On Beta Theta Pi’s Founders’ Day, Olympian Eddie Eagan

August 13, 1839, was Commencement Day at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio. Five days earlier, on August 8, at the first official meeting, eight young men established Beta Theta Pi, the first men’s fraternity founded west of the Allegheny Mountains. The men, “of ever honored memory” were John Reily Knox, Michael Clarkson Ryan, David Linton, Samuel Taylor Marshall, James George Smith, Charles Henry Hardin, John Holt Duncan, and Thomas Boston Gordon. The first three were members of the Class of 1839, at a time when there were no female students at Miami. 

The chapter became inactive in January 1848 due to the “Snowball Rebellion.” Erasmus D. McMaster, Miami’s president, wanted to rid Miami of fraternities; a decree was handed down banning the fraternities. The students rebelled. A heavy snow aided in the protest. The main entrance of Old Main was blocked off and at least a dozen huge snowballs found their way to the first floor. McMaster was livid! He was determined to expel the men involved. At the time of McMaster’s edict, they were the only two national groups on campus. The second chapter of Alpha Delta Phi had been founded at Miami in 1833. 

On the following evening, the rebellion continued. Doors were nailed shut, and Old Main was filled with snow. McMaster cancelled classes for a week and began disciplinary proceedings. All but nine seniors and five juniors were expelled from the University. 

Three of the men were admitted to Centre College in Kentucky and founded Beta’s Epsilon chapter. That spring, the two remaining members left. The Alpha chapter did not come back to life until 1855. Miami University’s decision to fire McMaster due to the loss in critical revenue resulted in a change of course for the institution regarding Greek-letter organizations. The story of Miami University’s role in the history of the fraternity movement is a rich one, but it will have to wait until another day. Happy Birthday to the first of the Miami Triad!

Eddie Eagan while at Yale.

Eddie Eagan while at Yale.

Since we seem to be caught up in Olympics, fever I offer you Edward Patrick Francis “Eddie” Eagan, a Beta who was a member of the University of Denver and Yale University chapters of Beta Theta Pi. Just as he experienced two Beta chapters, he also experienced the winter and summer Olympics. Eagan won the gold at the 1920 Antwerp Olympics in the 178-pound boxing category and a gold in bobsledding at the 1932 Lake Placid Olympics. After Yale, Eagan went to Harvard Law School and then to Oxford University as a Rhodes Scholar. He served in both World War I and World War II, lived and is buried in Rye, New York.

Two Olympic torches grace Eddie Eagan's gravestone.

Two Olympic torches grace Eagan’s gravestone.

 © Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com, 2016. All Rights Reserved. If  you enjoyed this post, please sign up for updates. Also follow me on twitter @GLOHistory and Pinterest www.pinterest.com/glohistory/

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Carbondale Connections and a Shout Out to the Amazing Lyn Harris

The Fraternity and Sorority Archivists have the opportunity of attending a biennial conference coordinated the Student Life and Culture Archives at the University of Illinois. One of the best parts of the conference is the opportunity to interact with kindred spirits – fellow fraternity and sorority members who love the history of their own organization and who are charged with protecting and preserving that history. It is through those conferences that I had the opportunity to meet the one and only Lyn Harris, Chi Omega’s Archivist. Recently, Lyn had a big-time mention in an Odyssey on-line feature article Things That Only Chi Omegas Understand. The title is a bit misleading as this Pi Phi understands #5 completely. I’ve seen the owl shoes and I love all that she does to make Chi Omega’s history come alive to its members.

Post from Odessey

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Recently, Lyn has been in a myth busters campaign of her own.

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***

Late Sunday evening, July 31, 2016, a member of the Carbondale Police Department was shot in the line of duty. The officer, 26-year-old Trey Harris, was on the force a little more than three years. After the shooting, he was transported to a St. Louis hospital for treatment.  Officer Harris was initiated into Phi Kappa Tau at Southern Illinois University Carbondale. According to the Carbondale Police Department, anyone wishing to donate monetarily to Officer Harris can send checks to: City of Carbondale Police Department, “CPD Injured Officers Fund,” 501 South Washington Street, Carbondale, Illinois 62901.

