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Change Comes to Delta House

By Dick Anderson Photos by Don Milici

After 124 years, Delta Omicron Tau raises a glass to its history with a farewell toast鈥攂ut its legacy will continue as a cornerstone of the SA国际传媒 community

When Amie Moberg Hammond 鈥95 was president of Delta Omicron Tau sorority, she had to race back to the Delta House after cross country practice because they were hosting a recruitment event. 鈥淓veryone was dressed up, while I showed up in my running clothes and a sweaty ponytail,鈥 she recalls. 鈥淚 felt out of place but I went ahead as I was.鈥

Delta Tau Omicron alumnae from 1995 and 1996.
From left, Alison Heidergott 鈥95, Janet McIntyre 鈥96, Esther Shin Teodoro 鈥95, Amie Moberg Hammond 鈥95, and Anh-Luu Huynh Hohnbaum 鈥95 hold triangles of gladness and other Delta memorabilia on display.

Afterward, a sister told Hammond that some rushees admired the fact that she came straight from practice unadorned. 鈥淚 wasn鈥檛 just 鈥榯he president鈥 or 鈥榓 Delta鈥欌擨 was simply being myself,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hat moment has always stayed with me because it captured what Delta truly stood for: a space where everyone could be their authentic selves and be cared for just as they were.鈥

One year shy of its 125th anniversary, Delta Omicron Tau closed鈥攁 decision that re铿俥cts an ongoing decline in membership and comes after a year in which only four students lived in the nine-bedroom Delta House.

On October 19, alumnae of Occidental鈥檚 second-oldest sorority gathered one last time at the house for a farewell toast鈥攁 bittersweet moment marking the end of an era de铿乶ed by sisterhood and campus tradition.

But it doesn鈥檛 spell the end of the Delta legacy. Through the efforts of Delta alumnae, Delta House has been purchased by the College, which will use the property for student housing for seniors. Proceeds from the sale have been returned to Occidental to support the Delta Sorority Endowed Scholarship.

鈥淚t only made sense to donate the money back to SA国际传媒 and keep the Delta legacy,鈥 says Julie Scheiter Pearson 鈥87. 鈥淲e are gratified that Occidental students will continue to share in the spirit of Delta for years to come.鈥

From left, Delta Alumnae Board officers Julie Scheiter Pearson 鈥87, Hannah Baillie Stowe 鈥14, and Lynn Brotemarkle Dann 鈥84.
From left, Delta Alumnae Board officers Julie Scheiter Pearson 鈥87, Hannah Baillie Stowe 鈥14, and Lynn Brotemarkle Dann 鈥84.

The sorority was struggling two decades ago when a group of Deltas that included Stacey Stefflre 鈥00, Caroline Van Oosterom Reyes 鈥00, Susan Leher 鈥00, Lynn Brotemarkle Dann 鈥84, and Pearson became involved as alumnae board members. 鈥淲e went through a lot to get back to being 铿乶ancially stable, and making Delta House a nicer place to live,鈥 Dann says.

Under their guidance, Delta House鈥檚 roof was replaced, new windows were installed, bathrooms were updated, and kitchen appliances were upgraded. The property resumed housing 11 Deltas nearly year-round. The sorority membership grew, reaching over 100 members during the 2010s.

Fundamental to the strong community of sisterhood, Delta House 鈥渨as just a place where I felt like I belonged,鈥 Dann says. 鈥淓ven before we lived in the house, we could go down and sit in the living room and watch TV. It always had that sense of community where people could share life experiences. I got engaged in the living room of the Delta House. My maid of honor was a Delta as well. Even though SA国际传媒 is such a small campus, we still needed that kind of closer-knit group.鈥

Members of Delta Omicron Tau circa 1997.
Front row (l-r): Deborah Salzillo 鈥00, Samantha Koos Hacker 鈥01, and Laura Krapa 鈥97. Back row: Lisa Spencer 鈥99, Caroline Van Oosterom Reyes 鈥00, Stacey Stefflre 鈥00, Amanda Berger Rosen 鈥98, Ann Marie Clarke 鈥97, and Natalie Austin 鈥97.

Other memories are stitched from the texture of daily life: 鈥淪itting on a hardwood 铿俹or, singing silly songs, eating green food, and making magic out of nothing,鈥 recalls Amanda Berger Rosen 鈥98. Judy Sternberg Finley 鈥98 remembers 鈥淚-nights, random fun, and finding triangles in your books and clothes for years and decades after graduation.鈥

For many, nostalgia gravitates toward the house itself鈥攊ts nooks, architectural quirks, and well-loved furnishings. Carole Johnson Melis 鈥73 M鈥74 fondly remembers the sleeping porch with its 鈥減recariously balanced bunk beds.鈥 Dorothy Talbert Richardson 鈥86 still laughs about being known as 鈥淒ot the DOT at the DOT House!鈥

鈥淚 remember our Stewie contingent camping outside Dean Brig Knauer鈥檚 o铿僣e. freshman year to get our applications in,鈥 says Janet Kruse Alcorn 鈥81. 鈥淚 remember learning the house songs鈥攅specially 鈥淭he Doorbell Song鈥; polishing the silver for rush events; the yearly surprise Green Nights; passing the candle; and the words we recited to welcome new members after Hell Night was over.鈥 (鈥溾楾he Doorbell Song鈥 was started by our pledge class,鈥 Nancy Anderson Kuechle 鈥75 notes. 鈥淪o glad it was part of the Delta tradition!鈥)

