TABLE OF CONTENTS The Key OF KAPPA Announcing KAP~A GAMMA Fraternity Headquarters, 530 East Town Street, Columbus, Ohio 43215 pictures to the: ACTIVE CHAPTER EDITOR Mrs. Willis C. POugh, Jr. 23 59 Juan Street · San Diego, California 92103 Send all alumnae news and pict ures to the: ALUMNAE EDITOR Mrs. E. Taylor Ri chardson 22 85 Old Orchard Rd ., N.E. Marietta. Ga. 30062 Send all busi ness ite ms and changes of address, six weeks prior to month of publicat ion. to: FRATERNITY HEADQ UARTERS P.O. Box 2079 Columbus , Ohio 432 16 (Du plicate copies cannot be sent to replace those undel ivered through failure to send adva nce notice.) Second class postage paid at Columbus. Ohio and at additional mailing offices. Copyright. Kap pa Kappa Gamma Fraternity 1976 . Convention Awards . . .. ..... 16 Newly Elected Council ..... . 21 Scholarship Application Deadlines ......... 24 ............ 25 Scholarship Winners 1976 . Mailing Address: P.O. Box 2079, Columbus, Ohio 43216 NUMBER3 2 Resolutions Urge Career Counseling . . . . . . . 6 "Pride Is Not A Four Letter Word" . . . . . . . . . . 8 The.!irst college women 's maga:ine. Published colllinuously since 1882 Send all editorial material and correspondence to the: EDITOR Mrs. David B. Selby 67 50 Merwin Place Worthington, Ohio 43085 Send all acti ve chap ter news and Chapter, U. of Virginia .. . . . Colorful Coronado Convention . EDUCATIONAL JOURNAL VOLUME93 u: FALL 1976 Price $1. 50 single copy Dead line dates arc August I. Novem ber I, February I, April I for Fall , Wint er. Sprin g, and Summer issues respectively Printed in U.S.A. Tlw A.'<:r is prim ed fo ur ti mes a yea r (in Fall , Winter, Spring and Summer) , by Compolith Typesetting Indi anapolis. Indiana and Di xon Publishing Company Di xon. Illinois 28 Graduate Counselors Student Aid Fund Contributors . . Fraternity Directory . 29 ..... .. ... . . .. . 30 What To Do When Calendar . .. .. .. . .. . .. . .. 38 Campus Highlights . . . . In Memoriam .. .... . . . rI . . .. .. .. . . .... 39 .... .... . . ' ..... 46 .. ..... 47 Chapter Closed . Alumnae News . .. . . . . ... .. . .... . .. ... . . . .. . 49 Alumnae Boutique .. .. .. ..... . . . .. .. 52 Membership Data Form ... . . . ... . .. . .... . .. . 55 COVER: Debbie Lavendar. Suzie Baumgardner, both Be members, and a child from the Headstart program, trick-or-treating during the " Owi-0-Ween" philanthropy with Chi Omega sorority at the University of Oklahoma. Alumnae Calendar . . . . ... . ...... . .... . .. .. . 57 Province Meetings Scheduled .. . . . 57 Campus Sights and Sounds U.S. BICENTENNIAL and summer Olympics in Canada have popular campus attention in 1976, but decided trends for educational institutions are in focus for the 1976-77 school year: the return of the no-need (merit only) scholarship, increased unionization of faculties, and an average of eight to ten per cent increase in tuitions. THE AGE of one-third of all college students is over 25 while three million of these in the U.S. are over 35. Fastest growing in numbers are those over 60. The University of Texas is offering special orientation programs for students over 25 who are returning to college. HATS, be they mortar boards or military , thrown into the air to celebrate the moment degrees are conferred has long been a tradition at many schools. This year at Colorado as each school stood to receive degrees journalism graduates waved newspapers , music graduates got a fanfare from the band, and medical grads let loose a torrent of frisbees which was likened to an "explosion of white corpuscles." CAREER-ORIENTED education continues to be a matter for debate-where education ends and job training should or does begin . Those in favor of increasing classroom time devoted to career preparation say it is high time for educators to become realistic while the opposition contends that the idea smacks of vocationalism and does not produce educated individuals. Michigan State placement officials urge career counseling as early as elementary school and "on through college if employment options for college graduates are to increase." CONSUMER EDUCATION is an area in a growing area of academic emphasis on a number of campuses. REMEDIAL ENGLISH-composition , grammar , spelling, punctuation , and the like-continues to be the top priority educational topic of the day. The problem , recognized and identified , is being met with a variety of remedial courses across the country . The fact that the depth of the problem extends down into elementary school educational gaps makes many wonder how much correction can be accomplished in a two-term remedial course. MORTAR-BOARD in its first year of female/male membership reports that of 170 delegates to its June conference 19 were men. On most campuses the tapping of men to the formerly allfemale honorary was "no big deal" and in one case 20 of 35 chosen were men. The national headquarters of Mortar Board reports that a few men had refused election to the organization, one writing that he thought he was a liberated thinker until tapped by Mortar Board when he discovered that he was a male chauvinist after all! UNIVERSITY PUBLICATIONS-posters, brochures, yearbook, etc. - are now being produced by a student operated graphics studio at Kent State, providing internship experience for graphics students while saving the University funds formerly paid to outside businesses. The studio also takes assignments from non-profit organizations. BIBLE COLLEGES are among those recording a noticeable enrollment gain , a gain noteworthy even in a year of general enrollment increases. According to statistics offered for early 1976 major public universities are up 2.3 per cent, major private institutions up .5 per cent, multi-purpose institutions up 4. 7 per cent, and the schools closely tied to fundamentalist religion gaining an average of 7 per cent. AID VIA TELEPHONE is offered to any and all with a problem-for prayer, suicide prevention , nursing the baby, and so on! The newest phone-a-flurry rampant across the continent is the Rumor Checkpoint number which can be used on many campuses (and communities) to clear the latest fantasy from true facts . BICENTENNIAL observances have left untouched very little from America's past. Possibly one of the most interesting displays was produced by the University of Akron library, "Books (comiuued on {1oge 29) .- r"'.. ,.,-: -- l -- ••• • :-:-II ' ,. . --:-' - ! - ~- '>:: ,.- -·=~~ ~- = - - " - " ) t"l.t• ~ .......,"""'_~-- ~ I ' : -~ I. , :ii ~ ity _of 1/irsinia - · ~.· ~'~ ,Jitsf~J&jj;~·-:~- Ocfo6er zz~z4-.l~~~ Cltarf(Jiks.,iffe , Ur9iJtia. hartered in 1819 by the general asembly under the pon or hip of Thoma Jeffer on, the Univer ity of Virginia till bear the imprint of it founder. Jeffer on de igned the building and campu , gathered the faculty and haped the organization . The univer ity wa the mo t liberal in titution of learning of it time with curri ulum totally electi e, no religiou te 1 of practi e , faculty all equal , and tudent under the honour t m. Many of the idea of admini tration and urriculum that dominate meri an uni er itie in the 20th centur were anticipated b Jeffer on. The uni er it opened to in truction in I 2 . in the beautiful and traditional etting of harlotte ille ( urrent TH KEY /F LL 1976 population of over 40,000) and with ground occupying more than 1500 acres of historical interest in the Blue Ridge Mountain country. The Rotunda and its allached colonades of student rooms inter per ed with Federal style two toried "pavillions" housing administrati e official front on the "lawn" and form the central focus of the campus. Small public gardens behind the residence eparated by erpentine brick walls and an outer row of tudent rooms on the "range" complete the setting. tudent population of the uni er ity i o er 14,000 with teacher population of 1500. Prior to 1970 women tudenl ~ ere admitted onl at the graduate and profe ional le el. By 1974, 41 % of the student population was women . For 1975 school year , I 0,000 applications were screened for an approximate 2500 acceptances. Academic divisions are the College of Arts and Sciences with undergraduate chools in Architecture, Commerce , Education , Engineering and Nur ing. Bachelor degrees are offered in 58 fields , masters in 79 and doctoral in 65 field in addition to Law and Medicine. National Panhellenic Conference group already on campus include ZTA , ~~~. nB<t> , and KA8 . Kappa Kappa Gamma happily e tabli hes Epsilon Sigma Chapter at the Univer ity of Virginia with a en e of historic celebration in thi year of the merican Bicentennial. View of Coronado, California from Pt. Lorna Resplendid, historic Hotel del Coronado Gorgeous, abundant flowers ©©D©LftfM D ©©Cf©ITUCID@J@ ©©UUW®ITU110©ITU Pacific Ocean at Sunset Flamingos of San Diego Zoo Smiling "Gray" Roberts receives loyalty award from President Graham Mexican Pottery from Tijuna or Old Town "From Bustles to Blue Jeans 1870 bustles contrast with blue jeans of 1970's in historical style show 1880's elegance- (rt.) trousseau Tade H. Kuhns, 1st Kappa President " Bobby sox" generation 1950's " Kappa banner presented to the convention A Proud Heritage Foretells A Promising Future Fem inine dresses & hats 1900's " The roaring 20's" Presidents' dresses-yellow (1970's) Barbeck, white (1960's) Alexander Swim suits -20 's. 40's. 70's-styles change and reflecl society The state of the union report by Marian Schroeder Graham B<l> -Montana, Fraternity President, mentioned the wave of nostalgia that has swept the nation and given impetus to Greek letter social system at most colleges and universities. Two-year figures as of June, 1975 showed an increase of 95,016 (3.5%) for a total initiated membership of 1,658,834 in National Panhellenic Conference groups. This represents a spread in number of chapters from 8<l>A eleven to D.Z 180. Only AD.n with 416 alumnae chapters and KD. with 390 alumnae chapters, exceeds Kappa alumnae groups. Fourteen of the 26 NPC groups, however, have more chapters, pay more per capita than does Kappa. Having lost one chapter this year, today we have 95 chapters and at least two coming next year. Our total initiated membership is 100,600. This year there are 6891 active members. Where the '60s were a time in which we saw the rights of freedom of association challenged, the '70s have produced its challenge to the single sex organization. On both counts, the fraternity system prevailed and emerged intact. Campus life styles are constantly changing, however, there are some reassuring constants. The economy of the country and an evolving work ethic find many of our actives holding part-time jobs to supplement funds for their education and social activities. More cooperative college and exchange programs, travel as part of or an adjunct to college education and time out to work, finds our members extending their educational period. More opportunities and options are available to women in their choice of career. A survey taken by a leading university indicates one woman in six now plans to enter one of the more masculine careers: law, business, medicine, engineering. Ten years ago, it was one in sixteen. This has to be because of more possibilities for jobs. Twenty-two percent of the college students own a passport, eight percent plan to visit Europe within the next year, sixty-eight percent have a typewriter, fifty six percent a bicycle and thirty-two percent an electronic calculator. Of the women ninety-two percent have a hair dryer, while forty-seven percent of the men own one. A renewed interest in the more social aspects of college and university life lead too often to overscheduled, overcalendared programs. There is a return to bet- 4 ~\GGrs, BLUE OWL ter dress codes but social graciousness and manners are lagging. There seems to be a general lack of consideration and courtesy shown each other, yet these collegians want to be useful and they aspire to give all a chance to make a constructive difference in each other's lives. College students are better informed and more inclined than ever to turn to the judicial system for redress of grievances . Religious organizations are com- ing back onto campus. All these factors lead to a different life style and affect the direction of the chapter programs. While not a required program in our chapters, philanthropy continues to be an extremely popular activity for many of our chapters and the size of their undertakings is astonishing. There has been a marked improvement in active-alumnae relations, marked increase in the number of chapTHE KEY/FALL 1976 A Presidents of new chapters are: Kim Braun, En -Riverside ; Cind i Keene, EP Texas A & M; Tricia Vivado, EO -Davis. B Laitner sisters getting fit for historical pageant. C Rheva Shryock arriving for her 23rd Kappa convention. D Marian Graham with book presented as Bicentennial gift from Canadian chapters. E Jackie Barber, X -Minnesota , active visitor played with the band. F Actives of Xi Province sport new T-Shirts (gift from their PDC Jo Barton) . G Joann Barton (member of E.L colony-U. Va.) and her mother Jo Barton. H T-Shirts were in style for everyone-even the President! I Dale Brubeck and Jean Schmidt back stage. J Taylor Reese-the only male " seated" at convention and an indispensable recorder of verbatim minutes. K Kay Graf, editor of The History, also wrote words for song that opened convention . L Caroline Jones Laurie , P 6 -Oh i o Wesleyan , entertained with unique singing skit. M Gail Williams, I -DePauw, 1 OO,OOOth initiate of Kappa. N Dressing for the formal processional are several officers. 0 Janet Pollard served as mistress of ceremonies for talent show. P LaJolla and San Diego Alumnae staffed the office and resource room on a volunteer basis-almost 50 area alumnae participated. Standing; Jane Cowles Schnepf, re -Drake ; Sally Jones Glynn, BZ -Iowa ; Betty Schellschmidt Hill, M- Butler; and Mary Beth Stewart Wed berg, 6 Z - Colorado College. Q Carey Nelson, ach ievement award winner, and Florence Lonsford, art editor of The Key. R Counc il members and daughters-a family affa ir for Jane and Barbara Koke as well as Cindy and Marj Converse. ter producing new teller and the e of much bel!er quality, more profe sional and al!racti e, content more intere ting, e onom b u ing campu facilitie to print, and increa ed circulation . d i er continue to add continuit to hapter life with I 0 new ad i er thi ear, many ith no pre iou e perience. The field e retarie er e a educator , teachers and moti ator for our hapter and are in aluable in a certain- T11 K \/F LL 1976 i ng chapter needs and ca m pus trends. Through the lower standards of society, the effect is felt to a degree within our member hip . With nine million alcoholic in thi country, too many of them of college age, we mu t encourage greater awarene and under tanding of alcohol abu e and ocial drinking. We hould be helping our member hip deelop re pon ible altitude and mature deci ion . Freshmen on campus this year are a bit m ore conser vative than those of the past yea rs yet a bit m ore perm issive abo ut sex, more likely to plan st udy in fields leading directly to careers, rega rding themsel ves as altruists, ye t alm ost hal f feel they can do lillie to change soci ety. Many of these f reshmen look to fraternity life to provide small living groups of friends within that large impersonal univer ity. They are seeking additional options to programs planned primarily around the intere t and activity of men , in a el!ing where number and option and cale of campu life defie per onal relation hip , they find cooperation and friend hip, rather than competition, to be the key . 5 Kappa Kappa Gamma Fraternity Headquarters Building now displays the flags of The United States of America and Canada. In honor of the Bicentennial the flags have been permanently installed and lighted for night as well as day viewing. Kappa 's home at 530 E. Town Street, in Columbus, Ohio was the governor's mansion during the Civil War period and has recently been nominated for the National Historic Landmarks Register. · Convention Urges Career Counseling Conventions are held for the purpose of electing officers, hearing reports, and transacting the business of the Fraternity. Elsewhere in this issue of The Key can be found accounts of the officers elected, awards presented , brief capsules of reports, and truly a visual presentation of those present at the 51st biennial convention of Kappa Kappa Gamma. Here are the resolutions presented and adopted by the convention. The Alumnae Resolutions Committee brought three issues before the convention. Nancy Broyhill Dudley, r K- Wm. & Mary, chairman, reported the following : "Resolved, That Council investigate the possibility of group insurance plans for members of the Fraternity who are interested. " (Initiated from the Philadelphia Alumnae Association it is designed primaril y to meet the needs of those members who cannot qualify for any other group insurance programs, typically because of recently being widowed or di vorced and not covered by any employment of their own. The committee broadened the wording to apply to all types of insurance and to all members, whether they qualify for other plans or not. This resolution only asks Council to investigate the program. It does not commit Kappa to a program. Jane Koke, Fraternity treasurer, has been appointed chairman of this committee.) A recommendation not a resolution: · "Because of growing concern over evidence that many students are graduating from college without readily marketable skills and that many students are not availing themselves of career counseling programs that may be provided by their college or university; and, further , be(continued on page 5 7) Can you find them in the conventio.n collage on the opposite page? 1. Five Alumnae Achievement Award Winners 2. The social committee 3. Four field secretaries 4. Polly Beall 5. James Marine (Keynote speaker) 6 . An exhuberant Council 7. The Hoot staff 8. Helen Steiner Answers: Turn over! ·sMa4ne~ uear UO!leJlS!6aJ JO uewJ!e4:> 4l!M :wonoq WOJJ MOJ PJ!4l ·ua1 ·e ·Aqlas aue!a ~ 'uew1aH no1 'pJO::I auer 'JeJ8 Ae)l '46n1Jd 4=>l!~ :wonoq woJJ puo:>as l46p-aaJl e U! ,l004, SIMO ·L · asJafluo~ fJe~ ~ a>tO>f auer 's11aM uear 'swe!II!M uepe~ 'AJ6U!d aS!OI3 :dol WOJJ puo:>as l46!!::! ·g ia6ed 94l uo uew AIUO 94l s,a4 · · · 6U!PP!>t noA aJ'V ·g W!W4:>S uear 4l!M :dOl WOJJ MOJ puo:>as 91PP!~ ·p ·6JaquaJeH uer ~ 'pJOJn8 laJe6Je~ 'UOlUela aJJal 'saJ!nbs 01::1 AJe~ :aiPP!W dol ·s 'PI!M uesris pue ' (WJ4~) >t=>e1a Apnr 'Jail!~ e4lJe~ :paleas ·pJ!8 fJe~ ~ 'Ja>tem4M S!Ol '>t:>!Jled AJe~ 'AJJn~ auer 'JaseJ::I a11nr :6u!pUelS (aaJl e Japun) H91 91PP!~ - ~ ·a100d AJe~ ~ 'suaMQ 4ln!::l 'Sa)jOlS Apnr 'J9PI3 UU'<;/ 'UOSI9N AaJe~ :ua1 dO! . ~ ''Pride'' Is Not A By James Marine, President Bowes Advertising Agency Registration Committeestanding: Laitner, Aiken, Long, Volk, seated: Walker, Matthews , Gulick, and Wood. Keynote speaker James Marine chats with long-time friend Betsy Prior (left) and wife Vera and daughter Julie both t:. Z- Colorado College. Loyalty award winners Rheva Shryock ('68), Fran Alexander ('70), Mary Whitney ('72), Miriam Locke ('74) and Gray Roberts (' 76) . Far Left: Liz MacLauchlin who was nominated "from the floor" by her friends of Eta province. I am here to talk about pride, and I want to apologize to all you fine ladies for using what seems to be in our lexicon today a dirty word. You are not supposed to feel pride today. Of course, you never were supposed to feel pride. Back in the Old Testament it said, " Pride goeth before destruction ," not , incidentally, before a fall, but "before destruction," which is worse than a fall. Samuel Pepys used to pray to God that he would not be afflicted with pride. Mark Twain said, "There are a lot of things that can get you into trouble, but pride is the only one that will keep you there.'' And today you are not only not supposed to feel pride, but if you do feel it, you are not supposed to admit it. Quite to the contrary, you are supposed to feel guilty. You are supposed to feel guilty maybe about America or about the energy we consume or the food we eat or the money we spend or the way our ancestors treated the blacks, Chinese or anybody else. As a matter of fact, there is really only one thing you are not supposed to feel guilty about any more. There used to be a saying that people were too proud to ask for charity. Now you are not supposed to be too proud to ask for charity; you are not even supposed to feel guilty about asking for charity. Things have changed, of course. Nowadays men-and I don't mean the kind that go to Washington out of a job, but I mean corporate presidents and industry representatives, who apparently don't have too much pride to ask for charity at all, are all over. They don't call it charity; they call it being realistic, being pragmatic. That is what is involved now in asking for charity. But if you think of the definition of pride, it really isn't such a dirty word after all. There are two definitions in the dictionary: one which says that pride is having a high value of one's worth. It also says that pride is having pleasure or satisfaction in one's achievement or one's capability, as the old saying, "Proud of a job well done." Now pride, in other words, if it is a high value on your worth, if it is pleasure and satisfaction in achievement, it says that you can rise above circumstances, that you don't have to be bound by circumstances. It says that you can out-perform other people, maybe in one particular respect, maybe in lots of respects, but pride says that you can do those two things, rise above circumstances, out-perform others-or at least try like the devil to do those things. So pride really is the same thing as self-respect and self-confidence and a sense of responsibility. It is everything implied in a Left: New Habiteers: Helen Gulick, Jean Elin, Molly Adams, Jayne Wentz, Caroline Toile, Carol Adams, Gwen Spaid, Mary Ewing. Middle: New Habiteers: Lois Whittaker, Mitch Pflugh, Sally Muzil, Carol Messmore, Marilyn Hicks, Juliana Wales, Marcia Johnson, Barb Henderson. Right: New Habiteers: Ruth Luchman, Marsha Love, Marian Williams, Judy Black, Florence Hahn, Liz MacLauchlin, Ann Colvin, Margaret Bagley. Four Letter Word motto that my father used to drum into me when I was a little fellow. He used to say, "Anything worth doing is worth doing well." That seems to be another motto that died along with pride today. But any job worth doing is worth doing well, and it is sort of the symbol of pride. Pride is really a good word . It is not a dirty word at all. Pride, you know , is really what got this country started, because it takes pride to be willing to fight for freedom. You can't have a high evaluation of your own worth and still think somebody else ought to be responsible for you. If you have a high evaluation of your own worth , you decide you will be responsible for you. Now, that is what those few rebels back in 1775 decided. You know we had a country then of about three and a half million people, really only about ten percent of whom were enthusiastic about revolting . There was another ten percent who were en thusiastic about not revolting. And there was eighty percent who were neutrals. But those ten percent who were very eager to overthrow England had a great deal of pride. They believed and you 've seen this television commercial, I guess, in the last two or three months- " Mother, I'd rather do it myself. " Well , that is what they told Mother England: ''I'd rather do it myself," and that takes a lot of pride. I don ' t think if they had not had that idea - that they could do it better themselves-that we would ever have had a revolution. We would still be a part of the British Empire, and that might not be bad. I don 't know. But it takes a high opinion of yourself to think that you can lick Britain, and especially when you only have three and a half million and they have several millions and a fine professional army. It took an awful lot on their part to decide not only that it was worth fighting for , but that there was a chance that they could win. Those of you who have been to Valley Forge may have felt the ordeal that those people went through. That was one of the greatest demonstrations of mass pride you ' II ever see in history , as those poor starving, almost clothesless soldiers somehow held together, and the only thing that held them together was pride. There i great pride in the Declaration of Independence, which wa written by Thomas Jefferson , and then all the other delegates got together and said "yes" or " no " to what he had written. Most of them said "yes" and it sets forth their objecti e , their aims and the rights they have to say they are going to epara te them elves from Great Britain. And in the very last line perhap one of the most beautifully written declarations of pride in our hi tory, it ay :"To those goals we mutually pledge our live , our fortune and our sacred honor. " And that is a ery proud tatement. It i the arne kind of pride that has made America the leader of the world after only two hundred years of e i tence. We ometime get accu ed of being a little bit arrogant with our leader hip-and sometime we are, ju t watch orne of our touri t o er ea . But we ha e a lot to be proud of, and it i pride that got u there. We ha e ix percent of the world population in America. The riti ' ithin merica damn u for con uming thirty percent of the world' energy. The forget to mention, howe er, that we produce fifty per ent of the world ' manufactured good with that i per ent of the orld' population . We ha one per ent of the ' orld' farm population . With that one per ent of the world' farm population we feed our i Singing around beach fires Memorial Service Informal sessions in the courtyard HOSPITALITY COMMITTEE The hospitality committee members here (seated) Ruth Hoehle Lane. <1> , Frances Fatout Alexander, I , Jane McBeath. f Y, Ruth Bullock Chastang, BN. (Standing) Dr. Miriam Locke, rn , Jean Handley Talbot. Bi\, Jean Stratton Robinson. BM. Marilyn Mayes Hicks. BX , Peg Easton Seney, P. percent very comfortably, and we export twenty percent more of the world ' s total farm products, which is done with one percent of the population. It goes without saying that America has the highest standard of living in the world . Those who have been abroad have seen the kinds of things most people in other countries look upon as luxuries-in some cases unattainable-and we take all of them for granted i~ this country. No country in the history of the world has ever been more generous than America, more willing to help other people in trouble than America, more unwilling to enslave people than America. That is not an American me saying that, that is a Canadian saying that about us. And I think that generosity, that willingnes~ to help, that tremendous standard of living, that tremendous level of productivity-which supports in some cases almost half of the rest of the world-is a product of more than anything else; the conviction that we can rise above circumstances; the conviction that we can out-perform other people; the conviction that we are going to have some self-respect and self-confidence-all of those things which make up pride. A Kappa is also a product of pride, and I see a lot of pride in this Fraternity. I don ' t have to tell you about high standards of character, conduct, performance-standards which first were promulgated through pride, and second-and more importantly-are now adhered to through pride, but for one hundred and six years Kappa has built upon a base of pride so that its membership stands out from other people because of that base. I have seen cases of Kappa holding the line against what some people call the new morality, against a general trend that happily right now seems to be slowing down a great deal-a general trend toward demoralization. I see pride in the high esteem in which other people hold Kappa, and I see pride in Kappa in the general r~cognitioq that Kappas are leaders. You have to have pride to be leaders. Bruce Barton , who was a U.S . Senator, said: "Nothing has ever been achieved except by those who dared to think they could rise above circumstances." That's a pretty strong statement. Lord Byron said it much more strongly and more bluntly, "The vile are only vain; the great are proud." Now, of course, you can get too proud, ap.d that 's where I think another one of the wonderful distinctions of women come into play. Women, I have discovered, in my own experience of having now five in the house, are great humblers, and when I get a little too proud there is bound to be somebody there that can humble me. You can be proud and humble at the same time. They are not incompatible. Rousseau said, " Great men never make bad use of their superiority because the more they have of it the more they know about their own deficiencies." The proud can afford to be modest-maybe because they have a lot of security in their pride. It is those who don't have an~thing to be proud of who think they have to be immodest. We have secretaries in the office who are not ashamed of being secretaries. They are good secretaries and that is their demonstration of pride, and they get very high salaries, because it is hard to find proud good secretaries. It's a funny thing, but you never think in terms of not getting drunk as a demonstration of pride. But when you get drunk you put your control under somebody else's influence, and proud people don ' t want to do that. I don't mean that proud people don ' t ever get drunk, but they know that that certainly is not a demonstration of pride. It takes pride to be a successful business man , not simply to make an honest profit but to make it on your own. Pride is being honest , because proud people know they can get what they want without lying or cheating or stealing. Pride is being polite and thoughtful, because pride means wanting to do what is right for other people as well as for yourself. Pride is being conscientious ; it is giving every task something extra, something to make it a little better. Sometimes pride is just showing up for work, or all these meetings . A proud person refuses to do something that is questionable, simply because "everybody else does it." I think maybe pride comes down finally to a question and answer, one you've heard and used many times. You need to decide whether or not to do something, and someone asks you, "Who will know?' 