gamma chi installed laurel dick massock … · dick massock reminisces eta celebrates its 50th ......

36
THE LAUREL of Phi Kappa Tau CONVENTION AT FRENCH LICK GAMMA CHI INSTALLED DICK MASSOCK REMINI S CE S ETA CELEBRATES ITS 50TH IMPACT 68 PLANS READY CHAPTER NEWS IN PICTURES

Upload: vuanh

Post on 09-Jun-2018

218 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

THE

LAUREL of Phi Kappa Tau

CONVENTION AT FRENCH LICK

GAMMA CHI INSTALLED

DICK MASSOCK REMINISCES

ETA CELEBRATES ITS 50TH

IMPACT 68 PLANS READY

CHAPTER NEWS IN PICTURES

C'7 wo important events in the life J of Phi Kappa Tau will be held in August of 1968. The first will be the undergraduate leader hi p workshop, to be held on the campu of Indiana University at Blooming­ton on August 22-25. Each chap ter and colony will be repre ented b three undergraduate members a t this historic event. T wo of th e mem­bers wi ll have at least two years re­maining as undergraduates a nd the third at least one year r maining in school. The Central Office sta ff and the members of the Nationa l Coun­cil are most excited about this work­shop. We are aware of the potential leadership in all our chapter ; but in order to reach the oal and objectives which are so importa nt in the effective management of ou r fraternity, we believe that this con­clave can and wil l be most valuable. This is the first such program in the history of Phi K appa T a u to be conducted on a nationa l lev I. I am sure tha t the brothers ou have selected to represent you r chapters wi ll represent the high qua lity of leadership we a ll des ire.

The thirty-ninth convention of Phi Kappa T a u will be held at the French Lick-Sheraton H otel in French Lick, Indiana, on August 25-28. This convention is your op­portunity to witness Phi K ap pa T a u a t work and to become aware of ou r achievements. ot only will the official business of the fra ternity be transacted, but decisions will be made which wi ll chart its future. Although much time will be spent on these matters, there will be ample time for fun and recreation. Facili­ties for swimming, golf, tennis and other varied activities a re ava ilable. The meeting of the Na tional Coun­ci l will be held previous to conven­tion time; thereby gi ing all of us a chance to become better acquaint­ed with our brothers.

See you at these two events!

WARREN H. PARK ER

at iona l Pres id nt

THE LAUREL j AC K W. j ARED , Edito r

Contents

OLUME LVI SPRI NG , 1968

NuMBER 3

of Phi Kappa Tau The exoteric publication of The Phi Kappa Tau Fraternity . PubliJhf'd pnor to 1919 as ''Sidelights." Sc~cd­ulcd to apprar quarterly under direc· tion and ~ u1hority of the National Counci l of The Phi Kappa Tau fr<"tc rn ity.

It ' on to French Li k For '68 onvent ion .... . . . .. . I

In ta ll amma hi at Delta ta te . .. ... . . . . . . .. ...... +

Richa rd M a o k Illinois '20 F reign orr pond nt .. . 7

John Raftery Train Pa rk . rvice Per onnel .... . ..... I 0

Eta H old Golden nnt\' r ary lebra tion .... . ..... I -

Ph i Tau lu mni Going Place , D ing Thing .......... I+

Plan in Reaclin for IMP.\ T '68 ..... . .......... 16

Dr. R yan 'vV . Drum, " l ifferent" L c tur r .... . ..... 18

hapter New aying It With Picture . ... .. . .. 19

Four Domain Chief ppointecl . ... . .. . .......... . . 28

O ur Gallant Phi T a u .. ....... . .... . . .. . ... . . . .. 29

The hapter Eternal . .. ........ . ..... . . . .... . ..... 3 1

Our Cover

Front entrance to the Fren h Lick - hera ton H otel, French Lick, I ndiana. The 1968 Phi K a ppa Tau Con­ve nti on will be held here sta rting unday, ugu t 25 .

T HE PHI KAPPA TAU FRATE RNITY CE:-ITRAL O FFICE, OXFO RD. OHIO cccpt~ncc for maili ng at soec1al ralcs of posta"c pro,•idcd for in ct ion 1103, Act o( Octobc.r 3, 191 7 Publish«!

qu:me:rly by the Uwhud PrbS Inc , E:ut tate treet. thens. Ohio official pri nten for The Phi Kapp;a Tau fn.tunity . Suond cbus pou agc p,atd 111 Athe ns, Ohio, A. and M adduional mailing offices form ~19 thould ~ addreucd to T he Phi Kappa T au fr:ucrnity, cnt ra\ OHice , Odord , Ohio <45056

~he thirty-ninth national convention of Phi Kappa Tau will be held at the historic and gracious French Lick- heraton Hotel, French Lick, Indiana, Sunday, August 25, through Wednesday noon, August 28, 1968. This i the third time Phi Kappa Tau has chosen French Lick as its convention site. In 1940 the Fraternity's twenty-eighth conclave was held at this Southern In­diana scenic location, and in 1953 the thirty-second con-ention was also called to order there.

There is good reason why the Fraternity has gone back to French Lick more times than to any other con­vention meeting place. estl ed in the picturesque Cum­berland foothills, the French Lick-Sheraton today is one of the country's leading resort-convention hotels, its fame having developed over more than a century of existence. The hotel, its spacious and beautiful grounds that cover 1700 acres, and its mineral springs are rich in tradition - tradition that is now yours to enjoy along with the unforgetable inspiration that only at­tendance at a Phi Kappa Tau convention can impart.

Down through the years French Lick has become ynonymous with good living and luxury. The ~wtel

guest register is studded with the names of society's finest and the nation's famous who were attracted to this vacation spot by its many outstanding features.

Although private railroad cars of the U.S. first

famili es are no longer shunted to sidings adjacent to the hotel entrance ( the rail sidings, however, are still to be seen ), the hotel's own landing strip and the easy ac­cessabi lity of French Lick by automobile make it the ideal Phi Kappa Tau convention site for undergraduates and alumni alike.

In addition to newly-decorated sleeping rooms, top­notch dining facilities, and spacious meeting rooms, the French Lick-Sheraton offers Phi Kappa Tau members and their families the finest in recreational facilities -keet and trap, livery stables, two outdoor swimming

pools, two indoor pools, tennis, croquet, badminton, table tennis and two championship golf courses. In ad­dition special recreational programs are available for children. The youngsters will delight in the separate play areas, surrey and train rides, and a childrens' supervised pool. A full -sized steam locomotive has been permanently retired to the hotel grounds and affords the chi ldren (and dad) a chance to "play train."

Arrangements for the Fraternity's thirty-ninth con­vention, August 25 to 28, at the French Lick-Sheraton are being planned to provide an unparalleled opportu­nity to learn what your Fraternity is doing and planning to do nationally as well as to give to members (and their families ) a golden opportunity to enjoy the facilities of one of America's most picturesque vacation areas. * * *

PROGR AM THIRTY-NINTH PHI KAPPA TAU

NATIONAL CONVENTION

The French Lick- heraton Hotel F rench Lick, Indiana

A ugu t 25 to 2 , 196

Sunday, Augus t 25

Afternoon 2:00 jJ.IIl. 5:0p.m.

Evening 6:30 jJ.m. 9:00 jJ.IIl.

Monday, Aug u t 26

M orning 7 to 9 a.m. 9:00a.m.

oon 12:00 noon

Aft moon 2:00 jnn.

E vening 6:30 jJ.In. 8:30 jJ.m.

Tuesday, Augus t 27

M orning 7 to 9 a.m. 9:00 a.m.

oon 12:00 noon

Afternoon 2:00 jJ.m.

Evening 7:00 jJ.m.

Wedne day, Aug u t 2

A1orning

N oon

Page 2

7 to 9 a.m. 9:00 a.m.

12 :00 noon

R egistration 0 jJt 111

R eel jJlion

Dinnl r A!odd h zitiation

Breakfast 0 peni~zg on uenlion

esswn

Awards Lunchl'oll

ommittee Af ccting1

D inner A chievement onle1L

Breah.fa t onvc nt ion e sto 11

Lunch on

Con vention csswn

onvcntion Ba nqu. t

Breakfast losin[J , onv ntion

csswn

F art•well L uncheon

A GREAT PLACE TO BATILE OLD MAN PAR

Convention Facts

WHAT WILL IT COST: The French Lick-Sheraton operates under a full -American plan system, which means that room and three meals a day are in­cluded in the hotel rates. Arrangements have been mode for single rooms, double rooms, and rooms for three persons. The rates, including room and meals, ore:

Single Room $21.50 per day Twin Room $19.00 per person, per day Triple Roc.m $15.00 per person, per day

(Add 2"/0

Indiana soles tax to above rates)

In addition, the hotel will add $1.35 per per­son, per day, for dining room gratuities. Rates for children, who occupy rooms with their parents, are $9.00 per day. This applies to children 16 years or younger.

HOW TO GET TO FRENCH LICK: Located in southern Indiana, French Lick is approximately 60 miles from Louisville, Ky., just off U.S. Highway I SO. The nearest commercial airport is Louisville, Ky., which is served by A merican, TWA, Delta, Eastern, Ozark, and Piedmont airlines. T ronsportotion can be arranged via limousine , bus, taxi , or air taxi from Louisville. The French Lick airport has o lighted, hard surface runway 4,400 feet in length and it is possible that scheduled service will be available by August d irect to French Lick. Com· merciol bus service is available from Indianapolis and Evansville , Ind. ; Louisvill e, Ky. ; and St. Louis, Mo.

WHAT TO WEAR: In general informal resort wear is quite acceptable for both men and women throughout the day. Men ore expec ed to wear coots in the dining room and public areas of the hotel. Neckties ore not required at breakfast or luncheon but ore necessary a fter six in the evening. Di nner jackets will be worn by the officers at the head table. While business suits will be quite ac­~eptoble for delegates for the banquet, dinner 1ockets would not be inappropriate.

INDOOR- OUTDOOR SWIMMING POOL

THE l '\U [L

SPORTS GALORE FOR CONVENTION-GOERS AT THE FRENCH LICK SHERATON HOTEL

RESERVATION FORM

THIRTY-NINTH PHI KAPPA TAU NATIONAL CONVENTION

AUGUST 25 THROUGH 28, 1968

l ationa l ecreta ry J ack L. Anson Centra l Office Phi K appa T au Fra terni ty O xford , Ohio 45056

I'll be at the French Li k-Sheraton H otel, French Lick, Ind :a na, for the n:J tiona l conventi on to be held August 25 to 28, 1968.

( ame) ( C hapter) (Class)

( A ddreH or at/r/,esses w h e1e )'U ll ca11 be co ntacted /rum Ar/ay 10 to A ug ust 25)

I will be arriving by _ ____ _ _ _ (au to, bus, plan e )

If by plane, I will a rrive in Loui ville, K entucky, a ( time, day )

-------- -- ------- --

The first mea l I will eat a t the convention will b'"------- ----------on _________ _ __ _

I will leave foll owing· _________ (which meal) on _ _ ________________ (da y)

Th fo llowing persons will be with me: _ ___ _ ( List the nam es uf all m e mbers of )to u r fa m ily w ho are co m i 11 g

an rl t heir a2es. I ( fralenli i 'V m emhers acco m pa 11 y you , l ist their home add reJSeS and c:IW/}/ers.)

D Single room at $2 1.50 per day D T win room at $ 19.00 per person, per day

Reserva tions Needed : D Triple room a t $15 .00 per person, per day

Note: Th is form is an offic ial re g is tration form a nd reservations will be mad e for all pe rsons listed he reon.

SPRING • 1968 Page 3

Home of Gamma Chi,

Our Ninety-Fourth

Chapter

Delta State College

P hi Kappa Tau became the six th group in the fa t­growing family of Greek-letter organiza tions on the Delta State College campu , Cleveland, Miss., when the Fraternity's ninety-fourth chapter was in ta iled there as Gamma Chi of Phi Kappa T au on February 25, 1968.

An afternoon reception and charter-signing cere­mony followed by an evening banquet at which the Gamma Chi charter was formally presented compri ed the program that brought a new fraterni ty chap ter to this progres ive and expanding we tern Mis i ippi institution of higher lea rning. T he Sta te of Missi ippi now boasts three Phi T au chap ter and one colony.

National fraternity officers in a ttendance included National Secretary Jack L. Anson ; Thomas L. tennis II, member of the ational Council who represented National President Warren H . Parker ; and T. H avi Johnson, chief of Domain No. 7, in which the new Gamma Chi chapter is located.

T he insta llation banqu t addres was given by Thoma L. tennis II . Dr. J ack W. G unn, assi ta nt dean of the college and profe or of history, wei omed the new chapter on behalf of Delta ta te's president, Jame Milton Ewing. Other college officials present were H enry Lee ow 11, dire tor of student ac ti vities; Miss Carol Brumby, chairman of the facu lty committee on campu organiza tions; and Mrs. M axine H olcom , chairman of the facu lty ommittee on fra ternities and ororities.

Banquet toastma ter wa D r. William L . LaForge, hairman of the Gamma hi board of governors. Other

board members presen t included R ichard D . trahan, Daniel T. McQuagO'e, M ajo r Lawton K . O wen, and Edward K ossman J r. R ep re enta tives of the fi ve other Delta tate fra ternitie and sororities, the Delta ta te Interfra ternity and Panhellenic councils, and parents and Gamma Chi alumni were also honored guests.