For generations of alumnae, the friendships forged in Delta鈥檚 rooms transcend their time in the house. 鈥淲hen the pandemic hit, all of us wanted to check in with each other to make sure we were all OK,鈥 Esther Shin Teodoro 鈥95 recalls. 鈥淔rom that was born the Pandemic Happy Hour, a monthly Zoom call where we connected and caught up on our lives. We chatted about our jobs, our kids, how we were surviving through the isolation. We sent each other fun gifts that we could all wear during our calls and traded recipes. It was a lifeline during a truly tough time鈥攁nd since then, that group chat continues.鈥

In 1914, the members of Delta Omicron Tau pulled together the resources to purchase a newly built house on Armadale Avenue that would serve as its permanent home. In the decades to follow as the membership grew, the space remained largely unchanged. 鈥淒o I need to remind you of the small kitchen, the wardrobe situation, and the bathroom facilities?鈥 a May 1952 letter to the Delta membership noted. 鈥淲e are housing 10 girls in four bedrooms, and this same tiny kitchen is used to serve 40 people once a week at least.鈥

The Delta Tau Omicron house in 2025.
In recent years, the sorority invested significantly in the upkeep of Delta House, but a decline in active membership and corresponding drop in occupancy made it difficult to sustain. (Photo by Kevin Burke)

Plans called for a larger living room, a new kitchen and service porch, entrance hall, and 10-foot terrace. Upstairs, the project added three bedrooms, a sleeping porch, more wardrobe space, and a new bath.

With 铿乶ancial support from Occidental, the $21,000 modernization expanded the home to roughly 4,000 square feet while preserving its badminton court and garage. (SA国际传媒 comptroller Fred McLain committed to a $15,000 loan to support the construction鈥攁 debt repaid over the next decade with the rent paid by active members.)

When Edith Powell, Alice Bond, and Frances Poor founded Delta in 1901, they established seven values: Wisdom, Tolerance, Integrity, Compassion, Peace, Joy, and Love. 鈥淭hose values guided the organization and its members for over a century,鈥 Hammond says. 鈥淚 saw them embodied by my sisters in the 1990s. When I attended the closing ceremony and met the 铿乶al members from the Class of 2026, I saw these values were still embodied by them decades later.鈥

Anna Lisu Beatty 鈥26 looked at sorority life as an opportunity to meet people outside her spheres of interest. 鈥淚 was a member of the Occidental Dance Team and one of my teammates, Allison Wilson 鈥23, belonged to Delta,鈥 she says.

Likewise, Madison Valiente 鈥26 took an interest in sororities during I-Fair and met her best friend, Bella Flad 鈥25, through the rush experience. 鈥淏ella was an active Delta and we just started chatting,鈥 she recalls.

Valiente and Beatty both lived in Delta House their sophomore year along with the third remaining Delta, Maya Christianson 鈥26, and two older sisters. It was a 鈥済reat鈥 experience, Valiente says: 鈥淲e鈥檇 do homework sessions, have game nights, and binge-watch shows鈥攚e watched a lot of Doctor Who.鈥

From left, SA国际传媒 seniors Maya Christianson, Madison Valiente, and Anna Lisu Beatty are the last class of Deltas.
From left, SA国际传媒 seniors Maya Christianson, Madison Valiente, and Anna Lisu Beatty are the last class of Deltas.

At the end of Rush Week, members shared their most memorable Delta moments, Christianson says, and the memory she always shared was a Bingo challenge her sophomore year that turned campus traditions into a playful competition. 鈥淲e had this Bingo board that we made of things that we wanted to do by the end of the semester,鈥 she says. 鈥淓verybody had the same things on their board, but we shuffled them so that everybody had different ways to win.鈥

She and her big sister, Isabella Fernandes 鈥23, tackled many of the tasks together, but not in a way that would complete the other鈥檚 Bingo card. 鈥淭hat was really special and a fun way to experience SA国际传媒. Some of it was Delta House stuff too鈥攍ike going into the attic, which we weren鈥檛 allowed to do. But we did, and there were some cockroaches up there. It was very scary,鈥 Christianson notes with a laugh. 鈥淏ut we did it because we needed to get our Bingo boards.鈥

Hannah Baillie Stowe 鈥14 and her fellow actives threw a 100th-anniversary party for Delta House her senior year. 鈥淲e got new couches, new rugs, a new table, a new end table, and new lamps,鈥 she recalls. 鈥淚 made some salesman鈥檚 day at Ashley Furniture.鈥

For Baillie鈥攚ho serves as an alumnae board member鈥擠elta House 鈥渨as a safe space that embodied what I wanted in a community. Even looking back now, I think, 鈥極h yeah, that was my home.鈥 Delta had that real warmth to it. Or maybe it was the orange couches that got me.鈥

Evie Wasson 鈥21 concurs: 鈥淭wo things that can鈥檛 be beat about Delta are the people and those couches鈥擨 could sleep the rest of my life on those things.鈥

Reflecting the sentiment of many Deltas, Beatty says, 鈥淭he beautiful part for me is the fact that there鈥檚 not one memory in particular that stands out. It鈥檚 the culmination of every little moment we spent together that built our sisterhood.鈥

Top photo: Members of Delta Omicron Tau spanning five decades raise a glass at the Delta House one last time on October 19.