***

Last night as I was in the middle of  a scanning project, I was reading the twitter feed. I saw that the opening of the Alpha Tau Omega Congress was being covered live. I tuned in just as the chapter at Southern Illinois University was being honored with a Storm Strap Award. The award honors a chapter or individual who have been able to withstand and prevail over severe chapter operational difficulties.

SIU Chapter President Nolan McConnell accepting the Storm Strap Award from Wynn Smiley, ATO's CEO

SIU Chapter President Nolan McConnell accepting the Storm Strap Award from Wynn Smiley, ATO’s CEO.

The spring semester was a very trying one for the chapter. It was accused of releasing a racist video. Congratulations Nolan on the award! Your leadership helped the chapter get through a very difficult episode.

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IMG_1681

© Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com, 2016. All Rights Reserved. If  you enjoyed this post, please sign up for updates. Also follow me on twitter @GLOHistory and Pinterest www.pinterest.com/glohistory/

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OTD – A Phi Gamma Delta and Pi Beta Phi Became the President and First Lady

On August 3, 1923, Americans were waking to the news that Warren Harding had died suddenly, late in the evening, after he became ill in a San Francisco hotel. The Vice-President, Calvin Coolidge, and his wife Grace, were visiting the Coolidge homestead in Plymouth Notch, Vermont, where the Vice-President’s father, John, lived.

For about fours hours, the country was without a President, as it took that long for the news to travel from the west coast, where Harding died, to the hills of the small New England town where the Coolidges were staying.  

Colonel John Coolidge’s home did not have a telephone. President Harding’s secretary telegraphed the initial message of Harding’s death to White River Junction, Vermont. The public telephone operator who received the message sought out Coolidge’s stenographer, W. A. Perkins, and Joseph N. McInerney, his chauffeur. They alerted a reporter. Much activity ensued in a short amount of time. They went to the Coolidge homestead at about 2:30 a.m. and knocked. Colonel Coolidge answered the door and received the news. He trudged up the stairs to wake his son.  The President recounted the night in his autobiography:

I noticed that his voice trembled. As the only times I had ever observed that before were when death had visited our family, I knew that something of the gravest nature had occurred.

He placed in my hands an official report and told me that President Harding had just passed away. My wife and I at once dressed.

Before leaving the room I knelt down and, with the same prayer with which I have since approached the altar of the church, asked God to bless the American people and give me power to serve them.

The Coolidge family - Calvin, Jr., Calvin, Grace, and John shortly before Calvin, Jr.'s death. Courtesy of the Library of Congress.

The Coolidge family – Calvin, Jr., Calvin, Grace, and John shortly before Calvin, Jr.’s death. Courtesy of the Library of Congress.

Grace Coolidge went downstairs to join her husband in the parlor. A Bible belonging to Calvin Coolidge’s mother, who died when he was young, was on the table. As her father-in-law, a Windsor County notary, administered the oath of office to her husband by the light of a kerosene lamp in the small (14′ x 17′) parlor, she became the First Lady of the United States. 

First-hand accounts vary as to the people in the room when the oath was administered. That is understandable given the haste of the activity, the darkness of the night, and the solemness of the occasion.

On that night, Grace Coolidge, a charter member of the Pi Beta Phi chapter at the University of Vermont, and Calvin Coolidge, a member of the Phi Gamma Delta Chapter at Amherst College, became the first President and  First Lady to have been initiated into Greek-letter societies as college students.

This full size portrait of President Coolidge was painted by Ercole Cartotto. Although it is now at the Phi Gamma Delta's Headquarters, it was originally commissioned. by the Xi Graduate Chapter originally commissioned this for the Phi Gamma Delta Club in New York City. Ercole Cartotto's painting was dedicated on February 20, 1929, in the Club library. It is "life size."

This full size portrait of President Coolidge was painted by Ercole Cartotto. Although it is now at the Phi Gamma Delta’s Headquarters, it was originally commissioned. by the Xi Graduate Chapter originally commissioned this for the Phi Gamma Delta Club in New York City. Ercole Cartotto’s painting was dedicated on February 20, 1929, in the Club library.

