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The Star and Lamp of Pi ffappa Phi FEBRUARY 1965 SCHOLARSHIP Fostering The Ideal

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SCHOLARSHIP Fostering The Ideal FEBRUARY 1965

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Page 1: 1965_1_Feb

The Star and Lamp of

Pi ffappa Phi FEBRUARY 1965

SCHOLARSHIP Fostering The Ideal

Page 2: 1965_1_Feb

'The Torch • • •

In Good Hands'

T -E Wll

tr~

loc COl

tin th< na on

l An COl

ten th€

l let1

J T has been my privilege to have visited nearly a third of our fraternity's ~r~ chapters since our 30th Supreme Chapter meeting in Mobile last August. l_£1.1

And what a pleasure it has been! 11

For those who may have wondered whether one feels any difference let1 between North, South, East or West when he visits our chapters here and ~ . there, I can tell you there is no difference. Wherever I went I felt perfectly wh at home as I encountered the same warm and friendly spirit of hospitality Yot

and brotherhood for which our fraternity is so well known. And each group U\1

of fine young men was as enthusiastic about Pi Kappa Phi as it could be! .1 Many of our chapters have acted on the suggestion of our past national~~~

president John Deimler to sponsor worthwhile activities and projects to make is 1 Pi Kappa Phi even better and more favorably known on their respective the. campuses and in their communities. Ever so many attractive trophies adorn ~fc the chapter houses, proof that Pi Kapps have won many top honors, scholasti- wu' cally, in intramural sports and in other college activities. ~0 :

Much work has been done to spruce up chapter houses. And some chap· n:~ ters have moved into newer and larger homes recently. Chapters are growing je\\

much larger as more fine men are pledged. But regardless of numbers, there wh, still exists that same spirit of brotherhood within the chapters as old men ani help neophytes to adjust and study in their new surroundings. cia1

Chapters seem to be more conscious of their scholastic averages and ma1 work to raise their rankings on their campuses. And our undergraduate ~he members are placing more emphasis on making chapter houses not merelY ~u~ rooming and boarding places but homes away from home for the many fresh· w~: men in school. WitJ

It was a wonderful experience for me to meet and know so many of rnY t~a1 . ld Wit] fine young brothers who extended me such a warm welcome. I w1sh I cou Bra

meet each one of them again personally in the near future. hou The torch of Pi Kappa Phi is in good hands everywhere. We are moving stra

swiftly, growing at an accelerated pace, producing more and more prominen~ d F and successful alumni who are bringing honor and glory to Pi Kappa Phl

001

everywhere. I am proud of our fraternity!

Mel Metcalfe National President

Page 3: 1965_1_Feb

[he Editors' Column

BROTHER Brooks Fischer, a member of Alpha Theta Chapter at Michigan State,

rasa member of Beta Xi Chapter, too, before ransferring to State.

1 Hke Writ~s that he has taken an introspective 00 at his fraternity life, evaluated it and

~irne to t~e ~onclusion it's been the happie~t thrne of h.Is hfe. Brother Fischer has put h~s

oughts In the form of a letter to an imagl­nar:y .f~iend who has written him for advice on J?Imng a fraternity. AIds. an honest, forthright and sincere letter. con Its. contents are of value for Pi Kapps te nduct~ng rush as well as for rushees con­th rnpl~bng entrance into the Fraternity. Here

en Is Brother Fischer's letter to his friend:

let~i, Brad. It was really great to get your r er. I Was particularly glad to see you are

:y's ~ ~en~Iy considering mass rush. Since :we have in th~p er at your college, anything I might say

1st. Pi Ris letter 'Yill be biased, because, Brad, about B appa Phi I frankly am prejudiced.

nee lette~ad, when . I first sat down to write this to rnany thmgs occurred to me. As I began

md wrR~t thel!l down on paper, I realized I was :tly wha~nf things I've always heard, instead of · You really thought. So out of honesty to _ltY all ' and to myself, I will truthfully and with >UP thi:Y .heart .try to explain these years of some-

Fg In 'Yhich I believe deeply. l dirn rat~rmty life is bound up with so many

na to b en~IOns and nuances it is almost impossible :~.ke is likgm, but let me start this way. A fraternity ive the lie ht rnany-faceted gem. As you hold it in · and b g .. rnany of these facets leap with fire )rn If Yo~Ilhan~e, others merely glow and vibrate. sti· Will lo consider only one of these facets, you

to i 1se the beauty of the gem, for as you seek han~o at.e each facet every movement of your

ap· nen Will cause another to leap into promi­ing jew~~· To truly appreciate the beauty of the ere whol~ You. must stand back and .vie~ it a~ a

an th. Bemg part of a fratermty IS lovmg 1en - B .e gern and much, much more.

ciat~ng Part of a fraternity also is the appre­tnd rnan n . of m.any of its abstract values. How

te the Y ~Irnes In a rush conclave have I spoken a true P, rase, "a band of brothers, tried and ·elY rnea~ and never really thought about what it sh· When s. Brad, old friends are the best. And

With 3You have lived, worked and "partied" that- 0 mel}- for several years, you have just

~~with old fnends: friends who will always talk U Bract Y~u: laugh with you, call you, "Brother."

hous.' nends can be found in a dormitory ing stra~ng 600, but there will always be the 580

t F'rigers there who you will never know. en. doors ~ndship and brotherhood are two keys to Phl In a fraternity house, but there are many

(Continued on page 9)

1 965

The Star and Lamp of

Pi liappa Phi

FEBRUARY 1965

I VOLUME -*l:l

CONTENTS

NUMBER 1

THE PI KAPP SCHOLARS . . . . . . . . . . 2-5

CHAPTERS HONORED FOR SCHOLARSHIP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . S

RHO'S GUEST: A FULBRIGHT SCHOLAR 6

KAPPA'S 50th YEAR AT UNC . . . . . . 8

A PI KAPP IN ANTARCTICA . . . . . . • . 10

XI'S OUTSTANDING CHAPTER REPORT 12

PI KAPP ON CAMPUS: REPORTS FROM THE CHAPTERS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13-25

NEWS AND NOTES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26

CHAPTER ETERNAL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28

COVER

PI KAPPA PHI'S SCHOLARSHIP Pendant, which is awarded annually to the Fraternity's Pi Kapp Scholars, is pictured on this month_'s cover. It s!g­nifies scholastic achievement, an tdeal for whtch all Pi Kapp chapters and undergraduates strive an? which the Fraternity's leaders work to foster. It ts particularly appropriate as the keynote. of this month 's issue of The Star and Lamp of Pt Kappa Phi which is devoted to news of the accomplish­me~ts and honors of the undergraduate Pi Kapps and their chapters.

Durward Owen Editor-in-Chief

Paul R. Plawin Managing Editor

THE STAR AND LAMP is published quarterly by the Nat ional

Counci l of the Pi Kappa Phi Fraternity , 11 East Canal Street,

Sumter, S. C. , in the months of February, May, August and

Nove mb er. The life subscription is $15 and is the on ly form of

subscription . EDITORIAL OFF ICE: Notional Office of the Pi

Koppe Phi Fraternity, 11 East Cana l Street , Sumter, S. C.

PUBLICATIONS OFFICE: 1901 Roane Street, Richmond 22, Vir­

ginia. Second-class postage paid at Richmond, Virginia .

Changes in address should be reported promptly to Notional

Offi ce, 11 E. Canol St., Sumter, S. C. All ma terial intended for publication should be in the hands

of th e Manag ing Editor , 11 E. Conal St. , Sumter, S. C., 50

days preceding the month of issue.

Page 4: 1965_1_Feb

2

'Representing the highest I eve oJ

THE PI KAPP

SCHOLARS I NDIVIDUAL excellence in scholarship always

is to be admired. This is especially true in an organization which emphasizes the value of individuality and scholarship as does Pi Kappa Phi Fraternity.

To foster this ideal and to recognize their contribution to the general welfare of the Fra­ternity, Pi Kappa Phi each year honors its out­standing scholars. They represent the ideal Pi Kapp.

The new Pi Kapp Scholars have received certificates and the Fraternity's scholarship pendant. The seven Pi Kapp Scholars selected for their academic records in 1964 represent the highest level of scholastic achievement. They are, too, representative in every respect of the well-rounded college man.

This year's Pi Kapp Scholars were selected from more than 1,500 Pi Kappa Phi under­graduates. We hereby recognize them officially to the entire Fraternity.

THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI KAPPJ\

.DG, Tpsil -"I alf, 1is l ear een r" Br

lg e, e h kun ~air fast .rch lip eta E!J:ni, ternJ ·esh eta .on a ist. :tli, >r h !res, :t}l 10

"I :hoo .Udy on, ge.''

:a Ru

Page 5: 1965_1_Feb

re 0 f scholastic achievement'

.OGAJt K Tpsilon · . BR~WNING, Beta -"I am Umversity of Virginia elf, but Proud not only for my­lis bein also for Beta Upsilon, ear

0 g the fourth consecutive

een se~! tfd our . brothers has r." c e a PI Kapp Schol-Brother B . .

1g econo . rowmng IS study-e has brrucs at Virginia, where kun and een a member of the h.airman Keys political society, [aster's D of the Three-Year .rchon egree Program and lip c~~re~surer and scholar­eta Dps·}uttee chairman of emic h~ on C~apter. His aca­tembershror~ mc~ude ho~ding ·eshman P m Phi Eta Sigma eta R honor society Phi :onors ~PPa, the Interm'ediate ist II rogram and the Dean's ill · V~l Plays intramural foot­>r 'his ~eybaU and basketball !l'ests f ~Pter and notes his in­:tll anct nc _ude checkers, basket-"! Science fiction

Plan t · :hool ne t 0 enter graduate ·Udy · x fall and continue my

In econ . . on of ul . ormcs m expecta-ge." hrnately teaching col-

CHARLES C. BRIGHT, Rho, Washington and Lee University -Brother Bright is studying history at Washington and Lee, where he has been active in the affairs of the University's Trou­badour Theatre for four years and served as president of the drama group his junior and senior years. He also is a mem­ber of the W & L Glee Club and has served as Archon of Rho Chapter. His academic honors include receipt of a Robert E. Lee Research Grant, membership on the Dean's List for four years and nomination by the University for Woodrow Wilson and Danforth graduate fellow­ships.

"I plan to go to graduate school for a Ph.D. in European

history. I hope to become a col­lege history professor."

R. BRANTLEY CAGLE JR., Beta Mu, McNeese State College-"! appreciate the Fraternity's help through my years in college."

Brother Cagle is studying his­tory at McNeese State, where he has been president of Blue Key honorary fraternity, chair­man of the 1964 homecoming program at the college, Beta Mu's representative on the In­terfraternity Council, a member of Alpha Phi Omega honorary fraternity, member of the Stu­dent Senate for four years and historian, chaplain and recipient of the outstanding pledge award of Beta Mu Chapter. His aca­demic honors include member­ship on the President's Honor List for four semesters, receipt of the Lamp and Key Award for highest academic achieve­ment in Beta Mu Chapter and the T. H. Harris Scholarship for the last three years. His in­terests include classical music, jazz, Civil War history and drama and following Olympic athletic competition.

"My plans for the future are to go to graduate school in either history or law."

3

Page 6: 1965_1_Feb

Pi Kapp Scholars

RAYMOND W. SMITH, Chi, Stetson University-"! am very happy to have been chosen a Pi Kapp Scholar. It is one of the greatest honors I have received in the fraternity."

Brother Smith, who graduated from Stetson last June, now is studying American studies on a Woodrow Wilson graduate fellowship at Yale University. At Stetson he was a member of the Student Senate as a junior and senior class repre­sentative; publicity chairman of the student government; mem­ber of student government com­mittees for homecoming, orien­tation and the Green Feather; circulation manager of the school newspaper, Th e Stetson R e­po?·ter; and chairman of the university's Quiz Bowl compe­tition. He participated in intra­mural cross country and was secretary, scholarship commit­tee chairman and editor of the newsletter of Chi Chapter. His academic honors included mem­bership in the Honors Program, Ford Graduate Program, Phi Society, Scroll and Key honor society, Phi Alpha Theta history honorary fraternity, Sigma Tau Delta English honorary frater­nity and the Dean's List.

"I hope to obtain my Ph.D. within three or four years at Yale."

FRANKLIN P. WEST, Chi, Stet­son University-"! am greatly honored to be selected a Pi Kapp Scholar. I could never have achieved nearly so much scholas­tically had it not been for my brotherly association with Chi Chapter of Pi Kappa Phi."

Brother West, who graduated from Stetson last June, now is studying for a master's degree on a Woodrow Wilson graduate fellowship at the University of Virginia. At Stetson he was a member of Green Circle sopho­more honor society, Scroll and Key honor society, Phi Alpha Theta honorary fraternity, Green F'eather Committee, Phi Society and the Stover Theater Productions and served as sec­retary and scholarship commit­tee chairman of Chi Chapter. His academic honors include making the Honor Roll for six semesters, the Dean's List for four semesters, participation in the Ford Graduate Program and as a History Department as­sistant.

"I plan to continue my edu­cation until I receive the Ph.D. degree. As for the future, I would like to combine a career in college teaching with some sort of work in the U. S. For­eign Service. This stems from my interest in international af­fairs and politics."

• • . the ide~P

JAMES E. PAUL JR., Tau, No~~ Carolina State-"This a~1 B makes me very happy, aJiiing thank Pi Kappa Phi for P oring me."

Brother Paul is studying e trical engineering at N. C. St1

where he has served as a sos­omore counselor for y:rJ _ Freshman Camp, a senior instructor in electrical engiJI~p ing and as historian, rush ch man and alumni chairma!l Tau Chapter. His academic tB ors include membership in Eta Sigma freshman honor ciety, Eta Kappa Nu elect! B engineering honor society, \1: · Kappa Phi honorary fraterrp;; the engineering honors proll'lpri· and as recipient of his chaP1rep; Star and Lamp Award for seven: arship. His interests inc!S

1ou

t a ur amateur radio, water spor s nalj astronomy. ban;

"My plans for the immed S: future include graduate \l'itze1 I hope to enroll in a Ph.Vthe electrical engineering pro~:~ but have not yet selectedrnen graduate school."

•e a A

4 THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI KAPP"

Page 7: 1965_1_Feb

e~Pi Kapps

, No~~~S ~EE ~IMMERMAN, Tau, a~t B arohna State.

rothe z· a11ring at -~{ Immerman is study-)f }1 orth Carolina State.

ng e J. st~

!;Smith nor ~

~gi;Pi Alum ma!l

n;~~Honored )nO I

lectt BEVE ~ty, \1 RL Y HILLS, California.

tterJtp;:;!tnan Stnit~, Pi '32, United )fOgPriz I~ternatwnal's Pulitzer-

! e-winn· Wh haPreporter Ing ite House or scvetnb ' was honored in No­·nclSout}~r by the University of 1 tsalutnn~rn California and its

or nal· 1 at the fifth annual J. our-lStn a h. .

dbanquet c Ievements awards nne Stn·th ;e ,~itzer ~ri who received the Pul-Ph·l)the assa ze. fo~ his coverage of

0~ennect ssmatwn of President pr 3tanct· Y, Was honored for "out­cted tnent;~g Professional achieve­

In news communications."

pplo 'EBRUtUtY, 1965

At Edington Award presentation are (left to right) Virginia Dean of Students B. F. D. Runk, Beta Upsilon Archon Butch Browning, Assistant Executive

Secretary Ted Scharfenstein, and Traveling Counselor John Davis.

Chapters At UVA, Tennessee Honored THE Fraternity's two annual

chapter scholarship awards have been presented this year to Beta Upsilon Chapter at the University of Virginia and Alpha Sigma Chapter at the University of Tennessee.

Beta Upsilon won the coveted Will E. Edington Award for having the highest campus scho­lastic standing of any chapter in Pi Kappa Phi. It was the second time the chapter had won the Edington A ward.

Alpha Sigma won the Karl M. Gibbon Award for demon­strating the most scholarship im­provement for a Pi Kapp chap­ter within the past year.

For Beta Upsilon the pres­entation of the Edington Award was icing on a well baked cake.

Assistant Executive Secretary Ted Scharfenstein, who made the presentation in Charlottes­ville in January, noted with his praise the outstanding overall record of the chapter. In addi­tion to being the top academic chapter in the fraternity, Beta Upsilon is a Champion Chapter, has placed a man among the Pi Kapp Scholars each year since the chapter's founding, is one of

the largest and most respected houses on the U. V. A. grounds and this year won the annual IMP award for scholastic ex­cellence as the top fraternity, scholastically, at the university.

The Edington Award was established by the Supreme Chapter in 1958. It is a rotating award that has been won by four chapters since it was estab­lished. They are Mu Chapter at Duke University (three times), Beta Upsilon (two times), Rho Chapter at Washington and Lee University and Gamma Chapter at the University of California.

The Gibbon Award was estab­lished at the 1960 Supreme Chap­ter. It is awarded annually to the chapter making the greatest scholarship improvement in the current year as compared with the preceding year. In addition to this year's winner-Alpha Sigma-the Gibbon A ward has been won by Chi Chapter at Stetson University, Lambda Chapter at the University of Georgia, Tau Chapter at North Carolina State and Alpha Ep­silon Chapter at the University of Florida.

5

Page 8: 1965_1_Feb

6

LEXINGTON, Virginia

THE BROTHERS of Rho Chapter at Wash­ington and Lee University and a German ex­change student are conducting a unique, mu­tual experience in international relations this year.

Bernd Schulz, 23, is the son of a Lutheran minister in West Berlin. He arrived at Wash­ington and Lee last September on a Fulbright Scholarship, one of three foreign students studying at the University this year.

Since September Bernd has been living at the Rho Chapter house of Pi Kappa Phi Fra­ternity under a program begun this year through the cooperation of the University ad­ministration and the Interfraternity Council.

"It's great," said Bernd, in one of the Ameri­canisms he's picked up here.

"It's one of the best ideas I have heard for foreign students. You can get used to the new circumstances far more easier.

"I am not a member, but the boys treat me as a brother," he said as he relaxed in the chapter lounge during the homecoming week­end last fall.

Several Rho men and their dates crowded around to talk with their special guest, who explained he liked American coeds but had to give his time this weekend to the books instead of the girls.

"I think the courses here are harder, more intensive than at home. At home you can at­tend lectures, then go home and do nothing. Here they keep you busy," he said.

Bernd is studying economics at Washington and Lee. He would like some day to work for the German government, perhaps dealing with the affairs of the European Economic Community. To land the job he must be fluent in three mod­ern languages. He speaks English well and is thinking of taking up French next. He said he does well with classical Latin and Greek, too.

