Scrapbook, 1921-1925 / Elisabeth M. Lineken.

ArchivalResource

Scrapbook, 1921-1925 / Elisabeth M. Lineken.

A scrapbook compiled by Elisabeth Lineken Friend while a student at the University of Maine. It contains signatures and comments of class members, and photographs, brochures, clippings and memorabilia about campus buildings and activities. Of particular interest are photographs of women's athletic teams and those that document Friend's membership in Phi Mu Fraternity.

1 v. ; 31 x 44 cm.

Information

SNAC Resource ID: 7952093

Raymond H. Fogler Library

Related Entities

There are 3 Entities related to this resource.

University of Maine

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6nw37rk (corporateBody)

The University of Maine saw approximately 1,000 students and alumni serve in World War I and 3,900 serve in World War II. Both wars had a strong effect on the university and its students; the desire to honor those who had served and to memorialize those who had died led to various activities on campus. After the end of World War I, funds were raised to erect the Memorial Gymnasium and Armory and after World War II, those who had died were honored in a volume titled "University of Maine, World Wa...

Friend, Elisabeth L.

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w67d4v74 (person)

Elisabeth Lineken, the daughter of Alvah J. and Gertrude Greenleaf Lineken, was born in Thomaston, Maine, Jan. 1, 1903. She graduated from the University of Maine in 1925 with a B.S. degree in home economics. She worked for many years as a nutritionist at the Maine Women's Correctional Center, Skowhegan. She married Francis H. Friend in 1928. Elisabeth Friend died Feb. 10, 1971. From the description of Scrapbook, 1921-1925 / Elisabeth M. Lineken. (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 660059...

Phi Mu Fraternity

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6r25hf8 (corporateBody)

Early in 1923, several seniors in the College of Engineering at the University of Maryland who had high scholastic rankings met to organize a local honorary engineering fraternity. As a result of this meeting, and with the approval of the president of the university, the honorary engineering fraternity Phi Mu was officially formed at the University of Maryland with the adoption of its constitution on March 27, 1923. The founders as well as the first charter members were: J. H. Harlow, M. J. Bald...