges which predate the establishment of the United States. It took women 200 years before they were able to be a part of any form of higher eduction in the United States. Instead of educating women with the Harvard men, the institution chose to create a coordinate institution, Radcliffe College, for the women. Radcliffe opened in 1879, and since the 1970s, Harvard has been coeducational.

In 1870, the year young Bettie Locke, one of the first five females enrolled at Indiana Asbury University (now DePauw) in Greencastle, Indiana refused the offer of a Phi Gamma Delta badge and created a fraternity of her own, there were less than 600 institutions of f higher education in the United States. Of that number only 29% were coeducational, 12% were female only and 59% were male only. In 1870, according to Mabel Newcomer, less than one percent of all females 18 through 21 years of age were enrolled in any form of higher education.

For the members of Kappa Alpha Theta, Delta Gamma, and Alpha Phi who are enrolled at Harvard University, it might as well be 1870.* They are currently facing challenges similar to those experienced by the early members of those organizations. The early female college students sought support systems and friends with whom they could share the experience of higher education. While the literary and debating societies may have filled these needs for some of the women, it appeared that others were seeking stronger bonds of sisterhood. Out of this search came women’s fraternities/sororities. 

Today, January 23, sorority women are asked to wear their badges to show support for the NPC women at Harvard. Let’s flood twitterdom with the #HearHerHarvard hashtag to show support for their steadfastness in the face of adversity.

From a previous post entitled Hypocrisy Thy Name is Harvard:

I find it odd that one of the most exclusive of universities is suddenly concerned about being equitable. The class of entering freshmen, the first to be subjected to this edict, had a 5.2% acceptance rate. Of the more than 39,000 applicants, only 2,037 were admitted. And yet, Harvard is denouncing “exclusivity.” I have an idea, Harvard. Take the first 2,000 students who apply, no matter their GPAs, extracurriculars, essays, etc. Just take them as they come in. Or better yet, distribute “golden tickets” a la Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory. After all, it’s the fair thing to do. I suspect that many of the 37,000 high school seniors who received the “thanks, but no thanks” letter were devastated about that decision. It’s just not fair that some students are accepted to your university and others are not. Open Harvard up to everyone; it’s the equitable thing to do.

*The Eta Theta Chapter of Kappa Kappa Gamma was suspended indefinitely earlier this year. Collegiate members in good standing were granted alumna status.


 

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Dillon H. Payne, Beta Theta Pi, and His Role in P.E.O.’s History

On January 21, 1869, seven young women, students at Iowa Wesleyan University in Mount Pleasant, Iowa, founded P.E.O. In the early years, they called it a Society and then, later, a Sisterhood. I’ve written about this before, but it is my contention that the founding of P.E.O. is one of the ripples that came from the founding of the Beta Theta Pi chapter at Iowa Wesleyan.

In December 1865, the Alpha Alpha chapter of Beta Theta Pi was chartered on the campus of Monmouth College in Monmouth, Illinois, about 60 miles southeast of Mount Pleasant across the Mississippi River. On June 8, 1868, the Alpha Epsilon chapter of Beta Theta Pi was founded at Iowa Wesleyan University. It was the first national fraternity on the Iowa Wesleyan campus

Between the chartering of the two Beta Theta Pi chapters, I.C. Sorosis, an organization for women, was founded by 12 female students on the Monmouth College campus. The organization’s Greek motto was Pi Beta Phi and today that is the name of the organization. The women patterned the organization on the men’s fraternity model and, from the beginning, they were intent on expanding to other institutions.

Libbie Brook, one of the I.C. founders, left Monmouth College for the 1868-69 school year. Perhaps encouraged by the Beta Theta Pi men she knew at Monmouth, she enrolled at Iowa Wesleyan University. There on December 21, 1868, the second chapter of I.C. Sorosis was chartered. The women wore their arrow pins to a New Year’s party at Hollowell’s Restaurant given by the Beta Theta Pi men.

