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---------------------------- Q: Who was Betty Crocker? A: One of the best-known women of the interwar years—Betty Crocker—never existed. The Washburn Crosby Company of Minneapolis, one of the six big milling companies that merged into General Mills in 1928, received thousands of requests each year in the late 1910s and early 1920s for answers to baking questions. In 1921, managers decided that it would be more intimate to sign the responses personally; they combined the last name of a retired company executive, William Crocker, with the first name “Betty,” which was thought of as “warm and friendly.” The signature came from a secretary, who won a contest among female employees. (The same signature still appears on Betty Crocker products.) In 1924, Betty Crocker acquired a voice with the radio debut of the nation’s first cooking show, which featured thirteen different actresses working from radio stations across the country. Later it became a national broadcast, The Betty Crocker School of the Air, which ran for twenty-four years. Finally, in 1936 Betty Crocker got a face. Artist Neysa McMein brought together all the women in the company’s Home Service Department and “blended their features into an official likeness.” The widely circulated portrait reinforced the popular belief that Betty Crocker was a real woman. One public opinion poll rated her as the second most famous woman in America after Eleanor Roosevelt. Over the next seventy-five years, her face has changed seven times: she became younger in 1955; she became a “professional” woman in 1980; and in 1996 she became multicultural, acquiring a slightly darker and more “ethnic” look. P.S. Sara Lee is a real person! Sources; Charles Panati, Panati’s Extraordinary Origins of Everyday Things (1989); Milton Moskowitz, Robert Levering, and Michael Katz, Everybody’s Business: A Field Guide to the 400 Leading Companies in America (1990); Tulsa World, March 27, 1996. -------------------- The many faces of Betty: http://chnm.gmu.edu/features/sidelig...s/bettys1.jpeg http://chnm.gmu.edu/features/sidelig...s/bettys2.jpeg |
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So next time you bake, think of my g-pas neighbor! |
My mom was friends with the lady on the Blue Bonnet package. I don't know if she was in a sorority. :)
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don't take this one too seriously, i'm being SILLY!
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Re: don't take this one too seriously, i'm being SILLY!
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Don't forget these "legends":
Trident gum was so named b/c the product manager's wife is a Tri-Delt. Wrigley's Spearmint Gum was developed by Pi Phi, and marked with the arrow. Hallmark is owned by a ZTA, hence the crown. I've heard the rumor Anne Klein is an ADPi b/c of the trademark lion, but I've never known it to be confirmed. Even if it's true, or not true, it's still fun to see our symbols! I love the carpool lane for the diamonds! :) I don't think it matters or not what "famous" people are members of our GLO's. It is fun to be proud of the "brand," but at the end of the day it matters more the people who are there for you who make your sisterhood/brotherhood a home to you. :) Pi Love, An ADPi |
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I remember that from my college roommate. I don't know if it is true of just a coincidence that Anne Klein's lion earrings were popular back then. I saw on a website that Betsy Johnson the designer was a DG, but that was the first I'd heard of it. |
Jenny is not Greek
I pledged Phi Sigma Kappa at SIU Carbondale in 1991. I was very active in the IFC, and tuned into the system. Take my word for it, (or not I suppose) she did go to School at SIUC, and she did NOT "Go Greek". She did however, work at a Greek hangout called The American Tap (I miss that place) as a bartender.
Thanks. |
Well I wasn't too sure about SJP, that's why I posted here online!