Bernd studied a year and a half at the Uni­versity of Freiburg and a year at the Free University in Berlin before coming to the U. S. on the Fulbright exchange. Prior to beginning university studies in his native Germany, he completed 13 years of grade school.

Before returning to Germany next summer, Bernd hopes to be able to travel in the United States. His brother, who once taught at UCLA on an exchange program, has told him to travel in the U.S.A. before returning home.

"My brother told me when he was here he went from California to New York and it was just great," said Bernd.

Since his funds are limited, he's thinking about working for a month this summer to earn enough to spend a month on the road, or perhaps earning his keep while traveling by lecturing on his homeland for clubs at towns on his trip.

Rho's Guest l

Bern d (left ) and Rho Ar chon Charles Sweet 11

a bout W & L camp us life.

..

w.

l\li ~ to~

T he Brandenburg Gate and the infamous Berlin ' IIa seen from West Berlin.

'E Bi THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI KAPPA

Page 9: 1965_1_Feb

st Bernd Schulz

tl West Berli ' C :et n s ongress Hall (Benjamin Franklin Hall),

not far from Bernd's home.

l\lidnight b . . ~, together 1 ull sess•on in Rho's dining room brings

hn IIagestad·( 0ft to right) Brothers Luck, Robinson, and ' ernd; Pledge Bolling and Brother Shively.

'E 811 ppA UAIIY, 1965

He has some interesting experiences to tell about.

He has a childhood memory of fleeing the advancing Russians in a horse-drawn cart at the end of World War II. And his memories of the Berlin Wall and trips through East Ger­many are current and vivid.

Bernd's home in West Berlin is a short walk from the Berlin Wall near the historic Brand­enburg Gate, which now is choked with cement blocks that separate Berliners of the West and the East.

The neighborhood is a cultural center of the city. His father's church is nearby, and so are a philharmonic hall and a civic auditorium.

To see the wall in Berlin is to feel its re­pugnance to free people, according to Bernd.

"You really don't realize it until you go to the wall, or leave the city by train or bus ... but you have some sort of special feeling seeing it.

"But we're not afraid," he said, "I think Berlin is as safe as Western Germany."

Traveling from his city standing free in the heart of communist East Germany to Western Germany is an experience in caution, he said. Care is your guide whenever you are in touch with the communists in Germany.

"Even when you travel through East Ger­many (by car or train), you don't know whether you will get to Berlin. You don't ever criticize them on the train. Under their system, they have to check everybody. They call West­ern Berlin the spy center."

A train trip through the eastern zone, Bernd explained, often is interrupted by frequent stops for checks by communist police, who walk through the cars and may even frisk individual passengers. Resistance to their search can lead to your arrest.

Charlie Sweet, Archon of Rho Chapter, said the brothers of the chapter were interested in sharing their house with an exchange student so they might share in his own knowledge and experiences in a foreign land.

"When Bernd arrived, he was warmly re­ceived, and we realized immediately we had made the right choice," said Charles.

"We let Bernd help us during Rush Week, allowing him to come to all our rush meetings. And Bernd did all he could to make himself welcome and well-liked by the brothers."

Bernd's friendship with the Rho brothers re­sulted in a special Christmas gift for him. He was the guest of four Rho brothers at their homes in four sections of the country during the holidays.

"We felt that only by allowing Bernd to spend both Christmas and the New Year's holiday in American style could we give him a gift commensurate with the knowledge and friendship he has given us. Yet, in a way, we realize that any gift will fall short of full ap­preciation," said Charles.

7

Page 10: 1965_1_Feb

8

Kappa Marks 50th Year

At Carolina

Gov. Moore (left) and Joseph Bryan, the oldest living alumnus of Kappa Chapter.

John Carroll addresses anniversary banquet audience 50 years after he installed Kappa Chapter in Pi Kappa

Phi Fraternity.

CHAPEL IDLL, North Carolina. Th, -More than 50 alumni and guests joined tbl mo undergraduate members of Kappa Chapter ll1 YOl Chapel Hill November 14 to celebrate the cha~ ach ter's 50th anniversary at the University o e:xc North Carolina. son

Among the Kappa men on hand for the occa'ter1 sion were Governor-elect Dan K. Moore, '27·wh, who had visited the chapter in his first primarJwr< election campaign early last fall, and J. ShePsay ard Bryan, '14, the oldest living initiate of tb1 ~ chapter and holder of chapter number 2. wh,

John D. Carroll, treasurer of the Pi KappiR:al Phi Memorial Foundation, was the feature<fee] speaker at the anniversary banquet. Brothe1bro Carroll had officiated at the chartering of tb1firs chapter in 1914. up

District XIII president, Bob Bourne of Chat·no • lotte, and Executive Secretary Durward Owelone also participated in the anniversary ceremonieSa h

The event was a particularly momentous OI11 E for Brother Bryan, who recalled the chapter'1de~ beginning in an article he wrote for the chaPiear ter's publication, Kappa Kapers: are

"When the initiation took place on N ovemb~diti 14, 1914, John D. Carroll from LexingtoJ1s h South Carolina, who was either the N atiol18tho1 President of the Fraternity at that time 0for was the immediate past National Preside?t;lllal was present to welcome us into the fraternl · T with appropriate felicitations. As I recall, 11 was assisted by E. R. W. Gunn, a South Car0

linian, who held a national office in Pi KapP·­Phi at that time.

"As I recall, I was the second boy initiate' in Kappa. The first initiate, Claude A. Bosemll( died many years ago, leaving me as of tb1

date the oldest member of the Kappa Chapte now living!

"It is refreshing to observe that the frate; nity spirit which thus came to fruition in 19J at Carolina has been preserved, and hande down by our successors in the fraternity fro! college generation to generation.

"We oldesters of 1914 rejoice in our goO fortune which permits us to join in the 501 Anniversary of Pi Kappa Phi fellowship aV friendship at Carolina."

Kappa alumni signing the guest register dll1

ing the weekend were: Mr. and Mrs. J. R. IJef derson, Mr. and Mrs. F. C. Shephard, Mr. a~ Mrs. Edward B. Marsh, Mr. and Mrs. '1'11

McAllister, Mr. and Mrs. Dick Young, Mr. a~ Mrs. W. L. Harris, Mr. and Mrs. Henry 1\1 Harper, Mr. and Mrs. Henry 0. Beck, ~ and Mrs. Dick Hutson, Mr. and Mrs. J. , Taylor, Mr. and Mrs. J. Macfie Anderson, 1\1. and Mrs. W. H. McAllister, Mr. and Mrs . .Al~j W. Daughtridge, Mr. and Mrs. C. P. Sprll1

Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Vann, and Jerry W. GreeV1 Bruce Briggs, Jim Kluttz, Calvin Graves, £. Mcinnis, Beverly C. Moore, Otis R. McCollll~ Charles P. Adams, J. Walton Blackman, Char\ Banner, George Newman, Hale Yokely, par~ Small, Mr. and Mrs. Bryan and Gov. Moo

THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI KAPPA I

BRu

Page 11: 1965_1_Feb

!!!:e Editors' Column, Cont . ...

l t~: ~ore. When you are in college the majority of e~a ach! energy is directed toward academic : ~ex Ievement. It is necessary to compete and to .Y so~e\_In the rush of competition simple values

cca'ter ~ Ime~ are lost-values like love. My fra-0 '21·wh mtyi gives me something to love at a time ~ar' wr~n most need it. Perhaps "love" is the ;hePsay.ng word. Maybe "spirit" is what I should

f thfwhSpir~t !he way I feel it is the feeling I get : jl(a en smg "Pi Kappa Phi Girl," or the "Pi t~~ifeet~ Stand Up" song after dinner. It's the thelbroth g ot pleasure I get when one of my ~ thlfirst ~.rs Introduces me to his pinmate for the

up i Ime. It's the feeling I get when I wake "'haf'no k n mr bed after a party (sometimes with )wetone n~w edge how I got there) and know that )nieSa ha

0d my brothers was around to give me

l n . .s oJl Br d pter\dea a ' a~other facet of this jewel includes the chaPlear~ and Idea~s of a fraternity. These you will

are l:s yo~ hve the Greek experience. Many 1mMlitio~ fashwned ideas like respect, pride, tra­LgtoJlis hidd and brotherhood. The finest half of life tioiiSthou hen from the man who does not love, and 1e o:for ig You may not always find what you look ide?~aken a fraternity, what you do find can only !rDI · TraJ-0~ a. richer person, never poorer. 11, )1 Ibon IS very much a part of Greek life. car0

tiate• ern a( [ th' La pte

rater l 191 an de frof

goo

Your pledging will be one of the sweetest mem­ories you will have of college. These are the gold and platinum years, and tradition will be a wonderful magnifier in the years to come. How a thing grows in the human memory and in the human imagination when love, worship and all that lies in the human heart is there to encourage it!

Brad being a part of a fraternity also will prepar~ you for the after-years. It always will serve as a highlight of your college days. In a way it is something like a verse of poetry I once read: "The days grow shorter, the nights grow longer, and headstones thicken along the way; and life grows sadder. But love makes strong the evening hours, and memory glad the twlight days."

Brad, to sum it all up I guess Fraternity, Greek Ideal, Spirit, Love, Brotherhood are all just words. But in their relationships to you they create an idea. And Brad, ideas go boom­ing through the world louder than can~ons. Thoughts are mightier than armies. Principles have won more victories than armed horsemen.

Being a member of Pi Kappa Phi has con­quered me. There are no regrets, no reserva­tions on my part, just the deep personal knowl­edge that this has been a part of the happiest time of my life.

Brad, I hope to read in the paper soon that you are pledging a fraternity, and I hope it is Pi Kappa Phi. Choose well and for life!

• 501 P aJl JVew l'i Kappa l'ki r dill

f{ef r. aJl

'l'il r. aJ1 . (

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Page 12: 1965_1_Feb

il PI KiiPP ON THE ICE

By JACK KESTNER Military Writer

Norfolk, Va. Ledger-Star

* * * * (Editor's Note: This story about Old Dominion College's three-man Ant­arctic research team, including Pi Kapp pledge Jim Curtis of Gamma Beta Chapter at Old Dominion, ap­peared in the Norfolk, Va. LEDGER­STAR in December. It appears here as it was written by the newspaper's military writer Jack Kestner, to whom go our thanks for providing the picture and permission to reprint his story. Pledge Curtis, a member of the colony chartered as Gamma Beta Chapter last October, left for the South Pole be­fore the chartering of the chapter. thus missed his initiation into Pi Kappa Phi. The Gamma Beta men report they'll line up an initiation for Curtis on his return to the warm climes of the campus.)

1 0

McMURDO STATION, Antarctica.

TWO YOUNG MEN from Tide­water Virginia are taking what is probably the most unusual break from college that two stu­dents ever made.

Here on the Frozen Continent they are camping out in sub­zero weather, diving for algae specimens on the bottom of the Ross Sea at depths of more than 100 feet in 28-degree water, weathering three-day blizzards in a tent with nothing to eat but candy bars and playing tag with vicious leopard seals.

James M. Curtis III, 21, son of Mr. and Mrs. James M. Curtis Jr. of Norfolk, Va. and Jack Fletcher, 19, son of Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Fletcher of Ches­apeake, Va. were selected by Dr. J. S. Zaneveld of Old Dominion College to accompany him as assistants on his second field trip to Antarctica.

Curtis is a senior at ODC, Fletcher a sophomore. The break will delay them a year in gradua­tion, but both think it well worthwhile.

"There have been times when we might have begun to doubt it, but that hasn't lasted long," says Jim, who like Jack is sport­ing his first full beard (black and blonde, respectively).

Jim has the distinction of set­ting a record for scuba dives in Antarctica-110 feet at Cape Crozier.

It was at Crozier, located at the easternmost tip of Ross Is­land near 78 degrees south lati­tude that the ODC biological team began its work in late October.

"It was a day or so after Jim made his deep dive that we saw a leopard seal on the ice," Jack recalls. "Since Jim was going down that day we picked a spot quite a ways from where we'd seen him."

Leopard seals also called leopards, are fond of wa: blooded food, including pengll Their disposition correspo with that of their names! wholly unlike the mild-manne Wedell seal whose breat11

holes in the ice the boys quently employ in their dive

As far as records go, ~ has ever attacked a man, somehow or other, nobody V:i to become a guinea pig to whether they will. ·a

"We cut a hole in the' mn and I helped Jim on with, air bottles," Jack continued. our walked over and stuck on'ive his fins down in the waterei:rne popped the leopard seal. joes1 helped Jim off with his bott 1ay]

Jim then walked over ust stuck the handle of his iC1JacE into the hole. Instantly, it W struck by the seal. oun

"We both decided not tcre 1 diving that day," Jim remil11 tl: dryly. A ·

The next day a blizzard, Pheh ing winds of more than }ll.rrnl cane strength, set in. The l P: shielding their radio wentd·ane ing away, but Dr. Zanevel ang the boys remained in their slapi( ing bags in another. )<Is : ,, g

"It blew for three day_s, Urf. related. "During that tHl'le .A' feasted on a coffee pot of

1re 8

water and a box of Cad)p '! chocolates." .n a

Since then, the boys 1 tl dived at five different sites

1o f

ing 31 days in the field . . "1-return intermittently to thBh_Pe logical lab at McMurdo St~~r to preserve their specimellhat

No set schedule is maint9~\fat "We both like to sleep, 5

1 B:1

generally don't get up . lan: around 10 a.m.," Jack grJf:) d "Some days we'll dive thl'1

ea 11

THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI KAPP~

Page 13: 1965_1_Feb

lied wa·

mgu ~spo: mesf { } anne eath >YS dive o, n an, .y v;! ~ to

the :anuna B p eta ledw J ' C . }1 .,e 1m urt1s (left) with Dr. J , S. Zaneveld (center) of Old Dominion College and Jack Fletcher

;vit , at the ti·io's scuba diving camp in Antarctica. Jed. our t· o~1 ive annes up to. 25 minutes a

:tter;.hne d~~n;vork till 2 a.m. The 3.1. Joesn't t matter since the sun bot 1aybe go down. The next day ve~· pst lo~k Won't dive at all but s ~~lace." around for a new , I Wheneve

ound th r seal holes can be Jt t~re avan:bl are utilized. If none erl'l8 1 the i e, holes are chopped

A. ce. nylon d .

rd, Pheir rubb cor . IS looped over .n }J~.rlllpits d er . SUits under their The ; Paid ou unng each dive. It ·ent ·aneveld t or pulled in by Dr .ve!dan¥ed s'i accordi~g to pre-ar~ eir slapldly m1nals. ~mce the holes

· 1s allllost .UP With crushed ice ys '') get b klllpossible to see how

'ti~eUrface. ac from beneath the t f A.s an dd· · Co dire, the ab Ihonal safety meas-

a )p generally who remains on n and Y has his scuba gear

oys 1 the e~:~~Y to go overboard ;ites o far of an emergency d r. ''11.~ ' none h .

~1 · •'l eith as occurred. > tnef'Pe,'' sa~r one of us is the hero ) strhart and s t~fck.. "I'll check the mel'l!,tn stay do 1 Jim, 'Well, you dnt~t~at depth; wn 13 .minu~es at

5, ake it 9 . and Jim will say ~p, IIeroes ll1Inutes'." up }any lads or not, there aren't grl) dive i Who would volunteer thl'f n super-chilled water

EBI! UAI!y ' ~p p ft 1 9 6 5

then come up to the sub-zero at­mosphere with only a tent heat­ed by a Coleman stove to change clothes in.

"When they come out of the water their suits are white with frost in a matter of seconds," Dr. Zaneveld said. "I am very proud of them both. They were a good choice for the job they are doing."

Several criteria went into the choice, Zaneveld says. Included were a willingness to help others, quick reaction time ("Jim's air regulator froze at Crozier, but he kept his head, came up and called for help."), good marks in biology, "handiness" with hands and tools, ruggedness, even dispositions and excellence in diving.

Both boys were experienced divers prior to their Antarctic decision, but they added the Navy's special course in scuba diving last fall .

Utilizing these skiUs, they have already made considerable in­roads in the heretofore untapped field of algae study in Antarc­tica.

Dr. Zaneveld says that they discovered fructifying algae un­der the ice around Nov. 1, prov­ing a theory he established last

year that algae don't wait for the ice to break up to emerge from dormancy.

Even more important, says Zaneveld, is the broader impact that ODC's project may have.

"People across the country are studying the success of our tech­niques so that they may con­duct collecting dives of their own," he says. "This is pio­neering work.

"In this respect, I am very grateful to the Board of Visitors that they have seen fit to give me two seasons a way from my work so that we might show the way, so to speak, to the larger universities."

Zaneveld also had warm words for the Navy's support.

"Without the Navy this proj­ect would be impossible," he said. "The helio pilots have really been wonderful, putting us down wherever we wanted with what­ever we wanted to carry."

When the antarctic summer ends, it won't mean an end to Zaneveld's work. He and his young men will board the ice­breaker Glacier Feb. 6 and stop at half a dozen sub-antarctic is­lands for further algae study during a two-month cruise to Wellington, New Zealand.

1 1

Page 14: 1965_1_Feb

1 2

Outstanding Chapter Report

(Editor's Note: Xi Chapter's letter has been selected as the outstanding chapter report in this issue of the STAR & LAMP. It contains all the elements of a good news report, is well written and an outstanding illustration of what a chapter letter should be.)

XI Chapter has begun the fall semes­ter with the election of new officers

and the initiation of three neophytes. Newly elected officers are: Douglas

Smith, Archon, from Huntington, N.Y.; Ronald McCormack, Treasurer, from Ramsey, N. J.; Ronald Leiser, Secre­tary, from New York, N. Y.; Robert Turney, Warden, from Bridgeport, Conn.; George Planavsky, Historian, from New York, N. Y.; and Ted Gar­man, Chaplain, from Catawba, Va.

Recently initiated brothers are Jeb Jordan from Strasburg, Va., Ted Gar­man and George Planavsky.

This semester has brought many hon­ors to various brothers of Xi Chapter. Brothers William Bobbitt, Paul Cald­well and Raymond Davis were tapped into Blue Key National Honor Frater­nity. Pi Kappa Phi on this campus has more members in Blue Key than any other fraternity. Brother Raymond Davis also was chosen editor-in-chief of the school newspaper and was named to Who's Who In American Colleges and Universities. Brothers Peter Geb­hard and William Bobbitt were elected president and vice-president, respec­tively, of the Junior Class. Brother Bobbitt was also elected to the Roanoke College Honor Council. Brother George Planavsky was elected to membership in Beta Beta Beta National Honor Bio­logical Society. Brother Leiser was named co-chairman of the Elections Committee.

