Page 48 - 1912 May - To Dragma
P. 48
TO DRAG MA QrF ALPHA 0 MIC RON PI 167
have engaged a luncheon table f o r Tuesdays at Whyte's restaurant
on Fulton street, where any members, active or associate, may drop
in f o r lunch and discuss i n f o r m a l l y any matters that may be of i n -
terest.
The month of March was given up mostly to work and very little
to play. Our one social activity as a f r a t e r n i t y was to give a dinner
at the fraternity room on March 28th. A f t e r this dinner plans were
discussed f o r a dinner to be given i n honor o f the f a c u l t y after the
Bar examinations on A p r i l 16th.
On March 16th the Women's Association of New York Univer-
sity Law School gave a tea f o r a l l women students and alumnae, at
which two of Nu's associate members, Miss Bertha Rembaugh and
Mrs. Marion B . Cothern, were speakers.
We w i l l retain our pleasant fraternity room at the Law School,
although it is feared that we may sooner or later have to give it up
on account of the crowded condition of the building. This would
prove a real misfortune to us, as i t is now the only place where we
can be by ourselves. Nu's lack of dormitory l i f e is quite a handicap
in the way of fraternity life or fraternity activities.
A L I C E L . CLARK, Secretary, N u Chapter.
OMICRON, UNIVERSITY OF TENNESSEE
Girls, i t seems quite strange that what h a d b i d f a i r to be O m i -
crons brightened letter was destined to be her saddest.
Of course you have not heard of the sad death of Janie Mayo.
A n d you who have never f e l t the loss o f so grand and lovable a
member can not realize how heart broken we are just now.
I t was on March 22nd that our Heavenly Father took her to be
w i t h h i m and l e f t us to long f o r her and wonder why.
Janie was one o f the finest girls that I have ever known, so true
and sincere, so noble i n aspiration and l o f t y i n ideal. She was a
g i r l whom everyone loved and her death came as a great shock to a l l .
Some outsiders said A O I I meant more to Janie than to anyone
that they knew but we say that Janie meant more to A O I I , not only
to O m i c r o n chapter, but to the whole f r a t e r n i t y f o r she was a g i r l
possessed o f a l l o f the attributes o f a true A l p h a O of whom the
whole fraternity might be proud.
A more loyal member and a truer f r i e n d could not be found and
i f A O I I had meant nothing more than the friendship of such a
g i r l it would have been well worth while.
We are crushed at the loss o f so valuable a member but through
our faith in the divine wisdom of God we are able to feel with Long-
fellow :