In 1869, there were about 75 collegiate level students at Iowa Wesleyan. Legend has it that some, but not all seven, of a group of friends had been asked by Libbie Brook to join the new chapter of I.C. Sorosis. Franc Roads and Hattie Briggs were sitting on the steps of a wooden stile at the southeast entrance to the campus and made the decision to start a society of their own. They gathered five others, Mary Allen, Ella Stewart, Alice Bird, Alice Coffin, and Suela Pearson and P.E.O. came into being on January 21, 1869.

P.E.O. Founders from a 1920s Record

Among the charter members of the Beta Theta Pi chapter were Will Pearson, Suela’s brother, and Dillon Hollingsworth Payne, who would go on to graduate as valedictorian. The future husbands of Alice Bird and Mary Allen, Washington Irving Babb and Charles L. Stafford, respectively, also became members of the Beta Theta Pi chapter.

Payne was Ella Stewart’s guest at P.E.O.’s  first social event, the Sidereal Soiree, held at the Brazelton Hotel on December 26, 1870.  As a member of the Class of 1869, he had already graduated. Payne read the law and spent most of his life as a successful lawyer, and he also served as a Trustee of IWU. His first wife, Susan “Suda” Weaver Pearson, was initiated as a P.E.O. in 1870. They married on October 17, 1877 in Atchison, Kansas. She died in 1891, apparently in childbirth, along with the child she was carrying. He died in 1928.

Dillon Payne

Payne also played a role in the extension of P.E.O. when, through his connections in Bloomfield, Iowa, made the introductions to establish Chapter G, then in Troy, Iowa. 

In the 1920s, Payne’s recollections of the seven Founders of P.E.O. were published in issues of the P.E.O. Record. Here is a smattering of how he remembered each woman:

Mary (Allen) had good taste in dress and made smart clothes look better, was graceful, cheerful and popular with the boys. She entertained nicely in her home and stood well in her classes.

Alice Bird: She was a town girl…medium height, black hair thrown back, dark piercing eyes, tailor-made clothes, taking long and bold strides as she passed through the college campus….When any bold or daring adventure was incubating, Allie was there in the midst. She was not a man worshipper, met the boys like brothers and generous in her attention to all. 

Hattie Briggs: The best hearted girl that ever lived. None knew her but to love her. She was modest and retiring.

Alice Coffin: She combined all the qualities of a stunning personality. In the drawing room she would be a queen; in the ball room, the first lady. Her name was always on the list of our Beta banquets. Perhaps the most striking couple in our public festivities was Alice Coffin, and Will Pearson, brother of Sue. They were tall, courtly, handsome and up-to-date dressers. Will had black hair and blue eyes;…Alice was a typical blonde, with elegant grace and costume in the latest style. The law of mutual attraction or human gravitation drew them together and the boys expected Will to select her as his partner….She could lay aside her dignity and become a hilarious romp, which she often did.

Franc Roads: There was dignity and poise in her manner, stocky form, neatly dressed, broad forehead, kindly eyes and shocky head of hair. She took her place in our class as a substantial member…She was rather quiet, not a tomboy. Her face was serious and thoughtful but pleasant and engaging. She took life seriously and not as joyously as might be expected of one with such artistic temperament and talent as she later demonstrated. However we were all too young to be looking for the budding of genius.

Suela Pearson: This star was the planet with a ring (of boys) around it, but not so far off….At sometime she was the sweetheart of each of us, we all looked alike to her….She had talent, could sing, and was a rival of Allie Bird as a reader….She was an attraction, a magnet. She had…more beaus in the list at the same time than all of the other founders….Can you imagine the girls leaving her out of the Original Seven? If they had the Betas would have initiated her…Another thing in her praise was that none of the other girls was ever jealous of her. Her light shown on all, and no one wanted it put under a bushel.

Ella Stewart: She had auburn pompadour hair, florid complexion, dressed neatly and in good style, was bright and lively, could play and sing. She always graced our social affairs and took an active part in all of our amusements….She wore the gold star and sometimes a Beta pin. I have the pin still

 

 

 

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Sorority Women in STEM Careers Before STEM was a Term

If you’ve seen the film Hidden Figures, you’ll be interested to know that Katherine Coleman Goble Johnson, Dorothy Johnson Vaughan, and Mary Winston Jackson were initiates of Alpha Kappa Alpha.