'and you answer, "I will. " That is pride. Pride obviously takes a lot of hard work and discipline, which may be why so many people in this country would maybe forego being proud . . . you know, why should you go to all that trouble? Perhaps there are three reasons for being proud. First, if you demean your own worth and belittle your own abilities, pretty soon you won't have any worth or any abilities. Finally you get to the point where you can't do things and there is only one thing left: contempt. Contempt first <9[ other people and finally contempt of yourself. And heaven help anybody whose only possession is contempt for themselves . The second reason that you should have pride is that if you don ' t respect your own worth how are you going to respect anybody else's? If you don't respect other people's worth, you can't respect their rights, and you certainly can't love them . Finally, I think pride is the only thing that is going to keep America free . We have today a happy trend, if you happen to be on the receiving end, of everybody looking for some way to absolve themselves of responsibility. You cannot have pride and run to somebody for help. You must start with yourself. The Holy Grai l in America has become "security". Not freedom, not initiative, not self-reliance. Security. Security at somebody else's expense and under somebody else's control. Edward Gibbon in The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire wrote, " In the end, more than they wanted freedom the Roman wanted security; and they lost it all, freedom and ecurity." Do you know why they did? Because they lost thei~ pride. Too many people do think that pride is a dirty four-letter word , but pride i a lovely five-letter word; the key to achievement in anything. It i the key to the only kind of security worth having, ecurity with freedom , the kind of freedom to which those proud men two hundred years ago pledged their lives and their fortune and their acred honor. Past presidents honored were Louise Barbeck, "Goodie" Campbell. Mary Whitney, Rheva Shryock. Helen Steiner, and Fran Alexander. Faces show . . . it was fun! Program chairmerJ were affectionately nicknamed the " thinktank". Jan McAllister. Barb Curley, Mitch Pflugh . Jane Curry, J. J. Wales, and Janet Sanford pause at fountain. NOMINATING COMMITTEE MEMBERS working on a slate to present to Convention are (Row 1). Anne McCullough McCann. B.=:. Jane Ellen Julian. E I , Betsy Dahlen. RB. Helen Synder Steine, Bn. Chairman . (Row 2) !;Jolly Merkle Dow. . Kay Ferguson Eby, BP. Margaret Kohont. P. Debbie Huntsaker. ~ T. and Melanie Smith . BY. Elect ion Committee : Seated ; Long and Whittaker. Standing ; McAllister. Blanton . Chambers. Adams, Volk , Pyke, Curry, and Curley. CONVENTION CHOIR Nancy Lee Bildsoe, Bn, pianist, Martha Harris Rosenbaum , r , organist, Elizabeth Alexander May, rN, director are pictured with the convention choir members (seated) Marli Iverson , Bn, Molly O'Dell Adams, M, Jane Palmer Canady, f8, Kitzi Stenicka, 6'¥, Janet Peacher, EP, Mary G. Mann, EP, Diane Johnson , Bn, Cynthia Converse, BX, Barbara Koke , Y, Shelly Sjolseth Baum, r X. (Row 2) Janet Robinson Sutton , P, Nancy Schneider Rolfs, 6K, Am y Ross, EB, Lucy Owings Ross, B::: , Abby Lawlis, H, Nancy Fuhrman , EP, Ginny van Hardwick, EP, Dena Farwell , EP , Susan Brothers, 86, Holly Armstrong , EB , Molly Ross, EB. (Row 3) Susan G. Duncan , 8 , Lisa M. Johnson, fT, Jayne Alexander, EP, Carol McCurry, EP, Catherine Schroeder Graf, BN, Ruth Kirkendall Schneider, r o , Sara Miller, fO , Drue Cox Zuverink, BX, Jane McMinn , I, Jacqueline Barber, X, Ann Osborn , ro , Yvette Van Voorhees, Bn. 12 THE KEY/FALL 1976 KA PPA MOTHE RS-DAUGHTERS-GRANDDAUGHTERS Kappa Mothers and Daughters attending Convention together are from left, Row 1: Marj Matson Converse, rD., Cynthia Converse, BX. Portia Pittenger Rissler, M. Priscilla Rissler Steelman , rz. Willie Long Oates, r , Deborah Oates, fN, Amy Ross, EB, Lucy Owings Ross, B::O, Molly Ross, EB , Bonnie Paul Benson , fl, Betsy Benson, rz. Dorothy Gosman Andersen , B<t>, Carolyn Andersen, rz. Row II : Caroline Godley O'Dell, M, Molly O'Dell Adams, M, Ruth Kirkendall Schneider, rn, Nancy Schneider Rolfs, D. K , Ann Skylestea d Rhoades, B<l>, Sylvia Rhoades Dolby, B<l> , Anna Worth Dolby, r ::0, (three generations) , Juliana Lofland Bond, f<t> , Anne Bond, f<l>, Mary Ann Dail Keil , rt, Karen Keill , BO, Nancy Voorhees Laitner, rD. , Cheryl Lynn Laitner, rD., Barbara Lynn Laitner, B M . Row Ill : Jane Lindsay Koke, rn. Barbara Koke, I, Peggy Bradley Colteryahn, f'i', Karen Lee Colteryahn , f'i' , Wilka Van Petten Finley, E, Marigene Finley Nicoloff, E. Jane Palmer Canady, re, Mary Canady Laughlin, r -,Colleen Manful! Osborn , ro . Ann Osborn , ro, Carolyn Robbins Sisson , BB, Robi n Sisson Wilkinson, BB, Jane Tourner Curry, 6, Sue Curry Whittaker, I. Row IV: Nancy Kartina Netherton , B::O, Mary Moon Netherton , 8::0, Nancy Sampson Nethercutt, rH, Nancy Nethercutt Gustafson, r H, Margrethe Kjosness Husom, B K, Elizabeth Husom Ross, r H , Carol Aspell Messmore,/\, Kathy Messmore,/\, Julie Williams Fraser, D. r, Juliana Fraser Wales, B . Row V: Frances Neff Steele, I , Carolyn Steele Stauffer, I , Mary Michael Oles McKenzie, B::O, Patty Miller Oles, 0, Irene Bond Cook, B8, Caren Irene Cook, B8, Shirley Evans Gilmore, I, Julie Gilmore, r . Provinces Pose For Photographer (Province photo identifications are available at Fraternity Headquarters They have been om11ted as an economy measure.) TilE K /F \LL 1976 13 - CHAPTER/ADVISORY BOARD RELATIONS: (advisers seated, actives standing I. to r.) Winner : BETA CHI, Jacqueline Bouchard Cross, Cheryl Bernice Brenner; Han. Mention: DELTA UPSILON, Mary Carty McCammon , Cathi Elise Wiebrecht; BETA MU, Ellen Caldwell Gury, Barbara Lynn Laitner ; EPSILON GAMMA, Nancy Logan Haigwood Cozart, Dorothea Lowendick. GRACIOUS LIVING-Unhoused , Winner: (seated) DELTA BETA, Susan Beck; Han. Mention : ALPHA, Linda Snowden. Housed, Winner: (standing) , BETA NU, Janie Wertz ; Han . Mention: BETA BETA, Lisbeth Dahlen; GAMMA OMICRON, Donna Waite ; GAMMA DE:LTA, Emily Maddox. CULTURAL PROGRAM Winner : BETA LAMBDA, Nancy Ellen Paulus; Han. Meniion: BETA XI, Susan Gay Hamilton. FRATERNITY APPRECIATION: Winner: (seated) GAMMA IOTA, Elizabeth Anne Nelson ; Han . Mention: DELTA, Paula Barclay ; BETA NU, Janie Wertz ; EPSILON BETA, Barbara Jean Thomson . SCHOLARSHIP IMPROVEMENT -under 10 PanHel Winner: GAMMA KAPPA, Mary Sue Hogan; Han. Mention : BETA OMICRON, Karen Keil ; EPSILON MU, Jane Ellen Julian ; GAMMA TAU , Charlotte Arneson. SCHOLARSHIP: Winner under 10 Pan Hel (seated) : GAMMA PHI , Susan Brown ; Han. Mention ; GAMMA UPSILON, Dianna Scott ; DELTA PHI , Alison Rosfeld ; DELTA ZETA, Diane Claassen; GAMMA IOTA, Elizabeth Anne Nelson. Winner : over 10 PanHel (standing) : UPSILON, Susan Ehrke ; Han. Mention : DELTA ALPHA, Linda Svab; DELTA TAU, Deborah Hunsaker; BETA DELTA, Suzanne Steicker; SIGMA, Becky Morgan . •. I _Jj CHAPTER FINANCE-Unhoused, Winner: LAMBDA, Katherine Marie Mesmore ; Housed, Winner : OMEGA, Mary Elizabeth Bray. GREATEST IMPROVEMENT: Winner : (seated), BETA MU, Barbara Lynn Laitner ; Hon. Mention : (standing) , DELTA MU, Mary Bolin Gleeton ; BETA PSI , Michel Schofield ; DELTA SIGMA, Kathleen Melchar. PANHELLENIC: Winner (seated): BETA THETA, Kathleen Marie Voss ; Hon. Men : GAMMA TAU, Charlotte Lee Arneson; GAMMA OMICRON , Donna Waite ; GAMMA RHO, Gayle Gianniny ; DELTA NU, Cynthia Louise Norton; GAMMA DELTA, Em ily Louise Maddox ; EPSILON DELTA, Karen Ann DuBose. EFFICIENCY: Winner-unhoused : EPSILON DELTA, Karen Ann DuBose ; Winner-housed : EPSILON GAMMA , Dorothea Marie Lowendick. STANDARDS: Winner, GAMMA ALPHA, Michelle Kay Moore. CHAPTER AWARDS PLEDGE TRAINING: Winner (seated) : EPSILON MU, Jane Ellen Julian ; H. Mention : GAMMA ZETA, Nancy Joyce Cotter ; EPSILON EPSILON, Nancy Elaine Norton ; GAMMA NU, Christine Ann Krueger; MU, Karen Kay Hungerford. SCHOLARSHIP IMPROVEMENT -over 10 PanHel winner : (seated) DELTA OMICRON , Cynthia Blackburn : Hon Mention : EPSILON LAMBDA, Jean Segner ; BETA CHI , Cheryl Brenner ; Special Citation : DELTA UPSILON , Holly Wiedemann ; THETA, Melinda Jane Moseley CHAPTER PUBLICATIONS: Winner : THETA, Melinda Jane Moseley ; Hon . Mention : MU, Karen Kay Hungerford ; ETA, Gretchen Ann Hutterli; GAMMA BETA, Catherine Mary O'Connell ; EPSILON ETA, Elena Newman : BETA THETA, Kathleen Voss. -- .J SCHOLARSHIP: Special Citation , BETA PHI , Mary Sue Schneider ; EPSILON XI , Jill Johnson ; EPSILON LAMBDA, Jean Ann Segner; EPSILON PI, Kim Braun . ADVISORY BOARD: H. Mention: UPSILON, Louise Wilkins Eberle ; BETA XI, Mary Gordon Thornton ; BETA PI , Shirleyann Stone Marinkovich; Winner, GAMMA PHI , Roberta Whitfield Brown . RHEVAOTT SHRYOCK GAVELS CLUBS College Station , Texas, Nancy Mills Howard, Winner; Piedmont, Carolina, Emily Turner Lester, H. Men. ALUMNAE ASSOCIATIONS under 50 MEMBERSHIP (seated) Tempe-Mesa, Arizona, Shireen Alford Rhoades, Winner ; Tri-City, Washington , Judith Mawdsley Mahaffey, H. Men. 50-100 MEMBERSHIP (standing) Miami, Florida, June Randall Thompson , Winner ; Champaign , Illinois, Marjorie Keith, H. Men. 18 ALUMNAE ASSOCIATIONS over 200 MEMBERSHIP (seated) Winner, Columbus , Ohio, Suzanne Crimm Milligan ; Seattle, Washington , Laura Fields Strohecker, H. Men. 100-200 MEMBERSHIP (standing) Sacramento, California, Linda Ayers Biko, H. Men ; Northern Virginia, Nancy Broyhill Dudley, Winner ; Colorado Springs, Colorado, Nan Butterworth Goodbar, H. Men. THE KEY/FALL 1976 -... CLUBS St. Petersburg, Florida, Winner, Tampa Bay, Florida, Runner-Up, Juliana Warner Deeds. Hon. Mention (all standing) North Jersey Shore, Jo Ellen Clark Barnard ; Cleveland-South Suburban , Ohio, Drusilla Cox Zuverink ; Springfield , Missouri, Dorothy Clinton Thule ; Byron-College Station , Texas, Nancy Mills Howard. ALUMNAE ASSOCIATIONS 50-100 MEMBERSHIP (seated) Pittsburgh , Pennsylvania, Marjorie Ganter Scholtz, Winner : San Diego, California, Marigene Finley Nicoloff, Ru nner-Up; (standing) Richardson , Texas, Mary Buschbaum Hensley; Baltimore, Maryland, Peggy Bradley Colteryahn ; Phoenix , Arizona, Karen Andretta Green LaJolla, California, Mary Thompson Russell ; Ft. Wayne, Indiana, Vicki Witmer Stoppenhagen ; Louisville, Kentucky, Charlotte Thuenen Raith , all Hon. Mention . ALUMNAE ASSOCIATIONS under 50 MEMBERSHIP (seated) Tri-City, Washington, Judith Mawdsley Mahaffey, Winner : Arlington Heights, Illinois, Catherine Bernotas Gelhaar, RunnerUp: (standing) Arcadia, California, Mary Jane Beachler Lightcap ; Richmond, Virginia, Marcia Hall Johnson ; Jacksonville, Florida, Carolyn Jones Laurie, all· Hon . Mention. McNABOE AWARDS ALUMNAE ASSOCIATIONS over 200 MEMBERSHIP (seated) Dallas , Texas, Mary Ellen Mitchell Jericho, Runner-Up ; Denver, Colorado, Connie Wadhams Pritts, Winner; Seattle, Washington , Laura Fields Strohecker, Most Improvement. (standing) Houston, Texas, Anne McCullough McCann ; Kansas City, Missouri, Nina Green Kanaga ; Cincinnati , Ohio, Kay Ferguson Eby, all Hon . Men tion . THE K Y/F LL 1976 ALUMNAE ASSOCIATIONS 100-200 MEMBERSHIP (seated) Wich ita, Kansas, Susan McConnell Schreiber, Winner ; Tulsa, Oklahoma, Sharon Raines Bartlett, Runner-Up. (standing) North ern Virginia, Nancy Broyhill Dudley ; Portland, Oregon , Ellyn Parks Anderson ; Pitts burgh - South Hills, Pennsylvania , Patti Miller Himes ; Washington , D.C.-Suburban Maryland, Lynne Cashman Astrich , all Hon. Mention. 19 MAGAZINE AWARDS Province Magazine Chairmen (seated I. tor.) Jean Simpson Mutrie, BI.J', Margaret Helser Vermehr, BO, Grace Burgett Dean, rr , Juanita Reynolds Jordan, r A , Esther Patrick Drecie, D.Z , (standing) Patricia Powers Recht, rz, Candy Aydelotte Alsop, r <t> , Emma Jane Gehr, BO, Gwen Spaid, M, Betty Schellschmidt Hill, M , Harriett Hill McDonald, BY . Magazine awards-Group 11 - Membership 50-99, Lafayette, Indiana, Jane Jarell Mallett; Northern Orange County, California, Juanita Jordan; Palo Alto, California, Margaret Helser Vermehr; San Jose, California, Mary Ellen Marsh Givens. Production awards this year were given to (from left) Houston, Texas, Anne McCullough McCann ; Lafayette, Indiana, Jane Jarrell Mallett; Palo Alto, Califfornia, Heloise Lee Stewart ; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Patricia Handley Turney ; Toronto, Ontario Canada, Jean Simpson Mutrie. Magazine awards for Group 11-Membership 100-175, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, Jean Simpson Mutrie; Wichita, Kansas, Susan McConnell Schreiber. Group Ill-Membership 175 and over, Denver, Colorado, Connie Wadhams Pritts ; Indianapolis, Indiana, Saundra Williams Schulhol. Increased sales awards $1 0-$200-Atlanta, Georgia, Dorothy Newman Walton ; $200-$500-Buffalo , New York , Dorothy Strasburger Holmes ; $500-$2000-San Francisco, California, Ann Fletcher Colvin . Magazine Awards-Group I Membership under 50, Battle Creek, Michigan, Priscilla Shaver; Hobbs, New Mexico, Alice Jones Gerhart; Imperial Valley, California, Carolyn Conway Madding; Sprin ld, Missouri, Dorothy Clinton Thule. 20 THE K EY/FA LL 1976 c 0 u N c I L The formal installation photo of the new Council officers elected by Convention 1976. Pictured standing : Caroline Toile, Betsy Prior, Sally Nitschke, and Marian Williams. Seated: Gay Barry, Jane Koke, Jean Wells, Marj Bird, and Kay Larson. A newly elected Council has been installed for the biennium with Jean Hess Wells as president of Kappa Kappa Gamma . Jean has served the fraternity in many many capacities with her latest being director of chapters for the past four years. Jean was a charter member of Delta Upsilon at the University of Georgia and served that chapter as recording secretary. Since college he has been membership, pledge, scholar hip, and chapter council adviser to Delta Upsilon, Delta Rho, and Epsilon Ep ilon chapters at variou time . She had the honor of serving on the colonization and installation committee for E E, E H , E K , EM, and E chapter (Emory, Auburn , S. Carolina , Clem on, and Vanderbilt) . Her fraternity ervice includes Mu PDC , i tant to the president, a si tant to director of member hip , Mu province ru h helper , pre ident of both Atlanta and Memphi lumnae, fraternity vice pre ident, and dire tor of chapter . Jean and her hu band Bob have two children. Their on Jere i a enior at the ni er ity of Georgia majoring in Engli h Literature with plan for graduate hoot and to teach. He organiz..ed and wa captain of the Lacro e team that ju t won the outhea tern championhip . Their daughter athlean i a ophomore in high hoot. THE K 'r/F LL 1976 Bob (I A E) is in private practice as an orthopedic surgeon who serves in his "spare time" as team physician for the Atlanta Flames (pro-hockey team), and the Atlanta Braves (pro-baseball team). He is also on the Board of Counselors for the American Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons, secretary, Board of Directors American Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons; Board of Directors Piedmont Hospital ; Board of Directors Blue Cross/Blue Shield. He still gives two weeks of volunteer service every year in Haiti providing orthopedic care to crippled children and adults working with several mission groups, principally the Albert Schweitzer Hospital. When it works out time wise, Jean likes to accompany him . Jean Hess Wells , b. Y Georgia , Fraternity President. Jean has at o served her community well. She i currently erving on the Executive Committee and Board of Tru tee for the High Museum of Art, retiring a Secretary; former pre ident of the Member Guild of the High Museum of Art; active in the decorative art program; and manager of the Antique Show; retiring from two term on the Board of Spon or of the Atlanta ymphony Orche tra ; ice pre ident of the board and ice chairman of the building ommittee of her church (building under con truction) . 21 Marjorie Cross Bird, BM -Colorado, is the new vice president. She holds a B.A. from University of Colorado in Spanish and an M.A. from O~lahoma State in Spanish. While in college she was on the school paper staff, Spurs, Hesperia, and Associated Students Council. Her Fraternity offices include, chapter president, graduate counselor (~I), field secretary, president Corvallis Alumnae, chapter council adviser fM, PDA for Iota province, chairman fraternity scholarship, assistant to director of chapterS for advisers, and first fraternity chairman of advisers. Marj says, "I have four children of whom I'm unbearably proud. For so long I was greatly involved in volunteerism, then I was suddenly thrust, into the "working world" which made me stretch in other directions. T'was good for me. Now I feel I have a happy blend of both -a part time job and work with Kappa, the most rewarding organizational work of all." Jane Lindsay Koke, fO-Denison, has graciously consented to continue as fraternity treasurer serving her fourth term of office. Initiated at H2, Jane later affiliated with ~ B- Duke, where she was treasurer and a member of 4> B K. Concerning her family and special interests Jane says, "We are a family of water sports enthusiasts. Barbara YNorthwestern, was flag bearer at con- vention this summer and Carolyn, 16, is still in high school. Bob is a commuter to Wall Street where he is president of the Eastdil Corporation. We have a small sailboat and we also like to body surf." A special hobby of Jane's is needlepoint and Danish embroidery-in fact she did a kneeling cushion for her church. Most of Jane's activities are related to the church and work in various capacities for Wilmington Flower market. Jane has the uniq\)e title of chief deputy Sheriff of New Castle County, Delaware and has held this job since 1975. Gay (Gwendolyn) Chuba Barry, ~A­ Penn State, is the new director of alumnae. Gay has a B.A. in secondary education with majors in English and history. She has been Beta PDA since March 1973 and prior to that time served the Philadelphia Alumnae Association as president, vice president, public relations chairman and Blue Print Editor. Gay claims Kappa consumes most of her volunteer time but, "I love every minute of it. My other major responsibility at this time is the designing and construction of our new home." Gay's husband Jack (Ben) is in hotel administration at Buck Hill Inn, Penn- sylvania. They are interested in music, preserving the environment and local government. Gay is currently on the Board of Directors for the Newfoundland Library and has been a director of the Ft. Washington Branch of Needlework Guild of America. From 19671973 she worked "patterning" handicapped children. While on campus, Gay was a member of women's chorus, Angel Flight, yearbook staff, a dorm officer and took: leadership training. She served her chapter as social chairman, music chairman and song director. Her paid employment was as a teacher for several years. Kay Smith Larson, Bn-University of Washington, is thrilled with her new assignment as director of chapters. She received a B.A. degree cum laude in elementary education with a speech minor. She served her chapter as assistant scholarship chairman and first vice president. She was president of nAe, secretary of Z«PH, program chairman ASUW and in Mortar Board. Kay taught fourth and fifth grades and was pledge, house and rush adviser. She was president of Bellevue Alumnae and Iota PDC. Durmont, Kay's husband , is vice pres- ident of the Pacific National Bank of Washington and their son Jeff is 14. Kay likes arts and crafts and as a family they enjoy spectator sports, skiing and tennis. Kay has just been elected to a two year term as program trustee at the Women's University Club in Seattle. She is a past member of Washington Alumni Board and their scholarship committee. Still active in Ryther 4 & 20 (supports center for emotionally disturbed children), Kay has been past president of all groups in the county. She has been director of field representatives and director of membership for the Fraternity. Since college Jane has continued to be active in Kappa having been president and most offices of the Delaware Alumnae Association, also Beta PDA. Marj has been president of Republican women, board member YMCA, past president P.E.O. and helped start a children's library. lY.&GllAII ~IIUJ;UtO;JI Yf UIUIIU ' '-" ...,n,..-u~ui''UV~ui'H•~-------,.::; -ll'UO)------.;-va~!)U'.rv'&-r·no•uqu,_n;t•• ....,., souri, director of field representatives, is a nationally rated official in basketball and field hockey. She taught physical education at Christian College, University City Elementary Schools, and Albuquerque Jr. High. As an active, Marian was Panhellenic delegate and chapter president. Past president of the Albuquerque Alumnae, Marian has also been finance adviser to fB chapter and Eta PDA. She previously served as chairman of chapter public relations and director of personnel. She has been treasurer of the Jr. and Girl Scout leader, on the Arts and Crafts Fair Board, New Mexico Conservation Coordinating Council Trustee and member of League of Women Voters. She is secretary on the Board of Directors of the Girl Scout Council, as well as continuing interest in rehabilitation auxiliary, environmental concerns group, and civic projects. Charles and Marian have three children-Steve 15, Debbie 13, and Ken 11-and all are avid out-of-doors enthusiasts. Marian was part of colonization for EO, En, and EP chapters. Sally Moore Nitschke, BN -Ohio State, is continuing as director of membership. Sally attended Vassar College and transferred to Ohio State where she served BN as president and became a member of<l>BK. Her fraternity experience includes rush adviser BN, Gamma PDC, Ohio State rush chairman, fraternity chairman of pledge training, and the first chairman of Speak Up. She was also house corporation president for BN. Sally's husband Chuck (ATO) is an architect and they have three children, Chris at Ohio State, Caren a senior in high school, and David a seventh grader. Sally was given the Woman of the Year Award by Chi Omega in 1966 and Ohio State University gave her the Distinguished Citizen Award in 1974. She is currently on the planning committee for the department of continuing education O.S.U.; a board member of Ohio Society for Prevention of Blindness, and Alfred Wilson Children's Center, and St. John's Church, plus Worthington Resource Center. In addition to serving Kappa as director of field representatives, Sally has been president of the Jr. League of Columbus, and an officer in Childhood League, and Junior Board of Ohio Avenue and West Side Day Care Centers. Caroline Cole Tolle, ~/\-Miami, is the newly elected director of personnel. She has served Kappa ·as president of Toledo Alumnae, Gamma PDA and assistant treasurer of the fraternity. being a Brownie and Girl Scout leader, and Sunday School teacher are part of Caroline's routine. She researched and helped develop a trail for the blind with the recreation department in Toledo and has worked on numerous fund raising campaigns. She has served the Jr. League in many capacities including being the delegate to 1976 annual conference . She has been treasurer, magazine editor, provisional trainer and helped organize the new Jr. League of Sarasota. Additional community concerns include the art museum and Planned Parenthood. Caroline's husband Dirk, (IAE) is an attorney and presently senior trust officer with Southeast Banks Trust Company in Sarasota, Florida. They have two daughters Jennifer 16, and Beth 13. Caroline's hobbies include needlework and collecting glass paperweights (also fishing and beachcombing). Volunteering for homemaker service, Betsy Mol berry Prior, B -Ohio State, is now the director of philanthropies and brings to her new job the knowledge of four years as director of alumnae. Betsy has a B.C.E. in Civil Engineering, plus additional work at Whittier College in mathematics. She served B a mar hal. Her family includes husband, James (<1>~8) two son , a daughter, and eight grandchildren. Jim i retired as Executi e Vice Pre ident Sierra Electric Diviion of Sola Ba tc lndustrie and now is ociated With Mohave County (Lake Ha a u City, Arizona) Di trict Water, anitation and Roads. Both Betsy and Jim are qualified as judges and are licensed for 14 breeds at AKC shows. They also both love working with metal and gem-stones and have started their business silversmithing, faceting and cutting gem stones: handling and repairing Indian jewelry and artifacts. Betsy has worked with Boy and Girl Scouts, Rainbow, DeMolay, Red Cross, Eastern Star, Church, Republican Women's Club and Panhellenic. Her Kappa activities include recommendations chairman for both South Bay and Arcadia· nominating chairman and president Arcadia, finance adviser ~ T chapter plus Kappa PDA, and most recently director of alumnae. • •• .