National Collegiate Players

National Collegiate Players also known as Pi Epsilon Delta (ΠΕΔ) was an honor society for participants in collegiate theatre founded in 1919.[1]

National Collegiate Players/
Pi Epsilon Delta
ΠΕΔ
FoundedJune 8, 1919 (1919-06-08)
University of Wisconsin
TypeHonorary
EmphasisTheatre
PublicationPlayers

History

Pi Epsilon Delta was established at the University of Wisconsin on June 8, 1919. The first group contained 17 men and women including 4 faculty members. Key people included the first president Ray E. Holcolm, first vice president Lawrence W. Murphy and Frances Allen Tucker who designed the key which was the emblem of the organization. It was established as a purely honorary group.

By 1922, additional chapters were present at Washington University of St. Louis, University of Minnesota and Northwestern University. In that year, Pi Epsilon Delta merged with Associated University Players to form National Collegiate Players . The ideals and scope of the new National Collegiate Players were identical to those of Pi Epsilon Delta. Associated University Players had been founded in 1913 at University of Illinois and had chapters at Ohio University, University of Washington and University of Oregon. All but University of Washington voted to join the merged organization. The name National Collegiate Players had been adopted due to resistance to greek letter organizations, being viewed as yet another secret order. The Key and Motto of Pi Epsilon Delta were maintained in the new organization.[1]

Jewelry and Symbols

The Pi Epsilon Delta pin contained the two masks of drama and the letters Pi Epsilon Delta.[2]

gollark: No.
gollark: No.
gollark: Yes, I can program literally anything whatsoever*.
gollark: Bee neuron data.
gollark: New nuclear technology would be safer. It just isn't actually deployed anywhere. The waste isn't a significant issue and I don't think it contributes much to costs.

References

  1. Joder, A. B. (March 1, 1942). "National Collegiate Players". The Southern Speech Journal. Routledge. 7 (4). doi:10.1080/10417944209370826.
  2. Wisconsin Art Portfolio Badger. Junior Class of the University of Wisconsin. 1921. p. 448.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.