RAY DAVIS

Xi was especially proud to have the National President, Brother Mel, visit the chapter this fall. We hope his trip to Norfolk with Brothers Leiser and Davis was enjoyable, and hope he will be able to see us again in the near fu­ture.

Xi is saddled with second semester rush this year for the first time in the history of the chapter. However, Xi pledged two fine men first semester in Wilbur Andrews from Salem, Va. and Edward Bennett from Roanoke, Va.

Intramurals opened slowly for Xi as we took third place in cross-country and fifth in speedball, but both teams were manned for the most part by under­classmen, thus the future bids well. Xi's basketball team has all but one starter returning and has good bench strength for the upcoming season.

Xi is preparing diligently for second semester rush and hopes to pick up one of its finest pledge classes.

Fourth PI KAPP COLLEGE e Officers leadership School • Davidson College

Davidson, N. C. • August 29-Sept. 2, 1965

THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI KAPP.A

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Page 15: 1965_1_Feb

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p· - 1 Kapp On Campus

Reports From The Chapters

ALPHA, COLLEGE OF CHARLESTON ALPHA CH new house ~TER at the College of Charleston has a moves, the· · te.r 60 years of rentals and frequent near our 17~undmg chapter has purchased a residence

The t -year-old campus. main ca;o-story dwelling is located a block from the campus /us on property that once was part of the ,ton fra.ter 1~fa Chapter is the first College of Charles­qharleston n! Y t? o~n its own home. The College of t1es and so IS .P!Imanly a day college and its fraterni­houses n rorities traditionally have rented "rooms" or of Chari::{ tpedcampus, which is located in the heart

The Pro on s owntown business district. rosit fromp~~tk was financed through a collateral de­oan from thi Cappa Phi national headquarters and a

" Dr. Geor e oll~ge of Charleston. p~he activ;e Dd Gnce, .President of the college, stated:

I Rappa p a_n alumm members of Alpha Chapter of to be com hi who worked so hard on this project are has achie~~nded for a job well done. Pi Kappa Phi campus ore . a :?ne reputation as a hard working student 1 ~amzat10~ and anyone studying the list of We are ~~ e~s realizes the caliber of its membership. and we con °~ that Pi Kappa Phi was founded here of a Perm g atulate all concerned on the establishment of stuctent:nent khome. It is heartening to see a group my 32 Years wor ~o well together and finally win. In trator I h on this campus, as a teacher and adminis­hf the' mema;e been privileged to know practically all

as been a pys of Alpha Chapter and the association Alpha Ch easant one."

(Var reside apter was founded in a Pre-Revolutionary egaJ and b ncek. on Charleston's Broad Street, in the . Alpha's nan mg district. ~,s built of ew house was constructed about 1900 and ~harleston ~eart long-leaf pine in the traditional w·est Indies ~use" style, with the long porches of the

Inds that k 0 catch the prevailing south to west ~er. All ro eep the South Carolina coast cool in sum­fihe high-ceil"ms dhave cross ventilation and open onto

replaces. mge porches. All main rooms have open fo A college fu d · · st r re-Purch n dnve IS now underway to raise money ti ruction of ~se of .th~ original campus and for con­

on of the ew bmldmgs. The Alpha House is a por­~ ca1pPus Whe~r~h and ~ill ~e in a choice section of the

C he new e proJect Is completed. ~ Hh~rleston ~~cers of Alpha are William S. Gaud of pt1ghts, t;ea chon; Richard J. Sanders of Charleston ,(lege J easant S surer; Harry W. Freeman Jr. of Mount

Chhn•s Island CS, secretary; Richard J. Cammer of tonarleston hi u; .c., warden; Ernest L. Zinkowski of

"' • stewa~d s rian; and Preston Brown of Charles-~ .

FEBRUARY, APPio 1 965

Alpha's New Chapter House.

Alpha Chapter recently completed a highly success­ful rush season by pledging 15 men. The social finale of the season was a combination "Hog Choker and Oyster Roast" on the Wando River. Mayor Woody Brooks of Andrews, S. C., district president of Pi Kappa Phi, made a rousing talk to the rushees.

Alpha's 1964 Pledge Class has the following mem­bers: John Almeida Jr. and James L. Wells Jr., of Orangeburg; Victor Vaught and Lee Signon of Flor­ence; Tim Farlow of Stanford, Connecticut; Steven Coker of Kingstree; Paul Sandifer of Seneca; Sam Stafford III, of Spartanburg; James B. Neely Jr., of Asheboro; Wayne Bauknight of Greenville; Robert Coker Jr., Tucker Irvin Jr., Wayne King, George Malanos and Edward Whitlock Jr., all of Charleston.

BETA, PRESBYTERIAN COLLEGE MEMBERS OF Beta Chapter feel they have had a part in making this a very progressive year for Pi Kappa Phi.

Over the past summer Beta sent two brothers to the national convention at Mobile, Ala.

With the coming of Fall and a new school year, Beta Chapter began what became a very successful rush season and brought six new pledges into the chapter.

Sports, studies and various social events have since occupied the time of the chapter members, highlighted socially by the Christmas dance weekend and the party at Peck's Ranch.

New Beta pledges are: Tommy Barnett of Atlanta, Ga.; James F. Soffe of Fayetteville, N. C.; Oren Eugene Sullivan Jr. of Lancaster, S. C.; Rofus Allen Rowland of Dillion, S. C.; David Graham Cottingham of Dillon, S. C.; and Andy Barnett of Westminster, South Carolina.

GAMMA, UNIV. OF CALIFORNIA

THE MOTTO of Gamma Chapter remains "Excelsior." We increased our membership by 300% to 21. We renovated our present house, but plan to move to a better home--located between a sorority and a girl's dormitory-by summer. We have moved from the bot­tom to the top ten in scholarship. In athletics we have come from last to a position among the top 15 of 55 fraternities. Our socials have been better in quality.

Despite the campus disorders and strikes, which were not supported by the fraternity system, we have made steady progress toward our goals. We count our alumni as our greatest asset in the drive to make Pi Kappa Phi the leading fraternity at Cal.

1 3

Page 16: 1965_1_Feb

Pi Kapp On Campus

EPSILON, DAVIDSON

THE YEAR got off to a good start for Epsilon Chapter of Davidson College. Pledge day ended with 24 pledges and an appropriate banquet. Epsilon has since raised her pledge class to 30 men-the largest class on campus. This feat, very rare at Davidson, was brought about by a great deal of work on the part of the brothers as individuals as well as the brotherhood as a group. Summer rush was stressed especially this year with Epsilon rush parties in four states. Rush week was even more active, the entire brotherhood arriving for rush preparations two days ahead of the usual date.

Fall of 1964 brought more than pledges to the Pi Kapp house at Davidson. The brothers of Epsilon, tired of that old gray outlook on life, bought a new color televis ion a s well as a stereo console, a new carpet for the living room and several smaller items for the house.

This year saw the first running of the Davidson Pledge Class Regatta. This event, held on nearby Lake Norman, called for a three-man craft constructed at a cost of $5 or less. Epsilon's pledges entered a s leek catamaran constructed from two jet airplane wing-tip fuel tanks (purchased at a cost of one cent each) . The Epsilon pledges finished first with an eighth of a mile lead in a quarter mile course.

Archon Bobby Waites and Chapter treasurer Jim Hardwick hold high rank in the ROTC: Bobby holds the rank of cadet lieutenant colonel and Jim, the rank of cadet captain.

Recent visitors at the Epsilon house have been the notable world economist, Dr. Robert Triffin, and several members of the Helen Hayes Repertory Company.

Social events at Epsilon included the annual Founder's Day Banquet with a combo party following and a Christmas party held by Epsilon for a group from a local children's home.

ZETA, WOFFORD COLLEGE

AS THE END of the semester draws near, Zeta has much to look to in retrospect. Under Archon Ed Hug­gins, the Pi Kapps of Wofford are rising to new and greater heights. Although the size of the new pledge class was somewhat small, the quality was high. New pledges for the first semester include: Sam Blackiston, Saudi Arabia; Don Bright, ·Gaffney, S. C.; Bobby Hoskins, High Point, N. C.; Daryl Huffman, Barnwell, S. C.; Dan Ledgerwood, Fairfax, Va.; Mac Lemmons, Gaffney, S. C.; Roy Pridgen, Myrtle Beach, S. C.; Jay Middleton, Landenberg, Pa.; De Scarboro, Gaffney, S. C.; and Pinckney Maxwell, Greenville, S. C.

Currently, through the efforts of Brother Rusty Hudson, Zeta is at the top in the intramural standings. The Blue and White of Pi Kappa Phi fought their way to an undefeated and untied season in football and won the championship. As for the remainder of the semester, from all reports the basketball team also will be a s trong contender for the crown. It looks as if Zeta may be the winner of the all-intramural trophy at the end of the year.

In November Zeta had the honor of being host to Pi Kappa Phi's traveling counselor, Bill Dicks. Bill proved to be a real source of inspiration and guidance as he told of Pi Kappa Phi nationally and advised on specific chapter problems.

Once again on December 10 Zeta paid homage to that tradition which was started 60 years ago by a nucleus of three. This tradition has been carried on through the years, and we at Zeta are proud to be part of it.

1 4

RHO, WASHINGTON & LEE

UNDER THE direction of Rush Chairman Jim BuckeY Rho Chapter enjoyed a very successful rush. Besideb the 16 men who were pledged during the formal rus week, three others selected Pi Kappa Phi later in the semester. Those pledged were: Tommy Baremore Shreveport, La.; Craig Barley, York, Pa.; Sterlill Bolling, Washington, D. C.; Mark Boyd, Washington, D. C.; Bill Butler, Bethesda, Maryland; Reid Co~· Metairie, La.; Brad Crowther, Anchorage, Ky.; Riel Christovich, New Orleans, La.; Jim DeSouza, Arling· ton, Va.; Lou Dupre, Houston, Texas; Rich Johnson! S. Norfolk, Va.; Ralph Schenkel, Baltimore, Md., We. Shear burn, Bryn Mawr, Pa.; Whitney Thornton, MiaJll1

Fla.; Pete Tooker, Chevy Chase, Md.; Stu Walla~e Bronxville, N. Y.; Paul Stanton, Elyria, Ohio; Bill Cosgrove, Watertown, N. Y.; and Ron Williams, Lan· caster, Ohio.

In November Rho elected new chapter officers. The are: Archon, Charles Sweet; treasurer, D . Tilghrna~ Broaddus; secretary, E. Robert Gordon; historian John Kelly; chaplain, F . Bruce Garrett; wardell James Luck. .

Rho also has experienced another enviable soc!~ season . Each home football game was climaxed WI a combo party. By far the most successful of theS occurred at Openings Dances. Every square inch 0'

space was occupied as the campus invaded Rho to ~ their favorite group-the Thorton Sisters. As Christ mas drew near brothers and pledges joined togeth, in decorating the lounge for the annual Pajama Part) This too was an unqualified success as brothers an dates danced through the night in their stripped night wear.

Rho's most significant event occurred in Octobe when Mel Metcalfe, the national president, visited o~ chapter. Upon his arrival Brother Metcalfe tour Lexington for a short while and was able to rnee Dr. Fred Cole, president of the University. That eV, ning a banquet was held in Brother Mel's honor 0

which he addressed the brotherhood, pledge class an invited faculty members. The following morning he Vl0

driven to Xi chapter for a visit there. His visit Vl8

a great success, and it is hoped that visits by natioll officers will continue in the future.

TAU, N. C. STATE

SINCE WE moved into the new Pi Kapp House 0

Fraternity Row here at N. C. State, the brotherh0 r of Tau Chapter has increased. This increase in brotbe, hood can be attributed to the fact that all of t•• brothers are able to live under a common roof insteB of living in dormitories, which are scattered aroun the campus. The new Fraternity Row also has helPe the brothers become more acquainted with the oth Greeks around us.

Last May, 11 pledges were initiated into the brothe hood of Pi Kappa Phi. .

We held our annual summer rush party in Ralell1 We feel these summer parties give us a jump on t . other fraternities who do not hold such function· We have held summer parties for the past three yea and have found they help us very much. Formal ru began on September 9 and consisted of smokers, coJll. parties, and informal discussion groups. In these dl; cussion groups, the rushees were told of the differe· aspects of fraternity life here at the Pi Kapp IIoU· at N. C. State. The brothers felt that we had a sU cessful rush. We pledged 16 men.

We at Tau Chapter are very pleased to report th Brother Jim Zimmerman and Brother Jim Paul 9

recipients of the Pi Kappa Phi Scholars Awa. Brother Zimmerman of Lexington, N . C. is a sell1

majoring in civil engineering and Brother Paul

TH E S TAR AND LAMP OF PI KAPPA

Page 17: 1965_1_Feb

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The Case

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THE VANISHING

RUSHEE

. Who do you think is your toughest competitor

hm tush? The fraternity with the bigger, newer

ouse do h . t wn t e street? The house with all the op athletes? The one that wins the scholarship

trophy every year? Forg · et HI On nine campus out of ten it isn't

any othe fr · a 1 r atermty. On most of these campuses, g ~rge percentage of the men who would make n~~. fraternity members never JOin any frater-

tie~o, ~£ you are rushing against other fraterni­tim' t e way we did a long generation ago, it's shoe _to take a long, hard look. Maybe you're

Ohng at h . in.,. t e wrong target. Maybe you are aim· eno a~ your friends, when the bushes are full of

em•es Ma b . • . m k · Y e 1t s time to make an up-to-date ar et analysis. The rush· 30 mg market today is far different from Years ag B k . Tush. 0 · ac m those days we had a great

nic •ng advantage-fraternities were living in e Warm

still l' . _caves ... and the independents were lVIng m trees.

This all Ph owed us to concentrate on just one

ase of h' othe f tus mg-sinking the shaft into any teres:e:.aternity in which a rushee might be in­peratel w~ ~new that our prospect wanted des­to Y to JOm a fraternity-he had to in order

get In o t f . kno k u 0 the ram! All we had to do was ac the other fraternities out of the running.

ow very different now! Our major rushing

The Regrettable Results of Restrictive Rushing Regulations

obstacles are no longer the other Greek letter houses. You have two much tougher competitors. The first is the great big, plush dormitory that offers all the physical comforts of the Hilton hotels and looks mighty good to many a fresh­man. Alongside such dormitories, the average chapter house looks pretty grubby. A man usual­ly has to be willing to accept some personal dis­comfort today if he wants to be a fraternity mem­ber.

The second and even tougher and more subtle competitor today is the widely-circulated sugges­tion that fraternities are no longer important­that, in fact, fraternities may be harmful to the process of education. Many good fraternity pros­pects are coming to college today with that in­doctrination. To sell them your fraternity, you first must sell them the fraternity system.

These are the rushing problems we face today that weren't even contemplated in "the good old days." But, though the prob­lems have changed completely in the last decade or so, rushing techniques still follow very much the same old patterns. We still concentrate on rushing against each other, and overlook the real competition.

It is high time that we all realize that it's no longer good enough, or even halfway smart, to down-grade the other fraternities in rush. If the

Page 18: 1965_1_Feb

Complicated regulations

discourage many interested men

from rushing & pledging

a fraternity.

Betas knock the Sigma Chis, and the Sigma Chis knock the DUs, and the DUs knock the Betas, pretty soon the rushee gets the idea that perhaps the critics were right . . . fraternities are no damned good.

How much better if the rush story is positive. The fraternity system is good. There are many good fraternities on campus. Then, from there, tell the rushee why your chapter is better-why it should appeal to him more. Not that Beta is worse, but that you are better.

The Television Parable Let's take a look at an analogy in the market

place. Let's suppose that in your city there are several different stores selling several different brands of color TV. You've heard a lot about color TV, pro and con. You've seen it at a neigh­bor's. You've about decided to buy a set, even though you realize they're not perfect. So, you stop in at the store selling Brand A, and the first thing the salesman does is to tell you why you don't want Brand B. Their colors are muddy, repair bills are high, pictures aren't reliable. You go down the street to take a look at Brand B. and that dealer tells you that Brand A is out of date, their circuitry is poor, their cabinets are shoddy, their tuning is too complex. . Your reaction quite likely will be that per­haps it isn't wise to buy a color TV set after all. So you go back home to your old reliable black­and-white set . . . and color TV has lost a cus­tomer. Those salesmen misjudged the market. They didn't realize that first you had to be sold on color TV, and then to be sold on the benefits to be obtained from a particular brand.

Suppose, instead, Salesman A meets you at the door and says, "Color TV is wonderful. Once

you've had it in your home, you'll never be satis· fied with black and white. Now let me tell you some features of Brand A which make it the best on the market." Down the street, Salesman B says, "Color TV doubles your watching pleasure. Brand B has some special features which we think will particularly appeal to you."

Soon you're really enthusiastic about color . TV. Now it's just a question of which set you select and enjoy. Someone is going to sell a color TV set.

It's easy tQ translate this into fraternity tenns· If the rushee first visits the AAA house and theY say, "Watch out for BBB. Their house is in bad shape. They've lost all their good men this year and they're in real trouble with the Dean· Worse than that, they have special assessments for every party. It'll cost you a fortune." At the BBB house they say, "Too bad about AAA. The}' used to be pretty good, but you wouldn't want to get in with them now. Half their pledges will quit the first month, because they treat thefll like dogs. They're pretty shaky financially, toO· And you should see their meals after rush wee~ is over."

This rushee probably is going to wind up living in the dorm for four years, figuring, "Just like I heard, fraternities are no damned good.'' The fraternity system has lost a good prospect.

Now suppose instead that rushee hears at AAA, "Fraternity life is wonderful. Once yotl know the advantages of the close personal fra· ternity life, compared to the cold, impersonal dorm, you'll definitely want to join a fraternitY· Now in AAA we think you could be particularlY happy because. . . ." And at BBB he gets this, "Fraternities double the significance of college life. At BBB we are particularly proud of. . . .''

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This rushee is pretty · apt to be sold on the fra­ternity system. Some fraternity is ~oing to get a good member.

Fraternity Advantages

Fraternities do have great advantages. In gen­eral they have nothing to be defensive about­and nothing to attack each other on. They do have. a strong, positive story to sell. Socially, eco­nomacally, scholastically (yes, scholastically too) th_ey make sense. A positive approach in rushing Will benefit the entire fraternity system, and your chapter will share in the prosperity.

Stan selling the fraternity system in your "ery first contacts with the rushee (and his parents). An old merchandising axiom is, "You can't knock the competitor without degrading your ~wn product." Another is, "Sell Benefits." They

oth apply equally to rushing.

AU fraternities should work together in this program. Through their Interfraternity Confer­~n;:,es they_ should start attacking the real job.

e real Job isn't to make more rules which ~y complicate rushing and discourage rushees.

