Truly, since our founding in 1874 we have sustained a commendable fraternal reputation at the University of Maine, and that is a measurable fact due to the fact that we are not a static, one-dimensional brotherhood. We value that our brothers have different gifts and talents. Our brothers have been meaningfully involved in the University of Maine community since the early years of its founding. Our success-oriented fraternal mindset can be seen in the great number of brothers who were athletes, actors, artists, musicians, editors, writers, R.O.T.C, cadets, and contributing members in other clubs and organizations in the university community. They were engaged and dedicated, and they each made a personal commitment to strive to be their best in their respective commitments. Everything that they did greatly enhanced the sense of community, and that is the most valuable aspect of their respective commitments. They were impactful brothers for the greater good of the University of Maine community and, in addition, many of these brothers were recognized as top leaders. Their character and sense of responsibility spoke volumes. And, consequently, many of these brothers were chosen to to be Sophomore Owls and Senior Skulls because they exhibited remarkable qualities of leadership, integrity, reliability, and a positive spirit to undertake various responsibilities and challenges and succeed. All of these brothers understood and honestly embodied Pete Carroll's "Responsibility Quotient" that led to their individual success, as well as the success of the various teams, groups, bands, orchestras, and organizations that they were members of at the University of Maine. Amazing things can happen when spirit, mind, and body work in concert. They desired success and they worked hard for it, and they all remain a blessing in our fraternal history, and in the history of the University of Maine. With regards to the later, we remain the oldest fraternal story at Maine. Without a doubt, our collaborative fraternal effort will continue to add rich new chapters to our fraternal story, as young men continue to bring their individual talents and gifts to enrich our brotherhood and the University of Maine community because amazing things can happen when spirit, mind, and body work in concert, and we have proven that fact for 150 years. With poise, rigor, and aplomb, many of our brothers have excelled academically at the University of Maine have been tapped into Phi Beta Kappa, and one brother was the first University of Maine student to be be awarded a Rhodes Scholarship to Oxford University. To use Pascal’s “safe wager” argument, these brothers consistently made the wager that academics mattered, that themes and ideas were worth thinking about, that words and ideas matter, that reading and writing matters, that wrestling with questions matter, that studying and being prepared for class matters, that understanding the subject matters, that creative and critical thinking matters, that taking risks matters, and that talking and asking questions in class matters. With confidence and enthusiasm, these brothers accepted the intellectual and emotional wager and won with honesty and authentic “perseverance and determination” beyond the minimal acceptable requirement. Congratulations, Senior Skull brothers, Phi Beta Kappa brothers, and our Rhodes Scholar brother. Academic and otherwise, our Omega Mu brothers continue to work hard to achieve their potential in all matters with an uncommon level of persistence and determination. Yet in the end, we have been fraternally doing this for 150 years, and we will continue to do so. There is no disputing the fact that we are the oldest unbroken fraternal brotherhood at the University of Maine, and our brotherhood is still in place at 79 College Avenue with no attached chains of fraternally limiting thoughts and ideas that we will not be here for another 150 years. We are thankful for all the Q.T.V. and Phi Gamma Delta brothers who have shaped and defined our unbroken historic brotherhood, and we are thankful for hard work of the present undergraduate brothers and the new Omega Mu pledges who recently accepted the white star. We continue to be men of fraternal good will, cordial fraternal warmth, and determinative fraternal drive in all areas. We do everything with fraternal energy and enthusiasm because we remain the pioneering, evolving brotherhood at the University of Maine. Persistence and determination encompasses everything that we have achieved as a brotherhood at the University of Maine during our first 150 years, academically, athletically, and civically. 150 years and still counting; count on it. Perge! Senior Skulls “The society promotes the values of friendship, obligation, academics, dignity, and the standards and traditions of the University of Maine” 1907 George P. Goodwin 1908 Guy E. Hayward and Raymond Fellows 1909 Arthur S. Hanscom and Howard L. Farwell Elton L. Towle 1910 Malcolm E. Fassett and Charles E. Stickney 1912 William R. Ballou 1913 Warren McDonald and Clifton E. Chandler 1915 Arthur W. Abbott and Phillip W. Thomas 1916 Robert E. Thurrell 1919 Hugo S. Cross 1922 Winslow K. Herrick 1924 Edward S. Lawrence 1924 Phillip H. Taylor 1926 Joseph M. Murray 1927 Henry B. Eaton, II and Fred C. Newhall 1928 Byron B. Porter 1930 John W. Moran 1939 Robert V. Cullinan 1942 William L. Irvine 1944 Alfred R. Hutchinson and Robert W. Nutter 1945 James F. Donovan and Winslow A. Work 1948 Roger F. Thurrell 1949 John W. Ballou 1950 Philip A. Coulombe 1955 Thomas W. Golden 1956 Maurice L. Hickey 1957 Eben B. DeGrasse 1958 Vernon L. Moulton 1959 Donald E. Cookson 1960 Norman W. Stevenson 1962 Joseph S. Tardif 1963 James H. Goff and John R. Roberts 1964 Lowell T. Sherwood, Jr. 1965 Terry L. Chadbourne 1969 Raymond W. O'Keefe 1970 John L. Collins and George P. Dulac 1972 James D. McLean, Jr. 1976 James F. Kane, III and Robert B. Rand 1977 Jonathan T. Oakes and Paul E. Violette 1978 Raymond A. Konisky, III 1983 Stephen G. Perry 1984 Sean Flathers 1986 Thomas E. Babineau and Don Marden Scott Wallace and Jeffrey G. Stewart 1990 Thomas Cole 1998 Stephen D. Sumner 2017 Thomas Beutler 2019 Matthew Ahearn “What if the space be long and wide, That parts us from our brother’s side A soul-joined chain unites our band, And memory links us hand in hand.” (Phi Gamma Delta fraternity song) Fraternally,
Chip Chapman, ’82 Perge
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