Publication information |
Source: Brief Source type: journal Document type: news column Document title: “The Fraternity” Author(s): anonymous Date of publication: October 1901 Volume number: 3 Issue number: 4 Pagination: 435-45 (excerpt below includes only pages 436-37) |
Citation |
“The Fraternity.” Brief Oct. 1901 v3n4: pp. 435-45. |
Transcription |
excerpt |
Keywords |
Phi Delta Phi; William McKinley; Theodore Roosevelt. |
Named persons |
Roberts P. Hudson; William McKinley; Theodore Roosevelt. |
Document |
The Fraternity [excerpt]
McKinley and Roosevelt.
It is unusual for any order to have as members
both the President and the Vice-President and probably no other fraternity has
had the high honor. The catalogue at present does not contain the name of William
McKinley, but several members of Swan chapter inform us that he was duly initiated
by their chapter as an honorary member and that the chapter roll so records.
The delegates to the Sixth Convention at Washington recall with pleasure the
special audience Mr. McKinley gave them and the interested and gracious way
in which he greeted them and inquired about the welfare and condition of the
Fraternity.
Theodore Roosevelt was initiated while an undergraduate
at Columbia law school, but the Phi Delta Phi virus did not take very well,
for when he visited Ann Arbor, Mich., some few years ago, and was met by a committee
from Kent chapter [436][437] and invited to the
chapter house, he asserted that he was not a member—so Mr. Roberts P. Hudson
of the Council tells us. He knew the Story club at Columbia, but he did not
know Phi Delta Phi. Since then, the New York Club has changed Mr. Roosevelt’s
views on the matter, but the incident well shows the result of conducting a
fraternity on the old laisser-faire [sic] idea, which formerly obtained.