~ real job isn't to act as a police force to ma e sure that no fraternity violates the .many and awes sh' . a d orne ru mg rules that already extst, T~ to mete out punishment for each infraction.

t e real job is to promote the fraternity system~ 0 mak · li£ e It a stronger and better part of campus

ek and to provide an enivronment that will :a e good prospects want to be fraternity mem-

ers.

It is told th . Pal at on the grounds of Buckmgham

ace ligh' a a ted red lantern had been placed at certain s t .

hu d po every mght for more than one n red years. Each morning for more than a

century th 1 refill ' e antern was picked up, cleaned, and

PI ed, and each night a guard carefully re­aced it · h

curr 10 t at same location. It finally ocr and ed to someone to question this procedure. th after careful investigation it was learned }(_at, more than one hundred years before, the · tng had seen a wild flower that had sprung up In that I unprotected spot, . and had ordered a antern pi d

tion. ace there each night for its protec-

We ha tive :e our red lanterns, too. Most restric-Usef rlushtng rules have long ago outlived their

u nesS-'£ · d reau 1 • m eed, many of them were ever Y needed.

It's time for your IFC to re-examine the rule book, to eliminate the red lanterns, and to get on with the real job.

IFC's Build Better Rush Your IJI'C should urge all fraternities to build

rushing programs around the advantages of the fraternity system. We must stress in rushing the fact that fewer fraternity men are drop-outs from college. We must emphasize the leadership training that fraternities offer, point out the greater enjoyment of living with a compatible group of men of your own choice, and bear down on the positive values of our social pro­grams, of our scholarship programs, of our in­tramural programs, of our leadership training programs.

Selling Rules Apply There's another selling axiom which applies

equally to rushing, "Make it easy for the cus­tomer to buy." It's time, in fact it's long past time, for our IFCs to begin helping fraternities to work together in the common cause of pro­moting the fraternity system. Do we do this now in our rushing programs? Let's go back to our parable of color TV and see how closely it paral­lels the rush program on many campuses.

This time, when you go out to shon for a set you don't even get in the door. You are met at the threshold by the dealer, who says, "If you are

Page 20: 1965_1_Feb

interested in shopping for color TV, there are a few rules which you must observe:

I. You must go first to the Chamber of Com­merce and register as a prospective buyer.

2. You must pay a registration fee. for this shopping privilege.

~- You must start your shopping on a fixed day at a fixed hour. Then you must visit at least four dealers for a period of one hour each-no more, no less. You must get a receipt from him showing that you have made this visit.

4. On no account may you go back to any dealer a second time or buy a set until you have visited them all.

5. Now, in our town, you can't see any of these sets until next February, and if any dealer even lets you in his store before then, or discusses TV with you, he is barred from selling you a set, no matter how much you may want it."

"THE CASE OF THE VANISHING RUSHEE" by Orville Read, Delta Upsilon, is the third in a series of articles prepared for fraternity magazines by "Operation Chal­lenge" a project of the College Fraternity Editors Associo· lion.

Permission to reprint the article or any portion thereof must be obtained from the Author and the Operation Challenge Committee.

The members of the "Operation Challenge" Committee are: Ralph F. Burns, Alpha Sigma Phi, Herbert l. Brown, Phi Sigma Kappa, Robert D. Lynn, Pi Kappa Alpha, Our­word Owen, Pi Kappa Phi, John Robson, Sigma Phi Epsi­lon, Corl J. Gladfelter, Chi Phi, ond Francis Wacker, Delta Sigma Phi, Chairman.

After hearing these, and other, rules, you'd tJ pretty apt to say, "The heck with it. I don't want color TV that badly. It isn't worth the trouble."

But before you walked out of the dealer's life forever, you might ask him, "Why has the gov- N1 ernment made all these silly rules that make it it so hard for you to sell TV sets, and for me to i buy one7" o

id And the dealer would reply, "Oh, the govern· ot

ment didn't make all these rules. We did this to ourselves!!!"

Sounds silly, doesn't it? You can't imagine a ni group of merchants being so foolish. But look ~~ again I How many of the rushing rules which hd have been built up on your campus over a period w~ of years are just as restrictive? How many of . th I

. In ose ru es are keepmg good rushees away froJll on

your house and the houses of your fellow Greeks. t How many rushee rules are actually harming

the fraternity system? How many red lanterns do ~~ you have on your campus? a

ve

The SECRET Weapon co

There's a potent secret weapon available to fra· t~ ternities on most campuses--a simple, inexpen· sive way of picking up top-grade men woo wiil ~~ be an asset to your fraternity. It's the easiest and ill least competitive form of rushing, and it con· ti! sistently yields great benefits to the alert chap· en ters who have learned to use it consistently. j~

This secret weapon is open rush. It's permitted so

on most campuses after formal rush is over. And Ch it's neglected by far too many fraternities. SoJJle 0~

f th b . h1s

o e est men on campus can be pledged 111 tna open rush-aften with no competition at aJ)I th These are men who for one reason or another ve1

didn't participate in formal rush. Perhaps the) sch didn't like the mechanics of highly-organized for rush periods. Maybe they didn't want to pay a

. . f b T registration ee or e on campus for rush. l\1:e Quite probably they didn't participate in for· 30t

mal rush because they thought they didn't wan1 s . c

to belong to a fraternity. Some of the best mell us on campus fall in this group. The benefits of ~e fraternity life can be proved to them. Often theY

0

have already begun to recognize the benefits but~~ now have no way to expose themselves to rusb- l\1:i

So, if formal rush restrictions have got yotl ber.

down, wheel out this sure-fire secret weapon andhe! enjoy the benefits of plain old-fashioned, ull'~1 cluttered, open rush. one

to her

Page 21: 1965_1_Feb

New Bern N C . . engineering B th. Is a semor majoring in electrical Kappa Ph·· h 0 brothers also are members of Phi

We are j onorary scholastic fraternity. on the n the process of putting some Greek letters identifiedorwr of our house so that it will be easily other ch~pt e ar~ . always glad to have brothers from

tO ers VISit.

WE F OMICRON, UNIV. OF ALABAMA · !NALLY m d ·t · a mficent struct a e I mto our new house! This mag-

of Universit :::-e, located conveniently on the corner the enviou Y venue and Fraternity Row, has caught admiring s 1 eye of all the other fraternities and the house we g ances of the sororities From this new w·d are entrench' 1 · I er rang f mg ourse ves even deeper into a

of . In rush th' 0 campus activities. In number a~dyear, .we topped all the other fraternities only two les t~uahty. Our 43 member pledge class is The boys w s an the campus record set years ago. We have to io gkt are well-rounded and conscientious.

In scholarsh~ them up to keep the girls away. dO from fifth h' hp w~ hope to continue our improvement

of '64 to p Jg . b~t In fraternity averages in the spring a new schof:s\.Y another record. We have initiated very_ successf~i 1P program which we believe will be

With the i · . C_oach Marshn\jamural sports season about to begin, his football t: Wes~broo~ has started to line up Bear" Brya tam. With tips from the indestructible

(We lost all b' we anticipate to best last year's r ecord consists of thr:t one game, which we tied). Our team

fra· ralfbacks and e thckles, four ends, two centers, twenty ose With' th · a ouse full of quarterbacks Who can

With th Is combination? · wiJI {ound ours:IJ~~tbali season into full swing, we have

d .1eep up with Jire ty busy on the weekends trying to afl 1 lustrious s . \ e sr;hedule of events planned by our COlt g.ame Parti ocJa chan·man, Tom Martin. With before-

ties · es, after g · e • It's hard to fi- a~e parties, and after-party par-0 nds (and You'd nd ti~e to study on football week-. n Weekends) B be surprised how many of us do study Job and we h ut Brother Martin has done a terrific ~~ials (ask thve bhad many fine compliments on our

apter meet· e . rothers who were at the Supreme f .All in all Ing m Mobile) .

• hi success ~n~e ~t ?micron look forward to a year jJI m story. We•r PI og1 ess unequalled in the Chapter's

aJll th ade and thee ~hou? of th': progress we've already Wbrothers en US!aSm Which is still building among

ve .. e think .we schsity ?f .Alaba~an grow to new _he~ghts on the Uni­fo olastically f ta campus and w1thm our fraternity·

r 0 Ur most' P~a erna~ly, and socially. We are striving • ogressiVe year.

TB:E BIG NU, UNIV. OF NEBRASKA Merit c· NEWs th'

{of' 30th S Itation to h Is year was the awarding of the R Upreme Ch c apter advisor Oscar Koch by the

S Ush Week apter. u~h~rfenstein ~=~·te4 the year off with a bang. Ted

ofPledg~ ~nefit of w~~h us dUl:ing rush week and gave more TI!ne me IS expen~nce. Nu Chapter has

tbef Trame!! before ~hand ;as h1gh hopes of acquiring bUidUrin vehng couns le en . of the semester.

Octobg. October an~ or Bll! Dicks v!sited the chapter Mike e1 t~ree men ent. u.s. a he~pmg hand. Also in

ollbers Samide and B were Initiated mto the Fraternity: Y _J .A' try.d Dennis 0,~n .Hulbert, as undergraduate mem­awheld .0Int Founde. rJen, as an alumni member. urtMerit1~.0ctober 0~ DayKRecognition Day dinner was

Colle Itation. Deancar . och, '24, was presented the one oiethWhose son . Wr:ght of the Arts and Sciences to cej e honored Is a member of Pi Kappa Phi, was here ebrate the glests. Plans also have been started

Tw at the Uni go_den anniversary of Nu Chapter 0 members versity of Nebraska.

, 11 of the pledge class, Jim Stevenson . lllJAity,

1965

Nu Alumnus Oscar Koch (center) and undergraduates from the chapter look at Brother Koch's Merit Citation.

and Harold Putney, were awarded four-year scholar­ships to the University.

The annual "Hay Loft" party started the social season at Nu.

The new pledges are: John George of Lincoln, Bill Wesslund of North Platte, Gary Pleas of Oxford, Byron Barber of Fairbury, John Hershberger of Lincoln, Jim Stevenson of Brainard, Harold Putney of Omaha, John Conrad of Fairbury and Harold Chader of Central City, all from Nebraska.

LAMBDA, UNIV. OF GEORGIA PI KAPPA PHI at the University of Georgia had its first brush with a deferred rush this Fall. Two rushing periods were held-the first in September for all stu­dents above first quarter freshmen and the second in mid-November for all students with a mid-term grade average of 73 or better.

Pi Kappa Phi took 17 pledges from rush. This is a decrease of eight from the last fall rush, but our pledge class should number well over 20 by next quar­ter through informal rush.

Perhaps the most interesting statistic concerning the deferred rushing system this Fall is that of the 1,255 freshmen registered for the fall quarter only 564, or 45 % , made a 72.5 or higher academic average at mid­term. Fraternities traditionally have been blamed as the cause of a poor academic showing by freshmen. Thus the deferred rushing system was adopted.

PSI, CORNELL

THINGS ARE happening this year around Psi Chap­ter.

Probably the biggest happening has been the start of a fund drive for the purchase of new housing. Fall rush went very well. We pledged five men, more than 90 percent of the 53 fraternities on the Cornell campus.

The new pledges are: Robert Hendrickson, Rochester, N. Y.; Peter Jahrling, Ridgewood, N. J.; William Newell, Sherman, N.Y.; Robert Ramage, Poughkeepsie, N. Y.; and David Smithgall, Seneca Falls, N. Y.

Psi Chapter had the pleasure of being host for the District I Conclave this year. This gave us a good chance to discuss district plans and meet our national president, Mel Metcalfe, who seems to be a very capa­ble and farsighted leader.

Sports have generated more enthusiasm this year than in past years at Psi Chapter. In intramural foot­ball we moved to a 3-3 record behind a 200-pound average defensive line. The basketball team is at least having fun. Our two best sports-bowling and ice hockey-will begin soon. Bowling should be our strong­est sport with two men with 180 averages on our team. In all it has been a satisfying sports year at Psi .

1 5

Page 22: 1965_1_Feb

Pi Kapp On Cam.pus

IOTA, GEORGIA TECH

FALL QUARTER of 1964 was one of the most re­warding quarters for Iota in many years. The quarter got off to a good start with the rush program during which four new men were pledged. Raymond Brown, Tex Brian, George Rouse, and Ray Ogburn were initi­ated at the beginning of the quarter.

Athletically, Iota improved this year, going unde­feated in football with a 5-0-1 record. In volleyball, the chapter was also undefeated, winning 15 games in league competition.

In December, Iota helped collect for the Jaycee Empty Stocking Fund for Needy Children. The average amount per man collected was higher than the other fraternities' averages.

Scholastically, Iota was number one as a chapter among the 26 fraternities on the Tech campus. Iota was previously ranked in the lower third scholastically among the fraternities. The pledge class of Iota was second in scholarship for the quarter.

The new officers for winter quarter are: Bill Jordan, Archon; Dan Wallis, treasurer; Chip Baker, secretary; Neil Carter, historian; Raymond Brown, chaplain; and Hokum Kelly, warden. Iota looks to a successful winter quarter under the leadership of these men.

The basketball and bowling teams show promise of continuing the chapter's athletic achievements. The chapter also will be working to maintain its number one rating in scholarship. The future looks very bright for Iota.

OMEGA, PURDUE

THE BROTHERS of Omega Chapter began the school year by co-sponsoring the "Island Fling." This annual campus function is a joint effort of Pi Kappa Phi, Phi Kappa Psi, Delta Chi, Delta Upsilon and Kappa Sigma and is presented for the entire student body (mostly for the coeds). The most popular event of the program, the dunking booth, was built by the Omega men.

Our new initiates are: John MacDonald, Chicago, Ill.; Denny DeCoste, Chicago; Bill Pihos, Chicago; Jack Strang, Gary, Ind.; Jack Meyer, Bethesda, Md.; John Anglin, Warsaw, Ind.; Tony Akers, Linden, Ind.; Tom Noble, Connorsville, Ind.; Dave Jeffries, Indian­apolis, Ind.; Gary Hercules, Flossmore, Ind.; Bill Ka­na use, Homewood, Ind.; Don Roll, South Bend, Ind.; Pete Gentry, Evansville, Ind.; Gary Hanson, Connors­ville; Bob Stanley, Vincennes, Ind.; Jim Selis, Misha­waka, Ind.; Bill Nenecak, Calument City, Ind.; Tom Pearson, West Lafayette, Ind.; and Neil Jay, South Bend.

Brother Pres Clayton, the IFC president, was hon­ored this past semester by being tapped by Gimlet and Iron Key. Both are activity honoraries. Brothers Tony Akers and Bob Theobald were tapped by scholastic honoraries this semester, Tony, by Phi Eta Sigma, the freshman scholastic honorary, and Bob, by Tau Beta Pi engineering honorary and Omega Chi Epsilon chem­ical engineering honorary.

Our new officers are: John Miller, archon, from West Lafayette, Ind.; Bob Sills, secretary, from Mari­on, Ind.; Joe Rose, treasurer, from Connorsville, Ind.; Warren Cline, warden, from Brooklyn, N. Y.; Bob Theobald, historian, from Decatur, Ind.; Tony Akers, chaplain, from Linden, Ind.; Jon Hall, steward, from Indianapolis, Ind.; and Gary Hanson, house manager, from Connorsville.

ALPHA MU, PENN STATE

ALPHA MU Chapter completed a prosperous fall term. We were honored and enlightened by the visit of Na­tional President Mel Metcalfe. And 84 alumni partici­pated in the Homecoming weekend. The alumni pur­chased the chapter new kitchen equipment and the actives refinished the first floor in a natural wood decor.

1 6

This was the special greeting Traveling Counselor ~ Dicks got on his arrival at the Alpha Phi ChnP

House last Fall.

1· i: a I h

" I h

" " t<

s t: c: OJ s S<

h

a; ti Y• 01

r< Ill s1 D All the pledges had B averages to bring the chnP1

academic prosperity. And the social mixers with ~ Tau Alpha, Gamma Phi Beta, Kappa Alpha Theta, ~ Sigma Sigma and Kappa Kappa Gamma were gr successes.

Brother Ron. Borkowski is the I.F.C. rush chairJI and is chairman of Penn State's "Sprir.g Week." Ui

te ALPHA PHI, ILLINOIS TECH er

tc HERE IS our chapter letter. We feel that it cart a1 a message of great importance for all who readd ft Its subject is one that we have to continually d

with and it displays the battle that we can't 111'' at to lose. Ot

p; By Ron Piela tn

DON'T TURN INTO A GRASSHOPPER COL0~1 d( .. cc

Once upon a time, there lived a colony of grasshoP.p They all had undergone some degree of hardsh1~; come to this area and build their own towers (w i' as you know, is the reason why grasshoppers eJ(i Previous generations of grasshoppers had re~og~ the difficulty of building a tower; so they, In ,. wisdom, had formed the colony to help the leS· eli ned to build. They elected a leader, periodicallY· t was a place of great honor. With this honor came g responsibility. He took his oath and promised to d~ best in channeling everyone's efforts to building ~O'~ There were some in the colony who were there Jll 1 build a tower for themselv.es. There were others Ji knew they must build their tower, but also :r:ea that the little colony needed their help in build!I1~ colony tower (which had many more levels th11

1 individual tower). Naturally, the colony tower~ never be finished, but the worker grasshoppers!; glad to have had a chance to add one floor. The fo each seasonal floor grew, the better the worker g t hoppers felt about it. They felt better because 1 knew they had just contributed to a part of the ~~

As time went on, during the "nth" season of { ing the tower, a laziness crept into the feelings, 0il wor.ker grasshoppers. It crept in from the indl~; tower builders. They tried to fight it. All theY td wanted was a little interest from the individual builders. They grew to dislike the non-workers~' cause they showed no interest in the main objec~~i the colony-the colony tower. Also, the indl tower builders began to dislike the colony builders. The two groups drew apart. Fighting out and many were injured so badly they were lltl to work anymore on the tower. The work on th~ 1 halted and the leader, who had promised to do ~~~ saw that his best was not good enough. He tr1.e perately to begin the work on the tower agaJII· 'Eal

THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI KAPP~

Page 23: 1965_1_Feb

elor e ChaP

. chag; 'ith II'

1eta, I re g~

:hair!~ !k."

t caf1 · read allY j 1't Ill"

~~a~hr lost his place of honor and his place of respect als e _Colony. The leader's attitude changed also. He lie 0 t t!Ied to fight it as his fellow builders had tried. his ned not to give up. He tried not to want to build Wait~wn tower first. As this story ends, the leader was lie Ing for t):le rebirth of interest which had waned. him hit no~ giVen up and will begin work on the tower will se i':th t~e hope that his fellow grasshoppers watchee Is phght and theirs and at least come to towe as he places another brick in the wall of the r.