Here are links to previous posts about sorority women who were members of GLOs before STEM was a term. They were pioneers in their fields and there are scores and scores of others who stories have not been widely told.

Nora Stanton Blatch Barney, Kappa Kappa Gamma

Elsie Katherine Bergegrun, M.D., Alpha Sigma Tau

Emily Helen Butterfield, Alpha Gamma Delta

Edith Schwartz Clements, Kappa Alpha Theta

Edith Clement book

Anna Botsford Comstock, Kappa Alpha Theta

Anna Botsford (Comstock), 1874

Myrtle Fahsbender, Kappa Delta

Myrtle Fahsbender, 1930s (courtesy of Kappa Delta)

Elizebeth Smith Friedman, Pi Beta Phi

Mary E. Gladwin, R.N., Delta Gamma

Dr. May Agness Hopkins, Zeta Tau Alpha

Dr. May Agness Hopkins in uniform

Carlotta Joaquina Maury, Ph.D., Delta Gamma

Julia Morgan, Kappa Alpha Theta

Julia Morgan, Kappa Alpha Theta

Louise Pellens, Pi Beta Phi

Florence Lucas Sanville, Alpha Omicron Pi

Mary Thompson Stevens, M.D., Delta Gamma

Annie Marie Tremaine, M.D., Alpha Phi

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On MLK Day, Monday News and Notes

Today is Martin Luther King, Jr. Day.  In honor of his non-violent campaign against racism, he was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1964. He was a proud member of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc.

It is also the day upon which Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Inc. was founded at Howard University. This weekend, this plaque was dedicated at Howard University in celebration of the 110th anniversary of the founding.

***

Forty years ago today, on January 15, 1978, two Chi Omegas were murdered in the chapter house at Florida State University. Serial killer Ted Bundy killed Margaret Bowman and Lisa Levy, and nearly killed two others who were left with serious injuries. Chapter member Diane McCain played a role in Bundy’s conviction. When I wrote about this back in April, a reader of this blog, who is also a Chi Omega, emailed me to tell me that she was Bundy’s law school study partner at the University of Utah in 1974-75. Years later, she met true-crime author Ann Rule, and she realized that in addition to both having known Bundy, they were Chi Omega sisters.  Rule wrote The Stranger Beside Me about Bundy. Those events four decades ago touched the lives of all of the women of that chapter as well as their families and friends. May time ease their wounds.

***

In case  you missed it……..

Kudos to these Temple Sorority women for confronting the meanness. The comments sound ridiculous when read aloud. Yet, many people take those anonymous comments seriously.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yOGoRZ6XzdU

 

Stacy Tasman Stahl, the woman who started the campaign feature on The Ellen Show is a Pi Beta Phi alumna from the University of Florida chapter.

 

The Longhairs who pitched their company on Shark Tank last night are Sigma Nu alumni. Their new business partner Mark Cuban is a Pi Lambda Phi.

https://blog.thelonghairs.us/the-longhairs-on-shark-tank/

***

Condolences to the family and friends of sportscaster extraordinaire Keith Jackson, a 1952 initiate of Alpha Tau Omega Washington State University chapter. He died at the age of 89 on January 12, 2018.

Condolences, too, to Alpha Kappa Alpha upon the loss of Bernice I. Sumlin.

 

***

And if you made it this far, I want to recommend a documentary available on Netflix and likely other places as well. It’s the Best Worst Thing That Ever Could Have Happened by Lonny Price. It tells the story of Beta Theta Pi Stephen Sondheim’s Merrily We Roll Along. In 1981, the play closed after 52 previews and 16 performances. Price was one of the stars of the production. The cast album was recorded the day after the play closed.Among the songs which were written for the score but have been recorded by many other artists are Not a Day Goes By, Good Thing Going, Old Friends, and Our Time.

There is a scene where some of the cast members visit the theater where the play was performed. It reminds me of the way alums look when going back to a chapter house after decades away.

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Be a Builder

The founders of Greek-letter organizations are revered. Every organization has its founders. They get the glory. Members know their names. 