Grace Coolidge in her official First Lady portrait

Grace Coolidge in her official First Lady portrait. In it, she is wearing her Pi Beta Phi arrow. The portrait was given to the United States by Pi Beta Phi.

If you’re ever near Plymouth Notch, Vermont, you can stop by and see the room where Grace Coolidge became First Lady by the light of a kerosene lamp. For more posts about the Coolidges see:

The Only President Born on the 4th of July. And He’s a Fiji!

Calvin Coolidge, Pride of the Amherst College Phi Gamma Delta Chapter

Grace Coolidge and Orange, Connecticut

Signed, Grace Coolidge

Grace Goodhue and Calvin Coolidge – Pi Beta Phi and Phi Gamma Delta – The First President and First Lady Initiated into Greek-Letter Societies while in College

GRACE GOODHUE COOLIDGE – MY FAVORITE FIRST LADY AND A LOYAL MEMBER OF THE VERMONT BETA CHAPTER OF PI BETA PHI

“If My Father Were Your Father, You Would.” – Calvin Coolidge, Jr.

© Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com, 2016. All Rights Reserved. If  you enjoyed this post, please sign up for updates. Also follow me on twitter @GLOHistory and Pinterest www.pinterest.com/glohistory/

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Bogus Greek Life Statistics and Condolences

It’s August 1. I will fully admit I am not sure how we arrived at this date or what happened to June and July. It was just Memorial Day the day before yesterday and we were in Pennsylvania, touring the hallowed GLO ground of Washington and Jefferson College. Smack dab and it’s now the dawning of another academic year.

The twitter feed is full of “it’s almost recruitment” posts. It’s also a ripe time for the “if it’s on the internet somewhere, it must be true” posts about the benefits of fraternity and sorority life.

Exhibit A – 

I am not sure this is still on the cited address.

This appeared on twitter within the last week.

Here are the current statistics from the NIC website (http://www.nicindy.org/fraternity-statistics.html):

  • Greeks in 112th US Congress: 42 Senators (42%), 101 Congressmen (23%)
  • Greeks in 113th US Congress: 39 Senators (39%), 106 Congressmen (24%)
  • 50% of the Top 10 Fortune 500 CEOs are fraternity men; 15% of Fortune 100 CEOs are Greek
  • 44% of all US Presidents have been members of a social fraternity
  • 31% of all US Supreme Court Justices have been fraternity alumni

I dare someone to do the research that would take to compute the 63% of all U.S. Cabinet members since 1900 factoid. I have no doubt that there was a year in time when it was a correct number, but I suspect it was a long time ago, perhaps when the grandparents, or even great-grandparents of today’s potential new members were just young ones themselves. 

As for the astronaut statistics, see http://wp.me/p20I1i-le. Short story – Sally Ride was at Stanford when there were no NPC organizations there. And as for Apollo 11, only Neil Armstrong was a fraternity man. His Phi Delta Theta badge did indeed travel to the moon with him. For the debunking of other GLO myths see http://wp.me/p20I1i-2JE

The graphic which appears above includes its source. However, a trip to the url produces this screen.

The graphic which appears above included its source. However, a trip to the url produced this screen.

***

A reader of this blog sent me a link to the obituary of Dr. Thomas Spotswood Glazebrook Jr., a Columbia, South Carolina physician, whose funeral was held yesterday. “Spots” as he was affectionately known, according to the obituary, was the great-grandson of Otis Allan Glazebook, one of the three founders of Alpha Tau Omega. Dr. Glazebrook was an initiate of the ATO chapter at the University of South Carolina. The obituary noted, “In lieu of flowers and memorials, if one wishes to honor the life of Dr. Glazebrook, his family suggests that a selfless act be done for a person in need.” Condolences to the family, friends and ATO brothers of Dr. Glazebrook.

***

This sad news is from the Sigma Phi Epsilon facebook page. Michael Lopez’s girlfriend survived the shooting by her former boyfriend and is in critical condition. My prayers for all involved.