S ALPHA TAU, R.P.I. t~i~~E .~UR last chapter letter, Alpha Tau has main­credit 1 s busy pace in many spheres. Much of the officer f~r our. accomplishments should go to our able Schm .s or this semester: Ed Banta, archon; Jerry son ::• ~easurer; Rick Pocock, secretary; Jerry John­histori ar en; Chris Bobo, chaplain and Jim Russell, an. anTi~ first thing accomplished during the year was time · Pthovement that the house has needed for a long you h e redecoration of the living room. If any of our vfve ~Ver visited us at Rensselaer, you know that room ~~~1a!l-styled house (built in 1890) has a living modern a IS unfortunately plagued with a set of stained' office-type furniture and a wall-to-wall, beer­Dave D carp~t. Urged on by our committee chairmen, wen kn ropki_n an_d Tony Minutaglio, we contracted a room b~wth m~er1or decorator to refurbish the living

So far .e time rushing rolls around in February. National ~Is year, we have been honored with visits by us after ecr~tary Kim Jepson, who came home with ter · Mel tte District Conclave at the Cornell Psi Chap­enstein ~tcalfe, national president; and Ted Sharf­to see 'tl~S~Istant executive secretary. We were happy and We ha the National Council is interested in us future ope to see more visits of this kind in the

Soci~lly "P" at R.p I • I Kappa Party," as we are called here our a~n~ 1as been very successful this year. Following Party We ah and always profitable registration night man girls ad our annual house mixer with the fresh­down th ~~om Russell Sage College, our neighbors couple of ock. Our Homecoming weekend came a

Weeks later, with the brothers enjoying a

Alpha Tau House

1965

Alpha Tau's freshman mixer party.

At Alpha Tau homecoming were chapter alumni and t11eir wives (left to right) Mr. and Mrs. Hank Mush, Mr. and Mrs. Guy Yaple, and the chapter advisor, Prof.

Grant Palsgrove and Mrs. Palsgrove.

Alpha Tau men take to their porch on sunny afternoons.

17

Page 24: 1965_1_Feb

Pi Kapp On Campus

concert featuring the Kingsmen on Friday night while Saturday was highlighted by a football game, formal dance and a house cocktail party, banquet and open party. The formal dance was climaxed by the receiving of our trophies for first place in I.F.C. football and golf last year. We were happy to see many of our alumni back for Homecoming Weekend. Just a few were: Guy Yaple, '31; Hank Mush, '39; Tom Kelley, '62; and Joe Newman, '62; plus the major part of the class of '64.

With R.P.I.'s new rushing system, we don't hold formal rush until next semester but Alpha Tau initi­ated five excellent sophomores early in December. They were: Paul Tava, Student Council representative and lacrosse team member from Hicksville, Long Island; Dave Sundstrom, who led us to second place in the I.F.C. golf championship, from Corning, N. Y.; Ken Kincel, a dean's list aeronautical engineering major from North Arlington, N. J.; Pete Chiefari, a transfer student from St. Bonaventure who lives here in Troy; and Jim Moloney from Cleveland, Ohio.

Up on the hill, Rick Boye from Arlington, Va., a senior transfer from Rho Chapter at Washington and Lee, was initiated into Chi Epsilon, the national civil engineering honorary.

Homecoming Weekend also was highlighted by the tapping of Brother Dom Polimeni for White Key So­ciety, the leadership honorary society for sophomores and juniors. Dom is currently the vice president of the sophomore class. Brother Ralph DeMent from Alexandria, Va. was chosen to represent Rensselaer fraternities at the National Interfraternity Conference in Cincinnati, Ohio. While there, Ralph talked with John Deimler, past national president, and Durward Owen, executive secretary of Pi Kappa Phi. Brother Al Wes­ton is the treasurer of the campus I.F.C. He was also awarded a large trophy this summer for map read­ing at Army R.O.T.C. camp in Indiantown Gap, Pa. (Al, however, found himself lost for four hours this Fall while hunting in the wilds of upper New York State.)

Founder's Day was celebrated at Alpha Tau the weekend of December 11. The schedule of events in­cluded an open party Saturday night, the decoration of the Christmas tree, a cocktail party, a banquet at the Henrick Hudson Hotel and a speaker Sunday. The brothers attended the Campus Carols afterwards at the fieldhouse. Also in December, Alpha Tau hosted the underprivileged children of Troy for dinner and a Christmas party including the giving of presents and arrival of Santa.

Alpha Tau is working diligently to improve its aca­demic standing on campus. We are looking forward to rushing this February with past Archon Ed Banta as rush chairman.

ALPHA IOTA, AUBURN ALPHA IOTA ended fall quarter with high spirits. We began the quarter with rush and pledged 31 out­standing young men. With nine pledges remaining from spring quarter, our pledge class now totals 40 . On October 11 Alpha Iota initiated five men into the brotherhood, bringing the total membership to 54. These new members have already taken an active part in the operation and improvement of Alpha Iota.

Fall quarter here has been highly active on the social side of fraternity life. Our Chapter had a victory party after each of the five home football games and one party in Birmingham after the Georgia Tech game. The parties were enjoyed and well attended by all the Pi Kapps and a great number of unexpected campus friends. Our last event of the fall quarter was a Founder's Day banquet with the national president, Mel Metcalfe, as guest of honor. Brother Metcalfe was acompanied by former national treasurer, Alpha Iota's own Brother Frank Hawthorne.

1 8

Alpha Iota is now striving to improve alumni re­lations and is moving toward closer contact with our Alumni Association. The Alpha Iota Club is having: 1

drive to collect funds for redecorating the downst:ur: section of our house.

Along with changes in the house there also haV' been changes in the leadership of the chapter. Some~~ the senior officers were succeeded by highly energet11

junior members of the fraternity. Alpha Iota planned a busy winter quarter. Inclu~ed

were a pledge formal, a rush party, winter initiatJOt and the annual Red Rose Formal. .

Academic achievement seems to be increasing th1' year, and Alpha Iota hopes that in the new year 1

can establish a more sound fraternity-socially, acPB demically, and financially-that will be a credit to Kappa Phi.

ALPHA XI, BROOKLYN TECH "DYNAMIC" IS the word which best fits the atmo~ phere at Alpha Xi this semester. The first part of th1

atmosphere in our chapter was the initiation of thre new brothers: Mike Pilo, Bill Prinzivalli and WaYP Morrison.

Pi Kapp brothers also have moved into impor~~ positions in school government. Among the most ~~. portant are: Inter-fraternity Council president, lJ!· Sturtz; chairman of the Student Council's Exter~' Committee, Vinny DiGiovanni; Student Activit11

Council treasurer, Floyd Baranello; vice president c the Junior Class, Ed Duffy; secretary of the Sopho!l'l~r Class, Tony Sacco; secretary of Student ActivitJ: Council, Steve Gruchawka; treasurer of the Stude~ Council, Joe LaRosa, who was also elected to t "Who's Who in American Colleges." r

Renovation and modernization of the house co, tinues at Alpha Xi. This summer the brothers oP again lent their time and skill in rebuilding and,../: finishing the entire second floor of the house. l'.e ceilings, walls and floors were put in and new plumb~~ was installed in all rooms. In addition, we had 1'

stories of staircases and ten archaic windows replaC[ The results of our labors to modernize the chaP ;

house were acknowledged and praised by parents i both brothers and pledges at our annual Parell

1 Night. A large number of parents attended and . greatly enjoyed the courtesies extended by the broth;· of Pi Kappa Phi. Refreshments and cake topped o very successful gathering. ··

I } 1 t

a

Co

d o: n­fJ d. a:

The social activities also were improved by the ~ stitution of a very busy summer schedule. Picnics, P. and beach parties, as well as a moonlight boat rJ; and hay ride, highlighted the season's events. The f semester brought a rip-roaring Halloween PartYtr swinging Rush Sorority Party and many Drag and S . parties. Also featured were the Theatre Party and ~ nual Toy Drive, the Founders' Day Dinner, and C!Jtl; mas and New Year's Eve parties. However, the gro finale of our formal social season will be the 15thg~ ~f: nual Rose Ball. The committee planning this 1 di affair has promised the elaborate Huntington 'fo li! House as its site once again. 1 P,

Since the World's Fair is in New York, over Wl

P: fJ al

ot

co

summer a great many Pi Kapps visited our h0~: Though we were in the midst of repair, we were gl of to see and welcome all. Once again, this summer ;i Sl see the open ing of the World's Fair and we would f se to extend an invitation to all brothers of Pi Kappa i Cl to visit us and see for themselves our "dynaJl1 chapter.

ALPHA UPSILON, DREXEL an

THIS YEAR the brotherhood of Alpha Upsilon! te1 sented their 30th annual Pi Kapp show at Dl'

Fe a TH E S TAR AND LAMP OF PI KAPPA

Page 25: 1965_1_Feb

1i re­h our ing 1

stair>

ha~' me oi rgetit

~Jude' .iatio!

7 thi: ~ar i

acs 'to Y

a two~ Jf thl · thre Wa'Jf'

mu~fcc1 year the brothers write and produce an original the ch comedy for the purpose of raising funds for viding apter,. streng:thening brotherhood ties and pro-Four~ maJor soctal activity for the school.

ated b en songs were written and three dances ere­week r Sur brothers. Rehearsals started the third Presen~ d wtember and continued until the show was load aned ovember 21 and 22. To lighten this work we have make our practice sessions more enjoyable parts Th~fteen ~oeds appearing in dancing and script accreditedis proVldes ~ome of our social life and is an

Th b extra-curncular activity for the coeds. in th~ :fa;JVound of this year's show was gay France President L s hnd the story develops when the good Progresses unc alot outlaws the Can Can. As the show nobility and~h find a split over this issue between the entertainin "e lowe1: class gentry. This provided an split our c g par.allehsm" to a problem which has

The sho~untry m the past few years. Year Unde .' natu.rally, undergoes many changes each Brother W a different show chairman. This year organizing alted Max~muk did an exceptional job in almost the an. run~ung the show. Besides writing the show Thnbre script, Walt directed every aspect of outstandi~ rough t~e excellent work of Walt and the brotherhoo~ c~h'peratwn that he received from all the attracted 1 5oo Is year's show was a huge success that

. On behalf people for the two performances. P1 Rapps t 0~ .our chapter we would like to invite all Year. Worko VISit Alpha Upsilon and see our show next 1965 show tf:lS already begun in preparation for the tation. w Ich promises to be another great presen-

AS FALALPHA THETA, MICHIGAN STATE

a new s~i;ltrm ope~ed a~ Michigan State University started man was m evtdence. Even before school gave it a Y of the brothers lived in the house and through r;;hatl~ needed paint job. This spirit carried Pleased With w ere six men were pledged. We are all term freshm our pledge class considering that first

Returnin . en ar~ n?t allowed to rush. certain ch g to Mtchtgan State this fall we met with driving re;~~~~ th~t e-yen now seem strange to us. A only after 6 .00 on requ1res students to drive on campus ~ost of the · th p.m. This affects our house as well as drom the ca 0 er fr~ternities who live some distance

orm complempus. Wtth the many new buildings and area and th xes the campus has been enlarged in total

the j· P Our schol~s~~rollment now has reached over 31,000. es, P~ f roved consid Ic record for last Spring's term im­at 1'1' raternities er~bly .. We rose from 24th to 12th among ~he fl aHA-men's g{·a~Ulpa~smg both the all-fraternity and the !lrtY• !though e POint average. 1d Stl 0~her .intric~~= used Duffy's platoon system and many 1nd s ~ me In four I plays, we were able to only tie one Chri' ~h better lu ~ .football outings. We wish ourselves , grot c 11 nee again th ~~ basketball. ;th ~ cialege With its e ~! Kapps have attacked the rigors of

clu .Program B u Imate we~pon-a well balanced so­is g' d' d1ng the R hnds were hn·ed for three parties in­t '1'01 li~h~er and da~s Party. The traditional Homecoming

Pa s of our ce ~ere held October 14th. Other high-vel' t Wh:th' the Slopsoplal program included the Costume hO~' Th Were ver .arty, a~d the Pajama Party, all of

gl of e main hi 11!nterestmg. :e~· ~ Sh a Merit eft ~~ht of the term was the awarding · ld )1 ser~r~, a charte~ 10n ~ Edward "Shorty" Clifford. u f B ~ Pi Rappa Ph~m er of Alpha Theta, has long ppa 11 Ch !other Cliff d I, rnll~ apter w or • a charter member of Alpha Theta

~; a sp~ciatsd. awar~ed the merit citation October 25 ne att Inner 1n h' h h a ended M' h' IS onor at t e chapter house.

· t Tid Was instt Ic tgan State University in the 20's onr! er here at E·~~ental ~n founding Alpha Theta chap­D F Lansmg. Since that time he has re­

EaltlJAity, •P/4 196 5

Alpha Theta Alumnus "Shorty" Clifford (left) receives Merit Citation from National Secretary Kim Jepson,

another Alpha Theta alumnus.

mained active in the chapters' alumni and business affairs, while also helping to form Beta Xi chapter at Central Michigan University. Members and alumni from all Michigan chapters were present for the cere­mony .

ALPHA SIGMA, UNIV. OF TENNESSEE

ALPHA SIGMA Chapter pledged 26 men this Fall in the best rush we have had since 1952. We had a fine Homecoming display which beat four other fraternities in the judging. The brothers and pledges were proud of the good effort we made in building our display under the leadership of Art Kibble, Jim Sparks and Roy Smith.

Founder's Day was celebrated with a reception at the house for the school administration and other fraternities' and sororities' officers. After the recep­tion a banquet was held at the Student Center with 42 brothers, pledges and alumi attending. Brother Mel Metcalfe, national president, was to be the speaker, but when his plane was delayed, Earl Layman made our Founder's Day address. Brother Layman has been our adviser for the past two years, and we of Alpha Sigma will be forever grateful. Mel Metcalfe finally arrived at the house late that night and gave a well received talk.

With a new Archon, Frank Rozzelle, and a new adviser, Jim Pryor, Alpha Sigma plans to continue to move up next quarter both in numbers and in quality.

BETA ALPHA, NEWARK COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING

THERE HAVE been quite a few events taking place at Beta Alpha Chapter.

A few months ago Prof. Robert G. Salamon of the Engineering Graphics Department here at Newark College of Engineering was formally initiated into the Brotherhood.

A few of the qualifications that Brother Salamon brings with him to Pi Kapp are: assistant chairman of the Engineering Graphics Dept., consultant to the Army Research Office in Durham, North Carolina; advisor in applied mechanics to Picatinny Arsenal, Dover, New Jersey; advisor to the Armed Forces Institute in the selection of engineering graphics texts; a licensed professional engineer and assistant in drawing up P.E. exams for New Jersey; immediate past president of the N.C.E. Alumni Association and a member of the coordinating committee of the Alumni Center fund drive.

But most important is the fact that underneath all his activities and his shell of a "tough instructor" is a personality that makes us very proud to address Professor Salamon as Brother.

1 9

Page 26: 1965_1_Feb

Pi Kapp On Cam.pus

Just before Professor Salamon's installation as a brother, another brother of Beta Alpha Chapter dis­tinguished himself. Anthony C. Vanagas received the Order of the Purple Heart and the Distinguished Flying Cross for his heroics in a Viet Nam flying mission. Besides being an alumnus of Pi Kappa Phi, he was in the Arnold Air Society and while an under­graduate, he obtained his private pilot's license through the Air Force R.O.T.C. here at N.C.E.

In August of 1963, the Viet Cong were still ad­vancing and were terrorizing the citizens with their guerilla tactics. Capt. Vanagas was ordered to locate their positions and have his Viet Nam observer mark them with smoke for the fighter pilots. To locate the enemy in dense jungle growth requires very low flying and to mark their location requires even lower flying. The Captain and his crew didn't spot the enemy, but the enemy spotted him and they unleashed everything they had at him. Bullets shattered the plexiglass windshield, sending much of it into Vanagas' face. With his engine failing and one eye useless, he was thoroughly justified to turn tail. Instead, he went the limit and made another run with his ob­server marking the enemy's position. The Vietnamese fighter pilots did the rest. Vanag-as was flown to Washington where surgeons removed the glass splinters with no permanent injury to his eye.

For this mission, Capt. Vanagas received the two aforementioned medals plus the Air Medal with seven oak leaf clusters for 199 missions after he had re­covered. They were all very hazardous and were undertaken at great personal risk.

The Brothers of Pi Kappa Phi are especially proud of his achievements, but we are prouder of the fact that Brother Anthony Vanagas, an American citizen is trying to make this world a better place to live in:

Through the efforts of the alumni and brothers, Beta Alpha has finally acquired a new house at 249 High St. The house was formerly used for offices and storage. Because of this, we have much renovating, remodeling, and painting to do.

The first floor has actually only three rooms with a semi-basement addition behind them. This floor is

Beta Alpha's New Chapter House.

20

ac at pr. tio of.

CO! an

T! Ra cor itn

~ ... -..x..- Old on wa inc of ba1

Beta Beta basketballers. got Wo.

i

where most of the work is being done at pres~~~ an] The front room is our Chapter room. We have painWJ W the room, re-arranged the lighting, and have furnishEI' toE it with modern style furniture. The room behind our I Chapter room is going to be the lunchroom. We IW~ by built a new wall, made shelves and put down a ne floor. In back of this there is a short hall with a~ office on one side and a bathroom on the other. LaS~ BE but not least, is our party room, which has ~0 . square feet of floor space. This is where the majorit! Itsh of work remains to be done. We have put up a ne1 w ' ceiling with all new fixtures and have started buildill;l QUE a new wall. All the walls will be paneled. There .1U th I also a balcony which we are reinforcing. There '1'11

0 t· e be a bar in this room and built-in benches all arou!1 6

101 Without going into too much detail, the secon1 C

and third floors are in pretty good shape. The secon ~ll floor rooms were all offices and are now used et' 0

elusively as bedrooms. All work on the rooms the.~~e1

selves is being done by the occupants. On the thi ir or floor there are four bedrooms, a dining room, an c! 1

a kitchen. · 1 C e,

These are our general plans for the present, b0 f 1?1

this house has many possibilities we have not ti a e! explored. We imagine that in the future there '1'11

0 ~ be many additions to improve the house. Beta AlP.~r~t: now has a home that they and the whole fraternl ·an~ can be proud of. son

in thr1

THIS PAST semester has been a very fruitful o~ of for Beta Beta Chapter. Upon returning to school t~1 D fall all of the brothers pitched in and joined togetb1 Ev~ to prepare the house for rush. Rush week, as usual, VI~ EliE very hectic but rewarding, and was topped off bY 'The tremendous final rush party and banquet at Alurnll~entj Tom Newman's beautiful home in St. Petersbll".hav Our efforts were justified by the fact that we picl<e and up five top notch pledges, which is very good cof:wa8 s!dering only 40 men were pledged by the 11 fratern~ der1 t1es on campus. Wer

On the soc!al scene we again enjoyed another gr~, to 1 semester .V.:h1ch greatly improved our prestige Vl1, this the soront1es and the deferred rushees on carnptl· tain We began the year with our annual luau. The yar at 1 was decorated Polynesian style, and appropriat~ ~The freshments were served. We have had several ll"e Pro' water skiing parties at Brother Bill Engel's in Sa~ . sot~, a b~rbecue ~~d horse-back riding party, seve 1 soc1~ls w1th soront1es and a hi15hly successful annUrBJJ:· Chnstmas dance. And our sailboat may always 1ati · seen on the waters of Lake Hollingsworth witb

0

BETA BETA, FLORIDA SOUTHERN

brother and his date.

THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI

~8~

KAPPA f

Page 27: 1965_1_Feb

Through bl achieved oo~, sweat, toil and tears, the Chapter at this ~e h~ghest academic rating we have had Proved the ool m ~any years. This has greatly im­tion and ~ fratermty's position with the administra­of. IS an accomplishment we can all be proud

We are 1 k" continued 00 mg . forward to a new semester of all the othsuccess m our fraternity life, and wish

er chapters the same.

THE BETA GAMMA, UNIV. OF LOUISVILLE

R FIRST PROJE apps at th . . CT on the agenda for the Pi ~omplete re e be15mn~ng of the first semester was a Improveme rodelmg JOb for our house. The following old gold r n s were made: The living room and the on both si~om were panelled; trophy cases were built ~all ceilin es of th~ living room fireplace ; new dry Indirect li \s . were mstalled in our two front rooms ; of the lh~ tmg was put in the gold room; the floors basement bng room and gold room were tiled ; the got new w ar got a new ceiling; the purple room Woodwork ails. and a new ceiling; and all walls and

All memb!ceiVed a I'l:ew c_oat of paint. ·esent· and we finsh rJ .helped m this tremendous undertaking ainteD Eight bo e Just in time for the start of Rush Week. nisbeC Week. The ys accepted our bids at the close of Rush ,d 0ur to become ~ ~re all exc~l~ent boys and all are certain , havt Parties a uable additions to our chapter. ~ ne'' by the liallver the past few months were highlighted ith at oween Masquerade Party.

sL~~~ ~ETA. DE~ETA DELTA, D~AKE UNIV.

1joriH Its most T A chapter of P1 Kappa Phi had one of a ne~ Who were successful rushes this year. The 20 men 1Hdi~! quarter of P~hdged plac~d this chapter in the upper 1ere .1: Beta Delta' e frat~rmties at Drake University. ·e '11'1)' ~~e chapter pi Prestige was raised even further when roun

1 Ions contest aced second in the homecoming decora-

seconc 1 Our schol~r h. secoP ~ 1 fraterniti s 1P was the second most improved of ~d e$' 0 third Pla:s 1;\t Drake. The chapter rose from ninth tbe!l~ ~ester. A i m total grade point average last se­

. thil" r onors and se ect group of individuals also received ~. 3!11 c:tary of thawards. Garry Modrell was elected sec-

. , C ed_ed Tom e Inter-Fraternity Council. Garry suc-1t, bO· frolhns is a Dresser, who also is a Pi Kapp. Nolin ot 'J~ a eshman sch memb_er of Phi Eta Sigma, honorary :e '11'11

0 guest of th!arsh1p society. Pledge Jim Antes was

Ajp~1 r~ts~anding st Is honor~ry society at a luncheon for tern!~ acting sect· udents. Jim also took part in the poetry

and p Ion of a · ·t d h 80

. oetry re d" . umvers1 y sponsore ootenanny in \}s a disc 3: Ikg mformal convocation. Fred Hookan­thr es Moinioc -i"~~ for a local FM radio station here

ul o~of ee male soi· . Jor_n (Corky) Heyning was one of .o1 til' Dliandel's ""Msts. m, the annual Drake production ogetlll· Ev ecember 4th ess1ah at the KRNT Theater. al ,~1 En a Sickel R was the night of the Winter Formal. f b'l 'Th er, Rappa ~r Queen of 1964, crowned Miss Bea urnno ent~ Formal w appa Gamma, as the Winter Queen. ~sbuti. ha~re social as a successful event, as has been the · piclle and e been high~!-"O~ram this year. The social events d cof: was a Pasqua!:~ ~ed by a Bohemian Left Bank Party aterll~ der ~ervect Th 1 arty at which an Italian dinner

WerPrivileged ~re was a Christmas Party for un-• grel, t0 e located ~~Ildren at the Pi Kapp house. Children ~ wit thisour house Trhugh a welfare agency and brought arnPU'tain Year a · ere. were a Santa Claus, gifts, and

yo' at Dment. Th· Profess10na~ clown-magician for enter­:te f! The rCke, an~s u;~s done m conjunction with a sorority li"elProj hristmas ps year. it was Kappa Kappa Gamma.

· ge.t' ects. arty IS one of our annual service ' r' se"eu' llET aysnn ~ BETA hpA. lJPSILON, UNIV. OF VIRGINIA a. atio u SILON wttll n of 13 b th began the semester with the initi-

E ro ers, bringing the total brotherhood B~uA~y

pA t ' 1965

to 42. The men initiated come from Virginia, New Jersey, Ohio, Maryland, Indiana and Tennessee. This is_ the largest brotherhood in the chapter's four-year history. This year we have men in politics, varsity sports, newspaper staff and virtually every extra­curricular activity around the Grounds. The senior city editor of the Cavalier Daily is a Pi Kapp.

Since rush at Virginia extends into December, there have been numerous combo and jukebox parties. W e have had some of the biggest and most successful parties in recent history. The result of our rush season has been the pledging of 11 second-year men at the beginning of the semester and 16 more on Bid Sunday. We are very satisfied with these two pledge classes, and feel that there is a lot of potential in them.

On the weekend of October 10, Beta Upsilon was honored in being chosen to initiate and install the Brothers of the new Gamma Beta Chapter at Old Dominion College in Norfolk. The Brothers also par­ticipated in that chapter's chartering ceremonies. We feel that Gamma Beta is a chapter with a lot of good men and will become one of the better chapters in Pi Kappa Phi. In fact, we will have to work even harder to maintain our position as number one chap­ter with competition such as this.

Of the 31 fraternities on the Grounds of the University of Virginia, Pi Kapp has had the top aca­demic average for the past year. In recognition of this, we received the IMP award for academic ex­cellence this year. Also last year Pi Kapp's intramural standing was well in the top half of the fraternities rated. So far this year we have had a successful season in IM football and in volleyball.

This October, the kitchen manager, working with the alumni of the chapter, put into effect the first food service in the house. Meals are served twice daily from Sunday to Friday with breakfast on a short order basis. The food is good as a general rule and our talented chef tends bar occasionally and can even be talked into singing with combos during parties.

Beta Upsilon is a young and growing chapter. We are gaining in prestige and influence on the Grounds. We are one of the biggest houses on the Grounds and are steadily working our way to being the best house on the Grounds. In consideration of our standing in the National Fraternity and here on the Grounds, we are justifiably proud of ourselves. We're proud to be Virginia Men and we're proud to be Pi Kapps.

BETA PHI, EAST CAROLINA COLLEGE

EIGHT NEW brothers were initiated into Beta Phi in October. This gave the chapter 36 active brothers.

Nineteen men were pledged on October 13. This is the largest pledge class in the chapter's history .

Homecoming was the highlight of fall quarter. Dur­ing the weekend of November 13-15, the chapter had three alumni return for a visit. These included Beta Phi's first archon, Bobby Hood, Otis Bailey and Danny West. Because of the youth of the chapter, its alumni are few.

Brother Danny Ray is now traveling for the fra­ternity nationally as a counselor.

The Chapter acquired a new chapter lodge "The Niche" during the summer through the help of its alumni advisor, A. B. Stallworth, Beta '21. It has one huge dance floor, a room for chaperones, and two rest rooms. It is located at 70Ph Dickerson Avenue.

Beta Phi held its second annual Comode Bowl game on October 24. The brothers were victorious over the Zeta pledge class by a score of 21-0. Twenty­five brothers and pledges from Tau Chapter visited Beta Phi that same weekend.

The chapter also had a pledge swap with Sigma Sigma Sigma Sorority that morning to clean up around the houses.

21

Page 28: 1965_1_Feb

Pi Kapp On Campus

Beta Phi was presented with a Master Chapter award this past summer at Mobile for the past school year-1963-64, the chapter's first complete year after being chartered in February 1963.

The Chapter took first place this year in the swim­ming intramurals on campus. This was the second straight year the Chapter has been victorious in this phase of sports.

"Looking for a Better ECC," Beta Phi's homecoming float, won third place in the fraternity competition.

Brother David McLawhorn has won a scholarship to Penn State to study meteorology for one year through the AFROTC. David also has been awarded the Distinguished Cadet award, and he received the scholarship award in the Chapter for last year.

The Chapter had six brothers active in the Circle K Club last quarter. One of these, Miles Barefoot, graduated and two others, Charlie Martin and Mack Davis, are doing their student teaching this quarter. Brother Gary Miller is on the varsitv swimming team.

Our new officers include: Bobby Childress, archon; Alan Fearing, secretary; Everett Cameron, warden; Phil Lomax, historian; Joe Blanks, chaplain; and Eddie Mitchell, treasurer.

BETA MU, MCNEESE STATE

BET A MU HAS made strides forward in many ways this year, and there is no doubt that this movement is the beginning of a new trend for Pi Kappa Phi at McNeese State College.

Fall rush proved to be quite successful this year: Pi Kapp picked up the second largest pledge class on campus. It consists of 14 men. Gene Kuntz was elected president of the pledges, and the offices of vice-president and secretary were filled respectively by Fortune Jaubert and J erry Mouton. Pledge Sweet­heart, Madelyn Meyers, is an Alpha Delta Pi pledge, and was a member of the Freshman Court this year.

The actives have also chosen their Sweethearts. The Rose of Beta Mu is Kathy Clawson, an active of Alpha Delta Pi, and a former Pi Kapp Maid. Anna Jobes and Robbie Ware are the two n ew maids.

The "Cowboys" Homecoming was a success for Beta Mu. This year Pi Kapp placed third in the Home­coming display competition, and the possibility is good that Beta Mu may win the School Spirit Trophy this year. .

At last work has begun on establishing an alumni chapter in Lake Charles, Louisiana, and our first chapter publication, "The Beta Moos" was out by

December. Much more was on the docket: a float the annual Lake Charles Christmas Parade, the annU Founder's Day observance and the annual ChristJ1l Party.

Pi Kappa Phi is well represented in student gove1r

ment and other campus organizations this year. Sullivan, past first vice-president of student govel ment, is now commissioner of machines. Brother ~.~ van also is a member of Blue Key and Who's ""' Archon Douglas Handley is chief justice of , student government Judicial Board; he also is VJI( president of Blue Key and a member of Who's ~ as is Brantly Cagle. Brantly also is president of llJ Key and served as chairman of the McNeese Bo~ coming Committee this year. Treasurer Herb Sen~ is serving his second year as cheerleader. Roii!J Dewey, a captain in Army ROTC is senator for Resident Men's Association, and Warden John Bal

0d

is president of the Pre-Legal Society. Pledge I Kuntz is senator for the Newman Club this semesf

Not only does Beta Mu have excellent representnll Be in student activities, the chapter is equally re

1P.

sented in academics. Beta Mu h as for the past t 1

years held the highest academic average of the fc fraternities on campus, and this year, Brother 0 tn~ was named a Pi Kapp Scholar. .

It is the hope of the Beta Mu actives and pie~ that our faculty advisor, Walter Mosley, will be 1

tiated as an alumni member sometime in JanuarS1 the same time some of our pledges will become nc

members. The annual Pi Kapp Rose Ball will be held

February.

BETA LAMBDA, TAMPA UNIV.

in~ Pe1 the

BETA LAMBDA chapter started its first setne~ Stn off with several big bangs. First of all we go\ Pa1 of the finest pledge classes we have gotten in a ' time. Two of the pledges moved into the house TH mediately showing great spirit and loyalty. ~ Pet

Homecoming was the next highlight for us. , tne two of our brothers on the starting lineup we VI~ in big football game. And when Brothers Ron Gnw rec and Sam Puppello put their heads together an~. he}· the brothers put their hands together we ca~t · Wei the trophy for having the best fraternity lawn dJSP for -a real fine showing for us in the 1964 homecoP' Pro activities. ' .1\ls

With plenty of action yet to come Beta Lnfl11

Wh, has a real solid position in intramurals. This '1

Sta the unc the the The "Be Wee lar1 dat, reJa

T No, this the riva

The brothers of Beta Phi Chapter strike a proper pose for their formal chapter portrait.

22 THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI KAPP~

Page 29: 1965_1_Feb

. float te ann' :brist!l!

t go"el rear. J . govef ~er sui to's "~ · of I ; is vi 10

1

S "1

t of 1!1 se IIo~ J Send " Ro~ ~: for I 1 Bald~ dge Gl sernest ~sentnll .ly reP >ast tb

the f• her CS

td pie~ ill be 1

anuar11 >me ac

Beta Mu tn . • . en w•!h NatiOnal Pres1dent, Mel Metcalfe, on h•s visit to their chapter.

many other th. are united mgs show that the brothers at T. U. about full for a reapy big year. The house is just each day now and Improvements can be seen in it our Arch. Much of the success can be credited to dent of IonF Don Small. Brother Dave Villari, presi-

e held the Greek · C., also is doing a fine job in uniting

. In the :ii . Ing, Our hi Important social corner we are not lack­fhenthouse ~best Party so far was held in a beautiful

, e time · e Platters, who were staying there at . serne· smaller Parw_ere the feature of the eveni!ll;. Many ·e got

1' Party, ties were between then and the Christmas

in a ' house TII:£ BET!ETA ETA, FLORIDA STATE us ~ Per1enced a ETA C~apter of Pi Kappa Phi has ex­

we 'wo' ~ester. As thost enJoyable and rewarding fall tri-Gnf In Septembe ~h brothers returned to the University

m and received u·r, ey .noticed the Beta Eta mansion had er ptu help of t~ Ite a hit of "face-lifting " and with the ~~adisf {eek" fur~h~eo~hytes who were going through "help-

mecon' or Rush A r Improvements were made to prepare 0 Program res I suc~essful formal and informal rush a Lnnl' ~hso in late uSte~ m 15 pledges eligible for initiation. ' ThiS Tn 13 new bp ember the brotherhood was enlarged

St he month ~others were initiated into the chapter. th ate Univers·~ HOctober was highlighted by Florida u e fighting S 1 Y. omecoming. Alumni returned to see t~defeated to ebnnoles upset Kentucky 48-6 and remain the pg_ame Probe byanke.d tenth in the nation. Although The I R.app's Ha Y clr~naxed the weekend for most, ''Be Delta Ga omec~mmg had already been victorious. ,., est All A mma-P1 Kappa Phi float was awarded "'eek - round" f · Ia end was or the 1964 Homecommg. The da~ne Garden coBcluded with an alumni picnic at Kil­rej es and Wis. rothers and alumni, as well as their

T~ation an~es, all enjoyed the Sunday afternoon of N e F!or· d games.

ovember 1 a State-Florida game played in mid-Y ' Was a ' · ear. Broth n event somewhat unique for us Southeast fters and alumni from schools all over

compete ooded the campus to see the arch­a bo ·1 ~~ter the victory over Florida, FSU

. , alu: . ld, so Beta Eta Chapter invited all Victory an~ ~hnd pled11;es to a party to celebrate acksonvin e forthcoming Gator Bowl game occasion e. Of course, everyone was jubilant, and

Was very successful.

la~E BR~~~ CHI, EAST TEXAS STATE Pledge c! RS of Beta Chi are proud of their new

ass of 12 men. At the present time we

1965

The "Pi Kapp Genie" decoration on the Beta Lambda chapter house won first prize in Tampa University's

Homecoming Decoration Contest.

are engaged in open rush, attempting to increase our number and make for a much stronger chapter. About three weeks after school started, Bruce Snover, a sophomore from Norwich, N. Y., was initiated into the brotherhood.

This Fall also produced many memorable moments for every brother and pledge. The Fall Dinner-Dance, followed up Homecoming, highlighted our social cal­endar.

Intramural football on campus ended around the fourth week of competition leaving Beta Chi in fifth place with a 1-3 record. Football was dropped due to the number of serious injuries that occurred.

The pledges have been working very hard to prove themselves this fall. Under the outstanding direction of Brother Ronnie Parks, pledge trainer, the pledges have given Coke parties for each of the five sororities' pledge classes.

BETA XI, CENTRAL MICHIGAN

THE BROTHERS of Beta Xi Chapter are proud of our new house. Work is nearly completed, and our housemother, Mrs. L. Hunter, is now living with us full time.

We had a succcessful fall rush which netted 8 pledges for us. They are Boyd Wiltse, Bay City, Mich.; John Strahan, Bay City, Mich.; Ken Smith, Bay City, Mich.; Hu Miller, Garden City, Mich.; Rick Bradshaw, Mid­land, Mich. ; AI Bartlett, Royal Oak, Mich.; Gary Banfield, Lansing, Mich.; and Bob Poland, Big Rapids, Mich.

Brother Jim Buck was elected to "Who's Who in American Colleges and Universities" this Fall, and brother John Shoberg was appointed a justice of the Student Judiciary on campus.

It is the goal of Beta Xi to become the number one fraternity on campus, and with our new house and pledge class we are well on our way.

BETA TAU, VALDOSTA STATE

BETA TAU began its 1964-65 activities during the summer with a beach party, a banquet and a lot of personal rush contacts.

A successful party put the finishing touches on rush. When rush was over, our chapter had 35 of the best men on campus wearing the white diamond.

A big boost to our morale, aside from our spirited pledge class, was the ordering of Pi Kapp Jerseys. Now everywhere you go, even the girls' dorm, you will see Pi Kapp blue and gold on all our sweethearts

23

Page 30: 1965_1_Feb

Pi Kapp On Campus

and sponsors. They are highly treasured by the right thinking females of Valdosta State.

Our Archon, as President of the I. F. C., was in charge of Greek Week festivities which were a great success.

Plans for the Miss V. S. C. Beauty Pageant are well under way and our Alumni Banquet is next quarter also.