__ • 'J.__'-''J" •nu "'-'llvLru,..,nlr r1. n 1"1.1'\.V.:) 1\KC 1\ V 1\JLJ\tlLC 1\I~N UALL Y UNDERGRADUATE SCHOLARSHIPS $200-$400 GRADUATE FELLOWSHIPS $500 For members with at least a "B" average, and no "F's", who have made an important contribution to their chapter and their campus, and who need financial help. For information, write the chairman, Mrs . W. James Aiken , Jr ., 206 Maple Avenue, Pittsburgh , Pennsylvania 15218. Deadline: Feb. 15. For members ahd lion-members with high academic standing, who need assistance in training for careers . Applications may be secured from the chairman, Dr. Miriam Locke , Box 1484, University , Alabama 35486. Deadline: Feb. 15 EMERGENCY SCHOLARSHIPS GRADUATE COUNSELOR SCHOLARSHIPS For graduating Kappas who have held a major office in their own chapter and are interested in assisting another chapter while doing graduate study. Contact: Mrs. Charles Williams, 2821 Alcazar, N.E., Albuquerque, New Mexico 87110. Deadline: Jan. I REHABILITATION SCHOLARSHIPS Undergraduate scholarships in Rehabilitation $300-$400 For members and nonmembers majoring in any phase of rehabilitation. Graduate Fellowships in Rehabilitation $500 For members and nonmembers doing advanced study in some field of rehabilitation. For information and application, write the chairman, Mrs. Thomas F. Long, Jr., 335 Ruby , Clarendon Hills , Illinois 60514. Deadline: Feb. 15 ROOT FOREIGN LANGUAGE SCHOLARSHIP $500 For Kappas to study a foreign language for a year in the country of that language. This fellowship is available for only Kappa graduate students. For information and qualifications apply to Dr. Miriam Locke , Box 1484, University, Alabama 35486. Deadline: Feb. 15. 24 For upperclassmen who face sudden financial emergency , a few emergency grants are available during the year. These grants are confidential and the applicant has to be well recommended by the Advisory Board. Consult your Chapter Council Adviser and the Emergency Scholarship Chairman, Mrs. Lewis Woehlke, 1045 Circle Dr., Elm Grove, Wisconsin 53122. Apply Anytime. In order to qualify, you must in addition to scholarship goals in fields of study and need: be a woman college student, citizen of the U.S. or Canada have completed two years of study on a campus with a chapter of Kappa Kappa Gamma or be a graduate student on a campus with a chapter of Kappa Kappa Gamma Applicatiqn forms are on file with your Scholarship Chairman . Additional forms may be obtained from the chairmen of the various areas listed on this page and in the Directory of The K ey (under Philanthropy) or from Fraternity Headquarters, P.O. Box 2079, Columbus, Ohio 43216. All applications in completed form are due to the respective chairmen by February 15, except Graduate Counselor, And Emergency. Address your questions to the Chairmen or the Director of Philanthropies, Mrs. James C. Prior, 565 Sea Queen Dr., Lake Havasu City, Arizona 86403. THE KEY IF ALL 197 6 Kappa Scholarships Announced Philanthropy helps with uHands, Hearts & Heads" By Betsy Mo/sberry Prior BN- Ohio State Director ofPhilanthropies In my letter to the chapters and alumnae groups , the word " Philanthropy" is defined: " Love of mankind, especially as manifested in deed of PRACTICAL beneficense. " What could be more practical than scholarships for those who truly want and need to continue their education? Forty-two years ago, Kappa Kappa Gamma began to offer scholarships: first came the Fellowships. Forty years ago, we added Undergraduate Scholarships. Thirty-four years ago, we found a great need for Emergency Scholarships and those were added to the growing list. Twenty-five years ago, we decided to add Rehabilitation to our Philanthropy Scholarships. Finally-just a year ago, we have added the Circle Key Grants for alumnae who find a need to finish or increase their educational level. In the past biennium, we have awarded 276 scholarships and 9 Circle Key Grants. We can only say " Thank you " to the individuals and alumnae groups who made these awards possible, through their contributions to the Student Aid Fund and the Rose McGill Fund. So, with Hands outstretched to help, Hearts open to love others , and Heads thinking of ways to help, we look ahead to continuing our great Philanthropies in Kappa Kappa Gamma. GRADUATE FELLOWSHIP AWARDS For 42 years, Fellows hips of $500 or more have been awarded for graduate stud y in the fields of art, humanities an d science. Carolina Alexa nder (Fiordla State) Florida State Classics Beverly Ball (San Diego State) Dentistry UCLA Pa mela Benitez, K K r (Washington U.) Medici ne Albany Medica l NORT H JERSEY SHORE AWAR D Julia J Duncan. K K r (Idaho) Idaho Medical Med Technology Cal- Berkeley Psychology Jane Ann Edwards (San Jose State) Mary Jane Flemming, K K r (Arkansas) Perviose Hospital Med Technology Colorado Medica l Donna Gayle Geck. K K r (Colorado) Medici ne DENVER AWARD honoring ELEANOR GOODRIDGE CAMPBELL Barbara Ann Hall, K K r (Duke) Duke Medical Medici ne LILLIAN ROCKWELL MEMORI AL AWARD Ann Haruke (Whittier) U. Washin gton Social Work Virginia Hays, K Kr (Texas Tech) Baylor Law HOUSTON AWAR D Counseling Rose ann Horn, K K r (Northndge) usc SOUTHERN ORANGE COU NTY, CALIFORNIA AWARD Carol Adair Jones. KKr (Pennsylvania) Harva rd Economics PhD PHILADELPHIA AWARD Leigh Kirkwood, KKr (Oklahoma) La w Texas KATHERINE P WOOLDRIDGE BETA XI MEMORIAL-AUSTIN, TEXAS AWARD Ann Mattrella (Connecticut) Literature Connecticut Ann McDougall. KK r (McGill) Psychology U WaterlooCLEVELAND WEST SHORE AWARD Ontario Jane Eliot McKinne, " Kr (N Carolina) Cal- Berkeley Art History Catherine McMochael . KKr (Michogan) Mochogan Music LILLIAN PRICE ARMSTRONG MEMORIAL AWARD Lerro Lynn Nelson , " Kr (U Washington) PugetSound Law Medicine Cheryl Ouomby, "K I (Colorado State) Colorado Medical Christy Russell, " K r (Pottsburgh) Pennsylvania Med Medicine Counseling and Janet Keny Readong. K K r (Drake) Iowa CHARLOTTE BARRELL WARE AWARD Env1ronment Study Florida Law Llana Silsby. "" r !Duke) ELIZABETH RIDGLEY GREEK MEMORIAL AWARD Robon Tryloll. "r (Mochogan & Chocago) SoothebysArt Hostory London BETA PROVINCE AWARD honorong RUTH BRANNING MOLLOY, Beta Alpha I (Auburn) Ellen Todd Law Alabama KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA AWARD hononng US A 's BICENTENNIAL Educatoon Valor a Washongton (Mochogan State) Indiana f (New Mexoco) athryn Oschwald . Public Admin New Mexico CLARA 0 PIERCE MEMORIAL AWARD TH K \ IF LL 1976 PHILANTHROPY DINNER Marjorie Moree Ke ith , r A, Jo Yantis Eberspacher, BM, Betty Mon ahan Volk , P•, Donna Simenson Long, Bi\, Son ia Wolf Wilson , Eloise Ryder Pingry, rll . s=. Rheva Ott Sh ryoc k, BA, Dr. Miriam Locke, rn, Jean Risser Aiken, rn, Nancy Voorhee s La itn er, f6, Kay Smith Larson, Bn, Janeen Gould, BB . 25 UNDERGRADUATE SCHOLARSHIP AWARDS Margaret Ackerman . 6 r - Texas Tech Susan Austin , 6I -Oklahoma State Marla Borowski . 6 Z -Colorado College Mary Canning , P -California Mary Casali, 611 -Miami Lynn Davis, 6 n- Tulsa Ann Edwards.6 1-Louisiana State Marilyn Forbes. 6 A -Penn . State Kappa Scholarship Winners and their sponsors for 1976-77 present at convention were : Row 1, Melinda Moseley, 8 , Holly Wiedemann , tJ. Y , Kathleen Messmore,/\, Patricia Handley Turney, /\. Row 2, Peggy Reeve Newman, rz, Cynthia Girardi , tJ.O, Mary Sue Schneider, B<l>, Margaret Ackerman, tJ.'I', Anne McCullough McCann, B=:, Sharon Raines Bartlett, tJ.I , Kathleen Malchar, tJ. I, Kathleen Schmidt Carlson, 'I', Nancy Paulus, B/\ . Austin Mary Fay, I - Nebraska Betse Gage, 0 -Kansas Cynthia Girardi . 6 0 - Fresno Diane Gourley, f H -Washington State Rebecca Hemphill . RA -Pennsylvania Jane Kaczkowski , R/1 -lllinois Mary Kessel , B K -Idaho Kathleen Kuhn R8 -Oklahoma Kathleen Malchar. 6I -Oklahoma State Debra Melotti. K -Hillsdale Julia Merricks. Er-N. Carolina Kathleen Messmore. II - Akron Melinda Moseley,8 -Missouri Ellen Petrie. rz -Arizona Susan Schneider. I - Nebraska Cynthia Sellars. E8 -Arkansas Debbie Shoptaugh, E B -Colorado State Joni Shoup, r r- Maryland Kay Turpin . 6 n- Tulsa Nancy Vine . 6Z -Colorado College Mariland Wade . 6 P- Mississippi Gail Walls. BN -Ohio State Ann White ($200) , r H -Washington State Holly Weidemann , 6 r -Georgia Cathryn Wilcox , B6 -Michigan Sharon Zackula. r !-Washington Univ. HOUSTON AWARD PALO ALTO-SUSAN DYER AWARD CLEVELAND AWARD AGNES AND CLIFFORD FAVROT AWARD PHI CHAPTER-BEATRICE WOODMAN AWARD PASADENA AWARD SAN MATEO-VIRGINIA OLEKSIW AWARD SPOKANE-MARY E. DWIGHT AWARD SOPHIE COPE-BETA ALPHA AWARD LA GRANGE CLUB AWARD PORTLAND AWARD OKLAHOMA CITY AWARD TULSA-GEORGIA LLOYD-JONES AWARD INDIANAPOLIS-ELIZABETH B. SCHOFIELD MARY AND RICHARD WHITNEY AWARD LINDA DIGEL MEMORIAL AWARD PHILADELPHIA AWARD GLENDALE BURBANK -NORMA DOW PATTON LINDA DIGEL MEMORIAL AWARD LOUISVILLE AWARD DENVER AWARD BALTIMORE AWARD LEXINGTON-CURTIS BUEHLER AWARD COLUMBUS & MARY LOU KENNEDY MEMORIAL DELAWARE AWARD ANN ZINN NIGEL Y AWARD WESTCHESTER COUNTY AWARD Not shown : Julie Merricks, Debbie Shoptaugh, Gail Walls, Sharon Zackula. Borowski Davis Edwards Forbes Foy Hemphill Me Iotti Kaczkowski Kessel Kuhl REHABILITATION AWARDS Scholarships in Rehabilitation Services have been awarded for 25 years to undergraduates and graduates. UNDERGRADUATE AWARDS OF $400 Kathy Araujo, K K r Puget Sound SALEM , OREGON AWARD Lee Ann Clark. K K r Clemson DETROIT NORTH WOODWARD AWARD Susan Farmer. K K r Washington U. FAIRFIELD COUNTY, CONNECTICUT AWARD Karen Geotz, K K r Indiana FORT WAYNE, INDIANA AWARD honoring ELLA BREWER CLAR. Delta Shirley Hettrich , 6Z Iowa Janet Opila Kansas Nancy Paulus. K K r Illinois HINSDALE. ILLINOIS AWARD Linda Storm, K K r Texas Tech RICHARDSON. TEXAS AWARD Deborah Sull ivan . K K r Arkansas Occupational Therapy Recreational Therapy Special Education Special Education Speech Therapy Occupational Therapy Speech Therapy Social Work Pre Medical GRADUATE FELLOWSHIPS of $500 or more Cynthia Bartlett. K K r (Indiana) Pittsburgh Speech Therapy PhD ROCHESTER, NEW YORK AWARD honoring MARJORIE MATSON CONVERSE. Gamma Della Speech Therapy McGill Dale Bonnycastle (McGill) CLEVELAND, OHIO AWARD Barbara Burrington, K K r (Indiana) Speech Therapy Northwestern DETROIT, MICHIGAN AWARD Florida State Jeanette Carpenter. A6P (Emory) Social Work Evelyn Edmunds. K K r (Maryland) Texas Tech Clinical Psychology WESTCHESTER COUNTY, NEW YORK AWARD G. Wash ington Art Therapy Audrey Evans (Keen State. N.H.) Sandra Evans (Pittsburgh) Speech Therapy Pittsburgh U. Washington Social Work Nancy Gorshe. K K r (Washington State) LAKE WASHINGTON AWARD Karen Hanson, K K r (Cal-Fresno) Cal-Fresno Social Work-Aged PASADENA, CALIFORNIA AWARD Caryl Herndon (Tennessee) Tennessee Med . Physical Therapy Iowa Speech Pathology Joan Maycan (Iowa) Kansas Judy Moore (Kansas State) Special Education KANSAS CITY. MISSOURI AWARD Ann Osterling, K K r (Purdue) Illinois Speech Therapy CINCINNATI. OHIO AWARD Denise Podeschl . K K r (Illinois) Washington U. Clinical Psychology Laura Primakoff (Pennsylvania) Texas Clinical Psychology Utah Mary Seymour (Utah State) Speech Pathology PhD lAM Sandra Young (Oh io U. & Virg inia) Aphasia Studies KANSAS CITY AWARD OF $1 000 for summer study at New York University's INSTITUTE OF REHABILITATION MEDICINE under Dr. Martha Sarno Opila Edm unds Paulus A. Evans Storm S. Evans Farmer Geotz Hettrich Sullivan Bartlett Bonnycastle Burrington Gorshe Carpenter Hanson Todd Herndon Graduate Counselors Aid Chapters While Studying For Degrees Serving as Graduate Counselors this year are six Kappas who will assist each chapter in all Fraternity matters in return for a graduate scholarship of tuition and fees paid by the Fraternity and room and board furnished by the chapter. Each Graduate Counselor is a Kappa who has held a responsible position in her own chapter, has been accepted to graduate school, and has a desire to continue her contribution to Kappa beyond undergraduate chapter life. · Caren Cook, Be- University of Oklahoma, received a B.A. in psychology and will be attending the University of California at Davis and assisting EO chapter. Caren served her chapter as pledge chairman and president, and is interested in outside sports and painting and all kinds of crafts. Caren 's father is a judge and her mother attended convention this June with Caren as both are Kappas. Caren has two older brothers. Patti Gilliard, B8- University of Okla\)oma, has just completed a year as a field secretary and now will attend Mississippi State University and assist in the establishment of a new Kappa chapter. Patti has a B.S. in special education and was most active on ~er campus being " Order of the.Owl" -a very special group-is composed of those Kappas who have been graduate counselors. Five of the six who will be counselors this year are Janeen Gould, Kay Scholberg, Caren Cook, Gay Linville, and Patti Gilliard. Not pictured is Bunny Nash. named to Who's Who in American Colleges and Universities, outstanding senior in College of Education, Top Ten Greek Women, and one of 12 in "Images 75". She was a pledge officer, membership chairman, and on catalog, nominating, and house committees. Patti also served as parlimentarian. Her special interests are art and tennis. Janeen Gould, BB 6 -St. Lawrence, has a B.S. in mathematics and is returning for her second year to En chapter at the University of California at Riverside where she will complete her graduate studies after the first semester. Janeen will then began traveling for the Fraternity as a field secretary for the remainder of the school year. She served her chapter as treasurer and president and says she enjoys playing the piano and skiing. She lives with her parents and brother in Lyons, New York. Janeen was a member of Omicron Delta Epsilon (economics honorary), Dean's List, and a Presidential Scholar at St. Lawrence. Gay Linville, r A- Kansas State, hails from Tiburon, California and received a B.S. in radio and TV. She will be pursuing a graduate degree in broadcast journalism at Washington State University and assisting r H chapter. Gay was guitarist and co-leader for two years for the Kappa pickers and served her chapter as 2nd vice president. She was also philanthropy chairman, homecoming decorations, cultural and public relations committees. Gay was administrative assistant to the student body president and was producer and host of a weekly cable TV program. She directed the cable TV coverage of elections 1974. Bunny Nash, BX -Kentucky, will be helping to install E 2.: chapter at the University of Virginia this fall. She has an A.B. in Educati6n with physical education and Russian as her majors and is currently studying counseling. Having served her chapter as 1st vice president and membership chairman, Bunny was also in Mortar Board, and a member of the Kentucky Troupers dance company. For two years she gave talks for campus research program for overweight women on fitness and nutrition. She is a member of the Physical Education Advisory Board of the University of Kentucky. Kay Scholberg, Ll <I>- Bucknell University, is an art history major with an avid interest in art, architecture, and antiques. A member of Mortar Board, and graduated cum laude with an honors thesis entitled: "The Image of the Animal as Seen in Contemporary Prints and Drawings", Kay has served her chapter as historian, rush parties chairman, president, and on the membership and public relations committees. She is a member of the woman's varsity tennis team and represented her living unit on student government. Kay will be assisting ilN chapter at the University of Massachusetts. Contributions have been received from 25 clubs and 86 associations along with members and friends . Three new awards have been established from bequests, four named memorial awards have been received and one special award from Beta Province. A grateful Pillsburgh South Hills, PA MEMORIAL NAME AWARDS thanks to all. Gifts/rom Alumnae Groups and Seallle, WA Friends and family of Linda Louchs Individuals Toledo, OH Digel, Delta Xi $1000 or over Washington DC-Suburban Maryland Family of Elizabeth Ridgely Tracy Kansas City, MO $2000 Sail Lake City, UT Greek, Beta Nu Houston, TX $1400 Arcadia, CA Friends of Lillis Price Armstrong, GamPhiladelphia, PA $1150 Long Beach, CA rna Omega Denver, CO $1095.67 Miami, FL Friends of Mary Lou Kennedy , Beta Nu Pasadena , CA $1000 Oak Park-River Forest SPECIAL AWARDS Westchester County, NY $1000 Sarasota, FL Ruth Branning Molloy , Beta Alpha Award by Alumnae Groups in Beta Albuquerque, NM $500-$1000 Akron, OH Province (Beta Iota, Delaware, Essex, Detroit, Ml $900 Atlanta , GA Harrisburg Club, Lackawanna, North Louisville, KY $900 Jersey Shore Club, Northern New Boulder, CO Southern Orange County, CA $825 Buffalo, NY Jersey Association, Philadelphia , Cleveland, OH $750 Pittsburgh , South Hills, Southern Milwaukee, WI Cincinnati, OH $632.97 New Jersey and State College) $1 ,230 Northern New Jersey Indianapolis, IN $550 Raleigh, NC Katherine P. Wooldridge Memorial Dallas, TX $500 San Francisco Bay, CA Award given in honor of Beta Xi $250-$500 Chapter's 75th Anniversary by the $100 to $250 Clubs Richardson, TX Austin , Texas Alumnae AssociaFox River Valley, WI Oklahoma City, OK tion-a gift of $3500 and the scholarClay-Platte, MO Lexington, KY, honoring Curtis Buehler ship given biennially. Montgomery, AL Rochester , NY, honoring Marjorie MatLillian Rockwell Award-a gift of Indian River , FL son Con verse $15 ,000 from Henry Rockwell to esMilwaukee West Suburban , WI Cleveland West Shore, OH tablish a scholarship in memory of his Mobile, AL, honoring Miriam Locke Detroit North Woodward, Ml sister, Lillian Rockwell , Beta Xi . AnFairfield County, CT INDIVIDUALS nual Award . La Grange, IL Club Katherine Bailey Hoyt Sophie Cope-Beta Alpha Award-a gift Lake Wa hington , WA Clifford Favrot Family Fund from Beta Alpha Chapter of $19,840 Northern Virginia, honoring Alice Boyd Mary and Richard Whitney left to them in the will of Sophie Hodgdon Gifts of less than $250 are combined for Cope, Beta Alpha for an annual Southern New Jersey additional awards award . Ft. Lauderdale, FL Columbu , OH fcomm uedfrom the that Changed America" -including a range wide enough to Delaware msule from co,•er) take in such wide views of the times as Uncle Tom 's Cabin as Fort Wayne, IN , in memory of Ella well as those dealing with specific subjects such as William Brewer Clark Beaumont's Psychology of Digestion or Ralph Nader 's Unsafe at Hin dale, IL Any Speed. Lafayett e, IN PEACE MEAL is the name of a new program at Eastern Illiorth Jer ey Shore nois University through which the school of home economics Pitt burgh , PA , honoring LaRue Mos has won a contract to run a nutrition program which pro vide Schreib meals for the elderly at 28 locations in the area of the Uni verPortland , OR sity. Palo Ito C in memory of Su an Dyer STUDENT HEALTH along with everything else change with Prepared b) Ihe Operalion Brass Tacks Commillee of alem, OR the time . The Uni versity of Id aho reports that student health Ihe alional Pan hellenic , honoring irginia Olekan Mateo, Editors Conferen ce. needs have in the past two decades teadily dimin ished th e iw space originally allocated to lhi purpose. The rea on ? - ju l hre eport , L ca n' t take time off from studies, the students ay. Tul a, OK, memor of Georgia LloydE GINEERING ENROLLME T con tinue to increa e - fo r Jone 1975-76, 18.8 per cent over the previo us yea r wi th female first Glend ale- Burba nk , C , honoring oryea r tudent in engi neering up 60 percent, minority group rna Do\\ Patten up 30%. $1 0 to $250 A ociation MOOD OF CAMP S, 1976 . . . apathy exi ting be ide acti rl ington Height , IL i m. . . ab urdi t candidate u ing the ridiculou to prove a eriou point. . . new ophi location for political activi l e , J maha, met hod . . . growi ng concern for the elderly and problem of aging. . . . Park Ridge- De Plai ne , IL TH K 'I I F LL 1976 29 FRATERNITY DIRECTORY COUNCIL President-MRS. ROBERT WELLS (Jean Hess, t:, Y), 4830 Jett Rd., N.W., Atlanta, GA 30327 Vice President-MRS. PHILIP C. BIRD (Marjorie Cross, BM), 415 Howes St., Apt. 601 , Ft. Collins, CO 80521 Treasurer-MRS. ROBERT KOKE (Jane Lindsay, r 0), 607 Entwisle Ct., Westminster, Wilmington, DE 19808 Director of Alumnae- MRS . JOHN A. BARRY (Gay Chuba,/::, A) , Rt. 1, Box 87W, Newfoundland, PA 18445 Director of Chapters-MRS . DURMONT LARSON (Kay Smith, Bn), 9413 N.E. 14th, Bellevue, WA 98004 Director of Field Representatives-MRS. CHARLES E. WILLIAMS (Marian Klingbeil, 8), 2821 Alcazar, N.E., Albuquerque, NM 87110 Director of Membership-MRS. CHARLES NITSCHKE (Sally Moore, BN), 6570 Plesenton Dr., Worthington, OH 43085 Director of Personnel-MRS. DIRK V. TOLLE (Caroline Cole,/::, II.), 2902 Captiva Dr., Sarasota, FL 33581 Director of Philanthropies-MRS. JAMES C. PRIOR (Betsy Molsberry, BN), 565 Sea Queen Dr., Lake Havasu City, AZ 86403 FRATERNITY HEADQUARTERS 530 East Town St., Columbus, Ohio 43215 Mailing Address: P.O. Box 2079, Columbus, Ohio 43216 Executive Secretary-Mrs . Robert V. Cameron (Betty Sanor, BN) PANHELLENIC National Panhellenic Conference Delegate- Mrs. Wilbur M . Pryor, Jr. (Phyllis Brinton, BM), 1975 Monaco Pkwy., Denver, CO 80220; First Alternate- Mrs. Wiles Converse (Extension Chairman) ; Second Alternate-Mrs. Lester L. Graham (Marian Schroeder, B<l>) , 16651 103rd Ave., Sun City, AZ 85351; Third Alternate-Mrs. Robert Wells (President). Panhellenic Affairs Committee-NPC Delegate (Chairman); First and Second Alternates:. Chapter Panhellenic: Mrs. John Beall (Pauline Tomlin ! r X), 6704 Hazel Lane, McLean, VA 22101; Campus Panhellenic: Mrs. Stephen W. Ridges (Cherry Moslander, /::,H), Fraternity & Sorority Co-ordinator, Student Union, U. of Utah , Salt Lake City, UT 84112; Alumnae Panhellenic: Mrs. Ralph Schwartz (Nancy Ann Nelson , B/1.), 3451 E. Asbury, Denver, CO 80210. ASSOCIATE COUNCIL PROVINCE DIRECTORS CHAPTERS ALUMNAE Ms. Lorna Jean Telfer(!::,!::,), 148 Kenaston Ave. , Montreal, 304, Que. , AlphaCan. H3R 1M2 Beta-Mrs. John P. Henry (Nancy Birch, r /::,) , 69 Glenmere Dr., Chatham, NJ 07928 Gamma- Mrs . Ross E. Wales (Juliana Fraser, BN), 3651 Bellecrest Ave., Cincinnati, OH 45208 Delta- Mrs. Thomas R. Lugar (Sara Schnaiter, r t:, ), 8080 Morningside Dr., Indianapolis, IN 46240 Epsilon- Mrs. Michael Molt (Katherine Feiger, B/1.), #I Jill Rd., Fairfield, IL 62837 Zeta- Mrs. Walter J. Stauffer (Carolyn Steele, 1), 8008 Roe Ave., Shawnee Mission, KS 66208 Eta-Mrs. Robert MacLauchlin (Elizabeth D' Ann Wilson , EB), 1407 Country Club Rd ., Ft. Collins, CO 80521 Theta- Mrs. Robert F Arbour (Rebecca Stone, t:,r ), 1220 Ross Ave., Baton Rouge, LA 70808 Iota-Mrs . James E. Hutsinpiller (Mary Kuhlman, r H), S. 4314 Martin, Spokane, WA 99203 Kappa-Mrs. William Tennison (Mary Kay Reid, Et:,), 1920 E. Gary St., Mesa, AZ 85203 Lambda-Mrs . William Mohr (June Miller , r t:, ), 2611 Walhalla Dr., Richmond, VA 23235 Mu-Mrs. Ronald Muzii (Sally Schwartz, '1'), 7500 S.W. !13th St. , Miami, FL 33156 Nu-Mrs. Raymond C. LaCharif e (Virginia Nelson Anding, r K), 1830 Cantrill Dr. , Lexington, KY 40505 Xi-Mrs. Gerald G . Barton (Martha Jo Clough , B8), 1605 Dorchester Dr. , Oklahoma City, OK 73120 Omicron-Mrs . Kenneth Hampson (Teri Ann Van Dorn, !::,0), 3011 Northwood Dr. , Ames, lA 50010 Pi- Mrs. Gerald Wiese (Carla Myers, r M ), 3320 Gumwood Dr. , Corvallis, OR 97330 Alpha- Miss Diana Dodds, (r 1), 201 E. 36th St. ,# 16E, New York, NY 10016 Beta- Mrs. John P. Henry (Nancy Birch, r t:,), 69 Glenmere Dr. , Catham, NJ 07928 Gamma-Mrs. John Zuverink, Jr. (Drusilla Cox, BX), 21332 Beachwood Dr. , Rocky River, OH 44116 Delta- Miss Priscilla Shaver (t:, r ) , 420 Linden, E. Lansing, MI 48823 Epsilon- Mrs. David A. Meeker (Nancy Segersten, E) 3310 Sand wood Way, Madison, WI 53713 Zeta- Mrs. William H. Thute (Dorothy Clinton, I), 10628 Castelar, Omaha, NE 68124 Eta-Mrs . Neil Gerhart (Alice Jones, M ), 4311 Roundtree Ct., Colorado Springs, co 80909 Theta- Mrs . DeWitt C. Shreve (Shirley Younkin, r A), 12319 Pine Rock, Houston , TX 77024 Iota- Mrs . Barton A. Brassey (Dorothy Barbour, r M), 330 Summit Ridge Rd ., Boise, Idaho 83702 Kappa- Mrs . Don Madding (Carolyn Conway, t:, r ), 5372 Rockledge Dr., Buena Park, CA 90621 Lambda- Mrs . C. Temple Thomason (Catherine Dennis, r '1'), 137 Westbury Rd., Lutherville, MD 21093 Mu-Mrs. Kenneth M. Deeds (Juliana Warner, BN), 4728 Travertine Dr., Tampa, FL 33615 . Nu-Mrs . Harold L. Jeffery, III (Lois Baird, /::,/1.) , R.R. # 3, Montpier Farms, Franklin, TN 37064 Xi-Mrs. Henry Broach, Jr. (Joy Cox, r N) , 5 South Rd. Terr. , Little Rock, AR 72207 Omicron- Mrs . David L. Cox (Molly Morony, !::,0), 4920 Morningside Rd.,# 44, St. Louis Park, MN 55416 Pi- Mrs. William Kriz (Patricia Maness, BM), 3388 Patterson Way, El Dorado Hills, CA 95630 FIELD SECRETARIES Terre Blanton (t:,P), 30 North Hill Pkwy., Apt. B-7 , Jackson,MS 39206; Jan Harenberg (rB), 208 Calle Petaca, Santa Fe, NM 87501; Mary Flo Squires (r<l>) , 2815 N. Florence St. , El Paso, TX 79902 STANDING COMMITTEES GENERAL ADMINISTRATIVE Bylaws-Mrs . Alston 0 . Harmon , Jr. (Carol Engels, t:,K), I 105 Catalina Rd., E., Jacksonville, FL 32216 (Chairman); Mrs. William D. Wagers (Mary Elizabeth Gordon , M) , 4115 Fir Ct., Indianapolis, IN 46250; Mrs. Gavin W. Laurie, Jr. (Carolyn Jones , P•) , 2944 Forest Cir., Jacksonville, FL 32217; Mrs. Eleanor F Zahn (Eleanor F Zahn, r .::; ) , 2880 Holyridge Dr. , Hollywood, CA 90068; Chapter Byla ws- Mrs. H. Dennis Sanford (Janet Dickerson , r K), 529 Franklyn Ave., Indialantic, FL 32903 Convemion- Mrs. William B. Roberts (Mary Agnes Graham, Y), 1116 4th Ave. N., Great Falls, MT 59401 (Chai rman) . Extension-Mrs. Wiles Converse (Marjorie Matson r t:, ), 83 Stoneleigh Ct., Rochester , NY 14618 (Chairman). 