It is with a heavy heart that we bring the news of the death of our undergraduate brother Michael Lopez, Florida International ’17.

He was shot and killed on July 30th. Our hearts go out to his family, friends and chapter brothers during this time.

May the red rose serve as an expression of our enduring fraternal love for our departed brother. ‪#‎VDBL‬ ‪#‎SigEpStrong‬

 

© Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com, 2016. All Rights Reserved. If  you enjoyed this post, please sign up for updates. Also follow me on twitter @GLOHistory and Pinterest www.pinterest.com/glohistory/

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In Mount Pleasant Finding Kappa, Pi Phi, Alpha Xi, and P.E.O. Connections

I’m in Mount Pleasant, Iowa. I just toured the Memory Room in Old Main at Iowa Wesleyan University. I’ve been there before, but it is always a treat to tour the campus where P.E.O. was founded on January 21, 1869. A month earlier, on December 21, 1868, Iowa Alpha of Pi Beta Phi was founded at Iowa Wesleyan. Libbie Brook (Gaddis) left Monmouth College and enrolled at IWU so that she could start a new chapter of her women’s fraternity.

Libbie, the Ring Ching Roadshow car, is named in honor of Libbie Brooks Gaddis), who left Monmouth College for a year to start a second chapter.

Libbie, the Ring Ching Roadshow car, is named in honor of Libbie Brooks (Gaddis), who left Monmouth College for a year to start a second chapter.

Pi Beta Phi was founded as I.C. Sorosis on April 28, 1867. It was founded at Monmouth College in Monmouth, Illinois. Three years later, Kappa Kappa Gamma was founded at Monmouth. Imagine my surprise at seeing the name of my Kappa friend, Kylie Towers Smith, in the guest book at the Memory Room. Had I visited a week earlier, I could have toured it with Kylie. I suspect if we toured it together, there would be much laughter involved in the tour.

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Kylie Towers Smith, Kappa Kappa Gamma, signed the guest book a week before I did.

After Libbie Brook organized the second chapter of her fraternity, several of the women who declined an invitation to join because not all of their circle was included in the invitation, were at Hollowell’s Restaurant. It is said that they talked about how Libbie Brook had done what she had set out to do. The women’s response to that information would be monumental.

It is said that Hallowells Restaurant os hg

An 1869 ad for Hollowell’s Restaurant where some of the P.E.O. discussed the establishment of the I.C. Sorosis chapter.

Although the beginnings of Pi Beta Phi and P.E.O. are connected by Libbie Brooks and Iowa Wesleyan, there is another connection that is more intimate. June 9, 1902, is a defining date for two organizations, Alpha Xi Delta and the P.E.O. Sisterhood. P.E.O. was founded as a collegiate organization at Iowa Wesleyan College on January 21, 1869. Alpha Xi Delta was founded on April 17, 1893 at Lombard College in Galesburg, Illinois. Iowa Wesleyan is about 60 miles from Galesburg with the Mississippi River separating the two.

1914 P.E.O. Emblem

1914 P.E.O. Emblem

azdIn the years between 1869 and 1902, the P.E.O. members who had been initiated while students at Iowa Wesleyan stayed active in the college chapter even though they were no longer college students. Many remained in or near Mount Pleasant. Others formed chapters in towns where the members moved after leaving the college. The early P.E.O. chapters that had been founded at nearby schools did not survive and P.E.O.’s growth was in community chapters. The chapter at Iowa Wesleyan was finding it difficult to operate on a college campus with the rules put forth by the community chapters. After the turn of the century, the governing body of P.E.O. made the decision to withdraw the charter of the Iowa Wesleyan chapter. The students wished to remain a collegiate organization and discussed becoming a chapter of a Greek-letter organization.

The Alpha Xi Delta Chapter at Lombard, having made the decision to become a national organization, and the collegiate members of P.E.O., having decided to become a chapter of a Greek-letter organization, discussed the decisions that needed to be made on both sides if there was to be a resolution to these wishes. Anna Gillis (Kimble), a member of the Alpha Xi Delta Chapter at Lombard College, was from Mount Pleasant. Her influence helped the Iowa Wesleyan women make the decision to become the Beta Chapter of Alpha Xi Delta.