Winter quarter also began the collecting of books for our chapter library.

BETA IOTA, UNIVERSITY OF TOLEDO THE BROTHERS of Beta Iota Chapter were host in November to Bill Dicks, traveling counselor of Pi Kappa Phi. Bill was a big help in getting our fall rush program into full swing. Since his visit we have initiated three men and have pledged two new men. The highlight of our rush functions was our hayride to Oak Openings Park. It was a cold ride to the park and back for the brothers, pledges, rushees and their dates, but it was a night to remember as we rode 80 miles round trip in the back of a pick-up truck.

All Pi Kapps in the Toledo area celebrated our annual Founder's Day in December with a dinner followed by two initiations at the house. Beta Iota was pleased to have as its guest speaker, Durward Owen, national executive secretary, and alumnus Jack Guinan, the first archon of Beta Iota Chapter.

Also in December we held our annual Rose Ball at Willy's Retiree Center. This was the second social event of the Christmas season in which the alumni in the Toledo area joined the actives and pledges for an enjoyable evening.

Our new officers are: Tim O'Shea, archon; John Lind huber, treasurer; Ray Hojnacki, secretary; Bob Dewendack, warden; John Kalmback, historian; and John Notzka, chaplain.

BETA OMEGA, EAST TENNESSEE STATE

SINCE OUR chartering last April, Beta Omega Chap­ter has launched a very active program. Returning in the Fall with a great deal of enthusiasm, the entire chapter of 13 men got the house in good shape and completed plans for rush in just one week. We made it, though, and had a successful rush, pledging 21 men.

The pledges class officers are : Jim Green, president; Bill Potterba urn, treasurer; Ed Cooke, secretary; and Russ Palmer, sergeant at arms.

Beta Omega held a hamburger fry after the Home­coming football game this Fall to introduce the area's alumni to the chapter actives and to keep up our good relations with the neighbors. That night there also was a dance at the house.

Pi Kapps at ETSU have taken an active part in student government this year. Dave Evans was elected to the Student Senate, and Byron Brown and Dave Mielke serve in the House of Representatives.

Beta Omega will hold its annual Rose Ball at t he Martha Washington Inn in Abingdon, Va. this year. The brothers have been working on plans for months and a very successful event is anticipated. Alumnus George Summerson, Rho, is the general manager of this luxurious inn. The Rose Ball will be the high­light of the year for us with the crowning of a new Rose Queen. Charlotte Stout is our current Rose Queen, and she has done a magnificent job throughout the year. East Tennessee abounds with beautiful women and selecting a Rose Queen will be a rather tough decision to make.

We invite all of you to drop by 515 West Poplar if you are ever in Johnson City and visit us.

2 4

l

1 r

0

a A rush party p rogr esses a t Beta Iota Ch apter· a

a Our new officers are: Dave Evans, archon, ft S1

Rockwood, Tenn. ; Dale Hodgens, treasurer, from N9 1:: ville, Tenn.; Byron Brown, secretary, from Alexandt a· Va. ; Dave Mielke, historian, from Johnson City, '}'ef· Ed Valentine, warden, from Alcoa, Tenn.; Tony was L chaplain, from Harriman, Tenn.; Charli e Woods, sll: chairman, from Oak Ridge, Tenn. ; and Bob spr; house manager, from Fontana Village, N . C. l\1

ac Si St th A: B~

Beta X i's New Chapter House. . ·ea 11 1

THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI KApp l

Page 31: 1965_1_Feb

~ter·

Beta Phi Man TopslnROTC

GREENVILLE, N. C. Brothe D . Ch r av1d W. McLawhorn of Beta Phi by ~1ter at Eas~ Carolina College has been cited ROT~ D. S. Air Force as one of its top nine

D cadets in the nation. unit ave, a cadet major in the Air Force ROTC Bro at East Carolina, received the service's rnon~ze Cross of Achievement A ward in cere-

li~es at the college in December. lin Was the first ROTC cadet from East Caro-

~hever to re:eive the coveted medal. outste ~~ard Is presented in recognition of achie an Ing academic and extracurricular activi~~ment as well as excellence in AFROTC

D es. amo~ve Was sele~ted as the medal winner from statesg ~ntrants m a district that included the land 0 ~orth Carolina, Virginia and Mary­and 't~or~I?ns.of New Jersey and Pennsylvania

This e Istrict of Columbia. Lawh was not the first award Brother Me-

lie o~n has received at East Carolina. "Medal~ so has won the Chicago Tribune Gold achieve or outstanding military and scholastic Silver Ment, the Reserve Officers' Association Star A edal Leadership Award, the Academic three s;a~d for maintaining an A average for Award raight quarters, the Competitive Drill Badge, and the Distinguished AFROTC Cadet

UPsi! catr on Pledge

e a class 8 presented National President Mel Met-Founders' rnddle on his visit to the chapter on

, ~ 8

ay. Other chapter alumni look on.

, I l!lJ-' l!y K.AP • 1965

PRETTY GIRLS Beta Psi "Rose" uzanne Smith (second from left in front) and her court, (left to right) Judy Bangs, Judy

Jones and Jill Roger •

Dave was valedictorian of his Winterville, N. C. high school graduating class, and he now stands in the top six percent of East Carolina's senior class scholastically.

Dave is secretary of Beta Phi Chapter and is superintendent of his Sunday School. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. E. W. McLawhorn of Ayden, N. C.

National President Metcalfe (left) looks at Upsilon's IFC Scholarship Improvement trophy.

25

Page 32: 1965_1_Feb

INFORMATION OF

INT!R!ST TO GRADUATE

MEMBERS OF PI KAPPA PHI

FRATERNITY

'

Fraternity Rushing Film Illustrates Activities

NEW YORK, New York.

To help new college students who annually face the decision of whether or not to join fra­ternities and sororities , the National Interfraternity Confer­ence and the National Panhel­lenic Council have produced a motion picture on the subject.

The 15-minute, color movie tells the story of a typical stu­dent just entering college who asks his parents : "What is your advice about joining a frater­nity?"

The audience is taken on a tour of actual fraternity and sorority activities which illus­trate the basic factors underlying their existence. These situations bring out the common aims and principles of fraternal existence.

Scenes in the movie were

TAMPA, FLORIDA ALUMNI

Tampa Alumni Chapter Luncheons, 3rd Friday each month, 1:00 P.M., THE TER­RAZO ROOM, Floridan Hotel.

NEW YORK ALUMNI

New York Alumni Chapter Luncheons, 3rd Friday each month, 12:30 P.M., LUCHOW'S RESTAURANT, 110 E. 14th St.

filmed on the campus of Butler University in Indianapolis, In­diana.

The film concludes by query­ing the audience as to its own advice to the original question after having viewed the expla­nations of the basic principles of undergraduate fraternal life and amenities. It does not pro­vide a specific answer, rather letting the six vignettes of the scenario tell their own story of the common realities of fra­ternity and sorority life.

The movie was designed for the use of interfraternity coun­cils, alumni groups, high school advisers and other interested groups. A copy of the film is available from the National Of­fice of Pi Kappa Phi. Inquiries should be directed to the ex­ecutive secretary.

DES MOINES, lOW A ALUMNI

Des Moines Alumni Chapter Luncheons, last Wednesday each month, 12:00 noon, NOAH'S ARK RESTAURANT.

BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA ALUMNI

1st and 3rd Friday, 12:00 noon, BRITTLINGS CAFETE­RIA, 309 N. 20th St.

DuBois Clubs!ffi~ na11

Are Marxist I. {

SAN FRANCISCO, Califorl rt Recent press accounts repo f

new political organizat~o~, mittedly Socialist and WilhnJ accept Communists, sprea 1

throughout the nation froJ11 California base.

The organization, the W. B. DuBois Clubs of AmericB aimed primarily at college yoO

FBI Director J. Edgar IIo0'

has branded the organizatio~ d" a Marxist group "spawne

the Communist Party, U. Sd Last June, nearly 500 .1

gates convened in San Fr~nc; to form a national o_rgamzll of DuBois clubs. Regional ordinators were named fof East, Midwest and West .. .

According to the natJ 0

president, Phil Davis of Jl Francisco, a 25-year-old co~ student, about 35 clubs

1 been formed in other Jl'l citi~. e

The first club was forJ11 few years ago in San Fran~ by a dozen young persons mitted to "Marxism, peace, 1

rights and civil liberties." 1 Soon it changed to an ac,

oriented group with a bl"~~ base, opening membersl1'

0 non-Marxists intereste studying Marxism as a P0t alternative to the present economic system. The gor

1 the organization reported; the foundation of "a socl order."

I r

Pi c Pi JE c T 1(

s,

F~a R l

26 THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI KAPp.A

Page 33: 1965_1_Feb

Counselors Really Traveling PI KAPP'S TRAVELING coun­selors have done some traveling recently.

bs FredE D· official :It tulus Jr., Beta '59, (right) talks with a New York Stock Exchange named ~ th": General Electric post on the exchange floor. Diulus recently was

Traveling Counselor Bill Dicks, Beta Beta, entered the U. S. Army in January for a two-year tour of active duty.

Succeeding Brother Dicks as traveling counselor was John Davis, also a 1964 graduate of Florida Southern College's Beta Beta Chapter.

• I. duPont~tsCtere~ representative with the Daytona Beach office of the Francis o. Investment firm.

iforl

~pori )D, f

lli!lg, ·ead' ~oJ11

TOLEDo, OHIO ALUMNI ToledoAl . umm Chapter Lunch­

eons 2 ' nd Wednesday each

:onth, noon ANDERSON'S .QERITAG ' D E, Sylvania Ave. at

ouglas.

SEATTLE, WASHINGTON ALUMNI

Seattle Alumni Chapter Luncheons Weekly,

Wednesday, 12:00 noon, Kau Kau Restaurant,

1115 2nd Ave.

Dan Ray, Beta Phi Chapter's first initiate, took up traveling counselor duties last October, but the Army has since called him also. Brother Ray graduated from East Carolina College in 1964. w .

. " f~----------------------------------------------------..... --..... --............................................................ --..... --..... ----, r1c• ~ yoti Hoo' ttiO~ 1ed'' J. s. 10 dt ·anci :tizll1

nal fol' Jt. 1 tiO' of '

coli >S p

plf

,rJ11e raJ1C ns c . ce, 1

,, ;. I , ac bl'o: ·sl1il ; te0

po5' nt 1 go~

ted~! soc'

y 0 u R I D PI KAPPA PHI JEWELRY PRICE LIST

BADGES JEWELED ST Crown s t p YUs Miniature Crown Set pearl Border ....... . .......... $17.75 C e earl, 4 Rub p · 19 75 rown s t p Y omts . . . . . . . . . . . C e earl, 4 So h' p · 19 75 rown Set p pp ~re omts . . . . . . Crown S

1 pearl, 4 Emerald Points ..... 22.75

Crown s:, pear, 4 Diamond Points . .. ... 37.75 Crown Set pearl and Ruby Alternating .... 25.75 PLA.I earl and Sapphire Alternating 25.75

N STYLES Plain Border Miniature Cho_'ed Borde;···· ·· . . .... ........... .... $ 4.25 Wh,te Gold ·:: · · · ·.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 .50

Standard $23.00 22.50 25.00 30.00 52.00 32.00 32.00

Standard

Wh· add,tlanal · I d b d •te G ld an Jewe e a ges .. ... .... . Alu 0 additional o 1 • b d

$ 6.00 8.00 5.00 3.00 mnus Ch n pam a ges .....•... . ..

Alumnus Charm, Double Faced .............. .. ..... .

~~holorship 0~~~r!ingle Faced .... ... .. .... . ....... .

0~~~~1 B~;~~n : · .. .. . .' .' .' .' .' .' .' .' .' .' .' .' .' .' .' .' .' .' .' .' .' .' .' .' .' .' .' .' .' .' _' .' Yellow ~n•t•on Button with White Enameled Star,

Enameled C old-Electroplated . .......... .. ... . .... . Goid.E!oat-of-arms Recognition Button, Yellow

Man ectraplated ogram R .... . . . ....... . ... .. ........ . ecognition Button , Yellow Gold -filled . . .

GUARD PINS

10.00 5.00 7.00 1.00

1.00

1.25 1.50

Extra Crown $29.75 31.75 31.75 39.75 83.75 33.75 33.75

large $ 9.50

10.50

Double letter $ 4.25

14.00 1.00 2.00

E N T I T y IS A VALUED POSSESSION.

YOUR NAME IS PART OF THAT IDENTITY.

YOUR BADGE IS ANOTHER VALUED WAY

OF IDENTITY.

WEAR IT WITH PRIDE OF YOUR MEMBERSHIP IN

PI KAPPA PHI.

• • Your Official Jeweler

BURR, PATTERSON & AULD CO. 2301 Sixteenth Street

Detroit, Michigan 48216

OFFERS

I.-Quality second to none 2-Best values for the price 3-Service with reasonable

and a 4-DESIRE TO PLEASE

time limits,

Write for your free copy The FRATERNITY GIFT PARADE

27

Page 34: 1965_1_Feb

3ln <!&ur C!Cbapter ~ternal ALPHA '11-Henry A. Rogers, Ben­

nettsville, S. C. BETA '07-James B. Frazier, West

Columbia, S. C. GAMMA '09-Fred A. Mechfessel,

Sacramento, Calif. '23-Quincy Evans Porter, Glen­

dora, Calif. '24-George Dale Miller, Chico,

Calif. '24-Harold R. Hartz, Oakland,

Calif. EPSILON-Neill A. McDonald Jr.,

Raeford, N. C. ZETA '11-J. M. Townsend, Bennetts­

ville, S. C. ETA '33-William H. Boring Jr., At­

lanta, Ga. -Hugh Harris, Decatur, Ga.

IOTA '15-James Valentine Thomas, Murfreesboro, Tenn.

'24-Donald Noble Dulweber, Greenwood, Miss.

'26--William D. George, Boulder, Colo.

MU '27-George E. Turner, Wash­ington, D. C.

NU '17-Floyd S. Pegler, Louisville, Ohio.

'21-Carl J. Peterson, former All­American football star on the University of Nebraska's 1922 team, retired in 1963 from Ne­braska's State Department of Tax­ation and Revenue, Topeka, Kan.

XI '26-Randolph John Salmons, Roanoke, Va.

'26--William I. Zirkle, retired vo­cational counselor for the Vet­erans Administration regional of­fice, Roanoke, Va.

OMICRON '19-Rex Alman, Bonita, Miss.

'38-Will T. Engdahl, Casper, Wyo. PI '28-Joseph B. Freeman, Colum­

bus, Ga. SIGMA '11-Joseph H. Phinney, Co­

lumbia, S. C. '42-Charles B. Baber, Gaffney,

s. c. '44-Robert M. Noble, Lumberton,

N.C. TAU '22-James Heath Kluttz, Al­

bemarle, N. C. '24-James M. Edwards Jr., Ra­

leigh, N. C. '27-David S. Cox Jr., Greensboro,

N.C. UPSILON '21-Charles H. Pruitt, Go­

leta, Calif. PHI '21-James Sidney Perry, Kings­

ville, Tex. '25-WaUace C. Franklin Jr., Dal­

las, Tex. CHI '22-T. C. McCutcheace, St. Pe­

tersburg, Fla.

28

'50-William S. Wren, a practicing attorney, DeBarry, Fla.

PSI '18-Walter Richard Prosch, Chi­cago, Ill.

'50-Anthony C. Barnum, taught agriculture and was baseball coach at Franklin Academy and Pratts­burg Central School, Prattsburg, N.Y.

OMEGA '22-George Wesley Munro, West Lafayette, Ind.

ALPHA ALPHA '29-J. E. Rudasill, Atlanta, Ga.

'36-DeVernon Robinson, Rome, Ga.

ALPHA BETA '23-Charles Neal Clarke, Amite, La.

'23-Ciancy Abernathy Latham, New Orleans, La.

ALPHA EPSILON '30-Chandler H. S. Sharon, De Land, Fla.

'40-A. Milton Mingonet, Eustis, Fla.

ALPHA ZETA '29-Eidon George Runciman, Lemon Grove, Calif.

'34-Hugh P. Hanna, principal of the Eddyville School near Toledo, Newport, Ohio.

ALPHA THETA '28-Glenn C. Dailey, Mt. Bosput, Ill.

ALPHA lOT A '26-Andrew R. Mose­ley Jr., Sylacauga, Ala.

'48-Joseph R. Kennemer, Athens, Ga.

'53-Edward Duke Tate, Fort Worth, Tex. -Robert Russell Carothers, Bushnell, Fla.

ALPHA KAPPA '27-Fred Koontz Eshleman, dean of the Henry Ford Community College in Dear­born Mich. His 37~year career in educ~tion began as a mathematics teacher at Fordson High School in Dearborn. In 1946 he became dean of the community college, he

THE STAR

was instrumental in founding n· guided the college from its esrr,P"

to 1 •as enrollment of 200 students , Flo present enrollment of more t••s,.,, 8,000 full- and part-time studen!isto,

He was a director of the Ame~han can Association of Junior Co!le(a~o and was instrumental in four ing the Adult Education Assol tion of America. He .was a mel11~"•« of numerous educational and %~dito ernment advisory organizat~'"ist

Brother Eshleman conduc~ ~ave number of stud ies in the fie! ~ ~~a adult education and commu

1 '"

colleges and his articles o~ th1 subjects were published 111 liSTR

Adult Education Journal. t~~~ He once wrote to a stu J Av,

counle he had helped get set ~rh at Ford College: "I have a{'1 Aip0h enjoyed my job because ·a'"'' working with young people

1, ;r~

much, and one of the regren. "l . ' have is Henry Ford Comm0l1~TQ College has grown so larg~t)' AI~, I haven't had the opportunf 1 Be,. be as close to as many o ~ ~P1 students as I used to when P'i.i1 college was smaller." ~1 1SfRr

Brother Eshleman died ·c•X~~·~ October following an operat1

1 Sar,

D !Rho­ALPHA LAMBDA '27-Jewel • Lock

ner, Tupelo, Miss. B;ta ALPHA MU '32-John Wolfe11~Ga~~

Upper Darby, Pa. 11~i~ 1 '36-Jack Ritchie McCloy, j\{O 4

Bo,. Pleasant Pa. G

1Phc ' I' ree

ALPHA NU '27-Nathan Rober Beta-Knauer, Toledo, Ohio.