ROBERTS MEMORIAL LIBRARY ON THE DELTA STATE COLLEGE CAMPUS

Pa ge 4 THE LAUREL

GAMMA CHI CHARTER PRESENTATION PRINCIPALS. Left to right , Jack L. Anson , national secre­tary; Robert A. Qu inn , pre~id~nt of ~ammo Chi hold ing the charte r lor our nine ty-fourth group ; James Harvey, Gamma Cho voce presodent ; and Thomas L. Stennis II, National Council me mber.

The Story of Gamma Chi

Bv LAWRENCE A. KENNETH, Editor Gamma Chi of Phi Kappa Tau

The Delta State colony of Phi Kappa Tau, estab­lished in the spring of 1965, was founded as a non­connectional social fraternity in 1963. This local fra ter­nity, Phi Tau Delta, had an original membership of ten undergraduates. Today the chapter room is located in the same building where organizational meetings were held.

Dennis Smith, a member of Phi Kappa Tau from Alpha Chi chapter at Mississippi State, established the local fraternity. At that time the local sought the as­sistance of Dr. Will iam F. LaForge, head of the Delta State department of social science, and a member of the Fraternity's Beta Epsi lon chapter at the University of Southern Mississippi. Dr. LaForge, president of the Gamma Chi board of governors, served in this same capacity for the Delta State colony.

The first undergraduate president of the colony was Dennis Smith. H e was succeeded upon graduation by Richard Stevens. After a two-year term Stevens was succeeded by Robert Quinn, currently serving as the first president of Gamma Chi chapter.

It is upon the shoulders of one man that the suc­cess of the colony rests. Robert Quinn has provided the inspiration and initiative in the thirteen months that he has served as president to put the men of the Delta

SPRING • 1968

State colony where they are today. Of the original ten men who founded Phi Tau Delta, Gamma Chi today boasts a total membership of forty-three. On February 19, 1968, six days prior to installation as Gamma Chi chapter, twenty-seven men were officially initiated as members of the Phi Kappa T au national fraternity. Initiation ceremonies were conducted at the Immanuel Baptist Church in Cleveland by members of the Alpha Chi chapter of Mississippi State University.

The men of Gamma Chi have always striven to give their best to Delta State College. They have held offices on the Interfraternity Counci l, and have been active in various campus professional fraternities. Men of Gamma Chi are to be found on the Dean's List and the President's List. They are charter members of a Delta State leadership fraternity. We have been the recipient of the Interfraternity Scholarship Trophy for spring seme ter of 1967 and fall of 1967. The Gamma Chi members are active in collegiate athletics and run all concessions for ath letic events on campus throughout the year.

We at Delta State profess to be a cosmopolitan organization both in membership and activities on cam­pus. The colony, in conjunction with the Delta Delta Delta sorority, won the first annual Greek Day Trophy.

There are men who have come and gone - and who are yet still present in that they have contributed considerably of their time, effort, ingenuity to the progress of Phi Kappa Tau at Delta State. The history of Gamma Chi is a history of brotherhood. There is a

Page 5

quo tation which aptly appraises each man's regard for the other: " o one could tell me where my soul m ight be ; I searched for God but he eluded me ; I sought my brother and fo und a ll three."

Delta State College wa crea ted a D elta ta te Teach­ers College in 1924 by the M issi sippi legi la ture a nd a uthorized to award the bachelor of cience deuree in education. T he origina l plant con i ted of con iderable lands a nd th ree bri k bui lding , once the p roperty of the Bolivar County Agricultural high chool, donated by the C ity of Cleveland a nd Bolivar ou nty. The ol ­leue opened for it first regular e ion on ep tcmbcr 15, 1925, with a faculty of eleven office r a nd teacher and a n enroll ment of ninety-seven tudent .

The growth and expanding function of D elta State College is evidenced by the cha nge in 1955 to it present name. Enrollment has increased to almo t 2,500 studen ts and corresponding increa e have occurred in physica l facili ties. The campus now con ists of 246 acre of fert ile land with in or adjoining the we tern corporate limits of C leveland . The college has under con truction a three-story re idence ha ll for women wh ich is ex­pected to be read y for oc upancy in 1969. Con truction has a lso begun on a ha lf-mi ll ion doll a r speech-drama build ing. The R oberts femoria l library, a n impo ing glass and masonry structure, occupies a commanding position on the eastern approach to the campus. Walters Sillers Coliseum and the Younu-Ma uld in cafe­te ria are two circula r tructures tha t have brought to Mississippi a new concep t in bui lding de ign .

Miami Library Donor

Dr. Wi lliam E. Alderman, Ohio University, dean emeritus of Univer­sity of M iami's College of Arts a nd Science, has presented the Univer­sity with a rare li terary collection as a birthday present on the occa­sion of Miami's celebrat ion of Char­ter Day on F ebrua ry 14.

Charter Initiates of Gamma Chi Chapter

DELTA STATE COLLEGE

UNDE RG RA DUATES

J ohn Ala n Bis hop J oseph C . Bucc heri Ja mes And rew Che atham John Thoma s Far re ll Fre d e ric A . Ghe d ine W a lter E. G ra vette , Il l Ste ph e n Lynn G ri mes Ja me s Micha el Ha rvey Jer ry Wayne J ohnson La wre nce Aug ustus Ke nneth,

Lo uis Luzzi, J r. Ph ilip Manella Ro b ert C . Naro n Ne a l Taylor Nations J o hn Stan ley Pol son Ro bert An tho ny Ou inn Jame s W oodrow Sm ith G a ry Fra nklin Terrel l William Cu rtis Wa lker , J r.

Il l W ill ia m Burford W est, J r.

A LUM NI

To m my L. Barron S. Ed ward Koss ma n, J r. H o race Eugen e Martin

J immy Ca riker M oore La wton K. O we ns Rich a rd Denma n Strahan

D egree o ff ring 111 riginal au tho r-iz d degree, includ ba a laureatc leurcc in th cience the a rt , a nd mu ic. In 1965 graduate work

for tea' her in evc ral fi lei of c nccntr tion was of­fered and the fir t dcgrc of M a tcr of Edu ca tion wa awarded in M ay of 1966.

Other na tiona l fra terni ti s loca l cl a t Delta , tate College a rc K a ppa lpha and Pi K appa lj ha. or n­ti e to be foun I on ampu ar K appa D elta, D Ita D elta D elta, and Phi Mu . * * *

MIAMI UNIVERSITY LIBRARY GIFT. Dr. W illi am E. A ld e rman , le ft , and Lel and S. Du tton . M iami Unive rsity Lib rary d ire ctor , with valuable e d ition of Shaltesbury " Characteri stics."

Glamour portion of the co llection is a handsome set of lea ther-bound books printed more tha n two cen­turies ago, the world's most ex­tensive collection of Shaftesbury's "Characteristics." These amount to 16 of the 17 authenticated English editions of the works of Anthony Ashley Cooper, T hird Earl of Shaftesbury, 167 1-1 713.

department twelve of those years. contains all of the printed material written by hafte bur p lus a work­ing collection of book and articles about him. Foreian-lan211age ed i­tions of "Characteri tic ," other old related volume , mi rofilm and pho­tocopy material from other co lie -tion , exten ive re earch note and cop1e of a ll of Alderman' \\'rit-

Shaftesbury's works have been the principal research in teres t of Dr. Alderman, who was dean at Miami from 1935 until h is retirement in 1959 and chairman of its English

Page 6

The Alderman-Miami collection of sixteen editions of the " Chara -teristics" is followed by the Bodleian Library at Oxford in England , which owns fourteen editions ; the British Museum, with thirteen ; Har­vard ni er ity \ ith twelve· Yale University ' ith eleven, and the Li­brary of Conures with nine.

T he Alderma n-Miami coli ction m u abou t ha fte bury ar m-

cluded. * * * THE L UREL

Reflections on a Career

Richard Massock -Foreign Correspondent

EDITOR' OTE: R ichard G. M assock, Ill inois '20, be-gan his newspaper career on the staff of the ILLI NO IS S TATE

Jo R NA L in Springfield. After joining the Associated Press in Chicago in 1920, assignments in j efferson Cit)', M o.; Fort JVorth and Austin, T exas; and M adison, W is. (whe-re he and M rs. M assock chaperoned Omega chapter dan ces) followed. In 1926 he was transferred to the New Y ork AP office and in 1932 began a colorful caree r as an AP foreign correspondence and bureau chief world-wide in its sco pe. fl e was chief of the A ssociated Pres R ome Bureau when Mussolini declared war on the U.S. on D ecember II , 1941 and M assock's book, " I ta/)' fr om W it hin," ( M ac­millan) is based on his I talian experiences. Massock wa.r born in 1900 at Blue M ound, I ll., " Th e town that gives a little color to Illinois ." N ow retired, after two Jlears in California, D ick and his wife, M J1r l, live in Coral Gables, Fla.

Th l IC IIARO G. MA SOC K, ILLI NOIS '20

3 t ,. a a black and blu tery winter's night of rioting. ngry protesters trying to storm parliamvnt were fa llin cr \ ith bullet wounds a ll over the darkened Place de Ia oncorcle. Rumor fl ew tha t Algerian spahi were mowing the people clown with machine guns. merican new paper and nevvs agen y offices had to know who wa doing the firing.

o, leaving the barricaded afety of the Hotel Cril­lon I pushed across th e va t square throu rrh the scream­ing crowd up to the bridg over the Seine. It was mid­night and, a lthough I did not know it at the moment, th:lt bloody night in Pari was the end of the politically chao tic Thirtie .

A I crept up a barrier of blue-coa ted gendarme on foot started forward. They opened fire with auto­matic pi tol . Their capes swinging behind them, they fann ed out from the bridge to clea r the square.

From the quais on either side, mounted troops of the Garde R epublicaine, their steel breastpla tes gleam­ing, their helmet plume streaming, galloped in on the crowd, slashing with aber right and left.

At the first pistol flash, I had turned and tarted back a ross the quare through the mob. "Doucement,

© I 968 by Richa rd Ma ssock

SPRING • 1968

RICHARD M. MASSOCK. ILLINOIS '20

doucement ( ea y, ea y), '' a Frenchma n acl moni heel me as I hoved him aside. "Dou emen t hell," I shouted, "get ou t of my way."

In the narrow treet between the Crillon a nd the American Embassy, the trooper caught up with me. I hadn' t time to halt at the hotel's bolted ide door and shout for entry.

For one long block, horse norting hotly clown my neck, my chest heaving with my own brea th, I outran the hoof-cla ttering herd, outran the charge until I cou ld turn off into the Rue Saint Honan~ whi le the troop pou nded on.

Panting out the story on the telephone from the Hotel Ca tiglione, I noticed my left hand bathed in blood. It bled from a cut across the knuckles I hadn' t felt, perhaps a wound from the fl ash ing sabers.

It was exciting, blood tingling, that race to e cape trampling and tell th e world abou t a riot. I wa cared a hell. I was shaking o I cou ld hard ly hold the ' phone.

It was going to be like that many time more for me a nd pre umably for an eve r-growing corps of foreign corre pondents a round the world in the next thi rt yea r .

Why did we get into uch ituations ? The typical correspondent is a college graduate.

M any have completed work for adva nced degree . Of

Page 7

THE COLOSSEUM - ROME

206 who answered a 1967 poll for the prestigiou Over­seas Press Club in ew York, more than half a llowed as how they drew over $15,000 a year, which is pretty good pay in journal ism.

So the foreign correspondent is not a misfit soldier of journalistic fortune. Nor is he recruited from the campus straight to a job in a foreign capital or rice paddy battlefield with typewriter, microphone or camera.

H e volunteers . But he is chosen by his employer only after he has become a seasoned profe sional a t home, skilled in his craft. Then only is he offered the chance to put his skills to work in the tougher environ­ment of foreign tongues, ways and fru tration .

As I watched and tried to tell about the tuka dive-bombing in pain, about the terror in the eyes of men doomed in Stalin's purge of his uspected enemie. , about Mussolini's tottering fall into Hitler's hands and a fate more terrible than that of his Nazi ally, about the grinding, shattering, home and nation wrecking storm for many people in World War II, about the ri e, fall and assassination of dictators in Latin America -throughout 33 years on five continents I was damn lucky.

Many corre pondent , among them clo e friends were not o lucky. everal s ore have died violently in many parts of the wor ld. Why?

It could not have been for money alone be aus the pay i n t that high.

The O ver ea Pre Club poll put it thi way: "The ov r ea new man i primarily motivated by

prof s ional at i fa tions in hi work rath r than by mat rial reward . event -five per cent beli ve their a ignment i con iderabl more intere ting and pro fc -ionally rewarding than a po ition of comparable tatu

in the home office." aybe tha t's a pro aic w y of ay ing we fin d

glamour in it, a lthough we scorn the word . Faded i the picture of the orr pondcnt in tren h

coat seducing a ultry p in an Orient Expr leeping car while enroute to a Balkan re olution.

I knew a few, however- now lamentably a ll dead - who could hav fitted into uch a compo it pi ture.