Every organization also has builders, those who do the heavy lifting, who make difficult decisions, who work hard to advance the organization. The builders do not usually bask in the glory given the founders.

A good many of the builders had a role in the early years of an organization, or in times of great tumult. Those organizations founded before the Civil War had builders who took a role after that war and the World Wars that followed it. The campus turmoil of the 1960s and 1970s provided opportunities for builders to emerge. 

This thought has been swirling about in my head because I am writing about the P.E.O.s who came after the seven founders. P.E.O. started as a collegiate society at Iowa Wesleyan University; it likely would not exist today had it not been for the builders, those women whose names 95% of the membership would not recognize. In 1902, Alpha Xi Delta, a local organization at Lombard College in Galesburg, Illinois, made the decision to become a national organization and P.E.O. became a community organization. Anna Gillis (Kimble) helped the Iowa Wesleyan P.E.O.s become the Beta Chapter of Alpha Xi Delta.

George Banta, a Phi Delta Theta, as a Franklin College student, became an initiated member of Delta Gamma and helped that women’s fraternity, founded in Oxford, Mississippi, to grow in the northern states. Without his efforts, that might not have happened.

Theta Chi was founded in 1856. Its second chapter was not installed December 1902. This came about because a member, Park Valentine Perkins, transferred to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He wanted to share his Theta Chi bond with some of the students there. He and a group of men petitioned the Alpha chapter three times before a charter was reluctantly granted. Had Perkins not been so persistent perhaps Theta Chi would not be here today.  

In 1876, Alpha Tau Omega Joseph R. Anderson received a letter telling him he had been appointed as Senior Grand Chief (National President) of the fraternity. Had he chosen to ignore the letter, perhaps ATO would not exist. Colonel William E. Berry, a winner of the Thomas Arkle Clark Award during his senior year at Ole Miss, gave up his dream job to serve ATO at a critical juncture in 1975.

Being a chapter officer is hard work and sometimes despite the best intentions and plans it doesn’t go very well. But when it does work, through vision, effort, persistence, teamwork and that feeling that there is something greater than what is in front of us, it is glorious. No chapter is perfect. And it is not perfection that is telling. It is in the working through of less than perfect situations that one learns to adapt, one learns resiliency, and one learns that doing the right thing at the right time is better than appearing perfect. Learning can take place at any point from falling slightly short of the mark to experiencing abject failure. Failure is not necessarily a bad thing, especially if one learns valuable lessons from it.

Theodor Seuss Geisel , a Sigma Phi Epsilon, wrote And to Think That I Saw It on Mulberry Street. He submitted it to 27 publishers none of whom were willing to take a chance on him. Had Geisel given up after the fifth or sixth rejection, the world would not know Dr Seuss. 

I implore the collegiate members of GLOs to be builders, to do that hard work of making a chapter better than you found it. The Founders deserve and those builders who came before you deserve it, too. Honor them by your actions.

Theodor Seuss Geisel, 1925, while a student at Dartmouth (courtesy of the Dartmouth College Library)

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Minnie Freeman and the “Schoolhouse Blizzard” on January 12, 1888

Can anyone in America today imagine not knowing that a big snowstorm was heading his/her way? 

Minnie Freeman (Penney) was an 1885 initiate of the Pi Beta Phi chapter at Methodist Episcopal College of York, Nebraska. On January 12, 1888, she was a 19 year-old teaching in a sod schoolhouse about six miles south of Ord, Nebraska, in an area known as Mira Valley. During a sudden, fierce Nebraska blizzard, she saved the lives of 13 of her students by leading them from her schoolhouse to the nearest farm, a mile away. The temperatures, which had been  unseasonable warm when the students walked to school, had dropped substantially, the wind was ranging, and the snow was blinding.

More than 200 people on the Great Plains were killed by that storm called the “Schoolhouse Blizzard,” most of them children who couldn’t get home from school. In 1888, the Song of the Great Blizzard: Thirteen Were Saved or Nebraska’s Fearless Maid, was written in her honor by William Vincent.

Freeman was given a gold medal by the State Education Board, a wax bust of her was exhibited across the country, and she received more than 80 marriage proposals.