1z!ia:

'28-Norbert Emil Fuchs, pu 'st· C Bay, Ohio. c~~

R C -wfoliStRI< '28-Edgar Leon epp , ra ,,84

ville, Ind. { · '32-Aifred E. Newhouse, Wo~ lab

Ohio, was chief engineer ll.nS62 ao Ohio Agricultural Experl <{"••. Station in Wooster, forme[e ,ra": · eng ineer of Wooster; wro,,~l.l 'c editor of the Wooster d 1~"'in9 Record": "Fate has remo~ee~.\r~ 1

of our most valuable citiZ 1hop·.,

ALPHA XI '47-James E. Bell.~ ~~~~ clair, N. J. ~"''•Y

...,, l"ari011 ALPHA SIGMA '35-Walter \Y• 4033 nett, Knoxville, Tenn.

11 l~'!an .

.,r~. ru,9 ALPHA TAU '10-John F. ~·••g0 Rochester, N. Y. 1Jov~;r, "g If ao '31-Seymour Squires, Nau., ,1••t 1 C '3""'b; onn. · 37 8

ALPHA UPSILON '34-Anth?11~: •• ~"o"' seph Drexel Paul , Radnot, :••cit, ·

. R 0nt, ••ch '38-Henry T. Pr1ce, osem Jr " <\LPHA PHI '36-H. Theodore ta

son , Lombard, Ill. · lifeJa, ~rt p

BETA ALPHA '54-John >p~0•ht Bauer, Berlin, Mass. Ca~;,

BETA BETA '4.3-Wordie peJi'~~.da. Oxford, N. C. "[jOscc

;_jc:or, Sa .....

AND LAMP 0 F PI K A P p .A 1•">,

Page 35: 1965_1_Feb

PI KAPPA PH I 11 E. Canal St., Sumter, S. C.

Founded ot The College of Charleston, Charleston, 5. C.-December 10, 1904

irMoN p FOUNDERS . OGARTY, 151 Moultrie St., Charleston, S. C. ANDREW A.

~~~~ P'••ident-Me . NATIONAL COUNCIL (chapter eternal) ; to ,r,eFalsu.rer-CharllevsolleTE. Metcalfe, 411 Adams Bldg., Port Arthur, Texas.

KROEG, JR. (chapter eternal) L. HARRY MIXSON

NATIONAL COMMITTEES ' orod om Hend A A G of Trust Investment-Francis H. Boland, Jr., Chairman, ·e t••s, 0

' Tallahassee Fl erson, sst. ttorney eneral, State South, New York 19, N. Y., exp. Dec., 1967. d Pi· <rotary-Kim J ' a . 180 Central Park

u e .;:'orion-Jack WPson, 300 Stoddard Bldg., lansing 23, Mich. A!ll~0 ancellor-James ·l Steward, 4375 Pearl St., Eugene, Ore. !olle! ~a President-Joh~ May Jr., Merchants National Bank Bldg., Mobile, Ala .

four rbeth, Po. W. Deimler, 1149 Green Tree lane, Penn Valley,

,s:~s. NATIONAL HEADQUARTERS ~d gr,••<utive Sa

1 11 E. Canal St., Sumter, S. C.

tl.0;ditar.in-"h' cfre cry-Durward W Owen Sumter S C za '' · -.. 10

• STAR A . ' ' . . fi)r lostant Execur NO LAMP-Durward W. Owen, Sumter, S. C. ?c)tdS~aveling Counse'1:• -~echretary:-Theodore A. Scharfenstein, Sumter, S. C. 18 a~aging Edita r 0 n Devos, Sumter, S. C. 1muP1 Qonia Beach Va STAR AND LAMP-Paul R. Plawin, 200 76th St Vir·

Pi Kappa Phi Memorial Foundation-John D. Carroll, Treasurer, Box 66, lexington, S. C.; Jack Bell, 6764 La lama Dr., Jacksonville 17, Fla.; George B. Helmrich, 32990 lahser Rd., Birmingham, Mich.; leonard l. long, The Darlington, Suite 7, 2025 Peachtree Road, N.E., Atlanta, Ga.

Scholarship-Or. Donald Come, 1517 Shubel, lansing, Mich.; Harold A. Cowles, Iowa State University, Ames, Iowa.

Endowment-Jack Bell, Chairman, 6764 La lorna Dr. , Jacksonville 17, Fla. Ritual and Insignia-H. B. Fisher, Chairman, Box 412, College Station, Texas.

Architecture-(Advisory)-Fred Hallmark, 620 S. 38th St., Birmingham, Ala.

Admisory-J, AI Head, Park Towers, Apt. 403, 200 Maple Ave., FaU.• Church, Va. n thl ' . .,

in 1>1STRicT 1 DISTRICTS OF PI KAPPA PHI PSummit, -NAI Steele, 25 H' h s

d •l-eo . J. og t. , stU : Av rnell Univer · . . tt AI he ., Ithaca N ysoty, 722 Unoversoty

Iota-Georgia Institute of Techno! · ogy, 719 Brittian Way, Atlanta, Go.

lambda-University of Georgia , 930 S. Milledge Ave., Athens, Ga.

Omega-Purdue University, 330 N. Grant St., West lafayette, Ind.

DISTRICT Xlii-Robert Bourne, 6801 Woodstreom Dr., Charlotte, N. C.

se BPa Xi p'i . . a)W~A{0h0klyn, J3 °srJ•chnic Institute of J Ji 1 P ~ Tou-R ney Place, Brooklyn.

P)e Bo~~~~~~,te, 49 2~de~a1er Polytechnic

0 t· . " Pho-N ·• Troy, N. Y. !gl"e · ~nearing, 24~wH~k College of En·

Beta Kappa-Georgia State College, 24 Ivy St., S.E., Atlanta, Ga.

Alpha Phi-Illinois Institute of Tech· nology, 3333 S. Wabash Ave., Chicago 16, Ill.

Alpha Psi-Indiana University, 317

Epsilon-Davidson College, Box 473, Davidson, N. C.

Kappa-University of N. C., 206 Cameron Ave., Chapel Hill, N. C.

E. 2nd St., Bloomington, Ind. Mu-Duke University, Box 4682, Duke Station, Durham, N. C.

1 muPllsrq/(; •gh St., Newark, tl IOO MT 11-Rich d

DISTRICT Vl-J . Martine Pearce, c/o Dept. of Chemistry, University of Fla., Gainesville, Fla.

Chi-Stetson University, 1241 Stetson, De land, Fla.

Beta Gamma- University of louis­ville, 2216 Confederate Place, louis· ville, Ky.

DISTRICT IX-Roberl S. Kuhlman, 940 Alvi son Rd., Toledo, Ohio .

Tau-N. C. Stale, 2401 West Frater· nity Court, N. C. State College Sta· lion, Raleigh, N. C.

·g~ . AI h cKendree Ar G. Anderson, 1n1tl B~x 0 Mu-Penna ve., Annapolis, Md.

of IA.iph 830, State c· 11State University, Tech Upsilon Do ege, Pa.

hefl Phil no logy, 34o5exel Institute of

Alpha Epsilon-University of Fla ., Box 2756, University Station, Gaines ­ville, Fla.

Alpha Chi-University of Miami, P. 0 . Box 8146, University Branch, Coral Gables 46, Fla.

Alpha Theta-Michigan State Uni· versity, 121 Whitehills Dr., East lansing, Mich.

Beta Phi-East Carolina College, 1301 E. 5th St., GreenvWe, N. C.

DISTRICT XIV-Willard W. Young, Jr. , c/o Southern Bell Telephone & Telegraph Co., Nashville, Tenn.

11SfRJt~elph;0 Po Powelton Ave., d I her 111-Ray · Beta Beta-Flo. Southern College,

Box 416, Bldg. 1· A, lakeland, Fla .

Beta Iota-University of Toledo, 1702 W. Bancroft St., Toledo, Ohio

Betn Xi-Central Michigan University, 508 S. College, St., Mt. Pleasant, Mich.

Alpha Siqma-University of Tennes­see, 1800 lake Ave., Knoxville, Tenn. e . · X;-~1• Ya. mond Hatcher, Am·

•J"Il tJ~ Sa 0 Dnoke C Beta Eta-Florida State University, Box 3085, Tallahassee, Fla . ·D 111th~~ Ya. allege, 327 High St.,

, lock Dashington a d Beta lambda-University of Tampa, 304 Plant St., Tampa, Flo.

DISTRICT X-Vernon A. Sodawasser, 909 Fleming Bldg., Des Moines, Iowa

Beta Omega-East Tennessee State University, 515 West Poplar, John· son City, Tenn.

Bota U r~wer 903 L ~ee University, ~ Ru b Psolon U .• exongton, Va

)feP Gari: Y Rd., Cha":lersity of Va., ·510 352 ma Beta-Old ottesv_il!e, Va.

.x~ISTRI~· Bute St., ~~':}onoon College, , l" Box 466 1'1-Woody B olk, Va .

Alpha-c' Andrews, S Cooks, P. 0.

Beta Tau-Valdosta State College, Valdosta, Ga.

DISTRICT VII-Jerry Willis, P. 0 . Box 1143, Baton Rouge, La .

Alpha Beta (Colony)-Box 2255, 31 McAllister, New Orleans 18, La .

Nu-University of Ne braska, 229 N. 171h St., lincoln, Nebr.

Alpha Omicron-Iowa State Univer ­sity 407 Welch Ave. , Ames, Iowa

Beta ' Delta-Drake University, 3420 Kingman Blvd., Des Moines 11, I own

Beta Psi-Tennessee Wesleyan Col­lege, Box 172, Athens, Tenn .

Kappa Phi (Colony)-Memphis State University, Box 1352, Memphis State Univ., Memphis, Tenn.

DISTRICT XV-Fox H. Brunson, Jr., 2751 Ralston Road, Mobile, Ala.

I Gree allege of . . obel Bela-p St., Chari Charleston, 19

S. C resbyterian eston, S. C.

Beta Mu-McNeese State College, Box 141, lake Charles, La.

Beta Omicron-Northwestern State College of La ., Box 431 , Natchi · toches, La.

DISTRICT Xi- Jack W. Steward, 4375 Pearl St., Eugene, Oregon

Omicron-University of Alabama, 312 University Ave., Tuscaloosa, Ala.

1Zeta-·w College, Clinton, po · S, c afford Col! Alpha Zeta-Oregon State University.

2111 Harrison, Corvallis, Ore.

Alpha Iota-Auburn University, 255 College St., Auburn, Ala.

Alpha Eta-Howard College, Box 1032, Howard College, Birmingham, Ala.

Sig1110'-u . ege, Spartanburg, CorlJ b n,~ersity f

Beta Chi-East Texas State College, Commerce, Tex.

Alnha Omega-University of Oregon, 1790 Alder St., Eugene, Ore. awfoli stRrcr io, s. c . 0 South Carolina,

1184 '1-T. Phil T DISTRICT VIII-Donald S. Payne, 106

Sun,et lnne, West lafayette, Ind. DISTRICT XII-Rev . C. J. Tyler, 2003

E. 291h St. , Oakland, Calif. Gamma Alpha-livingston State Col·

lege, Box 411, livingston, Ala.

wooS ' Macon, Ga. 0 PPy, P. 0 . Box

t lab r !I ·56 a..,a G ri~ 2 De>ct ulf Coast-N

pe "'•• 1 er Ave M b · D. McClure 01er L.,"'~ A.:'*a-w~Yne 0 ile, Ala. ' •rote ~a~ta, "Q Ames, low R. Moore, 430

•'JJJ M. OJ· 0 ·-Jock p 0

' d ,'"'i~gh':er Bldg., All. Turner, 1005 ove 611 AIm, Ala.-c a.nta 3, Ga. ' tizer·~la. ford Ave. "8~' !'· Carlisle, 1 ~~el II'IJ ' lrmongham 16, II ~ h w c ' N. c -c

' ~arleslo omeron .Ch arlyie Shepard o. alsey S~' S. c . ..: Alb 0 Pel Hill, N. c.'

"W· I'::Qiotle,'·· Sharlestnn"'{6 P. Taylor, 6 33 B "· c E , S. C.

!Gttal'la eresford "Rd rnest Delaney , -'t,~r il'lg Gasa. Tenn _ ., Charlotte ' • P hocag0 Orden l · lee Ryerson 5518

~. Mild, lli.-Rich~e, Chattanoo'ga. dizveland~d,Och;cag~d 14Gr?lgl ory, 2741

l Ue J"" 1 s1 ·-Jo~ • . ~3~~~ia, s's~\ ~·~.,~·nd~a~s. 3492

hortf • landa>cter St 'c Rochard c M' forod • Fia ., ayce S C . oms,

or, ttro;~, Av":· ·r4Bi.~ Sm;'th; N~rth Col· nont.leechwo "'••h.-K~~d, Fla.

J' Od, Birmin h Jepson, 17881 )rc g am, Mich.

ta-J • life a"'•• B

~'t' Pe Assu · Ram 'Ppachtree s'Once So a.ge, Equitable c o-F 1., N E coety, 739 W

~·rn'b~·•~n 1rlvle Sh Atlanta, Ga. . pe G a-Rob ve., Cha ep~rd •. 409 W. •-a. •rt E r('" Hoi!, N. C.

li 0 scar I( · nox, Thomson, i-j•oln, N och, 303 • p • •- a"'•• ebr. B Jackson D

• ,. ""'•rn Wm . r., , M.ain ·s Broltan, Bank of

1., Salem, Va.

Upsilon-University of Illinois, 306 E. Gregory, Champaign, Ill.

Gamma-Universi ty of California , 2353 Prospect, Berkeley, Calif.

Kappa Phi (Colony-Troy Stole Col· lege, Box 135, Troy, Alabama.

ALUMNI CHAPTERS Des Moines, Iowa-Harry Whitmore, 7309 S.W. 13th, Des Moines, Iowa.

Eugene, Ore.-Aion C. Groves, 275 31st Ave. W . Eugene, Ore.

Memphis. Tenn.-Worren Cruten, 539 Cherry Rd .. Memphis. Tenn.

Miami, Fla.-Richord 0 . Whipple, 2921 loui~;e St., Miomi, Flo.

Salem, Ore.-Richord Shaffer, 780 Ratcliff Dr., S.E., Salem, Ore.

Georgetown-Myrtle Beach, S. C.-Joe Shaw, 13 Meeting St., Georgetown, s. c.

Greenville. 5. C.-Moe Adams Chris­topher, PO Box 3507, Park Place Dr., Greenville, S. C.

Ho••ston, Texas-Hnrold F. Simpson. 1507 Calif., .tt-13, Houston 6. Tex.

Indianapolis, lnd.-David Bibler, 401 East 37th Street, Indianapolis, Ind.

Jacksonville, Fla.-Rolph Saffy, 3451 Remington, Jacksonville, Flo.

Kansas City, Mo.-Milton 5. Broome, 6210 N. Michigan Dr., Gladstone, Mo.

lakeland, Fla.-Gene Coufoeld, 213 Anne Marie Circle, lakeland, Fla.

Lansing, Mich.-Kim Jepson, 508 FuJ. ton Place. lans ing, Mich .

Lincoln, Neb.-Winfield Elmen, 2640 lake St., lincoln, Neb.

louisville, Ky.-Robert Schroader, 2403 Wallace Ave., louisville 5, Ky.

Montgomery. Alc1.-Morvin H. Killins· worth, 3983 Thomas Ave., Mont· qomerv, Ala.

New York, N. Y.-Joseph Flaherty, 771 Fourth Ave., Brooklyn 32, N. Y.

North Tex.-Rebert W. Wylie, 13327 Flagstone lone, Dallas 30, Tex.

North New Jersev-Edword T. Keane, 2672 Hudson Blvd., Jersey City, N. J.

Orlando, Fla.-Peter C. Barr, 3316 Charow ln., Orlando, Flo.

Philo ., Pa .-lawrence Barnard, 315 Airdole Rd., Rosemont, Penna.

Portland, Ore.-George W. Blinco, 10008 S.W., 56th Ave., Portland, Ore.

Raleigh , N. C. - l. M. Shirley, 3107 Sussex Rd .. Raleigh, N. C.

Roanoke, Va.- W. J . lawrence, c / o lawrence Trans. & Stg . Co., Roa­noke, Va .

ALUMNI ASSOCIATIONS Omicron-William D. Smith, 4 The

Downs, Tuscaloosa, Ala . Rho-Robert Glenn, Box 916, Roanoke,

Va . Tau-l. M. Shirley, 3107 Sussex Rd

Raleigh, N. C. Upsilon- P. 0. Box 77, Slation A,

Champaign, Ill. Chi-Uriel Blount, Jr. , B~x 421, De·

land, Fla . Psi- John A. Stone, 51 Cliflon Blvd.,

Binghamton, N. Y. Omega-Jerry K. Herod, 111 Avalon

lone, Chesterfield, Ind. Alpha Delta-Dean W. Parker, 6223

44th Ave. , N.E., Sealtle, Wash. Alpha Ep•ilon- Frank M~loney, 1823

NW lOth Ave ., Gainesville, Fla. Alpha Theta-John Hornville, Cassop·

olis, Mich . Alpha Zeta-Ronald Thorn , 1102 Cen·

ter, Oregon City, Ore.

Seattle . Wash.-Horold V. McPherson, 3043 East 203, Sealtle 55, Wash.

Spartan bur!!, S. C.-Thomas K. Flet· cher, Jr. , Box 1509, Spartanburg, S. C.

Sumter, S. C.-Edwin B. Boyle, 111 Mason Croft Drive, Sumter, S. C.

Tallahassee, Fla.-Jerry Dobson, 167 Grenshaw Ave., Tallahassee, Fla.

Tampa, Fla.-Gerold Bobier, 3301 Sierra Circle, Tampa 9, Flo.

Toledo, 0.-Rkhard Smalley, 3313 Anderson Parkway, Toledo 6, 0.

Tri..City, Tenn .-S. Neil Hayes, 1329 Pineola Avenue, Kingsport, Tenn.

Tucson, Ariz:.-Robert T. Francis, 2658 Avenida Carolina, Tucson, Ariz.

Valdosta, Ga.-Chorles Powell, 1710 N. lee Street, Valdosta, Ga.

Vero Beach, Fla.-John l. Groves, Box 974, Vero Beach, Fla.

Washington, D. C.-Capt. Mitchell Disney, 608 Niblick Dr. S.E., Vienna, Yo.

Alpha Iota-Frank Hawlhorne, 1009 First Nat'! Bank Bldg., Box 687, Montgomery, Ala.

Alpha Mu-Russell W. Ingham, 132 Pork Rd. , Wyomissing, Po.

Alpha Xi-Herman Fuchs, 744 West· minster Rd., Brooklyn, N. Y.

Alpha Omicron-Wayne R. Moore, 430 lynn Ave., Ames, Iowa.

Alpha Upsilon-Richard N. Mensch, 601 Williams Ave., Magnolia, N.J.

Page 36: 1965_1_Feb

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