30 Finance-Mrs. Cyrus Perkins (Betty Jane Burton, PB), 1725 Notre Dame Dr. , N.E., Albuquerque, NM 87106 (Chairman); Miss Jean Schmidt (!::,11.), 75 Rosewood, San Francisco, CA 94127; Mrs. John M. Shelton (Patricia Piller, 0), 6536 Sagamore Rd., Shawnee Mission , KS 66208; Miss Anne Wilson (BX), 1910 Fontaine Rd., Lexington, KY 40502; President Ex-Officio; Treasurer; Housing Chairman . History- Mrs. George E. Seney, III (Margaret Easton, P • ), 4049 Stonehenge Dr., Sylvania, OH 43560 (Chairman); Mrs. Jack R. Graf (Catherine Schroeder, BN), 3845 Hillview Dr. , Columbus, OH 43220 (Editor); Mrs. Joseph E. Molloy (Ruth Branning, BA), 200 St. Marks Sq., Philadelphia, PA 19104; Mrs. Justin Fuller (Charlotte Thomas, t:, Y), 133 Tecumseh Rd., Montevallo, AL 35115 Housing- Mrs . William R. Toler (Martha Stephens, 8), 1826 Highridge Dr. , Columbia, MO 65201 (Chairman); Concerning House Directors; Mrs. Daniel E. West (Vadis Elizabeth Foster, /::,B), 825 S. Perkins, Memphis, TN 38117; Assistant Treasurer; President (ex-officio) KEY Publication- Mrs . David Selby (Diane Miller, BN), 6750 Merwin Pl., Worthington , OH 43085 (Editor-Chairman) ; Mrs. Willis C. Pflugh, Jr. (Anna Mitchell Hiett, BM ), 2359 Juan St. , San Diego, CA 92103 (Active Chapter Editor); Mrs. E. Taylor Richardson (Mary Elizabeth Vawter, 8), 2285 Old Orchard THE KEY/FALL 1976 Rd . N.E., Mariella, GA 30067 (Alumnae Editor) ; Mrs . Graydon L. Lansford (Florence E. Hutchinson , r 6 ), 311 E. 72nd St. , New York, NY 10021 (Art Editor); Mrs . William Cahill (Audrey Elaine Hartley, 6 A) , 1180 Reef Rd. , Vero Beach , FL 32960 (Book Review Editor); Mrs. David Swaddling (Patricia Weber, K), 2725 Lymington Rd., Columbus, OH 43220 (Assistant to Editor). Publ1c Relatwns-Mrs. Philip C. Bird (Marjorie Cross , BM ), 415 Howes St., Apt. 601 , Ft. Collins , CO 80521 (Chairman). Ruuai-Mrs. John Boyer, Jr. (Nan Kretschmer, BM ), Winter Address : 836 E. 17th Ave., Denver, CO 80218; Summer Address : Box 21 , Savery, WY 82332 (Chairman). CHAPTERS Chapter Advtsory Boards-Mrs . Michael H. Miller (Martha Young, e), 1923 Leavenworth, Manhallan, KS 66502 Chapter Programs-Mrs. Willis C . POugh , Jr. (Anna M. Hiell, BM ), 2359 Juan St., San Diego, CA 92103 (Chairman) Fratermty Education-Miss Deidra Raye Ballard (Be), 2900 Rolido , #26 1, Houston, TX 77063 Pledge- Mrs . Russell S. McAllister (Jan Singleton, 6 P) , 2010 Gateway Dr., Jackson , MS 39211 Public Relations-Mrs. WilliamS. Cox (Judith Reamer, '1'), RFD Box 109L, Del Mar , CA 92014 Scholars/up-Mrs. Frederick N . Curley (Barbara Tranter, 6 r ), W. 408 Jefferson Ct. , Spokane, WA 99203 ALUMNAE Alumnae Programs-Mrs. R. Rodney Wilson , Jr. (Carolyn Hornor, BTl, 1220 Mohawk Trail, Richardson , TX 75080 PHILANTHROPIC Grants for Swdy: Graduate Fellows/ups-Miss Miriam Locke (rn), Box 1484, University, AL 35486 (Chairman); Judges: Mrs. Jus) in Fuller (C. Joyce Thomas , 6 Y), 133 Tecumseh Rd. , Montevallo, AL 35115; Miss Mary Elizabeth Brooks (r 6), 3111 Stevens St. , Apt. 3, Madison, WI 53705; Mrs . Frederick Harbold (Cynthia Springer, M), 412 Bayberry Lane , Naperville, IL 60540 . . . . Deadline for Applications, February 15. Graduate Counselor Fellowsh1ps-Mrs. Charles E. Williams (Marian Klingbeil, e), 2821 Alcaza r Rd., N.E., Albuquerque, NM 87110. . . . Deadline for Applications , January I. Undergraduate Scholarships- Mrs. W. James Aiken, Jr. (Jean Risser, r P), 206 Maple Ave., Pittsburgh , PA 15218 (Chairman); Judges : Mrs . Thompson Murray (Sue Brudi, 1) , 1806 Arrowhead Lane, Godfrey , IL 62035 ; Miss Sarah A . Ryder (A • l , 3 Echo Lane , Wheeling, WV 26003; Mrs . James Chamber (Cynthia Mitchell, 6Z), 7083 E. Montana Place, Denver, CO 80222. . . . Deadline for Applications, February 15. Undergraduate Emergency Scholarsh1ps-Mrs . Leslie Woehlke (Lois Thomp on, r 6), 1045 Circle Dr. , Elm Grove, WI 53122 (Chairman ) . . . . Deadline for Applications, February 15. Rehab1lttat10n Fellows/ups. Scholarships and Servtces- Mrs. Thomas F. Long, Jr. ( Donna Simenson, BJ\), 335 Ruby, Clarendon Hills , IL 60514 (Chairman); Judges: Mr . Howard A. Rusk (Glady Houx , e), 330 E. 33rd St. , Apt. 21M , ew York , Y 10016; Mi s Judith Lalla (B<I>), 3900 Watson Pl. , N.W., Wa hington , D.C. 20016; Miss Sandra J. Benzies (H), 1350 N. Lakeshore Drive , Chicago, IL 60610. . . . Deadline for Applications, February 15. Roe McGt/1-Mr . Va ughn W. Yolk (Eiizl!beth M. Monahan , P • ), 649 Timber Lane , Devon , PA 19333 (Chairman); Mrs . William G . Granat (Barbara M. Cran ton , 6 r ) , 654 Va llr Rd ., Wayne, PA 19087 (Assistant). Mrs. Edward C. Eber pacher, Jr. (Jo ephine F. Yanti , BM ), 219 N. Washington t., Shelbyvi lle, IL 62565 (Assi tant Circle Key) . Clmstmas har111g Program-Mr . Walt e r M. Kei th (Marjorie Moree, r A), 405 W. Ve rmtmt , Urbana, IL 61801 SPECIAL APPOINTMENTS om111atmg-Mr . William S. Lane ( Ruth Hoehl e, <1>), Box 27, Inte rvale, H 03845 Par/1amt•ntattan-Mrs. Loui e Barbeck (Loui e Little, r <1>), 3301 Greenbrier, Dalla , T 75225 COUNCIL ASSISTANTS A. IS/ant to till! Dtrectorof 1ember lup- Mr . Ro nald P. Helman (Lou Ellyn Alexander, 0), 150 Hilltop Rd., Oxford, OH 45056; Mrs. E. P. Laitner ( ancy oorhe , r l. 1020 Downing Dr. , Wauke ha. WI 53186; Mrs. Stephen W. R1dg ( herry Moslander, 6H) , Fraternity & orority Coordinator, Student mon , . of tah, all Lake City, T 4112 GRADUATE COUNSELORS areh ool. (B9l . KKr. . of California at Davi , 222 R1ce Lane, Da i • CA 95616 Patu llliard (B8) , ~o:~o:r . M1 i 1pp1 tate .. P.O . Bo 2949. Mi i ippi State, I 39 62 Janeen G uld (liB• l. Klo:r , . of ahforma at R1vers1de, 3637 Canyon Crest , K201. Rl\ende, 92 06 a) LmVIII (r ), Klo:r . Washmgton tate 00 Campu , Pullman , 99163 'w TH K \IF LL 1976 Bunny Nash (BX), KKr , U. of Virginia, 404 8th St. , N.E., Charlottesville, VA 22901 Kay Scholberg (6<1>), KKr , U. of Massachusells , 32 Nulling Ave., Amherst , MA 01002 FRATERNITY HEADQUARTERS 530 East Town St. , Columbus, OH 43215 Communications-Mrs. Michael Elin (Jean Ebright , BN) Chapter Finance-Mrs. David L. Henry (Mary Swan, r r ) Financial Administrator-Mrs . Tracy Shea Convention Coordinator- Mrs. Roy Wentz (Jayne Weathers , BN) Assistants-Patricia Barron; Mrs. George Blackmur; Mrs. Bryon J . Mollica; Mrs. Nancy Pennell (Nancy Sanor, BN); Mrs. Tod Stowe (Judith Cadot, P • ) AUTHORIZED JEWELER J. 0. Pollack & Co., Inc. 1700 West Irving Park Rd., Chicago, IL 60613 MAGAZINE AGENCY Director-Mrs. Orieon Meeker endolyn L. Dorey, M ), 4440 PROVINCE MAGAZINE CHAIRMEN Alpha-Mrs. Robert M . Mutrie (Jean Simpson , B'l'), 20 Walker Ave., Toronto, Ont. Canada , M4V IG2 Beta-Mrs. Russell Dey, Jr. (Marie Mathewson , 6 A), Timberlane, R.D. # I, Box 433, Pennington, NJ 08534 Gamma-Mrs . Donald MacFarlane (Nancy Harrington, 6Z) , 1411 Croyden , Lyndhurst , OH 44124 Delta-Mrs. Joseph N. Heath (Sally Owens, 61\) , 1208 Rochester St., Lafayelle , IN 47905 Epsilon-Mrs . Glenn Evans (Nancy Jones, E) , 1031 S. Home , Park Ridge, IL 60068 Zeta-Mrs . Myron Mangram (Shirley Johnson , A• ), 812 North 7lst St., Kansas City, KS 66112 Eta-Mrs . Charles Heffner (Margaret Givens , BM), 750 S. Clinton St. Apt. 2-D, Denver , CO 80231 Theta-Mrs. A. P. Brooks (Martha Jo Holland , r K) , 12319 Overcup Dr., Houston , TX 77024 Iota-Mrs. Michael Mahaffey (Judy Mawdsley, r A) , 2520 Granada Ct. , Richland , WA 99352 Kappa-Mrs . Howard A. Hill (Elizabeth Schellschmidt , M ), 4117 Lymer Dr. , San Diego, CA 92116 Lambda-Mrs. Dorcas N. Cloud (Dorcas-Newcomber, 6A) , 2022 Lee Hi Dr. S.W. , Roanoke, VA 24018 Mu-Mrs . Edwin H. Smyth (Jane Chandler, BA) , 10917 Carrollwood Dr. , Tampa , FL 33618 Nu-Mrs. William E. Heidish (Louise Schwallie, r 0), 5710 Criner Rd ., Huntsvi lle, AL 35802 Xi-Mrs . John Clifford (G. Jill Cross , Be ) , 1209 Ridgecrest Rd ., Edmond , OK 13034 Onucron- To be named P1-Mrs. Helser VerMehr (Margaret Helser, BO) , 324 Costello Dr. , Los Altos , CA 94022 ACTIVE CHAPTER PRESIDENTS & CHAPtER COUNCIL ADVISERS (•Chaplet House Address) ALPHA PRO VI CE St. LawrenC'I! Umverslly (BB• ) -Lizbeth Dahle n , •45 E. Main St., Canton , NY 13617; Mrs. John A. Clark, Woodmere, Canton , NY 13617 Syracuse Umversuy (BT)-Lynn March , •743 Comstock Ave., Syracuse , Y 13210; Mrs. Eric A. Weber, 207 Strathmore Dr., Syracuse, NY 13207 Un11•ersuy of Toronto (B'I') -Michel Schofield, •32 Madison Ave., Toronto, On, Can M5R 2SI ; Mrs . Albert E. Bassett , 123 Warren Rd ., Toron to , On , Can M4V 2S3 McGtll Unll'l!fSit)' (66) -Daphn e Hamp on , 841 Lexi ngt on Ave., Montreal , Pq .. Canada H3Y IL2; Mrs. R. Milliken, 25 Glengarry, Town of Mt. Royal, Pq . Can . Un11•ersuy of Connecticut (6 M) -Mary Gleeton , •t572 Storrs Rd ., Storrs , CT 06268; Mrs. Gregory Osgood , 52 Seminary Rd., Simsbury, CT 06070 Unll'l!rSit_V of Massachuseus (6 )-Ci ndy Orton , •32 Nutting Ave., Amherst , MA 01002; Mr . Ala n Barker, Teewaddle Rd., RF D 3, Amherst , MA 01002 BETA PROVI CE Allegheny College (r P ) - Gayle Gianniny, KKr, Box 179, A.C. , Meadville, PA 16335; Mr . Deanna Eberlin, 566 Beer Ave., Meadville , PA 16335 1111'1!rs1ty o{ Pent~syll-ama (BA)-Deborah Ginley, •3952 Pine St.. Philadelphia , P 19104; Mrs. Bruce Carl on . 856 Parks1de Bl vd., Claymont , DE 19073 Un11ws•ty of Pmsburgh (r E) -Colleen McGroder, •4401 Bayard, Pittsburgh , PA 15213; Mrs. Andrew A. Marocchi , 460 Willow Dr. . Pittsburgh , PA 15243 PemiSI·Irama State Un11'1!rS1ty (6A)-Lmda S a b, KKr . 108-S Cooper Hall , nier. lty Park. PA 16802; Mi Anne Riley, Box 314, Boa! burg, PA 16827 Cartll'/111?- Mellon Umw?rSI(I' (6.:)- adine Lika r, KKr . 3D- 1060 Morewood Ave., Pittsburgh , PA 15213; Mrs . Alfred Mengato , 24 Church ill Rd., Pit ts burgh , PA 15235 31 Bucknell Universiry (6<1>)-Aiison Enid Rosfeld , KKr , C2919, Bucknell U., Lewisburg, PA 17837; Mrs . Sally Goas, 48 Center Dr. , Camp Hill , PA 17011 GAMMA PROVINCE UniversiTy of Akron (A) -Kath y Messmore, *237 Spicer St. , Akron, OH 44304; Mrs. Frank Pugliese, 3104 Bancroft Rd ., Akron , OH 44313 Ohio Wesleyan UniversiTy (P • ) -Beth Ramsey, *126 W. Winter ~t., Delaware, OH 43015; Mrs . Edward Cassier, 175 N. Franklin, Delaware , OH 43015 ~ Ohio STare UniversiTy (BN) -Jane Wertz, *55 E. 15th Ave., Columbus, OH 4321 0; Mrs. William J. Kienle , 1695 Doone Rd ., Columbus, OH 43221 Universiry of CincinnaTi (BP • ) -Ginger Lughes, *2801 Clifton Ave ., Cincinnati, OH 45220; Miss Marcy Johnson, 6346 Montgomery Rd., # II , Cincinnati, OH 45211 Denison Universiry (r 0) -Ann Patrice Hargreaves, *110 N. Mulberry St., Granville , OH 43023 ; Mrs . A. F. Cameron , 625 Country Club Rd ., Apt. F-10, Newark, OH 43055 Miam i Uni versiry (I'. A) - Carol Rankin , KKr , Hamilton Hall, Miami U., Oxford , OH 45056; Mrs. Barb Samuelson, P.O. Box 71, Oxford, OH 45056 DELTA PROVINCE Indiana Uni versiTy (6) -Paul a Barcl ay, *1018 E. Third , Bloomington , IN 47401; Mrs. Charles Jerden , RR # 10, Box 527 A, Bloomington, IN 47401 DePauw Universiry (I) -Gail Williams, *507 S. Locust , Greencastle, IN 46135; Mrs . J. P. Allen, 615 Ridge , Greencas tle, IN 46135 Burler Universiry (M)- Karen Hungerford , *82 1 W. Hampton Dr., Indianapolis, IN 46208; Mrs. John Sh ackle, 8106 E. 20th St. , Indi anapolis , IN 46219 Hillsdale College (K) - Ke rry Donova n, *22 1 Hill sdale St. , Hillsdale, Ml 49242; Mrs . Roger Davis, 408 Haral, Sturgis, Ml 49091 UniversiTy of Michigan (B6) -Su za nn e Streicher, *1204 Hill, Ann Arbor , MI 48104; Mrs. Karl Bolstad , 635 Center Dr. , Ann Arbo r, MI 48103 Purdue UniversiTy (r 6 ) - Emily Maddox , *325 Waldron , W. Lafayette, IN 47906; Mrs. Thomas T. Bau man , 234 Connolly St., W. Lafayette, IN 47906 Michigan Srare UniversiTy (6 r) -J an Bailey, *605 M.A.C. Ave., E. Lansing, Ml 48823; Mrs. Robert R. Henry, Jr. , 454 Tulip Tree Ln ., E. Lansing, Ml 48823 EPSILON PROVINCE Monmowh College (A• )-Dorothy M. Snowden , KKr , Student Center, Monmouth College, Monmouth , IL 61462; Mrs . Milton Bowman , Box 173, Little York , IL 61453 Illinois Wesleyan UniversiTy (E) -N ancy Stoerzback, *105 E. Graham St. , Bloomington , IL 61701 ; Mrs. John Naylor, RR # 4, Bl oomington , IL 61701 Univ~rsiTy of Wisconsin (H) - Gretchen Hutterli , *601 N. Henry St. , Madison , WI 53703; Mrs. Donald Thayer, 930 Waban Hill , Madi son, WI 53711 Norrhwesrern UniversiTy (I) -Sue Ehrke, *1871 Orrington Ave., Evanston, IL 60201 ; Mrs. Marcus Eberle, 230 East Ave., Park Ridge, JL 60068 Universiry of Illinois (BA} -Nancy Paulus, *1102 S. Lincoln Ave. , Urbana , JL 61801 ; Mrs. Kip Pope, 721 W. Washington St. , Champaign , JL 61820 ZETA PROVINCE UniversiTy of Missouri (8) -M indy Moseley, *512 Rollins, Columbia, MO 65201; Mrs . Charles Peterson, Route# 4, Columbia, MO 65201 Universiry of Kansas (0) -M ary Bray, *Gower Place , Lawrence, KS 66044; Mrs. Stephen Glass, 3001 Longh orn , Lawrence, KS 66044 UniversiTy of Nebraska (I)-Becky Morgan, *6 16 N. 16th , Lincoln, NE 68508; Mrs. Nick Harm , 2306 Piccadilly, Lincoln , NE 68512 Kansas STare UniversiTy (r A)-Michele Moore, *5 17 Fairchild, Manhattan, KS 66502; Mrs. Michael Miller, 1923 Leavenworth , Manhattan, KS 66502 WashingTon UniversiTy(r I) - Elizabeth Anne Nelson , KKr, Box 188, Washington U., University City , MO 63130; Mrs . Richard Teague, 765 W. Kirkham , St. Loui s, MO 63122 ETA PROVINCE UniversiTy of Colorado (BM) -Barb Lait ner, *1134 University, Boulder, CO 80302; Mrs . John Ham ilton, 3747 Spring Valley Rd., Boulder, CO 80302 UniversiTy of New Mexico (r B) -Katie O'Connell , *1620 Mesa Vista , N.E ., Albuquerque, NM 81106; Mrs . Frank C. Melfi, 3201 Rh ode Island , N.E., Albuquerque, NM 87110 Umversiryof Wyoming (fO) -Donna Waite, *KKr , Fraternity Mall , Laramie, WY 8207 1; Mrs . John Sandeen, 1421 Steele, Laramie, WY 82070 Colorado College (L'.Z) -Marla Borowski, *1100 Wood Ave., Colorado Springs, CO 80903; Mrs. Darrel Choate, 6550 Brook Park Dr., Colorado Springs, CO 80918 UniversiTy of Urah (tl H) -Lisa Broadbeck, *33 S. Wolcott , Salt Lake City , UT 84102; Mrs . Ernest Baldwin , 811 Northcrest Dr. , Salt Lake City , UT 84103 Colorado SraTe UniversiTy (EB) -Barb Th omson, *729 S. Shi elds , Ft. Collins, CO 80521; Mrs. John Schmidt , 1730 Miramont Dr. , Ft. Collins, CO 80521 THETA PROVI NCE Umversiry of Texas (B.::J -Su sie Hamilton , *2001 University Ave. , Austin , TX 78705; Mrs. Ga ry J. Thornton , 801 Rock Creek Dr. , Austin , TX 78746 Tulane Uni••ersiTy (H. Sophie Newcomb College) (BO) -Karen Keil , *1033 Audubon St. , New Orl eans, LA 7011 8; Mrs. William E. Wright , Jr., 2801 Calhoun St., New Orleans, LA 70118 . Sowhern MeThodisT Universi(v (r <!>)-Susan Brown , *3110 Dani els St. , Dall as, TX 75205; Mrs . James E. Roberts, 3513 Stanford , Dall as, TX 75225 Lowsiana STare Uni1•ersiTy (61) -Ginn y King, *K Kr House, Box 17380-A , Baton Rouge, LA 70803; Mrs. Philip Mansour , 5055 Nicholson Dr., Batoh Rouge, LA 70808 Texas Tech UniversiTy (6'1')-Peggy Acke rman , KKr, 4108 Tech Station, Lubbock, TX 79409; Mrs. Barbara Adams, 4506-18th , Lubbock, T X 79416 Texas ChrisTian Un11•erslfy (EA ) - Carol Casim ir, K Kr , Box 29721 , Ft. Worth , TX 76129; Mrs. Norman J. Taylor, 27 12 Colonia l Parkway, Ft. Worth , TX 76 107 32 Texas A & M (EP ) -Cindi Kenne, KKr, Box 9913, College Station, TX 77840; Mrs . Dennis Grunkenmeyer , 2728 Camelot , Bryan, TX 77801 IOTA PROVINCE Uni versiry of Washingron (Bn}-Kim Jorgensen , *4504 18th, N.E., Seattle, WA 98105; Mrs. Donald Marinkovich , 4401 52nd, N.E., Seattle, WA 98105 UniversiTy ofMomana (B<I>) -M ary Sue Schneider, *1005 Gerald Ave., Missoula , MT 59801 ; Mrs. Harold Holt , 345 Daly Ave., Missoul a, MT 59801 UniversiTy of Idaho (BK) -Eilen Wetherell , *805 N. Elm , Moscow , ID 83843; Mrs. Jenifor L. Klindt , 1020 Deakin, # 6, Moscow, ID 83843 WhiTman College (r r )-Laurie Agnew, KKr, Whitman College, Walla Walla , WA 99362; Mrs. J . Scott McKnight , 1815 Crestl ine, Walla Walla , WA 99362 WashingTon STaTe Universiry (r H)-Sue Clark, *N.E. 800 Campus, Pullman, WA 99163; Mrs. Kenneth Fielding, S.W. 11 20 Marcel , Pullman, WA 99163 Universiry of Brirish Columbia (r I ) - Dianna Scott, K K r , Panhellenic House, U.B.C., Vancouver , BC, Can; Mrs. Timmy McKay-Dunn , 1789 Matthews , Vancouver, BC, Can. V6J2T3 Universiry of PugeT Sound (E I) -Kris Judson, K K r , Smith Hall , U.P .S., Tacoma, WA 98416; Mrs. James L. Monroe, 1105 Paradise Pkwy., Tacoma , WA 98466 KAPPA PROVINCE Universiry ofArizona (r Z)-Nancy Colter , *1435 E. 2nd St., Tucson, AZ 85719; Ms. Candy Walters , 2350 E. Water, Tucson , AZ 85719 Universiry of California ar Los Angeles (r .:;}-Susan Kane, *744 Hilgard, Los Angeles, CA 90024; Mrs. Robert C. Pickett, 610 Reposado Dr. , La Habra Hgts ., CA 90631 Universiry ofSourhern California (6 T)- Debbie Hundaker , *929 W. 28th St. , Los Angeles , CA 90007; Mrs. Thomas M. Brewer, 2017 Amherst Dr. , S. Pasadena, CA 91030 Arizona STare UniversiTy (E6)- Karen Dubose, Box 216 , Palo Verde Main, Tempe , AZ 85281 ; Mrs . F. Taylor Scanlon , Ill , 13602 N. 2nd Pl. , Phoenix , AZ 85022 California SraTe Universiry aT NorThridge (E.::) -Darilyn Mathis , K Kr , 18403 Plummer St., Northridge, CA 91324; Mrs. Robert D. Groom , 19148 Nashville St. , Northridge, CA 91324 UniversiTy of California ar R iverside (En}-Mary K. Braun , 3637 Canyon Crest , # K-201, Riverside, CA 92506; Mrs . Duane Hillya rd, 5251 Candlewick Ct. , Riverside, CA 92506 LAMBDA PROVINCE WesT Virginia UniversiTy (BI} -Melanie Smith , *265 Prospect St. , Morgantown , WV 26505; Mrs . Ronald E. Richardson, 666 Bellaire Dr., Morgantown , WV 26505 College of William & Mary (r K)-Mary Sue Hogan , *I Richmond Rd ., Williamsburg, VA 23185 ; Mrs . D. M. Duguid , 284 E. Queens Dr., Williamsburg, VA 23185 Ge01ge Washingron Uni versiTy (fX)-Katherine Alice Lipps, c/o Mrs. John R. Beall , 6704 Hazel Lane, McLean , VA 22101; Deborah Hope Andruss, ·Jill Army Navy Dr., # A903, Arlington , VA 22202 Universiry of Maryland (r '!') - Elizabeth Ann Jones , *7407 Princeton Ave., College Park , MD 20740; Mrs. Howard F. Kirk, 408 Lamberton Dr., Silver Spring, MD 20902 Duke UniversiTy (!'.B) -Susan Ruth Beck, KKr, P.O. Box 5024, Duke Sta., Durham, NC 27706; Mrs. Emily T. Lester, 3534 Hamstead Ct., Durham, NC 27707 UniversiTy of Norrh Carolina (E r ) -Dorothea Lowendick, *302 Pittsboro St. , Chapel Hill , NC 27514; Ms. Nancy H. Cozart, 211 Glenburnie St. , Apt. 3, Chapel Hill, NC 27514 UniversiTy of Virginia (EI) -Shaun Saer, K Kr , 404 8th St., N.E. Charlottesville, VA 22901 ; Mrs . Donald G . Dougald, 20 University Circle, Charlottesville, VA 22903 MUPROVINCE Rollins College (6 E) - Cathi Wiebrecht , K Kr , Box 2486, Rollins College, Winter Park , FL 32789; Mrs . Lloyd Aspinwall, 2100 Howell Branch Rd.,# SA, Maitland , FL 32751 UniversiTy of Miami (6 K) -Janet S. Lund , K K r , Box 248221 , Coral Gables, FL 33124; Mrs. R. Lowell Goldman, 10720 S.W. 69th Ct., Miami , FL 33146 UniversiTy of Georgia (tl I) -H olly Wiedemann , *440 S. Milledge Ave., Athens , GA 30601 ; Mrs. James Odom , 361 College Circle, Athens , GA 30601 Emory Uni versiTy (E E) - Nancy Norton , K K r , Drawer NN , Emory U., Atlanta , GA 30322; Miss Frances R. Cobb, 1417 Druid Valley Dr. ,# A, Atlanta , GA 30329 Florida SraTe UniversiTy (EZ) -Lilli Jane Johnston , *528 W. Jeffe rson St., Tall ahassee, FL j2301 ; Mrs. John G . Sheffield, 1327 High Rd. ,# U-3 , Tallahassee, FL 32304 UniversiTy ofSourh Carolina (EK) - Terry Boykin, KKr , Box U-85127, U.S.C., Columbi a, SC 29208; Mrs . Michael Edwards, # 603 Cliff Apts ., P.O. Box 88603, U.S.C., Columbia, SC 29208 Clemson UniversiTy (EM ) -Jane Ellen Julian , K Kr , Box 3852 , Clemson U., Clemson , SC 29631 ; Mrs. Jerry Little, 1106 Green Acres, Anderson , SC 29621 NiJ PROVINCE UniversiTy ol Kenwcky (BX) -Cheryl Brenner, *238 E. Maxwell , Lexi ngton, KY 40508; Mrs. Job Turne r, III , 1340 E. Cooper Dr., Lexi ngton , KY 40502 Universiry ofA iabama (r nJ - Carol Anne Crook , K Kr , Box 6183 , University, AL 35486; Dr. Miriam Locke, Box 1484, University , AL 35486 UniversiTy of Mississippi (6 P ) -Jean McGee, KKr , Box 4436, University, MS 38677; Mrs. Oscar K. Gary , 404 S. lith St. , Oxford, MS 38655 Auburn UniversiTy (EH)-Elena Newman , KKr, Dorm 2, Auburn , AL 36830; Mrs. Jay B. Jennings, 1592 Millbranch Rd ., Auburn , AL 36830 THE KEY/FALL 1976 Umversity of Tennessee (Ei\l-Jean Anne Segner, KKr , 1531 W. Cumberland Ave., Knoxville, TN 37916; Mrs. C. Kermit Ewing, Topside Rd. , Knoxville, TN 37920 Vonderbtlt Uni1•ewty (EN)-Sarah Smith, KKr, Box 3937, Sta. B, ashville, TN 37235; Mrs. Robert W. Benson, 5901 Robert E. Lee Ct., ashville, TN 37215 XI PROVINCE Untl•erslty of Oklahoma (B8)-Kathy Voss, *700 College, Norman , OK 73069; Mrs. France Higgins , 1230 Windsor Way, Norman, OK 73069 Um1•ersity of Arkansas (r ) -Chris Krueger, *800 W. Maple, Fayetteville, AR 72701 ; Mrs. Joe Coffield, 1009 Elmhurst, Fayetteville, AR 72701 Unt~wsuyofTulso (t.n}-Carol Morris , *3146 E. 5th Pl. , Tulsa, OK 74104; Mrs. W. Thomas Coffman, 5726 S. Indianapolis, Tulsa , OK 74135 Oklahoma State Um1•ers11y (t.I)-Kathy Malchar, *1212 W. 4th, Stillwater, OK 74074; Mrs. Earl VanEaton, 4817 Country Club Rd ., Stillwater, OK 74074 Utuverstty of Arkansas at Lillie Rock (E8) -Sherry Kidd, *2924 S. Taylor, Little Rock , AR 72204; Miss Rosalie Cheatham, 6405 Evergreen Rd ., Little Rock, AR 72207 OMICRO PROVI CE Umverstty ofMmnesoto (X)-Laura Anderson, *329 lOth Ave., S.E. Minneapolis , MN 55414; Mrs. George May, 1509 Fairmount Ave., St. Paul, MN 55105 Umversuy of iowa (BZ)-Jenny James, *728 E. Washington , Iowa City, lA 52240; Miss Kathy Tucker, 220 First Ave., Iowa City, lA 52240 Droke Umversity (r 8)-Leslie Wilkins, *1305 34th St., Des Moines, lA 50311; Mrs. Larry B. Williams , 5611 Waterbury Rd ., Des Moines , lA 50312 North Dakota State Un11•erst(Y of Agnculture & Applted Sciences (r T) -Charlotte Arneson, *1206 13th Ave., N., Fargo, NO 58102; Mrs . Daniel Heintzman , 3625 Par St. , Fargo, NO 58102 Iowa State Universuy (t.O)-Cindy Blackburn , *120 Lynn Ave., Ames, lA 50010; Mrs. Stephen P. VanHouten , 2702 Pierce Ave., Arne , lA 50010 PI PROVI CE Unll'f!TStty of Coi{{Omio (11' )-Anne Simmons Brush , *23 28 Piedmont Ave., Berkeley, CA 94704; Mrs . Stephen Ro , 225 Clifton, Apt. 104, Oakland, CA 94618 Untl•erstty of Oregon (BO)-Suzanne Corning, *821 E. 15th St. , Eugene, OR 97401 ; Mr . Dougla Brown, P.O. Box 10625, Eugene, OR 97401 Oregon State Um1•ers11y (r M) -Sue 01 en, *1335 N.W. VanBuren , Corvallis, OR 97330; Mr . Willi am P. Wold , 3670 .W. Gumwood Dr. , Corvallis, OR 97330 Coliformo State Unmrslly at Fresno (t.O)-Cindy Girardi , *5347 N. Millbrook , Fre no, CA 93710; Mrs. Terrill W. Allen, 156 W. Wrenwood Lane, Fresno, CA 93704 Um1•erstty of Coi{/imuo at Do vts (EO)- Tricia Vivado , KKG, 222 Rice Lane, Davis , CA 95616; Mr . J . E. Hoss , 3424 Country Club Dr., El Macero, CA 95618 ALUMNAE ASSOCIATION (*Clubs) AND CLUB PRESIDENTS CA ADA Bnush Columbto (1)-Mi Chri tina Chaston (r r) 2866 Bellevue Ave. , W. Vancouver, B.C., Can. Momreo/(A)-Mr . Robin de Schullhess (Patricia Owenst.t.) 3796 Melrose Ave., Montrea l, Pq , Can . H4A 2S2 Toromo (A)-Mi Alice Louie Stoneman (B'i') 40 Glen Rd., Apt. 211, Toronto, On., Can . M4W 2VI • 1 tlllllfi<'R (0)-Mi Catherine Pol on (r I) II 18-185 Harrow St., Winnipeg, Mb, Can . R3M 2Y2 E GLA D(A ) •Lo11tlo11-Mr tan ley A. Smith, (Christie Hick H) 29 Yeoma n Row , London, England W3 2AL ITED T TE OF AMERICA L B l •lubum- lr . Robert Patton (Barbara Hepner EE) 1216 Brookwood Cir., pelika, L 36801 Blfmll~~hom-Mr . James Bank ton (Mar ha Griffin r n) 21 Clarendon Rd ., Birmingham. L 35213 •God5dc11-Mrs. Arthur Cook (Su an Burns r n) 210 Hartwood Dr., Gadsden , L 3 901 ·1/wuwtl/e- 1r . . F. Rollin (Berti lie McMahan B8l 3100 Holly Hill Rd., Hunt \llle, L 35 02 \fobtl - lr John Carlin, Jr (Fran cs Curran r nJ 16 Turnout Lane , Mob1le. L 3660 1mmon (Thalia Bell 6 B) 3503 Edgefield Dr., II) Lamar r n) 1-0 orthwood Lake, ( usan Hardegree E H) 1320 idne) TH K Y/F LL 1976 \loeur ( lar} harper Z l 1666 12th. Dougl orth- . Z •FJogsto.ff-Mrs. Duane Miller (Beverly Lockett r Z) Windmill Ranch, Sedona, AZ 86336 · Phoemx-Mrs. Michael Green (Karen Andretta Bn) 6544 N. 36th St. , Phoenix , AZ 85018 Scollsdole-Mrs. Jeffrey Roth (Marcia Harrington r Z) 6150 E. Cambridge, Scottsdale, AZ 85257 Tempe- M eso- Mr . Frederick Rhoades (Shireen Alford Et.) 1121 E. Wesleyan Dr. , Tempe, AZ 85282 1itcso11-Mrs. Allan Burk (Suzanne Morley r 'I') 95 Calle Encanto, Tucson , AZ 85716 . ARKANSAS(.=) •£/ Dorado-Mrs . George Morgan , Jr. (Margaret Sloan r N) 1632 Park Lane, El Dorado, AR 71730 *Foyelle ville-Mrs . James Rutherford, Ill (Billie Hill rN) 913 E. Jackson, Fayetteville, AR 72701 •fort Smith-Mrs. William Hen on (Betty Ayers r N) II 9 Old Greenwood Lane, Fort Smith , AR 72901 •Hot Spri11gs-Mrs. Stuart Pennington (I abel Burton r <I>) Rt. 3, Box 472 , Hot Springs, AR 71901 Lillie Rock-Mrs. Thomas Eane (Susa n Jordan r N) 901 Silverwood Trail , N. Little Rock·, AR 72116 •North Arkansas-Miss Mary Jill Davis (r N) 1203 S. Culberhouse, Jonesboro, AR 72401 •Northeast Arkansas:- Mrs. Joseph Deacon (Sherry Thomasson rN) 626 W. College, Jonesboro, AR 72401 •Pine Bh!ff-Mrs. F. Daniel Harrelson (Mary Plummer rN) 108 Park Pl. , Pine Bluff, AR 71601 •Texarkana-Mrs. Martha E. Ril ey (Martha Erb, r<t>) II I Sweetbrush, Texarkana, TX 75501 CALIFORNIA •A mador Volley (n) -Mrs. Gary Sabo (Karen King r t.) 7792 Oak Creek Ct., Pleasanton, CA 94566 Arcadia (K)-Mrs. Robert Lightcap (Mary Beachler r E) 8321 Youngdale Rd ., San Gabriel , CA 91775 •cannel Area (n}-Mrs. Willi am McClintock (June Dunn BZ) 4139 Sun Ridge Rd., Pebble Beach, CA 93953 •central Orange Coumy (K )-Mrs. Wayne Silzel (Mary Ruddick r r) 18202 Montana Cir., Villa Park , CA 92667 Contra Costa Coumy (n}-Mrs. Ronald Zumbro, (Jennifer Campbell t. 0) 160 Camille Ct. , Alamo, CA 94507 East Boy (n) -Mrs. Donald Parachini (Mary Ann Miller t. X) 1140 Winsor Ave., Piedmont, CA 94610 Fresno (n)- Miss Dina Trapp (Bn) 636 E. Vassar, Fresno, CA 93704 Glendale-Burbank (K)-Mrs. Paul Ru sell (Deborah Wamser r .