Our Roots
A local group of women, Aye Sees, was formed in 1952 and officially became the Pennsylvania Epsilon Chapter—Pi Phi’s 100th chapter—in 1953 after installation by past Grand President Marianne Reid Wild, Kansas Alpha. The Initiation Ceremony was held in McElwain Hall, a women’s dormitory, and the installation banquet took place at the Nittany Lion Inn on campus.Collegiate Chapter Leadership
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Daniella Barry
Panhellenic Delegate
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Mia Cabo
Vice President Operations
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Margaret Carter
Director Housing
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Lauren Cerrie
Director Membership Selection
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Rose Ciarmoli
Director Lifelong Membership
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Sophia DelRosso
Director Social Events
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Samantha Flynn
Chapter President
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Fiona Gillmor
Director Leadership
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Eva Glennon
Director Fraternity Heritage
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Gabrielle Kaas
Director PR/Marketing
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Elizabeth Krissinger
Vice President Inclusion
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Olivia Luistro
Director Service and Philanthropy
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Victoria Madden
Director Policy and Prevention Education
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Laura Makoid
Vice President Finance/Housing
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Madison McGloin
Vice President Member Experience
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Lucy Ort
Vice President Recruitment
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Sienna Peraica
Vice President Risk Management
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Abby Peterson
Vice President Community Relations
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Molly Salvino
Director Community Inclusion
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Madeline Schratz
Director Academics
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Katherine Shallis
Director Member Finances
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Ava Siaton
Director New Member Experience
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Addison Sullivan
Director Recruitment Events
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Addyson Taylor
Director Member Conduct
Supporting Sisters’ Dreams
Chapter-specific scholarship funds support collegiate chapter members as they pursue their academic dreams and professional goals. By giving to a scholarship fund, donors can directly impact their own chapter sisters and open doors that might not have been possible otherwise.
Notable Chapter Alumnae
Valerie Plame Wilson
Former CIA officer and Author
Valerie Plame Wilson
Former CIA officer and Author
Valerie Plame spent decades as a covert operations officer in the CIA’s Directorate of Operations, conducting intelligence and counterproliferation work focused on preventing the spread of weapons of mass destruction. Her career came to an abrupt and public end in 2003 when her covert identity was leaked to and published by The Washington Post. The event triggered a federal investigation into intelligence security and government accountability that drew national attention for years.
After leaving the CIA, Valerie channeled her experience into writing and advocacy work. She co-authored “Fair Game: My Life as a Spy, My Betrayal by the White House,” a memoir that was adapted into the feature film “Fair Game” starring Naomi Watts and Sean Penn. She has since become a public voice on nuclear proliferation, government transparency and national security, co-founding Global Data Sentinel, an organization focused on identifying illicit financial networks and global security threats. Valerie has also co-authored two fictional spy novels.
Valerie was initiated in 1984.