One wa a legendary ba helor James . Mill . H e wa publicly reput d to ha e had a reigning queen as hi mi tre when there were mor queen in Eu rop than th r are now. Tall, hand orne, dignified, we ll mannered, att ntiv , an amusing tory tell r, Mill wa the Gentleman Jim of corr ponden ts on four con­tinent.

There i a hitherto unpubli hed tory of Mill ' re­turn from a Mo cow a ignment. H e wa sleeping in a London hotel room when the telephone rang. The editor on duty in th London offic had a cable for him.

"R ead it to me, will you plea e," J im a id, leepily. The editor opened the env lope and read: " Mi ing ki ing. onya."

corre pondent I on e knew often eli tre ed hi wife by going on long weekend in the outh of Franc with a Hollywood tar.

ot many of u , however, I fear, can lay !aim to u h elegant ex tra-curricular romance.

tatistics compiled by Dr. Leo Bogart, the OPC

SC~NE~ FROM A COLORFUL JOURNALISTIC. CAREER. Left: M.assock, ma rked by a rrow, a t a briefi ng a t British Army Hea dqua rters, Catro, tn World War If. Center: In. front . of Bucktnghom Pa lace ~u rt ng World War II. Right : Massock, fourth from left, posed with a group of fellow European correspondents, tncludtng a French woman , wtth Franco troops at the Mad rid front during the 1936-39 Spanish Civil Wa r.

© 1968 b y Ric hard Massock

Page 8 THE LAUREL

RI C HA RD G . MASSOCK , then ch ief of ihe Associa ted Press Ro me Bureau , posed for th is picture at his typewrite r sho rtly before that b lea k d a y in Decem ber, 1941 , when Be nito Mussol ini d ec lared Italy at war with the U. S. Massock was arrested and inte rned at Siena until repa triation a rrang ements were fi nal ized for him in June, 1942.

po ll ter. indicate that today' average, or typica l, corre -1 onden t i married is in hi thirties to forties, and has hi wife and children with him a t his foreign post. Working wive are not the rule, with one in four hold­ing a job.

M y elf, I've een quite a few obviously happy home abroad. I a lso have een quite a few break up. It is a good gue that the odds on connubial bliss are even longer than they are among the martini set in a state ide uburb. The tre s of errati c working hour , of unpre-

d ictable absences on udden a ignment away from ba e, i hard! conducive to dome ti c fe licity.

Som of these reflection are prompted by Robert Da ley' no el "The Whole Truth." In it Pau l Pettibon, famed Pari bureau chief of a New York newspaper, 1 on hi vvay down and out. H e deliberately distorts the new in de pera te attempts to keep his byline on the front page and stay abroad . nhappily thwarted in his de i're for th papers London post, he is about to be call d home to the ignominy, for the foreign con·es­pondent, of the city room. H e only becomes a hero posthumou ly and pointle ly a t the hands of Tunisian terrorist .

ome newsmen ha e deplored D aley's fiction a fa lsely picturing their profession . One reviewer, on the other hand, though t it accurately reflected the new -paper business. To me it seems there is quite a bit of

© 1968 by Ric ha rd Masso ck

SPRING • 1968

authenticity in the background and probably a com­posite of ome colleague ' traits in the haracters a reated by Daley himself a orrespondent. I doubt if

anyone will take offense . Too many of u have seen our lve aricatured in other writer ' novels.

I t i regrettable that f our-flu hers and fakers do infiltra te the busines , a it i that some correspondent go to seed, from boozi ng, lazines, an inner feeling of inadequacy or whatever. There latter probably were not too o·ifted with what it takes to tancl the gaff when they were fir t ent abroad.

I reca ll the ummer day when a Croatian terrori t a a inated King Alexander of Yugo lavia at Mar eilles and killed French Foreign Mini ter Louis Barthou in the proce . The correspondent for one news agency al o ki lled off their a ide, General Alphonse George. The general wa everely wou nded but he recovered. That wa in 193+. So fa r a I know, that agency corres­pondent never revived the general until 1939, when George reappeared in the news as deputy commander of the F rench army that e entually capitula ted to the Germans.

That was an isolated, po ibly a unique case, how­ever. sua ll y the correspondent who strays from a -curacy returns to it by what i called in the trade, " the rowback. " H e has to do it. The competition in this bu iness, both for jobs and amon<Y the media, is so tough tha t the phony and the faker fo rtunately cannot Ia t long. * * *

SEINE RIVER SCENE - PARIS

Page 9

John Raftery Helps Train

THE G RA ND CANYON

~raternity member who are " eeing m rica Fir t" th i ummcr will no doubt include one or more of our na tiona l parks in their itinera ry, and by ju t payino­the nominal entrance fee will be in contac t with one or more of the men a nd women who wear the a­tiona! Park en ·ice uniform. If your vi it ta ke you to any of our national park or national monument ar a there i a good chance tha t the e Park ervice per onnel wi ll , no doubt, ha e been trained under the upervi ion of John C. R aftery, Colorado tate '49, a i tant uper­vi or of the H orace M. !bright Training enter of the

JOHN C . RAFTERY ALPHA SIGMA '49

Page I 0

Our National Park Personnel

Nation< I Pa tk , C l \ ' I c, lora t ·d a t rand :an ' ll ,

,\ ri.wna. The !brigh t .enter,

f arch of 19 6, i

who a ·'go to cho I" un I r th guidanr t r taff in luding R aftery, may com ft known na tional park a Yellow ton or Yo em ile, or from uch diver lo a ti n a M ou nt M cK inley Nation­a l Park in Ia ka, the \ irgin I land at ional Park in th aribbean, or from H awaii ' H a leakala N a tiona l Park on the i la nd of M au i. Th y may come from th battlefi eld of elty buro- ationa l lVIilitary Park from Lake M ead a tional l e r ation rea in Nevada, or th y may repr ent the .. Pa rk Police who protc t

RAFTERY, right, instructing firearms safety

MOUNTAIN RESCUE - PART OF A RANGER'S TRAINING

RANGER FOREST FIRE CONTROL EXERCISE

SPRING • 1968

the many Federal re ervalions m and adjacent to our Na tion' capital.

Prior to the e tab li shment of the Tational Park ervice in 191 6, there wa no organized agency to pro­ide continuity of management and protection for our arious national park and monuments. In some area uch a Yellowstone and Yosem ite, protection was pro-

vided by cavalry troops of the U.S. Army. Though vi itor were fevv, th ' ir visits were often interesting in an unplanned fash ion. Indian a ttacks and stagecoach hold-up were not uncommon during thi early period in national park history.

The only su h "added a ttra tion " these clays are tarred in pageants and the modern park ranger that

Joh n R aftery is helping to train and counsel must be a man of many talents, but primarily he is still the man re pon ible for the protection of the park re our es and the people who come to enjoy them.

Raftery's career in the Nationa l Park Service in­cludes duty tours in eight na tional pa rks as a pa rk ranger, district park ranger and chief park ranger prior to com ing to the Albright Training Center. These parks included Yellowstone, Everglades, Sequoia, Kings Can­yon, H awaii Volcanoes, Crater Lake, Big Bend and I l Royale. This broad background of experience p lu everal temporary assignments in a tiona l Pa rk R e-

giona l and Washington offices helped to fit h im for his pre ent important work. * * *

NATI O NAL PARK RANGER ON THE TRAIL

Page II

MUHLE N BE RG LI BRARY

~ he ob ervance of Founder ' Day, 1968, i an event tha t wi ll be well remembered by the more than 150 members and gue t of the Fra­tern ity' Eta chapter mark ing a it d id the celebration of fifty year of Phi K appa Tau on the i uh lenbcrg College campu .

National officer , member of the Eta R e iclent Council , Gradua te Council, and gue t , enjoyed the festi vitie held at Allentown' Twin Lake Country Club on Saturday even ing, M arch 16. The banquet was of e pecially significant for Phi K appa T au in tha t three E ta a lum ni were reco<mizecl for their fifty years of member hip in the Fra ternity- M elville J. Boyer, for­mer member of the na tional

Eta of Phi K appa Tau­

Fifty Y e ars

J ACK L. ANSON , Na ti ona l Secreta ry, presents Me l Boyer, for me r me mbe r of t he Nat io na l C ouncil, with his Fifty-yea r C ertifica te at Eta 's Gold e n A nniversary C e le b ra tion March 1 b.

council; H . H . H eller ; and the R ev. David G. J axheimer. Fifty-year Certifica te were pre ent d to the e Eta a lumni by a tional ecretary J ack L. n on.

1 o !!i.ven well-de erved recog­nition wa J udge Theodore R .

ardner M uhlenberg '28, who, ·while crv ina a coun el for Eta, ucce fully guided lengthy litigation

through local and ta te court to ach ieve tax exempt ta tu for P nn ylvania reek-! tter fra ter­niti who con tructed hou on

CA~PUS LEADERS AT ETA CHAPTER . Ph i Taus who se rve a s Mu h le n b~ rg Colleg e Dormitory Counc ilors inc lud e , Left to right: David P. K1dd , H e rbe rt J . Dolle r, J eff e ry Sc huele r, Robe rt Tre at, Thomas E. M ille r, Bruce Sa tterl ee , and Fra nk Ste vens. ( Right) : Eta Phi Ta us re cently nam ed to " Who 's Who in Am erican Co ll e g es a nd Un ive rs ities ," a re Kenne th C . Ela m, W illi a m P. Entle r, Theod ore Le wis , Lee Krug .

Page 12 THE L UREL

a 1

Hulllenberg univer ity-ovvned land. The lien­town juri t wa presented with a Certificate of ppreciation and re­ceiYed a tandin o- ovation from tho e pre ent for hi effort on be­half of Phi Kappa Tau.

Others attending the Eta Foun­der · Day banquet included Jack W. J areo, na tional alumni ecre­tary and na tional editor ; Robert K . Butz, hief of Domain No. 3; Dr. J ohn hankweiler, Muhlen­berg '21, a former domain chief ; Erne t mith, Penn S tate '28; J ames Bloxham, Penn tate '53; Ru ell R. Miller L afay tte '33; and Bruce M achado, L afayette '68, :\lpha Omicron R e ident Council pre ident.

A particularly intere ting part of the program included a progress report on the ta tus of the R esident Council, pre ented by its president, T ed R . Lewi . Lewis report d that Phi K appa Tau was undoubtedly the leading Greek-letter group on the Muhlenberg campu with e enty-two member and pledges.

For the past three year Eta ha be n econd a ademi a lly no mall ach ievement when con ideration i

RECOGNITION FOR ETA CHAPTER. Muhl enberg College President Earling N. J ensen {left) and Coach Kenneth Moyer of th e Muhl enb erg conference-winning basketball team, present a basketball to Eta pledg es which they later dribbled 35 miles to the Albright Coll ege campus, site of the NCAA regional basketball championships, in support of th e Muhl enberg College team and th e lour Eta mem bers and pledg es who were on the squad .

given to the fact that the leading fraternity cholastically was second last year in a ranking of a ll chap­ters of all national fra ternitie .

Eta' ach ievements have not only been directed toward the hapter it­self but a l o at the leader hip of ampu tudcnt activitie . Eta ha

nine of the sixt en members of the College Dormitory Counci l, even of the fourteen members of the Stu­dent Council, two justices of the Student Court, and six members on the tudent nion board of direc­tor . The re ident council was also honored recently by the naming of four of its brothers to Who's Who in

merican Colleges and nivers1t1es. In addition to the report of the

Re ident Council, J ohn More, M uhlenberg '48, president of the Eta Graduate Council, reported on the acti ities of this group. To small credit for the outstanding uccess of Eta's Golden Anniversa ry elebration is due to William Clem­

son, M uhlenberg '49, banquet toast­ma ter; and to Robert E. Albee, Muhlenberg '42, banquet commit­tee chairman and his committee, Ray Smith, H arry K aupp, and Ru W rkheiser.

It was fittin o- that the evening was concluded with an informal gathering at the chapter hou e, since the occasion a! o marked th e tenth anmversary of Eta in its pre ent location . * * *

ETA MEN ON MUHLENBERG STUDENT COUNCIL includ e, le ft to right, Kenn eth Elom, C. Peter Nag el, Michael A. W eitz, Davi d P. Kidd, Richard Bennett, Edward Shumsky, Lee Krug, and Ph ilip A. Terhune. {right); Eta Stud ent Union Boord members ore Samu el R. H ill man , Michael D. Stoudt, William F. En tle r, Richard Benn ett , Phil ip L. Porker . Th ese g roups o re typical of Eta's campus activi ty partic ipat ion .

SP RING • 1968 Pa ge 13

Phi Tau Alumni Going Places Doing Things STANLEY G. CEDERQUIST, i llinois '40, president of the I ndianapoli -based food brok rage firm of The Nicholas o. , I nc. , has recently been elected pre ident of the ational F ood Brokers ssoc ia­t ion. In addition to his work with the

icholas firm, Cederquist i trea urer and a member of the board of directors of I nstitutional Life I nsurance o., I ndi­anapolis, and is active in a la rge number of I ndianapolis civic, bu inc s, and ul­tura l organiza tions in luding the I ndi­anapolis ssociation of Jvianufacturer's R epresenta tives, the I ndiana poli F o d Brokers Asso iation, the .'\ rt ssoc iation of I ndianapolis, and the New York M etropolitan Opera Nationa l Council.