=) 971 Rosemount Rd ., Glendale, CA 91207 •Jmpeno/ Valley (K) -Mrs. John Ben on (Ca rolyn Fletcher BM) 426 W. G St. , Brawley, CA 92227 •Kem Coumy (K)- Mrs . Alan Jaco b (Judy Webb t. X) Box 33, Granite Sta., Bakersfield , CA 93301 La Canada Volley (K) -Mrs. Ralph Cox (Barbara Bu chman r <I>) 425 Meadow View Dr., La Canada , CA 91011 *Laguna Hills (K)-Mrs. Barnes Powers (Josephine Barn e rz) 197-A Avenida Marjorca , Lag una Hills, CA 92653 La Jolla (K ) -Mrs. Thomas Gibson, Jr. (Pau lette Lollar t. T) 7765 Via Capri , La Joll a, CA 92037 Lo11g Beach (K) -Mrs. Don ald Je nkin (Charl ene Cook Bn) 76 Savona Walk , Long Beach, CA 90803 Los Angeles (K)-Mrs. S. Roger Rombro (Tracy Crai l r) 57 16 Spring Oak Ter. , Los Angeles, CA 90068 Mann Coumy (n) -Mr . Lyman McBride (Alice Leland Y) 197 Biscayne, San Rafael, CA 94901 • orth So11 Otego Cou/1/y (K )-M rs. Frank Grattan (Katherine McMillen , I) 150 1 Anza Ave., # 74, Vi ta , CA 92083 orthem Orange Cou/1/y (K) - Mr . Richard K. Allen (Marilyn St. John A• ) 1480 Kathleen Ln .. Orange, CA 92667 Palo Afro (n) -Mrs. Howard Stewart (Heloise Leer M) 264 Scripp Ct., Palo Alto, CA 94306 Pasode11o (K) - Mr . Paul Congleton (Dorothy Howay r r ) 1460 Wembley Rd .• San Marino, CA 91108 •Pomona Valley (K)-Mrs. Jan Johnson (Deborah Green BN) 342 Emerson St. , Upland, CA 91786 ·R11•erstde (K)-Mr. Jame Stewart (Carolyn Hartzler I) 2155 Ranchwood , River ide. C 92506 Socromemo Volley (n)- Mrs. Robert Biko (Linda Ayer r H) 399 Wilhaggin Dr., Sacramento, CA 95825 • oddlebock-Coptstrono I'alley (K )-Mrs. Gary Lafferty (Judith Pilkenton r A) 26302 alenzuela. Mis ion iejo, CA 92675 San Otego (K)-Mrs. Gerald L. Hein , II (Ruth Wortmann, rB) 3470 Syracuse Ave .• San Diego. C 92122 San Femando l'ollei'IK) -Mr Jame Jeffer on. Jr. (Betty mutz t. T) 23927 rda Rd.. alencia, C 91355 Son FronCISco Bo1· (nl-Mr Che ter olvin (France Fletcher rH) 52 Broadmoor Dr .. San Franci o, 94132 an Jo.se (nJ -Mrs. Jame Given • Jr (Mary Marsh BA) 13466 Debb1e Lane, ara toga, C 95070 33 San Mateo (n}-Mrs. Thomas Newman (Margaret Reever Z) 815 Vista Rd., Hillsborough , CA 94010 Santa Barbara (K) -Mrs. William Tewksbury , 1II (Barbara Engel r Z) 960 Debra Dr., Santa Barbara, CA 93110 Sa ma Cruz Coumy (n} -Mrs. F. Burt Stearns (Gloria McGillis BB) 515 St. Andrews Dr. , Aptos, CA 95003 Santa Monica- Westside (K) - Mrs. William Niemann (Dorothy Beam Bt.) 16920 Dulce Ynez Ln ., Paci fic Palisades , CA 90272 *Sonoma Coumy (n) -Mrs. William J. Streeter (Martha Brown 8) 2013 Hidden Valley Dr. , Santa Rosa, CA 95404 South Bay (K) -Mrs. John Bloore (Betty Hines t.P) 30246 Via Borica, Palos Verdes Peninsula, CA 90274 Southern Orange Coumy (K) -Mrs. Norman Dolby (Sylvia Rhoads B<l>) 933 Emerald Bay, Laguna Beach, CA 92651 •srockron Area (n} -Mrs. Gordon Egan (Melissa Van Noete t. X) 1775 N. San Joquin, Stockton , CA 95204 *Tulare-Kings Coumies (n} -Mrs. Will iam Bryant (Margaret Schell r Z) 3520 McCormick, Visalia, CA 93277 •vemura Coumy (K) - Mrs. Robert Grether (Sally Moffatt ll") Rt. 2, Box 229, Camarillo, CA 93010 Westwood (K) - Mrs. George Callahan (Dorothy Breidenthal 0) 10437 Al mayo Ave., Los Angeles , CA 90064 Whirrier (K) -Mrs. David Areghini (Frances Sullivan r Z) 2526 Angelcrest Dr. , Hacienda Heights, CA 91745 COLORADO (H) Boulder- Mrs. Jeffrey Burke (Di anna Thompson BM) 4900 Sioux Dr. , , Boulder, CO 80303 Colorado Springs-Mrs. Nan Goodbar (Nan Butterworth BM) 2725 Holiday Lane, Colorado Springs, CO 80909 Denver-Mrs. Roy Pritts (Connie Wadhams EB) 8211 Pennsylvania Way , Denver , CO 80229 *Fort Collins-Mrs. Richard Siever (Sue Hostetler r A) 932 Pitkin , Ft. Col lins, CO 80521 *Grand Junction- Mrs. Bri an Mahoney ( (Linda .Carpenter t. M) 2234 Kingston Rd ., Grand Junction , CO 81501 *Greeley-Mrs. James Reeman (Susan Knight BM) Rte. I , Box 194, Eaton, co 80615 Pueblo- Mrs . James McKinney (Jane Furman BM) 2126 Elizabeth, Pueblo, co 81003 CONNECTICUT (A) Fairfie ld Coumy-Mrs . Roger Olson (Jennie Moore <I>) 114 Five Mile River Rd., Darien, CT 06820 Hartfo rd-Mrs. Gerald O'Connell (Carol Graeber t.N) 15 Virginia Dr., Ellington, CT 06029 *New Haven-Mrs. Edward Kluck (Barbara Lowell t. M) 291 Broadway, Hamden , CT 06518 DELAWARE (B) Dela ware-Mrs. Bruce Carlson (Kathleen Schmidt IJ.I) 856 Parkside Blvd., Claymont, DE 19703 DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA (/\) Washington, D.C. -Suburban Maryland- Mrs. Harold Astrich, Jr. (Lynne Cash man r IJ.I) 1223 Fallsmead Way, Rockville , MD 20854 FLORIDA (M) *Brevard County-Mrs. Walter Clapp (Pauline Green t.B) 307 Palm Ct. , Indialanti c, FL 32903 Clearwater Bay-Mrs. Frederick Mustard (Dione Kerlin M) 9504 Oakhurst Rd ., Seminole, FL 33542 Fr. Lauderdale-Mrs. Donald King (Mi na Smith t. A) 4300 N. Ocean Blvd., Apt. IIC, Lauderdale-by-the-Sea, FL 33308 *Gainesville-M rs. Timothy Lowe (Marsha Schupbach t.O) 2254 N.W. 19th Lane, Gainesville, FL 3260 I *Indian River-Mrs. Mari on Newton (Georgia Manchester Bn) 625 Honeys uckle Lane , Vero Beach , FL 32960 Jacksonville-Mrs. Gavin Laurie, Jr. (Carolyn Jones P • ) 2944 Forest Circle, Jacksonvi lle, FL 32217 Miami- Mrs. Donald Thompson (June Randall t.K) 7721 S.W. 53rd Pl. , S. Mi ami, FL 33143 *Palm Beach Coumy-Mrs. Richard Burroughs (Jane Peterson t. Z) 3450 S. Ocean Blvd.,# 503, Palm Beach , FL 33480 *Pensacola-M rs . Frederick L. Curtis (Doris Welles t.B) 151 Cove Rd ., Pensacola, FL 32503 *Sr. Petersburg- Mrs. Thomas Andes (Mary Rollence /\) 5720 Dunfries St. N., St. Petersburg, FL 33709 *Sarasota County-Mrs. Thomas Kruse (Elizabeth Murtagh BZ) 3622 White Sulphur Pl. , Sarasota, FL 33580 *Tallahassee-Mrs. Peter Crowell (Kay Upton EZ) 2102 Scenic Rd ., Tallahassee, FL 32303 *Tampa- Mrs. M. E. Strauss (Marian ne Ellis BO) 3416 Gardenia Dr. , Tampa, FL 33609 Winter Park- Dr. Geneva Drinkwater (8) 203 E. Lyman Ave., Winter Park, FL 32789 GEORGIA (M) *A thens-Mrs. James Trieschmann (Donna Vancura E8) 645 Kings Rd., Athens, GA 30601 34 Atlanta-Mrs . William Walton (Dorothy Newman t. A) 391 Pine Forest Rd. N.E., Atlanta, GA 30342 *Central Sa vannah River Area-Mrs. Donald Nichols (Marsha Pelley t. K) 912 Fairfield Ave., N. Augusta , SC 29841 *Columbus-Mrs . Dan Hobbs (Patricia Mudter t. Y) 1529 Stark Ave., Columbus, GA 31906 *Macon & Middle Georgia-Mrs. James A. Berg, Jr. (Martha Williams t. Y) 256 Calloway Dr., Macon , GA 31204 *Sa vannah-Mrs . Archibald Morris (Elizabeth Carswell t. Y) 220 E. 45th St. , Savannah, GA 31406 HAWAII (K) Hawaii-Mrs. Richard Ferguson (Lesley Luhman Et.) 4063 Round Top Dr., Honolulu, HI 96822 IDAHO (I) Boise-Mrs. David McDonald (Harriett Hill BY) 5618 Hill Rd., Boise, ID 83703 *Idaho Falls-Mrs. Fred Thompson (Sylvia Charest BK) Rt. 4-Box 184, Idaho Falls, ID 83401 *Lewiston-Clarkston-Mrs. Frank Miller (Patricia Jones r H) 3722 16th St., Lewiston, ID 83501 *Moscow- Mrs. Monte Nail (Janet Tilly BK) 801 East B St. , Moscow, ID 83843 *Twin Falls- Mrs. John Newell (Merrie Kloepfer BK) Box 848, Twin Falls, ID 83301 ILLINOIS (E) Bloomington-Mrs . William Bach , Jr. (Alice Strayer E) 606 S. Moore, Bloomington , IL 61701 Champaign-Urbana- Mrs. Walter Keith (Marjorie Moree r A) 405 W. Vermont, Urbana, IL 61801 Chicago Area: Arlington Heights Area-Mrs. James Gelhaar (Catherine Bernotas E) 9 S. William, Mt. Prospect , IL 60056 *Aurora-Mrs. Jeffries Eilert (Mary Brackenridge B=:) 733 N. Fordham , Aurora, IL 60506 *Barringron Area-Mrs. Pat Jarratt, Jr. (Nancy Adams B8) 1946 Durham Dr., Palatine, IL 60067 *Beverly-South Shore-Mrs. David Buikema (Barbara Wing E) 991 I S. Oakley, Chicago, IL 60643 *Chicago-Miss Linda Wallin (t.O) 600 N. McClurg Ct. , Chicago, IL 60611 Chicago South Suburban- Mrs. Larry Hayes (Katrina Ohaver r t.) 741 Brookwood Terr. ,# 5, Olympia Fields, IL 60461 Deerfield-Glenbrook-Mrs . Gordon Grimstad (Dorothy Whittet H) 530 Douglas Dr. , Lake Forest, IL 60045 *Elmhurst-Mrs. Douglas Kuester (June Christiansen A• ) 102 Berteau, Elmhurst , IL 60126 *Glen Ellyn-Mrs . Frank Reed (Patricia Guthrie t.Z) 221 Woodstock , Glen Ellyn, IL 60137 Hinsdale- Mrs . Charles C. Purser (Susannah Scarborough t. I) 721 6Ist St. , Downers Grove, IL 60515 *LaGrange- Mrs . William Hynes (Mariwyn Brennan r t.) 945 S. Spring Ave., LaGrange, IL 60525 *Naperville- Mrs. Howard Larson (Marlene Neer BM) 616 Burning Tree Lane, Naperville, IL 60540 North Shore-Mrs. Earl Carrier, Jr. (Kathryn Larson H ) 2444 Pioneer Rd. , Evanston, IL 60201 Oak Park-R iver Forest- Mrs . James Arado (Judy Stegger Bi\) 920 Bonnie Brae, River Forest , IL 60305 Park Ridge-Des Plaines Area- Mrs. Glenn Evans (Nancy Jones E) 1031 S. Home, Park Ridge, IL 60068 *Wheaton-Mrs. Michael Northrop (Susan Mintener Er) 26 W 010 Embelden Lane , Wheaton , IL 60187 *Decatur- Mrs . Richard Lutovsky (Janna McCoy r T) 8 Lake Grove Club , Decatur , IL 62521 *Galesburg-Mrs. Kelly Kane (Patricia Carpenter E) 362 N. Broad St. , Galesburg , IL 61401 *Madison & Sr. Clair Counties-See Missouri Monmouth- Mrs . Robert Matson (Melba Larson A•) 1020 E. Detroit Ave., Monmouth , IL 61462 *Peoria- Mrs. Dean Secord (Marilyn Hintermeister BP • ) 930 Oak Glen Dr., Peoria, IL 61614 *Rockford-Mrs. Stuart Schweisberger (Marilyn Bygrave t. r ) 1824 Bradley Rd ., Rockford, IL 61107 Springfield-Mrs. M. A. Knight (Martha Little Bi\) 2307 Lynn Haven , Springfield, IL 62704 INDIANA (t.) *A nderson-Mrs. Franklin Beeler (Jayne Burgoyne r t.) 20 Overlook Dr. , Anderson, IN 46011 Bloomington-Mrs. James Kennedy (Jerilyn Jones t.) 1916 Sussex Dr. , Bloomington, IN 47401 THE KEY/FALL 1976 •Bluffton-Mrs. Charle Caylor (Phyllis Stra burg, I) R.R.# 4, Country Club Est. , Bluffton, IN 46714 •Boone Coumy-Mrs. Sigmon Myer (J ane Me enger 6) P.O. Box 89, Lebanon , I 46052 •columbus-Mrs. James Paris (Sue Roth BP • ) 1322 Crescent Dr., Columbus , IN 47201 East Lake-Porter Coumy-Mrs. William Davis (Linda Bruington M ) 1620 Dale Dr., Merrillville, IN 46410 •Elkhart-Mrs . Gordon Eslick (Jane MacLennan 6) 3308 E. Lake Dr., So., Elkhart , IN 46514 E••ansvtlle-Mrs. Clarence Clutter (Barbara BadgerM) R.R. 8, Box 222 , Volkman Rd ., Evansville, IN 47711 Fort Wayne-Mrs. Robert Stoppenhagen (Vicki Witmer 6) 1608 Old Lantern Trail, Ft. Wayne, IN 46825 •Greencastle-Mrs. Robert Poor (Barbara Fuson , I) 108 Northwood Blvd., Greencastle, IN 46135 •Hammond-Mr . William Wilke Ill (Margaret White 'V) 2305 Martha St., Highland , IN 46322 lndwnapohs-Mrs . Hugh T. Schulhof (Saundra Williams BN) I 1312 Lakeshore Dr., E., Carmel, IN 46032 •Kokomo-Mrs . Delmar Demaree (Kathryn Fell , I) 551 I Four Mile Dr., Kokomo, IN 46901 Lafayeue-Mrs . Craig Mallett (Jane Jarrell r 6) 1600 Western Dr. , W. Lafayette, IN 4 7906 •LaPorte-Mr . William Moore (Barbara Cavins 6) 1532 Michigan , LaPorte, IN 46350 •Monon-Mrs. David Rosenberg (Jane King 6) 501 W. Nelson St., Marion , IN 46952 •Mart/1/SIIIIIe-Mrs. Frank Donovan (Patricia Donovan B<I>) R.R. 2, Box 177R, Brownsburg, IN 46112 Muncie-Mrs . Darral Parsons (Caroline Ballard I) 2628 S. Parkway , Muncie, IN 47304 •R1chmond-Mrs . George Tripp (June Coulter 6) State Line Rd ., Richmond, IN 47374 •Rushville-Mrs . Jean Hull (Martha Matlock r K) 1206 Waggoner Ave., Ru hville, I 46173 South Bend-M1shawaka-Mrs . James H. Naus, III (Susan Engel 6/\), 4638 Fellows St. , South Bend, IN 46614 •rerre Howe-Mrs . B. Curtis Wilkin on (Leslie Krieble 6) 203 Briarwood Dr., Terre Haute, IN 47803 IOWA (0) •Ames-Mrs. Leon Larson (Kathleen Shepard r T) 1624 Johnson , Arne , lA 50010 •Burl111g1on-Mr . Waller Funck (Jean Thuenen f I) 2509 S. Third St. , Burlington , lA 52601 Des Mo111es-Mrs. Michael Laughlin (Mary Canady r 8) 7509 Madison , Des Moine , lA 50322 •fort Dodge Area- Mrs. Hi rum Walker, III (Beverly Peterson BZ) 1506 3rd Ave. ., Fort Dodge, lA 50501 Iowa Cuy-Mrs. 0 . C. Beasley (Betty Sims 0) 30 Ashwood Dr. , Iowa City, lA 52240 • orthll'esllowa-Mr . Ted Fritcher (Dori Horslund BZ) 1312 W. 6th St. , Storm Lake. lA 50588 Quad-CI11e -Mrs. Robert Vlack (Linda Ehlers BZ) 3808 Ridgewood Dr. , Davenport, lA 52803 • AwrA Rnw Valle••- Mrs. John Morri sey (Jean Baker 8) Box 100, Montezuma , lA 50171 KA A (Z) Hill h111son-Mr . George Oldh am (Lois Schmitt fA) 108 W. 29th , Hutchinon , K 67501 •Kansas u•·-Mr . Robert Ander on (Margaret Meeks 0) 1877 Praun La., Kansas City , KS 66102 Lall'renre-Mr . Robert McColl (Su zanne Ecke 6Z ) 3514 We t9th Ct. , Lawrence . K 66044 Manhauan-Mr . Robert Haine (Mary Gradinger O ) 226 Fordham , Manhattan, KS 66502 TopeAa-Mrs. John Gaunt (Ch arlotte Emery r ) 3111 Bri arwood Cir. , Topeka , K 66611 ll'lclma-Mr . harle chreiber (Su an McCo nnell 6 0) 241 Rutland , Wichita , K 67206 KE T K (N) Le.\ 1/IJifOn-Mi Dana Lynn Paul on (B ' ) 240 yca more Rd ., # 3, Lexington , K 40 02 Low wilt'- Mrs. Jul iu Rai th . J r. (Charlotte Thue nc n E) 3921 Burning Bush Rd .. LOUI \ill C. KY 40222 I I (8) "-l lnamlna- 1rs !bin Jo hn o n ( Rcbcc a Woodi n , ..l l ) 1406 Horseshoe Dr. , le \andna, L 7 130 1 BalOn Roug• - 1rs l1chael lagm ni (Mar} M' hoon 61) 730 Park Blvd ., Baton Route. L 70 06 "L a/Uit'll< Ana-M rs John D 1 oor~ ( ara Ro o.n) 05 Woodvale, Lafa}'elle, L 70 0 1 "LoA harl<' - I Ja k Thielen (Della Krau e 'V) 320 Dre"' Park Dr., Lake h rl . L 0601 THE KE /F LL 1976 •Monroe-Ms. Annetta Carter (Annetta Duffy fN) 1401 McKeen, # 102, Monroe, LA 71201 New Orleans-Mrs. Charles Schmidt , III (Catherine Claiborne BO) 405 Brockenbraugh Ct. , Metairie, LA 70005 • ew Orleans Wes1-Mrs. Louis Heavner, Jr. (Mary Towers 6n) 3931 Pot Oak Ave., New Orleans , LA 70114 Shreveport-Mrs . Tom James (Susan Metcalf 6 P) 112 Malibu Dr., Shreveport, LA 71105 MARY LA D (/\) Bal1imore-Mrs. Lloyd Colteryahn (Peggy Bradley r 'V) 1535 Wadsworth Way , Baltimore, MD 21239 Washing/on. D. C.-Suburban Maryland-See District of Columbia MASSACHUSETTS (A) •nay Colony-Mrs. David Pierre (Linda Me~lierini <I>) Paine Ave., Prides Crossing, MA 01965 Bos1on lntercollegiale-Mrs. Richard Hersey (E. Denley Rothman BB• ) 37 Grist Mill Rd ., Littleton , MA 01460 •sachem-Miss Juliana Buckley (6 N) 418 Moraine St., Brockton, MA 02401 MICHIGAN (6) •Adrian-Mrs. Hugh Heffron (Carolyn Ott.=:) 927 College Ave. , Adrian . MI 49221 Ann Arbor-Mrs. Robert McDonald (Pat Peckinpaugh I) 3906 Penberton , Ann Arbor, MI 48105 •oa11le Creek-Mrs. DeanS. Dooley (Rebecca Rhue I) 617 N. Kalamazoo Ave ., Marshall , MI 49068 •Dearborn Area-Mrs. John Burkhard (Trudy Mascia BX) 921 Beechmont , Dearborn, MI 48124 De1roit-Mrs. H. Gordon Tanner (Frances Lasater M) 817 Lincoln Rd ., Grosse Pointe, M1 48230 De1roi1 North Woodward-Mrs . Lyman Lyon (Gretchen Davis P•) 1200 Orchard Ridge Rd ., Bloomfield Hills , Ml 48013 •Detroil Nortlnvesl Suburban-Mrs . James Donlon III (Sandra Moser 60) 29969 Mayfair, Farmington , Ml 48024 •F11111-Mrs. Max Graff, Jr. (Bonnie Norton.6 r) 5317 Moceri Ln., Flint , M1 48507 Grand Rapids-Mrs . James Sebastian (Susan McBride B6) 2211 Eldorado , S.E., Grand Rapids, MI 49506 •Hillsdale-Mrs. Hugo Friedrichs (Doris Mauck K) 150 Budlong St., Hillsdale, Ml 49242 •Jackson-Mrs. James Mehall (Rebecca Horan 6f) 1100 S. Webster , Jackson, MI 49203 •Kalamazoo-Mrs. RichardS . Godfrey (Mary Ellen Hood r 6) 5176 Colony Woods, Kalamazoo, MI 49009 Lansing-Easl Lansing-Mrs. Jack Born (Marilyn Smith 6E) 810 Stuart, East . Lansing, MI 48823 •M1dland-Mrs. William L. Gold (Bonnie Small r 6) 1800 Dilloway Dr., Midland, MI 48640 •sag111aw Valley-Mrs. John Poole (Marysue Blackney 6 r) 6360 Fox Glenne Dr., Saginaw, MI 48603 •s1. Joseph-Beman Harbor-Mrs . Robert Korff (Esther Duncan K) 1520 Miami Rd ., Benton Harbor, MI 49022 MIN ESOTA (0) •Dulwh-Mrs . James Gessner (Nancy Frailing H) 411 Pinewood Lane , Duluth, MN 55804 •Roches/er-Mrs. F. Charles Olsen (Deborah Wood 6E) 1130 7th St. , S.W., Rocheste r, MN 55901 Twin Ci1ies-Mrs. Wesley A. Dickinson (Rhoda Campbell , X) , 6821 Aut o Club Rd ., Bloomington , MN 55431 MISSISSIPPI (N) •Jackson-Mrs. Edward Brunini , Jr. (Barbara Ledbetter 6 P) 4220 Ath ens Dr. , Jackson , MS 39211 ·M ISSISSippi Gulf Coasi-Mrs. Alberta F. Quinn (Alberta Folger r 0) 3228 ottingham Rd., Ocean Springs, MS 39564 • orth M1sS1SS1pp1-Mr . Lowell Gri ham, Jr. (Kathryn McKell ar 6 P ) 229 Avent , Oxford , MS 38655 MISSO RI (Z) •cemral M1ssoun-Mr . W. B. Lewi (Cath erine Menefee 8) 612 S. Grand , Sedalia, MO 65301 •etay-Piaue Coumy-Mrs. Lowell McRobert ( Frances Rossiter 6 r ) 6116 . Bales, Kansas City MO 64119 Columbw-Mrs. Joseph Gibbs (Virgin ia Ho user 8 ) Ro ute I, Rocheport , MO 65279 •Je.ffer on Ci(v- Mrs. Thomas Singleton (Sh irl ey Carpe nter 8) 709 Ca rdinal, Jeffe rson Ci ty, MO 65 101 •Japlm-Mrs. Mark Eastman (Ellen Bl anchard 8) 1032 W. Murphy Bl vd., Joplin, MO 6480 1 Kansas Cuy-M r . Cli nt on Kanaga. Jr. ( ina Green 0) 1208 W. 65th St., Kan as City, MO 66 11 3 "Mad1son& S1. Cla~rCoumles -M r . Thompson G . Murray (Suzan ne Brudi , I) 1806 Arrowhead Ln., G odfrey, IL 62035 "SI. Joseph-M r . John Ford ( Kri ti n Coc 2) 4406 . 30t h Terr.. St. Jo eph. MO 64506 S1. Lows- Mrs . Roger Heitla nd (Jaclyn Layton r I) 45 Daryl La ne, St. Louis, MO 63124 35 *Springfield-Mrs. Ca rl Yates (Joy Evertz r I) 1954 Meadowview Dr., Springfield, MO 65804 MONTANA (I) Billings-Mrs. Th o mas Eb~ery (Julie Henderson r 0) 3024 Rugby Dr. , Bill ings , MT 59102 Brllre-Miss Colette Doherty (Treas.) (B<l>) 1019 W. Po rphyry , Butte, MT 5970 1 *Grear Falls-Mrs. Timothy Devine (Marlaine Smith B<l>) 2825 Jrd Ave. No ., Great Falls , MT 5940 1 , Helena- Mrs. John Burgess, Jr. (Donna Kelly H) 713 Harrison Ave ., He lena, MT 59601 Missoula-Mrs. Henry Worden (Tomme Liddleton B<l>) 208 Pattee Canyon Dr. , Missoula, MT 5980 1 NEBRASKA (Z) Lincoln-Mrs. Eugene Wright (Ba rbara Glover I) 3535 S. 37th , Lincoln , NE 68506 Omaha-Mrs . Elli ot Gilmore, Jr. (Shirley Evans I) 211 South 90th St., Omaha , NE 68 114 NEVADA *Sour hem Nevada (K)- Mrs . John Green (Julie McKnight r Z) 3552 S. Bronco Rd ., Las Vegas , NV ?9 103 NEW JERSEY (B) Essex-Mi ss Catheri ne Cahalan (BT) 223 White Oak Ridge Rd ., Short Hills, NJ 07078 Lackawanna-Mrs. George McDowell (Ann Halberstadt 6 A) 34 West End Ave. , Summit, NJ 07901 *Lower Bucks Cou111y- Trenron-see Pennsylvania *Norrh Jersey Shore- Mrs . Lewis A. Barnard (Jo Ellen Clark r N) ~7 Stockton Dr. , Marlboro, NJ 07746 Norrhern New Jersey- Mrs. Th omas Yerkes (Lynne Marcus r K) 100 Chamberlain Pl. , Midland Park , NJ 07432 Princeron Area-Mrs. Edward Rei lly (Carol Feld BI) 706-B Kingston Terr. , Princeton, NJ 08540 Sourhern New Jersey-Mrs. John Bozman (Carol Jones P • ) 521 Cambridge Dr. , Mt. Laurel , NJ 08057 NEW MEXICO (H ) Albuquerque-Mrs. G ary Moore (Lau ra Sharp r Z) 7522 El Morro Rd ., N.E., · Albuquerque , NM 87109 *Hobbs- Mrs . David Harris (Sharon Darr 6 'I') 934 E. G old , Hobbs , NM 88240 *Las Cruces-Mrs. Morgan Roberts (Martha Serrell60) Rt. 2, Box 76 1, Las C ruces , NM 88001 *Roswell-Mi ss Jane Ann Oldrup (r B) 1201 W. McGaffey , Roswell , NM 88201 *Soma Fe- Mrs . David Matthews (Janice Nusbaum r B)# 2 Pinonero , Santa Fe, NM 87501 NEW YORK (A) Br!lfalo- Mrs . Clinton Holmes (Dorothy Strasburger Y) 7765 Jewett Holmwood Rd ., Orchard Park, NY 14127 *Capiro/ Disrricr-Mrs. James C. Harding (Marjorie Nees , rT) , 163 Westchester Dr. So., Delmar, NY 12054 *Chaurauqua Lake- Mrs . Stephen Skidmore (Mary Megerl e r K) 411 Crossman St., Jamestown, NY 14701 *Hunringron- Mrs. Robert Manniello (Ann Schilling 6 A) P.O. Box 291, Cold Spring Harbor, NY 11724 *Jefferson Cou111y-Mrs. Neil Metevia , Jr. (Barbara Schaefer BB• ) 1145 Harrison St. , Watertown , NY 1360 1 New York-Mrs. Harper L. Garrett, Jr. (A nn Hopkins r 6) 31 Gramercy Pk . So., New York , NY 10003 Rochesrer-Mrs. G. William Pullis (Beverly Knapp BB•) 12 Buttonwood Ci rcle, Fairport , NY 14450 Sr. Lawrence-Mrs. John Clark (Donn a Reid BB• ) Rive rside Apts ., Canton , NY 13617 Schenecrady-Mrs. Maurice Gardner (Nancy Austin r M) 17 Berkley Rd ., Scotia, NY 12302 Syracuse-Mrs. Henry Stoutenburg (Isabelle McCarthy BT) 29 Ely Dr. , Fayetteville, NY 13066 Wesrchesrer Coumy- Mrs . Manuel Sanguil y (Mary Smith BN) Country Club Lane, Scarborough, NY 10510 NO RTH CA ROLINA (/\) *Charlorre- Mrs . James Abrams, Jr. (Jane Sharpe B8) 2144 Princeton Ave., Charlotte, NC 28207 *Piedmom-Carolina-Mrs . H. Max Schi e bel (Nancy Alyea 6 B) 1020 Anderson St. , Durham , NC 27705 Raleigh-Miss Caroline Nodell (Er) 833-A Daniels St. , Raleigh , NC 27607 NORTH DAKOTA (0) Fargo-Moorhead-Mrs. V. Wi lli am Sturdevant (Barbara Torok r T) 2109 S. 7th St. , Moorhead, MN 56560 *Grand Forks-Mrs . Harry Butl er, Jr. (Bett y Ann Leer T) 6525 Lake Dr. , Grand Fo rks, ND 58201 OHIO (r) Akron-Mrs. James Nolte (Connie O'Dell/\) 138 The Brook lands, Akron , OH 44305 36 *Canron-Massillon- Mrs . James Parkison (Veronica Sima BN) 2918 Arboretum Cir., N.W. , Canton, OH 44718 *Chagrin Valley of Ohio- Mrs. James Wallace (Aline Kraemer 6 T) 205 Aspenwood Dr. , Moreland Hills , OH 44022 Cincinnari-Mrs . Clyde Eby (Janice Fe rgu son BP • ) 3332 Lambert Pl ace, Cincinnati, OH 45208 Cleveland- Mrs . Ron ald Smith (Carol Christensen BN) 4756 Edenwood Rd ., South Euclid , OH 44121 *Cleveland Sowh Suburban- Mrs. James Enochs (Nancy Willi amson P • ) 7714 Wake Robin Dr. , Pa rma, OH 44130 Cleveland Wesr Shore- Mrs. Charles Frutig (Shari Smith BN) 19856 Roslyn Rd ., Rocky River, OH 44116 Columbus- Mrs. William Milligan (Sue Crimm 6) 150 W. Beechwold, Columbu s , OH 43214 Day ron-Mrs. Richard Sutton (Janet Robinson P • ) 729 Lindsey Ave ., Day ton , OH 45342 *Elyria- Mrs. Arthur D. Hudnutt (Sally Atkinson P • ) 570 Washington Ave ., Elyria, OH 44035 *Erie Cou111y Ohio- Mrs. Robert Stockdale (Susan Foreman 6 /\) 4011 Cleveland Rd ., Sandusky , OH 44870 *Findlay- Mrs . Ro bert Sprague (Constance Cole 6 /\) 129 Third St. , Findlay, OH 45840 *Lima-Mrs. Jo hn Pe trie (Margot Brown M) 3698 Miramonte Dr. , Lima, OH 45806 *Middlerown- Mrs. Patricia Walden (Patricia Miller BN) 7762 Cedar Glen Way, Middl etown , OH 45042 *Newark-Gran ville- Mrs. Horace King (Virginia Hubach r 0) 209 W. Broadway , Granville, OH 43023 *Springfield- Mrs. David Hobson (Carolyn Alexander P • ) 1652 N. Fountain Blvd., Springfield, OH 45504 Toledo- Mrs. Phillip Gravengaard, Jr. (Barbara Swartz baugh BN) 2909 Kenwood Blvd., Toledo, OH 43606 • Youngsrown- Mrs . Richard Agger (Barbara Gale P • ) 8018 Spartan Dr. , Boardman, OH 44512 OKLAHOMA (=:) *A rdmore- Mrs . Rudy White (Camilla Thompson B8) 922 3rd, SW, Ardmore, OK 73401 *Barrlesville Area- Mrs . D. J. Houtman (Su san Mitchell 6n) 5804 SE Harvard, Bartlesville, OK 74003 *Duncan Area-Mrs . Barton Ratliff (Leah Britton 6 n) 2014 Country Club Rd ., Duncan , OK 73533 *Enid- Mrs . Dan Harris (Colleen Allison 6I) 1406 W. Vinita, Enid , OK 73701 *Mid-Oklahoma-Mrs. Willi am Harris (Sally Goins B8) 41 Serenada, Rt. 3, Sh awnee, OK 74801 *Muskogee- Mrs. C. Warren Wagner (Christine Clark B8) Box 512, Muskogee, OK 74401 *Norman-Mrs . Robert Lambert (Karen Smith B8) 1513 Magnolia, Norman, OK 73069 Oklahoma Ciry- Mrs. Grover Miskovsky (Patricia Fisher B8) 2208 N. W. 59th, Okl ahoma City, OK 73112 *Ponca Ciry- Mrs . Michael Wynn , Jr. (Cecil e Appleby B8) 2212 El Camino, Ponca City, OK 74601 *Srillwarer- Mrs. Robert Bauter (Alice Cudd 6 I) 1102 W. Eskridge, Stillwater , OK 74074 Tulsa - Mrs . Michael Bartlett (Sharon Rai nes 6 I) 5775 S. 80th E. Ave., Tulsa, OK 74145 OREGON (n) Corvallis-Albany-Mrs. Wendell Tompkins (Joan Reycraft 6 B) 1135 Lakewood Dr., Albany, OR 97321 Eugene- Mrs. Laraway Giustina (Carolyn Keen r M) 4158 Normandy Way, Eugene, OR 97405 Porrland- Mrs. Lynn Husband ( Diana Brunner r M) 3939 SW Altadena Ave., Portland , OR 97201 Salem- Mrs. Bobbie Brooks (Bobbie Mikkelson r M) 4583 Kingston Ct. N.E. , Salem , OR 97303 PENNSYLVANIA (B) Beta l ora-Mrs. Edward Burdick (Marian Pratt Bl) 205 Walnut Pl. , Havertown , PA 19083 *Erie- Mrs. John L. Gregory (Nancy Schilling BB•) 640 Delawa re Ave., Erie, PA 16505 *Harrisburg-Mrs. Willi am Fo ulk , Jr. (Susan Powelson BN) 4313 Valley View Rd ., Harrisburg, PA 17112 *Johnsrown- Mrs. Curtis Beerman (Myra Rankin r P) 1108 Club Dr., Johnstown, PA 15905 *Lancasrer- Mrs . Ferdin and Nerret (Katheri ne Griffiths 'I') 48 Nort h view Dr., Lancaste r, PA 17601 *Lehigh Valley-Mrs. Peter Ru ssell (Sall y Roth 6 P) 845 S. Elizabeth St. , All entown, PA 18103 *Lower Bucks Coumy -Tremon-Mrs. Virgil Mahaffey (Kay Pfiester BP •) 138 Dunkin Dr. , Washington's Crossing, PA 18977 Philadelphia-Mrs. Charles Turney (Pat ri cia Handley/\) 505 Old Gulph Rd. , Bryn Mawr, PA 19010 Pirrsbur~:h-Mrs . Kenn eth Scholtz (Ma rjori e Ganter 6 A) 113 S. Pasadena Dr. , Pi ttsburgh , PA 15215 THE KEY/FALL 197 6 Pmsburgh-Sowh Htlls-Mrs. Norman Himes ( Pani Mill er 6<1>) 2174 Cl airmont Dr. , Pinsburgh, PA 15241 Srore College-Mrs. John Mason (Marga re t Ro s <I>) 517 W. Park Ave., St ate Coll ege, PA 16801 RHODE ISLA D (A) •Rhode Island-Mrs. Kenne th H. Klei n (Nancy Brode ri ck t.A) 12 Old Chimney Rd ., Barrington , Rl 02806 SO TH CAROL! A (M ) 'Clemson-Miss Catherine Cox (E M ) E-4 Country Pl. Apts., Easley, SC 29640 'Columbta-Mrs. Charl es Taylor (Wanda Bethune EK) 2501 Pleasant Ridge Rd. , Columbia, SC 29209 ' Greenl'llle Area-Miss Peggy Marie Batson (EM) Apt. A3 , 307 Vill a Apts., Greenville , SC 29607 TEN ESSEE (N) , ' Cira11anooga Area-Mrs. Slayden Hunt , Jr. (Jane McFadden r n) 399 Laurel Lane, Lookout Mt., TN 37350 ' Knox111lle-Mrs. Thomas Ballentin e (Sh aro n Bohne r Ell) 671 5 Gl en Brook Dr. , Kn oxvi ll e, TN 37919 Memphts-Mrs. Je rry Sibl ey (Olivia Lin lefi eld 6 P ) 1425 Goodbar, Memphis , TN 38104 Nashville-Mrs. Willi am Salt Ill (Su san She rron BN) 3704 West End Ave ., Nash vill e, TN 37205 TEXAS(8) ' Abtlene-Mrs. Jimmy Parker (Helen Beck 6 'I') 2406 Buffalo Gap Rd. , Apt. II 211 , Abilene, TX 79605 ' Aiice-Kti tgs t•ille-Mrs. Ray Butler (Martha Lawson 6'1') 1821 Clare, Alice, TX 78332 ' Amanllo-Mrs. William Griffin (Nita Johnson B8) 3208 Hawthorne, Amarillo, TX 79109 'Arlmgron, Texas-Mtd-Ctrtes Area- Mr . James Medford (Barbara Smith 6 'I') 815 Waggone r, Arlingto n , TX 76013 Aus/111-Mrs. Sam Wilson (Soni a Wolf B=:> 5305 Western Hills Dr. , Austin , TX 78731 ' Beaumom-Porr Arrlrur- Mrs. Cl aude Thorp (Leslie Gose B=:> 2450 Gladys, Beaumo nt , TX 77702 ' Btg Bend- Mrs. James Kerr (Douglass Adams r Z) Box 1546, Fort Stockton, TX 79735 ' Brownwood-Cemral Texas-Mrs. Ned Sn yde r (Be verl y Gramann B2) 4113 Gle nwood , Brownwood, TX 76801 ' Bryan-College Srauon Area-Mrs . Larry J. Ringer (Jean Bradley 6 0 ) 702 Thomas, Coll ege Station, TX 77840 Corpus Clrnsu-Mrs. James Borden (Carol Paine EA) 3617 Wate rloo , Corpus Chri ti, TX 78413 Dallas-Mr . Eugene Jericho (Mary Mitchell r <I>) 3805 Potomac, Dallas, TX 75205 ' Demson-Sirerman-Mrs. Vick Gotcher (Lydia Stocks EA) 617 N. McKown , Sh erman, TX 75090 £ 1Paso-Mrs. Grove r Stewart , Jr. (Carolyn Mitchellt. O) 5708 Pebbl e Beach , El Paso, TX 79912 Forr Worrlr-Mr . Robert McKenzie (Mary Oles B2) 6828 Kirk Dr., Fort Worth , TX 76116 'Galt't'sron-Mrs. Robert Murray (Patricia McMeans BO) 18 Adler Circle, Galve ton , TX 77550 HotiS/On-Mrs. Charles McCann (Anne McCullough B=:> 7807 Ella Lee Lane, Ho uston , TX 77042 •Longl'le w-Mr . William Stiles (Bet y Kay EA) Ill S LeDuke Bl vd., Longview, TX 75601 ' Lo"'l'r R10 Grande Valley- Mrs. Robert Barnes (Kathryn Ne lson Bi\ ) Box 430, Hidalgo, TX 78557 LubbocA -Mr . G iles Forbe (Lynn Bento n 6 'I') 4009 69th St., Lubbock, T X 79413 ' Lt(/km-Mr . Carroll Allen (Ann Te mple B=:> 1005 Sherwood, Lufkin , T X 7590 1 Mtdlanti- Mr . Jame D. Hill ( Katheri ne Bl anchen e r <I>) 2804 Front ier, Midland, T 7970 1 'Ode~- Mr . Gerald Carpente r (Sh iela Young r <I>) 1703 Laurel, Odessa , T 7976 1 RtcltardlOII- Mr . Willia m Hen ley (Mary Bu chbaum r <I>) 2120 Flat Creek , Rtchardson , T 75080 • an A11gt'lo- Mr . Blanks oelke ( Helen Hartgrove B=:> 1620 Paseo de Vaca, an ngelo, T 7690 1 a11 11/omo- 1r . Ray Weed (Elea nor Oli er B=:> 242 o rthridge, San ntonio, T 78209 ' Tempii'- Mrs . Jerry ecre 1 (France Kimbriel EA) 3501 Elk Trail , Templ e, T 76501 ' Te.