Page 94 - 1930 October - To Dragma
P. 94

OCTOBER, 1930  89

hockey and track her sophomore year and serving as winter sports manager. Her
junior year she again made varsity hockey and was head track manager. For
these activities she received her half and full numerals.

     Since her freshman year, "Home" has been on Y.W.C.A. cabinet and last
year served as treasurer of this body. She proved a very capable treasurer of our
chapter last year and is holding the office again this year.

     In her sophomore year "Hoffie" was vice president of her class; in her junior
year, president, and in this capacity served on
Junior Prom committee and Customs com-
mittee. She is now senior women's class presi-
dent.

      Last year and this year she has been on
the staff of the Collegian, college semi-weekly
publication, and is woman's editor of La Vie,
college annual. She was also our active chap-

ter editor for To DRAGMA.

      In scholarship "Hoffie" gained a place on
the Liberal Arts Honor Roll her first two years,
and received the Honor Society Medal her
sophomore year. This last year she won the
Stecker Mathematics Prize and the State Fed-
eration of Pennsylvania Women's Scholarship.

      "Hoffie" has been delegate to Campus
 Club's Council, local Panhellenic for two years.
She was pledged to Archousai, senior women's
 honorary corresponding to Mortar Board, and
 is senior adviser to Alpha Lambda Delta, na-
 tional scholastic honorary for women.

             Cfolk School Is Successful

                                    (Continued from page 49)
knee hanging baskets and rag rug making as their various objectives. Sixty-three
women are working on individual objectives adopted voluntarily by them at Folk
School. There has been a parish-wide beautification plan, which is being worked
out. Even the negroes have caught the contagion and are beautifying their churches,
schools, and homes.

     Every evening at the end of the Folk School day as car passed car going home
People would wave to one another, strangers previously, but now classmates. New
friendships, new human interests. This itself is no small result.

     In the beginning we felt if only one returned home with a bigger vision, our
work would not have been in vain. Are we idealists when we dare hope that in
the hearts of many in that crowd there were stirrings and awakenings that would
oear fruit in the years to come?

                  We Wish To Regret

     Betty Hiestand Smith refuses to be credited to Eta chapter as she was in the
M a y issue. She belongs to Rho.

     It is with great regret that we read of the passing of the Reverend Dr. David
^ouriey Wylie, the father of Jane Dwight Wylie (Alpha '09). Dr. Wylie had been
a leader in the Presbyterian denomination for years, and on the morning of his

 eath presided over a session of the General Bible Conference. Our sympathy goes
°ut to his family.
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