CEDERQ UI ST BAUGHMA N

GEORGE W . BAUGHMAN Ill , Ohio State '20, Ins been named a con ultant to the U.S. Department of Tran portati on after ret iri ng from a 44-yem· career with

mon witch and igna l and \ est ing-

::Dedicate Bol!ej natatorium

hou e . ir Brake Co. During hi long career in tran porta tion he received or applied for 102 pa tent receiving 9+ with nine till pending. H e wa a major contributor to the deve lopment of Cen-tralized Traffic ontrol a nd the u e of communica tion fac ilitie uperimpo eel on T line - two dcvcloprncnts which expedi ted the fl ow of railroad traffic dur­ing World War II.

RUSH MARSH

JEFFERY LEE RUSH , Florida '64, has bee n awa rded a I ,000 scholar hip for the 1967-1968 chool year by the ni ­vc r ity of fl orida Jvi cclica l chool. Ru h i a member of the 1968 g raduating clas at the medi al hool and wa scle ted for the award by the chool a uthorities on a basi of academic qualification .

DONALD F. MARSH , N ew Y ork Univer­sity '23, pre idcnt of B orum and Pease, i directing the a tivitic of one of the nation' large t firms manufacturing ring book , accounting, bu iness records and bu inc s forms marketed and eli tributed under the nationally and internationally known " tanda rd " tradema rk .

I n addition to heading the 125-year­old office form manufacturer, M ar h is al o chairman of the board and director of the mberg File a nd I ndex Co., I nc., K ankakee, Ill. , and is affilia ted with the M cMillan Bqok Co., I nc., of yracu e,

.Y. and the Tru ell Manufacturin~ Co., of Poughkecp ie, ew York. He is also a director of the xia Federal av­ing and Loan A ociation of R ahwa y, K.J.

A feature of the 1968 Centre College Alumni Weekend was the ded ication of the Bole ata torium, construction of wh ich was made possible by a major gift by EWI NG T. BOLES, Centre ' 16, pat nat iona l pre idcnt and currently erving a presiden t of the Phi K appa T au F oundation. Charles B. "Bud" Wilkinson, fa nner nivers ity of Oklahoma head football coach, was th e ded ication's featured speaker.

Buil t at a co t of $400.000 the Boles Na ta torium is aid to be the onl y one of its kind in K entucky. The brick a nd concrete bui lding measures 123 feet long and 99 feet wide. The pool is A size- 75 feet long and 43 feet wide with six swimming lane a nd low and high diving board . . ttendant facilities include two fa culty office , folding bleachers accom­moda ting a pproximately 270 specta tor, a sun deck, dre ing rooms, lo kers, showers, a laundry room, i sue room, lobby, a nd an ultra-modern water fi lt r s stem.

Page 14

The R ichmond. V a., branch of the En· .~li h peaking nion ha lected HUGH H. ADDY, Bethany '32, as the group' fir t teacher rcctptent of a ummcr ch \llar hip f\l r tudy in Great Britain.

Addy, a vet ran of thirty- ix years of teaching in preparat\lry chool in New Eng land, Ncbra ka , and Florida, i cur­rently an in tructor of eighth grade En­g li h at Richmond' ollegiat chool for B ' Y .

. \ dd will attend Oxford nivcrsity "here he "ill tudy seventc nth century En gli h literature.

N ·vin llall , na med in honor of HUGH NEVIN, initi n ed into the fraternity on March 30, 195 :! "hilc a m mbcr of th

entre :o llcgc Board of Trustees, is now under constru tion on the Centr Coll cg ca mpu , Danville, K y. The $650,-000 tructurc , which will accommodat 103 tucl nt , will b ready for ccu­pancy by th fall of 1968.

Broth r cvin, a L ouisville, Ky., a r-chit c t. wa an active member of the

entre l3o<~rd of Tru tee from 1941 l o

1958. vin Hall will in lucie fifty cloubl a nd thre · sing! room , a lounge-study

a h fl oor, an apartm nt for th e men, a nd offic pa e for tltc

direc tor for all entre olleg m n's rc iclcn

ADDY NEVIN

GILBERT W . KINGSBURY, Kentucky '33, niver ity of Kentucky vi e pre ident,

ha been named executive director of

THE LAUREL

G ILBE RT KINGSB URY

the Ohio Valley Improvement Associa­tion, a C incinnati , Ohio, ba ed organiza­tion. Kingsbury is a former vice presi­dent in cha rge of the news operation for the ros ley (now ( CO) Broadcast­ing Co.

JAMES P. MA RRO N, R enssalear '46, has assumed his dutie a commissioner of the D epartment of a nitation, ew York City, a key unit of M ayor Lindsay's En­vironmental Protec tion Administration.

Marron retired in 1965 with ra nk of commander from the U. . avy after ?0 years of service with the Navy's Civil Engineer Corps. The En vironmental P ro­tec ti n, the area in which Marron will be working, in add ition to in lucling the departmen t of anita tion and Air Pollu­tion Con tro l, is a lso involved in th e maintenance of sewage faciliti and water ervi e administra tion.

ERNEST F. NIPPES, R ensselaer '38, direc­tor of the research division at R ensselaer Polytechnic Institute, has been insta lled as president of the American Welding Society. H e previously was chairma n of the orthern ew Y ark Section of the

MARRON NIP PES

SPRING • 1968

Clark, Psi Chapter Phi Tau Stationed in Antarctica

J ohn R . Clark, Colorado '6 1, is currently representing Phi K appa Tau in one of the world's remotes t region . As a lieutenant ( jg) in the USNR Clark is Officer-in-Cha rge at Byrd Sta tion, located 600 miles from the South Pole where mean tempera tures are we ll be low zero eve n during the opera ting sea on (O ctober to March ) and the consta nt wind rare ly fa lls below a vel city of IS mi les per hour.

Clark reported for duty in O ctober of 196 7 and is erving for one year "on the ice" with his crew of a medical officer, fourteen navy enli ted men and nine scientific personnel. Byrd Station itself is a complex system of tunnels excavated forty fee t clown into the Antarctica ice ca p and is covered by steel a rches a nd snow. Insula ted pre­fabricated buildings constructed in the tunnels provide quarters and working space for the multiplicity of functi ons carried out at Byrd .

One of the more spectacular projec ts going on during the current operat­ing eason at Byrd Station is the drilling of probes through the polar ice cap to tap the earth's crust 8600 feet be low the surfa e. Cores of ice removed from this boring may revea l secrets that could elate b::tck to 40,000 years B. .

g roup, and is a past chairman of the Eastern New York Chapter of the Amer­ican Society for M etals, and a past na­tional director of the America n Welding Society. H e has been active ly engaged in welding resea rch and has attended several meetings of the Interna tional I n­stitute of Welding in Europe.

M ajor orga niza tional cha nges m the D etroit Edison Company included the electi on of ROBE RT E. SCHWAB, M iami '35, as vice president ; a nd HARR IS R. SYMES, M ichigan State '32, as secretary

SC HWAB SYMES

of the company to ta ke offi ce N ovem­ber 1.

Schwab joined D etroit Edison in 1936 as a personnel research ass istant and ad­vanced through a series of ta ff and su­pervisory posts in the personne l field to become manager of em pl oye rela tions in 1959. H e was given addit ional responsi­bi lities and appointed an assistant vice president in 1966.

Symes worked for the auditing firm of Price Waterhouse & Co. for a year be-

fore joining Edison in 1933. H e started with Edison in the general accounting depa rtmen t a nd in 1941 tra nsferred to the a uditing depa rtment where he was appointed general a udi tor in 1962. I n his new p st, Symes becomes the second member of his fami ly to serve as secre­tary of D etroit Edison. His fa ther, the la te Russell W . Symes, was named to tha t position in 1943.

JOHN S. NAGY, Ohio State '37, is the recipient of the annual " S ervice Award" of SPORT MAGAZ INE, in which the Gam­ma alumnus is recognized for "a lifetime of dedicated sports leadership and com­munity service." Cleveland's mayor Carl Stokes ( right) presented the plaque to Nagy on behalf of the magazine. Nagy has served as Commissioner of R ecrea­tion for the Cit y of Cleveland, Ohio, since 1943.

Page I 5

IHPJICf GS p

PLANNING FOR IMPACT '68! Pictured above ore Edward J . Kuntz, Beta Lambda ; and Thoma s L. Good , Zeta , ta lking ove r plans lor Impact '68 with Elvis J . Stohr, President of Ind iana University .

A di tinguished faculty tha t In -

cludes the top 1967 olleg foo tba ll coach, a pea ker acclaimed nationally fo r hi in pira tional mes ages, two former na tional pres­idents of the F raternity; a ollege pre ident ; two college dean , the mayor of Akron, O hio ; top-flight indu tria li t ; and educa tional lead­ers has been a sembled to di rect es­sions and present ta lk a t IM PACT '68, the Phi K appa Tau leader hip s hool which will convene for it fi rst annual meetina on Thur day,

ugu t 22, on the campu of In-d iana niver ity, Bloomina ton, I n-d iana.

Th ro ter of I i[p T '68 faculty m mbers read like a " \\ ho' Who" of the ollegc, bu inc , and fra t m it)' world . T he IlV[P T

Page 16

teering comm ittee ha enaaged R ay M on a lva tae, Day ton, Oh io. a le training and indu tria l education ex­pert, to pre ent on of the major addres e of the three-day e ion. John Pont, head Indiana niver-ity football coach, who e amazina

H oo ier took on a ll omer dur ina the 1967 ca on and ended up repre­ent ing the Bia T n in the R o e

Bowl, wi ll pea k on " omm itment and Leader hip."

Other on the proaram include Roland M axwell a nd H a rold Angelo, forme.r Phi K appa Tau national pre ident . M ax\ ell i currently pre ident of Interfra ternity R e ear h a nd dvi ory ouncil I n . ( IR ) .

ngelo i erving a trea ure r of the ra tional Interfra ternity onference .

Phi K appa T au leader in the fie! I

Phi Kappa Tau

Will Open Augu

* * *

of cd u ation wi ll bring to IMPA T '68 th b n fit of their yea r of experi nc gain d from working with co llege tudent . Th y incu ld M or­ton v a lkcr, K entucky '3 1, fo rmer

a tional ou ncil member and now on the niver ity of Loui vill fa ul ty; D r. R obert Mill , K entucky '38, pre id nt of George town (K y.)

ollege; Ben E . D avid, niver ity of Miami (Fla.) a i ta nt placement

RAY MONSALVATGE

TH E L UREL

.NS IN READINESS

adership School

~2 at Indiana U

* * *

offi er ; Edward J. Kuntz, I ndiana, a i tant dean, Indiana niversity

chool of Bu ine . Also on the pro-gram is Robert haffer, Indiana

ni,er it dean of tudent.

Addin o- to the practicality of the IMP A T me age for Phi Kappa T au undergraduate leaders are Otto L. chellin , Akron '50, chief of Domain o. 10, with the B. F .

ROLAND MAXWELL

SPRING • 1968

JOH N PONT - INDIANA U. HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

Goodrich international relations de­partment; Warren H. Parker, Phi Kappa T au na tional president ; F. LaVerne McKinley, ew York City a rchitect, and chief of Domai n To. 1· Robert W. H ampton, K ent State '50, head of the El Paso, Texas, Better Business Bureau, and chief of Domain o. 1 7.

IMPACT '68 wi ll com bine work­shop sessions with recreation ti me. Genera lly, key addres e will be fol ­lowed by panels of reactor , to be then fo llowed by small group di -cussion . The program will cover everal pha es of chapter manage­

ment: rush , pledge educa tion, fiscal pro g rammin g, public relations, social-cultural programm ing, and academic achievement. Also included will be a model initiation, a panel

discus ion on interfra ternity rela­tions, a presentation to " introduce'' delega te to the na tional organiza­tion, and bonu "parkbench se -ion ," designed to permit delegate

to dis us topics of their choice with va nou IMP CT '68 facu lty per­sonnel.

Chairman of the IMPACT '68 steering committee is M el Dettra of the Phi K appa Tau National Coun­cil. Other member are Dr. Robert Mi lls; AI Beretta, Hobart '39, Ho-bart ollege director of tudent Activitie ; R. A. Clarke, a tional Council member; Thoma L. Good, Illinois '65; Otto Schell in; William Eigel, ]{ ntucky '68; rational Se -retary J ack L. An on; and William Jenkins, assistant national secre-tary. * * *

Pa ~e 17

Botany To Music

Presenting

Ryan W. Drum

On Education - "There are two type of education: vocational training, which prepare · a ·tudent for a pot in the economy; and human education, which,

through (Jlea ·ur , help · the ·tudcnt lead a hap(>ier, hea lthi e r human exi ·tence."

On Grades - "Grade and job · and education arc a ll inter-re lated and none sati ·factorily. Education s uf­fer · beca u ·e of the g rad e requirement ·."

On the American Attitude towards Money - "Be­ca u c of th ·er iou nes · with which mo ·t merican · approach money, t he uni vers ity atmo (>h · re i · ·ometim very joyle · ·. With a few exception · the cia •·oom is a mirthle · place. Th merican ·y ·tern JH' vent · total hea lthy lcamin g."