\arAa11a- e Arkan a 'The Pla11n'tl'" Arro oj Tt>m s- 1rs. Re Jordan (Eleanor Perry B=:> 1005 W. lith t . Plamv1e" , T 79072 ' Tik• l tc /orta 4rt'O-Mrs. Robert May (Lou dele Dorrell B:=: ) 301 E. Hunlmgton . Beev1lle. T 7 102 ' Tril'r- 1rs William Finn (Dorothy Bell B=:> 2222 . Chilton . Tyler , T 7 701 'll a, o- 1r.. R E. Henderson. Jr (Diane arner EA ) 7224 We tover, Wa o, T 76710 TH KEY /F LL 1976 Wtchtla Falls- Mrs . Stanley Rugeley (Marth a Eye r B8 ) 2410 Clayton , Wi chit a Fall s, TX 76308 TAH (H ) 'Ogden-Mrs. All an Lipman , Jr. ( El ea nor Winston 6 H ) 2830 Fillmore Ave., Ogden , UT 84403 Salr Lake Cay-Mrs. Ro be rt Howell ( Karen Lewis C. H ) 5814 Holladay Blvd., Salt Lake City, UT 84121 VIRGI lA (/\) 'Cirarlollest•ille Area- Mrs. Donald Douga ld ( Karen Mylting 6 A) 20 University Cir. , Charlones vill e, VA 22903 ' Hampron Roads-Mrs. John Pugh (Judith Wehking 8) 132 Stage Rd ., Newport News, VA 23606 'No(/'olk Area-Mrs. John Manh ews (Lenora Dempsey r n) 7622 Argyle Ave., Norfolk , VA 23505 Norrlrem Virginia- Mrs. Robert Dudl ey (Nancy Broyhill r K) 9505 Broome Ct. , Vienna, VA 22180 Rtchmond-Mrs. Thomas Matkov, Jr. (Emil y Rope r C. B) 4101 W. Franklin St., Richmond , VA 23221 Roanoke-Mrs. Lee Raney , Ill (Paulin e White 8) 2611 Montgomery Ave., S.W. , Roanoke , VA 2401 5 WASH! GTON (I ) '£"ere11-Mrs. Steph en Bates (Prisci lla George Bn) 727 35th , Eve rell , WA 98201 Lake Waslungron-Mrs. Ir vin g Morgan (J oa n Willman BK) 2010 79th N.E., Bellevue , WA 98004 Pullman-Mrs. John Gorham (Mary Martin r H ) N.E. 1200 Cove Way, Pullman, WA 99163 Sea/lie- Mrs. Franklin Strohecker (Laura Fields BK) 7704 88th Pl. , S.E., Mercer Island , WA 98040 Spokane-Mrs . James Brown (Myrn a Hopper r H) N. 8209 Country Homes Blvd., Spokane, WA 99208 Tacoma-Mrs. Charles Zwie rs (Susa n Mullin Bn) 4308 Arbordale West, Taco ma, WA 98466 Tn -Cuy-Mrs. Dean Mitchell (Helen Skinner r H ) 2017 W. 9th Pl. , Kennewick , WA 99336 •va/ICOIII'er- Mrs. Michael Porter (Bl air Proctor r 6 ) 20212 N.W. 34th Ave., Ridgefield , WA 98642 Walla Walla-Mrs . John Tunl e (Eli zabeth Johnson r r) 1316 Howard , Wall a Walla, WA 99362 Yak1111a- Mrs. Bert Swedin (Marcia Mcintyre Bn) 4908 Sceni c Terr., Yakima, WA 98902 WEST VIRGINIA (/\) Clrarlesron-Mrs. David Christe nsen , Jr. (Louise Currence BY) 2309 Windh am Rd ., So. Charl eston , WV 25303 ' Clarksburg Area-Mrs. Robert St eptoe, Jr. (Mary Thompson BY) 1218 Briercl iff Rd ., Bridgeport , WV 26330 •Hunltngron-Mi ss Germaine Lawson (6 Y) 1147 13th St. , Hunt ington , WV 25701 Morgamown-Mrs. J. E. John on (Mary Rogers BY) 10 Maple Ave., Morga ntown , WV 26505 ' Tire Parkersburg Area-Mrs. Jo eph C. Wooft er (Mary Ellen Lindsay BY) 29 Fai rview Hghts., Parke rsburg, WV 26 101 Wlreelmg-Mrs. Ca rl yle Farn worth (Nancy Seibe rt BY) Forest Hills, Wh eelin g, WV 26003 WISCONSIN (E) ' Fox Rtver Valley-Mr . C. T. St one, Jr . (Susan Sherwood H ) 61 Sun set Trail , Indian Shores , Winn econn e, WI 54986 Madtson-Mrs. John Oros (Anne Wackman H ) 4018 Manito u Way, Madi son, WI 53 711 Mtlwaukee-Mrs. William Dow (Holli s Merkle 60) 3 13 Cre cent Lane , Th iensvi lle , WI 53092 Mtlwaukee Wesr Suburban-M rs. Roger Herbst (A nna Grier A 4 ) 2580 Happy Hollow Rd ., Pewaukee , WI 53072 WYOMI G (H) Clrerenne- Mrs. J. Kent Rut ledge ( ancy Mueller r 0) 29 15 Pioneer Ave., C.heyen ne , WY 8200 1 'Cody- Mrs. C. E. Webster (Eliza Moncur r 0) 1334 Su nset Bl vd ., Cody, WY 824 14 Laranue- Mrs . Steve Noecker (Rebecca Hitchcock rO) 1305 Kearney, Laramie , WY 82070 'Powder R11•er- Mr . France Cooper (Frances Odell Btl) Dayton , WY 82836 Kappa Kappa Gamma Proudly Welcomes New Alumnae Groups Temple, Texas ClubCentral Savannah River Area, Georgia Club Kankakee, lllinoi Club changed to ARC 37 flVhatto do flVhen Calendar for Chapters, Advisers and Province Directors of Chapters ALL REPORTS SHOULD BE FILLED IN ON REGULATION FORMS SUPPLIED BY FRATERNITY HEADQUARTERS. OCTOBER Founders Day-13th MEMBERSHIP I. (Or ten days after rushing ends) mails Report on Rushing and references . TREASURER 10. Mails Budget for school year, copy of charges of other campus groups. Financial Summary of Summer Operations and Report of Members' Outstanding Accounts. 10. Mails first Monthly Statement. MAKE ALL CHECKS PAYABLE TO KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA FRATERNITY 10. Mails magazine subscriptions for other magazines for chapter library and check to Director of Kappa's Magazine Agency. 20. (Or immediately after pledging) mails check for pledge fees with Pledge Fee Report. Registrar's Pledge Memb~rship Report and Pledge Signature Cards. REGISTRAR SCHOLARSHIP 30. (Not later than) mails 2nd semester or spring term Scholarship Report and Grading System Report . See box for Scholarship Report. I. Mails chapter News Publication Report with one copy of chapter newsletter to Chairman of Chapter Public Relations. Gives chapter Newsletter to Registrar for mailing. Corresponding Secretary Immediately after elections mails ·Officer List. Keeps changes current. I. Mails chapter Newsletter and one copy to the Editor of the KEY, one copy to the Active Chapter Editor and one copy to Fraternity Headquarters . President Within 30 days after installation, mails individual chapter programs (2 copies) to Province Director of Chapters and Chairman of Chapter Programs. NOVEMBER TREASURER 10. Mails Monthly Statement. 30. Mails check for treasury &/or Hou se Dept. Bonds , Per Capita, Advisor Pool & Auditor's Report Fees. Also Fall Membership Report. 30. Checks to be sure all fees with reports and cards have been mailed. REGISTRAR I 0. Mails Monthly Statement and (if on quarter or trimester plan) Budget Revision for second school term . REMEMBER, SECOND & THIRD TERM PER CAPITA AND ADVISER POOL FEES ARE DUE IMMEDIATELY AFTER INITIATION IN CONJUNCTION WITH THE INITIATION FEES. DECEMBER TREASURER 10. Mails Monthly Statement. 38 ADVISORY BOARD 15. Chairman mails annual Advisory Board Report. (Chapters whose school year ends before or by May 15 must complete all requirements in this Calendar prior to closing.) TREASURER 10. Mails Monthly Statement for second school term (if on quarter plan). CORRESPONDING SECRETARY 15. (On or before if possible) mails Annual Chapter Report, School Dates and Order Blank for The Kappa Notebook for fall delivery. FEBRUARY 10. Mails Monthly Statement and (if on semester plan) Budget Revision for second school term. 20. (Or ten days after pledging-chapters havin.g deferred ru sh) mails Registrar's Pledge Membership Report and Pledge Signature cards. CORRESPONDING SECRETARY I. (Not later than) mails names and ad- dresses of Membership Chairman and Alumna Membership Adviser. 15. Mails Annual Catalog Report . 20. (Or ten days after pledging-chapters having deferred rush) types Pledge Membership Report . Collects Pledge Signature cards. MAY TREASURER 10. Mails Monthly Statement. MEMBERSHIP I. Mails order to Supplies. JUNE TREASURER I0. (On or before July I0) sends as INSTRUCTED BY FRATERNITY HEADQUARTERS , ALL materials for Auditor's Report. CHECK FINANCE MAILING FOR INSTRUCTIONS FOR AUDITOR'S REPORT MATERIAL MEMBERSlnP 20. (Or ten days after rushing ends-chapters having deferred rush) mails Report on Rushing and references. CORRESPONDING SECRETARY AT LEAST TWO WEEKS PRIOR TO INITIATION SCHOLARSHIP CHAIRMAN Mails Scholarship Report with in 30 days of close of term as instructed on the report form TREASURER 10. Mails Monthly Statement. TREASURER REGISTRAR 15. Gives Fall-Active Membership Report to Treasurer. Checks to be sure two Catalog Cards for each initiate have been typed and distributed according to instructions . R EGISTRAR APRIL JANUARY CORRESPONDING SECRETARY 30. Mails current Rushing Rules, Campus Panhellenic By-laws and Handbook to NPC Delegate and Province Director of Chapters. PUBLIC RELATIONS (Held annually between October I and March 31) ELECTION OF MEMBERSHIP CHAIRMAN AND ADVISER to be held between October I and February 15. TREASURER 15. (Or immediately after pledging) types ·Pledge Membership Report. Collects Pledge Signature cards. MARCH ELECTION OF OFFICERS MAILS Application for Initiation APPROVAL and Badge Orders to Fraternity Headquarters. CORRESPONDING SECRETARY Sends by the end of the school year the ANNUAL HONORS REPORT to Fraternity Headquarters and one copy to the Active Chapter Editor of the KEY. THE KEY/FALL 1976 ''What the World Needs Now" Discovering · "What the World Needs Now" entailed much work for the Epsilon Kappas at Illinois Wesleyan. Jerry Lewis' theme song in the fight against muscular dystrophy was an inspiration, however, as the chapter joined forces with the Acacia Fraternity to stage the first annual Acacia-Kappa Kappa Gamma "Dance For Those Who Can't" last spring. All proceeds went to the Muscular Dystrophy Association. Acacias and Kappas maintained shifts throughout the 24-hour period to keep up the spirits of the dancers and to Jean Cooper, E -Illinois Wesleyan, dance marathon chairman. Still another Kappa chapter was "on the run" last spring in the race against muscular dystrophy. Having entered the Gamma Phi Beta track meet on the Oregon State campus, Gamma Mu Kappas finished with a clean sweep. The entire team placed first and each individual came home with a placing ribbon. Their pride in good performance was equalled by their joy in being able to help in the run for muscular dystrophy, the recipient of funds raised by this track meet , through donation "bets." Many miles away but close in heart and aim, the Kappas at Auburn University also won a first place for fund-raising efforts. During the annual Greek Week activities, Epsilon Eta Chapter joined Phi Gamma Delta Fraternity to pon or chances on a seven-day trip for two to Acapulco. Their ambitious project led to overwhelming ticket ale and a resulting contribution of $1400 to the All Campu Fund Drive. Added to their happiness about their fir t place trophy i a special excitement about being able to end the winners of the trip to Acapulco on their 25th wedding anni er ary. by lean Cooper, Epsilon-Illinois Wesleyan provide backrubs or foot massages-anything to keep the dancers moving! Competition dances, ranging from the jitterbug to the hustle, were held often and judged by cochairpersons Jean Cooper, E -Illinois Wesleyan, and Acacia Phil Wilson. Prizes donated by local merchants were awarded to the winners. Goldfish swallowing, raffie drawings, and a visit from Illinois Poster Child Mary Shippen were among the events staged to keep enthusiasm high. The process by which money was raised was two-fold. Couples were given three weeks preceding the marathon to secure pledges for each hour danced, and cash donations were placed in individual canisters for each couple during the event. Dancers competed for the grand prize of a color television set in addition to numerous other prizes. Even though these gifts were an incentive for the dancers, most agreed that the real reason they were willing to dance for 24 hours was their belief in the fight against muscular dystrophy. Donations were collected for the two weeks following the marathon by the couples, then handed in to the chapters at a "Let's Celebrate" party. The grand total of $5,500 was presented to John Mazzotti, field representative for Region 8 of Muscular Dystrophy offices. What the world needs now is more dance marathons for MD! About the same time, another dance marathon was in full swing at the University of Montana-this one to benefit epilepsy. With Sigma Alpha Epsilon Fraternity, the Beta Phi Kappas raised the largest amount of money for the marathon through such activities as a car wash and a bake sale. Susan Bunting, B<P Montana, and SAE Jud Teague were the winning couple, and each received a $250 scholarship for this fall 's use . Kappas and SAEs at Montana. CAMPUS HIGHLIGHTS THE KEY /F LL 1976 £dt1ed by A 1111a Mile hell Htetl Pftuf?h. Beta ,\Ju- Colorado. ActiiY' Chapter £dt1or 39 Mary Kelly Duncan, Y - Northwestern, secretary-treasurer for Panhellenic, Alpha Lambda Delta, Medii School of Journalism at Northwestern. Sandee Bryan, B ~ -Texas, Alpha Lambda Delta, Dean's List, Cordettes · (women·~ honorary organization for Arrgy- ROTC), Texas Union Committee, Texas Relays Princess. Carol Niederer (left) and Valerie Petrilak, r <!J -Southern Methodist, sustentation chairperson of Student Foundation and president of Psi Chi (psychology honorary), respectively, during the 1976-77 school year. Actively SpeakingExempl a ry of Kappa college careers and their active years is a member of Alpha Chapter at Monmouth Uni v ersity-Nicole Chevalier. Nicole has been selected president of the college's student association and is also her chapter's first vice-president. During her college career she has also been a representative on the student judicial board , president of the Association of Women Students, Alumni Board representative , on the women's tennis varsity team , a member of the Reader's Theatre group, and in Alpha Lambda Delta and Mortar Board. Epsilon Eta Kappas (Auburn U.) also boast of Kappa student leaders. During the spring student government association elections, Debbie Wehle was elected vice-president of the School of Education; Debbie Boucher , vice-president of the School of Arts and Sciences; and Jo O' Rear, president of the School of Home Economics. Nicole Chevallier, A • - Monmouth. Mary Anne Rauh , M - Butler, Mortar Board, Chimes, Spurs, Rho Ch i (pharmacy honorary) 40 Suzie Arnold, EN - Vanderbilt, received the honor of presenting her paper on hypertension at the Sigma Theta Tau honorary nursing fraternity clin ical sessions . Hers was one of six selected from entrees by other nurs ing students , faculty , and hospital personnel. Valery Warren , EN - Vanderbilt, Sigma Delta Pi (Spanish hon orary) . Beth Swenson, M -Butler, Mortar Board, Chimes, Spurs, Rho Chi (pharmacy honorary) . THE KEY IF ALL 197 6 Too Numerous to N arne Diane Gourley, fH -Washington State, has been called a "continuous inspiration and outstanding leader" by her chapter sisters. Her Kappa and college involvement are so full that her honors and activities are almost too numerous to name in one article. Diane is second vice-president of Gamma Eta Chapter and has been editor of their chapter newsletter and chapter public relations chairman. On campus she was queen of Farmhouse Fraternity, on the Washington State Cougarette drill team, a member of the Western Governmental Research Association, senior Panhellenic first vice-president, co-head of rush counselors, and selected to membership in Mortar Board. Diane has written radio programs for a series on the W.S. U. radio station in connection with the Associated Women Students Bicentennial Committee and was chairman of the PanDiane Gourley , r H -Washington hellenic-IFC leadership workshop State. for 600 delegates last spring. Another chapter vice-president who is very active on campus is Jenny Johnson, rn -Alabama, who has been chosen for Phi Beta Kappa, Omicron Delta Kappa (leadership honorary) , and was president of Mortar Board . Jenny was also elected to membership in Outtanding Greek Women, based on ervice to the chapter. Linda Snowden. A• -Monmouth Chapter Presidents Active Everywhere Sue Ehrke, TH K r -Northwestern "i'/F\LL 1976 New members of Spook honorary at the University of Texas are (left to right) Gere Gleim, Meg Terry, and Starr Braun , all B.=- Texas. Gere is also in Alpha Lambda Delta and Phi Beta Kinsolving, as well as being a Kappa Picker and intramural officer of the pledge class. Meg is also involved in intramurals and is the princess representative of her hometown in the 1976 Austin (Texas) Aquafest. Starr was recently chosen an outstanding student in the French Department at Texas. was on the Dean's List, was selected for Alpha Lambda Delta, and is a member of PRSSA (society for public relations majors) . Patrice Bell , Y -Northwestern, was recently elected to Phi Beta (national professional fraternity for women in music and speech) and then was elected vice -president, based on her scholarship, leadership, and character. Linda Snowden, president of Alpha Chapter (Monmouth) has stayed on the Dean 's List with 4.0 in business administration and wa the first girl at Monmouth College to do a bu iness intern hip in hospital administration. Linda is in Alpha Lambda Delta , Beta Beta Beta (biology honorary) , Mortar Board, Dolphins (synchronized wimming) is in musical groups on campus and was awarded Out tanding Freshman Woman title. Carol Anne Crook, r n -Alabama, is in Mortar Board, Ander on Society and Omicron Delta Kappa (leadership honorarie ) as well a being her chapter s president. Kathy Vo , B - -Oklahoma, has in her list of honor and acti itie Mortar Board, Gamma Gamma (outtanding junior Greek ) , and Beta Gamma Sigma (bu ine honorary). Be ide being pre ident of orthwe tern Kappa chapter, p ilon, ue Ehrke a al o a finali t for Homecoming Queen thi ear. Kathy Voss, A8 -0klahoma 41 Outstanding In the spring of this year, three Mu Chapter Kappas were selected for recognition at Butler University's annual "Outstanding Students Banquet." They are Elaine Campbell, Jeanne Hambidge, and Karen Hungerford. Jeanne gained added recognition by being chosen one of the top ten women at Butler. She was president of the Association of Women Students 1975-76, a Beth Schofield Scholar 1976, and a member of Mortar Board, Chimes, Spurs, and Phi Kappa Phi. Karen's previous honors have been as a member of Mortar Board, Chimes, Spurs, Kappa Delta Pi (education honorary), and Glamour Magazine's Top Ten Coeds. Karen was Mu Chapter president, and Jeanne served as second vice-president. Both received special honors also at the annual Matrix Table. Jeanne Hambidge, M- Butler. Karen K. Hungerford, MButler. Single Honors Reflect Multiple Activities Torchbearer Diving Champ Jean Marie Calloway, E!\- Tennessee, is one of the nine seniors to receive the University of Tennessee's highest honors by being named a Torchbearer. Based on scholastic achievement, activities, character, and service to the university, the honor recognizes the students as representatives of the motto: "One that beareth a torch shadoweth oneself to give light to others." Susy Honnen, t.Z -Colorado College, is one of four teenagers named to the AAU age group diving team that competed in a series of European meets this summer. Susy, former two-time state high school champion, won first place in the 3 meter springboard and second place in the 10 meter platform event. A member of the Colorado College varsity diving team, Susy's coach has been Captain Micki King, 1972 Olympic gold medalist and currently men's diving mentor at the Air Force Academy. This team is not only the youngest ever to represent the U.S. in the series, but also the first age group contingent to compete behind the Iron Curtain. According to the Denver Post Susy received the Metropolitan YWCA Sportswomanof-Colorado Award for her diving achievements. In addition to her Torchbearer honor, Jean also received a Chancellor citation for "extraordinary campus leadership and service" and was tapped as a member of Omicron Delta Kappa (leadership honorary), which included women for the first time this year. Jean's other campus activities include being treasurer of the Coordination Council for Women, cochairman of the University Center governing board, student counselor to University President Edward Boling, and president of the undergraduate alumni council. She has also been associated with Panhellenic's Judicial Board, Vol Corps, Carnicus, rush counseling, orientation, Alpha Lambda Delta, Phi Kappa Phi, and Mortar Board. Jean indeed exemplifies extraordinary leadership and service. 42 Jean Marie Calloway, E1\ - Tennessee. Ideal Greek Woman The Kappas of Epsilon Chapter (Illinois Wesleyan) were thrilled to hear the announcement at the end of Greek Week last spring that Marianne Wolf, E -Illinois Wesleyan, was chosen Ideal Greek Woman. Marianne was the 1975-76 Panhellenic co-rush chairman, chairman on the executive Homecoming Committee for two years, assistant chairman for the university's Mom's Day, and Junior Panhellenic president. Marianne Wolf, E -Illinois Wesleyan. THE KEY/FALL 1976 It's Music to Our Years Continuing in the tradition that was originated by Delta Chapter in the 1959-60 school year, and that has since spread nationwide , this year's Delta Chapter Kappa Pickers have been singing for in-chapter events and for campus and fraternity gatherings all year long. Constantly adding new arrangements to their repetoire, the Pickers are even considering the addition of two new instruments. Since the 1959 beginning of Pickers groups wjth Delta Chapter at Indiana, this chapter's Pickers groups have been on USO tours, have performed in the " AllAmerican College Show" in Hollywood, and have even cut three records. Delta Chapter's musical talents are also seen through their involvement in the Indiana University Sing, an I. U. Student Foundation-sponsored activity that has been on the Bloomington campus for 47 years. Fraternities and sororities pair up for the competition , and each group presents a musical skit involving singing, choreography , instruments, and elaborate costuming and scenery . Barb Stock , 6. -Indiana , was chosen one of the four emcees for the I. U. Sing this year. The All-Sing competition on the University of Tennessee campus this year found the Epsilon Lambda Kappas winning a second place in the large group division . These Kappas carried their performing arts skills even further as they joined the Sigma Nu Fraternity for the first time this spring to do a skit for the university's Carnicus competition . Carnicus is a production put on annually by the Greek for the entertainment of the students on campus. Delta 's Kappa Pickers include (from left) Mib Bramlette (gut bucket and piano) , Becki Miller (bongos) , Terri Lipp (ukelele) , Kathy Shedron (shakers) , Jana Janssen (spoons and the group's leader) , Sus ie Veo (washboard), Susie Kirn (gu itar), and Barb Stock. Not pictured are Deb Kern and Anne Kiel y. Epsi lon Lambda (Tennessee) Kappas in All-Sing. Those "well-rounded" Texas Kappas- Lynne McGee, TH K B=- Texas. /F LL 1976 Beta Xi Kappas rounded up all their enthusiasm for this sp ring's un iversity ' Round- Up," and they came out on top in many categories. The 'Mo t Humorous Float' award wa presented to the Kappa and Beta Theta Pi Fraternity, who had teamed up to build a huge boat float en titled "Austin Tea Party.' Earlier in the week the Kappa joined the Acacias in elling moked au age at the Round-Up Carnival. And Kappa athletic ability and de terity wa unmatched a they took first place in the chug and peddle con test. A highlight of the week was the crowning of Lynne McGee, B.=: Texas, as University Sweethea rt, a special honor voted on by the 42,000-member tudent body . Lynne i also in Orange Jackets (women ' ervice honorary), Alpha Lambda Delta Dean' Li t Texa Po ee (fre hman- ophomore pirit and ervice organization) , Texa nion Recreation Committee-and he maintain a 3.8 grade point average! 43 TO Marianne Spurrier, H -Wisconsin, one of six photographers to receive a $1 ,000 educational scholarship from the Eastman Kodak Company. The awards were presented at the most recent national 4-H Club Congress in Chicago after 50 finalists had been chosen from among 300,000 competitors. Marianne is an agricultural journalism major, on the Dean's Honor List and a member of the Agricultural Communicators ofTomorrow Club. TO tennis champs from Oklahoma and Auburn Universities. Pictured above is Judy Barger, Be -Oklahoma, the # 1 player on the university women's tennis team, Oklahoma intercollegiate state tennis champion both for # 1 singles and doubles. Judy was also Oklahoma high-school champion in # 1 singles for four consecutive years . At Auburn University, Epsilon Eta Kappas Carol Dixon and Becky Rawls both won first places in their respective divisions at the state tennis playoffs. TO Allison Opel, r<t>-Southern Methodist, presently active as president of the university 's Dolphin Club, the women's synchronized swimming organizationn . Gamma Phi Chapter (Southern Methodist) has made a name for itself in many sporting activities in addition to swimming-And they are most excited about their second place overall win in women 's intramurals, which included chapter firsts in jogging, archery, and track. TO University of Colorado Kappas on the ski team Bizzy Repetti (left) and Laurie Logan. They are avid competitors for the national title in women 's giant slalom and practice racing every day after classes. Weekend competition leads them to races throughout the West. Also, Bizzy maintains a 4.0 grade point average in business school, and Laurie intends to major in recreational therapy with emphasis on athletic training, specifically coaching the university's women's ski team . HATS OFF! TO Gail Dunphy, r l -Maryland, who has achieved fame in studio design. Her talents have been seen in painted display designs for auto dealerships, an import shop, and a restaurant-with one of her designs chosen for the cover of a pamphlet produced by her department at the university. Gail has also written several feature articles for the school newspaper and has served as art director and editor of a dormitory complex newsletter. 