The account as it appears in the March 1888 Arrow:

A HEROINE,

The Omaha Herald calls for a medal of honor from the state of Nebraska for Minnie Freeman and THE ARROW seconds the motion. She teaches a school in the vicinity of Ord. When big blizzard of Friday last came along, it blew the door of the school-house off its hinges, and then lifted the roof from the walls. The brave school mistress tied her thirteen young charges together, took the smallest in her arms,

They were blinded and buffeted by the merciless north wind; they were tripped up by the drifts and blown down between times; but they struggled along together, and finally reached a sheltering roof, where the nearest patron of the school lived, to be welcomed from the very jaws of death. It was the pluck and level head of Minnie Freeman that saved those thirteen lives.

Minnie Freeman, Pi Beta Phi

Minnie Freeman, Pi Beta Phi

A poem about Minnie Freeman was written by Flora Lamson, an 1884 initiate of the same chapter. It also appeared it the March 1888 Arrow:

TO MINNIE FREEMAN,

“When e’er a noble deed is wrought,
When e’er is spoken a noble thought,
Our hearts in glad surprise
To higher levels rise.” Longfellow
 
‘the night and the storm fell together,
On prairie and woodland and lea;
And trembling, the mighty snow-tempest
Held out its cold hand toward the sea.
Like the quick, sharp flash of the lightning
The wind swept the streets and the shore;
It wrenched off the roofs and the chimneys;
It burst ‘gainst windows and doors.
Like a savage excited and frenzied,
It surged up the prairies and down;
It screamed the harsh cry of “Destruction!”
O’er cottage and hilltop and town. ‘
‘Twas a night when we all love our shelter
And dare not to venture abroad;
 
When the rider clings close to his charger.
And trusts in the mercy of God.
Oh, cruel and merciless blizzard!
We sons of the pioneer know,
Whenever unfriended we meet you,
That you are our bitterest foe!
You snatch off the forms of our darlings;
You bury them under the snow;
And only the days of the future
Your cruelty ever shall know.
 
But see! Far off in the whirlwind,
A school-house without roof we behold,
The children crouched closely together,
Mute with terror and anguish and cold,
While the fair, girlish form of the teacher
Looks out on the snow-clouds around her
And glances with fear at her fold.
Her sweet face with courage is lighted;
And, taking a wee child in her arms,
A chain of humanity is fastened.
And hastens to brave the alarms.
But look! look! the procession is stumbling.
While trembles the brave, fragile girl;
They struggle ‘mid snow fierce and blinding,
While the merciless winds rise and whirl.
On, on through the storm the chain plunges.
With strength unaccustomed and might.
Till bright through the gloom and fierce storm-clouds
Gleams the home or the children at night.
 
Thank God that whatever the sadness
That seems to cover this world’s feeble sight.
He always provides a deliverer, and
sends us a sweet ray of light.
Let us praise His omnipotent mercy,
Coming down with the clouds from above,
And rescued our Minnie from ruin,
And made her an angel of love.
To Minnie. brave sister Minnie,
Our message of love we unfold;
And our hearts with gladness are throbbing,
As we point to the arrow of gold.
 

Blanche M. Burns, (English), another chapter sister of Minnie Freeman’s, wrote this letter to the Arrow:

We would be glad to add some tribute to the flood of praise that comes from all to our now distinguished sister, Minnie Freeman. Truly, the “tiny cord” has been transform’ed, and is drawing to her and firmly binding many friends. We are proud to claim her as ‘Our Minnie,’ and wish for her that these ties may be strong enough to hold through all the” storms of life” she has to face.

 egp.pe.013

 

The Blizzard of 1888, a large glass mosaic, memorializing Minnie Freeman and her students, hangs in the Nebraska State Capitol. Minnie is in the middle followed by her students, with the rope which ties them together. The large image on the left is said to be a Native American spirit that guided them to safety. 
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Congrats, Condolences, and Cautious Optimism

Congratulations…

Pi Kappa Phi’s Miami University chapter was recently in the news for the way it spends its Fridays.