On that Monday in 1902, for the first time, the Alpha Xi Delta members entered the Lombard College Chapel wearing tri-colored ribbons. The ribbons signified that they were now a national organization. After chapel, the Alpha Xi Delta installing officers made their way from Galesburg to Mount Pleasant.

The installation of Alpha Xi Delta’s second chapter took place at the home of Ellen Ball. Cora Bollinger-Block presided at the installation. Helping her were Ella Boston-Leib*, Alice Barlett-Bruner, Jennie Marriot-Buchanan, Virginia Henney Franklin, Anna Gillis, and Edna Epperson-Brinkham.  With the installation of the chapter, it also signified the day that P.E.O. became a community organization.

In 1913, Iowa Wesleyan College authorities allowed the chapter to initiate the P.E.O. alumnae as Alpha Xi Deltas. Afterwards, the Mount Pleasant Alumnae Club of Alpha Xi Delta was formed.

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The Alpha Xi Delta chapter gave the IWU a bench on the occasion of the chapter’s centennial. The bench is in front of the P.E.O. Memorial Library, now IWU’s administrative offices.

The only P.E.O. founder to be continuously involved with P.E.O. was Alice Bird Babb. Her daughter Alice Babb was a member of the Beta Chapter of Alpha Xi Delta. In June 1924, Alice Bird Babb became an alumna initiate of Alpha Xi Delta.

Gillis-Kimble was the first Alpha Xi Delta delegate to attend the Inter-Sorority Conference (now known as the National Panhellenic Conference) in 1904. She served as the first Editor of The Alpha Xi Delta of the Alpha Xi Delta Sorority (now The Quill). Her role in making Alpha Xi Delta a national organization was only one of her contributions to her beloved sorority.

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Alice Bird Babb, a P.E.O. founder, was also a member of Alpha Xi Delta

* Ella Boston Leib also served as Alpha Xi Delta’s Grand President, National Panhellenic Conference delegate, and Chairman of  NPC as well as the President of Illinois State Chapter of P.E.O. For more information about this, please take a look at this post http://wp.me/p20I1i-Gz .

© Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com, 2016. All rights reserved.  If  you enjoyed this post, please sign up for updates. Also follow me on twitter @GLOHistory and Pinterest www.pinterest.com/glohistory/

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A Weekend With Amazing Sorority Women

I’ve been on a vacation of sorts. Well, it wasn’t really a vacation in the normal sense of the word. It has been five days filled with amazing sorority women. It was a leadership academy for sorority women. And while most of them were members of my own organization, there were a few who wore the badges of the other NPC groups, including the wonderful Erin Fischer, who was our rock star. There was even a fraternity man, Shawn Eagleburger, in the mix. And Sis Mullis, was there. That’s all that needs to be said. She danced and danced and danced and gave the Institute a special Sis-ness.

None of the facilitators had titles at this event. The Grand President was incognito and it was not until the last 15 minutes that her presence was revealed to most of the college women who hadn’t made the connection between the facilitator named Paula and the fact that she leads our organization.

I promised them – Paige, Jill, Jackie, Riley, Jenny, Katie, Allie, Rachel, Hannah, Sara, Dana, Sarah, and MacKenzie – a post, so here it is. Thank you ladies for a fabulous couple of days. The future is in your hands and I can’t wait to see it! You are all phenomenal women!

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Squad 13

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Washington University’s Brookings Hall 0n my early morning walk

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Breaking the ice and diving in

 

Facilitors of Squad 13. On the left is Mackenzie Price, a Hillsdale Pi Phi.

Facilitators of Squad 13. On the left is Mackenzie Price, a Hillsdale Pi Phi.

© Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com, 2016. All Rights Reserved. If  you enjoyed this post, please sign up for updates. Also follow me on twitter @GLOHistory and Pinterest www.pinterest.com/glohistory/

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Garry Marshall, a Life Loyal Tau

Garry Marshall, creator of Happy Days, Mork and Mindy, and a slew of other television and film hits, was a member of Alpha Tau Omega. He died yesterday.