Tops As Teacher " tudent today are b ing ducated in a way

that doe n' t even perta in to today, let a lon • tomor­row. They are being educated for ye t rday."

"I beli eve that education ·hould be a delight, not a drudg ."

" t ud nt Throng to A tt nd L ec­tur s of the 'Pi d Pij; r of Botany D pt."

5 his intriguing h adlin ov r a story in the lu mn of th Univer­sity of Ma ach u tt da il tudcn t new pap r las t fa ll wa · de ribina the popu la rity of a ou r e, " en ra l Botany for Poets" (non- ience ma­jors ) b ing ta ught by Dr. R ya n W. Drum I owa State '6 1.

Ye Botany 100 at the Univer ity

Page I B

DR. RYAN W . DRUM ' Botany for Poets'

On the role of the Univers ity - In tead of force­r edin g knowl edge, the uni,•e•· ·ity ·hould encoura g curio ·ity and a joy in leaJ·nin g and it hould provide th e opportunity to learn."

of M a a hu tt ha a " n w look," thank to the · of Pro-

1nu h a li vi ng rga ni m a the plant he ta lk about. H e u light , lor , mu ic, and photoa raph y to r fl ct the illlmedia of today t clas e enjoyable.

Tha t hi tw Ia e that have an n roll men t of o er 500 ea h are

p pu la r i atte ted by the fa t that enrollment 1n Botany 100 ha doubt d to 1100 for the pnng e­me ter, full y ten p r c nt of the ntire tud nt body a t th mver-i ty.

Dr. Dru m' empha i in the cour e i on lea rning, not teaching. " It a l­mo t lo n' t matter wha t' being taught," he xplain , "a long a omething i beina learned. The

whole point of I arning i beina a ble to do om thincr with it. far a li fe i oncern cl, the ritical thin cr i not how mu h ou learn, but how w II yo u a n u e what you ha e l arn d .'

How doe Dr. Drum conduct hi ta ff reporter for

Daily Collegian

o ou an find auditorium

orne­no light

n the nly illuminati n em nate · f r m I id pr j t d on th · 'f n, a nd the re'· mu ic playing. lt' · Bob D ylan.

"You find a t. You lo k ar a t th fa ·e . They aren' t th fa e yo u ·ee in th r Ia · . They are fa s fill d with a happy anti ipa­tion .

of many thing , of and p lant . nd th e

tri ably inter­woven. peopl - warp and woof b om interw en into one beautifu l fabri .

"The Ia end , all too s on, tu­dent flo k about him a king him to le ture at their dorm they a k him p hilosophical que tion . ome are ynical and try to embroi l him in

metaphy ical argument - impo ible! H e' not intere ted in philo ophi ing !if , he want to live it and f el it in it mo t natural a p ct . . . the find he i

ure come from !if ha no fana ti a! phi lo ophie h ' ju t another human b ing with deep in icrht into man , thin H i a plea ant and profound int r-lude in ur oil cre life. H turninO'

u on. * * * THE LAUREL

Phi :Jau

NEWS

ALPHA SWEETHEART. Anne Agee-Borch­ers, wife of Alpha 's Te rry Borchers, was selected as Phi Kappa Tau 1967-1968 Sweetheart at Miami Un iv., Oxfo rd, Ohio.

ALPHA LAMBDA PHI TAUS enjoy their first annual " Hippie Party" just before fi­nals. Dean Foy, Dean of Student Affairs , who attended the event, is front center.

SPRING • 1968

PHI KAPPA TAU IN COMMUNITY SERVICE. Edward A. Wa kin, right, re ceives th e Greate r Louisville Outstand ing Community Se rv ice Award from Col. Harold Stout , Salvation Army .

.t\1iami- Honored Founder Taylor A. Borradaile a ttended Alpha's Founders' Day banquet March 17. Ohio State- Gamma currently ranks fourt h out of forty-three fraternities competing for the All-Sport trophy. Centre­Ewing T . Boles, president of the Phi K appa T au Foundation, wa gue t peaker at Domain To. 8 Founders' Day banquet ' ith Delta enterta ining

gue t from Loui ville (B ta Beta ) , Transylvania (Theta ) , and member of Alpha Chi Iota at Eastern K entucky. M ount Union- Ep ilon boasts the large t campu pledge cia s and with the election of new offi rs has the means to continue existing programs including a id to menta lly retarded hi ldren. I llinois-Zeta celebra ted Founders' Day on ·March 17 with a

banquet at which Edward E. Stafford '20 wa p aker. Muhlenberg- Eta observed its fiftieth anni er ary March 16 with a banquet a t which time fifty-year certificate were o·i en to Mel ille J. Boyer, H . H . H eller, a nd the R ev. D avid G. J axheimer. K entucky-Bi ll Eigel was recently named Out-tanding Greek Man at K entucky and John outhard is newly-elected

pre ident of the K entucky Student Center Board . N ebraska TVesleyan-ational Pre ident War ren H. Parker wa the featur d speaker a t the

Upsi lon Founders' Day ob ervance March 16 a t which D avid M cClure wa pre ented with the Out tand ing cholar Award. Bethany-During Chri tmas holiday David Dy on visited Israel, A then , Rome and witzerland ; and T d Kupelian and Jack Hillwig traveled to J amai a to study marine biology and the cultural and ecolorrical aspects of island life. N orth Carolina State­Chi celebra ted Founders' Day on M arch 16 with its annual Carnation Ball, preceded by a banquet at which awards were made to out tanding brothers and Chi's weetheart, Linda H lms, wa pre ented. Jvlichigan State- t the start of winter term Alpha Alpha inaugurated an ambitiou new ru. h program that resu lted in pledging the largest clas in its hi tory and out­doing every other fraternity at 'Sta te.' William and M ary-Alpha Theta moved into its new fraternity home on February 1 with the formal ded ication held on M arch 16 in conjunction with a Founder ' Day Open House dinner and Sweetheart D ance. Auburn- Alpha Lambda enjoyed a prosperous winter quarter that included placing third among twenty-sLx fra­ternities in scholarship and making progress toward winning a fourth All­Sports trophy in five years. I owa State-On March 15 and 16 fourteen men

Page 19

A PHI TAU LOVELY! Th is photograph of Leslie Tucker, Swee theart of Zeta at the University of Ill inois, appears in th e chap­te r's newly publ ish ed rushing brochure.

THE MEN OF Alpha Ph i, University of Akron , honored the me mory of the ir fra ­ternal god-lather, H . 0 . " Doc " DeG raff, at the ir Fou nders' Day banquet this year .

FOUNDERS' DAY at University of Wis­consin-Milwaukee included a cake that was spec ially decorated lor this occasion.

Page 20

of Alpha u traveled to the Iowa \• esleyan and initiated twenty-three olony members. L afa•yette- lpha Omicron a lumni and their famili c

were gue t a t a crala picnic held pril 20. Univer it~· of Washingto n­February 18 wa the date when lpha Pi wa welcom d into the Phi Kappa Tau family of chap ter a Pre ident John Wilkin on proudly ac eptcd the charter from Na tional e retary Jack L. n on. olorado State-Alpha igma wa a\ arded fir t plac in the fra t rnity clivi ion for H omecom ing decora tion a nd co- ponsorc I a fashion how with D elta Zeta, the proceed goincr to the University' pecch and H earing .l inic. A kron- Th e men of lpha Phi honored the m mory of th ir fra ternal goclfath r, H . 0 . (Doc ) DeGraff, a t their Found r' Day banquet. Mississippi State- mong Alpha Chi' many a ttvltte i the hap ter' annual R ed arna tion Ball and Banque t during wh i h award ar pre ented. Baldwin-Wallace-Jam Jankura and Dick Fletch r are abl repre enting Phi K appa T au on the var ity tra k and ba ketball team re pectively. University of T exas-B ta lpha ee l bra ted its twenty-fifth anniver ary on M arch 16 with a dinner and dance a t the D riskill Hotel where th chap ter' insta lla tion banquet was held twenty-five car ago. Louisville-Beta Beta placed fir t in campu scholar hip wi th a 1.62 out of a 3-point with the grade of 109 men u eel in a hicving thi rank .

outhern M ississippi- Beta Epsilon defeated even o th r ampus fratcrnitie to win an annual orority- pon ored ong fe t. New M ex ico tate-Beta Zeta men in ROT work received a plaque in recognition of the hapter' parti ipa tion in ]-Troop the civilian organization which pon or rmy ROTC extra-curricula r ac tivitie . University of Kansas-Beta Theta has begun fa ll '68 ru h thi pring by talking to currently enrolled freshmen and upperclassmen who are intere ted in forming the nucleus of the fall pledge cia s. Florida State- On March 17 Beta Iota honored the four founder of Phi K appa Tau a t the annual Founder ' D ay banquet at which time awards were pre ented to Bill Week and Richard Coleman. Oklahoma State-On March 17 thirteen men were initiated into Beta Kappa hapter. I ndiana University--Beta Lambda Phi T aus have been preparing for months for the " World' Greatest ollege Week-end," the Little 500-:-bicycle race, a 50-mile event that annually draws thou and of spectators to the campus. M ichigan T ech- Four Gamma Alpha mem­bers including Charles Apap, class pre iden t, domina te sophomore tudent Counci l representation ; while Bob Mar h i pre ident of M emorial nion Board of which Carl Zapffe is I nterfraternity A ociation pre ident. Uni ver­sity of the Pacific-Gamma Epsilon membership this seme ter conta in the student body president, the Interfraterni ty Council pre ident and treasurer and the chool ne,,· paper editor and port editor. Sacramento State­Gamma Iota' Founder ' Day celebra tion wa held March 16 a t which the new trophy to be awarded to the out tanding chapter in Domain No. 20 was d isplayed. Bradley--Gamma fu member are proud to announce that Bill Wog tad wa elec ted a ll - chool vice-president and that T erry Woith wa cho en I nterfra ternity Council vice-pre ident. R ochest r- Gam­ma u recently won the Interfraternity Council chola r hip trophy for having the hiahe t grade point ave racre of any Roche ter Greek orcraniza­tion. East Central tate-Gamma Xi ha everal men in va r ity sport including Larry Tobie four-year letterman in ba ketba ll and golf: Jim Martin two- ear baseball letterman· Dann Talley, football ; and T ed Younts, ba ketball and baseball. California tate-Fullerton- Gamma O micron kicked off the fa ll erne ter with their fir t annual "Hate \\ om n Week" highlighted by a raid on the air! dorm hanging of a \\·oman ffigy on campu , and a dance. K earney State- Gamma Rho emercred vi tori u over Up ilon of ebra ka \Ve leyan in the fir t annual ebra ka Tnt r-

THE L UREL

MR. CARDINAL. Forrest S. Kuhn was nam­ed " Mr. Card inal " in recognition for his outstand ing service to Un ive rsity of Louis­vi lle. In add ition to se rvi ng Beta Be ta as president, Kuhn is also Louisville's IFC pres­id ent and mainta ins a 2.9 grade a ve rage.

RICHARD KOPF, Gamma Rho , heads the Student Senate at Kearney State College.

SPRING • 1968

FOUNDERS' DAY AT GAMMA IOTA. Sac ram ento State Ph i Taus gathered on March lb for Founders' Day. Se mra Kirsan and Suze Kelle y, Gamma Iota Sweethearts. tog ethe r with Alumni Presid e nt Kip Jacobse n and Pledg e Jim Small ie adm ire th e new cup to be award ed to th e outstanding chapte r in Doma in No. 20. of whic h Be n Brewer, shown a t left is chief.

Chapter Sports Cavalcade. Northeastern- Founders' Day was spent in the true spirit of brotherhood when sevente n Gamma Phi brothers paid a visit to Gamma Gamma at St. John ' . Southwest T exas State-Gamma Psi chapter observed Founders' Day on March 17 with a T exas-style barbeque consisting of beef, ranch-style beans, potato alad and chips. St. Cloud Colony--Minnesota's first Phi Kappa Tau colony installed officers on February 25. Boston University Colony-It is anti ipated that the new colony vvill broaden the fratern ity base in the new resurgence of the fraternity movement at Boston U niversity. Ole Miss Colony-In its first year of competition the Phi Taus took second place in homecoming decorations and the basketball team won the small fraternity champion-hip. Kansas State T eacher's College Colony-The colony acquired a 2.78

average on a 4-point grade basis to be the first Greek organization to achieve such a high average for seven years. University of Wisconsin­M ilwaukee Colony--Founders' Day was celebrated with a banquet on March 17 and the initiation of six members. No Chapter Reports: Ohio University (Beta); Transylvania (Theta ) ; Coe College (Iota ); Lawrence (Mu ) ; California ( Tu ); Franklin and Marshall (Xi ); Southern California (Pi ) ; R ensselaer (Rho); Michigan (Tau ); Colorado (Psi); Delaware (Alpha Gamma); Case W estern R eserve (Alpha Delta ); Kansas State (Alpha Epsilon ) , Oregon (Alpha Zeta ); Florida (Alpha Eta ), Washington State (Alpha Kappa ); Georgia T ech (Alpha Rho ); Cornell (Alpha Tau ) ; Colgate (Alpha Upsilon ); University of T exas-El Paso (Alpha Psi ); Idah o (Beta Gamma); K ent State (Beta Mu ) ; Georgia (Beta Xi ); Maryland (Beta O micron ) ; Middlebury (Beta Pi ); Bowling Green (Beta Tau ) ; H obart College (Beta Upsilon); West­minster (Beta Phi ) ; Southern Illinois (Beta Chi ); California State at Long Beach (Beta P i); Chico State (Beta Omega); Cincinnati (Gamma Beta ) ; St. John's (Gamma Gamma); Northern Michigan (Gamma Delta); Connecticut (Gamma Zeta); East Carolina University (Gamma Eta); C. W. Post College (Gamma K appa ) ; Central Michigan (Gamma Lamb­da ); Youngstown (Gamma Pi ) ; University of California- Davis (Gamma Sigma) ; Old Dominion (Gamma T au); Spring H ill (Gamma Upsilon ) .