I've heard about Anne Klein being an ADPi, but I can't seem to find a straight answer about that....!?! Someone even mentioned it over in the ADPi forum, but I'm not 100% sure. What I AM 100% sure about is that Judy Woodruff (aka of CNN fame) is an ADPi...in fact she is a member of my chapter (Omicron--Duke University)....not that she's anything like SJP or anything :) -Emily |
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I'm fairly certain that Anne Klein is not an ADPi, but has been given some sort of an honorary status due to her wonderful trademark lions. I think I remember seeing that in an Adelphean a while ago. A fun thread would be "Celebrities Who Pledged, but never got initated"! I know that Farrah Fawcett was a Tri-Delt pledge, and Michelle Pfeiffer was an ADPi pledge - there has to be more! (edited to correct Anne Klein's trademark "loins" to "lions"!! What was I thinking?!?!?!?) |
Okay... so I did a search and this is what I found on the Betty Crocker/Greek story. She is listed on the Kappa Alpha Theta Web site as a famous Theta (kappaalphatheta.org):
Marjorie Child Husted Creator and Director of the Betty Crocker Homemaking Service for General Mills, beginning in 1928. Child was the voice of Betty Crocker on radio. Upsilon/University of Minnesota As for Betsy Johnson, I have heard she was in several sororities, but in interviews with her, have never even heard her mention college... does anyone know? I adore her clothes! |
The following is from an article in the Ohio University Post on the Ohio Valley Summer Theatre from last year...
"Also, some current Hollywood actors got their first taste of acting in OVST. "Sarah Jessica Parker was a little girl in ooDark of the Moonoo in 1968," Evarts said. "Her mother was very active in OVST." Other performers such as Richard Dean Anderson, who played the title role in the TV series ooMacGyveroo and Louise Fletcher, who won an Academy Award for her part as the nurse in ooOne Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nestoo also acted in OVST productions." I can't find the documentation, but here's what I believe to be true: Sarah Jessica Parker grew up in Athens, Ohio, the home of Ohio University where either one or both of her parents were/are on the faculty. I have never seen anything to indicate that she attended O.U. or was in any Greek Organization. I think, as has been mentioned above, that she went for acting and dance lessons insead of college. Before another thread begins, Piper Perabo (Coyote Ugly) did receive her college degree with honors from the Ohio University Theatre Department -- but was not in any O.U. sorority chapter. |
Born in Nelsonville, OH, on March 25, 1965, as the fourth of eight siblings, Parker grew up in relative poverty following the divorce of her mother, an elementary school teacher, and her father, an aspiring writer. Raised by her mother and often out-of-work stepfather, she trained as a dancer and singer, bringing home paychecks from a young age.
------------- DeltAlum, is Nelsonville near Athens? Thanks for the information! Maybe our next thread should be "Who's NOT in a Sorority? Clearing up rumours and urban legends." :p |
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Oh and DeltAlum, the rumor started last year right after recruitment that Piper Perabo was a Pi Phi but that was quickly cleared up. Her brother did think about pledging a fraternity but I believe he decided to focus on acting. Oh, and don't forget Mallory Keaton WAS in a sorority ON THE SHOW. I have no idea about what Tracey Gold (is that her name) might have done. |
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Lioness exagerates just a little. Nelsonville is about 12 miles North of Athens on US Route 33 which is the road to Columbus -- so it's really more like 10 minutes away. (Actually, I'm staying at a new hotel in Nelsonville for OU Homecoming this Fall because it costs about 1/3 as much as the Athens hotels inflated rates for that weekend.) It does have several traffic lights, but is a pretty small, fairly poor town. The big event there was the annual, "Nelsonville Parade of the Hills" at which I had to do a remote broadcast for an Athens station one year before Nelsonville got its own radio station. Starting to get the picture? I wonder if Sarah was ever Miss Parade of the Hills? I digress. There are a number of O.U. faculty and/or staff members who live there -- or in small towns or enclaves (good word, huh?) in between. Basically, the entire Southeast Ohio (Apalacian) region centers socially and economically around Athens and the University, so even if neither of her parents worked for O.U. (I'm still pretty sure I read that at least one of them did), it would explain her mother's interest in the Theatre there. My wife's degree is in Theatre from Ohio, and worked OVST a couple of years, but wasn't in Dark of the Moon, although she may have worked the show. The department has turned out several moderate to fairly large TV and movie celebrities, but I don't know if any were Greek so I'm not starting any more urban (if you can call Athens that) legends. |
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