He was initiated into the Northwestern University chapter of ATO where he served as an officer of the chapter.

December 1953 officer listing

December 1953 officer listing

From the September 1954 edition of The Palm of Alpha Tau Omega.

From the September 1954 edition of The Palm of Alpha Tau Omega.

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Alpha Tau Omega had a place in the Happy Days. An ATO paddle was on the set of Arnold’s Drive In, just above a “Marshall” pennant. Happy Days characters Richie Cunningham, Potsie Weber and Ralph Malph pledged ATO in one of the story lines.

The ATO paddle is on the top left.

The ATO paddle is on the top left.

Garry Marshall brought joy and laughter into the lives of so many people and he will be missed. My condolences to his friends and family.

© Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com, 2016. All Rights Reserved. If  you enjoyed this post, please sign up for updates. Also follow me on twitter @GLOHistory and Pinterest www.pinterest.com/glohistory/

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Turn, Turn, Turn…

Today’s post sounds eerily similar to yesterday’s post. Today it is a death and an anniversary.

International Fraternity of Phi Gamma Delta

With great sadness, we report that a Phi Gamma Delta brother was among the 84 people who died in the July 14 terrorist attack in Nice, France.

Nick Leslie (California Berkeley 2018) was in France participating in Cal’s study abroad program this summer. We extend our condolences to Nick’s family, his brothers at the Delta Xi Chapter, and all those who knew and loved him.

For more on this tragic news: www.nbcnews.com/…/uc-berkeley-student-confirmed-dead-france…

Three other UC-Berkeley students were injuried in the attack. Vladyslav Kostiuk and Daryus Medora suffered broken legs. Diane Huang’s foot was broken.

I offer my heartfelt condolences to the family, friends, and Fiji brothers of Nick Leslie and my fervent hope for quick healing to those injured in the tragedy.

***

Thirty years ago, the LeaderShape Institute became a reality. In the early 1980s, Alpha Tau Omega began searching for a way to help its members become better leaders. Through the efforts of some visionary leaders, LeaderShape took form.

On July 19, 1986, the first LeaderShape Institute was held at the University of Illinois Conference Center at Allerton House in Monticello, Illinois, approximately 20 miles southwest of Champaign. The first session began on Saturday, July 19, and ended on Friday, July 25. The second session started the following Sunday and wrapped up on Saturday. In addition to the Alpha Tau Omega men, each of the 26 National Panhellenic Conference organizations were invited to send a representative. All but one NPC took ATO up on the offer. 

A dry run of the LeaderShape concept had been part of the 1985 ATO Congress, which was held in Champaign, Illinois. The Congress undergraduate attendees were grouped into 15 LeaderShape chapters which functioned as model ATO chapters.

From the Winter 1986 Arrow of Pi Beta Phi

From the Winter 1986 Arrow of Pi Beta Phi

© Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com, 2016. All Rights Reserved. If  you enjoyed this post, please sign up for updates. Also follow me on twitter @GLOHistory and Pinterest www.pinterest.com/glohistory/

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There Is a Season…….

The truck attack in Nice, France on Bastille Day, July 14, 2016, claimed the lives of an American father and son. Sean Copeland, 51, and his 11-year-old son Brodie were killed in the attack. Maegan Copeland, a Kappa Kappa Gamma alumna, and Sean Copeland, an Alpha Tau Omega, were in France celebrating together. The celebration turned into a tragedy, Condolences to their family.

Ole Miss Kappa Kappa Gamma

Ole Miss Kappa Kappa Gamma sends our sincere condolences to our sister, Maegan Copeland (’05), and as well as to her family, who suffered the tragic loss of her father and little brother while in Nice, France over the past couple of days. The link to their GoFundMe account is posted below, and we encourage you to make a donation to help our sister and her family through this time of loss. We cannot imagine the heartbreak you feel – we are here for you always.

https://www.gofundme.com/2eb85b99

Prayers for Tau Austin Copeland in Nice France who lost his dad Sean and brother Brodie in yesterday’s cowardly attack.