Pag e 21

AWARDS AT ALPHA. Left to right , Tom Ratcliff, I FC representative , presents the John Brumley ou tsta nding athlete award to Norman Hoyt. Do ve Horsley is given th e outstand ing pledge a ward by Carl Vance.

* * * HIGHLIGHT OF FOUNDERS' DAY- 19b8 AT ALPHA CHAPTER. Carl Vance, Middle­town , president of the Resident Council, shows Honored Founder Taylor Borrodoile the Alpha charter against the imposing background of the Alpha chapte r house trophy case.

..... FOUNDERS' DAY AT ALPHA CHAPTER, MARCH 17, 19b8! Th is year's observance was of special significance to Alpha with Honored Found er and Mrs. Taylor A. Borroda ile in attendance . The top photo shows Found er Borroda ile a s he gave the Found ers' Day address . Seated at the speaker's table, left to right, ore William Jenkins, ass istan t notional secretory ; Mrs. Borrodoile; Mrs. Mueller, Alpha housemother; Resident Council President Carl Vance ; Founder Borrodo ile ; H e nry Huber, Jr. ; Tom Ratcliff ; Notiona l Secretory Jock L. An son ; and Jock W . Joreo, notional alumni secretory and notional editor. BELOW: W ilford F. Sizelove, Cincinnati, Oh io, Ph i Kappa Tau initiate No. 101 , at ninety-two one of the oldest liv ing mem bers of the Fraternity, shown co nversing with a group at Alpha 's Found ers' Day.

Page 22

HONORED FOUNDER BORRADAILE Phi Kappa Tau Initiate No. 2 and Cory S. Miller, Norwood , O hio, Initiate No. 74, pictured a t Alpha Founders' Day ba nquet .

DONALD LEASE, Dayton , Oh io, member of the Notional Council, and Honored Founder Borroda ile, pose in front of the Alpha ch apter house fireplace prior to the Found ers' Day banqu et on March 17.

THE L UREL

ETA CHAPTER'S ATHLETIC CHAIRMEN, left to right, Jack Raymore, Pag e R. Belmore , Jeffery G . Schueler and Eta President Theodore Lewis proudly display the Muhlenberg College Intramural All-Sports Trophy as well as other evidence of Eta's athle tic prowess.

BROTHERS AND pledges of Gamma Omi­cron admi re the fe male e ffigy at the chap· ter house during the California State­Fullerton first annual " Hate Women W eek."

* *

IFC HEAD at W illiam and Mary. George Nance, Alpha The ta vice-president, was chosen as Interfraternity Council president.

NEW INITIATES at Beta Kappa. Doug Campbell shows the new Oklahoma State Ph i Taus his addition to the dining room.

SPRING • 1968

* * *

NEW OFFICERS AT KANSAS. Guiding Beta Theta affairs are, left to right : Gaylord Frank, treasurer; Kent Saylor, president; Gary Gluesenkamp, social chairman ; George Miller, secy. ; Lee Alloway, vice pres.; Phil Connor, rush. The mascot's name is Michelob.

Page 23

Athletically Speaking

LARRY NOBLES, Gamma Xi chapter , is a four-year letterman in baskeball and golf at East Central State College a t Ada , O kla .

" THE FIGHTERS OF PHI KAPPA TAU" is the name given to these Gamma Psi broth­e rs at Southwest T exes State who combined to win the fraternity boxing trophy at the an­nual Fight Night. Members of the team pic­tured above are, left to right, Jimmy Ste­phenson, Ricky Siddall , and Fred Goodman .

Page 24

BETA BETA CHAPTER PERSONALITIES. Left: Greg Karam and Charles Petry, sophomore foot ball starters lor the Un iversity of Lou isville Card inals and , right, Ken Moye r and Howard Hosp with the "Turkey Trot" trophy that Be ta Beta won during the 1967 fall term .

INDIANA UNIVERSITY PHI TAUS have been preparing for months lor the " World 's Greatest College W eek-end," the Little 500 bicycle race. Annually drawing thousands of visitors to Bloomington, proceeds from the 50-mile race and other activities crowded into the week-end are donated by the Indiana Un iversity Stud ent Foundation for scholarsh ips .

PHI TAUS EXCELL IN THREE SPORTS. Left to right: Ted W ittig , captain of the Michig an Tech baske tball team and team high scorer, racking up 17.9 points per game. Clement Huffman , North Carolina State second baseman who batted .27b last year. Ronald Watkins right, senior fullback on the North Carol ina State Wallpack football squad . Ron played in the 1 b97 Liberty Bowl , won by North Carolina State by a score of 14 to 7 over G eorgia .

THE L UREL

CHUCK LANTRY, left, Gamma Alpha 's award -winning wrestler at Mich igan Tech.

ETA PLEDGES star on the Muhlenberg basketball team. Mickey Miller puts one in during worm-up drills prior to Muhlenberg's NCAA regional playoff game aga inst Ch eyner Sta te College, and, right, Ned Rahn, Muhlenberg 's leading scorer, shows the style of ploy that earned for him a position on the 1968 Middle Atlantic Conference All-Star basketball squad .

BALDWIN WALLACE PHI TAUS IN ACTION . Dick Fletcher, Alpha Omega sophomore (white uniform) is one of the starting five for the B-W Yellow Jackets. Right : James Jon­kuro is the defend ing 440-yord Ohio Conference champion ( 49.2) and is a member of the mile relay team which ron a 3:31.0. Jim was clocked at 48.6 as his leg of this event.

FAST ACTION in the Nebraska Phi Tau Inter-Chapter Sports Cavalcade. Gamma Rho bested Upsilon of Nebraska Wesleyan .

LYNN STUART, sophomore wrestling sen­sation at Miami University, placed first in Mid-America Conference wrestling lor 1968.

SPRING • 1968

GAMMA EPSILON A WINNER at University of the Pacific. The Phi Taus won first prize in the Homecoming Float contest and the chapter's football team, above, won the 1-M title .

Page 25

ALPHA THETA HOUSE DEDICATION . Corson H . Barnes, W illiam and Mary's d ean of men, presents o golden key to Ken Smi th (second from left) newly-elected Alpha Th eta president, commemorating the d edicatio n of th e new Alpha Theta chapter house. Also pictured ore Gordon Vl iet '54, {left) college a lumni secretory; Richard Velz ' 31> {second from right) and George Nonce , the current IFC presid ent.

RIGHT: The future of Phi Kappa Tau at Kansas State Teacher's College colony is in their hands. Officers ore: Fronk Ronsee, secretory; G eorge Kehoe, president ; Steve Borklond, vice president ; Charles Brodie , treasurer. The colony is at Emporia , Kans.

PHI TAU ROTC MEN AT NEW MEXICO STATE. Beta Zeta men currently enrolled in Army ROTC ore shown receiving o plaque from Lt. Col. Raymond Siergrist in recogni­tion of the chapter's participation in J­Troop, the civilian organization which spon­sors Army ROTC extra -curric ular activities on the N . Mexico Stole campus. Los Cruces.

A WINNER AT BETA EPSILON! These happy Southern Mississ ippi Phi Tous ore celebrating their first place award given to Beta Epsilon chapter over seven other campus fraternities in an annual sorority-s ponsored singles!. It looks like the beginnin~ of 0 big celebration!

Poge 21> THE l UR EL

PHI TAU LEADERS at Kappa chapter. Left: John Southard , Anchorage, is t he newly-elected president of the Kentucky Stud ent Center Board . Right: Bill Eigel , Lou isville, named outstanding Greek Man at the University of Kentucky. Bill is the undergraduate member of Phi Tau's IMPACT '68 steering committee .

NEW BETHANY LEADER. Howard Bell , right, takes the gave l from Don Hiscox as Bell assumes the No . 1 job at Phi chapter.

* * *

UGLIEST MAN! New Mexico State cheer­lead er Rony Reay presents a trophy to Len Berg er of Beta Zeta in recognition of his being chosen " Ugliest Man on Campus."

ST. CLOUD COLONY installation of officers on February 25 was the occasion lor the above photograph: Le ft to right are Ted Smetak, president; Robert De tloff, secretary ; Larry Jones, national field secretary who assisted in organizing the colony ; Gary Bau­mann , vice preside nt ; J erry Hirschfeld , treasurer. St. Cloud is one of ten Phi Tau colonies.

I --£31'P' -v I

PHI KAPPA TAU CAMPUS LEADERS AT MICHIGAN TECH . Gamma Alpha me n who hold top campus posts include (left to right): Bob Marsh, Memorial Union Board presid e nt ; Carl Zapffe, Interfraternity Association presid e nt; Roger Roehl , treasurer of Blue Key ; Carl Kallansrud, Biology Club president ; and Ed Broestel, AFROTC Drill Team commander. RIGHT : Gamma Alpha men dominate Student Council sophomore class re prese ntation . Left to right : Dave Fletch e r, Chuck Apap, president ; Bob Taumey ; Mike Roehl , vice president.

SPRING • 1968 Page 27

Four New DoJDain (;hiefs

Presenting the Fraternity's newes t domain chiefs-Robert . Foster, from High Point, .C.; Ervin Carl Lentz, R acine, Wi .; Leon V\ hit­ney, Austin, T exas; and John Green, Omaha, Tebr.

The appoin tment of Robert Foster, North Carolina State '50, as chief of Domain To. 5 was an­nounced in late ovember. H e suc­ceeds William P. Eyerman, East Carolina State '64. Bob, who took a general engineering course a t

FOSTER LENTZ

North Carolina State where he was a member of Chi chapter, is mana­ger of the High Point, .C., office of Genera l Finance Co. H e and Mrs. Foster, who make their home at 4 Lodge D rive, Thomasville, . C., have two children, R obert Jr. , 8 ; and Georgette, 15.

New chief of Domain o. 13 is Ervin C. Lentz, Georgia T ech '53, who is special assistant to the pre i­dent of Walker Manufacturing Co.

Hammond Honored W. A. HAMMOND, past national president of the Fraternity, Xenia , (left) bows to Dr. Phil ~ ip R. Shriver, Miami Unive rsity presi­d e nt, after receiving Miami's honorary de­gree of Doctor of Science at graduation ce remonies. On e of six to be honored , in­cluding several national ligures, Dr. Ham­mond was cited lor " zeal and imagination" in research, business and publ ic se rvice . He was presented for his honorary degree by Hugh C. Nichols, Miami '23 , former Nation­al Council member and chairman of Miami's Board of Trustees. Dr. Hammond's benefactions to Miami Univers ity include the endowment supporting the W. A. Ham­mond lectures on the American Tradit ion, his lincoln collection, and the furnish ing s of the American Room in McGuffey Hall .

Page 28

of Racine, Wi c. where he and Mrs. Lentz and their three children make their home a t 101 We tminster

quare. Ervin, a Wi consin native, wa

initiated as a member of Alpha Rho chapter at George Tech in 1949 and served a chapter president while an undergraduate. Upon graduation in 1953 he did graduate work at Penn

tate, where he wa affiliated with Omicron chapter and recei ed a Master· degree in 1955 .

ew chief of Domain No. 16 is Leon v hitney, T exas '58, a project officer for the U. . Department of Commerce in Au tin T exa .

Whitney who served as Beta Al­pha pre ident during hi senior year, prepared a rna ter plan for the city of I rving, T exa , as one of his fir t projects a an alumnus. He subse­quently returned to u tin to work for the City of Au tin as a city planner.

Before returning to Austin to a -sume his present work, he spent ap­proximately three years in Norfolk, Va., and Washington, D .C., as an architectural adviser on naval in­stallations for the avy Department. Whitney is also in real estate investment and developmen t work in the Austin area.

Domain 16 includes chapters at Southwest Texas State (Gamma Psi ), University of Texas (Beta Alpha ) , Oklahoma tate (Beta

Kappa ) and East Central Okla­homa tate (Gamma Xi ).

John M . Green, ebraska Wesleyan '63, has succeeded C. William Bow­rna ter, ebraska W esleyan '56, as chief of Domain o. 15 upon com­pletion of Bowmaster' four-year term.

Before taking hi pre ent po ition with the Fir t ational Bank of Omaha, Green was an officer in

GREEN WHITNEY

the avy, erving aboard the . Ashtabula (A0-51) as a

communica tion officer and ubse­quently wa connected with the

avy re ruiting station in Des Moines, Iowa. Mrs. Green i the former J oan Lee Chri tian en, Drake

niversity Delta Gamma. At ebraska Wesleyan, Green was

a member of Blue Key, the varsity golf team, and was senior class ecretary-treasurer.