These women of Kappa Delta at Wright State University each earned 4.0 honors.

 

 

 

 

Condolences

Condolences to Sigma Chi and Omega Psi Phi on the deaths of Astronaut John Young and Nashville, Tennessee Police Officer Joseph Gilmore, respectively.

 

 

Cautious Optimism…

I am hopeful that the men and women who attended the GLO leadership events of the past week and those who are headed to upcoming events will leave energized and armed with the skills and resources to lead our organizations into the future.

***

P.S. I can’t pass up the fact that today is the date upon which Dr. Charles Richardson, “Sis Doc,” Kappa Sigma and Chi Omega was born.

Dr. Charles Richardson, Kappa Sigma, and a founder of Chi Omega

He, Honorary Tau Kappa Epsilon Elvis Presley, and I share a birthday.

Rick Husky pins a TKE pin on his newest fraternity brother Elvis Presley. (Photo courtesy of Elvis Presley Enterprises)

 

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Is Fraternity Life Doomed?

Will fraternity life be around in 20 years? I don’t know, but I do know that every time I see another headline about the state of fraternity life in 2018, it breaks my heart. For every incident and death, whether due to hazing, alcohol, drugs or just plain carelessness and uncaring behavior, the lives of those left behind are shattered. The what-ifs, shouldas and couldas become a broken record in the thoughts of the survivors.

This weekend and the ones following it are rife with GLO sponsored leadership academies, workshops and opportunities for new officers to improve their skills. No matter what the name, the goals are basically the same – to better the fraternity and sorority experience. A handful of chapter members attend, or maybe it’s only the president. They get fired up and empowered and then they head home. Are those skills and that energy enough to lead  100 or 200 other members whose goals might not be similarly aligned?

As one who studies the history of our organizations, it’s not the first time the organizations have come under assault. From the very beginning, GLOs have been up against anti-fraternity sentiment. It’s been a constant since the beginning. Today, the noise is louder, more high pitched, and omnipresent.

The model of membership in most of our organizations involves bringing in new members each year. The image and future of the GLO is vested in the very youngest members, those who have hardly a clue about the goals, values and history of the organization. Perhaps they’ve heard some stories from older alums or maybe they can quote from heart movies and shows about fraternity life. Maybe they live for the moment and care nary a whit about the lofty purposes of the organization they joined without thinking much about it.

And while most of the incidents involve men, be forewarned that if the men’s GLO groups are forced to leave a campus, the women’s groups will be a casualty, too. The women need to hold the men’s groups accountable for their existence weighs in the balance.

If we as GLO members say we stand for higher aims and live our values then our actions should reflect that. Those who fail to live up to these ideals need to resign or be dismissed. The futures of all GLOs are in the balance.

An early 1900s fraternity hat band ad (Photo courtesy of the Student Life and Culture Archives at the University of Illinois.)

 

 

 

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Celebrating the Good Work of GLO Members!

Happy 2018! My resolution is to keep telling the stories of GLO members. Today’s post highlights some of the social media posts of the last week.

Condolences to the family of Zackari Parrish, the Douglas County, Colorado, deputy who was killed on a New Year’s Eve day in Highlands Ranch, Colorado. Among the officers wounded was a Pi Beta Phi member, Taylor Davis. May she and the others injured in the shooting recover quickly.

 

Congratulations to Hota Kotb, Delta Delta Delta on her new gig on TODAY!  She and co-anchor Savannah Guthrie, Pi Beta Phi, are an impressive NPC Duo! Guthrie was also a P.E.O. Scholar Award recipient.

 

Congratulations, too, to Dana Gresham, Alpha Phi Alpha, who was appointed the Chief of Staff to Doug Jones, Beta Theta Pi and Alabama’s new Senator.

 

Congratulations to the University of Central Florida football team for their win in the Peach Bowl. Here’s a post from Phi Delta Theta. I suspect there may be other fraternity men on the team.

 

How wonderful that these three fraternity men share an Alma Mater and a great love for their own fraternities, members of the Miami Triad, the three fraternities founded at Miami University!

 

Here’s a smattering of the posts celebrating good deeds done by GLO members.

 

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