***

This morning, I learned that a Chi Omega founder and an Alpha Xi founder share a birthday.

July 16, 1878 Jean Marie Vincenheller Founder was born in Eastland County, TX

 

Happy Birthday to one of our Founders, Lewie Strong Taylor! She was born on July 18, 1867.

I’ve also added the two birthdates to the State by State Tour of Graves, Founding Sites, and HQs for NPC GLOs http://wp.me/p20I1i-1WQ.

© Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com, 2016. All Rights Reserved. If  you enjoyed this post, please sign up for updates. Also follow me on twitter @GLOHistory and Pinterest www.pinterest.com/glohistory/

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GLO Recruitment Via Famous Alumnae/Alumni

“Reverting to immediately prior version; fact about Kappa Alpha Theta membeship (sic) is unsupported and a Google search suggests it refers to a different person altogether.” The subject of this wikipedia entry was Edith Schwartz Clements. She was indeed a member of Kappa Alpha Theta. I went searching for a primary source which would leave no doubt that it was she, and not another Edith Clements, who was a Theta. I found it the Kappa Alpha Theta, Vol. 22(2), January 1909, on page 164 in the report of the Minneapolis Alumnae Association: “It was our privilege in October to give a tea at the home of Mrs Birch in welcome to Edith Schwartz Clements of Rho chapter whose brilliant husband has come to head the department of botany at the university. The guests included the wives of members of the faculty and also representatives from the alumnae chapters of the other women’s fraternities.” (See http://wp.me/p20I1i-2xO for more info on Schwartz.)

I enjoy documenting the GLO connections of wikipedia subjects. I will also delete the information about a person if I come across it while searching something else. I took out the claim that Carly Simon was a member of a GLO. She isn’t. That said, I am not the wikipedia police and I am not going out searching for problems. If I come across something that needs correcting, I will correct it, but it’s not my main purpose in life.

So how did I end up here? I’m not really sure. For the past 36 hours, I have been felled by a rare summer cold, a gift from my husband, who has been battling it for a few days longer. On Wednesday, Libbie, the Pi Phi car, and her driver Daphney, joined the Southern Illinois Pi Phi Alumnae Club for lunch and a photo op. After the festivities were over, I headed to the grocery store to pick up a few things. There, in the produce section, a head cold attacked me and it was as if a faucet turned itself on. Three boxes of tissues later, two of them the lotion kind that gets saved for this purpose, I feel sort of like myself again. 

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There are about 30 Pi Phis in Southern Illinois. A third of them are dues paying members to the Alumnae Club and most of them attended the lunch with Libbie.

There are about 30 Pi Phis in Southern Illinois. A third of them are dues paying members to the Alumnae Club and most of them attended the lunch with Libbie.

But back to wikipedia. Should anyone join a certain GLO solely because someone they admire or some famous people belonged to that organization? No, no, and a thousand times, no. 

For those women signing up for Panhellenic recruitment, I give you this advice. Do not rule out any organizations solely because of what you heard from your cousin who is on another campus, or your boyfriend who is at a school that doesn’t have GLOs, or from what you read on the internet on “ranking” sites. If you’re a legacy do not think you will have automatic entry into that organization. It’s not possible in many instances. And the fact is that it might not be the best match for you. Joining an organization to please someone else isn’t the best option in most cases. You, and only you, need to be happy with your choice. The grass is always greener on the other side if you let it be. It is up to you to work for the betterment of the organization you join.

For those hoping to join organizations whose recruitment is not as structured as the Panhellenic Council recruitment, I advocate keeping an open mind and being willing to make a decision to work on behalf of that GLO. It doesn’t matter who wore the badge before you; you and your chapter members, how you behave and dedicate yourself to the organization, will be the ones who decide its future.

© Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com, 2016. All Rights Reserved. If  you enjoyed this post, please sign up for updates. Also follow me on twitter @GLOHistory and Pinterest www.pinterest.com/glohistory/

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