The chapters in Domain 15 are ebraska Wesleyan (Upsilon), Kan­

sas State (Alpha Epsilon ) , Iowa tate (Alpha Nu ), University of

Kansas (Beta Theta ), K earney Sta te (Gamma Rho) , and the colony at Emporia tate.

THE LAUR EL

* OUR GALLANT PHI TAUS * Captain Richard L. Levering, Akron '51, is a winner in the 1967 Free­doms Foundation at Valley Forge armed forces letter writing contest. Captain Levering, who is assigned to a U. S. Air Force Special Activity Squadron based in Izmir, Turkey, received the George Washington Honor Medal for his entry on the subject "Freedom-My Heritage, My Responsibility." Captain Lever­ing was assigned to the Asiatic Theatre of Operations during World War II and JS a veteran of the Korean War.

* * * First Lt. Sidney S. Margrey, H obart '64, has been decorated with the Silver Star for heroism during his tour of combat duty in Vietnam with the U. S. Air Force. Lt. Mar­grey was cited for gallantry at the risk of his own life while leading a flight of F -100 Super Sabres on a strike against a heavy concentration of VietCong in Nam Phan province. In spite of darkness, intense ground fire, and smoke in the target area, he totally destroyed his objective.

* * * Lt. Col. Richard E . M cCarty, USAF, Colorado State '49, is the re­cipient of the U . S. Joint Service Commendation M edal for his meri­torious service as assistant chief of staff for the Plans Division, H ead­quarters, U . S. Military Assistance Command, Thailand. He is current­ly a professor of aerospace studies with the Air Force ROTC detach­ment at Central Washington State College.

SPRING • 1968

Captain Phillip Ashley, Ohio State '60, has been given the Bronze Star Medal for his work as commander of the Army's 545th Transportation detachment. The award was given for efficient maintenance support which provided helicopters required to sustain the combat effectiveness of the ground combat forces. H e was personally responsible for the suc­cessful recovery, under fire, of eight UH-1 helicopters which had been shot down by enemy forces.

* * * Captain Russell E. Barber, Ohio University '61, was decorated with the Air Force Commendation Medal for meritorious service as a ground safety officer with H eadquarters, United Kingdom Communications Region, at South Ruislip RAF Sta­tion, England. He was cited for his outstanding professional skill and initiative.

* * * Captain Richard M. Coffman, Ohio State '61, is the recipient of the Air Force Commendation M edal for meritorious service as a supply man­agement officer at Lakenheath RAF Station, England. Capt. Coffman is now serving as a supply instruc­tor at Lowry Air Force Base, Colorado.

* * * Captain William H . C . Evans, Transylvania '60, has been awarded the Bronze Star Medal for merito­rious service while engaged in mili­tary operations against Viet Cong forces while an Air Force adminis-

ASHLEY CO FFMAN

SIDNEY MARGREY - SILVER STAR

RICHARD M cCARTY - COM M EN DATI O N M EDJ

Page 29

DAVID HARDESTY - DFC

OUIE FRANKLIN - COMMENDATION MEDAL

MENEGHEL LI LEVERI NG

NYE BARBER

Page 30

trati,·e officer at Bien Hoa, \ iet­nam.

* * * Captain David L. H arde ty, Illinois '62, has joined the gro\\·ina group of Phi Kappa T au member in the armed for e that ha,·c been award­eel the Di tingui h d Flying ro , the cou ntry' eighth highc t award .

apta in H arclc ty wa a l o pre cntcd ' ith the fir t throuah ixth O ak Leaf lu ter .

The Distingui heel Flying Cro wa given to aptain Ilarde ty for hi extraordinary achicv mcnt whil participating in aerial fliaht a an E -47 Aircra ft ommandcr in up­port of Operation Kingfi her in and arou nd Dong Ha, Vietnam, Ia t Augu t 17. n that da t , Capta in H arde ty wa flying a combat up­port m1 wn again t unfriendly around for e . ' i th great determi­na tion and uperior a irman hip, in con tant clanaer from ho ti le grou nd and artillery fire he maneuvered hi aircraft in uch a mann r as to re­main on . tation and provide e -entia! and timely intelligence.

* * * Fir t Lt. J. Craig Honaman, North Carolina tate '65, wa recently awarded the Di tinau i heel F lying Cro for heroism in aerial fli ght in Vietnam. s aircraft commander he volunteered to take hi helicopter into an area where an infantry com­pany was engaged in heavy contact with a V iet .Cong force. Unable to land because of large tree , he hovered the aircraft over the tree as the wounded men were hoi ted aboard, a ll the while under inten e automatic weapon fire. H aving de­livered the men to medical facilitie , he returned twice to the arne area, the second time at night, for other casualties. Previou ly he wa a\ ard­ecl the Air 1Iedal and the Air Medal with "V" de ice for heroi m whi le erving as a pi lot of a medical evac­

uation helicopter.

* * * apt. Thoma C. Le an U F,

Miami '61 , has received hi th ird a ir award of the Air 1eda l for air action in outhea t ia. H e wa cited for outstanding airman hip and courage on succe fu l and important mi ion unci r hazardou onclition

CRAIG HONAMAN - DFC

while a iancd to the 355th T ti a] Fight r V ina at Takhli Roya l Thai

FB, Thailand .

* * * Fir t Lt. La ne . M en ghclli, K ent

tat e '64 wa awar led the 1r M cla l for air a tion in outhcast /\ ia. The decorat ion wa made in recognition for hi m ritoriou achi vement a a K -135 trato­tanker o-pilot. H e wa cited for hi out tandina a irman hip a nd cou rage on ucce ful and important m1 10n under hazardou condi­tions.

* * * Captain Jame W. Nyc, M ichigan '63, ha received the Air For e Commendation M edal for merito­riou ervice a an ele tronic enai­neer and for hi exceptional profe -ional kill and leader hip.

* * * olonel Louie Franklin Auburn

'47, ha been given his econd award of the Air Force Commendation M edal. H e wa de orated for meri­toriou ervice a commander of the 41 t M ilitary Aircraft quadron

harle ton FB .C. Col. Frank-lin i pre entl deputy dire tor of trainina H eadquarter , 1ilitary ir­lift ommand, cott ir For Ba Illinoi . During ' orld " ar II h

r\'ed in th T heatre.

THE L UREL

The Chapter Eternal WALTER D. SM ITH , Mia mi ' 12, D ec. 30, I 967 , at the age of 83. H e was ini tiate No. I 04 in the Fra ternity and had re­tired in I 949 from the H obart Mfg. Co. , of Troy, Ohio. A daughter, Mrs. M ar­garet S. Borchardt, seven grandchildren, and one great g randchild survive.

EARL F. HETZLER , M iami ' 14, is deceased . He was the Fra ternity's No. 56 initia te.

GEORGE L. CRAI G , Ohio University, D ecember 27, 1967. H e was initia ted ir.to Beta chapter on O ctober 28, 191 2. His wife, wh o resides at 70 L ong Hill R oad , W allingford, Conn ., is included in th ose who survive.

ALEXANDER C. KERR, Ohio UniversitJ' ' 16, O ct. 13, 1967. H e was formerly connected with the Lykes Lines Agency of L ond on, England, but re tired a nd re­turned to the U.S. six years ago.

IVAN R. HANSO N, Ohio University '57, March 3, 1967. H e is survived by his wife, Mrs. Mary K ay Hanson and two children, J ohn and Christine, residing at 5 100 West 228th, C leveland, Ohio 44126.

GEORGE R. FLEM IN G , Centre '32, D ec. 16, 1967. H e made his home in St. Augustine, Fla., where his wife, Mrs.

1e ttie Flem ing, lives at 20 Oak Rd .

ALBERT E. JEFFERY, Ohio University '29, ov. 16, 1967. An instructor in physical

education, J effery had spent thirty-six years on the faculty of Libbey High School, Toledo, Ohio. During this time he had served as either a sis tant coach or head coach of football , basketball , and baseball. On April 26, 1968, the school's field house was dedicated in his memory. H e is survived by his wife, Mrs. Margare tta J effery; two d a ughters, a son, three grandchi ldren, and three brothers.

J AM ES G . MORGAN , Muhlenb erg '2 1, O ct. 24, 196 7. H e made his home at 1330 M ansell Ave. , Williamspor t, Pa. 17706. H e is survived by his wife, Mrs. K athryn C . M organ .

RALPH F. HARWICK , Muhlenberg '30, M ay 16, 1965, foll owing a cerebral hem orrhage.

HARRY B. UNDERWOOD, Muhlenberg, '34, Jan. 1, 1968, a t orth Ca rolina Baptist Hospital, Winston-Sa lem. Prior to his passing he was a surgeon at Davis H ospital and had been active in civic, religious and milita ry affairs. Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Edythe W a lters Under­wood ; twin sons, and one sister . Brother

SPRING • 1968

Underwood was commi sioned i:1 the army medical service in I 938 and se rved during World War II in Europe with the 69th Division a 273rd regimen ta l surgeon. H e became comma nding offi cer, with rank of colonel, of the 3 I 2th H os­pital unit of the Selec ted · Reserve Force in 1963.

ALBERT V. MOORE, Purdue '27, D ec. 8 , 1967. D r. M oore, a native of Cincinnati, was a re tired professor of d a iry science at T exas A & M Univers ity, joining the staff there in 193 7. H e was advanced to the rank of full professor in 1944 and continued in that position until his re­tirement in 1966. Survivors include h is wife, Mrs. Alma B. M oore of 205 W est Brookside Dr. , in Brya n, T exas, and a son, Richard Carroll M oore of Austin .

GODFREY E. DAMO N, California '26, Aug. 8, 1967 . H e resided at 12 Wes t­wood Ct. , O a kland, Calif. 94611 , at the t ime of his death.

ARTHU R A. JOHNSON , California, Nov. 20, I 967. H e made his home in O akland, Calif. , at 1627 Trestle G len R oad, 95610.

CHESTER C. ORTON, S outhern Caltfornia '34, M a rch 20, 1968. Surviving are his wife, Alice B. Orton, three sons, a nd a daughter .

RAYMO ND B. ARCHER, Rensselaer ' 64, M a rch 29, 1968. Archer, a Marine first lieutena nt, was killed when his helicop­ter was shot down in Vietnam. H e had been in Vietnam since last N ovember, after having been in the M a rine Corps smce 1965. H e is survived by his wid ow, Mrs. Carolyn Archer of Pensacola, Fla.; his mother, Mrs. M a rcy Archer, and his father, Gera ld Archer, both of R ochester, N.Y.

MAYNARD M. BORI NG , Colorado ' 16, J a n. 11 , 1968. An honorary member of Psi chapter, Brother Boring was a re­tired manager of General Elec tric engi­neering personnel a t Schenectady, N.Y. a nd in 1958 was the recip ient of the U niversity of Colorado a rlin award, given annua lly to a n outsta nding Uni­versity of Colorado a lumnus. Besides his work wi th General Electric, Boring had been chairman of the Engineering M an­power Comm ission, chairma n of the Na­tional Academy of Sciences' advisory board on education, a nd a member of President Eisenh ower's Committee for Engineers a nd Scientis ts . After his re­tirement Boring made his home in Bra ­denton, Fla ., and was president of a private college there for six years. Sur-

vivors include a daughter, a brother, two sisters, a nd a grand child .

HERBERT B. ELLI S, Colorado '35, Dec. 15, 1967. Dr. Ellis practiced pediatrics in Los Alamos, N.M., a nd Colorad o Springs, Colo., and was clinical director of the Parsons State H ospital and Tra ining Center in Parsons, Kans., at the time of his pass ing. H e is survived by his wife, Mrs: Lucille Ellis, two d aughters, a son, a nd a brother.

VINCENT C. CET RO NE, Case '41, O ct. 30, I 967 , a fter a long ill ness. H e had bee n employed by Sperry Gyroscope for twenty-two years a nd was a n engineerin~

sect ion head when he contracted polio in I 954. After a two-year recuperati ve period he returned to Sperry as a re­search engineer and worked for ten years us ing a motorized wheelchair and special respirator equipment. His wife a nd a son survive.

ROBERT H. CRANFORD, Florida '25, Feb. I 4, I 968. A char ter member of Alpha Eta, Cranford made his home in M oul ­trie, Ga. , where he was an a ttorney.

HUGH P. YOUNG , Florida '33, J a n. I I , I 968. A re tired newspaperman, formerl y with th e Tampa, Fla. , Tribune, he made his home in Tuscaloosa, Ala., and is survived by his wife, Mrs . Ma ry E. Means Young.

JOH N C. SYMMES, Pennsylvania '38, Feb. 9, I 968 in Phil adelphia, Pa. During World War II Symmes was a com­mander in the U .S. Naval R eserve, and was the winner of two avy Cross a nd two Distinguished Flying Cross Awards. H e is survived by his wife a nd two da ughters of 105 P lan t Ave., Wayne, Pa.

MALCOLM J . BYRON , Washingt on State ' 41, Feb. 28, 1967. Byron, a retired cap­ta in in the U. S. Navy, was owner-oper­ator of the H eppner Lumber Co. , of H eppner, Ore. Those who survive in­clude his wife, the former M ary Hamil­ton ; and three chi ldren, Gale, I 9 ; Ca­mille, 16 ; and Benham, 12.

