Page 84 - 1925 September - To Dragma
P. 84
TO DRAGMA OF ALPHA OMICRON PI 73
house? Lest you think, however, that all we cherish about Mary Dee is
her culinary accomplishments, let me hasten to add that there are a thou-
sand and one ways in which she will be missed, by the group as a whole
and by individuals within it. But you are wondering where she has van-
ished. Really not so far. She is living in Evanston now, and some of the
girls are already planning on paying her a visit in the near future.
Edith Huntington Anderson attended convention with six months' old
Barbara Jane. A f t e r convention she stayed on a few weeks with her
husband's family. A good visit with Edith made a bright spot in conven-'
tion memories for many a Tau girl. Edith and Mary Dee, the only girls
not of Tau whose names appear in these notes are just as truly of Tau, in
our estimation, as they are of Alpha Phi and Beta Phi, their own chapters.
Spike Reinertson has spent the summer in Virginia, driving the family
Ford, and acting as athletic counselor for two weeks at the Y. W . camp.
Spike will be through the cities and will spend a few days with Betty Bond
on her way to teach at West Concord, Minnesota.
Grace O'Brien has returned to Cleveland. She spent a month in
Duluth with her family after taking her M . A . examinations this spring at
the University.
Ruth O'Brien will teach Latin at the University High school this
year.
Helen Gates will teach mathematics in Austin, Minnesota this year.
She will be near Helene in Albert Lea. Helen spent the summer at Yel-
lowstone.
Helen Turner Dawson was in St. Paul this spring when she and her
husband attended the international Kiwanis convention.
Lila Kline was called home this summer by the illness of her father.
Margaret Howarth Nelson reports a very interesting time as a libra-
rian in the lending department of the Boys' and Girls' Bookstore, which
is run by the Women's Union in Boston.
Margaret Doyle Stevning has been very i l l . We are glad that she
is better now, and that she had been home from the hospital over a week
when this went to press.
Katherine Doyle will teach Home Economics at Superior, Wisconsin,
this year.
ENGAGEMENTS
Catherine T i f f t and Bill Merrill, Acacia, are to be married, we hear,
sometime in October. They will make their home in Montevideo, Minne-
sota, where Bill is engaged in the practice of law.
MARRIAGES
Dan Cupid has been more than busy shooting his golden arrows
around in Tau chapter's preserves this spring. We have no less than seven
weddings to record. ,
Margaret Doyle was married to Oliver O. Stevning in May. Margaret
and Oliver will make their home in Minneapolis.
Wilma Helen Smith, a this year's senior, was married at the Grace
Episcopal church in Sioux City, Iowa to Leland F. Leland, whom many
of you will remember as editor of the Minnesota Alumni Weekly. Dor'u
Bowers was maid of honor at Wihna's wedding. M r . and Mrs. Leland
will be at home after September 15 in their new home in St. Louis Park.
Wilma will take some graduate work in the English department at the uni-
versity. She will make a dandy addition to Minneapolis alumnae chapter.
Irma Fliehr was married on September 12th to Arthur Regan, a Beta,
and a graduate of Princeton. Arthur and Irma will live in Minneapolis
too. Dorothy Womrath and Spike Reinertson were Irma's bridesmaids.
Her wedding took place at Virginia, Minnesota.