44 TO Wendy Gajewski, I Northwestern, who as a singer, actress, and pianist has performed all over the country and has worked with such wellknown stars as Caesar Romero, John Davidson, and David Fry . Active in theater productions at Northwestern, Wendy was a principle soloist and in the choral ensemble in the 1975 and 1976 Waa-Mu shows . She spent last summer working at the newly opened Marriot Great America Theme Park in the Great America Stage Show in Illinois. THE KEY IF ALL 1976 FOR Gamma Phi Chapter at Southern Methodist who concluded a week of fun and ha rd work with the first place spirit trophy at the close of Sigma Chi Derby Day. Karen Fry was G amma Phi 's chairman for Kappa Participation which included a Picker serenade, cookies , s igns , a special bulletin board , and a " This is Your Life" skit based on information for Sigma Chi parents and an ad in the campus newspaper. FOR Delta Omicron Chapter at Iowa State , who won the " most fired-up house " award for Sigma Chi Derby Days on their campus. Shown here to the right a re (standing) Linda Renk , left, and Sue Wheeler , chairmen , and (seated) Carrie Grimes , Delta Omicron ' s Derby Darling, who won first runner-up in the Derby Da rling competition. Derby's On I FOR Epsilon Kappas pictured to the left who took second place in the sorority relay games for Illinois Wesleyan's Sigma Chi Derby Days , 1976. The highlight was the Kappa artists finishing in the top three places in the poster contest to maintain the chapter 's record reputation in this category for past four years. Also a part of the week-long celebration was the parti cipation of the Greeks in the Sigma Chi philanthropy " trampathon " for Wallace Village Center for children . Kappas Combine Travel and Study Through Illinois Wesleyan's Short Term Travel program, six Epsilon Kappas were able to spend the month of January in Europe studying the business aspects of European society . Sarah Plumb, Lyn Tomlinson , Nancy Stoerzbach , Marianne Wolf, Joni Arens, and Catherine Rust , EIllinois Wesleyan , travelled to five western European countries i!1 their studies. the home of a native family and will study in the areas of curre nt world economic problems , comparative politics, and business. Anne 's acti vities while at Purdue included Tri-B, Pep Girl co-director, Purdue Student Union Board , Grand Pri x Jun ior Board , and Se nior Board of Pe p. A G amma Delta (Purdue) Kappa has received a high honor in being selected to attend Mi ami University's (Oxford , Ohio) European Cente r in Lu xembourg this year. Anne Berman , r tl -Purdue, will li ve in A 75th anniver ar for a Kappa chapter i a pe ial time and i made e e n more memorable ith a celebration and the pre enc of a founding member. Beta ni er ity of Colorado) Mu hapter had ju 1 the e ingredien I t pril a the hapter gathered with Beta Mu alumnae and alumnae from Boulder and TH K ) / f LL 1976 Den er to celebrate. Pictured abo e i ettie Schwer Freed (center) , a founding member of Beta Mu Chapter in 190 I, ith the wooden key made for her and igned by Beta Mu Kappa now in the hou e. With her are Chri Herrmann, anni er ar hairman (left ), and Barbara Laitner , chapter pre ide nt. 45 It is with deep regret that The Key announces the death of the following members: Akron, University of-Lambda Louise Dilley Brown '21-December 14, 1975, 50 year award Roselena Mize Warfield '41-June 22, 1964 Alabama, University of-Gamma Pi Nell Felix Kirkland '49-May 25, 1976 Allegheny College-Gamma Rho Dorothy Winter Archbold '25-June 25, 1975 Josephine McDanel Myers '36-April 28, 1970 Arizona, University of-Gamma Zeta Agnes Gordon Compton '27-January, 1974 Dorothy Hill '22-May 3, 1976 Louise Bellows Kruttschnitt '30-August 8, 1976 Butler Uqiversity-Mu Martha Oursler McK.instray '16-April 13, 1976, 50 year award Eleanor Wheeler '03-July 12, 1975 California, University of at Los AngelesGammaXi June Yager Bradford '45 June 28 , 1975 Cincinnati, University of-Beta Rho Deuteron Jane Ross Davis '30-March 17,. 1976 Mary Gracely Shepard '34-June 12, 1969 Colorado College- Delta Zeta Eleanor Lynch Nemacheck '33-February 21, 1976 Isabel Yanochowski Polizzi '35-April 11, 1971 Colorado, University of-Beta Mu Lura Fallas Hoeppner ' 09-July 3, 1976 Marion Raymond McEachern '24-July 11 , I 976, 50 year award Margaret Marr Ryan '3D-December 23 , 1975 Ruth Bellman Wolf '17-March 20, 1976, 50 year award Denison University-Gamma Omega Shirley Pitzer Webb '29- March 21, I 976 Eugenie Coudan Wetzel '29-August 1, 1976 DePauw University-Iota Frances Zabel Hofmann '09-July 2, 1976, 50 year award Drake University-Gamma Theta Louise Parritt Jordan ' 24-July 20, 1976 Emory University-Epsilon Epsilon Carlynn McLendon Clinkscales '59-June 19, 1976 George Washington University-Gamma Chi Lelia Williams Duffy ' 38-0ctober 9, 1974 Hillsdale College- Kappa Helen Crum Dibble '15-July I, 1976 Maude Miner Fisher '08-June 13, 1976, 50 year award Idaho, University of-Beta Kappa Ellamae Farmin Ashby '25-June 14, 1976 Myrna Adams Hall ' 27-November 22, 1973 Illinois, University of-- Beta Lambda Elisabeth McMartin Babbitt '35-July 29, 1975 Louise Pletcher Peebles '20-May 28, 1976, 50 year award Arabella Watson Richards '04-1961 , 50 year award Indiana University-Delta Dorothy Lucas Rademaker '18-September 1 I, 1969 Iowa, University of-Beta Zeta Rowena Evans Drake '18 July 9, 1975, 50 year award Helen Rule Eberle '22-January 25, 1968 Marie Ramsey Nelson '10-April 7, 1976, 50 year award Betty Jane Rath Reichert '48-March 15, 1966 Kansas State University-Gamma Alpha Josephine Null Welch '23-March 26, 1976, 50 year award Kansas, Upiversity of-Omega Evelyn Strong Claassen '13-May 24, 1976, 50 year award Virginia Elward Huffine '10-March 18, 1976, 5.0 year award . Kentucky, University of-Beta Chi Anne Mii'!Vard Dedman '33-July 17, 1976 Barbara Wiley Moritz '36-March S, 1976 Maryland, University of-Gamma Psi Louise Hersperger Jones '31-April 23 , 1976 Miami, University of-Delta Kappa Mary Elizabeth Sullivan Sloan '39-June 1, 1975 Michigan State University-Delta Gamma Marilyn Miller Barribeau 'S 1- January, 1974 lone Worden DeLind '30-July 6, 1976 Patricia Lyons DeYoung '30-May 14, 1976 Arvilla Voss Welles ' 31-March 3, 1976 Michigan, University of- Beta Delta Mary Overman Adams '16-Max.2, 1976 Christina ·Stringer Sims '14-JulY.-25, 1975, · 50 ·year award Louise Ratcliff Winder ' 28-March 25, 1976 Minnesota, University of-Chi Mildred Conger Fuller '17-July, 1976, SO year award Constance Merrill Geist ' 38-April 11, 1976 Missouri, University of- Theta Henrietta Moore Root ' 36-March 13, 1976 Montana, University of-Beta Phi Lillian Scrogin Cummins '13- February 11 , 1976, SO year award · Caroline Barnes Kebric ' 22-March 10, 1976 Helen Gregory Sayer '21-May 20, 1976 Nebraska, University of-Sigma Helen Shepherd Derieg '13-April 15, 1976, 50 year award Beulah Chamberlin Jones '08-July 29, 1976 North Dakota State University-Gamma Tau Agnes Weible Serkland ' 29-May 5, 1976 Janice Marie Bakken White ' 56-February 15, 1971 Gwendolyn Gregg Zerby ' 29-July 8, 1976 AS THE IN MEMORIAM SECTION IS PREPARED BY FRATERNITY HEADQUARTERS, PLEASE SEND ALL DEATH NOTICES GIVING FULL 46 In memoriam Northwestern University- Upsilon Emma Jones Adams '06-July 10, 1975 Celia Anna Drew '96-December 15, 1971 Janet Colvin Hopps' '39-December, 1966 O .. io State University-Beta Nu Dorothy Denison Ferguson ' 36-April 20, 1976 Ruth Albritain Whitehill '15-July 16, 1975, 50 year award Ohio Wesleyan University-Rho Deuteron Mary Dougherty Bell '38-December 27, 1974 Edith Markel Hough ' 25-June 2, 1974 Oklahoma, University of-Beta Theta Lillian Aderhold ' 27-June 19, 1975 Oregon State University-Gamma Mu Elinor Bressie Allen ' 37-0ctober 18, 1975 Marilyn Wunder Scott '42-May 15, 1976 o~egon, University of-Beta Omega Esther Warner Pugh ' 18-April 19, 1972, 50 year award Constance Cartwright Small '13-May 24, 1976, 50 year award Hildamay Hobart Syrdal '32-June 17, 1976 Pennsylvania State University-Delta Alpha Evelyn Mack Rose '30 December 24, 1975 Pittsburgh, University of-Gamma Epsilon Margaret Miller Esch ' 24- May 13, 1976, SO year award Patricia Nelson Hermann '49-May 3, 1976 Puget Sound, University of- Epsilon Iota Jennifer Boyd Taylor ' 66-February 23, . 1976 Purdue University-Gamma Delta Kathryn Landy Duarte '54-March 21 , 1976 Southern Methodist University-Gamma Phi ,Ruby Hilgers McNamara ' 32-March 15, 1975· . Syracuse University~ Beta Tau Elizabeth Armstrong Hunte'r ' 32-March 1, 1976 Barbara Belle Tyler '31- February 25, 1976 Texas, University of-Beta Xi George Hume Cofer '17~November 16, 1975, SO year award Grace Rogers James '23-January 8, 1976, SO year award Arabella Jester Miner ' 33~May 13, 1976 Rita Brewster Tidemann '36-June 20, 1976 Tulane University (H. Sophie Newcomb College)- Beta Omicron Lucile Vardell Gillican '04-May 12, 1976, SO year award Louise Flower Stubbs '06- December , 1975, SO year award U tab, University of- Delta Eta Marjorie Gordy Brown ' 32-July 24, 1974 Janet Sanders Parrish ' 34-January 20, 1974 Washington State University-Gamma Eta Marjory Smith Potter ' 34-September, 1971 NAME AND VERIFICATION OF DATE OF DEATH TO FRATERNITY HEADQUARTERS, P.O. BOX 2079, COLUMBUS, OHIO 43216. THE KEY IF ALL 197 6 Washington University-Gamma Iota Jane Brown Stanza '55-August 14, 1974 Washington, University of-Beta Pi Katherine Gates Clark .'31 -March, 1973 Ottie Armstrong Hill '05-April 30, 1973, 50 year award Genevieve Thompson Quinn '13 -July 3, 1976 Catherine Quigley Sylvester '38-February 22 , 1968 Margaret Corey Trueblood '07-September 7, 1972 West Virginia University-Beta Upsilon Mary Schultz Lockard '21 - November 12, 1975 Jean Ann Warden Martin '50-May 17, 1976 Whitman College-Gamma Gamma Susan Pelegruti Carnes '61-June 6, 1976 Margaret Thomas Trimble ' 36-1972 William & Mary, College of-Gamma Kappa Lucy Jessup Parker '26-June, 1970 Wisconsin, University of- Eta Marian Clancy Atherton 'IS-July 17, 1975, 50 year award Wyoming, University of-Gamma Omicron Dorothea Smith Appleton ' 29-December 29, 1975 INACTIVE CHAPTERS Adelphia College-Beta Sigma Ethel Jamieson O'Brien '18-November 24, 1969, SO. year award Ruth Waldo '05 -September 5, 1975, 50 year award Adrian College-Xi Helen Fickes McKinnie '96 -November I, 1959 Barnard College-Beta Epsilon Mary Budd Skinner '99 -0c;tober 8, 1973 Cornell University-Psi Gail Roxie Brazilian Bailey '56-May 5, 1976 Charlotte Purdy Griffiths '24- May 17, 1976 Helen Ellsworth Van Lobensels-September 21 , 1974, 50 year award Catherine Calvin Norris ' 33 - March 17, 1971 San Jose State College-Delta Chi Daphne Caporaso Higbie '67-June 19, 1973 Stanford University-Beta Eta Marion Ward Merrill '10-May 25 , 1970 Swarthmore College-Beta Iota Margaret Willets Mason '13-March 12, 1975, 50 year award Sarah Boreman Miller ' 19- August 24, 1951 Gamma Sigma Is Inactive Fraternity President Marian Graham announced at convention that with great sorrow the active members of Gamma Sigma Chapter, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Canada, had requested of the Council that they be allowed to surrender the charter of their chapter to the Fraternity. The active members believed the campus attitude towards fraternity life not conducive to the chapter continuing. In 1974, there were seven women's fraternities on the campus. The following year two left the campus and this year only fifteen girls went through rush and of this number, only ten pledged. As the Kappas leave the campus, there are four groups left with from three to eighteen members. It is with great reluctance that the Council voted to accept the charter of Gamma Sigma Chapter which came into being in 1928. Coming Attractions Many new officers have been appointed -meet them in the Winter issue of The Key along with a special spotlight on Kappa Artists and Kappas in Print. Philanthropy will be a featured article, and a brand new section on careers will make its debut with a first installment on Kappas in medical careers. The Key staff has enlarged and wishes you to know that beginning with the Winter issue Lois Catherman Whittaker, BI -Adelphi, will be the new Alumnae News Editor; Mary Beth Vawter Richardson, 8 -Missouri , the new Career Editor; and Anna Mitchell Hiett Pflugh, B M -Colorado, the continuing Active Chapter News Editor. KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA MAGAZINE AGENCY -•- 4440 LINDELL BLVD., APT. 1702, ST. LOUIS, MO. 63108 -•- "' Mrs. Orieon M. Spaid 'l' DIRECTOR order any magazine at rate offered by publisher-prices on request ~~ma-----------------, MAGAZINES NEW OR RENEWAL HOW LONG PRICE STREET f~------------~~----ZI~ ORDERED BY ADDRESS CREDIT ALUMNAE ASS'N .: THE KE /F LL 1976 WHICH CARD: XMAS GIFT BIRTHDAY CHECK ENCLOSED FOR $ 47 IT HELPS TO HAVE A FRIEND LIKE THE ROSE McGILL FUND IT HELPS THE ROSE McGILL FUND WHEN YOU SEND YOUR SUBSCRIPTIONS TO KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA MAGAZINE AGENCY At no added cost, your subscriptions earn the commissions. In the Biennium of 1974 and 75, more than $24,000 was earned for the Rose McGill Fund. Everyone can help. EVERY KAPPA (at least) ONE SUBSCRIPTION would triple that income! Six years ago, at the lOOth Anniversary Convention, a group suggested that in some way we should POP open this possibility. From this suggestion came the " P"ercentage "O"f "P"articipation (POP) Award (see chart A which shows the production expenses and gains for 5 years- (1975-76 figures not available until auditors report). The Award is a gold charm or pendant given to the chairman whose Club or Association produces the percentage of money sales (See Chart B). The first year less than a dozen received the award . Each year more have qualified until at Convention 1976, 24 charms were given . Some have won every year and so the charm is given to some interested alumna who has helped in some particular way. Hobbs, N.M. with 14 members hopes that in time every member will proudly wear the charm wh ich shows an open magazine supporting a full-blown rose. There are other benefits! Through production and increased sales over the previous year, Associations and Clubs can win money awards. (Chart A) Also a bonus check is sent each chairman figured at the rate of 7% on the net amount sent above the per capita of $5.00 per paid member. Hopefully this bonus will pay all expenses incurred by the chairman for postage and promotion. (See chart A) IT HELPS IF: EVERY KAPPA SENDS (at Least) ONE SUBSCRIPTION to her Alumnae Magazine Chairman or to Mrs . 0. M. Spaid in St. Louis, Mo. Use the coupon in THE KEY on page 47. 190,000 , . . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . KAPPA KA PPA GAMMA MAGAZ INE AGEN CY ( Si nce l.9 JJ J PAl O ROSE ~lcGI LL FUND 112,040 11 ,19 1 10,061 8,810 ~ ''P ' ercentage "O"f "P ' articipation POP AWARD REQUIREMENTS 121 51 76 101 151 201 2501911 48 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 Est. 20 50 75 100 150 200 250 Plus Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Members Members Members Members Members Members Members Members 70% 60% 55% 50% 35% 30% 25% 20% Entire membership can participate including inactive Kappas THE KEY/FALL 1976 Alumnae News Standing inside the restored bandstand in Dallas' Old City Park are, from left, Marion Mclaren Roever, BM -Colorado, president of the Dallas Alumnae Associ ation ; Ruth Ann Rogers Montgomery, f<l> -Southern Methodist, president of the Dallas County lf"eritage Society ; and Frances Dowd Moore, B:;:: - Texas, cha i rman of the Dallas Alumnae Association 's Tour of Homes. Dallas Tour Benefits Historic Park Another out tanding benefit has been staged by the Dalla Alumnae As ociation which reports profits of $21 000 from it late t biennial Tour of Homes. lumnae ha e donated $3 000 of the proceed to a Dalla Bi entennial project, re toration of Old City Park . pon ored by the Dalla Count Heritage Society, Old Cit Park ontain 1- authentic building which trace the lopment of Dalla from it boi terou pioneer day in I 40 , through it rapid growth a a railroad cro road , to it mergence ju t after the turn of the century TH KEY/F LL 1976 • as a city of national importance. Alumnae think their donation is especially appropriate because, in the 10 year history of the Heritage Society , a Kappa has been president every year but one. Other tour proceeds distributed this year include $4 050 to Theta Province chapters $500 for an emergency scholarship and $1 000 to the Rose McGill Fund . AI o Children s Medical Center in Dallas will benefit from a coloring book for day surgery patients being publi hed by alumnae. Additional beneficiaries of tour proceed ' ill be announced in 1977. 49 Elizabeth Anne Hamilton, r K -William and Mary, is one of America's most distinguished harpsichordists. She lectures at the University of California, San Diego, and at Mesa College, in addition to being a noted performer. She has appeared as soloist with orchestras on both east and west coasts and in Mexico. A recent concert with world-renowned harpsichordist Igor Kipnis won critical acclaim. She has recorded for Capital Records, composed and narrated a program for educational television, and conducted a radio program entitled "Introduction to Music." Her " Student Materials for Classroom Piano" is published by Composers Press . During her undergraduate days at the College of William and Mary, she served as official harpsichordist for nearby Colonial Williamsburg, performing in weekly recitals. She has B.A. and M.A. degrees from the University of California, Los Angeles. Ronda Roszel, B8 -Oklahoma, a second lieutenant in the United States Air Force, was one of 15 women selected to receive special training at the Air Force Academy in Colorado. She was trained to act as an upperclass cadet for the first group of women entering the Academy last June. She is living with the new cadets, undergoing most training programs with them, and serving as a role model for them during their first two years f at the Academy. Elizabeth Hamilton Jane Edwards Champlin, B8-0klahoma, has been recognized as Distinguished Citizen of the Year by the Greater Enid Alumnae in the news • • • (Oklahoma) Chamber of Commerce. The community leader and philanthropist is the first woman to win the award in its 72year history. Lou Siebert Pappas Mary Clapham Mills Lou Siebert Pappas, rM -Oregon State, is the first recipient of the Hope Chamberlin achievement award presented by the Women in Communications chapter at her alma mater. A nationally known food consultant and writer , Mrs. Pappas has authored six cookbooks. Formerly on the staff of Sunset magazine for 13 years, she now does free lance work, with contributions to Gourmet, House and Garden, the Christian Science Monitor and a recent Ortho book series to her credit. She also teaches at De Anza College and Foothill College in Portola Valley, Calif. During the past 11 years, she and her husband, Nicholas, have traveled through Europe eight times, collecting recipes and food ideas. They have just completed a month-long tour of two- and three-star restaurants in France. Mary Linda Clapham Mills, E B -Colorado State, and her husband , Jerry , a lawyer, operate Mills Ranches near Fountain, Colo., one of the top quarter horse businesses in the nation. Their annual sales, which are also gala social event~ , attract buyers from all over the country. In 1971, Mary Linda was No. 1 nonprofessional rider in the Western States Cutting Horse Association, but since 1972 her husband has been No. 1 and she has been No. 2. Every year the Mills family , which includes three daughters , travels to a succession of horse shows. A former Miss Universe contestant from Colorado, Mary Linda has modeled professionally. She recently filmed a television commercial for the Ford Motor Co. 50 THE KEY/FALL 1976 Donna Flynt Lang, t.=:-Carnegie Mellon , is making news on several fronts. As a designer , Donna has won acclaim with her Christmas tree ornaments and calico trims created for such customers as Vogue and Family Circle magazines. Her Santa Pack pattern 1312 was the biggest seller in Vogue's history. As an interior decorator , Donna and her business partner recently were chosen from among numerous applicants to participate in two designer showcase houses in New Jersey. The French nursery they decorated for the Dodge estate show was viewed by 60,000 people, including Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis and Mrs. Gerald Ford. Mrs . Ford commented that Donna 's nursery was her favorite room in the show. Also , as a well-dressed young career woman , Donna was featured recently in The New York Times Fashion Magazine. She lives in Chatham, N. J., with her husband , Joseph , and 3-year-old son , Wesley. Fellow members of the Lackawanna Alumnae Association are anticipating a workshop Donna has volunteered to conduct at one of their meetings this year . Dorothy Holly Blanchard, t. N- Massachusetts, has been named Home Economics Teacher of the Year, an award spon sored by the American Home Economics Association and Family Circle magazine. The award was announced at the Association 's national convention in Minneapolis this summer, where Mrs . Blanchard was selected from among 40 finalists. She is on the staff of Masconomet Regional High School in Topsfield , Mass., where she has initiated several innovative programs. She has a master's degree from Simmons College and spent~ years sabbatical as an intern with the U.S. Office of Education recently , visiting school systems in 11 states, as well as schools in England and Scotland. She is a member of the Bay Colony Alumnae Club. Donna Flynt Lang The Advertising Club of Lincoln , Neb., has named Pamela J. Holloway, I-Nebraska, the 1976 Advertising Person of the Yea r. Sh e is a senior copywriter with Ayres and Associates , and her list of honors includes winning two " ADDY ' trophies (the ' Osca r" of the advertising industry) . She participates in numerous civic groups and was named one of Lincoln 's Five Outtanding Young Individuals in 1975. Mrs. Blanchard Pam Holloway Mrs. Champli n Mrs. Sharp Cynthia Baker Sharp, t. -Indiana , was commissioned by the Bicentennial Commission of Barrington Ill. , to write an Third Annual Scholarship to be Awarded We tche ter County City Panhellenic has announ ced that they are offering their third cholar hip to a Greek Lette r Girl wh o belong to a National Sorority, if: I. he expect to complete he r j un ior yea r atisfactorily in any college in the United State or Canada. 2. She i in need of financial a si tance to help her complete her enior year. 3. he i a re ident of We tche ter County. 4. Her orority i affili ated with the Westche te r County Panhelle nic lumnae. ppli a tion mu t be re ei ed by May I , 1977. The inner v ill be announced in June , 1977 and $500 will be paid toward tu ition for the re ipient in eptember, 1977 . ppl i ation fo rm rna be obtained by writing to the orre ponding e retary of We t he ter ounty Panhellenic, Mr . Robert handler, 16 Chamberlain Street, R e, e\ York 105 0. THE KE /F LL 1976 hi tori cal accou nt of the area entitled " Tale of Old Barrington . A free-l ance writer and teacher, Mrs. harp has a rna ter' degree from Sta nford Un iver ity' In titute for Comm un ication Re earch. She i ma rried to Robert A. Sharp, who recently wa named pre ident of the Detroi t-Toledo-Ironton Railroad , and with thei r three on they will be movi ng to Bloomfield Hill , Mi ch. (continued on page 58) 51 Hand Painted KAPPA HAND BAGS By Robin Adair A project of the Columbus, Ohio, Alumnae Association. Vivid acrylic hand paintings on walnut stained and varnished wood. Brass catch, mirror inside lid, beautifully lined. Basket 10x5-3 / 4x 6-1 / 2h Lantern 9x6-3/ 4x5- 1/ 8h Check below your choice of Bag Style and Decoration -------------------------------------- Basket $32.00 [ I Lantern $49.00 [ I Decoration : Owl, key, fleur-de-lis 0 Owl , flowers 0 Make checks payable, send to Robin Adair, P.O. Box 5860, Columbus, Ohio 43221 Add $1 .50 for mailing and handling. Add 4% tax on shipments in Ohio. Ship to Address _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ __ _ _ __ City Zip Code - - - -- - - -- - - - - - HAND-PAINTED ORNAMENTS These Clever hand-painted wooden ornaments are available in 24 styles. As can be seen in photo some items are appropriate as "RINGS ON HER FINGERS". . . . Kappa Style. These un ique petit pointe needleworked rings look great on any finger of any hand, (band has hidden expansion to fit all sizes) . They are done in Kappa Blue and Blue with a gold setting and choice of Key or Fleur de Lis design. It's a gift for a new pledge, a " Fifty Year" Kappa, or anyone in between . The price, $4.00 including postage. Send orders to Mrs. Frederick Teach , 3213 Bonnie Brook Drive , Plano , Texas 7 507 4 . Quantity available: 1 75. Allow 3 weeks for delivery. KAPPA KOOKS A second collection of favorite recipes compiled by the Colorado Springs Alumnae Association , features over 400 recipes which were tested by the members. Many recipes from the popular version published over ten years ago are included as well as new additions . The name and 52 keychains and decorations for a child's room as well as tree ornaments. Also a good idea for baby gifts, birthdays , thank-you 's and Christmas giving . Averaged 4 inches in height, they are painted in bright, cheerful colors and varnished with a glossy finish . Prices range from $5.00 to $6.00 and no minimum order required. We aim for delivery in three weeks. Portland Alums have sold these popular items at their annual " Kappa Trees of Christmas " party for past four years and are now making them available by mail order. For price list and detailed brochure send name and address to: KKr Portland Alumnae Association , 6415 S.E. 34th , Portland, Oregon 97202. chapter of each rec ipe's con tributor and comments made by the tester are included . Kappa Kooks format lends itself to easy use. Recipes in the 5 'h" x 8 1h " book are printed in large type and space is provided for the cook 's own comments to be added. Cover and section dividers are of longlasting, blue cardboard and the 3 ring binder insures that the book wi ll lie flat. Each of the eleven sections has its own index page for easy reference. The book's cove r and dividers are brightly illustrated by " Kappy the Owl" drawn by Marge Harrison . Colorado Springs alumnae will be happy to mail Kappa Kooks anywhere in the U.S. The price of $5 .00 includes mailing and handl ing. Please allow 2-3 weeks for delivery. Send orders to Mrs. James R. Austi n, 1 20 Beaver Avenue , Colorado Springs, Colorado 80906. alumnae COOKIE STAMPS The Corvallis-Albany (Oregon) Alumnae Association of Pi Province is selling Rycraft ceram ic cookie stamps (with recipe booklet included) . We have the owl , key and fleur-de-lis stamps and sell the set of three and the recipe booklet for $7 .50 including postage and insurance. The cookie stamps sold like hot cakes at the convention boutique so we hope selling Kappa Cookie Stamps will develop into our best " ways and means" endeavor. Make checks payable to Kappa Cookie Stamps and send order to Mrs. Howard Smith , 715 N.W. Merrie Drive, Corvallis, Oregon 97330. Prompt delivery upon receipt of check. KEY ART IN GLASS Individually handcrafted and numbered, these keys will become heirlooms of tomorrow. They are exact scale replicas (8 3/4' x 2 3/•" ) of the Kappa Key wrought into leaded glass of gold or blue. Great for chapter, initiation or award gifts. Orders of ten or more can earn $2.00 per key for your chapter, club or association . Larger percentages on larger orders. Send $32.50 (plus $3.1 0 for packaging, postage and insurance) to Mrs. John S. Brown (Mary Douglass- 0 '48) , 130 N. Crestway, Wichita, Kansas 67208. State blue or gold glass. Allow four to si x weeks. Rush orders accepted when possible. (Add 3 % tax on Kansas Orders) Glass replicas of any sorority, fraternity, school , business or other insignia also available. Price depends upon labor and material involved. Send $25 deposit on repl icas other than Kappa Key. POSTCARDS Oversized for convenience and style the postcards measure 5 'h" x 8 '12''. We designed our own Kappa Owls in pen and ink and had them printed in deep blue on soft blue cards. Seven owls, some even hold ing Keys, are scattered across the top of the card . They are perfect for notes and invitations. Join the many Westcheste r Kappas currently using them. Upon rece ipt of your order we will mail them promptly. They sell 5 cards for $1 .00 plus $.33 postage for 5 cards, $ .97 pos tage fo r 25 cards, $1 .88 pos tage for 50 cards. Send orders to: Mrs. Lawrence W. Littig, 77 Paulding Dri ve, Chappaqua, New York 105 14. TH E K EY/FALL 1976 boutiqu@ THE KEY TO KAPPA COOKERY A collection of recipes from our annual Salad Sampler luncheons originated in 1967. Because of popular demand this is our 5th printing , revised and enlarged to include salad dressings and casseroles . Attractively bound in a yellow flex ible cover with an orange spiral binding. Sells for $4.00 plus 50¢ for postage and handling. Book will be sent upon receipt of order and enclosed check made payable to Detroit Alumnae Association of Kappa Kappa Gamma, c/ o Mrs. Jane Taylor, 452 Colonial Ct., Grosse Pointe Farms , Michigan 48236. KAPPA RINGS Designed for our ' 76 Convention at Coronado, these lovely Sterling Fleur-de-Lis and Owl " V" rings pictured , are being offered by the Delaware Alumnae Association . We asked Ardavast Jeweler to incorporate Kappas' symbols onto his elegant " V" design . Their popularity at Convention encouraged us to make them available to Kappas all year!. They can be worn as " pinky" rings or on any finger you chose! Just send us your ring size (use chart below) and $19 .00 plus $1 .00 postage to : Kathleen Carlson , 856 Parkside Blvd ., Claymont, Delaware, 19703. A 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 ,12 13 14 RING GUIDE Cut out chart. Wrap strip from point A around the finger on which the ring is to be worn . Measure from point A to wherever it meets the chart. Be sure to include a half-size if there is one. Be sure to indicate choice of Owl or Fleur-de-Lis ring! (Also available in 14 kt. gold on request) •• ~ ' KAPPA UPPA GIMMI PRESENTS • : BRUNCHES, LUNCHES IHO 01 NN ERS FOR TWO TO TWENTI PERSON S OWL NECKLACE Hand crafted by Margo Gross, r B -New Mexico, and sold through her shop " The Silver Fox " in cooperation with the Pittsburgh Alumnae Association . Sterling silver owl on a sterling choker $10.00, Sterling silver owl on a 16" silver chain $10.00. Postage and insurance $1 .00. Penna. res idents add 6% tax . Ma il order and checks pa ya ble to The Silver Fox, 1118 Freeport Road , Fox Chapel , Penna. 