GEORGE S. CARLING, Lafayette '30, Feb. 8, 1968. H e made his home in S t. Augustine, F la., where he formerly owned and operated Surf Creek Cottages and was president of the board of di­rectors of Ancient City La undry. Carling re tired as a school teacher after a caree r in the Pennsylvania school system. His wife, Mrs . Kathryn Carling, a d aughter, three brothers, and a sister, are included in those who survive.

HENRY P. FRANK, Lafayett e '29, J a n. I , I 967. H e was a charter member of Alpha Omicron and is survived by his wife, Mrs. Mary . Frank .

PALMER H. JENKINS, Colgate '35, J an . 25, 1968 . A charter member of Alpha Upsilon chapter, J enkins was a dental

Page 31

surgeon with offi ces in J ackson Heights, .Y., where he made his home at 73-1 2

35th Ave . He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Esther Jenkins, two daughters, and three sisters.

HARMON 0 . DeGRAFF, Akron, Nov. 24, 196 7, following a stroke. Dr. DeGraff, initiated into the Fratern ity on March 18, 196 2, was a long-time Alpha Ph i facul ty adviser. I n October, 1956, special ceremonies were held honoring him for twenty-five years' service to Alpha Phi and Phi Kappa T au in this capacity. Dr. DeGraff was born in Ossian, I owa, and received his A.B. and M .A. degrees a t the University of I owa. H e continuctl his pcst-gradua te study at the U nivt> r­sity of Chicago and received his Ph .D . degree from that institution in 1926. His teaching career at the University of Ak­ron began in 1930 and he u sumEd duties as faculty adviser to Sigma Beta Nu, the loca l that became Alpha Phi of Phi Kappa Tau, in 1931. He retired from the University of Akron in 1951 as professor emeritus and subsequently worked as a fam ily counselor for the Akron Court of Domestic Relations. I n addition to his invaluable service to Al­pha Phi, Dr. DeGraff contributed much time and effort to Akron civic a nd wel­fare projects including the Y.M.C.A. , Goodwill I ndustries, a nd Counci l of So­cial Agencies.

FLOYD A. DECKER, Texas '27, M arch 23, 1968. A charter member of Alpha Psi chapter, Decker was retired as chairman of the engineering department of the University of T exas a t El Paso. Besides membership in the Fraternity, he was also a member of Phi Kappa Phi and Sigma Tau, honorary groups. He is sur­vived by Mrs. D ecker, a daughter, two brothers, and three granddaughters.

W IRT PETERS, University of Miami '29, June 22, 1967. H e was the senior mem­ber of the law firm of Peters, Maxey, Shupack, Short, and M organ of Coral Gables, Fla. H e was a former Beta Delta chapter adviser.

OWEN T. KEAVENY, St . John's Unive r­sity '68, is reported as deceased. He made his home in Flushing, N .Y. at 142-30 Sanford Ave.

ROGER W . KELSEY, Westminster '56, April 9, 1968. H e was a Beta Phi chapter presiden t in 1955- 1956, and at the time of his death was pastor of the First Pres­byterian Church, in Waverly, Pike Coun­ty, Ohio. Previously he had been student assistant minister at First Presbyterian Church, New Castle. Surviving are his wife, his mother, a brother and a sister.

LAWTON D. HARRIS, University of the Pacific '22, is deceased as of J une, 1967.

A Gamma Epsilon charter member, he served the group as chapter adviser.

SANFORD MOBERLY, a member of Ar­chania, Gamma Epsilon chartering group at College of the Pacific in January of 1967. He resided in Livingston, Calif., prior to his passing.

W ILLIAM L. MOORE, June 9, 1966. He was a member of Archania. He is sur­vived by his wife, Mrs. M argaret M oore.

CHARLES C. WEIDEMAN N, a member of Archa nia, Nov. 14, 1966, after a long ill­ness. An ed ucator, he was a resident of Columbus, Ohio, for several years. His wife, Mrs. Pearl Weideman, is included in those who survive.

JAMES C. WOLFE, College of the Pacific '68, August 12, 1967, as a result of an automobile accident in Stockton, Calif.

MICHAEL FRAH M , Western Michigan , a charter member of Gamma Theta, M arch 31 , 1968, after a lingering illness. His parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Frahm of Mt. Clemens, Mich ., survive .

DANNY RAY MARSHALL, Sacramento State '67, was fa tally injured during July, 1967, in a jeep accident while on

ational Guard duty. His foster parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Dechter Jr., of 5141 Sharp R d ., Calistoga, Calif., survive.

------------------------------- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- ---- --- ---·

RECOMMEND A RUSHEE Cut out and mail this fo rm with your rush recommendation to Jack L. Anson, Nationa l Secretary, Ph i Kappa Tau Central Office, 15 North Campus Avenue, Oxford , Ohio 45056. It will be forwarded to the chapter specified .

T o the Brothers of ________ -:-:::---=---- -----(Chapter )

H is home address is: - -------;;:;:-:-:;-;;:-::7---------;-;:;:--;----------;;;-----:--------::::=-:::--:-.,----( o . and Street ) (City ) (State ) (ZIP Code )

and he wi ll enter ----~~--~-=-~-------on or abouL------------::::-~-----------(College or Univ. ) (Date )

Remarks: _ __________________ __________________ ____________ _

Fra terna lly Submitted :

( ame ) (Chapter an d Year )

(Address )

---- ------- ------ ------ ------- ------------ ---------------------- -----·- -------- ---------------------- -- ---------------Page 32 THE L UREL

P.S .

Have YOU

thought about dying

lately?

On a "Spendthrift" Jack Benny TV program it was said in essence - IF HE CA 'T TA K E IT WITH HIM, HE'S NOT GOING.

History, however, has not recorded anybody who has successfull y crossed the River Styx, worldly possessions in hand .

Why not be realistic and have a competent attorney review your will? Carefu l planning now could greatly reduce eventua l tax costs. And why not, in you r planning, carry out your resolve to remember generously the Phi K appa Tau Founda­ti on ?

Present and future generations of Phi K appa T aus wi ll be eternally gratefu l.

W e hope you supporter of deductible )

live forever and become an annual the Foundation (in come tax

Cash contri b utions sh ou ld be se nt to

M. E. WETHERBEE 1241 Dublin Rd ., Columbus, O hio 4321 2

Please make checks payable to " Th e Phi Kappa Tau Foundation"

8

The Phi Kappa Tau Fraternity Founded a t M iam i University, Oxford , Ohio, M arch 17, 1906

FOU NDERS Taylor A . Borradaile, Lewis Apartments. Apt . 4, 22 14 S. Kanawha St. ,

Beckley, W. Va . 25801; Dwi~ht I. Dou~lass ; William H . Shideler; Clint on D. Boyd.

NATIO NA L OFFICERS NAT IONAL PR ESIDENT - Warren H . Parkrr, N ebras ka Wes leyan University ,

50th a nd t . Paul , Li ncoln, Nebr. 68504 ED UCATIONAL DIRECTOR - Ben E. Da uid, 8505 S.W . 48th St. , Miami , Fla .

33 155 H ouS ING AND fi NANCIAL ADVI SER - R eid A . M organ , 3853 81 st St., S.E.,

M ercer Island, Wash . 9804 0 NATIONAL C HAPLA IN - Rev . Charles D. StJO IIs, Smoketown, Pa. 17576

THE NATIONAL COUNCIL M elvin Dellra , c/ o Blue Cross of N .E. O hio, 2024 E. Yth St. , Cleve land ,

Ohio 44 115 Donald E . L ease , 200 Winchcombe Dr .. Dayton, Ohio 45459 ] o/111 II. Edrmrds, !' . 0 . Box 10422, Raleigh , N. C . 27605 Ray A. Bushey, 9-14 13th Street . Boulder , Colo. 80302 l?ay :1. Clarke, 3403 Scarborough Road, T oledo, Ohio 43615 Th oma.< L. St eo111is II , 45-55th Street, Gulfport, Miss. 39501 Lou Gerding , 509 Palomas D rive, N.E., Albuquerque, . Mex. 87108

THE CENTRAL O FFICE 15 orth Ca mpus Avenue . Oxford , Ohio 45056

T elephone: 513-523-54 19

N ATI ONAL S ECU.ET ARY- ./ack L . Auso 11 A SS I STANT NATI ONAL SECRETARY- Will iam D . } eukius NATI ONAL EDITOR, N AT IONAL AL U MNI S ECRETARY- j a c k W . ] areo DIRECTOR orr CHAPTER D EVEL OPM ENT - Th o mas C. C zwninRham fi ELD ScciUCTARIES- Ciwrles H . Borup , Larry C . ] ones

DO MA IN CHIEFS I. F. L aV em e M cKinley, 801 Seco nd Ave. , New York , N. Y. 10017.

Chapters: Rho , Beta Pi , Gamma Gamma, Gam ma Zeta , Gamma Kappa , Gam ma Phi . Colonies: Boston, Bryant.

2.

3.

4.

5.

6.

7.

8.

9.

10.

II .

12 .

13.

14 .

15 .

16.

17 .

18.

19.

20 .

21.

M aso n H urd, 17 University Ave .. H amilton . N . Y. 13346. Chap ters: Alph a T au, Alpha Upsilon, Beta Upsilon, G:tmma Tu R obert ] . K. Butz . 32 S. Seventh St. , Allen town , Pa. 181 01. Chap ters:

Eta . Omicron , Alpha Om icron, Gamma Omega . Bert E. M ansell . 494 1 N. 26th St. , Arli ngton . Va . 22207. Chap ters: X i, Alpha Gamma, Beta Omicron R obert S . Foster, 131 '· H am ilton St. , High Point , N .C . 27261. Chapt ers: Chi , Alpha Theta, Gamma Et a, Gam ma T au L aw rence H. M r Daniel, University of Georgia Alumn i Society, Academic Bldg ., Athens, Ga. 3060 1. Chapters : Alpha Eta, Alpha Rho, Beta Iota, Beta Xi . T . Havis ] ohnsorr, 745 Launcelot Rd ., J ackson , Miss. 39206

Alpha Lambda, Alpha Chi , Beta Epsil on, Gamrna Upsilon , Gamma Chi . Colony: Mississippi Edward A . Marye. ]r . , 268 Rose H ill . Versailles, Ky . 40383. Chapters : Delt a, Theta, Kappa, Beta Beta. Colony: George tow n. ] . Philip R obertso n , 81 9 W ilmington Ave ., Apt. 14, Dayton , Ohio 454-20 . Chapters : Alpha , Beta , Gamma. Gam ma Beta . Colony: M arshall O tto L. Schellin , H7 Cliffside Drive. Akron. Ohio 44313 . Chap ters: Epsilon , Phi , Al pha Phi , Beta Mu , Gamma Pi Harry La<h , 351 Basse tt Rd ., Bay Village , Ohio 44140. Chapters: Alpha D elta , Alpha Omega , Beta T au , Beta Phi Ray A. Clarke , 3403 Scarborough Rd ., Toledo , Ohio 43615. Chapters: T au , Alpha Alpha. Gamma Theta , Gamma Lambda Ervin C. Lentz } r .. 101 Wes tminster Square, Racine, W is. 53402 . Chapters : Iota . Mu , Gamma Alpha . Gam ma D elta , Delt a Alpha. Coloni es: St. Cloud, Wisconsin at Milwaukee Donald A . Henry, ]r .. 29 Sunnyside Dr ., Sprin.d ield , Ill . 62702. Chap­ters: Zeta Lambda, Beta Lambda , Beta Chi , Gamma ~ l u . D elta Beta ] olur M . Green . 4743 S . 83rd St. , Apt. 72 . Ralston , ' ebr. 68127 Chapters : Upsilon . Alpha Epsilon, Alpha 1u , Beta Theta, Gamma Rho. Colony: Emporia State L eo n A . Whitn ey , 4501 Ramsey Ave. , Austin , T exas 78756. Chapters: Beta Alpha, Beta Kappa, Gamma X i. Gamma Psi. R obert W . Ha mpton . Better Business Bureau , 700 Elect ric Bldg. , El Paso, . T exas 79901. Chapters: Alpha Psi, Beta Zeta . Colonies: Santa Fe, New Mexico Highlands R obert D . L eath erman, Cottage 415, Chautauqua Park, Boulder, Colo 80302 . Chapters : Psi, Alpha Sigma M yron L . Wh ite. 316 Guggen heim H all . Uni . of Washington, Seattle,

Wash . 98105. Chapters : Alpha Zeta, Alpha K appa, Alpha Pi , Beta Gamma Ben C. Bre1cer. 676 " N" St. , Sacramento , Calif. 958 14. Chap ters: u , Beta Omega, Gamma Epsilon , Gamma Iota , Gamma Sigma R . L yrin Liu~ngsto n . 1340-#2 . S. Burwood, La H abra , Calif. 906"31. Chaoters: Pi , Beta Psi , Gamma Omicron

RESIDENT COUNCIL OFFICERS OF ALPHA CHAPTER GREET HONORED FOUNDER BORRADAILE ON THE OCCASION OF THE CHAPTER'S FOUNDERS' DAY CELEBRATION HELD ON THE MIAMI UNIVERSITY CAMPUS MARCH 17, 1968