15215. NEEDLEPOINTS KITS Handpainted design on # 1 2 interlock ing mono. Light and dark blue Per sian yarn , needle and instructions included . Coasters : Key, Owl , Fleur de Lis, or Owl and Key design. $4 .00 postpaid. Key Tags : single Key or Multiple Key . Key chain included. $4.00 postpaid. Immediate delivery. Send orders - to : Mrs. Harold Kane, 4545 Laguna Place # 380, Boulder, Colorado 80303. KAPPA SCARF Originated by Frankie Welch of Alexandria, Virginia, in bright Hegler blue on White Qiana Nylon ! Scarves and other items bearin g the charming Kappa symbols make perfect initiation , graduat ion , 50- year Kappa or hostess gifts OR un ique favors for Founders' Day, installations or other Kappa occasions. THE QIANA SCARF-8" x32 " (design re peated 4 times)-$10.50 KAPPA NAPA-CHIEFS-8" x8" (as above in pima cotton-use as hankies, cocktail napkin s or favors ) each 2.50 ; 4 for 8 .50; 6 or more 2.00. KAPPA HOSTESS APRONS (long , polyester-cotton blend accented with napa-chief pocket and ruffle trim)-$7 .50. To the price of any items above add $.75 for postage and insurance. THE KAPPA PILLOW-(Qu ilted napa-chief centered on a background of light blue and white checked gin gham ; white eyelet ruffle trim) Two sizes available : 14 " x 14" $1 0 .00 ; 16" x 16" -$1 2.00. To pillow orders please add $2.00 for postage and insurance. Make checks payable to Northern Virginia Alumnae Ass 'n of K K r and send orders to Kathy Will iams, 4720 Pickett Road, Fairfax, Virgin ia 22030. ALL ORDERS FILLED PROMPTLY PROCEEDS SUPPORT KAPPA PHILANTHROPIES. TH K E"' /F LL 1976 I,I,I.I.I.I.LI.I.LI~LLI,I COOKBOOK " Brunches , Lunches, and Dinners " includes menues and recipes for 2-20 people ranging from koffee klatch , board meetings, and shower luncheons to seasonal meals, holiday dinners, cocktail hors de'oeuvres, and foreign cuisine. Total pages 84. Paper back. $3.00/ copy plus 25¢ / copy handling and mailing. All monies contributed to local rehabilitation philan thropy and scholarships. Make checks payable to Philadelphia Alumnae Association of K K r, send to Mrs. James MacLaughlin , 302 Woodward Road , Moylan, PA 19065. KEY STICKERS White with dark blue key, sticker is the size of a penny and is selfadhesive. 50¢ per page of 35, 3 pages for $1 .00, or 30 pages for $7.50. Can be used as a personal touch in sealing envelopes, placed on calendar to mark special Kappa events or meetings, used to dress up plain stationary or- Use your imagination . Send money order, cash or check with self-addressed envelope and number of pages des ired to : Nancy Lamping, 7150 Ragland Road, Cincinnati, Oh io 45244. Orders filled upon rece ipt. 0• 8 (conTinued on page :4) 53 U'"""'''ebtJIIIiqlle ... • • The "Blue Owl Boutique" held at ORDER KAPPA STATIONERY FROM Miss Cleora Wheeler Designer, Illuminator 1376 Summit Ave. St. Paul, Minn. 55105 Former Grand Registrar A quire is 24 Sheets and Envelopes: stamped gold or silver Note·size $3.50, per quire. Mailing Costs SO cents per quire. EXQUISITE G IFT BOOKS OF RITUAL. FOR INITIATIONS . SEND FOR COST AND DESCRIPTIONS. "OUTLINE PRINTS" (folder 4x5) with LARGE WHITE COAT OF ARMS , for Note Paper or Year Book covers , 100 for $10.00; 100 envlps . $3.50 , MAILING COSTS $2.00 ENCLOSED PAYMENT WITH ALL ORDERS MINIMUM: ANY SIZE STATIONERY 2 QUIRES. KAPPA CREST IN NEEDLEPOINT Your Accents 140 Ashford Dr. Dayton, Ohio 45459 The Kappa crest beautifully detailed in needlepoint. Kit includes: white #10 interlocking mono canvas, Paternayan Persian yarn , needle, and complete instructions. Finished size 14x14. Specify celery or off white background. Only $15.75 , includes postage and handling . Ohio residents add 684 sales tax. FLEUR-DE-LIS COFFEE MUGS K K r Fraternity Headquarters· P.O. Box 2079 Columbus. Ohio 43216 Kay Scholberg, currently a graduate Counselor, holds Kappa favor from 1976 Coronado Convention . This white china, footed cup or mug with blue design on two sides features the traditional !leur-de-lis symbol with stylized version imposed in white. 4" high x 3" diameter. Perfect for giftso r just for "yo u"! Order one or as many as you wish . Send $3.00 per mug to Kappa Kappa Gamma Fraternity Headquarters. This includes Postage. Orders filled upon receipt. 54 the 1976 convention was a huge success. According to Barbara Terry Henderson, f.. -Indiana, chairman of the event, gross sales amounted to $8 ,655.95. There were 59 alumnae groups participating with over 40 Kap.pas from the LaJolla, San Diego and North San Diego County groups working as volunteers to staff the boutique. Top volume groups'" Were: Indianapolis-official Karpa jewelry from the Pollack Co.; Portlandwooden ornaments; Kansas Citypainted glass ornaments and blue wooden curtain rings framing needlepoint fleur-de-lis; Lackawanaleaded glass owls, and other symbols. Northern Virginia- originally designed Kappa motif silk scarves; Pi Province-ceramic cookie presses; and San Jose-stationery and notepads. There were cookbooks galore with an especially clever one by Wichita with a zuccini collection. Needlepoint kits were a favorite as were numerous handmade items. Special Kappa _T-shirts sold --by the Los Angeles Association were also very popular and worn at convention by all ages . . . and all sizes. Irems ranged in price from 25¢ to $50 with 5% of gross sales going back to the convention treasury to defray costs of the boutique. Just to compare results the first boutique held in 1974 made $4,200. KEYS AND FLEUR-DE-LIS FOR PILLOW OR FRAME AND A KAPPA BANNER TO BRIGHTEN YOUR ROOM. KITS INCLUDE : HANDPAINTED CANVAS (5 to 1"), ACRYLIC YARN, NEEDLE AND COMPLETE INSTRUCTIONS. MAIL TO : KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA ALUMNAE CLUB P.O. BOX 2514, KANSAS CITY, KANSAS 66102 EACH KIT, $5.75 (INCLUDES POSTAGE) ALLOW 2-3 WEEKS DELIVERY KEYS (7" by 10") BACKGROUND: CREAM ONLY DESIGN : YOUR COLOR• FLEUR-DE-LIS (B" by B") BACKGROUND: CREAM ONLY DESIGN: YOUR COLOR• KAPPA BANNER: (14" by 4W') LT. BLUE & DK. BLUE ONLY (WHITE BKGD . & GOLD ACCENTS) ·coLORS (CHOOSE ONE): red , cranberry, shocking pink, purple, navy, royal, light blue, olive, kelly, brown, rust, yellow, orange, and gold . ~----------------~-----------------KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA REMEMBRANCE GIFfS Contributions to the Rose McGill Fund or Student Aid Fund in honor or memory of friend or relative may be sent to Headquarters, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Box 2079, Columbus, Ohio 43216 and are tax deductible. Please indicate the Fund, information (maiden names) and addresses for acknowledgements on this form. · Kappa Kappa Gamma Philanthropies: 0 Rose McGill 0 In memory of 0 in honor of 0 Student Aid 0 on occasion of (Name) (Chapter) _ _ __ Please send remembrance card to: (Name) - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - (Chapter) _ _ __ Address - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - City - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - State _ _ _ _ Zip _ __ CONTRIBUTORS: (Name) - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - (Chapter) _ _ __ Address - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - City - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - State _ _ _ _ Zip _ _ __ ------------------------------------THE KEY/FALL 1976 I MEMBERSHIP DATA (To be used by members of Kappa Kappa Gamma only) PICTURE NameofRushee ----------------------------------------------------------------(First) (Last) (Nickname) To ------------------------------ chapter of Kappa Kappa Gamma at ---------------------------------(College or University) Age __________ College Class: Freshman _ _ _ Sophomore ______ Junior ______ Senior ______ Name of Parent or Guardian (Give full name) Home Address (City) (Street) (Number) (State) (Zip Code) SchooiAddress(ifknown) ___________ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ Has Rushee a Kappa Relative? Sister ____ Mother _ _ _ Grandmother Other-----------------------(Check one) Name ___________________________________________________________________________________ (Married) (Maiden) (Chapter) Address------~------------------------------------------------------------------------(Street) (Number) (City) (State) (Zip Code) Has Rushee connections with other NPC groups? HighSchool----------------------------------------(Name) (City, Suburb, or community where located) Scholastic Average ____________ Rank in Class ____________ Number in Class School Attended after High School Scholastic Average Activitie --~~------- Number of terms. completed ------------ Plea e list names of organizations (explain type-school, church, community) with the rushee 's participation and leaderhip in each one. Attach additional information on separate sheet if you choose. pecial Recognition and Honor Awarded: THE KE /FALL 1976 55 Please use this portion of the form to provide information about the rushee's character traits, leadership qualities, and personality characteristics , using examples whenever possible. Indicate rushee's special interests, talents, and any other information which might serve as a means to know her better: Check one: This information is submitted on personal acquaintance with the rushee. _ _ _ I have known the rushee for _ _ _ years. Although I do not know this rushee personally, this information has been obtained from school, friends, or other reliable sources. _ __ Did the chapter request this reference after rush started? Yes ___ No _ __ I hereby endorse this rushee with the understanding she may become a pledge of the Fraternity if the chapter so desires. Signeu__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Date _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ Maiden Name Married Name _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ Chapter _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Initiation date _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___ Number Street City State Zip Code If the rushee lives in a city where there is an alumnae association or club, the signature of the MEMBERSHIP REFERENCE CHAIRMAN of that group is requested. Please forward for her counter-signature. (See the Directory in the Summer Issue of the KEY .) THE ALUMNAE MEMBERSHIP REFERI.::NCE COMMITTEE OF (Association or Club) endorses this rushee. Date _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ S i g n e d - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - · Chairman Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ Other Authorized Fraternity Signature (To be used if neces sary) Date - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Signed Title (Check One) State Chairman _ __ Membership Adviser ___ Chapter President _ __ TO BE COMPLETED BY THE CHAPTER MEMBERSHIP CHAIRMAN: Reference Endorser Acknowledged Date pledged _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ ___ Signed , Active Membership Chairman _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Chapter IF RUSHEE IS PLEDGED TO KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA, SEND THIS BLANK TO TJIE DIRECTOR OF MEMBERSHIP WITHIN 10 DAYS OF PLEDGING. Calendar for Alumnae and House Boards Alumnae officers Club officers responsible for reports with * OCTOBER Founders' Day-13th *PRESIDENT 30. Sends program , alumnae directory and form listing officer changes to Fraternity Headquarters, Director of Alumnae and Province Director of Alumnae. NOVEMBER TREASURER 10. Mails a copy of estimated budget for current year to Province Director of Alumnae. JANUARY TREASURER I. Mails to Fraternity Headquarters check with annual fees report form for the current year. ARC CHAIRMAN I. Mails report and annual fees to Fraternity Headquarters. *PRESIDENT 25. Appoints Chairman of Membership Committee and mails name and address to Province Director of Alumnae. PROVINCE DIRECTOR OF ALUMNAE 20. Mails names and addresses of membership chairmen in province to Fraternity Headquarters and to Director of Mem- bership. Mails names and addresses of City Panhellenic Delegates to NPC Delegate. APRIL TREASURER 30. Mails two copies of treasurer's Financial and Audit report to Province Director of Alumnae. Mails Philanthropy report per instructions. *PRESIDENT 30. Mails one copy of annual report to Province Director of Alumnae. *SECRETARY 30. (Or immediately following election) sends one copy of officer list to Fraternity Headquarters, one each to Director of Alumnae. MAY *MEMBERSHIP CHAIRMAN 10. Chairman sends order blank for reference forms to Fraternity Headquarters. PROVINCE DIRECTOR OF ALUMNAE 20. Sends to Director of Alumnae Annual Report. Sends one copy of Philanthropy Report Director of Alumnae, to Director of Philanthropy and Rehabilitation Chairman. PRESIDENT 30. (Or before.) Appoints City Panhellenic Delegate and mails name and address in duplicate to Province Director of Alumnae. (cominuedfrom page 6) cause of the significant potential resource among alumnae members to provide help in this area, the committee on Alumnae Resolutions recommends that the Council study the adoption of a program whereby alumnae groups could be encouraged to undertake career information program of benefit to actives and pledges, and whereby alumnae advisers would be encouraged to insure an awarene s among actives and pledges of available career counseling." (Gay Barry, director of alumnae, has been appointed chairman of this study committee on career counseling and been a ked to report to the Council at their January meeting.) "Re olved, That Council establish a Loyalty Fund toreceive voluntary contributions to the Fraternity to promote the program of the Fraternity, and that a committee be appointed to explore way of promoting this fund a oon a po ible." (Eloi e Pingry, former director of philanthropie , ha been appointed chairman of thi tudy committee.) uzanne rimm Milligan , delegate of the Columbu , hio Alumnae A ociation presented the following re olution a hairman of the Re olution and Recommendation Committee. ' Wherea The delegate to the ational Panhellenic in ol ed in major area of Fraternity operaHer attendan e at Council meeting i an TH K Y/F LL 1976 House Board officers FEBRUARY PRESIDENT 20. Returns House Director Appointment form to Fraternity Headquarters. MAY TREASURER 15. Mails Audit Fee to Fraternity Headquarters. JUNE TREASURER 30. (Or two weeks after books are closed) mails Annual Report to Fraternity Headquarters and Chairman of Chapters Housing. PR ESIDENT 30. Mails names and addresses of House Board Officers to Fraternity Headquarters a nd Chairman of Chapter Housing. JULY TREASURER 10. Mails material for annual audit to Fraternity Headquarters. 15. (On or before) mails a copy of June 30 audit to Fraternity Headquarters, if books are audited locally. Revised 1975 established fact; "Resolved, That a Bylaw amendment be proposed to the 1978 convention adding the office of National Pan hellenic Conference Delegate to the Council of Trustees." (Phyllis Pryor, National Panhellenic Conference Delegate, has been appointed chairman of this study committee.) Province Meetings Scheduled Province Dates Hostesses Alpha Beta March 4-6 April 22-24 Gamma Delta Epsilon Zeta Eta Theta Iota Kappa Lambda Mu u Xi Omicron Pi April15-17 February 25-27 April15-17 March 25-27 April22-24 April 1-3 March 4-6 April 15-17 March 25-27 April15-17 March 25-27 February 25-27 April 1-3 April 22-24 Toronto, BI.J' Valley Forge, Philadelphia, BA Granville, ro Ann Arbor, Btl Bloomington , E St. Louis, r I Denver, Boulder, BM Austin, B.= (75th B'Day) Seattle, Bn Los Angeles, tl T Chapel Hill E r Clemson EM Nashville, E Tul a, tln Iowa City, BZ Corvallis , r M Check the Winter I ue of The Key for all detail 57 Curtain time Omaha alumnae had a Bicentennial sewing bee and made cafe curtains for Sigma Chapter at the University of Nebraska. First and second floor bedrooms were ready for rush week, but the "Cinderellas" on third floor had to wait for a later shipment. Beating the blahs Promising Pilot Several Philadelphia alumnae are working with an enrichment program for women known as project "IDENTITY," a series of workshops-conducted by experts-on such topics as time management, loneliness, assertiveness, finances and fashion . Heading the project is Catherine Lanham Miller, fj. -Indiana (left), author of "How to Say Ses to Life: A Woman's Guide to Beating the Blahs." Two of her volunteer assistants are Clare Van Dyk Burtch, B T -Syracuse, and Patricia Handley Turney, i\Akron. With co-writer Spring Asher, Wicke Oliver Chambers, fj. YGeorgia, has produced books, magazine articles, and a popular newspaper column . Now the two Atlanta wives and mothers have turned television producers, making a pilot film called "City Kid" which they hope to expand into a series for national TV. .Motivated by a conviction that children's programming must be improved , they 've studied the field and enlisted advice from producers of the acclaimed "Electric Company" series. Their pilot is receiving excellent reviews. "The number to call in Denver is. " To help keep evening and weekend programming on Denver's P. B. S. station , Kappa alumnae joined with Pi Beta Phi alumnae to conduct a " Kappa-Pi Phi Pledge Night." The alumnae staffed telephones at station KAMA and recorded pledges of donations called in by viewers. Fun and profits 1909 initiate At left, Joan Linder Magee, /j.O-Iowa State, with the pride of the Dearborn Area Alumnae Club, 67-year member Ada Adams King, E -Illinois Wesleyan. 58 Columbus alumnae met with Beta Nu actives at the Ohio State University chapter house for an auction of handmade items, plants and baked goods. Alumnae co-chairmen Dorothy Ann McGinnis Kreinbihl and her daughter, Anne Kreinbihl, both BN, say much credit for the evening's success goes to lively auctioneer Doris ("always and still called 'Pearley' " ) Mandel Brewer, r 0- Denison , who helped boost the evening's fun and profits. Omega reunion Eleven members of the 1936 pledge class of Omega Chapter at Kansas University met recently in Wichita! Reunion planners were Sis Morris Sweeney, Virginia Lee Steeves Meyer and Betty Kester Holmer. Others attending were Marge Spearing Downey, Helen Geis Westlund, Virginia Shelden Wilhelm , Betty Gene Sayles Fleming, Betty Ann Yankey Rogers, Peggy Lynch Boerstler, Dorie Johnson Hewins and Maurine Gray Springer. THE KEY/FALL 1976 more alumnae news Archie's other wife "The real Mrs. Carroll O'Connor is nothing like Edith Bunker, the dingbatty, kitchen-bound housewife of All in the Family," said an article in the Los Angeles Times entitled "Archie's Other Woman ." In fact, the story said Nancy Fields O'Connor (B<l>Montana) is a gifted actress and painter who manages a busy household with skill, whether the family is living here or abroad. Recently Nancy and her husband were named 1976 co-chairmen of the U.S. campaign for the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF). She is the daughter of Hulda Miller Fields, B<l>-Monformer province officer and former director of membership. Calling all curlers Curling? It's a fascinating winter team sport shared by over 5,000 American women, many of them Kappas. To find who the Kappa curlers in their area might be, Maxine Binet Gilboy, H -Wisconsin, and Annabelle Perry Lueck, 88 -Oklahoma, organized a " Kappa Kuri-Off" at Kettle Moraine Curling Club in Delafield, Wis., and sent invitations to 27 area clubs. Response was so great they plan to make the Kurloff an annual event. Curling is an ice sport in which contending parties " deliver" special stones from one mark to another. Sportsmanship is all-important, so games begin and end with a handclasp from each participant, and a wish of " Good Curling" is a must. It's great fun and offers rewards of good exercise and fellowship. Eighty clubs may be found in 19 states. Maxine has been women 's editor of North American Curling News, and if you wish to know the club nearest you , wr ite Mrs. J. E. Gilboy, 100 Beggs Isle, Oconomowoc, WI, 53066. THE K E / F LL 1976 Still Picking Former Kappa Pickers of Delta Chapter at Indiana University have organized as Alumnae Pickers. From left: (front) Nancy Jeanne Baker Manthey, Patricia Haddock Biber, and Peggy Jones Everetts, (back) Deborah Cui- Judy's book is Mmmmmmmmm good You've heard her speak at Convention or read about her in THE KEY (Summer, 1976). Here-in response to several Inquiries-is additional information about the cookbook edited by Fraternity Achievement Award winner Judy Ford Stokes, EE -Emory. "Atlanta Cooks for Company" is the name of Judy's book, and it Is published by the Junior Associates of the Atlanta Music Club, of which Judy is a member. Featured In the Ladies Home Journal and cited by the Chicago Tribune as one of 10 outstanding regional cookbooks in the nation, the book also has received attention from The Washington Post and other major newspapers recently. Ioden Hudson, Betty Jane Carr . Crockett, Sue Rosebrough Worthington , and Marilyn Hudson . The latter was one of the origi- · nal Delta Pickers who began performing in 1959 "as a joke" and later became so proficient they recorded three albums, and made two u.s.a. tours. When Democratic Presidential Nominee Jimmy Carter was governor of Georgia, he hosted a reception for Judy and other Music Club members In the governor's mansion to recognize the book, which happens to Include a favorite Carter recipe, "Plains Special" Cheese Ring. Great for Kappa gift-giving, "Atlanta Cooks for Company" is available in major book stores or by writing Mrs. Frank Law, 721 Cumberland Circle N.E., Atlanta, Ga. 30306. ($5.00 per copy, plus 50 cents for handling-Checks payable to Cookbook-Atlanta Music Club). Alumnae who own book stores or gift shops may obtain wholesale order information from Mrs. Law. All proceeds from Judy's book benefit scholarship funds or philanthropic projects. 59 a ~ u 'ii. Fill out card and mail (with label attached) to Fraternity Headquarters, P.O. Box 2079, Co1umbus; Ohio 43216. Also notify your chapter. eu i: ~ chapter advisor Date _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ Deceased. New marriage date Widowed Divorced -----'--- (show name preference below) Special interest, ability, occupation: NEW NAME IF DIFFERENT FROM ATTACHED LABEL TITLE LAST, FIRST I I I I I I I I MIDDLE I I I a: PLEASE PRINT LLI l- en c( New Address : ::! l- en 0 0.. ----------------------------------------------------J 0. P'LllbA K CO. 1700 W. Irving Pk. Rd ., Chicago, Ill. 60613 OUR AUTHORIZED JEWELER • JEWELRY SERVICENTERS ON ALL CAMPUSES • FREE CATALOG AVAILABLE FROM POLLACK • BADGES ORDERED THROUGH FRATERNITY HEAD QUARTERS ' LAVALIERS • Charm 1-2LL/27 2 - 3LL / 13D 34567- 3LLI02S 3LLI09 3LLI12 3LLI02V CC/ 07 10K Gold Filled $12 . 50 13.50 Chain Key Three D im ension (Gold Pl ate Charm/Gold Filled Chain , $8 .00) Staggered Monogram Circle with Monogram Heart with Monogram Vertical Monogram Crest 10K Sterling Silver 10K Sterling Silver $19.00 $ 8 .00 20.00 7 .50 9 .50 10.00 10 . 75 9 .50 13.50 16 .00 16 .50 17.25 16 .00 6 .50 8.00 8 .00 6.50 8.00 OTHER INSIGNIA 8-PI/ 9 - MB/13 10-CA/25 11 - MG /1 1 PLEDGE PIN RECOGNITION PINS : Gold Plate Key-Gold Filled 10K Crest-Gold F illed Monogram-Plain Staggered - Gold Filled $ 2 .00 2.25 4 .00 12.00 3 . 50 3.50 RINGS 1 2 ·SA/531 13 - SA /1 35 14-SA/366 15-SA/165 --Sterl i ng Silver A ecessed Letters $19.50 S i gnet (rectangular) 16 .00 S i gnet (oval) 14.00 Key 15.00 16- B / 63 Key 10K Yellow Gold $35.50 32 .00 28.50 32.00 BRACELET Sterling S ilver 1 / 10 10K Gold Filled $16 .00 19 .50 CHAPTER GUAROS (Not Illustrated) 1 -Letter CG / 06 CG / 09 CG / 07 CG/08 Pla in Engraved (Chased) Close Set Pearl Crown Set Pearl $8.70 9 .65 14.50 18.50 I) &.~ .._o a"' >< M a,g .,"iic ~~ Initiation Yr. house board off_icer _ __ Check if you are : alumnae officer -~ ~ a u NAME OR ADDRESS CHANGE Chapter Maiden Name Check if: eu :;; e ea Lb!!!!L $11 . 70 13.55 23.50 29 .50 PR I.CES SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE """