Friendship
Volume 1๏บ8, โ 4
Culture
Character
Global Service Initiative 9 Butler Building Dedication 2 Chapter Installations 4 Alumni News 13 Chapter News 17 DUEF Annual Report 21 Justice
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Preparing Exceptional Global Leaders My son graduated from Kansas State University this past May with a degree in pre-law, business and a minor in leadership studies. He intended to go to law school following graduation. He vigorously studied for the law school exam, but decided at the last minute to forgo law school to earn money. My son struggled with whether to accept the job offer to become a finance manager for a large auto dealership in Topeka, Kan.; a far cry from his dream of joining a sports agents firm in a major U.S. city. After listening to his classmateโs frustrations of not getting any offers, he settled in to learning his job and performing at his maximum potential. As I watched him struggle, I asked him if I had been a good father in preparing him for his future. He quickly responded by saying, โYou told me that my future depended on a good academic foundation in high school and college. You took me on a mission trip to Equatorial Guinea (a former Spanish Colony), West Africa; Madrid and Barcelona, Spain, because I took Spanish in high school and college; and a side trip to Dublin. You repeatedly told me that my career path might take me to cities around the world. You advised me to make friends outside of my race and the American culture. My best friends now come from London; Sydney, Australia; and Sao Paulo, Brazil. While I wish more for my first job, Iโm good with it exposing me to the world of work. I know I will get to my dream. Yes, youโve been a good dad, Dad!โ As I reflect on this conversation, I am concerned for the community of college students, and more profoundly for young college men. Many analysts say that this college generation will not come close to their parentsโ standard of living. They will compete in a global market with students who come from countries where science, math and English education are a very high priority. They will compete with our students for American jobs, and for jobs around the world. We live in a time where a high degree of world culture, history, language and excellent interpersonal/cross cultural skills is an indispensable foundation for career and leadership success. The best employers all over the world are looking for the most competent, most resilient, most creative and the most world-knowledgeable college and university graduates on the planet, and they are willing to pay top dollar for their services. American studentsโ lack of knowledge about the world is very disturbing. According to surveys by the National Geographic Society and the Asia Society, American students are next to last in their knowledge of geography and current affairs compared with peers in eight other countries, and an overwhelming majority of college-bound seniors cannot find Afghanistan, Iraq, or Israel on a world map. Fewer than half our high school students study a foreign language, and while a million U.S. students study French, a language spoken by 80 million people worldwide, fewer than 75,000 study Mandarin, a language spoken by 1.3 billion people. My concern is this: Americaโs leadership position in the world depends on preparing students to be savvy citizens with the specific competencies needed to compete and cooperate in the global market place. I am clearer than ever in my belief that a Fraternity can assist a young man in preparing for the global marketplace. A chapter whose membership reflects the global population is a superior education community. Nowhere in our culture other than in a fraternity can men learn to live and work together. Fraternities are as relevant today as they ever have been. We have completed the work of the Presidentโs Task Force, to provide a deeper framework for helping our undergraduates prepare for the global economy. Through the task force we concluded that a single-sex organization like DU is still very relevant, and we commit ourselves to assisting our men to become exceptional global leaders. We have created a global service initiative in Jamaica. We need our alumni to come alongside a chapter to help some young men find their way in a changing world. We also need you to donate to our Global Service Initiative through the Delta Upsilon Foundation so that more young men can have an experience outside of the continental United States.
E. Bernard Franklin, Kansas State โ75 President, Delta Upsilon International Fraternity Email: ihq@deltau.org P.S. I would like to congratulate our Executive Director, Justin Kirk, who became a member of our Fraternity at the Installation of the Boise State Chapter this past April. We are very pleased to have this talented man as our Brother!
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Delta Upsilon International Fraternity North Americaโs Oldest Non-Secret Fraternity: Founded 1834
The Principles of Delta Upsilon The Promotion of Friendship The Development of Character The Diffusion of Liberal Culture The Advancement of Justice
The Motto of Delta Upsilon Dikaia Upotheke - Justice Our Foundation Officers President E. Bernard Franklin, Ph.D., Kansas State โ75 Chairman of the Board Richard X. Taylor, North Carolina State โ82 Secretary Malcolm P. Branch, Wisconsin โ69 Treasurer E. Bruce McKinney, Missouri โ74 Directors Timothy C. Dowd, Oklahoma โ75 Charles E. Downton III, North Carolina โ66 John W. Duncan, Oregon State โ00 Robert D. Fisher, Alberta โ76 Bradford S. Grabow, DePauw โ85 Joseph R. Heerens, DePauw โ84 Brian Mudrick, Louisville โ82 Bryan D. Griffin, Florida โ10 Justin D. Pierce, Kent State โ10 Past Presidents Terry L. Bullock, Kansas State โ61 Samuel M. Yates, San Jose โ55 Bruce S. Bailey, Denison โ58 James D. McQuaid, Chicago โ60 Alvan E. (Ed) Porter, Oklahoma โ65
Copyright 2010 Delta Upsilon International Fraternity Inc.
International Headquarters Staff Delta Upsilon Fraternity Executive Director: Justin Kirk Associate Executive Director: Karl Grindel Executive Assistant: Jana McClees Associate Executive Director of Educational Services: Andy Bergman Director of Educational Programs: Michelle Rebholz Associate Executive Director of Chapter Services: Eric Chamberlain Director of Loss Prevention: Laura Whitney Leadership Consultants: Stephen DeCarlo, Indiana โ11 Mark Gehrke, Boise State โ11 Mike Taylor, North Carolina โ11 Senior Staff Accountant: Mary Ellen Watts Membership Records Coordinator: Roslyn Riall Director of Communications & Editor: Jean Gileno Lloyd Social Media Director: Zach Thomas, North Florida โ09
The Official Magazine of the
Delta Upsilon International Fraternity Since 1882
Volume 128, โ 4 Delta Upsilon International Headquarters Office hours: 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Monday through Friday Office: 317-875-8900 / FAX: 317-876-1629 Email: IHQ@deltau.org / web site: www.deltau.org
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Delta Upsilon Quarterly is published quarterly in the spring, summer, fall and winter at 8705 Founders Road Indianapolis, Indiana 46268, U.S.A., (R) TM Registered U.S. Patent Office Copy deadlines: Winter, October 1; Spring, February 1; Summer, April 1; Fall, August 1
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to Delta Upsilon Quarterly, 8705 Founders, Indianapolis, IN 46268. About the cover: Mark Wickware, Lehigh โ11 and Tucker Heaton, Wisconsin โ11 participated in DUโs Global Service Initiative in 2010.
North-American Interfraternity Conference
Delta Upsilon Educational Foundation Executive Director: David R. Schumacher Director of Development: Craig S. Sowell, Houston โ92 Director of Operations: Brandylin J. Cole
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Butler Memorial Headquarters Building Ceremony and Memorial Dinner
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Copyright 2010 Delta Upsilon International Fraternity Inc.
The Fraternity honored the memory and service of former Executive Director Wilford A. Butler, Western Michigan โ61 on Saturday, November 4, 2010 with an afternoon ceremony at the International Headquarters in Indianapolis, followed by a memorial dinner attended by members of the Butler family, board members, current and past fraternity staff and interfraternal friends. Brother Butler was executive director of Delta Upsilon Fraternity from 1962 to 1986. He died in December 2009 after a short illness. At the headquarters naming ceremony, Fraternity President Bernard Franklin, Kansas State โ75 spoke followed by Fraternity Historian, Bill Briscoe, Purdue โ65 who gave an overview of Butlerโs role moving the headquarters from New York to Indianapolis. Lewis Gregory, Kansas โ75 welcomed guests to the memorial dinner later that evening. Former Tau Kappa
Epsilon Executive Director Bruce Melchert offered an interfraternal remembrance and former Delta Upsilon staff members Rick Holland, Syracuse โ83, Brian Mudrick, Louisville โ82 and Greg Kavanagh, Miami โ81 shared their memories of Butler.
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Copyright 2010 Delta Upsilon International Fraternity Inc.
Above left: Former Delta Upsilon staff members, all of whom worked for Brother Butler over the years, gathered at the Butler Memorial Headquarters Building for the naming ceremony. Above: The Butler Memorial Headquarters Building in Indianapolis houses the staff of the Fraternity and Foundation.
Focusing on the importance of education of fraternity members Bernard Franklin announced the development of the Wilford A. Butler Education Chair to ensure that generations of DUโs benefit from world-class training. Billโs sister, Gail Wakelee, presented checks from the Butler family totaling $30,000 toward the chair which will be held by Delta Upsilonโs Director of Education. Robert Tyburski, Colgate โ74 spoke about the importance of leaving a legacy. Former staff, board members and others who may be interested in supporting the Wilford A. Butler Education Chair may learn more by contacting Brandy Cole at brandy@deltau.org. Closing remarks were offered by Warren Nesbitt, Wisconsin โ76 and those in attendance joined in singing โHail, Delta Upsilon.โ
Bill Butlerโs sisters, Charlotte Terry and Gail Wakelee admired the Memorial Headquarters plaque with former DU staff member JoEllen Walden.
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154th Chapter Chartered at Embry-Riddle
Thirty-one brothers were initiated into Delta Upsilonโs 154th Chapter at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University in Daytona Beach, Florida on Saturday, September 4, 2010.
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The Embry-Riddle Chapter is the fourth chapter in the Sunshine State and DU representatives from the Florida, Central Florida and North Florida Chapters participated in the installation. Fraternity Director Timothy Dowd, Oklahoma โ75 gave the charge, focusing on the importance of diffusing liberal culture.
The installation took place at the Willie Miller Instructional Center Auditorium with more than 100 guests in attendance. Guests included Fraternity and Sorority Advisor Ryan Powell; Associate Dean of Students Paul Bell; The University Presidentโs wife Maurie Johnson; Associate Director of Student Activities & Campus Events for Orientation and International Programming and alumni initiate Shane Ryan; parents; friends, and representatives from nearly every Greek organization on campus.
Chattanooga Chapter is DUโs 155th
Copyright 2010 Delta Upsilon International Fraternity Inc.
The Chattanooga Chapter was installed on December 11, 2010 at the University of Tennessee-Chattanooga. Delta Upsilonโs 155th Chapter welcomed 27 initiates. The ceremony took place at the university auditorium with more than 80 family members, friends and university staff in attendance. The ritual team consisted of Aaron Clevenger, Central Florida โ97, Sam Delay, Tennessee โ77, Mackenzie Means, Embry-Riddle โ12 and Joseph Jaworski, Embry-Riddle โ10. Delta Upsilon Executive Director Justin Kirk gave the charge and the men were welcomed into the Fraternity with a special video message from Lou Holtz, Kent State โ58.
Elon Colony Established Delta Upsilon welcomed a colony of 72 men at Elon University in Elon, North Carolina on March 31, 2011. The colonization ceremony, held on campus at the Moseley Campus Center, was led by Executive Director Justin Kirk and Paul Taylor, North Carolina State โ89. The colony members were joined by two dozen guests. The colony is one of the largest menโs fraternities on campus and they have achieved the top GPA. As a two-week old colony they also won the campus Greek Week competition.
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Virginia Tech Chapter Reinstated The Virginia Tech Chapter returned to the roll of active chapters on Friday, April 15, 2011. Originally chartered as Delta Upsilonโs 126th chapter in 1983 the chapter at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University in Blacksburg, Virginia had been inactive since 2002. Within the past year, colony members worked diligently to achieve chapter status with advisory support from area DU alumni H. Francis Bush, Florida โ85, Mark Vanderberg, Colorado โ69 and Jeff Czerniak, Iowa State โ09. Thirty-five members were initiated including faculty advisor, Dr. Preston Durrill. Brother Czerniak served as examiner and the charge was given by Delta Upsilon Director of Chapter Performance, Ian Areces, Rochester โ06. The chartering ceremony was followed by a presentation of gifts and an overview of the chapterโs path from colonization to chartering.
Special guests included Director of Fraternity and Sorority Life, Heather Evans, Virginia Chapter President Paul Hodskins, Virginia โ12 and four undergraduate members of the Virginia Chapter along with several parents, family members and friends of the new DU members. In the midst of celebrating DUโs return to Virginia Tech, members and their families were encouraged to participate in remembrance ceremonies hosted by the university for the 32 students and faculty members who were tragically taken from their loved ones and the Virginia Tech Community on April 16, 2007.
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156th Chapter Chartered at Boise State
Copyright 2010 Delta Upsilon International Fraternity Inc.
Delta Upsilonโs 156th Chapter was installed at Boise State University on Saturday, April 30, 2011 with 26 undergraduate initiates. The newest members of DU have become heavily involved on campus and in the Boise community since colonization on November 2, 2010. The colony held two events to benefit the International Rescue Committee (IRC), where members collected and donated furniture items to be given to the IRC to furnish homes for incoming refugees. Four alumni were also initiated including friend of the chapter, Ryan Brust; advisory board member Rick Jung, who is director of development for the College of Social Sciences and Public Affairs at Boise State University; DU Executive Director Justin Kirk; and advisory board member Robert Schuler who is vice president of distribution accounting for Albertsons, LLC and is serving as the advisor for the vice president of finance for the chapter. The ceremony was held at the Simplot Ballroom in the Student Union Building. Delta Upsilon Fraternity board members served as officers of the installation, including Treasurer Bruce McKinney, Missouri โ74 as chaplain, Tim Dowd, Oklahoma โ75 as Chief Marshal, Chairman Richard Taylor, North Carolina State โ82
as Examiner and John Duncan, Oregon State โ00 as Grand Marshall. Delta Upsilon International President Bernard Franklin, Kansas State โ75 gave the charge. The charter was presented after officer installation and a dessert reception followed. Members of the new chapter offered special recognition to Sarah Shinn, Jeremiah Shinn, Justin Kirk, Boise State โ00, Jason Clark, Washington State โ01, Bob and Kathy Kustra, the Delta Upsilon IHQ staff and the Boise State Chapter Advisory Board. Visit the chapter web site at www.boisedu.org.
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Founders Medal Presented to Bill Landherr, Penn State โ59 More than 50 years ago Brother Bill Landherr, Penn State โ59 recited the Oath of Initiation, cementing his membership in the Delta Upsilon Fraternity. On April 24, 2010, he was honored with the DU Founders Medal at the Penn State alumni dinner. When Landherr initially arrived on the Penn State campus to study industrial engineering, the DU brothers may not have imagined the long-term impact he would have on their chapter. Named President of the Penn State University DU Alumni Corporation in 1978, Brother Landherr served ably for 31 years before stepping down two years ago.
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Early in his term as president, the chapterโs charter was threatened with revokation and Landherr assumed the leadership role in chapter operations for a short time. As part of this commitment, on Monday nights, he made the drive from Philadelphia to State College to run chapter meetings and kept the chapter stable until it was back on its feet in the early 1980s. Brother Landherrโs devotion, patience and leadership over the past 50 years has linked todayโs generations together and strengthened the tie that binds us as brothers; he was considered the heart of Penn State Delta Upsilon.
Proffesionally, Landherr founded Corro Therm Inc. in 1971. The firm provides coating applications for machinery in the automotive, aerospace, and biomedical industries, among others. In 1997, he established Corro Therm Protective Coatings, a distributor of coating supplies. He served in the Navy aboard the aircraft carrier Franklin D. Roosevelt. After active duty, he remained in the Naval Reserve and was a member of the VR-52 Fleet Logistics Support Squadron at Willow Grove Naval Air Base. After
Executive Director Justin Kirk presented the Founders Medal to Bill Landherr, Penn State โ59 at the Penn State alumni dinner in April 2010.
35 years in the military, he retired as a captain in the mid1990s.
Copyright 2010 Delta Upsilon International Fraternity Inc.
Landherrโs volunteerism and community involvement was not limited to DU. He was a longtime member of the St. Alphonsus menโs morning Bible study group and he served as Abington High Schoolโs alumni association president for 25 years and was inducted into the schoolโs hall of fame.
His love for DU, and the loyal and dedicated leadership that he provided was indeed a human embodiment of the Fraternityโs Four Founding Principles. Sadly, in June 2010, just a few weeks after Brother Landherr was honored, he died of cancer.
Recipients of the Founders Medal embody the spirit of Delta Upsilonโs ideals and follow the example set by our Founding Fathers on November 4, 1834. Founders Medal recipients are the revered giants and volunteer elite of Delta Upsilon. The men who receive this honor are not just awarded a medallion and certificate of recognition, but they are also permanently enshrined at the Fraternity Headquarters in Indianapolis, Indiana, where their name will live on forever. Fewer than 30 men have been recognized with a Founders Medal.
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Fraternityโs Highest Honor Awarded to Scott A. W. Johnson, Washington โ80 Photo by Peter Ha, Washington โ04
With more than 30 years of leadership and service to both his chapter and the International Fraternity, Scott A.W. Johnson, Washington โ80 earned the DU Distinguished Alumni Award and was honored during the Washington Chapterโs Centennial Celebration in September 2010.
board for two terms. He was a leader in revising many of the fraternityโs policies and procedures during this time. Following his fraternity board service, he served on the Delta Upsilon Educational Foundation as a Trustee. As the Washington Chapter alumni know, Johnson has been a rock for the Washington Chapter, serving many years as House Corporation President.
A. Johnson, Washington โ80 Johnson began his Delta Upsilon Scott received the DU Distinguished Alumni journey with his initiation in April 1977. Award in September. Executive Director Justin Kirk presented the award during He served the Washington Chapter as the Washington Chapterโs Centennial During the award presentation in president and after graduation he was celebration. 2010 Executive Director Justin Kirk appointed to the Fraternityโs field staff by said, โWhen I became executive director then Executive Director Wilford A. Butler, Western Michigan I asked some of our volunteers the names of important โ61. Since he left the staff in the early 1980s, Johnson has alumni I should meet. At the top of the list for many, it was held a leadership role with either the Washington Chapter or Scott Johnson.โ International Fraternity, and in many years, both. To date, nearly 155,000 men have been initiated into Delta
He served on the International Board of Directors from 1993 to 2001, first as secretary and then as chairman of the
Upsilon and Johnson is the 67th to received the honor of being presented with the Distinguished Alumni Award.
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Copyright 2010 Delta Upsilon International Fraternity Inc.
Jim Simpkins, Washington State โ81 Honored with Founders Medal As one of DUโs most actively engaged alumni Jim Simpkins, Washington State โ81 has had a profound impact on his chapter. In recognition of his dedication he was honored with a Founders Medal during the 2010 Leadership Institute. The Founders Medal is awarded to brothers who have devoted an extraordinary amount of time and inspirational service to a Delta Upsilon chapter.
organizing an alumni event, attending a DU Convention, or serving on the Board of Directors of the International Fraternity, Brother Simpkins always kept what was most important at the forefront, brotherhood. He has a keen sense of always doing what is right for Delta Upsilon, and the Washington State Chapter.
Alumni from Jimโs chapter Since his graduation in 1981, Brother commented, โIf it wasnโt for Jim, it is Simpkins has been an integral part of the Fraternity Board Chairman, Rick Taylor, doubtful we would have been able Washington State Chapter. He has served North Carolina State โ82 presented to re-colonize so quickly. Since our the Founders Medal to Jim Simpkins, on the chapterโs alumni board in several Washington State โ81. recolonization in 2001, Jim has led the capacities including serving as president chapter back to levels we have not seen for the past eight years. He was a invaluable in a very long time.โ leader in the chapterโs recolonization Brother Simpkinsโ continued involvement and service to in 2001. Whether he is guiding the organization of the DU is proof that dedication to excellence is an integral part undergraduate chapter, counseling an undergraduate brother, of Delta Upsilonโs commitment to Build Better Men.
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Alumni Initiate Exemplifies Values Kevin Smith, Ohio โ10 was ready to take on a challenge five years ago when a colleague asked if heโd be interested in serving as the advisor to the Ohio Chapter of Delta Upsilon. Smith had no prior association with DU and was not a member of a Greek-letter organization, but felt he understood what a fraternity is supposed to look like. Professionally, Smith directs the Amanda Jay Cunningham Leadership Center at Ohio University, where he is in charge of community service initiatives from the campus involvement center. His higher education background made him an ideal candidate for working with Delta Upsilon undergraduates. Delta Upsilon Foundation Chairman Steve Rowley, Ohio โ65 spoke with Smith frequently and was impressed by his commitment to the chapter. โI realized I was talking to someone who had a great passion as an advisor,โ Rowley said.
Smith considered the values of the fraternity in accepting the invitation, and was honored to be initiated as an alumni member of Delta Upsilon at the 2010 Leadership Institute in New Orleans. During the Leadership Institute Smith lived the values that brought him together with the Fraternity. He enthusiastically joined DU undergraduates for the service project in New Orleansโs Lower Ninth Ward. Smith said he appreciated the projectโs purpose of exposing DU members to volunteer opportunities and inspiring them to do more service work. โThe whole goal of that project was to expose students to something new, something that might be context changing.โ To follow up he emphasized the need for building relationships and devoting more time to learning about those in need. โYouโve got to be with people, and thatโs truly where service begins,โ Smith said. Smith admits he doesnโt get to do a lot of service on his own in Athens, Ohio due to his schedule. โMy weekends are booked,โ he said. โI really believe that you should give to your community. Thatโs really the point of higher education. Thatโs why Ohio University is where it is. The whole point of higher education was to serve the region and the people
Alumni initiate Kevin Smith, Ohio โ10 (right) paused for a photo with a contractor and his best friend while the three volunteered in the home of of a New Orleans resident.
of the region to develop a better citizenry. They had this new government in the U.S., and they decided if we are going to have government of the people, we need to educate the people to become better citizens. Whereas the old idea of university was to turn men into good preachers and ministers so, for me, itโs a very personal thing to think thatโs why we do higher education to educate our citizenry. โ Before Smith traveled to New Orleans he decided to capitalize on his own opportunity to serve in a new context. He arranged to stay in the city to do volunteer work for several days following the Leadership Institute.
Copyright 2010 Delta Upsilon International Fraternity Inc.
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When Rowley learned that Smith was not Greek, he called DU Executive Director Justin Kirk to discuss alumni initiation. โI felt he was the right kind person for DU. His values are clearly right where ours are and his involvement has been extremely critical to the ongoing success of the chapter.โ
โNew Orleans is a very different demographic. Diversity lives there. Itโs an ideal place were diversity is not just something that is appreciated, it is New Orleans.โ Smith anticipated his volunteer time in New Orleans would be directed toward clean up of the 2010 oil spill, but he quickly learned that the real need related to the devastation of Hurricane Katrina in 2005. โThis was a good lesson for anybody doing service. When you ask people what they need, you listen.โ
His values are clearly right where ours are and his involvement has been extremely critical to the ongoing success of the chapter. โDelta Upsilon Foundation Chairman Steve Rowley, Ohio โ65
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Global Service Initiative By Justin Kirk, Andy Bergman and Kaye Schendel
Big ideas develop in the strangest of places. When the leadership of Delta Upsilon Fraternity decided to plan a journey to take members on a developmentally impactful trip across the globe to serve a struggling community, the idea definitely came in a unusual place โ at an interfraternal friendโs wedding on the beaches of Negril, Jamaica. Upon implementation, this big idea has already transformed the lives of students and three communities in a third-world nation, but it has also transformed the strategic direction and found of an international fraternity and its members.
Copyright 2010 Delta Upsilon International Fraternity Inc.
It was spring break, 2009. Kaye Schendel, Assistant Director of University Centers at Univeristy of WisconsinLa Crosse was coordinating an Alternative Spring Break for 26 students in Negril, Jamaica. Jeremiah Shinn, then a staff member at Indiana University, was getting married at the same location and had many friends with him including Delta Upsilonโs Executive Director Justin Kirk, DU Board member John Duncan, and DUโs Director of Educational Services Andy Bergman. And thatโs when it happened. Upon hearing Kaye talk about the UW-La Crosse service trip, someone wondered aloud why such an experience couldnโt be replicated for members of a national fraternity. From that conversation, the Global Service Initiative was born.
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Kaye became interested in alternative breaks during one of her vacation visits to Negril, Jamaica that happened to coincide with spring break back in the states. She was dismayed as thousands of American college students demonstrated the most predictable, but least tasteful versions of themselves as they drank excessively and demonstrated disrespectful behavior toward the Jamaican people, and a general disregard for the beautiful environment. She returned from that trip motivated to show the Jamaican people that not all American students were the next generation of โUgly Americansโ and to show her students that places like Jamaica could be viewed in ways other than through a bottle of Red Stripe. She sensed an opportunity to show students a side of Jamaica that few see from their all-inclusive resorts and booze cruises; An impoverished, but prideful and hospitable people. The Alternative Spring Break has become a popular choice at campuses as students across the country are
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Orleans, Louisiana, and see the conditions in which people live. Some are a bit afraid, wondering what they have gotten themselves into. But by the end of the week emotions are flowing on the bus ride back to the airport as no one wants to leave. It is a week that changes lives; the students, the Jamaican people, and trip leaders. Why is this Experience is Relevant to Delta Upsilon? For Delta Upsilon, the idea of a global service trip is the mobilization of a message from International President Bernard Franklin, Kansas State โ75 with emphasis on preparing Delta Upsilon members for success in an ever-changing global marketplace and aligning with the Fraternityโs foundational value of advancing justice. The initiative received unanimous support from the Fraternityโs Board of Directors in the summer of 2009 and the pilot trip was planned for May, 2010.
There are a variety of reasons why Alternative Spring Break experiences are desirable to students. Alternative Spring Break programs are a growing form of service learning. In fact, many students may have already participated in some type of spring break community service program during high school. Because many students had a positive experience in high school, they are looking for a similar experience in college. The one-week Alternative Spring Break provides an affordable way to have a meaningful experience, participate in service projects, and see a new part of the world or country. Campus Compact, a coalition of 1,000 colleges and universities committed to the civic mission of higher education, says the number of schools offering spring break volunteer opportunities has increased from 66 percent to 77 percent since 2000, and that number is growing with each semester/quarter. Each trip seems to start the same. Students, many of whom have never left the country, some of which have never left the state, are in disbelief as they drive through the streets of a new world, whether in Montego Bay, Jamaica or New
Our Service
Copyright 2010 Delta Upsilon International Fraternity Inc.
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choosing to spend a week painting over partying. According to The Corporation for National and Community Service, the number of college students volunteering rose about 20 percent from 2002 to 2005, more than twice the growth of all adult volunteers. Approximately 3.3 million college students volunteered in 2005 โ nearly 600,000 more students than three years ago.
As we embarked on this journey, we asked ourselves how this type of program was relevant for Delta Upsilon. What is the value-added to our members? Dr. John Dugan, assistant professor, Loyola University of Chicago, said it best, โThe service orientation of fraternities and sororities should also be stressed and connected more directly to leadership. Educators should help chapters to understand the differences between philanthropy and community service, while pressing students to personalize their individual commitments to broader society.โ (Dugan, 2008) We needed to take our members out of their comfort zone and create true learning around leadership, philanthropy and community service and dig deeper into other curricula. The Global Service Initiative included eight students, Kirk, Duncan, Bergman and Schendel. The seven-day experience served three primary areas of Jamaica: Tafari Youth Club: In the hills of Hanover in the Cave Valley District this club helps to provide education and mentoring for kids and draws the community together to work toward a common goal of making things better for them and their children. We partnered with this club to learn, grow, and enhance education through building a bathroom and kitchen, and painting the walls. Ketto Primary School: At this early education center for students of the Ketto, Jamaica area we worked with students to replaced a dangerous barbwire fence in the playground area with a chain-link fence and replaced the rusted swing
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sets to enhance the quality of the educational environment for the Jamaican children. St. Maryโs All Age School: The for several years this parrish, has been listed as one of the poorest in Jamaica; it boasts what is thought by some to be one of the best secondarylevel schools in the Jamaican nation. We partnered with this 200-student school to help them comply with government regulations to avoid closure. We helped teach literacy skills, repainted the inside of the school and built a fence to keep individuals from stealing from the schools only water supply. Creating an Educational Experience While the service was important, equally vital were the intentional conversations around global issues and the importance of service. So often, fraternal members participate in service activities without a vehicle to maximize the learning opportunity. The educational experience was created with the experiential learning concept at the forefront. The essence of experiential education was captured by the philosopher John Dewey, who argued that โevents are present and operative anyway; what concerns us is their meaning.โ Experience happens; it is unavoidable. The problem for fraternal educators is how to make meaning out of member experiences. In its purest form, experiential education is inductive, beginning with โrawโ experience that is processed through an intentional learning format and transformed into working, useable knowledge. The curriculum focused on action-responses, hierarchical competition and physical service with the following themes:
evaluate issues from several different perspectives (4.38/5), will continue to expand their cultural/international learning because of the GSI (4.25/5), and reported t they will immediately invest what they have learned at the GSI back into their chapter (4.78/5). These results alone make our relevance key to offering our members the opportunity for direct service and global education to occur within the organization and within our chapters and their broader communities. Beyond Spring Break: The future of GSI Delta Upsilon is actively identifying ways to make our undergraduate experience more relevant by envisioning a social innovation framework for the 21st century that reflects a new social contract: brothers actively and effectively serving their communities and the world, solving problems, and connecting their service to a larger effort. What began as a simple idea among friends on the beaches of
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Copyright 2010 Delta Upsilon International Fraternity Inc.
Building Brotherhood and Community โข Pre-Conceived Ideas โข Perception and Perspective โข Community Advocacy โข Globalization, Health Care and the Economy โข Male Socialization and Masculinity โข Gratitude for the Challenges of Life This environment set the stage for us to build upon our already evolving curriculum and introduce service learning, extend cultural immersion, and connect to our memberโs academic curriculum, thereby developing cultural competencies and a deeper understanding of the challenges facing the nations of the world. Upon completion of the trip, the students completed the Global Perspectives Inventory, an assessment to measure a personโs global perspective, and reported being able to
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Negril, Jamaica, the GSI has transformed Delta Upsilon and its strategic direction. Global Service is now just one component of the organizationโs Global Initiative, which also includes Global Learning, Global Networking, and Global Challenge. The Global Initiative has created enthusiasm throughout the organization. The Presidentโs message in the Quarterly about the global movement has generated three times as many letters as past issues, with the great majority being positive. After showcasing the GSI at the summer Leadership Institute, chapters have begun raising money for building projects in Jamaica. For instance, the North Carolina State chapter committed $3,000 to build a cafeteria at the Ketto Primary School. An alumnus who travels abroad extensively recently endowed a scholarship for a member to study abroad each year.
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In late December, Kirk and Schendel met with community leaders in Negril to map out a five and ten-year strategy for rebuilding the communities and in May 2011, the fraternity is returning with 20 students, nearly tripling the number of the pilot year. A domestic alternative spring break trip is planned for next March, as well as a Global Challenge trip for members to climb Mt. Kilamanjaro next summer. Within five years, the fraternity will offer a domestic alternative break trip
each week a DU chapter is on spring break. The fraternityโs long-term vision is for every member to participate in a global experience as a result of their DU membership. While local road side clean-ups, working with atrisk youth, and fixing houses still have their place in the fraternity experience, these domestic experiences must be complemented with initiatives that help our members become more globally aware and prepared to meet the challenges of the future. The world around us is changing at a rapid pace, and for fraternities to remain relevant, we must fundamentally change the fraternity experience. We can no longer afford to waste time maintaining and defending outdated systems and practices. Our conversations and education around core values must now include social justice and global competence if we want to be relevant 21st century organizations. As Fraternity/Sorority leaders, letโs commit to providing experiences that will challenge our members to consider a new path to success. Dewey, J. (1997). Experience and education. New York: Touchstone. Dugan, J. (2008). Exploring relationships between fraternity and sorority membership and socially responsible leadership. Oracle, 3(2), 16-25.
DU Earns 2010 Excellence in Educational Programming Award Copyright 2010 Delta Upsilon International Fraternity Inc.
Delta Upsilon International Fraternity was awarded the 2010 Excellence in Educational Programming Award for their Global Service Initiative at the Association of Fraternity/Sorority Advisors Annual Meeting in Phoenix, Arizona. The Excellence in Educational Programming Award, first awarded in 1992, is presented to recognize new and innovative educational programming efforts by a fraternal organization for their efforts directed to undergraduate or alumni members. Established in 2010, Delta Upsilonโs Global Service Initiative offers members a unique opportunity to work with global and local communities, while uniting Delta Upsilon competencies and principles with substantive volunteer service. Students travel to, study in, and work with communities where social and economic conditions are substandard. During the global experience, students engage in service-learning to make a meaningful impact in our global society. To address the issues plaguing
Assistant Director of University Centers at Univeristy of Wisconsin-La Crosse Kaye Schendel, DU Associate Executive Director of Educational Services Andy Bergman, AFA President Kelly Jo Karnes and DU Executive Director Justin Kirk.
urban societies, members roll up their sleeves to create or rebuild areas of need. For more information please visit http://deltau.org/meetus/eventsandprograms/ globalserviceinitiative.
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Photo by Aixa Aleman-Diaz
Alumni News
Alberta alumni celebrated the chapterโs 75th anniversary in 2010.
The wedding of Pete Albanis, Chicago โ99 in Naples, Florida, served as a mini chapter reunion. One brother flew in from Brazil, while another escaped the UK before the Icelandic volcano shutdown.
Alberta
school at New York University, completed his residency at the Neurological Institute of New York and obtained a neuroanatomy doctorate from Columbia Universityโs College of Physicians and Surgeons, where he was the founding chief of its pediatric-neurosurgery division.
The Alberta Alumni board organized a golf tournament and events for their 75th anniversary weekend, presented an educational wine tasting event, and organized the events of the 30th annual Robert J. Edgar Alumni Rush Dinner. They awarded $5,600 at Rush Stag in addition to the Max Stewart Scholarship award and invested some sweat equity in improving the physical plant. Arizona State In July 2010 Chad Wolver, Arizona State โ10 departed for The Republic of South Africa with the Peace Corps. He will remain in South Africa until August 2012 as part of the Schools and Community Resource Project.
Copyright 2010 Delta Upsilon International Fraternity Inc.
Cal Poly Dr. David W. W. Jones, Cal Poly โ94 is an assistant professor of agricultural and extension education for North Carolina State Universityโs Leadership in Agriculture and Life Sciences program. In 2010 Jones received the Rising Star Award from the Association of Leadership Educators. Chicago Peter Carmel, Chicago โ56, professor and chair of the neurological-surgery department at the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, was named presidentelect of the American Medical Association. Previous honors have included being named as one of the best doctors in America by American Health magazine, receiving an outstanding medical-educator award from the Edward J. Ill Excellence in Medicine Foundation and chairing the National Foundation for Brain Research. Carmel attended medical
Jeff Wuchich, Chicago โ90 is president of the Alternating Hemiplegia of Childhood Foundation (AHCF). Wuchich, an accomplished sales executive, and his wife Renee reside in Rolesville, North Carolina. Their son was diagnosed with AHC at 18 months of age.
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Cornell Cornell University recognized Nelson Schaenen, Jr., Cornell โ50 with its 2010 Frank H.T. Rhodes Exemplary Alumni Service Award. The award, given at a Sept. 24 ceremony on campus, is the highest honor Cornell bestows upon volunteers. Established by the Cornell Alumni Association in 1994, this award honors alumni who have demonstrated Nelson Schaenen, Cornell โ50 extraordinary service to Cornell through long-term volunteer activities within the broad spectrum of Cornellโs various alumni organizations. Rich Scherer, Cornell โ07 graduated from the University of Buffalo School of Law. He was awarded an Honorable Mention in the 2009 International Association of Defense Counsel Student Legal Writing Contest. The article, โGrab a Drink and Pass the Blame: An Argument Against Social
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DePauw Robert D. McClure, DePauw โ63 was featured in Syracuse Universityโs โThe Daily Orangeโ as he left the university after 41 years of services as a professor and administrator at the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs, the public policy school of Syracuse University. In August 2010, Matt Dellinger, DePauw โ97 published โInterstate 69: The Unfinished History of the Last Great American Highway.โ Harvard In April 2010 Scott Smider, Harvard โ01 successfully completed the 26.2-mile Boston Marathon four times consecutively in two days, all to raise more than $10,000 for the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in memory of his sister-inlaw Elizabeth, who died from breast cancer Christmas Eve 2008 at age 41.
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Illinois Stephen Katsinas, Illinois โ78 was elected president of the Council for the Study of Community Colleges, the nationโs oldest and largest organization of scholars on community college. He has also been appointed to serve as consulting scholar for the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching. Iona Ronald Stabile, Iona โ10 created a campaign at Indiana University of Pennsylvania to combat bullying surrounding sexual identity. Stabile is an Assistant Residence Director at the institution and organized this program with his community assistant staff. Together they got over 150 photos taken of students as promises to speak โOnly Loveโ to people of all sexual identities. The campaign is moving across Pennsylvania and looking to come to colleges across the U.S. Iowa Former major league catcher Jim Sundberg, Iowa โ73, Senior Executive Vice President of the Texas Rangers, was named to the Texas Sports Hall of Fame in Waco. Kansas Josh Fisher, Kansas โ08, started DodgerDivorce.com to write about the legal battles of divorcing Dodger owners Frank and Jamie McCourt and what the outcome is likely to mean for the โBoys in Blue.โ Fisher started the site in
October 2009, and according to a Sept. 19, 2010 article in the New York Times, became โthe go-to guy for analysis of the McCourt divorce.โ Fisher was also interviewed on American Public Mediaโs Marketplace Morning Report on Wednesday, December 8, 2010. Manitoba Don Lowry, Manitoba โ73 is president and chief executive officer of EPCOR Utilities Inc. He has led the growth of EPCOR Utilities Inc. from its base in Edmonton, Alberta, into a North American power and water company. In July 2009, he helped lead EPCOR into the next Don Lowry, Manitoba โ73 phase of its evolution with the spin-off of its power generation business into one of Canadaโs largest investorowned generation companies, Capital Power Corporation. Don serves as Chairman of the Board of Capital Power. Prior to joining EPCOR, Don spent more than 20 years in the telecommunications industry. He was President and Chief Operating Officer of Telus Communications Inc. and Chairman of Alta Telecom. Don holds a B.Comm. (Honours) and an MBA from the University of Manitoba. He is also a graduate of the Harvard Advanced Management Program and the Banff School of Management. Lowry is also the chairman of Canadian Oil Sands Trust and serves on the boards of the Canadian Electricity Association, the Alberta Economic Development Authority, Conference Board of Canada and the Telus Edmonton Community Board.
Copyright 2010 Delta Upsilon International Fraternity Inc.
Host Liability,โ was published by the Defense Counsel Journal.
Miami Kenneth E. Kempf, Miami โ69 was selected as the 2009 National Disabled Veteran Outreach Program (DVOP) Specialist of the Year by the American Legion, receiving his award at their National Convention in Milwaukee, Wisc. on Sept. 1, 2010. Kempf has been a Veterans Employment Consultant in the Raleigh Local Office of the North Carolina Employment Security Commission for nearly four years. He is a Vietnam Veteran, having served with the U.S. Army 101st Airborne Division, 158th Aviation Battalion. Kempf also has been awarded the DVOP of the Year for the State of North Carolina by the Veterans of Foreign Wars,
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National Academy of Arbitrators. He is still fully active as an arbitrator, but divides his time between New York and a home in County Cork, Ireland. Minnesota Robert Martin, Minnesota โ95 and his wife welcome their son Steve, born on July 15, 2010. Missouri William H. Long, Missouri โ77 was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives for Missouriโs 7th congressional district in 2010. Kenneth E. Kempf, Miami โ69 was selected as the 2009 National Disabled Veteran Outreach Program Specialist of the Year by the American Legion and received his award at their National Convention
Disabled American Veterans (twice), and the American Legion (twice).
Copyright 2010 Delta Upsilon International Fraternity Inc.
Jeffrey L. Wax, Miami โ01, has practiced law at Greensfelder, Hemker & Gale, P.C., in St. Louis, Missouri, since 2008. His work includes commercial and real estate litigation with a focus on condemnation/eminent domain issues. Jeff attended law school at Washington University in St. Louis. He married Jessica Stein Wax in 2006, and their daughter, Eliana, was born in 2008.
North Carolina State Mark Brooks, North Carolina State โ03 married Elizabeth Cary Eaton on June 12, 2010, in Raleigh, NC. He also earned a Master of Business Administration degree in Technology Entrepreneurship and Commercialization from North Carolina State University in May 2010. Northern Illinois After 23 years of owning his own cleaning company (175 buildings and 35 employees), Scott Curry, Northern Illinois โ75 sold it to another entrepreneur. He and his wife Renie have three children, Ryan, Jason, and Kaelene.
Michigan
Northwestern
George Nicolau, Michigan โ48 received a Life Time Achievement Award from the Peggy Browning Fund. Nicolau, who served as a B-17 Navigator in the 8th Air Force during WWII and was the president of the Michigan Chapter shortly after the war, is a nationally known arbitrator George Nicolau, Michigan โ48 and mediator. He has been the contract arbitrator for Major League Baseball, the National Basketball Association, the National Hockey League and the Major League Indoor Soccer and their respective player associations, as well as the arbitrator in disputes between most major airlines, their pilots and flight attendants. In the 1950s through 1970s, he was a union attorney, a member of the Peace Corps Staff, the head of New York Cityโs Anti-Poverty program, Executive Director for the Fund for the City of New York and the Institute for Mediation and Conflict Resolution. In 1987 he was president of the
J. David Nelson, Northwestern โ63 was profiled in the book, โCitizen You: Doing Your Part to Change the World,โ and was also featured on a Harvard Business School blog, โDoes Leadership Really Matter in Non-Profits.โ He was named a Purpose Prize Fellow, and in 2008 received the Alumni Service Award from the dean of the Kellogg School of Management.
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Northwestern State Tran Woods, Northwestern State โ03 produced a benefit concert in Atlanta for the Atlanta affiliate of Susan G. Komen for a Cure. Ohio State Steve Stivers, Ohio State โ88 is the U.S. Representative for Ohioโs 15th congressional district. Stivers previously served in the Ohio Senate, representing the 16th district. He is a Lieutenant Colonel in the Ohio National Guard and served active duty in Iraq as Battalion Commander until December 2005. โโHate Can Waitโ is the first in a series of childrenโs books and other materials based on emotions by John Ordosch,
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Ohio State โ83. The book first explains this feeling and then provides scenarios and suggested methods for children to cope, address and handle this emotion in an original, interesting and colorful story book. Ordosch says, โThis is a book and resource with purpose since it teaches an oral lesson.โ
encounter with a group of teenagers living in the United States who give voice to how they, and perhaps others, were impacted by the earthquake in Haiti. San Diego State Steve Lewis, San Diego State โ00 and his wife Carolyn announce the birth of their son, Sean Edwin, on June 18, 2010. John Ordosch, Ohio State โ83
โHate Can Waitโ received Honorable Mention at the Los Angeles Book Festival in the Childrenโs Books category. Penn State The 100th anniversary celebration for the Penn State chapter will be September 16 - 18, 2011. There will also be a gathering for after the homecoming football game on October 9. Purdue
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Drew Bowyer, Purdue โ91 earned his MD from St. Georgeโs University in 1997, was president of Iota Epsilon Alpha, an international medical honor society, and earned his PhD in psychology biomedical engineering at Maritime University. He is board certified as a Disability Analyst, and serve on the boards of two European Cultural charities: the American Czech Slovak Cultural Club in Miami, and the Scottish American Society of Palm Beach County. He volunteers as a piano player at Manor Oaks Nursing Home in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida and is a member of a Presbyterian Church in Pompano Beach. Rutgers Andrew Malekoff, Rutgers โ73 is executive director of North Shore Child and Family Guidance Center, a childrenโs mental health center located in Long Island, New York. Visit deltau.org to read Brother Malekoff โs account of his
Bruce Green, San Diego State โ86 won a Daytime Creative Arts Emmy Award for Outstanding Achievement in Technical Direction / Electronic Camera / Video Control. This was Greenโs second nomination and second Emmy Award. In 2004 he was honored with a Creative Arts National Primetime Emmy. Stanford During the 16th annual enshrinement festival in South Bend, Ind., wide receiver Ken Margerum, Stanford โ81 was enshrined in the National Football Foundationโs Hall of Fame. Syracuse Singer-songwriter and guitarist Pete Yorn, Syracuse โ96 released a self-titled album in September 2010. Yorn first gained international recognition after his debut record, โMusicforthemorningafter,โ was released to critical acclaim in 2001. Texas H. Glenn Adams, Texas โ88 was one of only 17 applicants to pass the Texas Board of Legal Specialization Exam in 2009. He was sworn in as a board certified attorney by the Chief Justice of the Texas Supreme Court in February 2010 and practices entirely in the area of criminal law. Washington State More than 60 golfers joined the annual Washington State DU Worm Burner Golf Tournament raising $6,000 for the Jason Taitch Memorial Scholarship Fund.
Washington State DU Worm Burner Golf Tournament
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Chapter News Florida Chapter In November 2010 the Florida Chapter was recognized by the University of Florida as Chapter of the Year. The Florida Chapter of Delta Upsilon recently re-acquired its original Roll Book from 1957. The Roll Book had been missing for more than six years, but was returned by someone who found it in a pawn shop in Southern Florida.
The Florida Chapter in 2010.
Copyright 2009 Delta Upsilon International Fraternity Inc.
Alberta Chapter The Alberta Chapter participated in a fund raiser that netted more than $100,000 for their local Garneau Community League. California Chapter K to College, a non-profit founded by Benito Delgado-Olson, California โ07 has served nearly 204,000 underprivileged children and earned the California Chapter a proclamation from the City of Berkeley for their efforts in the School Supply Initiative Assembly. More than 10,000 school supply kits were assembled for distribution in the Bay Area. The assembly was spearheaded Coordinator Peter Hsiue, California โ10; Vice President of Scholarship, Matthew Bauer, California โ11; Vice President of School Supply Initiative, Mason Smith, California โ10; Treasurer, Thibaut Mueller, California โ11 and Vice President of Banquets and Planning, Michael Midling, California โ12. K to College earned awards for Outstanding Community Service Event and Outstanding Student Organization. Current undergraduate president Austin Peck, California โ12 and IFC Representative/Philanthropy Chair Shahryar Abbasi, California โ12 have summer internships with K to College. Cornell Chapter In the April 2011 election, Alex Bores, Cornell โ13 defeated five candidates to become the undergraduate student trustee for Cornell University with 55 percent of over 4,000 student ballots entered. He will serve on the Board of Trustees for a two-year term. In two short years, Alex has already established a substantial legacy at Cornell. Read more at www.deltau.org.
Georgia Tech Chapter In November 2010, the Georgia Tech Chapter hosted the Boys & Girls Clubs of Metro Atlanta as the 9 to 11 age group played their flag football championship. More than 360 boys and girls from around the Atlanta area came to the Campus Recreation Center. The Falcons cheerleader and representatives from the NFL and Blank Family Foundation also attended.
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Georgia Tech Chapter hosting the Boys & Girls Clubs fo Metro Atlanta for their flag flootball championship.
Kansas Chapter The Kansas Chapter joined Pi Beta Phi Sorority to host a dinner in support of ovarian cancer awareness in April. The chapter was one of only two chapters (out of 26) to win all seven of seven Greek Awards from the University including the areas of leadership, growth, chapter standards and membership, scholarship, financial management and operations, community service and philanthropy and brotherhood. Two DU freshmen received Outstanding New Member awards for their work in the chapter and Greek community. Kansas State Chapter โโFifty-five Years of Excellenceโ will be the theme of the Foundersโ Day. On November 12 speakers will include International President Bernard Franklin, Kansas State โ75 and Olympian Christian Smith, Kansas State โ06, who ran the 800 meters at the Beijing Olympics. A Distinguished Service Award will be given to Paul Edgerley, Kansas State
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Kent State Chapter Chad Budy, Kent State โ12 the chapterโs vice president of membership education, was elected as Interfraternity Council president in November and Chapter President Justin Pierce, Kent State โ11 was elected as student body president in March. This is the first time a DU has been IFC president since current alumni president Stu Thom, Kent State โ97 was elected. Justin Pierce participated in President Barack Obamaโs โWinning the Future Forum on Small Businessโ in February in Cleveland. Pierce, who served as executive director of Kent Stateโs Undergraduate Student Government, was president of the Kent State Chapter, and served as an undergraduate advisory board member of the Delta Upsilon board of directors from 2009-2010, was one of a few students on a panel discussing youth issues. Lafayette Chapter The Delta Upsilon Distinguished Mentoring and Teaching Award recognizes faculty members for distinctive and extraordinary teaching through mentoring, which may include advising, undergraduate research, independent study, or any of the many one-on-one mentoring activities that take place in a student-centered learning environment. The recipient of the 2010 Delta Upsilon Distinguished Mentoring and Teaching Award at Lafayette is Arthur J. Kney, associate professor of civil and environmental engineering. The announcement was made at Lafayetteโs annual trusteefaculty dinner May 21, on the eve of the Collegeโs 175th Commencement exercises.
freshman. As a result they have the third largest associate member class in the history of the chapter and the chapter has reached the average chapter size for campus. The chapter initiated 16 men into the chapter as part their Founderโs Day festivities on November 4 with plans to initiate seven more men during the semester. The initiation ceremony was attended by more than 85 members and guests, including parents and alumni and was preceded by a pasta and salad dinner hosted by the chapter. Delivering the DU Initiation Charge was Retired Brigadier General Albert F. Riggle, U.S. Air Force. A member of the class of 1976, Brother Riggle spoke to the brothers about his undergraduate days in the chapter, responsibilities of membership, and importance of leadership. โWe were pleased to have someone of Brother Riggleโs stature address our chapter and share how Delta Upsilon influenced his career,โ said Chapter President Brian Kehew, Louisville โ11. โThe more our members meet our alumni brothers, the more we feel like we are part of something meaningful and lasting. Missouri Chapter The average ACT score of the summer recruitment class was 25 and the average GPA was 3.5. More than 85 percent of the members were represented at the annual parent orientation meeting in August. At that time, all new associate members received their badges. A luncheon held afterward at the chapter house gave parents a chance to learn about DU and meet the new members, other parents, alumni and chapter officers. Dadโs weekend was held in October in conjunction with the Colorado game and included a catered lunch. Oklahoma Chapter
Copyright 2009 Delta Upsilon International Fraternity Inc.
โ78, managing director of Bain Capital in Boston and a major benefactor of the Kansas State Chapter and Kansas State University. Contact Lee Musil, Kansas State โ71 at elmusil@ gbta.net for more information.
Lehigh Chapter Offensive tackle Will Rackley, Lehigh โ10 played in the East-West all-star game for college seniors on January 22 in Orlando, Fla. Louisville Chapter The Louisville Chapter added recruitment events such as a night at the local AAA baseball stadium, one-on-one lunches and big cookouts on the riverfront in Louisville. They called 90 percent of incoming freshmen men to introduce them to the chapter and campus, sent mass emails about events, talked to parents and freshmen at orientation sessions, and went out on move-in days to make introductions and help
Oklahoma Chapter members delivered toys to children in Presidio, Texas and Ojinaga, Mexico in January..
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Copyright 2009 Delta Upsilon International Fraternity Inc.
Each year the Oklahoma Chapter has a toy drive in December for a local nonprofit organization. This year the chapter took an additional step to learn about the families they would be helping. Angel Ochoa, Oklahoma โ13 talked to the chapter cook, Delfa Balderas, who is originally from Ojinaga, Mexico and learned that every year she uses what little money she has left after Christmas to buy toys for the underprivileged children. Ochoa proposed that chapter members donate four dollars each to help her buy toys. In January three DU undergraduates joined Balderas, her son and husband, and the Oklahoma student body president for the 12-hour drive to deliver the toys. Due to liability issues, the students did not cross into Mexico, but delivered some of the toys to underprivileged children in border town of Presidio, Texas. The rest of the toys were distributed in Mexico by Balderas and her family. Chapter members expressed appreciation for their Alumni Board in supporting this important service project. โThis was one of the most amazing experiences. Being able to see the smiling faces of children receiving toys is priceless. I really hope to continue this service project in the upcoming years. It was like creating a small mission trip in which I hope becomes a tradition,โ said Ochoa. Purdue Chapter The Purdue Chapter of Delta Upsilon was honored with the presence of the new Dean of Students, Donita Brown and Assistant Dean of Students and Director of the IFC, Kyle Pendleton. They joined the chapter for their scholarship dinner, where scholastic excellence is recognized and scholarships are awarded. Doctor Brown gave an enlightening speech regarding excellence and how that relates to DUโs mission of Building Better Men.
South Carolina members welcomed new initiates from the class of 2014 including Sean Edgeworth, Paul Clemente, Taylor Denno, and Theordore (TJ) Wrzesinski.
Tom Elverson, Swarthmore โ75 with DU seniors in May 2010. Joel Tolliver, Luke Rampersand, Brandon Work, Tom Elverson (Adviser and DU Alum), Wiley Archibald, Noah Lang, David Getachew-Smith. The DU sashes were all hand-made, by Tolliverโs grandmother.
San Jose Chapter Wilson Kong, San Jose โ11 was one of three candidates selected to be on the Homecoming Court of 2010. South Carolina Chapter The South Carolina Chapterโs fall initiation ceremony was held at the historic Rutledge Chapel on the Universityโs Horse Shoe area of Campus. An alumni lunch followed.
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Virginia Chapter Members of the Virginia Chapter settled into their new home at 171 Madison Lane in Charlottesville, having officially transferring ownership of the historic 180 Rugby Road house to Beta Theta Pi. Michael Minneman, Virginia โ11 organized a wonderful Parents Weekend in conjunction with the Virginia Homecoming. As they prepared to move to their new home they donated various items to Habitat for Humanity and the Salvation Army. Paul Hodskins, Virginia โ12 and Damian Price, Virginia โ11 also oversaw two outstanding social functions, one featuring the band Farm Vegas and another featuring Virginiaโs premier dubstep DJ, Matthew Henry. Charles Joynson, Virginia โ12 has worked to established a relationship between the chapter and The Haven, a dynamic, multi-purpose community space that features resources for the hungry, disadvantaged and homeless. Every week brothers volunteer at The Haven, helping with daily operations at the front desk as well as interacting with visitors. Additionally, the chapter planned a brand new spring philanthropy event inspired by memberโs Leadership Institute experience in New Orleans.
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Preston Smith, Washington State โ11 spent the last year participating in the CET Intensive Chinese Language Program in Beijing, China and learning how global the business world has become.
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Washington State Preston Smith, Washington State โ11 spent the last year participating in the CET Intensive Chinese Language Program in Beijing, China. The program has a full-time language pledge where the students promise to only speak Chinese while in the program. The program is full of inspiring students both in the United States as well as other Countries around the world eager to take on the challenge of learning Mandarin Chinese. โI saw how global the business world is becoming today and how China has become a dominate player in this global economy,โ Smith said. โI felt having the ability to speak Chinese would not only give me a leg up against other accounting majors after graduation, Chinese would also greatly benefit me on my path to my long term career goal to some day be a CEO of a multinational company. This opportunity to travel to China and immerse myself in the culture has not only tremendously improved my Chinese language ability, but also has given me the opportunity to see another culture so different from the United States and their transformation to the second biggest economic power.โ Western Ontario Chapter The University of Western Ontario chapter kicked off
We need your news for the Quarterly www.deltau.org Email: lloyd@deltau.org
their homecoming with a newly renovated house and rebranded chapter with support from over 50 alumni. The chapter house was reopened after heavy renovations from the hit TV show โCanadaโs Worst Handymanโ who filmed their latest season at the house. Wisconsin Chapter
Alexi Feld, Wisconsin โ11 with DU Executive Director, Justin Kirk and Jon Callaway, Wisconsin โ88
Alex Feld, Wisconsin โ11 headed to the Gulf Coast after his graduation accompanied by two life-long friends to discover and document events in the wake of the Horizon oil spill. Red Bridge Productions, Brother Feldโs organization, has been documenting the spillโs impact on both wildlife and residents of the Gulf Coast. Through interviews with business owners and residents, and flights over the spill site and coastal wetlands with marine biologists, Feld hopes to produce an independent documentary that will call viewers to action. Blog entries, photos and videos can be found at www.redbridgeproductions.org.
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Delta Upsilon Foundation 2009-2010 Annual Report A MESSAGE FROM THE CHAIRMAN Stephen K. Rowley, Ohio โ65
The only thing we can report this yearโฆis good news. Our donor segments increased. Our โdollars raisedโ increased. Nearly every category that we track increased. Indeed, this was a great fundraising year for the DUEF. And we have all of our loyal donors to thank. We are extremely grateful to all DU brothers and friends who supported our fundraising efforts and our 175th Anniversary appeal in the 2009-10 fiscal year. We are proud to be able to recognize each and every donor on the succeeding pages and provide some highlights of this past fundraising year. For the donors listed on the succeeding pages, we cannot thank you enough. Most of you are with us year after year, which I cannot tell you how appreciative we are for that. Some of you joined us for the first time or rejoined our effort. Please accept our sincerest thanks to you for your gifts. Please keep the DUEF in your annual giving plans! Consistency is key, and we make an effort to denote consecutive years of giving for each of our donors listed here.
DUEF Board of Trustees Chairman: Stephen K. Rowley, Ohio โ65 Vice Chairman: Craig J. Franz, FSC, Bucknell โ75 Treasurer: P. David Franzetta, Michigan State โ70 Secretary: Lewis D. Gregory, Kansas โ75 Vice-President - Investments: William C. Rappolt, Lafayette โ67 Vice-President - Development: Craig R. Milkint, Illinois โ83 Trustees: Roy F. Allan, Lehigh โ68 Bruce S. Bailey, Denison โ58 Anthony B. Cashen, Cornell โ57 John A. Delaney, Florida โ77 Thomas F. Durein, Oregon State โ92 John R. Eplee, Kansas State โ75 Gary S. Killips, Alberta โ71 Martin Krasnitz, Chicago โ57 Maurice S. Mandel, Chicago โ55 James D. McQuaid, Chicago โ60 Robert L. Tyburski, Colgate โ74 John T. Weisel, Oregon โ48
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Our โBetter Leaders. Better Legacies.โ planned giving program and our Founders Memorial Courtyard campaigns continue in the coming year. Consider joining these efforts, to include the DUEF in your estate plans and perhaps leave your physical legacy with a brick in the courtyard. These gifts also increase our ability to serve DU in many ways as well, and we are pleased to recognize you for it. We continue to grow and find new ways to support our Fraternity with your ongoing gifts. Please be sure to visit www.DUEF.org to see the new look of our website and updates on the good things your dollars are doing. Our mission for the 2010-11 appeal is underway and the call is out once again to all brothers. If you are listed on these pages as a donor this past year, my request to you is simple. Please join us again this year, and contact one brother you keep in touch with who is not listed here and ask him to join us in our efforts. We can do so much more with additional support. We are not like other national charities that have a wide-ranging or mass appeal. They can ask anyone to support them. On the whole, the only ones we can ask to support usโฆare our brothers. Join us, and encourage others to do the same. Iโve said before, that โwe are worthy of your support,โ but I truly believe that now more than ever. Fraternally,
Stephen K. Rowley, Ohio โ65 Chairman, DU Educational Foundation
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D๏ฅ๏ฌ๏ด๏ก U๏ฐ๏ณ๏ฉ๏ฌ๏ฏ๏ฎ F๏ฏ๏ต๏ฎ๏ค๏ก๏ด๏ฉ๏ฏ๏ฎ 2009-2010 A๏ฎ๏ฎ๏ต๏ก๏ฌ R๏ฅ๏ฐ๏ฏ๏ฒ๏ด โWe all have an obligation to leave a path for those who follow. A legacy gift is just one of many ways we can help Delta Upsilon to continue to make that path available.โ โDave Maguire, Southern Illinois โ73
Legacy Circle
The Legacy Circle was established in 2000 to honor living brothers who have listed the Delta Upsilon Educational Foundation as a beneficiary in their will, insurance policy, 401K, or other deferred giving instrument. The following is a list of brothers that notified the DUEF of their intentions, and as such, are members of the Legacy Circle.
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Samuel Alboy, Northern Arizona โ01 Anonymous H. James Avery, Illinois โ44 Bruce S. Bailey, Denison โ58 James G. Bell, Calgary โ94 George A. Blair, Miami โ37 Jerry L. Bobo, Houston โ77 Anthony B. Cashen, Cornell โ57 Aaron D. Clevenger, Central Florida โ97 Robert E. Collins, Eastern Kentucky โ74 Harry A. Crawford, Ohio State โ47 Robert A. Dahlsgaard, Bradley โ63 Stephan C. Davis, Northern Colorado โ94 John A. Delaney, Florida โ77 Howard W. Dennis, Nebraska โ52 Henry J. Down Jr., San Jose โ53 Charles E. Downton III, North Carolina โ66 Darrell E. Dukes, San Jose โ53 Thomas F. Durein, Oregon State โ92 Clint M. Dworshak, North Dakota State โ00 John R. Dytman, Syracuse โ71 Steven R. Fisher, Washington โ87 Frederick R. Ford, Purdue โ58 P. David Franzetta, Michigan State โ70 Jeffrey L. Fuhrman, Northern Iowa โ94 John E. Giacomazzi, San Jose โ52 Ole J. Gilbo, Kent State โ65 William R. Gordon, Kansas State โ60 Lewis D. Gregory, Kansas โ75 Terrence F. Grimes, Eastern Kentucky โ71 Benjamin L. Harper, Indiana โ54 Thomas E. Harrison, Johns Hopkins โ53 David A. Heagerty, San Jose โ50 Richard A. Hegeman, Purdue โ49 John C. Herron, South Carolina โ88 Melvin H. Iverson, Washington โ48 Aldie E. Johnson, Jr., Iowa State โ47 Everett C. Johnson, Arizona โ62 Michael O. Johnson, Arkansas โ90 O. Kepler Johnson, Kansas โ52 Orville E. Johnson, Washington State โ39 Thomas M. Koehler, Carnegie โ87 Martin Kraznitz, Chicago โ57 Allan M. Lansing, Western Ontario โ53 Kelly S. Leach, Nebraska โ85 William T. Liebermann, Miami โ51 Jordan B. Lotsoff, Northern Illinois โ88 Carroll L. Lurding, Ohio State โ59
Dave Maguire, Southern Illinois โ73 Maurice S. Mandel, Chicago โ55 Thomas C. McNeal, Miami โ37 James D. McQuaid, Chicago โ60 Craig R. Milkint, Illinois โ83 Charles L. Miller, San Jose โ59 Robert W. Muntzinger, Kent State โ51 Rodney L. Nelson, Minnesota โ63 Warren P. Nesbitt, Wisconsin โ76 William H. Noble, Missouri โ50 Alvan E. โEdโ Porter, Oklahoma โ65 Philip G. Ranford, Culver-Stockton โ00 Daryl W. Reisfeld, Rochester โ03 John W. Rogers, Miami โ57 Paul E. Rosenthal, Florida โ73 Stephen K. Rowley, Ohio โ65 Jeffrey W. Sears, Northern Arizona โ98 Trent A. Shepard, Illinois โ73 William A. Sigman, Iowa State โ50 Craig S. Sowell, Houston โ92 Tyler K. Stevens, North Carolina State โ11 Haruo Taga, Bradley โ54 Richard X. Taylor, North Carolina State โ82 James R. Tormey, San Jose โ57 John H. Vinyard, Jr., Missouri โ49 Ben T. Walkingstick, Oklahoma โ52 Allan A. Warrack, Alberta โ61 James T. Watkins, Iowa State โ53 John T. Weisel, Oregon โ48 Scott W. Wilson, Colorado โ73 Venlo J. Wolfsohn, Pennsylvania โ48 A charitable bequest to the DU Educational Foundation may be expressed in terms of a specific dollar amount, a percentage of an estate, or as a residual or contingency beneficiary. Wills are important to ensure that wishes regarding assets will be observed and that the estate minimizes taxes or other expenses. The following language is suggested for inclusion in the will of any Delta Upsilon alumnus: โI hereby give, devise and bequeath to the Delta Upsilon Foundation with headquarters at 8705 Founders Road, Indianapolis, Indiana, 46268 the sum of $______; or the following described property: _________________________, or percent of the rest, residue or remainder of my estate, to be used for the general purposes of the Foundation as the Board of Trustees may direct.โ
WWW.DUEF.ORG
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Delta Upsilon Foundation 2009-2010 Annual Report
THE LIFETIME GIVING WALL
The DU Educational Foundation commissioned a recognition piece in October 2004 to recognize lifetime giving. The Lifetime Donor Wall honors all donors who have set an example by their loyal and generous support. All donors who have gifted a minimum total of $5,000 in a lifetime to the DU Educational Foundation are enshrined on the donor wall. Whenever a donor reaches the $5,000 plateau, his name is automatically added to the wall! In addition, there are five levels of recognition for lifetime giving. When a donor reaches the next level his name is moved up a level. At the unveiling, the board included 203 names of loyal donors. Since installation, more than 120 donors have reached a gift level that qualified them to have their name added to the wall. The current list of 326 names* are separated into the following five levels of recognition: $5,000 Friendship Society $25,000 Culture Society $10,000 Character Society $50,000 Justice Society $100,000+ Dikaia Upotheke Society This permanent fixture honors those whose generosity demonstrates a commitment to the tradition of yesterday and the vision of tomorrow. Make sure your name will be included! Leave your legacy and preserve your name for posterity! Visit www.DUEF.org for more information. Dikaia Upotheke Society $100,000 or more H. James Avery, Illinois 1944 Clarkson A. Disbrow, New York 1899 Paul B. Edgerley, Kansas State 1978 W. H. Harwell, Jr., Missouri 1951 John D. Luckhardt, San Jose 1956 Arthur K. Lund, San Jose 1955 Raymond E. Mason, Jr., Ohio State 1941 Charles D. Miller, Johns Hopkins 1949 H. Clayton Peterson, Kansas State 1967 John W. Rogers, Miami 1957 Justice Society - $50,000 or more Bruce S. Bailey, Denison 1958 Curtiss L. Beebe, Washington 1935 David L. Cole, Wilmington 1972 C. Norman Frees, DePauw 1936 Nicholas T. Giorgianni, Kent State 1956 Richard A. Hegeman, Purdue 1949 Edgar F. Heizer, Jr., Northwestern 1951 Martin Krasnitz, Chicago 1957 Allan M. Lansing, Western Ontario 1953 Maurice S. Mandel, Chicago 1955 James D. McQuaid, Chicago 1960 Henry M. Rowan, Williams 1945 Nelson Schaenen, Jr., Cornell 1950 Donald C. Slawson, Kansas 1956 John T. Weisel, M.D., Oregon 1948 Culture Society - $25,000 or more Gary B. Adams, Oregon 1966 Roy F. Allan, Lehigh 1968 George A. Blair, Miami 1937 Richard B. Campbell, Nebraska 1968 Anthony B. Cashen, Cornell 1957 H. Scott Davis, Jr., Louisville 1965 John A. Delaney, Florida 1977 Richard L. Delano, Indiana 1985 Henry J. Down, Jr., San Jose 1953 Thomas F. Durein, Oregon State 1992
Jeffrey L. Fuhrman, Northern Iowa 1994 William R. Gordon, Kansas State 1960 Benjamin Lee Harper, Indiana 1954 Donald R. Heacock, North Carolina 1964 John C. Herron, South Carolina 1988 Charles F. Jennings, Marietta 1931 Carl R. Jochens, Jr., Denison 1954 Howard Kahlenbeck, Jr., Indiana 1952 William L. Messick, Lafayette 1968 Alvan E. Porter, Oklahoma 1965 William C. Rappolt, Lafayette 1967 Paul E. Rosenthal, Florida 1973 Stephen K. Rowley, Ohio 1965 Steven K. Snyder, Oklahoma 1979 Mrs. Ashton M. Tenney, Jr. Richard B. Thompson, Michigan State 1967 Ben T. Walkingstick, Oklahoma 1952 Ralph O. Willard, Kansas State 1958 Character Society - $10,000 or more
Horace L. Acaster, Pennsylvania 1944 Dale H. Anderson, Iowa 1949 Foundation Donor Anonymous Frederick C. Atkins, Jr., North Carolina 1967 J. Carter Bacot, Hamilton 1955 F. Lee Baird, Kansas 1958 Scott R. Bayman, Florida 1968 John E. Berry, Bradley 1987 William J. Bittner, Bradley 1974 Jerry L. Bobo, Houston 1977 William B. Boone, California 1935 Leo Robert Brammer, Jr., Oklahoma 1947 W. Perry Brown, Miami 1952 Keith B. Bruening, Iowa State 1980 Joseph H. Buchanan, Iowa State 1933 Wilford A. Butler, Western Michigan 1961 David H. Carnahan, Denison 1960 Douglas A. Cassens, Kent State 1968 David E. Chambers, Arizona 1960 Mart H. Cooley, Kansas State 1958
Jeffrey W. Courter, Iowa State 1984 Harry A. Crawford, Ohio State 1947 Frank S. Dodd, Miami 1949 Charles E. Downton III, North Carolina 1966 Darrell E. Dukes, San Jose 1953 Clint M. Dworshak, North Dakota State 2000 Craig R. Enochs, Houston 1994 John R. Eplee, Kansas State 1975 Richard F. Fagan, Washington 1952 Matthew G. Fiascone, Bradley 1985 Fred Fisher, Miami 1950 P. David Franzetta, Michigan State 1970 John P. Grady, DePauw 1938 Donald S. Grant, Kent State 1970 R. Nathan Greene, Kansas State 1958 Lewis D. Gregory, Kansas 1975 Fred A. Guggenmos, Nebraska 1961 Thomas Roy Harney, San Jose 1952 David A. Heagerty, San Jose 1950 Timothy R. Herbert, Iowa State 1982 Louis L. Holtz, Kent State 1958 H. Karl Huntoon, Illinois 1972 John C. Jadel, Bowling Green 1952 Aldie E. Johnson, Jr., Iowa State 1947 William G. Kagler, Syracuse 1954 Will S. Keim, Pacific 1975 Ryan M. Kelly, Bradley 1994 Gary S. Killips, Alberta 1971 Stephan G. Kouzomis, Illinois 1968 Byron O. Lee, Jr., Purdue 1951 Robert T. Lewis, Pennsylvania State 1940 Robert M. Loch, Nebraska 1954 Jordan B. Lotsoff, Northern Illinois 1988 Carroll L. Lurding, Ohio State 1959 Dave Maguire, Southern Illinois 1973 Richard C. Marx, Pennsylvania 1954 John L. McGehee, Wisconsin 1938 David Derek McKeag IV, Minnesota 2004 E. Bruce McKinney, Missouri 1974 Robert Charles McKinstry, Iowa State 1950
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*Names as of June 30, 2010
www.dUEF.org
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Delta Upsilon Foundation 2009-2010 Annual Report
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J. Paul McNamara, Miami 1929 Miami Alumni Chapter Mildred V. Horn Foundation John B. Morey, Jr., San Jose 1958 John P. Morgridge, Wisconsin 1955 Donald J. Moulin, California 1953 Glenn A. Mull, Kansas State 1973 Robert W. Muntzinger, Kent State 1951 E. Lee Musil, Kansas State 1971 Nebraska Alumni Association John C. Nemeth, Kent State 1967 Warren P. Nesbitt, Wisconsin 1976 Reginald B. Newman II, Northwestern 1959 Northern Iowa Psi Omega Bldg Corp. Brett A. Olson, Bradley 1988 Edward F. Paliatka, Bradley 1956 W. Allen Perry, Iowa State 1927 H. Paul Picard, Houston 1982 William T. Porter, Oklahoma 1941 Charles D. Prutzman, Pennsylvania State 1918 Thomas S. Rakow, Northwestern 1965 Leonard Rhodes, San Jose 1953 Rutgers Alumni Chapter Christopher L. Saricks, Kansas 1970 Beurt R. SerVaas, Indiana 1941 Jeffrey Siegel, Maryland 1978 William A. Sigman, Iowa State 1950 Todd P. Smith, Bradley 1989 Patrick Spooner, San Jose 1955 Thomas T. Stallkamp, Miami 1968 Max M. Stearns, Kansas State 1966 Norman J. Steffey, Kansas State 1957 Richard X. Taylor, North Carolina State 1982 Ashton M. Tenney, Jr., Chicago 1943 Charles T. & Marion M. Thompson Foundation James R. Tormey, Jr., San Jose 1957 Thomas E. Tuckwood, Kansas State 1979 Robert L. Tyburski, Colgate 1974 Peter V. Ueberroth, San Jose 1959 Allan A. Warrack, Alberta 1961 W. Donald Watkins, North Carolina 1927 Roger W. Wothe, Technology 1958 David H. Wynja, Iowa 1967 Samuel M. Yates, San Jose 1955 Winston Scott Trust Friendship Society - $5,000 or more Ronald C. Abbott, Kansas State 1961 E. Lysle Adams, Miami 1929 Jaime M. Aguero, Houston 1998 Charles L. Allen, Michigan State 1955 Bruce C. Anderson, Purdue 1965 K. Gordon Arnold, San Jose 1955 Harold D. Barker, Miami 1950 Michael J. Baughman, Kansas State 1978 Thomas P. Bays, Oregon State 1942 David M. Blatner, Southwest Missouri 1986 Paul J. Bodine, Jr., Northwestern 1950 Ernest J. Bontadelli, San Jose 1950 Herbert H. Boswau, Denison 1955 William W. Boyd, Northwestern 1948 Charles W. Brace, Bradley 1989 Harry N. Briggs, Missouri 1951 Robert W. Broad, Syracuse 1960 Herbert Brownell, Nebraska 1924 Jeffrey A. Bryant, Oregon State 1997 Thomas E. Burgess, Miami 1961 Henry E. Burr, Miami 1962 Mitch Castor, Kansas State 1985 Huntly G. Chapman, British Columbia 1968 Donald A. Chew, Kansas State 1981 Robert J. Clanin, Bradley 1966
Edwin D. Crane, Arkansas 1976 Robert H. Croak, Oklahoma 1963 Robert A. Dahlsgaard, Jr., Bradley 1963 Thomas W. Darling, Syracuse 1981 Joseph M. Darragh, North Carolina State 1985 Joseph A. DeBlasio, North Carolina 1962 Christopher B. D'hondt, Illinois 1988 Timothy C. Dowd, Oklahoma 1975 Walter A. Dwelle, California 1967 John E. Esau, Kansas 1978 John H. Eyler, Washington 1969 Robert D. Fisher, Alberta 1975 Craig R. Foss, Iowa State 1971 J. William Frank III, Lehigh 1968 E. Bernard Franklin, Kansas State 1975 Craig J. Franz, Bucknell 1975 Ross K. Fuller, San Jose 1949 Joseph Gibson, Kent State 1968 Robert C. Gimlin, Purdue 1942 William N. Godfrey, Miami 1958 William R. Grant, Union 1949 Hugh W. Gray, Nebraska 1934 R. McDonald Gray, North Carolina 1959 Scott D. Hahner, Rutgers 1978 Brian A. Halas, Miami 1993 Jay R. Hamann, Minnesota 1959 William E. Heine, Sr., Iowa State 1960 Bill A. Helvey, Kansas State 1958 John F. Herma, Rutgers 1970 David G. Herzer, Wisconsin 1954 Don A. Hill, Kansas State 1969 Patrick S. Hobin, California 1959 Richard M. Holland, Syracuse 1983 Yancy D. Hudson, Kansas State 1968 Martha S. Jack Thomas R. Jacobs, Arkansas 1977 Richard G. Jacobus, Wisconsin 1951 Alan C. Jeveret, Bowling Green 1959 O. Kepler Johnson, Jr., Kansas 1952 Scott A. W. Johnson, Washington 1980 Clifton C. Jones, Kansas State 1977 Mark S. Jones, Arlington 1975 Rees M. Jones, Manitoba 1967 Charles H. Kamm, San Jose 1957 Alumni of Kansas State Joshua A. Katz, Central Florida 1997 Donald A. Kelley, Miami 1969 Steven Khoshabe, Bradley 1993 Bryan L. Kinnamon, Iowa State 1969 Austin H. Kiplinger, Cornell 1939
Rodney P. Kirsch, North Dakota 1978 David R. Knuepfer, Iowa 1976 Douglas C. Kramlich, Northwestern 1959 William C. Krommenhoek, Nebraska 1957 Andris Lacis, Purdue 1964 Robert J. LaFortune, Purdue 1951 Donald E. Larew, Iowa State Richard F. Laubengayer, Kansas State 1964 Frank C. Long, Jr., Ohio State 1932 George C. Long, Bowling Green 1967 M. Eighmy Foundation D. Robert Madsen, San Jose 1951 Richard R. Mahoney, Houston 1983 William G. Malloy III, Northern Illinois 1969 Lewis A. Maroti, Lehigh 1958 Robert J. Martin, Washington 1959 Stephen C. Martinelli, California 1952 Gregory H. Mathews, Florida 1970 Phillip H. Mayer, Iowa State 1949 David C. McCalpin, Bradley 1986 John S. McConnell, DePauw 1966
Howard L. McGregor, Jr., Williams 1940 Richard S. Melvin, Indiana 1930 Michael A. Menius, North Carolina 1968 William B. Miller, Jr., San Jose 1952 Michael G. Mitchell, Texas 1965 John L. Moodie, Iowa State 1945 William C. Moodie, Jr., Lehigh 1947 Jeffery B. Morris, Kansas State 1979 Raymond R. Moser, Jr., Georgia Tech 1983 Grayson L. Moss, Purdue 1947 David S. Nelson, Clarkson 1969 Herbert H. Nelson, Colorado 1959 J. David Nelson, Northwestern 1963 James W. Osborn, Iowa State 1973 Sid W. Patterson, Oklahoma 1942 Joe H. Petty, DePauw 1936 Michael A. Pizzuto, Illinois 1981 Neal R. Popham, Purdue 1954 Richard R. Popham, Purdue 1940 Daniel D. Porter, Iowa State 1990 Richard W. Porter, Kansas State 1972 Jon L. Prime, Bradley 1963 Joseph L. Raudabaugh, North Carolina State 1978 Rhodes Design & Development Corp Arthur Lynn Rice, Jr., Illinois 1936 Rice Family Foundation / Mrs. Arthur L. Rice, Jr. Mark G. Ritchie, Iowa 1983 James S. Roberts, Florida 1963 Richard L. Rodine, Oklahoma 1973 Edward A. Rosenfeld, Oregon State 1942 Samuel A. Santandrea, Rochester 1956 Elaine Sceva Terry K. Schmoyer, Jr., South Carolina 1988 John O. Schram, Bradley 1950 David R. Schumacher Sharkey Family Foundation John L. Sherman, San Jose 1966 Norman E. Sidler, Bradley 1991 James S. Simpkins, Washington State 1981 William S. Smeltzer, Syracuse 1958 James W. Smith, Washington & Lee 1962 Don S. Snyder, Miami 1970 Craig S. Sowell, Houston 1992 Michael L. Stepovich, San Jose 1956 Willis A. Strauss, Iowa State 1944 Kenneth H. Suelthaus, Technology 1966 Marvin F. Swanson, Kansas State 1957 Leland W. Sweeney, Jr., San Jose 1955 Edwin J. Taff, North Carolina 1961 Herbert K. Taylor, Jr., Swarthmore 1927 John H. Teeter, Kansas State 1979 Michel C. Thielen, Iowa 1957 Paul A. Thiry, Washington 1928 Keith D. Tucker, Kansas State 1976 Peter A. Tuohy, Washington 1953 U.S. Charitable Gift Trust UTA Delta Upsilon Foundation Douglas D. VanderWeide, Iowa State 1989 Clyde W. VonGrimmenstein, Purdue 1949 William Wallace III, Union 1948 Edward E. Waller, Jr., Oklahoma 1951 Robert V. Wardle, Michigan 1952 William F. Waters, Cornell 1954 Donald E. Weaver, Indiana 1960 Frank E. Wellersdieck, Brown 1951 James V. White, Michigan 1950 Paul W. Wilke, Jr., Minnesota 1950 Robert G. Yingling, Jr., Missouri 1962 James F. Zboyovsky, Jr., Pennsylvania State 1951
www.dUEF.org
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Delta Upsilon Foundation 2009-2010 Annual Report
2009 โ 2010 DUEF Scholarships Chapter Leadership Scholarships โA New Chapter in Leadershipโ campaign, which concluded in 2007, impacts undergraduate leaders by allowing for increased participation at conferences like the Leadership Institute and DUEL Experience program. These individual member scholarships are funded by the generosity of DU alumni members and DU alumni chapters. Forty-eight DU undergraduate brothers received scholarships to attend DUโs 2010 Leadership Institute in New Orleans, and five DU chapters received scholarships to attend DUโs 2010 DUEL Experience program, which took place in June at Williamstown, Mass. The following chapters presently have fully endowed Leadership Institute (LI) Scholarships: Chicago Cornell Denison Florida Houston Illinois (3) Indiana (2) Iowa Johns Hopkins (4) Kansas (3) Kent State
Lafayette Lehigh Miami Minnesota Missouri North Carolina North Carolina State (2) Northern Iowa Northwestern Oklahoma Purdue
South Carolina Rutgers Wisconsin (2) Plus 13 additional designated Leadership Institute scholarships!
In addition, these chapters have fully endowed DUEL Experience program scholarships: Arizona State Kansas Louisville Nebraska North Dakota State
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Annual Scholarships Awarded The 2009-2010 DUEF Scholarship Program was completed with the announcements of the 2010 scholarship recipients during the Saturday Awards Luncheon on July 24, 2010 in New Orleans.
Photo by George Wada
This year the Foundation awarded four McQuaid Scholarships of $2,500, two Oak Circle Scholarships of $1,000 and two UIFI Scholarships. Congratulations to this yearโs recipients!
The McQuaid Scholarships John H. Grice, Kansas State โ11 Jordan L. Liles, Western Illinois โ12 Greg D. Nance, Chicago โ11 Peter H. Haslag, Arizona State โ10* *Graduate fellowships The Oak Circle Scholarships Matthew V. Panzano, Florida โ11 Ryan A. Wilkerson, Kansas State โ11
DUEF Trustee Jim McQuaid, Chicago โ60 presents a scholarship to John H. Grice, Kansas State โ11.
UIFI Scholarships Ben A. Pyle, Kansas โ12 Mitchel Schemenauer, Minnesota โ13
www.dUEF.org
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Delta Upsilon Foundation 2009-2010 Annual Report
Consecutive Giving to DUEF for 25 years or more โThe central challenge of leadership is to spell the word โvisionโ using upper case letters. The Delta Upsilon Foundation is part of my annual giving because of my lifelong belief in the efficacy of the Four Founding Principles, not just for my brothers at the University of Illinois chapter, but for our DU brothers across this great country and in Canada as well. Success has to be structured to โBuild Better Menโ and it is incumbent upon all of us in whatever economic situation we find ourselves in, to do our part.โ โ Stephen G. Katsinas, Illinois โ78
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40 Years
33 Years
29 Years
27 Years
Horace L. Acaster, Pennsylvania โ44 Leland J. Adams, Jr., Bucknell โ64 Harold D. Barker, Miami โ50 Michael G. Boylan, Bradley โ69 David L. Cutter, Stanford โ51 Keith O. Kaneta, Washington โ59 Maurice S. Mandel, Chicago โ55 Robert J. Martin, Washington โ59 Thomas E. Mattson, Oregon โ63 Howard O. Mielke, Carnegie โ51 Michael G. Mitchell, Texas โ65 Donald R. Morse, Tufts โ42 J. David Nelson, Northwestern โ63 Aubrey H. Polser, Jr., Texas โ65 Richard R. Popham, Purdue โ40 Nelson Schaenen, Jr., Cornell โ50 Richard B. Thompson, Mich.State โ67 James V. White, Michigan โ50
David E. Chambers, Arizona โ60 Mark A. Clemente, Cornell โ73 George J. Hamilton, Arkansas โ77 Bradley B. Hoot, Michigan State โ65 David O. Johnson, Kansas State โ75 Charles L. Kavanagh, California โ64 Thomas F. Keating III, Cornell โ57 Martin Krasnitz, Chicago โ57 Eugene A. Lucadamo, Lehigh โ71 Angelo J. Magistro, Rochester โ60 V. Edward Perkins, Brown โ35 Christopher L. Saricks, Kansas โ70 Henley L. Smith, Lafayette โ51 Ronald E. Wischhusen, Clarkson โ76 Sheldon Wylie, Brown โ57
Charles L. Allen, Michigan State โ55 Stephen J. Anderson, Northern Iowa โ79 Michael B. Donnelly, San Fernando โ68 John R. Ehrlich, Missouri โ67 Edward W. Furst, Lehigh โ60 William B. Hallam, Delaware โ80 Richard G. Jacobus, Wisconsin โ51 Mark S. Jones, Arlington โ75 Stephen C. Martinelli, California โ52 Kenneth D. Miller, Iowa โ67 Brian E. Mudrick, Louisville โ82 Roger F. Ray, Arlington โ70 Gary A. Rugel, Illinois โ78 John T. Weisel, Oregon โ48 Scot A. Yezek, Colorado โ80
James D. Hallihan, Miami โ67 Dennis A. Johnson, California โ63 L. Geoffrey Lawrence, Wash. & Lee โ59 James A. Oppy, Kansas State โ64 Jeffrey A. VanEenenaam, Colorado โ79
32 Years
28 Years
Larry W. Amos, Wash. State โ68 Dieter F. Czerny, Lehigh โ74 John A. Delaney, Florida โ77 John K. Dunlap, Texas โ73 Terry D. Finnell, Syracuse โ57 Robert W. Haerr, Creighton โ72 Stephen G. Katsinas, Illinois โ78 William T. Lauder, Columbia โ44 Dave Maguire, Southern Illinois โ73 David W. Rusk, Iowa โ76 Leland W. Waters, Texas โ73 Keith W. Weigel, Iowa โ78
John A. Buist, Illinois โ78 Clement T. Cole, Carnegie โ79 Philip E. Eubanks, Georgia Tech โ71 Patrick S. Hobin, California โ59 Robert W. Shively, Nebraska โ82 Charles E. Trunkey, Iowa State โ52 Richard B. Wilcox, Florida โ68
39 Years Jere E. Bremer, Bradley โ66 John O. Cronk, Iowa State โ60 Richard B. Hallman, Purdue โ54 Benjamin L. Harper, Indiana โ54 Aldie E. Johnson, Jr., Iowa State โ47 John K. Johnston, Penn. State โ58 Howard Kahlenbeck, Jr., Indiana โ52 Robert J. LaFortune, Purdue โ51 Charles A Phillips III, Clarkson โ64 James S. Roberts, Florida โ63 William A. Sigman, Iowa State โ50 George S. Studle, Washington State โ57 Paul W. Wilke, Jr., Minnesota โ50
38 Years Dennis S. Kanemori, Western Mich. โ66 John W. Sprout, Bucknell โ48 Ben T. Walkingstick, Oklahoma โ52 Harry L. Wilkinson, Tufts โ69
37 Years William C. Krommenhoek, Nebraska โ57
36 Years Robert G. Yingling, Jr., Missouri โ62
35 Years Gregory L. Allemann, Missouri โ69 Thomas P. Bays, Oregon State โ42 Robert A. Dahlsgaard, Jr., Bradley โ63 Lewis D. Gregory, Kansas โ75 Joe H. Petty, DePauw โ36 John W. Rogers, Miami โ57
31 Years
26 Years
Kelley J. Brennan, Marietta โ64 Alan R. Chapman, Illinois โ69 Daniel E. Fitzgerald, Purdue โ49 Andris Lacis, Purdue โ64 Stephen L. Mahannah, Colorado โ61 Alan L. Mores, Iowa State โ80 Charles F. Witte, Miami โ51
25 Years Michael E. Hogan, Purdue โ85 Charles R. Kurtak, Washington St. โ42 Willard C. Loomis, Miami โ59 Michael A. Nickey, Iowa State โ65 George G. Rinder, Chicago โ41 Albert P. Stauderman, Jr., Syracuse โ58
Foundation Gifts July 1, 2009 โ June 30, 2010 $724,406
Robert B. Buchanan, Illinois โ55 John H. Eyler, Washington โ69 Scott D. Hahner, Rutgers โ78 Conrad L. Hoover, New York โ40 Grayson L. Moss, Purdue โ47 Warren P. Nesbitt, Wisconsin โ76 James L. Ryan, Michigan State โ55 Richard L. Smith, Colgate โ68 Smith T. Wood, Technology โ69
Other Restricted Gifts 5%
30 Years Jerry E. Brennan, Jr., Purdue โ55 Keith B. Bruening, Iowa State โ80 Thomas W. Foote, Purdue โ50 John F. Herma, Rutgers โ70 Thomas E. Hoover, Ohio State โ56 Alan C. Jeveret, Bowling Green โ59 David A. Krebs, Miami โ80 David C. Myers, Tennessee โ74 Robert G. Noah, Pennsylvania State โ57 David E. Vinson, Wisconsin โ59
Chapter Educational Accounts 26%
Annual Appeal 69%
34 Years Frederic Ackerson, Iowa โ44 Bruce C. Anderson, Purdue โ65 John R. Ashby, Arlington โ74 John L. Cassell, Jr., Texas โ70 P. David Franzetta, Michigan State โ70 Paul E. Rosenthal, Florida โ73 Mark L. Rupert, Oklahoma โ74
www.dUEF.org
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Delta Upsilon Foundation 2009-2010 Annual Report โI have come to see my life in Delta Upsilon as precisely that... so the obligation to further the cause monetarily comes along with all of the benefits that it still provides me. That said, it dawned on me that if I could afford the dues as an undergraduate, I can certainly keep contributing now. I have been giving to the Educational Foundation for the past couple of years and encourage my fellow brothers to continue doing so as well.โ โBrett A. Killips, Alberta โ03
Presidentโs Club
The Presidentโs Club was created more than 30 years ago by then-Fraternity President W. D. Watkins, North Carolina โ27. In fiscal year 2009-2010, in honor of the Fraternityโs 175th Anniversary, the Presidentโs Club recognized all donors who gave at least $175 to the annual fund. Members of the Presidentโs Club receive a Presidentโs Club lapel pin at every five-year renewal interval, various other benefits, and advance notices for special events as applicable. In 2010, there were 539 members of the Presidentโs Club, including 117 donors whose gifts totaled $500 or more and who are honored as part of the Presidentโs Trust. Sincerest thanks to our giving leaders!
James A. Garfield Circle (Gifts of $25,000 or more) Henry J. Down, Jr., San Jose โ53 -CEA Paul B. Edgerley, Kansas State โ78-CEA+ Nicholas T. Giorgianni, Kent State โ56-CEA+ John D. Luckhardt, San Jose โ56 Charles Evans Hughes Circle (Gifts of $10,000 to $24,999) Donald S. Grant, Kent State โ70-CEA Louis L. Holtz, Kent State โ58-CEA Arthur K. Lund, San Jose โ55-CEA Charles D. Miller, Johns Hopkins โ49 James S. McDonnell Circle (Gifts of $5,000 to $9,999) Roy F. Allan, Lehigh โ68 H. James Avery, Illinois โ44 Douglas A. Cassens, Kent State โ68-CEA+ E. Bernard Franklin, Kansas State โ75 Thomas Roy Harney, San Jose โ52-CEA+ W. H. Harwell, Jr., Missouri โ51 Richard A. Hegeman, Purdue โ49 Edgar F. Heizer, Jr., Northwestern โ51 William B. Miller, Jr., San Jose โ52 John B. Morey, Jr., San Jose โ58-CEA+ John W. Rogers, Miami โ57 James B. Conant Circle (Gifts of $2,500 to $4,999) Bruce S. Bailey, Denison โ58 Thomas F. Durein, Oregon State โ92 Clint M. Dworshak, North Dakota State โ00-CEA+ Jeffrey L. Fuhrman, Northern Iowa โ94 Byron O. Lee, Jr., Purdue โ51 James D. McQuaid, Chicago โ60 E. Lee Musil, Kansas State โ71-CEA William C. Rappolt, Lafayette โ67 John T. Weisel, Oregon โ48 Herbert Brownell Circle (Gifts of $1,000 to $2,499) Horace L. Acaster, Pennsylvania โ44 Scott R. Bayman, Florida โ68 Malcolm P. Branch, Wisconsin โ69 G. Clayton Bruntz, San Jose โ57-CEA David H. Carnahan, Denison โ60 Michael A. Cesa, Kent State โ76-CEA+ John A. Delaney, Florida โ77 Christopher B. Dโhondt, Illinois โ88-CEA+ Michael J. DiFranco, Kent State โ98-CEA Timothy C. Dowd, Oklahoma โ75 Charles E. Downton III, North Carolina โ66
John R. Eplee, Kansas State โ75 Richard F. Fagan, Washington โ52 John R. Freitas, San Jose โ55-CEA Wayne B. Goldberg, Louisville โ83 Lewis D. Gregory, Kansas โ75 David A. Heagerty, San Jose โ50-CEA+ John F. Herma, Rutgers โ70 Howard Kahlenbeck, Jr., Indiana โ52 Charles H. Kamm, San Jose โ57-CEA Gary S. Killips, Alberta โ71 David R. Knuepfer, Iowa โ76 Douglas C. Kramlich, Northwestern โ59 Martin Krasnitz, Chicago โ57 Robert M. Loch, Nebraska โ54 William G. Malloy III, Northern Illinois โ69 Maurice S. Mandel, Chicago โ55 Richard C. Marx, Pennsylvania โ54 David Derek McKeag IV, Minnesota โ04-CEA+ Reed E. McKinlay, Washington State โ77-CEA E. Bruce McKinney, Missouri โ74 Craig R. Milkint, Illinois โ83 William C. Moodie, Jr., Lehigh โ47 H. Clayton Peterson, Kansas State โ67-CEA Jon L. Prime, Bradley โ63 Rice Family Foundation/ Mrs. Arthur L. Rice, Jr.-CEA Stephen K. Rowley, Ohio โ65 Nelson Schaenen, Jr., Cornell โ50 Beurt R. SerVaas, Indiana โ41 Jeffrey Siegel, Maryland โ78 James S. Simpkins, Washington State โ81-CEA+ Craig S. Sowell, Houston โ92-CEA+ Richard X. Taylor, North Carolina State โ82-CEA+ Mrs. Ashton M. Tenney, Jr. Richard B. Thompson, Michigan State โ67 Charles T. & Marion M. Thompson Foundation Robert L. Tyburski, Colgate โ74 Peter V. Ueberroth, San Jose โ59 Dennis J. Wright, Kent State โ69-CEA Samuel M. Yates, San Jose โ55-CEA+ Edgar Bergen Circle (Gifts of $500 to $999) Charles L. Allen, Michigan State โ55 Anonymous Robert D. Berard, Kansas State โ91-CEA Ted J. Biggerstaff, Nebraska โ63 Leigh Bishop-CEA Jerry L. Bobo, Houston โ77 Ernest J. Bontadelli, San Jose โ50-CEA Peter W. Bridgford, Northwestern โ56
George W. Brown, San Jose โ57-CEA Gregory S. Caine, Purdue โ81 Anthony B. Cashen, Cornell โ57 Aaron D. Clevenger, Central Florida โ97 Clement T. Cole, Carnegie โ79 Joseph A. DeBlasio, North Carolina โ62 Robert W. Deichert, Jr., Johns Hopkins โ97 Richard L. Delano, Indiana โ85 John W. Duncan, Jr., Oregon State โ00 Howard Robert Elliott, Jr., Indiana โ77 Jon T. Flask, Kent State โ67-CEA+ P. David Franzetta, Michigan State โ70 Norman H. Frazier, Jr., Virginia โ99 Daniel S. Gibbs, Illinois โ85 Thomas A. Gilchrist, Washington State โ83-CEA Joe N. Goforth, Jr., North Carolina โ66 R. McDonald Gray, North Carolina โ59 Jay R. Hamann, Minnesota โ59 Clifton C. Jones, Kansas State โ77-CEA+ Jack E Joynson-CEA Stephen G. Katsinas, Illinois โ78 Joshua A. Katz, Central Florida โ97-CEA+ Rod D. Kiefus, Illinois โ63 Justin J. Kirk C. Bruce Laidlaw, Jr., Syracuse โ55 George C. Long, Bowling Green โ67 Daniel E. Losee, San Jose โ59-CEA Jordan B. Lotsoff, Northern Illinois โ88 David R. Madsen, San Jose โ66-CEA Todd D. Marker, Washington State โ81-CEA Lewis A. Maroti, Lehigh โ58 Michael Bruce Martens, Kent State โ03 Stephen C. Martinelli, California โ52 John S. McConnell, DePauw โ66 John W. Moeller, San Jose โ52-CEA+ Corbin G. Navis, Kansas State โ03-CEA+ Warren P. Nesbitt, Wisconsin โ76 Reginald B. Newman II, Northwestern โ59 Evan M. Nosek, Northern Illinois โ85 Brett A. Olson, Bradley โ88 H. Paul Picard, Houston โ82 Michael A. Pizzuto, Illinois โ81 Richard W. Porter, Kansas State โ72-CEA Thomas S. Rakow, Northwestern โ65 James S. Roberts, Florida โ63
Ronald R. Roe, San Jose โ59-CEA Paul E. Rosenthal, Florida โ73 Michael Rowe, Washington State โ78-CEA Michael A. Ryan, Virginia โ86 Samuel A. Santandrea, Rochester โ56 Christopher L. Saricks, Kansas โ70 Terry K. Schmoyer, Jr., South Carolina โ88 David R. Schumacher William A. Sigman, Iowa State โ50 Donald C. Slawson, Kansas โ56 Steven K. Snyder, Oklahoma โ79 Peter Stork, Kansas โ65 Richard A. Taitch-CEA Tamer N. Talaat, Louisville โ82 James R. Tormey, Jr., San Jose โ57-CEA+ Peter A. Tuohy, Washington โ53 Ben T. Walkingstick, Oklahoma โ52 Theodore G. Wallace, San Jose โ60-CEA Frank E. Wellersdieck, Brown โ51 Richard A. West, Lafayette โ53 James V. White, Michigan โ50 Paul W. Wilke, Jr., Minnesota โ50 Clark K. Williams, Northwestern โ62 Tim S. Wu, Minnesota โ03 Webster Chapter- CEA
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Charles G. Dawes Circle (Gifts of $175 to $499) H. Glenn Adams, Texas โ88 John S. Adams, Wichita โ04-CEA+ James C. Aitken, Washington โ70 James R. Allan, Oregon โ53 David V. Allard, Indiana โ70 Alden L. Allen, Minnesota โ49 Richard C. Allendorf, Iowa State โ83 Robert L. Allman, Wisconsin โ58 James A. Allums, Texas โ59 L. Elvin Ambler, Wichita โ68 Larry W. Amos, Washington State โ68 Bret E. Anderson, Washington State โ95-CEA Bruce C. Anderson, Purdue โ65 Michael J. Anderson, Washington State โ79-CEA Patrick D. Anderson, DePauw โ09 Stephen J. Anderson, Northern Iowa โ79 John L. Angelotta, Western Reserve โ45 Anonymous
Key: CEA indicates Chapter Educational Account donor CEA+ indicates donor gave to both CEA and annual fund
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Delta Upsilon Foundation 2009-2010 Annual Report Presidentโs Club Continued
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L. John Arbizzani, Auburn โ68 Robert S. Ayres, North Carolina โ65 Edward T. Babbitt, Washington State โ79-CEA F. Lee Baird, Kansas โ58 Bruce K. Balderston, Pennsylvania State โ76 William G. Ballinger, Ohio State โ49 Harold D. Barker, Miami โ50 Thomas P. Bays, Oregon State โ42 C. Robert Bell, Indiana โ54 K. Michael Berkley, Kansas โ61 Paul D. Betters, Bradley โ69 Kristopher P. Biesiadecki, Houston โ97 Lawrence A. Bilker, Rochester โ91 Robert J. Black, Iowa โ95 Wayne V. Black, Missouri โ59 David M. Blatner, Southwest Missouri โ86 Peter M. Blauvelt, Cornell โ57 Henry B. Brackin III, Georgia Tech โ71 Terry J. Brady, Missouri โ62 Robert J. Brand, Louisville โ70 Jere E. Bremer, Bradley โ66 Jerry E. Brennan, Jr., Purdue โ55 Kelley J. Brennan, Marietta โ64 Girard S. Brewer, California โ78 B. Chris Brewster, Colorado โ77 Christian Brim, Oklahoma โ92 William F. R. Briscoe, Purdue โ65 Robert W. Broad, Syracuse โ60 Walter R. Brookhart, Virginia โ71 James R. Brooks, Kansas โ62 Alan C. Brown, Iowa State โ60 Robert W. Brown, Purdue โ46 William A. Bruck, Arlington โ72 Keith B. Bruening, Iowa State โ80 Randolph W. Bryant, Texas โ74 John A. Buell, Jr., Technology โ56 Benjamin T. Burson III, Georgia Tech โ67 Richard B. Campbell, Nebraska โ68 Paul G. Cantor, Alberta โ62 Gerald A. Caplan, Syracuse โ55 J. Fred Carey, Jr., Delaware โ70 James D. Carle, Ohio State โ61 Stuart M. Carlson, Nebraska โ54 Kevin D. Carlton, Washington โ86 Peter W. Carmel, Chicago โ56 William L. Carter, Florida โ71 John L. Cassell, Jr., Texas โ70 Randy R. Cellone, Kent State โ67-CEA+ David E. Chambers, Arizona โ60 Clark G. Channing, California โ58 Alan R. Chapman, Illinois โ69 Joseph W. Ciatti, Oregon โ64 Brent L. Circle, Indiana โ67 G. Russell Cleveland, Pennsylvania โ61 Ronald W. Coble, Purdue โ58 Robert E. Collins, Eastern Kentucky โ74 John A. Copland, Cornell โ59 Michael R. Coppola, Jr., Kent State โ65 Barry D. Cory, Northern Iowa โ75 Lawrence M. Costa, California โ62 Jeffrey W. Courter, Iowa State โ84 Donald D. Cowe, Tennessee โ73 Frederic S. Cox III, Washington State โ80-CEA Kim C. Cox, Illinois โ76 Steven L. Cox, Oklahoma โ92 John W. Crabbe, Auburn โ68 John O. Cronk, Iowa State โ60 H. Richard Crowther, Technology โ54 Jeffrey D. Croxen, Western Reserve โ03-CEA+ Adam L. Culley, Northern Iowa โ00 William C. Cutler, Washington State โ55-CEA Bernard A. Dahlem, Louisville โ51
Robert A. Dahlsgaard, Jr., Bradley โ63 Alfred W. Dalcher, Kent State โ57 Lawrence W. Dam, Washington โ68 Thomas E. Darcy, San Diego โ72 Jack David, Rutgers โ63 Richard B. Davies, Oregon โ49 James H. Davis, Northwestern โ65 Jeffrey A. Dickson, Bucknell โ90 Paul W. Doetsch, Maryland โ76 Richard P. Donohoe, Illinois โ55 Ronald E. Dowhaniuk, Oregon State โ86 W. Blake Down, Oregon State โ43 Andrew M. Dunham, San Jose โ86 Douglas E. Dutcher, Houston โ73 William H. Dwight, Washington โ79 John R. Dytman, Syracuse โ71 Kenneth G. Edwards, Pennsylvania State โ71 John R. Ehrlich, Missouri โ67 Andrew J. Eisiminger, San Jose โ11 Christopher J. Ellingson, Minnesota โ92 Andrew A. Englehart, Michigan โ06 Craig R. Enochs, Houston โ94-CEA+ Brian K. Erickson, Houston โ96 Troy Daniel Erickson, Michigan Tech โ02 Robert R. Evans, Houston โ74-CEA Herbert P. Evert, Northwestern โ56 John H. Eyler, Washington โ69 Philip D. Farley, Houston โ04 Bruce H. Fellows, Wisconsin โ51 Warren L. Felton III, Oklahoma โ72 Stanley L. Ferguson, Northwestern โ75 James W. Fields, San Jose โ66 Troy W. Finnegan, Florida โ00 Robert D. Fisher, Alberta โ75-CEA+ George W. Flathers II, Illinois โ78 Ronald D. Fleck, Iowa State โ49 James G. Fleming, Iona โ05 Joseph E. Fluet, Jr., North Carolina โ65 David C. Fohr, Wisconsin โ73 Thomas W. Foote, Purdue โ50 Frederick R. Ford, Purdue โ58 Craig J. Franz, Bucknell โ75 James D. Freyer, Sr., Syracuse โ61 Kevin Carl Friis, Western Reserve โ09 David J. Fulton, Miami โ61 Daniel M. Fuquay, Indiana โ67 Larry R. Gaddis, Colorado โ63 Patrick L. Gerhart, Northern Colorado โ04 Irving Gersten, Kent State โ61 Joseph Gibson, Kent State โ68-CEA+ William H. Gibson, Jr., Miami โ51 Lloyd G. Gillette, Alberta โ55 Robert C. Gimlin, Purdue โ42 Roger K. Godfrey, Wisconsin โ54 Matthew A. Goering, Kansas โ91 Fred M. Goolsby, South Carolina โ81 William R. Gordon, Kansas State โ60-CEA+ Michael F. Goss, Kansas State โ81-CEA Bradford S. Grabow, DePauw โ85 Robert B. Graham, Marietta โ75 Dominic K. Greene, Oregon โ99 Gary W. Gregory, Arlington โ77 Richard P. Gregory, British Columbia โ69 J. Mark Gresham, Texas โ71 Gerald E. Gross, Michigan State โ63 Robert L. Grottke, Northwestern โ52= David J. Habib, Washington โ86 Grayson M. Hajash, Alberta โ47 Matthew D. Hakes, Western Reserve โ10 Richard B. Hallman, Purdue โ54 Scott D. Hahner, Rutgers โ78 William A. Hamilton, Oklahoma โ57
Top Ten Chapters by Amount of Donations Annual Appeal 2009 โ 2010 As of June 30, 2010
Chapter
Amount of Donation
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
San Jose Kent State Kansas State Purdue Johns Hopkins Illinois Northwestern Missouri Lehigh Miami
$205,539 $86,785 $69,839 $17,037 $16,290 $14,010 $11,775 $10,749 $8,735 $8,577
Top Ten Chapters by Number of Donors Annual Appeal 2009 โ 2010 As of June 30, 2010
Chapter
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
Kansas State Illinois San Jose Houston/Kent State/ Washington Miami Bradley Indiana Kansas DePauw/Northwestern Oklahoma/Wisconsin
# of Donors 64 59 57 54 53 51 47 45 42 41
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Delta Upsilon Foundation 2009-2010 Annual Report Presidentโs Club Continued
Jesse B. Hannan, Jr., Cornell โ52 William H. Harkey, Oregon State โ71 William Harlow, Arizona โ62 Benjamin L. Harper, Indiana โ54 Christopher L. Harper, Houston โ02 James F. Harris, Wisconsin โ72 Richard S. Hartley, Oregon State โ54 David P. Hawkins, Kansas State โ81- CEA+ Gregory L. Haymon, Oklahoma โ77 Melvin D. Heckt, Iowa โ46 Oliver H. Heely, Jr., Auburn โ68 Tim L. Heiman, Kansas State โ76-CEA+ Bill A. Helvey, Kansas State โ58-CEA+ Stephen J. Henning, Nebraska โ85 Richard D. Heroux, Jr., South Carolina โ84 Arthur L. Herr, Rutgers โ54 John C. Herron, South Carolina โ88 John R. Hillis, Miami โ64 Edward M. Hipke, Wisconsin โ56 Roger W. Hirsch, Nebraska โ66 Patrick S. Hobin, California โ59 Stanley V. Holm, Oklahoma โ92 Mathew Holt, Culver-Stockton โ08 Charles W. Hoppe, Purdue โ57 Bruce V. Howard, San Diego โ70 Sidney B. Howard, UCLA โ41 Phillip E. Hurley, Oklahoma โ64 John L. Hysom, Jr., Kansas โ57 Thomas R. Jacobs, Arkansas โ77 Richard G. Jacobus, Wisconsin โ51 Robert J. Jarrett, Union โ51 Miles S. Jenney, Syracuse โ55 Alan C. Jeveret, Bowling Green โ59 Bradley M. John, Iowa โ96 Aldie E. Johnson, Jr., Iowa State โ47 David O. Johnson, Kansas State โ75 Everett C. Johnson, Arizona โ62 Nils P. Johnson, Ohio State โ43 O. Kepler Johnson, Jr., Kansas โ52 Thomas W. Johnson, California โ53 John K. Johnston, Pennsylvania State โ58 Mark S. Jones, Arlington โ75 Rees M. Jones, Manitoba โ67 Thomas E. Kaercher, Bucknell โ57 Keith O. Kaneta, Washington โ59 Kappa Alpha Order Charles L. Kavanagh, California โ64 Edward Kavazanjian, Jr., Technology โ73 Vincent L. Kelly, Dayton โ80 C. Bruce Kern II, Michigan โ84 Anthony K. Kesman, Iowa โ77 Michael J. Kilbane, Bradley โ78 William T. Killian, Auburn โ69 Brett A. Killips, Alberta โ03 J. Scott King, Missouri โ75 Bryan L. Kinnamon, Iowa State โ69 Austin H. Kiplinger, Cornell โ39 Hugh E. Klein, Purdue โ46 Paul A. Klinefelter, North Carolina State โ80 John E. Knechtel, Alberta โ60 T. Michael Knies, Tennessee โ71 Alfred J. Knox, Northern Illinois โ77 Ronald R. Kovener, Indiana โ55 Barry S. Kramer, Rutgers โ62 David A. Krebs, Miami โ80 Scott E. Kremer, Houston โ86 Mark S. Kristoff, Cornell โ84 William C. Krommenhoek, Nebraska โ57 Mark D. Kuchel, Iowa State โ76 Charles R. Kurtak, Washington State โ42
Steven F. La Buda, Western Illinois โ88 R. Allen LaBerge, Washington โ87 Andris Lacis, Purdue โ64 Robert A. LaFontaine, Santa Barbara โ91 Robert J. LaFortune, Purdue โ51 Laird Norton Real Estate, LLC William G. Landess, Kansas โ53 Robert S. Lannin, Nebraska โ81-CEA+ Allan M. Lansing, Western Ontario โ53 Joseph Laquatra, Jr., Cornell โ74 Donald E. Larew, Iowa State โ63 Gregory C. Larson, Syracuse โ83 Mark D. Lausier, Maine โ85 B. Allen Lawlis, Houston โ97 John C. Layman, Michigan โ55 Kenneth J. Lee, DePauw โ47 Jeffrey M. Levine, Florida โ85 James K. Levorsen, Oklahoma โ50 J. William Little, Wichita โ58 Thomas C. Litwiler, Kent State โ56-CEA Robert C. Long, Iowa State โ51 Willard C. Loomis, Miami โ59 Kyle Bradley Lorts, Western Illinois โ07 Jon D. Lundy, DePauw โ90 Carroll L. Lurding, Ohio State โ59 Joseph M. MacDonald, Colorado โ69 Angelo J. Magistro, Rochester โ60 Dave Maguire, Southern Illinois โ73 Donald F. Maisel, Bradley โ55 Andrew Malekoff, Rutgers โ73 Adren D. Mann, Minnesota โ51 Joseph J. Marinelli, Florida โ65 Thomas L. Markl, Carnegie โ70 J. Lawrence Marsh, Colgate โ75 David L. Marston, Iowa โ63 Robert J. Martin, Washington โ59 Peter A. Marzek, Illinois โ81 Steven J. Marzullo, Kansas State โ85-CEA Thomas E. Mattson, Oregon โ63 Glenn E. McCann, Kansas โ40 Kelly W. McClain, Purdue โ71 Robert A. McDonald, Ohio โ73 R. Gordon McGovern, Brown โ48 William C. McIntosh, Michigan โ53 Roger K. McLimans, Wisconsin โ68 Julian E. Mead, Wisconsin โ61 David M. Mertens, Michigan Tech โ94 Christopher L. Miller, Miami โ90 Kenneth D. Miller, Iowa โ67 Lowell D. Miller, Jr., Missouri โ82 Michael C. Miller, Bradley โ80 Missouri Chapter Michael G. Mitchell, Texas โ65 Michael A. Monรฉ, Florida โ85 John L. Moodie, Iowa State โ45 James R. Moody, Brown โ58 Donald K. Morford, Washington โ56 Dennis N. Morrison, Kansas โ67 Richard L. Morrison, Kansas โ70 Donald R. Morse, Tufts โ42 Theodore C. Mortenson, Michigan State โ61 Grayson L. Moss, Purdue โ47 Lindy G. Moss, Indiana โ49 Donald J. Moulin, California โ53 David C. Mouron, Jr., Tennessee โ77 Brian E. Mudrick, Louisville โ82 Mark J. Mueller, Wisconsin โ82 Robert W. Muntzinger, Kent State โ51-CEA+ Norbert M. Murray, California โ64 J. David Nelson, Northwestern โ63
Rodney L. Nelson, Minnesota โ63 John C. Nemeth, Northwestern โ99 Michael A. Nickey, Iowa State โ65 George Nicolau, Michigan โ48 Robert V. Noreika, Lafayette โ67 Thomas H. Norris, Missouri โ60 Don I. Norton, Kansas State โ75-CEA Thomas C. OโBannon, Oklahoma โ82 Christopher D. Olsen, Kansas State โ06-CEA+ Christopher P. Olson, Houston โ92 Drew G. Olson, DePauw โ11 Edward F. Paliatka, Bradley โ56 Mark Parseghian, Lehigh โ49 Arnold J. Parus, Bradley โ53 Dominick N. Pasquale, Cornell โ57 Robert L. Patterson, Iowa State โ54 Sid W. Patterson, Oklahoma โ42 Harry Pawlik, North Carolina โ54 V. Edward Perkins, Brown โ35 Joe H. Petty, DePauw โ36 Ronald D. Peyton, Indiana โ69 Charles A. Phillips III, Clarkson โ64 Daniel A. Picard, Tufts โ81 James P. Plessas, California โ53 Jeffrey L. Pollack, San Jose โ67 Aubrey H. Polser, Jr., Texas โ65 Vitor T.Pontual, Lafayette โ08 Neal R. Popham, Purdue โ54 Richard R. Popham, Purdue โ40 Alvan E. Porter, Oklahoma โ65 Ashutosh A. Pradhan, Johns Hopkins โ96 Conrad T. Prebys, Indiana โ55 Coady H. Pruett, Cal Poly โ02 Alan L. Quiles, Houston โ92 George Ramsden, Lehigh โ44 Philip G. Ranford, Culver-Stockton โ00 Bruce D. Raskin, Washington โ85 Roger F. Ray, Arlington โ70 Matthew R. Reeping, Kent State โ94-CEA Daryl W. Reisfeld, Rochester โ03 Richard M. Rettstadt, Florida โ82 Jason S. Rice, Bowling Green โ03 Phillip S. Rice, Arlington โ95 Donald L. Riechman, Bradley โ60 Charles N. Rodgers, Kent State โ60-CEA+ Robert J. Rohr, Rochester โ63 William D. Rose, North Carolina โ69 Kenneth P. Roy, Bowling Green โ61 D. S. Rudd, Western Ontario โ51 J. Preston Ruddell, Jr., North Carolina โ71 Rick A. Rumford, Indiana โ80 Mark L. Rupert, Oklahoma โ74 Rutgers Colony Steven T. Satek, Wisconsin โ88 Thomas D. Sauppe, Bowling Green โ53 Craig D. Schnuck, Cornell โ70 John A. Seitz II, Missouri โ59 James H. Sergeson, Michigan โ59 Edwin B. Shaw, Syracuse โ66 William R. Shepherd, Jr., Oregon โ55 Richard E. Sherwood, Washington State โ64 Jeremiah Shinn Aaron M. Siders, Kansas State โ04-CEA+ Thomas Slintak, San Jose โ08 G. Michael Slovak, Cornell โ77 Richard L. Smith, Colgate โ68 Walter R. Smith, Jr., Washington โ70 Wendell A. Smith, Johns Hopkins โ54 Jeffery T. Snow, Illinois โ94 John B. Snyder, Williams โ51
David Y. Sorenson, Oregon โ71 Patrick Spooner, San Jose โ55 Alan H. Staidl, Iowa State โ69 Christopher C. Stanton III, Florida โ76 Albert P. Stauderman, Jr., Syracuse โ58 Arthur R. Steiger, Purdue โ48 Richard L. Stern, Georgia Tech โ90 H. A. Stevens, Northwestern โ46 John S. Stewart, Fresno โ84 Robert A. Stewart, Washington โ64 George S. Studle, Washington State โ57 Kenneth H. Suelthaus, Technology โ66 Todd C. Sullivan, Santa Barbara โ95 Tony W. Sutton, Illinois โ77 Erik D. Swanson, Washington State โ93-CEA William S. Symons, Rutgers โ66 Robert L. Sypult, Arizona โ67 Haruo Taga, Bradley โ54 Howard E. Thompson, San Jose โ58 Richard J. Thorpe, Syracuse โ60 James R. Tolonen, Michigan โ71 Douglas T. Uyeda, Washington State โ91-CEA K. Bradford Valentine, Tufts โ67 Michael Ashby Valentine, DePauw โ04 W. G. VanBenthuysen, Kent State โ61-CEA+ Clyde W. VonGrimmenstein, Purdue โ49 Ronald S. Walcisak, Wisconsin โ74 Joseph A. Walker, Illinois โ67 Stephen L. Wallenhaupt, North Carolina โ74 Edward E. Waller, Jr., Oklahoma โ51 B. Michael Walsh, Oregon โ64 Donna Warner Regitz Allan A. Warrack, Alberta โ61 William F. Waters, Cornell โ54 Donald E. Weaver, Indiana โ60 John A. Webb, Jr., Washington State โ94-CEA Keith W. Weigel, Iowa โ78 George G. Weingardt, Ohio State โ55 Steven D. Weiss, North Carolina โ77 Richard A. Wells, Oklahoma โ82 Paul W. Wentzien, Iowa โ59 Gregory J. Wessling, North Carolina โ74 David B. Whitehurst, Purdue โ59 George M. Whitson, Michigan State โ52 Judson E. Wilhelm, Florida โ68 Richard D. Williams, Jr., Indiana โ58 Matthew D. Wilson, Guelph โ97 Scott W. Wilson, Colorado โ73 John P. Wingard, Ohio State โ63 Chad Eric Wolver, Arizona State โ10 Roger W. Wothe, Technology โ58 B. Bryan Wright, Jr., North Carolina โ64 Kurt C. Wulfekuhler, Brown โ89 Lawrence A. Yenkole, Bradley โ60 Scot A. Yezek, Colorado โ80 Robert G. Yingling, Jr., Missouri โ62 Charles S. Young, Miami โ57 Robert S. Zakos, Jr., Pennsylvania State โ02 Ray K. Zarvell, Bradley โ68 James A. Zeese, Minnesota โ59
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Delta Upsilon Foundation 2009-2010 Annual Report
Honor Roll 2009-2010 Donors to the Delta Upsilon Educational Foundation The donors recognized on the succeeding pages gave gifts between July 1, 2009 and June 30, 2010. The Delta Upsilon Foundation sincerely thanks these donors for their continued and generous support. Annual Appeal gifts help the Foundation fulfill its mission to help enhance the lives of our undergraduate brothers. With the support of our donors, the Foundation is able to promote the best interests of the Fraternity, its chapters and our individual brothers Alberta [B. Abdu โ09 [G. Campbell โ62 t P. Cantor โ62 (7) [D. Davila Rojas โ02 t R. Fisher โ75 (3) CEA+ t L. Gillette โ55 (9) [C. Greenough โ10 t G. Hajash โ47 n L. Hatch โ65 m G. Killips โ71 (8) t B. Killips โ03 t J. Knechtel โ60 l D. Love โ46 (24) l I. McDonell โ72 n D. Medhurst โ50 n G. Morton โ60 [M. Shah โ10 [G. Stout โ11 l E. van der Lee โ51 (4) t A. Warrack โ61 (13)
30
Amherst l J. Fairman โ52 (13) Arizona D. Chambers โ60 (33) t W. Harlow โ62 t E. Johnson โ62 (3) l T. Strasburg โ64 (4) t R. Sypult โ67 t
Arizona State [M. Griffin โ09 [P. Haslag โ10 [C. Krusemark โ09 l L. Lopez โ11 (2) [Z. OโBrien โ10 l K. Reichert โ13 [J. Salter โ07 [M. Salter โ74 t C. Wolver โ10 Arkansas [G. Hamilton โ77 (33) t T. Jacobs โ77 (9) [M. Zimmerman โ90 Arlington N. Armenta โ11 [J. Ashby โ74 (34) [S. Atchison โ70 (7) [J. Branstetter โ12 t W. Bruck โ72 [D. DiCarlo โ12 [T. Escobar โ10 t G. Gregory โ77 (11) [M. Grossman โ12 l M. Hawkins โ70 (10) t M. Jones โ75 (29) [E. Jordan โ88 t R. Ray โ70 (29) t P. Rice โ95 (4) [D. Sims โ10 l
Auburn [R. Ambrose โ67 (2) t L. Arbizzani โ68 (4) [W. Baker โ64 t J. Crabbe โ68 (5) l J. Dixon, Jr. โ65 (3) l C. Flint โ65 (8) t O. Heely, Jr. โ68 (11) KEY m = Presidentโs Trust ($500+) t = Presidentโs n = Golden Delta ($100+)
[J. Henderson โ62
(16) (3) [M. Sarra โ64 (17)
t W. Killian โ69
Baylor R. Shull โ85 (12)
l
Bowling Green
[W. Bensie โ70
C. Clingman โ69 (7) (9) (3) t A. Jeveret โ59 (30) [J. Klipfell III โ71 (24) [A. Koester โ59 l W. Koons โ71 (2) [L. Lengyel โ56 m G. Long โ67 (11) [T. Melton โ69 l D. Morgan โ58 (12) t J. Rice โ03 (8) t K. Roy โ61 t T. Sauppe โ53 (2) l C. Schaffer โ73 (11) n
[N. Elkins โ97
[R. Hayek โ69
Bradley [J. Beaupre โ11 t P. Betters โ69 n M. Boylan โ69 (40) t J. Bremer โ66 (39) l W. Bried โ68 (4) [K. Burns โ11 l M. Burrows โ11 l J. Custis โ02 (2) t R. Dahlsgaard, Jr. โ63 (35) l M. Danielewicz โ12 l B. DeSplinter โ84 (8) l J. Faltinek โ60 (12) [M. Hauer โ11 [K. Kelley II โ12 t M. Kilbane โ78 (10) l C. Lain โ12 [C. Lamoureux โ59 l J. Leonard โ76 [R. Lugiai โ11 (2) [Z. Mager โ11 (2) t D. Maisel โ55 (3) l M. Manseau โ10 (2) l L. Meyer โ64 (3) t M. Miller โ80 (14) [D. Misewicz โ79 (2) [S. Mlynarczyk โ11 n R. Morales โ10 l R. Norkus โ51 (7) m B. Olson โ88 (7) t E. Paliatka โ56 (22) t A. Parus โ53 (16) l D. Peterson โ78 (12) m J. Prime โ63 (11) l G. Reser โ72 t D. Riechman โ60 (12) [D. Roberts โ03 [T. Ruestman โ11 [M. Schardt โ85 [S. Smith โ12 [J. Stuckel โ55 (2) [J. Stuedemann โ10 (2) t H. Taga โ54 (10) [W. Tekien โ69 (15) [T. Terry โ61 (4) [N. Thommen โ11 l R. Tringali โ51 (13)
[J.
Ward โ12 B. Wernke โ79 (10) [J. Wolcott โ58 (6) t L. Yenkole โ60 t R. Zarvell โ68 (3) l
British Columbia R. Gregory โ69 n E. Valentine โ53 t
Brown
n W. Eastham โ48
(5) R. McGovern โ48 t J. Moody โ58 (3) [W. Nash โ44 l R. Norman โ57 (7) t V. Perkins โ35 (33) m F. Wellersdieck โ51 (8) t K. Wulfekuhler โ89 (8) l S. Wylie โ57 (33) t
Bucknell L. Adams, Jr. โ64 (40) t J. Dickson โ90 (11) J. Eachus โ60 (2) t C. Franz โ75 (10) [D. Hopkins โ42 (2) t T. Kaercher โ57 (2) [S. Lakhani โ11 l L. Rost โ67 (4) l A. Saunders, Jr. โ57 [I. Schnaufer โ12 [J. Sprout โ48 (38) n
Cal Poly [R. Blaco โ05 (8) [M. Brown โ08 (2) l L. Doble, Jr. โ68 (22) [P. Maggi โ09 t C. Pruett โ02 (10) [J. Schutz โ10 l J. Silva โ11 [B. Timm โ11 California G. Brewer โ78 (3) t C. Channing โ58 (10) t L. Costa โ62 n J. Fry, Jr. โ63 t P. Hobin โ59 (28) t T. Johnson โ53 (8) l D. Johnson โ63 (27) t C. Kavanagh โ64 (33) [W. Lewis โ47 (9) m S. Martinelli โ52 (29) n R. Merrick โ54 (3) t D. Moulin โ53 (13) t N. Murray โ64 (5) t J. Plessas โ53 (12) [C. Rea โ81 [H. Roth โ52 (3) n P. Ten Doesschate โ50 l D. Witt โ49 l J. Wrixon โ60 t
Carnegie G. Alan โ82 [D. Bradley โ62 (10) l R. Churchill โ84 m C. Cole โ79 (28) l R. DโAngelo โ61 (2) l J. Ferrell โ50 l A. Icken โ65 (10) l
l = Silver Delta ($50+) (#) = Consecutive # of years as a donor CEA = Chapter Educational Account gift
K. Kerlin โ82 (7) (20) t T. Markl โ70 (13) l G. Middleton โ86 (24) [H. Mielke โ51 (40) [W. Murdock โ83 [J. Reid โ81 (7) [E. Tennyson โ45 [T. Warner โ83 (2) n D. Williams โ64 (10) n H. Young โ52 (3) [R. Young โ53 (2) n R. Zimmerman โ78 (12) n
[W. Leete โ58
Carthage [G. Bothun โ08 (5) l B. Brubaker โ12 (2) n J. Chaplin โ96 (7) l D. Collins โ05 (3) [J. Donovan IV โ11 (2) [C. Harrison โ10 (2) [E. Jaburek โ10 (2) [K. Johnson โ08 (2) n D. Kniss โ97 (11) l D. Malcolm โ08 [J. Meiners โ08 n K. Neumann โ12 n K. Plagge โ12 (2) [B. Potts โ12 (2) [M. Read โ09 (2) [D. Ross-Jones โ06 (3) [A. Scott โ12 (2) [A. Smith โ12 (2) l J. TeBeest โ08 (4) [R. Ten Bruin โ97 [M. Tokarz โ10 (4) Central Florida (10) M. Goldman โ99 m J. Katz โ97 (8) CEA+ [P. McDaniel โ03 (3) l T. Rits โ13 Parent m A. Clevenger โ97 n
Central Missouri [J. Duke โ74 (3) l G. George โ89 (21) l M. LeDoux โ83 (5) [D. Stockwell โ78 Chattanooga Colony J. Slayton โ11
l
Chicago n S. Appel โ54 (6) CEA n E. Bronson โ55 [A. Brunk โ08 (5) t P. Carmel โ56 (7) [K. Gutschick โ50 (2) l C. Hughes โ09 (2) l Q. Johnstone โ36 (16) m M. Krasnitz โ57 (33) [T. Leahy โ10 (2) l J. Maheras โ59 m M. Mandel โ55 (40) m J. McQuaid โ60 (19) n M. Nanninga โ47 (23) l G. Rinder โ41 (25) [B. Selassie โ12 l W. Stoll โ60
Clarkson G. Armstrong โ61 (2) n R. Brai โ84 [J. Buran โ80 l P. Davidson โ69 n C. Elliott โ73 (8) [R. Hopkins, Jr. โ76 [S. June โ65 n K. Klafehn โ61 (2) l R. Naylon, Jr. โ72 (4) n D. Nelson โ69 (2) t C. Phillips III โ64 (39) n J. Stein โ68 [W. Waterbury โ81 [R. Wischhusen โ76 (33) n
Colby J. Alex โ50 (12) [D. Hailer โ52
n
Colgate
l T. Boccuzzi โ58 [C. Collier โ85
(6)
J. Marsh โ75 [M. Scheer โ11 t R. Smith โ68 (31) l Z. Smith โ11 (2) m R. Tyburski โ74 (15) [D. Wesley โ07 [L. Woltman โ65 t
Colorado
[H. Blake, Jr. โ65
(4) B. Brewster โ77 (21) l J. Byrd IV โ65 (2) l K. Clark โ76 [W. Drum, Jr. โ61 (4) t L. Gaddis โ63 (6) l J. Lockhart โ76 t J. MacDonald โ69 (8) [S. Mahannah โ61 (26) [W. Oliver โ62 (11) l K. Pober โ62 (16) n R. Ruppe โ67 n J. Standley โ73 n M. Vanderberg โ69 n J. VanEenenaam โ79 (27) n N. Wilder โ61 (9) t S. Wilson โ73 t S. Yezek โ80 (29) t
Columbia
m Anonymous
n W. Lauder โ44 l
(32) J. McCormack โ39 (22)
[R. Rosen โ58
Cornell R. Attiyeh โ55 (13) P. Blauvelt โ57 m A. Cashen โ57 (5) l C. Chambers โ11 n M. Clemente โ73 (33) t J. Copland โ59 (6) n P. Daverio โ60 (8) l P. Feliciano โ11 (2) [S. Garrison โ85 (9) [S. Gravani โ12 [D. Grimberg โ12 t J. Hannan, Jr. โ52 [F. Harwood โ60 n O. Hessler โ42 (3) n t
CEA+ = donor gave both to CEA and annual appeal Red text = also a donor to the Brick Campaign Italics = gift was a Parent gift
www.dUEF.org
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Delta Upsilon Foundation 2009-2010 Annual Report l W. Jahsman โ51
(2) III โ57 (33) t A. Kiplinger โ39 (13) [J. Knuff โ74 t M. Kristoff โ84 (9) t J. Laquatra, Jr. โ74 (5) l J. Maier โ69 (6) [L. Mishrell โ10 n A. Murray โ60 (4) [T. Nebesar โ12 t D. Pasquale โ57 (7) m N. Schaenen, Jr. โ50 (40) t C. Schnuck โ70 (3) t G. Slovak โ77 n J. Stevens โ10 (3) l R. Swisher โ12 n C. Vail, Jr. โ61 t W. Waters โ54 (11) l T. Webb โ57 [ T. Keating
Creighton [R. Haerr โ72 (32) [Culver-Stockton t M. Holt โ08 [A. Leach โ07 (2) t P. Ranford โ00 (3) [A. Robertson โ11 Dartmouth l J. Gately โ49 (12) l J. Giddens โ59 (14) Dayton R. Harris โ69 t V. Kelly โ80 l W. Maselko โ81 (7) l
Delaware E. Anzalone โ72 (8) [J. Brzostowski โ79 (8) t J. Carey, Jr. โ70 (9) n W. Hallam โ80 (29) [D. Reifschneider โ70 (10) l
Denison B. Bailey โ58 (24) (2) [R. Carleton โ60 (9) m D. Carnahan โ60 (3) [D. Gibson โ57 l J. Lanzen โ00 n J. Lawson โ50 (7) [D. Shell โ59 (14) m
l W. Bartlett โ60
DePauw [A. Alexandrou โ85 P. Anderson โ09 (2)
t
[J. Ayers โ61
(2) (2) l A. Billingsley โ11 (2) l E. Boldrey โ63 (18) [D. Copple โ00 (3) l R. Current โ59 [J. Downs โ65 (2) l H. Fjord โ47 (22) [R. Gackenheimer โ00 (10) [J. Gordon โ88 (21) t B. Grabow โ85 (2) [C. Graham โ82 (19) l P. Groebe โ62 (23) l M. Herrell โ60 (5) l W. Hunn โ59 (2) n J. Isenbarger โ45 (3) l C. Jordan โ50 l A. Kaufman โ05 [C. Knueppel โ46 (3) n J. Koch โ53 (3) l W. Kyhos โ66 (8) t K. Lee โ47 (4) n D. Lewis, Jr. โ58 (7) t J. Lundy โ90 (20) [K. Madden โ94 (9) m J. McConnell โ66 (15) n M. Miller โ88 (7) l W. Murphy II โ93 (10) [M. Nance โ10 (3) [J. Novak โ49 (19) t D. Olson โ11 (2) t J. Petty โ36 (35) l J. Piotrowski โ82 (2) n R. Sass โ55 (4) l N. Smith โ52 (15) [R. Tilly โ64 t M. Valentine โ04 (7) [J. Volkman โ63 (3) n J. Ware โ85 (7) [C. Wood โ09 [S. Benner โ11
Eastern Kentucky R. Collins โ74 (8)
t
Embry-Riddle Colony [T. Fratta โ11 Florida S. Bayman โ68 (19) [J. Bonney โ67 l J. Boyd, Jr. โ81 (5) [H. Bush โ85 (5) t W. Carter โ71 [J. Curley โ11 (2) m J. Delaney โ77 (32) t T. Finnegan โ00 m
l
P. Forrest โ58
l T. Slovak โ87
[D. Goldfarb โ11
(2) [ J. Gordon โ10 (2) [B. Griffin โ10 (2) n A. Hallums โ86 (6) [Z. Heylmun โ10 (3) l D. Jones โ67 t J. Levine โ85 (12) t J. Marinelli โ65 (14) n J. McGinley โ87 (1) t M. Monรฉ โ85 (11) [M. Panzano โ11 (2) n G. Pritchard โ62 (3) t R. Rettstadt โ82 (15) m J. Roberts โ63 (39) m P. Rosenthal โ73 (34) [G. Santi โ10 (2) [J. Sprenger โ12 t C. Stanton III โ76 (2) [J. Tully โ69 (9) [R. Wade โ61 (14) [R. Wilcox โ68 (28) t J. Wilhelm โ68 (12) l M. Zajkowski โ86 (16)
(13)
[H. Stephens, Jr. โ59
R. Stern โ90 (19) E. Vietor โ91 (12) [F. Weiss II โ09 l H. Whitehead โ72 (3) t l
Guelph M. Wilson โ97 (8)
t
Hamilton C. Andruss โ95 (6) [K. Foote โ60 (4) [P. Luney, Jr. โ70 [P. McNall โ57 (2) l S. Nye โ52 (6) l J. Pitarresi โ71 (8) n F. Romano โ49 l D. Wefer โ54 (7) n J. Wingate โ85 (16) l
Harvard
l W. Spang โ38
Fresno n T. LaBrue โ72 (12) t J. Stewart โ84 (21) [J. Takeda โ71 (7) l G. Wada โ74 (2) Georgia Tech H. Brackin III โ71 (6) t B. Burson III โ67 (7) l J. Chan โ12 l K. Ching โ99 (2) l D. Crawford โ61 (14) l R. Davis III โ83 (2) [J. De Priest, Jr. โ61 (6) [N. Desai โ11 [M. Doyle โ71 (2) l P. Eubanks โ71 (28) [C. Fulghum III โ78 (18) n M. Fuller โ79 (18) l R. Hall โ62 l M. Haney โ79 (3) n J. Harvey II โ92 l W. Hay, Jr. โ71 (12) n N. Horne โ12 (2) n R. Huggins โ98 (2) l M. Lemons โ08 l K. Menezes โ08 (4) CEA+ [L. Middlebrooks, Jr. โ64 l C. Monfort, Jr. โ68 (7) n K. OโToole โ94 (10) [E. Schepps โ81 (14) t
(22)
Houston [M. Allen โ13 [R. Baabdullah โ11 [G. Bearichs โ13 t K. Biesiadecki โ97 (6) m J. Bobo โ77 (24) [S. Boulet โ11 [J. Burden โ11 (2) n W. Carr III โ75 (2) [D. Carr โ10 [T. Carr โ13 l R. Cowan โ67 (9) l L. Dean โ99 [S. Demberg โ13 t D. Dutcher โ73 (12) t C. Enochs โ94 (4) CEA+ t B. Erickson โ96 (7) t R. Evans โ74 CEA [L. Evers โ10 (4) t P. Farley โ04 (2) [L. Figueroa โ11 [J. Gutierrez-Priego โ12 (2) t C. Harper โ02 (5) [J. Horak โ10 (2) [N. Jackson โ11 (2) [ J. Janda โ12 (2) n E. Kershaw โ91 t S. Kremer โ86 (12) t B. Lawlis โ97 (7) [I. Laws โ13 [G. Maduzia โ94 [S. Mays โ13 [M. McGill โ12 (2)
[P. Measells โ11 [A. Mehdi โ12
[T. Menegon โ10
(2) (2) C. Olson โ92 (2) [C. Orellana โ12 [T. Ortiz โ10 (4) [V. Oyler โ10 m H. Picard โ82 (10) t A. Quiles โ92 [ J. Restrepo โ13 l J. Rocheleau โ06 (5) [R. Rodriguez โ07 (4) n W. Roehsner โ05 (4) n M. Rondon โ92 (9) [D. Self โ12 (2) [T. Shelton โ11 (2) m C. Sowell โ92 (16) CEA+ [D. Tran โ13 n B. Turcotte โ92 l D. Tvrdy โ96 (2) [C. White โ10 [S. Zamir โ05 (2) [G. Milks โ11
t
Illinois
n A. Andrews, Jr. โ54
H. Avery โ44 (13) Aydt โ12 B. Brockstein โ85 l R. Buchanan โ55 (31) n J. Buist โ78 (28) [L. Bumba โ12 n C. Carey โ82 t A. Chapman โ69 (26) l E. Clements III โ71 t K. Cox โ76 (21) [C. Dexter โ51 (3) m C. Dโhondt โ88 CEA+ t R. Donohoe โ55 (2) l T. Duffy โ78 (3) [J. Falotico โ85 t G. Flathers II โ78 m D. Gibbs โ85 (2) l D. Giffin โ62 (4) l D. Glotzbach โ10 (2) n E. Grandone โ70 (4) [D. Hortberg โ57 (7) n R. Hougham โ72 (6) n D. Howe โ81 (15) m S. Katsinas โ78 (32) l P. Kempfer โ64 (9) m R. Kiefus โ63 (3) l J. Kimmel โ60 (9) l D. Kohout โ74 (7) [H. Lang โ59 n T. Lindsey โ74 (7) m
[A.
l
31
Memorial and Honorary Gifts Gregory A. Hampton, Wichita โ79, in honor of Annette Hampton on the occasion of their 25th wedding anniversary
Andree G. Anderson, in memory of Wilford A. Butler, Western Michigan โ61
Heizer Foundation, in memory of Edgar "Ned" Heizer, Northwestern โ51
Craig S. Sowell, Houston โ92, in memory of Carolyn Mandel
Bruce S. Bailey, Denison โ58, in memory of Carolyn Mandel
Martin Krasnitz, Chicago โ57, in memory of Carolyn Mandel
Patricia H. Sullivan, in memory of Wilford A. Butler, Western Michigan โ61
Thomas P. Bays, Oregon State โ42, in memory of Harvey D. Ronne, Oregon State โ41
Robert S. Lannin, Nebraska โ81, in memory of Wilford A. Butler, Western Michigan โ61
Richard A. Taitch, in memory of Jason A. Taitch, Washington State โ94
Susan E. Bergesen, in memory of Wilford A. Butler, Western Michigan โ61
Richard B. Levy, McGill โ89, in memory of John G. Wheeler, McGill โ89
Jonathan J. Brant, in memory of Wilford A. Butler, Western Michigan โ61
Thomas S. Maentz, Sr., in memory of Wilford A. Butler, Western Michigan โ61
Patricia L. Vollmer, in memory of Wilford A. Butler, Western Michigan โ61
Todd C. Sullivan, Santa Barbara โ95, in honor of the 2010 DUEL Participants
Carolyn Butterfield Wicke, in memory of Jerry D. Wicke, Denison โ59
Alvan E. Porter, Oklahoma โ65, in memory of Carolyn Mandel
Donna Warner Regitz, in memory of Donald G. Warner, Rochester โ44
Alpha Epsilon Pi Foundation, Inc., in memory of Wilford A. Butler, Western Michigan โ61
Kevin W. Ching, Georgia Tech โ99, in memory of Grandma & Aunt Carol
Chris H. Sarlas, Illinois โ63, in memory of Stephen J. Boros, Illinois โ63
John W. Crabbe, Auburn โ68, in memory of Otto Peter Herman Claus Cerny, Auburn โ68
David R. Schumacher, in memory of Edgar "Ned" Heizer, Northwestern โ51
Melinda B. Sopher, in honor of Richard X. Taylor new Fraternity Board Chairman Melinda B. Sopher, in honor of Justin Kirk from Comm 466 Melinda B. Sopher, in honor of Richard X. Taylor, North Carolina State, from Comm 466
Kappa Alpha Order, in memory of Wilford A. Butler, Western Michigan โ61 Bucciero & Associates, P.C., in memory of Wilford A. Butler, Western Michigan โ61 Acacia Fraternity, in memory of Wilford A. Butler, Western Michigan โ61
Julie S. Fries, in memory of Wilford A. Butler, Western Michigan โ61 Elizabeth Gallaudet, in memory of Wilford A. Butler, Western Michigan โ61 Anonymous, in memory of Nicholas J. Coffey, Louisville โ12
Mrs. Ashton M. Tenney, Jr., in memory of Ashton M. Tenney, Jr., Chicago โ43
Craig S. Sowell, Houston โ92, in memory of Ross K. Fuller, San Jose โ49 Craig S. Sowell, Houston โ92, in memory of Joe H. Petty, DePauw โ36 Craig S. Sowell, Houston โ92, in memory of Wilford A. Butler, Western Michigan โ61
www.dUEF.org
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7/28/11 9:34 AM
Delta Upsilon Foundation 2009-2010 Annual Report S. MacGregor โ74 R. Magnussen โ60 (18) [M. Maniscalco โ13 t P. Marzek โ81 (24) l M. McLees โ75 (11) [B. Meadows โ11 (2) m C. Milkint โ83 (6) l D. Nixon โ73 (7) [L. Novak โ10 [J. OโDonnell โ82 (5) m M. Pizzuto โ81 (11) [C. Pudelek โ11 [A. Quattrochi โ82 (2) l J. Ritt โ52 (24) CEA+ l G. Rugel โ78 (29) [C. Sarlas โ63 (8) [ [E. Seelbach โ10 (2) l R. Selby โ66 (8) n T. Shepard โ73 (15) [J. Sladek โ74 (3) l R. Smith โ50 (14) t J. Snow โ94 [M. Sturgeon โ12 t T. Sutton โ77 (5) l K. Ulatoski โ76 t J. Walker โ67 l S. Wigginton โ45 n C. Zelent โ84 (16) l n
Indiana D. Allard โ70 (15) l M. Bear โ55 t C. Bell โ54 (5) n J. Boyd โ65 (7) t B. Circle โ67 (9) [J. Coffman โ79 n T. Cook โ48 (6) [E. Crabbe โ11 (2) [A. Culver โ10 n J. Cutter โ52 l S. DeCarlo โ11 (2) m R. Delano โ85 (2) [S. Eldridge โ66 m H. Elliott, Jr. โ77 (5) n D. Epstein โ90 (12) [ J. Faber โ11 n R. Fishburn โ67 (6) t D. Fuquay โ67 [N. Garvey โ12 [P. Garvey โ12 t B. Harper โ54 (39) n S. Jaren โ76 (2) [T. Jelonek โ12 m H. Kahlenbeck, Jr. โ52 (39) [M. Kerbis โ11 l T. Kilpatrick โ57 (12) t R. Kovener โ55 (17) n J. Lambert โ87 (23) l R. Levin โ87 (21) [R. Manalo โ71 (5) n S. Moore โ69 t L. Moss โ49 t R. Peyton โ69 (2) t C. Prebys โ55 l R. Rock โ67 t R. Rumford โ80 (2) [C. Schwager โ12 m B. SerVaas โ41 l G. Sims โ82 (12) n F. Smith โ61 [K. Smith โ63 (11) l E. Snelz โ82 (5) n L. Stuckey II โ97 (10) n R. Swanson โ56 (13) t D. Weaver โ60 t R. Williams, Jr. โ58 l F. Wolf โ67 (11) t
32
Iona [N. Alvarez โ10 (2) [A. Burgman โ10 [A. Burke โ09 [B. Di Chiara โ11 [F. Finelli โ09 t J. Fleming โ05 (4) [W. Hargett โ10 [P. Huffman โ06 (2) [K. Johnson โ06 KEY m = Presidentโs Trust ($500+) t = Presidentโs n = Golden Delta ($100+)
[R. Losco โ10
(2)
F. Baird โ58 (5) K. Berkley โ61 (8) n J. Bertoglio โ58 n B. Biles โ66 (13) n W. Brainard โ56 t J. Brooks โ62 [ [J. Buddig โ10 [D. Buechel โ45 n E. Clarke โ42 (7) [C. Cram โ69 (5) l M. Crowther โ59 (9) [T. Emery โ57 n G. Frankamp โ12 (2) [T. Gage โ11 (2) t M. Goering โ91 (6) l G. Gray โ12 m L. Gregory โ75 (35) [S. Hagan โ13 l Z. Harsch โ12 n N. Hart โ56 (20) [C. Hayes โ13 [E. Hayes โ11 (2) [T. Holt โ88 l J. Hoppe โ68 t J. Hysom, Jr. โ57 (18) t O. Johnson, Jr. โ52 (12) t W. Landess โ53 [A. Levine โ12 [J. Light, Jr. โ51 n R. Mastin โ62 t G. McCann โ40 (2) t R. Morrison โ70 (5) t D. Morrison โ67 l M. Praeger โ64 (2) l B. Pyle โ12 (2) l J. Reitinger โ12 n R. Rowley โ13 m C. Saricks โ70 (33) m D. Slawson โ56 m P. Stork โ65 (3) [M. Thomas โ62 (4) [D. Torson โ10 l P. Trouslot โ60 J. Wright โ75 (8) t
[D. Millbauer โ95
t
[J. Munoz โ08
[M. Noonan โ11 [M. Opoku โ07 [E. Paparo โ11
(4)
[P. Peralta โ11 [G.
Rost โ12 (2)
[N. Sgambelluri โ09
(2)
Iowa l F. Ackerson โ44 (34) t R. Black โ95 (4) l T. Drake โ78 (11) [F. Folbrecht โ59 n R. Franklin โ97 n D. Frederick โ92 t M. Heckt โ46 (7) n D. Hinson โ57 (22) [F. Huebsch, Jr. โ52 (5) t B. John โ96 (8) t A. Kesman โ77 (2) m D. Knuepfer โ76 (6) [R. Kodros โ68 [G. Lamb โ94 (16) t D. Marston โ63 (3) [J. McCarragher โ68 (20) t K. Miller โ67 (29) l K. Nelson โ44 (3) [H. Parsons โ67 (2) [J. Pattie โ58 n R. Renfro โ48 l D. Rusk โ76 (32) [M. Sornsin โ91 t K. Weigel โ78 (32) t P. Wentzien โ59 [J. White โ86 Iowa State R. Allendorf โ83 (3) [H. Bentzinger โ44 l M. Bowman โ65 (12) t A. Brown โ60 (7) t K. Bruening โ80 (30) [D. Carne โ70 (3) [J. Carson โ73 t J. Courter โ84 (9) t J. Cronk โ60 (39) n C. Danielson โ47 (2) t R. Fleck โ49 (8) n C. Foss โ71 (10) n S. Hudson โ84 (5) t A. Johnson, Jr. โ47 (39) t B. Kinnamon โ69 (14) t M. Kuchel โ76 (10) t D. Larew [S. Loney โ74 (7) t R. Long โ51 (6) t J. Moodie โ45 (15) n D. Morse โ52 (9) t M. Nickey โ65 (25) t R. Patterson โ54 m W. Sigman โ50 (39) l A. Snyder โ86 (10) t A. Staidl โ69 l C. Trunkey โ52 (28) [C. Vermie โ73 (4) n G. Walker โ44 (17) l B. Welbourne โ99 R. Wood โ51 (16) t
Johns Hopkins (10) m R. Deichert, Jr. โ97 (7) n W. Gibson โ50 (7) n D. Hanson โ50 (22) [J. Hildebrandt โ43 (2) m C. Miller โ49 (2) n J. Parker, Jr. โ67 (4) t A. Pradhan โ96 t W. Smith โ54 (5) [C. Summers โ50 (2) [M. Boyd โ73
Johnson & Wales Colony [Z. Davis โ10 [A. Husvar โ11 Kansas
l W. Abels โ51
(4)
Kansas State H. Altwegg โ62 CEA n W. Bahr โ94 CEA [R. Baker โ11 m R. Berard โ91 CEA [M. Berkley โ63 n J. Bostwick โ07 CEA+ n L. Butel โ87 (10) l J. Callen โ62 (9) l S. Crosier โ87 l T. Curran โ05 CEA [J. Davis โ65 n P. Davis โ78 CEA [A. Delimont โ10 l R. Drake, Jr. โ77 CEA [K. Durflinger โ11 m P. Edgerley โ78 (16) CEA+ m J. Eplee โ75 (9) CEA+ m E. Franklin โ75 (2) t W. Gordon โ60 (23) CEA+ t M. Goss โ81 CEA n J. Gottfrid โ65 CEA [R. Greene โ58 (2) [J. Grice โ11 l J. Grinstead โ73 t D. Hawkins โ81 (2) CEA+ t T. Heiman โ76 CEA+ t B. Helvey โ58 (3) CEA+ l J. Howland โ71 CEA t D. Johnson โ75 (33) m C. Jones โ77 (16) CEA+ l C. Jones โ10 (3) [B. Jones โ11 (2) l B. Jubelt โ68 (6) [F. Jurenka โ59 (16) n L. Kendall โ68 CEA l D. Kientz โ11 [ J. Kinney โ10 n J. Knopp โ74 CEA [S. Lawrence โ87 n A. Link โ74 (2) CEA [M. Loeb โ12 (2) t S. Marzullo โ85 CEA n
l = Silver Delta ($50+) (#) = Consecutive # of years as a donor CEA = Chapter Educational Account gift
n
J. Miesse โ72 (7)
l
E. Musil โ71 (4) CEA C. Navis โ03 (4) CEA+ CEA n D. Nordstrom โ60 CEA t D. Norton โ75 (2) CEA t C. Olsen โ06 (2) CEA+ n J. Oppy โ64 (27) m H. Peterson โ67 (3) CEA m R. Porter โ72 CEA l B. Reinhardt โ83 t K. Ross โ02 CEA n R. Sebelius โ73 CEA [T. Sharp โ11 t A. Siders โ04 CEA+ l A. Sloup โ05 (3) l N. Steffey โ57 CEA l J. Swenson โ77 (6) l G. Turner โ63 CEA [R. Wilkerson โ11 (2) n W. York โ71 (2) CEA m m
[M. Nelson โ65
Kent State P. Bohlander โ67 [ J. Cady โ12 l P. Camerino โ57 (8) m D. Cassens โ68 (12) t R. Cellone โ67 m M. Cesa โ76 t M. Coppola, Jr. โ65 (21) l W. Cornell II โ01 t A. Dalcher โ57 (9) l A. Davis โ12 m M. DiFranco โ98 n D. Duke โ77 (3) [M. Estremera โ12 m J. Flask โ67 [B. Fodor โ12 t I. Gersten โ61 (16) t J. Gibson โ68 (11) [O. Gilbo โ65 (3) m N. Giorgianni โ56 (12) l J. Goclano โ12 m D. Grant โ70 (2) [P. Hall โ49 (3) m L. Holtz โ58 [ J. Kirk โ12 [A. Kriz โ12 t T. Litwiler โ56 (16) [J. Manninen โ57 (21) m M. Martens โ03 (4) l R. McNeil โ51 (7) n T. Meinhardt โ54 (14) [W. Miller โ65 t R. Muntzinger โ51 (13) [C. Nerad โ12 l G. Paris โ53 [D. Patenaude โ12 [M. Pfahl โ00 [ J. Pierce โ10 (2) [R. Potter โ64 (2) t M. Reeping โ94 t C. Rodgers โ60 (12) n L. Roth โ47 l W. Rummell โ53 l P. Shriver โ49 (22) n P. Shriver โ50 (15) [K. Skurkey โ68 (2) [R. Stevenson โ47 (15) n A. Thomas โ65 l H. Thomas โ59 (4) [R. Tidyman โ10 t W. VanBenthuysen โ61 (11) n J. Vitangeli โ60 l E. Walaszewski โ11 [M. Wankowski โ10 m D. Wright โ69 n
Lafayette
l T. Ashton โ86
Lehigh
n A. Alber โ65
(9) J. Alcaro โ74 (7) R. Allan โ68 (16) l A. Barker โ61 (4) [F. Batson, Jr. โ50 (15) [A. Beeken III โ45 l A. Cannon, Jr. โ74 (22) [ J. Cashen III โ55 n R. Christiansen โ56 [B. Conchar โ41 (11) l C. Curtiss โ43 (11) n D. Czerny โ74 (32) [J. Edell โ79 [C. Edwards โ41 (3) n J. Frank III โ68 (12) l R. Frey โ70 [E. Furst โ60 (29) [R. Gabriel โ51 (9) [B. Goldman โ58 [ J. Kurtz โ52 (14) l J. Lichter โ68 [E. Lucadamo โ71 (33) m L. Maroti โ58 (24) [N. Meier โ50 (13) m W. Moodie, Jr. โ47 (12) [G. Naylor โ71 (22) t M. Parseghian โ49 (19) n J. Perna โ76 (3) l J. Ramsay โ58 (5) t G. Ramsden โ44 (22) [R. Ruth โ68 n W. Salmond โ46 [D. Shaw โ52 n J. Sini โ68 (12) l W. Smith โ50 (10) [N. Welton โ10 (2) n
m
Long Beach [C. Cooper โ88 (13) Louisville [Anonymous (2) M. Barnes โ76 t R. Brand โ70 (18) l J. Brian โ87 (11) [A. Casson โ10 t B. Dahlem โ51 (8) l P. Disney, Jr. โ51 [P. Fussenegger โ79 (4) l G. Gaddie โ49 m W. Goldberg โ83 (3) [D. Grieshaber โ12 [J. Griffiths โ69 (22) [M. Hammond-Mujica โ10 n S. Hartstern โ70 (15) n J. McKinnon, Jr. โ77 t B. Mudrick โ82 (29) [A. Segovia โ09 m T. Talaat โ82 (10) [N. Wesselman โ12 [M. Withrow โ11 l
Maine [C. Hoak โ76 (3)
l T. Hooper โ89 t
(9) [S. Comanto โ11 [J. deRuyter โ73 (3) [R. Ernst, Jr. โ48 [R. Gordon โ54 (2) [G. Hintz โ10 [E. Mackey โ42 n P. Moser III โ68 (5)
R. Noreika โ67 (4) M. Panny โ10 (2) t V. Pontual โ08 m W. Rappolt โ67 (6) [G. Rivera โ10 (2) [G. Sanchez โ10 l H. Smith โ51 (33) l N. Snook โ59 [N. Sullivan โ00 (10) [L. Vanier โ07 m R. West โ53 (7) n J. Zembron โ74 (3) t
[S. Moore โ99
M. Lausier โ85 (5) (12) (11)
[S. Spear โ83
[D. Stairs โ80
Manitoba J. Brass โ73 (5) [D. Dickson โ10 t R. Jones โ67 (6) [T. Srivastava โ05 l
CEA+ = donor gave both to CEA and annual appeal Red text = also a donor to the Brick Campaign Italics = gift was a Parent gift
www.dUEF.org
fall2010_21-36_v1_jgl.indd 32
7/28/11 9:34 AM
Delta Upsilon Foundation 2009-2010 Annual Report Marietta [J. Bako โ63 t K. Brennan โ64 (26) [M. Chatterton โ94 (2) l T. Forbes โ64 l L. Galletto, Jr. โ83 t R. Graham โ75 [R. Krupp โ64 (3) [W. Richards โ57 (6) [C. Schmidt โ53 (7) [D. Stephan โ58 (2) l W. Thiessen, Jr. โ60 (2) l D. Trabilcy โ59 (9) l G. Woodring โ59 (5) l G. Yester โ51 (21) Maryland M. Caporaletti โ73 (21) [R. Costello โ65 (5) t P. Doetsch โ76 (4) l J. Girolami โ75 (17) [R. Goco โ87 (12) l P. McCusker โ85 (9) [G. Miller โ91 m J. Siegel โ78 (23) n
Massachusetts [M. Crosscup โ96 (7) McGill S. Brown โ90 R. Levy โ89 (7)
l n
Miami [B. Backoff โ10 (2) t H. Barker โ50 (40) n W. Brown โ52 l R. Bruckman โ49 (6) l J. Burgess โ00 (2) l H. Burr โ62 [B. Case โ03 (6) [A. Castaldi โ11 [A. Cramer โ12 l J. Derr โ45 (2) [A. Doellman โ12 [G. Durivage โ12 l W. Filter โ49 [A. Friedman โ11 t D. Fulton โ61 (2) [A. Funk โ12 [E. Gates โ48 (2) l P. Geiger โ63 (8) [W. Gerspacher โ63 t W. Gibson, Jr. โ51 (6) l B. Gilleland โ51 (4) l W. Gurney โ53 (3) [J. Hallihan โ67 (27) l F. Hershner โ49 (2) t J. Hillis โ64 Brick l J. Holschuh, Jr. โ77 l W. Jones โ64 [B. Kenney โ11 [J. Key โ64 (6) t D. Krebs โ80 (30) [R. Levy โ11 t W. Loomis โ59 (25) l R. Mayberry โ51 (2) n M. McCollum โ54 (7) t C. Miller โ90 (9) [G. Miller โ12 l T. OโKeefe โ82 (9) [D. OโMalley, Jr. โ11 [D. Petkoff โ11 n M. Plummer โ56 m J. Rogers โ57 (35) [E. Sarkisian โ85 (12) [R. Schoenherr โ63 (4) [D. Sechnick โ76 (13) n F. Shera โ63 [A. Snyder โ97 (5) [T. Springer โ99 [D. Sturtevant โ10 [R. Sunkel โ53 (23) l P. Swanson โ59 l T. Vaughn โ98 (2) [R. Vernon โ54 (6) l J. Wettengel โ65 (4) t C. Young โ57 (4) Michigan
l W. Alexander โ47
(2) [D. Baumgarten โ79 (3) [S. Craig โ11 (2)
S. Derhammer โ09 (3) [A. Gaggin โ11 n W. Hole, Jr. โ51 (6) [R. Holloway โ51 n R. Johnson โ74 l M. Keagy โ11 t C. Kern II โ84 (7) t J. Layman โ55 (7) l G. Lowery โ83 t W. McIntosh โ53 (12) [T. Mowry โ70 (5) n K. Murray โ79 (2) t G. Nicolau โ48 (6) l J. Orlowski โ11 G. Seraydarian โ12 t J. Sergeson โ59 n R. Spencer III โ59 (11) [T. Spencer โ65 [J. Stevens โ11 [J. Stuart โ52 (5) t J. Tolonen โ71 m J. White โ50 (40) l J. Widen โ12 n
t A. Englehart โ06
Michigan State m C. Allen โ55 (29) l R. Anthony โ69 D. Carpenter โ63 (11) l D. DeVries โ56 m P. D. Franzetta โ70 (34) t G. Gross โ63 (13) n B. Hoot โ65 (33) [T. Hyslop โ80 (5) n R. Johnson โ54 l S. Knox, Jr. โ68 (3) [L. Maccani โ56 (13) t T. Mortenson โ61 (6) n D. Neese โ68 (20) l J. Ryan โ55 (31) l W. Savage โ56 (18) l J. Schmidt โ59 n L. Seguin โ53 l G. Shannon โ62 n G. Snyder โ57 (10) n J. Tanton โ56 (11) m R. Thompson โ67 (40) t G. Whitson โ52 l R. Zimmerman โ53 (16) Michigan Tech [C. Capo โ11 (2) [S. Darin โ90 (2) [T. Domcik โ09 t T. Erickson โ02 (2) [ J. Hudson โ13 l M. Lathia โ04 (2) t D. Mertens โ94 (10) n A. Mitteer โ03 (4) [T. Wendt โ13 l D. Wetzel โ94 (2) Middlebury (8) l P. Dunham โ45 (10) l W. Fuller โ54 (3) n R. Johnson โ58 (18) l T. Carey โ86
Minnesota (18) [L. Baker โ65 (10) n S. Bormann โ64 n A. Colombo โ54 (7) t C. Ellingson โ92 (6) [L. Fredrickson โ75 n J. Gausman โ50 (18) m J. Hamann โ59 (12) [S. Kim โ75 t A. Mann โ51 m D. McKeag IV โ04 (8) CEA+ t R. Nelson โ63 (14) [W. Siemers โ11 (2) [C. Stoehr II โ65 l J. Sullivan โ49 (3) m P. Wilke, Jr. โ50 (39) m T. Wu โ03 (2) t J. Zeese โ59 (15) t A. Allen โ49
Missouri G. Allemann โ69 (35) R. Anderson โ63 (2) [G. Bistline โ76 (5) t W. Black โ59 (3) l l
[W. Bradley โ54
t T. Brady โ62
(11) (3)
J. Capps โ67 J. Culpepper โ57 (8) P. Edwards โ02 (4) t J. Ehrlich โ67 (29) l R. Ellis โ59 (2) l L. Gorski โ13 l E. Gray โ76 l W. Hamlin โ60 (2) m W. Harwell, Jr. โ51 (15) l J. Holdsworth โ87 n L. Hubbard โ55 (5) n J. Jeans, Jr. โ53 l A. Kaestner โ57 t J. King โ75 l S. McFarland โ81 (2) m E. McKinney โ74 (8) t L. Miller, Jr. โ82 (2) [B. Mitchell โ60 [R. Nelson โ83 (24) t T. Norris โ60 (10) [D. Press โ58 (4) l G. Rector โ62 (14) l S. Richards โ64 (8) l J. Rowland โ64 [R. Schiavo โ11 (2) n W. Schoenhard โ71 m J. Seitz II โ59 (18) l B. Tarantola โ81 (14) [D. Tesarek โ55 (9) n W. Weber โ55 (4) t R. Yingling, Jr. โ62 (36) n n
Nebraska
m T. Biggerstaff โ63 t
(3) R. Campbell โ68 (15)
[T. Campbell โ67 t l
S. Carlson โ54 (10) H. Douglass โ59 (5)
[R. Glover โ62
R. Harmon โ64 (2) S. Henning โ85 (8) t R. Hirsch โ66 (3) [J. Houchin โ85 (9) l M. Humphrey โ63 [G. Jacobson โ09 [C. Kokjer โ46 [G. Kratz โ05 CEA [P. Kratz โ72 CEA t W. Krommenhoek โ57 (37) [W. Kubert โ64 [W. Lallman โ89 t R. Lannin โ81 (10) CEA+ [K. Leach โ85 (11) [B. Lee โ74 (10) m R. Loch โ54 (7) l F. Meier โ42 (6) [A. Melville โ96 (10) n R. Neal โ56 (2) n R. Noble โ49 (2) [M. Norris โ12 (2) [G. Novotny, Jr. โ66 [N. Pearce โ10 [M. Rogge โ12 [T. Schnell โ89 (2) l S. Schuster โ93 [R. Seline โ78 n R. Shively โ82 (28) n A. Sigerson โ93 l H. Smith โ65 (15) n D. Spencer โ85 [M. Stanley โ10 (2) l J. Warrick โ59 (11) l t
New York [C. Hoover โ40 (31) North Carolina n J. Allen โ73 t R. Ayres โ65 (13) l M. Baratta โ81 (17) [A. Barrett โ12 l E. Bunting, Jr. โ67 n R. Coleman III โ68 (2) [T. Cornell โ57 n W. Crawford โ76 (12) m J. DeBlasio โ62 (12) m C. Downton III โ66 (5) t J. Fluet, Jr. โ65 (2) [A. Ginn โ11 m J. Goforth, Jr. โ66 (7)
R. Gray โ59 (5) (3) l E. Johnson โ55 n J. Joyner, Jr. โ77 (23) n L. Lewis, Jr. โ67 n S. McClanahan โ74 (15) n T. Parker โ09 (4) t H. Pawlik โ54 n C. Pippert โ91 (5) t W. Rose โ69 (23) t J. Ruddell, Jr. โ71 (2) l C. Schumacher โ73 (4) l A. Subramanian โ97 (13) [K. Sullivan โ86 (15) n E. Taff โ61 (22) n R. Trenbath โ65 (2) t S. Wallenhaupt โ74 (8) t S. Weiss โ77 t G. Wessling โ74 (3) l R. Wing โ70 (4) t B. Wright, Jr. โ64 l T. Yermack โ78 (14) m
n W. Jobe โ63
North Carolina State [ J. Bullard โ11 (2) [A. Compton โ09 (2) [A. Davis โ11 [M. Gromlich โ12 l J. Harke โ07 t P. Klinefelter โ80 (12) n E. Lach, Jr. โ79 (4) [S. Lo โ09 (2) [D. Massengill, Jr. โ11 (2) [B. Mathis โ09 [M. Miller โ10 [B. Pack โ80 (8) [C. Parker โ10 [A. Rojas-Holmquist โ11 (3) [T. Stevens โ11 (2) [C. Sutton โ11 (2) m R. Taylor โ82 (6) CEA+ [W. Taylor โ10 (3) [ J. Williams โ11 North Dakota (4) D. Bruschwein โ74 (12) n A. Daily โ11 [T. Dolan โ72 (12) [D. Egesdal โ88 l D. Finke โ74 J. Freden โ08 [J. Furst โ81 (2) l J. Keenan โ13 [R. Kirsch โ78 (3) [S. Lebovitz โ11 [J. Lindvig โ11 n D. McLeod โ63 (18) l C. Mock โ08 (5) [J. OโGrady โ71 [D. Rasmussen โ12 (2) l K. Rother โ09 (3) l C. Sundal โ13 l S. Swenson โ75 n R. Szczys โ69 (11) [D. Wehr โ09 (2) [J. Atkinson โ09
l
North Dakota State C. Dworshak โ00 (9) CEA+ [H. Hagen โ86 (7)
m
North Florida [M. Breidenstein โ07 [M. Haley โ12 (2) [H. Ray โ09 [Z. Thomas โ09 Northern Colorado [C. Belt โ92 (4) D. Falter โ03 (2) t P. Gerhart โ04 (5) [P. Schott โ96 (14) l
Northern Illinois [S. Borbely โ66 (4) [J. Carlson โ70 (4) [R. Cherry โ73 n J. Chesko โ71 (2) t A. Knox โ77 (12) [J. Landstrom โ70 (3) m J. Lotsoff โ88 (23) m W. Malloy III โ69 (5) l L. Michna โ84 (12)
[K. Moline โ74
(4)
[S. Murphy โ90
E. Nosek โ85 (12) J. Rembusch โ66 (3) (2) l W. Tyler, Jr. โ65 (4) m n
[S. Trausch โ11
Northern Iowa S. Anderson โ79 (29) B. Cory โ75 (3) t A. Culley โ00 (10) m J. Fuhrman โ94 (10) [K. Krause โ83 (2) [M. Melcher โ92 (16) [C. Nyguard โ91 t t
Northwestern [E. Akemann โ62 (3) [D. Armstrong โ46 n M. Beaubien, Jr. โ64 (7) n W. Boyd โ48 (12) m P. Bridgford โ56 (4) l H. Cakora โ59 (2) l D. Costello โ54 (24) n R. Countryman, Jr. โ50 (5) n C. Crowe, Jr. โ55 (8) n M. Darraugh โ76 t J. Davis โ65 (9) [C. Davis โ11 l J. Dorn โ54 (10) t H. Evert โ56 (11) t S. Ferguson โ75 l A. Ferraro โ59 (2) t R. Grottke โ52 (15) l G. Happe โ50 (4) m E. Heizer, Jr. โ51 n R. Horvath โ59 (3) l J. Karwath โ97 (2) l R. Kling, Sr. โ44 (3) n S. Knight II โ55 n J. Kraebber โ58 m D. Kramlich โ59 (11) [G. Lose โ57 [D. Martens โ59 (3) n S. Martin, Jr. โ56 (3) l J. Montgomery โ43 (8) t J. Nelson โ63 (40) t J. Nemeth โ99 m R. Newman II โ59 (15) l C. Norborg โ62 [ [A. Pegram โ12 m T. Rakow โ65 (6) [T. Smithburg โ10 l R. Spencer โ51 t H. Stevens โ46 (9) n J. Tessler โ11 (2) l R. Van Vooren โ53 (9) [R. Whisnant โ98 n R. White, Jr. โ52 m C. Williams โ62 (6)
33
Ohio [C. Coulton โ65 (2) [B. Holschuh โ12 [R. Leibreich โ11 l G. Logsdon โ62 (9) l M. Logsdon โ64 (9) t R. McDonald โ73 (5) n K. Mick โ67 (7) l W. Mock โ66 [C. Palmer โ60 l E. Paxton โ68 m S. Rowley โ65 (20) [P. Seders โ11 l W. Spanfellner โ61 (21) n R. Uvena โ64 [T. Walker โ80 (7) [ J. Weimer โ68 l J. Wills โ70 n W. Wright โ61 (9) Ohio State
t W. Ballinger โ49
(7) (4) l S. Blozis โ80 (4) l W. Buchsieb โ51 (5) t J. Carle โ61 (14) l W. Deming โ35 [R. Dickson โ50 l D. Gordon โ63 (9) [T. Hoover โ56 (30) t N. Johnson โ43 (4) l E. Kilby โ75 (4) l W. Barnes โ49
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Delta Upsilon Foundation 2009-2010 Annual Report
[A. Kimbrell โ99
(6) C. Lurding โ59 (6) l S. McCormick โ92 (18) l P. Porter โ50 (19) [A. Rapien โ10 l B. Reagan โ78 (4) l R. Reamer โ64 (12) l N. Robbins โ63 n D. Rohrer โ49 (2) [R. Schieferstein โ66 (10) l L. Selvey โ48 (5) [B. Silla โ52 [M. Simpson โ10 n J. Underwood โ62 [D. Veverka โ78 l T. Voght โ97 (13) l W. Walker โ54 (8) t G. Weingardt โ55 (10) l C. Wertz, Sr. โ52 t J. Wingard โ63 (5) t
Oklahoma C. Brim โ92 (3) l G. Carr โ83 (14) [K. Christian โ12 l C. Coleman โ81 (7) [C. Connell โ10 t S. Cox โ92 n W. Daly โ12 [J. Darakhshan โ09 (5) m T. Dowd โ75 (5) [B. Ellison โ09 t W. Felton III โ72 (3) l C. Frymire โ79 t W. Hamilton โ57 (8) [L. Hann โ12 t G. Haymon โ77 l K. Hirsch โ74 (8) l J. Holly โ12 [Z. Holly โ12 t S. Holm โ92 (3) [T. Hudiburgh โ78 (9) t P. Hurley โ64 (3) n R. Johannes โ61 l K. Kickingbird โ66 (2) [C. Klieger โ11 t J. Levorsen โ50 (5) [ J. Nelson โ10 n G. Noland II โ86 t T. OโBannon โ82 (14) t S. Patterson โ42 (13) n R. Polk โ89 t A. Porter โ65 t M. Rupert โ74 (34) n M. Seddelmeyer โ07 (2) m S. Snyder โ79 (5) n D. Stussi โ77 (10) [A. Swift โ12 Parent m B. Walkingstick โ52 (38) t E. Waller, Jr. โ51 (8) t R. Wells โ82 (8) [J. West โ12 l H. Wilson โ55 (6) t
34
Oklahoma State l W. Clovis โ75 n J. Seals โ68 (3) Oregon t J. Allan โ53 (17) [B. Anderson โ57 (22) l H. Bachofner โ50 t J. Ciatti โ64 t R. Davies โ49 (5) l D. Donile โ95 (3) l M. Frandsen โ70 [E. Goffard โ49 (7) t D. Greene โ99 (11) [F. Johnson โ55 (3) l F. Lovell โ49 t T. Mattson โ63 (40) [D. Mecklem โ53 (3) l G. Moulds โ64 (11) [J. Naumes โ03 (4) l R. Neely โ50
KEY m = Presidentโs Trust ($500+) t = Presidentโs n = Golden Delta ($100+)
R. Newell โ65 (6) R. Price โ62 (22) t W. Shepherd, Jr. โ55 [A. Shields โ69 (4) l J. Smith โ92 (12) t D. Sorenson โ71 (5) [ J. Swearingen โ12 [G. Taylor โ11 [J. Trigg โ58 (11) t B. Walsh โ64 [R. Watson โ71 (10) m J. Weisel โ48 (29) n n
Oregon State [C. Anderson โ10 [R. Bake โ07 t T. Bays โ42 (35) [M. Buxton โ11 (2) [T. Carey โ12 [J. Castle โ07 [E. Doran โ11 t R. Dowhaniuk โ86 t W. Down โ43 (7) m J. Duncan, Jr. โ00 m T. Durein โ92 (18) t W. Harkey โ71 (7) t R. Hartley โ54 l D. Hendrickson โ51 R. Horne โ52 (9) l R. Smith โ95 (2) [N. Smith โ12 [K. Tuerffs โ13 Pace B. Furlong โ09 (3) T. Guarino โ10 (3) [E. Redden โ12 l N. Wargo โ06 l l
Pacific A. Anderson โ12 L. Cowan โ12 n J. DuMond, Jr. โ66 [ J. Fuller โ10 (2) [ G. Hess, Jr. โ64 [ J. Madsen โ65 (2) [M. Millette โ10 [M. Rea โ12 [ [
Pan American O. Ostorga โ11 (2)
[
Pennsylvania H. Acaster โ44 (40) [ J. Beach โ62 (7) [ B. Blecherman โ82 (3) l R. Canfield โ61 (6) t G. Cleveland โ61 n G. Curchin โ50 (9) n A. Elseroad, Jr. โ53 (6) [ E. Gentino, Jr. โ50 (5) [ G. Graf, Jr. โ55 (22) [ J. Hall โ91 (2) m R. Marx โ54 (13) l R. McVay โ54 (5) [ A. Noble โ51 (12) l W. Ozmore โ12 l B. Short โ91 n C. Stehman โ49 V. Wolfsohn โ48 (12) m
Pennsylvania State B. Balderston โ76 (20) R. Baldwin โ57 (16) [J. Batchelor โ84 (6) l W. Bilohorka โ50 [R. Brooks โ49 (4) l A. Cocking โ11 n R. Crosby โ54 (9) l J. DโAntonio โ93 (12) n L. Dash โ92 (18) n W. Davidson โ59 n J. Dubinsky, Sr. โ59 (6) t K. Edwards โ71 (2) [W. Haffner โ54 [ W. Hershey โ50 t n
[H. Hilner โ59
(23) J. Johnston โ58 (39) l G. Kowatch โ81 (5) [W. Landherr, Jr. โ59 (2) n D. Merenda โ77 (13) [R. Noah โ57 (30) [A. Policelli โ67 l C. Prutzman, Sr. โ72 (4) [W. Reynolds โ49 l T. Samuel II โ91 [T. Sica โ41 (10) [P. Strittmatter โ50 [ J. Temple, Jr. โ74 (2) l R. Yeager โ96 t R. Zakos, Jr. โ02 (9) t
Purdue B. Anderson โ65 (34) [M. Banks โ02 [K. Baumel โ62 (10) n J. Beacham โ54 (5) [D. Bielefeld โ61 (6) [L. Bowler โ71 t J. Brennan, Jr. โ55 (30) t W. Briscoe โ65 (5) t R. Brown โ46 (20) G. Burgin โ11 l R. Byrne โ68 (18) m G. Caine โ81 (8) n W. Chen โ94 t R. Coble โ58 l W. Cross โ44 [J. DeVoll โ63 (10) [D. Doyle โ03 l C. Dressler โ06 [D. Duffin โ44 l P. Fearing โ63 n D. Fitzgerald โ49 (26) t T. Foote โ50 (30) t F. Ford โ58 n J. Foster โ65 l R. Fox โ63 (11) [B. Frazee โ10 (2) t R. Gimlin โ42 (2) l M. Guthrie, Jr. โ45 t R. Hallman โ54 (39) m R. Hegeman โ49 (15) [M. Hogan โ85 (25) t C. Hoppe โ57 (5) l C. Houff โ53 l J. Jones โ48 (8) t H. Klein โ46 (2) [K. Kolmer โ81 (9) n O. Kuehrmann โ57 M. Laccavole โ12 t A. Lacis โ64 (26) t R. LaFortune โ51 (39) m B. Lee, Jr. โ51 (13) l E. Letts โ67 (10) n J. Mancher โ10 (2) t K. McClain โ71 (6) t G. Moss โ47 (31) [C. Nutting โ51 (3) t N. Popham โ54 (12) t R. Popham โ40 (40) n B. Price โ05 l R. Rhine โ77 (10) l W. Robinson โ98 (4) n W. Shumaker โ55 (5) l J. Smith โ52 (13) t A. Steiger โ48 (9) [J. Sweeney โ64 (15) [D. Tydd โ10 l J. Unruh โ83 l A. Voelker โ95 (12) t C. VonGrimmenstein โ49 t D. Whitehurst โ59 (5) l N. Williams โ64 (12) [W. Wilson โ92 (15) [D. Zak โ51 t
Ripon l J. Beisner โ71 (2) G. Rieder โ82
l = Silver Delta ($50+) (#) = Consecutive # of years as a donor CEA = Chapter Educational Account gift
Rochester III โ66 (9) n J. Bassingthwaite โ92 (9) t L. Bilker โ91 N. Chirunomula โ11 n E. Danton โ98 (9) [G. Ehinger โ73 (2) [E. Garfield, Jr. โ53 (18) [J. Lawrence โ02 [M. Letaconnoux โ11 t A. Magistro โ60 (33) J. Magloire โ93 t D. Reisfeld โ03 (9) t R. Rohr โ63 l P. Rouff โ96 (15) [P. Ryan โ46 m S. Santandrea โ56 (8) l G. Sukenik โ10 l R. Woods โ42 (15) l T. Barnes
Rutgers [C. Adelizzi โ62 (16) [A. Bolter โ56 n T. Cameron โ49 [L. Cipriani, Jr. โ75 (4) l M. Darder โ73 t J. David โ63 (14) n L. English, Jr. โ63 [R. Gies โ42 [G. Green โ40 (10) t S. Hahner โ78 (31) n C. Hart โ54 (10) m J. Herma โ70 (30) t A. Herr โ54 (5) W. Kaiser โ59 (2) J. Kolessar III โ69 t B. Kramer โ62 l F. Kroesen โ44 (3) l C. Little โ60 (11) t A. Malekoff โ73 (11) A. Mckenna โ12 G. McLaren โ75 l J. Miller โ60 (2) l J. Nazzaro โ62 (10) n R. Stites โ53 n J. Strampfer โ72 (7) [G. Sundstrom โ54 t W. Symons โ66 San Diego t T. Darcy โ72 (8) [P. Fieri โ73 n A. Glaves โ81 l M. Hartell โ67 t B. Howard โ70 (8) [D. Jacobson โ06 (5) [J. Jones โ12 l C. Kiehler โ81 (2) [S. Lewis โ96 (2) l C. OโConnor โ91 [R. Smith โ12 San Fernando M. Donnelly โ68 (29) [J. Phillips โ65
l
San Jose J. Agan โ57 (4) m E. Bontadelli โ50 (11) CEA n S. Borges โ56 [R. Brady โ63 (13) [B. Brown โ56 (13) m G. Brown โ57 CEA m G. Bruntz โ57 CEA [ S. Canchola โ09 [ L. Carothers โ11 n D. Colby โ56 (12) l J. Colwell โ55 (5) m H. Down, Jr. โ53 (3) CEA t A. Dunham โ86 (5) t A. Eisiminger โ11 (2) t J. Fields โ66 (2) l T. Fitch โ88 m J. Freitas โ55 (2) CEA l R. Harder โ54 l
m T. Harney โ52
(10) CEA+ D. Heagerty โ50 CEA+ l C. Henderson โ10 (3) [A. Jones โ11 (2) [C. Jones โ09 (2) n H. Jorgensen โ07 (2) m C. Kamm โ57 (7) CEA [ P. Kauffman โ10 [ W. Kong โ10 (2) [ K. Lapp โ11 (2) [ A. Law โ11 m D. Losee โ59 CEA m J. Luckhardt โ56 (3) m A. Lund โ55 (11) CEA m D. Madsen โ66 CEA n B. McNay โ12 m W. Miller, Jr. โ52 m J. Moeller โ52 CEA+ m J. Morey, Jr. โ58 (4) CEA+ l N. Mosher โ11 (2) [ D. Notaro โ10 (4) [ R. Pike โ58 (2) t J. Pollack โ67 (4) B. Ralph โ10 (2) m R. Roe โ59 CEA t T. Slintak โ08 (6) l L. Spolyar โ52 m P. Spooner โ55 (13) [ K. Swanson โ85 [L. Sweeney, Jr. โ55 t H. Thompson โ58 (4) m J. Tormey, Jr. โ57 (11) CEA+ m P. Ueberroth โ59 [N. Valenziano โ12 [S. Vallejo โ12 l R. Wallace โ90 (4) m T. Wallace โ60 CEA [ T. Webb โ81 Brick m S. Yates โ55 (18) CEA+ m
Santa Barbara R. LaFontaine โ91 (7) (12)
t
t T. Sullivan โ95
Shippensburg Colony [R. Price โ11 [K. Williams โ11 South Carolina [C. Allgood โ11 n B. Bullard โ12 l J. Estes III โ90 [A. Fratangelo โ11 l J. Freyer โ94 (7) t F. Goolsby โ81 (8) t R. Heroux, Jr. โ84 (4) t J. Herron โ88 (23) [R. Kennedy โ12 [R. Lenart โ12 n M. Pine โ85 (9) m T. Schmoyer, Jr. โ88 (15) l M. Washburn โ91 (3) South Dakota P. Christiansen โ75 (3) l M. Harrington โ71 (6) n
Southern Illinois M. Carr โ73 (9) t D. Maguire โ73 (32) l
Southwest Missouri D. Blatner โ86
t
Southwest Texas J. Keller โ73 (10) n D. Reynolds โ73 (4) n
St. Norbert J. Flanagan โ93 (9) B. Hammer โ11
n l
Stanford
[ A. Breech โ74 l
(2) L. Chaffin, Jr. โ56
[ A. Cheney โ55 l
D. Cutter โ51 (40)
CEA+ = donor gave both to CEA and annual appeal Red text = also a donor to the Brick Campaign Italics = gift was a Parent gift
www.dUEF.org
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Delta Upsilon Foundation 2009-2010 Annual Report [
P. Hearne โ60
l W. Hirst, Jr. โ40
(2) [ R. Lowry, Jr. โ83 l S. Richmond โ60 n R. Smith โ59 (4) [ B. Wilson โ50 (22) Swarthmore III โ74 (4) (3) l R. Hall โ52 (8) [S. Heiser โ72 (3) n T. Henderer โ60 (6) [V. Jose โ44 (7) [C. Leith โ81 l K. Selverian โ97 l B. Snavely โ57 [R. Sundt โ50 (5) [H. Bedolfe
[H. Bode, Jr. โ55
Syracuse R. Aikman, Jr. โ56 (16) [K. Berlin โ92 (3) t R. Broad โ60 (15) t G. Caplan โ55 (3) [R. Diver, Jr. โ50 t J. Dytman โ71 (11) n R. Eckardt โ66 (2) l G. Faigle โ59 (3) [T. Finnell โ57 (32) [W. Freiert โ51 t J. Freyer, Sr. โ61 [J. Gold โ79 n J. Heider โ54 (11) t M. Jenney โ55 (6) m C. Laidlaw, Jr. โ55 t G. Larson โ83 n J. McHenry โ81 [W. Namack III โ57 (2) n D. Pipher โ73 (3) l M. Reiser โ68 (7) [ L. Rhodes โ57 n D. Robitaille โ82 n R. Sack โ82 l E. Salisbury โ40 t E. Shaw โ66 (3) [W. Stark, Jr. โ47 (8) t A. Stauderman, Jr. โ58 (25) [R. Terwilliger โ51 (3) t R. Thorpe โ60 (22) l P. Zarins โ60 (5) l
Technology [D. Alusic โ64 (3) [S. Balsbaugh โ54 (9) t J. Buell, Jr. โ56 (5) [T. Ciesielski โ11 (2) t H. Crowther โ54 (9) n H. Drab, Jr. โ69 (7) [E. Ehrlich โ55 [B. Gardiner โ11 Parent [C. Hagge II โ57 l T. Hoffman โ87 (13) l M. Huke โ65 (24) n T. Johnson โ93 (3) t E. Kavazanjian, Jr. โ73 (9) [ R. LeBoeuf โ88 (22) n R. Mackintosh โ53 (2) l S. Martin, Jr. โ50 (8) l D. Maurer โ78 (12) [T. Nowak, Jr. โ71 (2) t K. Suelthaus โ66 (5) [ Z. Swanson โ71 (2) [D. Warren, Jr. โ76 (2) l S. Wood โ69 (31) t R. Wothe โ58 J. Zhou โ10 Tennessee D. Cowe โ73 t T. Knies โ71 (7) t D. Mouron, Jr. โ77 (8) n D. Myers โ74 (30) [K. Snyder โ94 (6) t
Texas H. Adams โ88 (5) J. Allums โ59 (8) t R. Bryant โ74 t J. Cassell, Jr. โ70 (34) n J. Dunlap โ73 (32) t J. Gresham โ71 (7) n T. Heins โ65 (5) [ J. Jett โ73 t M. Mitchell โ65 (40) t t
l W. Nelson โ59
(8) (40) [W. Tibbitts III โ61 (21) n L. Waters โ73 (32) n S. Wolf โ76 (2) l J. Word โ68 (6) t A. Polser, Jr. โ65
Where do Your Dollars Go? Every year Delta Upsilonโs donorsโ faithful and generous gifts go towards the support of many areas that help make our Fraternity stronger. They include:
Texas A & M [K. Hickman โ87 (12) Toronto
[ A. Czarnowski โ11
[M. Economopoulos โ93 [D. Paupera โ11
[R. Prusinski โ11
Tufts E. Casabian, Jr. โ64 (13) l C. Erickson โ64 (8) [T. Fahy โ92 n R. Fletcher โ54 n J. Fonda โ51 n J. Furlong II โ68 [W. Healey III โ75 [R. May โ62 t D. Morse โ42 (40) t D. Picard โ81 t K. Valentine โ67 (15) n D. Vinton โ52 (6) [H. Wilkinson โ69 (38) [
UCLA S. Howard โ41 (23) D. Lyons โ44 (11) [R. Mancini โ50
t l
Union B. Bonanno โ77 (2) N. Botsford, Jr. โ54 (22) [D. Cate โ62 (13) [R. Cooch โ43 (6) n J. Gardeski โ51 (13) l R. Gardner โ51 l J. Greve โ51 n S. Hayes โ89 (15) l W. Hesse โ49 t R. Jarrett โ51 (6) l K. Merz โ69 (3) [ M. Meslink โ65 [R. Obremski โ59 l M. OโMeara, Jr. โ50 (9) [ l
Virginia M. Ashbury, Jr. โ54 (24) l D. Barbour โ77 (22) t W. Brookhart โ71 (24) [J. Craig III โ11 [R. Cunningham โ10 l W. Daniel โ67 (3) [ R. Edsall โ10 l L. Eppard โ90 (2) [G. Ferrell โ70 (10) [ J. Fogarty โ10 (2) m N. Frazier, Jr. โ99 (9) [ J. Hales III โ82 [N. Haynes โ12 [J. Hoover, Jr. โ81 CEA l S. King โ69 (4) [B. Luke โ11 [B. Mercer โ11 [T. Neale โ74 (3) m M. Ryan โ86 (2) l A. Saufley โ54 (23) [W. Updike โ63 l
Washington J. Aitken โ70 (8) l P. Anderson โ09 (5) n D. Baer โ82 (12) l R. Bienenfeld โ72 N. Bogusz โ10 n R. Braun โ58 n R. Bryan โ56 (4) t K. Carlton โ86 (9) [ J. Chapman โ11 [ G. Cobley โ41 n M. Cochrane โ09 (4) t L. Dam โ68 (5) l R. Duncan โ66 t W. Dwight โ79 (6) [ K. Eiford โ10 (4) l B. Elfers โ92 (18) t J. Eyler โ69 (31) m R. Fagan โ52 (13) [ S. Fisher โ87 (11) t
(8)
The Leadership Institute โ Since 1948, the annual Delta Upsilon Convention & Assembly has been included within what we now know as the Leadership Institute. For nearly 60 years and counting, the Leadership Institute has provided stellar educational programming to undergraduate and alumni members of Delta Upsilon. The Winter Educational Conference โ First instituted in 1995 as the Presidents Academy, the WEC now includes educational programming for chapter presidents and the vice-presidents of recruitment. The three-day conference is designed to assist these officers in their leadership and management function to help build a stronger Delta Upsilon. The Leadership Consultant Program โ This program was established to employ recent graduate members to serve as representatives of the Fraternity who are trained to assist chapter/colony members and alumni advisors to advance the principles of DU.
35
Chapter Services Support โ IHQ serves as a clearinghouse for an assortment of educational manuals, videos, programming services, personnel resources, and management tools. The Chapter Services department supervises the development and implementation of these educational resources. Charles Evans Hughes DU Emerging Leaders (DUEL) Experience โ Launched at the 2000 Leadership Institute, the DUEL Program is designed for our chapterโs newest members (freshmen and sophomores). Participants receive customized training in leadership philosophies, group dynamics, confrontation, service learning, public speaking, and motivation. The program is held in Williamstown, Mass., where the participants experience the history and heritage of DU at the Fraternityโs founding site. Regional Leadership Seminars โ These regional meetings bring chapters in a particular province together to share ideas and techniques and learn innovative membership and chapter leadership skills. DU continues to evaluate its personal growth and membership education curriculum tailored to all DU members. McQuaid Scholarship Fund โ Undergraduate Scholarships and Graduate Fellowships are awarded annually to brothers who apply and are selected to receive $2,500 grants to help further their education. The scholarship was established in 2000 to honor the service of Brother James D. McQuaid, Chicago โ60.
www.dUEF.org
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D๏ฅ๏ฌ๏ด๏ก U๏ฐ๏ณ๏ฉ๏ฌ๏ฏ๏ฎ F๏ฏ๏ต๏ฎ๏ค๏ก๏ด๏ฉ๏ฏ๏ฎ 2009-2010 A๏ฎ๏ฎ๏ต๏ก๏ฌ R๏ฅ๏ฐ๏ฏ๏ฒ๏ด B. Fortier โ87 (9) D. Habib โ86 (7) ๏ฌ S. Habib โ83 ๏ฎ G. Harris โ71 (16) ๏ฌ I. Hastings โ56 ๏ฎ W. Henderson โ59 (4) ๏ฎ T. Hendrickson โ67 ๏ B. Hicks โ09 ๏ R. Horne โ89 (10) ๏ C. Jacobson โ11 ๏ T. Jacobson โ13 ๏ด K. Kaneta โ59 (40) ๏ฌ B. Keen โ50 (15) ๏ D. Kraft โ48 ๏ด R. LaBerge โ87 (12) ๏ K. Mackey โ77 (11) ๏ด R. Martin โ59 (40) ๏ฌ V. Martin โ66 (4) ๏ฎ V. McDonald โ48 ๏ด D. Morford โ56 (8) ๏ฎ D. Nielsen โ60 ๏ Z. Ormsby โ10 ๏ด B. Raskin โ85 ๏ฌ D. Ravander โ86 (11) ๏ J. Russell โ79 ๏ K. Sahagun โ08 (5) ๏ด W. Smith, Jr. โ70 (2) ๏ด R. Stewart โ64 ๏ฎ J. Taylor โ90 (8) ๏ฎ K. Toal โ11 ๏ญ P. Tuohy โ53 (10) ๏ A. Weinstein โ11 ๏J. Wiltse, Jr. โ60 (6) ๏ฎ J. Winters โ52 (2) ๏ฎ R. Young โ50 (13) ๏ ๏ด
WASHINGTON & LEE J. Hess โ60 (10) ๏L. Lawrence โ59 (27) ๏P. Muller โ55 ๏ฌ G. Whitehurst โ50 (12)
๏
$4.0M 4000000
Delta Uspilon Foundation Total Assets $3,529,676
$3.5M 3500000
$3,401,504
$3,439,916
$3,516,098
$3,169,272
$3.0M 3000000
$3,052,789 $2,854,678
$2.5M 2500000
$2.0M 2000000
$1.5M 1500000
$1.0M 1000000
๏
36
WASHINGTON STATE L. Amos โ68 (32) ๏ด B. Anderson โ95 (3) CEA ๏ด M. Anderson โ79 CEA ๏ด E. Babbitt โ79 CEA ๏ฌ R. Brandenburg โ55 ๏ฌ G. Copeland โ83 (2) CEA ๏ด F. Cox III โ80 CEA ๏ด W. Cutler โ55 CEA ๏ญ T. Gilchrist โ83 (2) CEA ๏ฎ K. Guiberson โ92 CEA ๏ฌ D. Hambelton โ75 (9) ๏ R. Hunter โ50 (7) ๏ด C. Kurtak โ42 (25) ๏ญ T. Marker โ81 (3) CEA ๏ฎ K. McDonough โ83 CEA ๏ญ R. McKinlay โ77 CEA ๏ฌ A. Menard โ11 ๏ฌ V. Moreman โ63 (9) ๏ L. Quadracci โ11 ๏ญ M. Rowe โ78 (2) CEA ๏ด R. Sherwood โ64 (2) ๏ญ J. Simpkins โ81 (10) CEA+ ๏ฌ R. St. Laurent โ12 ๏ด G. Studle โ57 (39) ๏ด E. Swanson โ93 CEA ๏ด D. Uyeda โ91 CEA ๏ด J. Webb, Jr. โ94 (3) CEA ๏C. Williams โ92 CEA
$500K 500000
๏ด
WEBSTER
๏S. Ayres โ11
๏P. Baden โ11
๏I. Barczewski โ10 ๏D. Boemler โ11 ๏C. Busby โ09
๏M. Chamblin โ10 ๏N. Dawes โ11
M. Diliberto โ11 E. Eiseman โ11 ๏ T. Garner โ10 ๏ D. Geigerman โ12 ๏ K. Hayden โ13 ๏ J. Kraushaar โ09 ๏ R. Krieg โ11 ๏ R. Leavell โ11 ๏ J. Lerchenfeld โ11 ๏ K. McWilliams โ11 (2) ๏ P. Nicklisch โ11 ๏ B. Noss โ12 ๏ ๏
0
0
2003-04
2004-05
2006-07
2005-06
2007-08
2008-09
2009-10
The chart above details the total assets of the DU Educational Foundation over the past seven years. The DUEF acknowledges Bill Rappolt, Lafayette โ67, Chairman of the Investment Committee for his oversight during some difficult economic times. On an annual basis the Foundationโs financial statements are audited by K.B. Parrish & Co. LLP of Indianapolis, Indiana. Copies of the 2009-2010 audited financial statements are available upon request from Delta Upsilon Headquarters.
N. Price โ11 J. Raymundo โ12 ๏ A. Schneider โ13 ๏ E. Schrenker โ10 ๏ B. Smelser โ11 ๏ Z. Treadway โ11 ๏ D. Vogel Woodall โ13 ๏ A. Walker โ11 ๏
D. Pew โ63
๏ฎ
๏ฎ V. Sutherland โ57
(11)
WESTERN ONTARIO
๏ด A. Lansing โ53 ๏
R. Malcolm โ52 (2) D. Rudd โ51 (5)
๏ A. McKay โ59 ๏ด
WESTERN RESERVE J. Angelotta โ45 ๏ฌ P. Barratt โ69 (4) ๏ฌ C. Bizga, Jr. โ69 ๏ C. Cookson โ51 (5) ๏ฎ J. Croxen โ03 CEA+ ๏ฌ T. Diego โ66 (2) ๏ W. Frederick, Jr. โ69 (3) ๏ด K. Friis โ09 (4) ๏ด M. Hakes โ10 ๏ M. Hawley โ11 ๏ P. Kaluszyk โ73 (10) ๏ J. Kendel โ59 (14) ๏ฌ S. Marshall โ87 (7) ๏ฌ A. Mourousias โ12 ๏ J. Sabo โ67 ๏ฌ R. Soltis โ81 ๏ P. Stewart โ13 ๏ฌ J. Stickney โ48
WESTERN ILLINOIS ๏ฌ J. Anderson โ12 ๏ S. Annable โ11 ๏ S. Brown โ86 (13) ๏ฌ M. Egan โ12 ๏ฎ J. Ford โ95 (3) ๏ฎ R. Gruenig โ85 (12) ๏ A. Hellwig โ11 ๏A. Kern โ09 (2) ๏ด S. La Buda โ88 (15) ๏ด K. Lorts โ07 (2) ๏ฌ J. Nevel โ00 (10) ๏ฎ B. Peterson โ74 ๏ฌ T. Polaski โ80 (4) ๏ฎ J. Porro โ91 (6) ๏R. Schmidt โ11 ๏ฌ J. Schultz โ86 (14) ๏ J. Stroh โ10 ๏E. Yearian โ12
๏ด
WESTERN MICHIGAN ๏ฌ D. Kanemori โ66 (38) ๏ฎ J. Moore, Jr. โ65
๏ด
WICHITA J. Adams โ04 (9) CEA+ ๏ด L. Ambler โ68 ๏ D. Baty โ11
J. Berning โ12 G. Butts โ60 (8) G. Hampton โ79 (2) ๏ Z. Ketteman โ11 ๏ด J. Little โ58 (14) ๏ W. Loyd โ77 ๏ D. Meyer โ10 ๏ B. Myers โ06 (4) ๏ P. OโNeil โ93 ๏ F. Schneider โ08 (5) ๏ฌ R. Scull โ55 (6) ๏ฌ C. Trammell II โ68 (4) ๏ฌ N. Weidner โ04
J. Harris โ72 (22) C. Herro โ43 (13) E. Hipke โ56 (16) ๏R. Hunner, Sr. โ51 (7) ๏ด R. Jacobus โ51 (29) ๏ฌ D. Johnson โ70 (10) ๏ฌ K. Kayser โ91 ๏ฌ P. Laper โ68 (21) ๏ C. Lawler โ12 ๏ฌ M. Livingston โ12 (2) ๏ R. Maturo โ11 (2) ๏ด R. McLimans โ68 (10) ๏ด J. Mead โ61 ๏ฎ S. Miller โ70 (10) ๏ด M. Mueller โ82 (4) ๏ญ W. Nesbitt โ76 (31) ๏ฌ C. Roup โ67 (7) ๏ด S. Satek โ88 ๏ฎ L. Seno โ71 (4) ๏ J. Shapiro โ11 (2) ๏ฌ C. Thomas โ59 (9) ๏ฎ R. Thompson โ67 (9) ๏ F. Trubshaw โ43 ๏ฎ D. Vinson โ59 (30) ๏ J. Voss โ72 ๏ด R. Walcisak โ74 (5) ๏M. Weinstein โ12 ๏ฌ M. Wiener โ11 (2) ๏ฎ D. Yenerich โ82 (12) ๏ฌ J. Zahn โ74 (7)
๏
๏ด
๏ฌ
๏ฎ
๏
๏ด
WILLIAMS
๏J. Gepson โ65
(8) D. McDonald โ50 (7) ๏ฌ J. Pilgrim โ60 (9) ๏ด J. Snyder โ51 ๏O. Svenson โ50 (20) ๏ฎ
WISCONSIN R. Allman โ58 ๏ฌ M. Baer โ80 (10) ๏ญ M. Branch โ69 (6) ๏ฌ C. Chabalowski โ72 (2) ๏ T. Coogan โ58 (4) ๏ฎ G. Day, Jr. โ70 (2) ๏ด B. Fellows โ51 (13) ๏ด D. Fohr โ73 (4) ๏ด R. Godfrey โ54 (8) ๏B. Gold โ10 ๏ฎ J. Harden โ59 (13) ๏ด
WWW.DUEF.ORG
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Alumni Involvement a Top Priority DU Needs Your Help As Chairman of the Board of Directors of Delta Upsilon International Fraternity, it is my honor to reach out to you, seeking your input to help the Board shape the future of Delta Upsilonโ your Fraternity and mine for life. Since taking over as Chairman in July 2009, it has become increasingly apparent to me that Delta Upsilonโs focus over the years has been almost entirely on one demographic of our 70,000+ living membersโ the undergraduates. While Building Better Men can certainly occur at the undergraduate level, we cannot forget about the more than 65,000 DU alumni living all over the world, only a small portion of whom continue to feel truly connected to Delta Upsilon.
To that end I have tasked the Alumni Involvement Committee, now chaired by Greg Lamb, Iowa โ94, to help the Board or Directors learn from YOU, as a DU alumnus brother, how Delta Upsilon can remainโ or once again becomeโrelevant in your life. If you already responded to the email survey request in 2010, thank you! If you have not yet had an opportunity to respond you may take the survey online at http://tinyurl.com/DU-Alumni or complete the survey below and return it by mail to : Delta Upsilon Fraternity 8705 Founders Road, Indianapolis, IN 46268 Dikai Upotheke!
I am committed to doing everything I can to ensure that the phrase, โI was a DUโ is no longer uttered by DU alumni. Brothers, WE ARE STILL DUs!
Richard X. Taylor, North Carolina State โ83
37
NAME (optional): ___________________________________________________________________________________________________ CHAPTER (requested): ____________________________________
Copyright 2010 Delta Upsilon International Fraternity Inc.
1. How long ago did you graduate college? (Please circle only one.)
a. b. c. d. e. f. g. h. i.
Less than 1 year 1-5 years 6-10 years 11-20 years 21-30 years 31-40 years 41-50 years 51-60 years More than 60 years
a. b. c. d. e. f. g. h.
President Vice President Treasurer Secretary Rush/Recruitment Chair Loss Prevention Chair House Manager Other, please specify: ______________________________
3. Which DU program(s), if any, did you attend as an undergraduate? (Please circle all that apply.)
a, b. c. d. e.
4. How long did you live in your chapterโs house/facility? (Please circle only one.)
2. Which position(s) in your chapter, if any, did you hold as an undergraduate member? (Please circle all that apply.)
GRADUATION YEAR (optional): ________________________
a. b. c. d. e. f. g. h. i.
We did not have a house/facility We had a house/facility, but I never lived there Less than one year One year Two years Three years Four years More than four years Other, please specify
5. What is the most important thing you gained from your DU undergraduate experience? (Please choose only one.)
a. b. c. d. e. f. g.
Study habits Leadership skills Lifelong friendships The importance of giving back How to be a contributing member of a team Preparation for the real world Other, please specify
6. On a scale of 1-10, how would you rate your DU undergraduate experience? (Please circle one number.)
Leadership Institute Winter Educational Conference (WEC) Regional Leadership Seminar (RLS) Delta Upsilon Emerging Leaders (DUEL) Other, please specify: ______________________________
Very Dissatisfied 1 2 3
4
5
6
7
Extremely Satisfied 8 9 10
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a. b. c. d.
14. Have you ever served as an alumni volunteer for DU? (Please circle all that apply.)
I have heard nothing from my undergraduate or alumni chapters I have received very limited communication (less than one newsletter, e-mail, phone call per year) I have received moderate communication (a few items per year) I have received frequent communication (one or more items per month)
a. b. c. d. e. f. g. h.
8. How often have you been back to your house/chapter since graduation? (Please circle only one.)
a. b. c. d. e.
I have not been back to the house/chapter I have been back to the house/chapter one or twice I have been back to the house/chapter an average of once every few years I have been back to the house/chapter about once per year I have been back to the house/chapter multiple times per year
9. Do you gather or communicate with chapter brothers from your era aside from full-chapter homecomings, get-togethers, or meetings? (Please circle only one.)
38
a. b. c. d. e.
15. On a scale of 1-10, how would you rate your own satisfaction as a DU alumnus? (Please circle one number.)
Yes, we gather and communicate often Yes, we have gathered at least once and we communicate fairly regularly Yes, we communicate via phone/e-mail but we have not physically gathered No, I participate in full-chapter activities but have not interacted much with only those from my era No, I have had very little interaction with any brothers since graduation
10. Do you gather or communicate with DU brothers NOT from your chapter? (Please circle only one.)
a. b. c.
I feel very connected to my chapter I feel moderately connected to my chapter I feel very disconnected from my chapter
Not supportive at all 1 2 3 4 I have no idea
5
6
7
a. b. c. d. e. f. g.
a. b. c. d. e. f. g.
Within the last week Within the last month Within the last 6 months Within the last year 1-5 years ago More than 5 years ago This is the first time I have heard from DU International
6
7
Extremely Satisfied 8 9 10
Business networking opportunities Professional development opportunities Volunteer opportunities within Delta Upsilon Connection to volunteer opportunities outside Delta Upsilon Social/brotherhood opportunitiesOpportunities to mentor undergraduates and/or younger alumni Other, please specify
18. What would you most like to see change about your experience as a DU alumnus?
____________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________
Extremely supportive 8 9 10
13. Before now, when was the last time you heard from DU International (e.g. received email or DU Quarterly)? (Please choose only one.)
5
17. What would you like to receive from your experience as a DU alumnus? (Please circle all that apply.)
12. How would you rate your alma materรข€™s level of current support of its Greek Community? (Please circle a one.)
Very Dissatisfied 1 2 3 4
16. Please explain why you chose your previous answer: ______ ____________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________
a. Yes, through the chapter closest to my home b. Yes, through the local alumni group not associated with a specific local chapter c. Yes, by phone, e-mail, or letters with alumni acquaintances d. No e. Other, please specify: _____________________________ _________________________________________________ 11. Which of the following best describes your situation? (Please circle only one.)
No, I have never served as an alumni volunteer for DU I have served as a chapter advisor or in another position that advises undergraduate DUs at my own chapter I have served as a chapter advisor or in another position that advises undergraduate DUs at a chapter other than my own I have served on a House Corporation that managed a DU house but did not interact with the undergraduates I have served in an official volunteer role with DU International (e.g. board of directors, province governor, committee member) I have facilitated during a DU International program (e.g. Leadership Institute, Winter Educational Conference, Regional Leadership Seminar) I have served as an officer or volunteer of a geographic-based DU alumni club Other, please specify
Copyright 2010 Delta Upsilon International Fraternity Inc.
7. How often have you heard from your chapter since graduation? (Please choose only one.)
Mail to:
Delta Upsilon Fraternity 8705 Founders Road, Indianapolis, IN 46268
FAX to:
317-876-1629
www.deltau.org
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DUck tales People, Places and Events in DUโs History Compiled by Fraternity Historian, Bill Briscoe, Purdue โ65
39
125 Years Ago: Prominent DUโs from the class of 1885: Victor C. Alderson, Harvard, President of Colorado School of Mines 190313 and 1917-25, George R. Duncan, Williams, Archeologist, Egyptologist and translator of hieroglyphics, Robert J. Eidlitz, Cornell, Master builder, president of firm that built NY Stock Exchange, New York Federal Reserve Bank, AT&T Building and Cloisters Museum
175 years agoโฆ Williams Chapter celebrated its first full year as the Social Fraternity with 28 men pledging the organization in 1835
David Starr Jordan, Cornell 1872, named president of Indiana University
Copyright 2010 Delta Upsilon International Fraternity Inc.
100 years agoโฆ 150 years agoโฆ
One chapter was established in 1910: Washington
Washington & Jefferson Chapter established in 1860
Middlebury and Western Reserve moved into new houses
Prominent DU from the class of 1860: Edmund F. Webb, Colby, President Maine Senate, Speaker Maine Assembly and US Superior Court Judge
Convention was held in San Francisco, Calif.
125 years agoโฆ Wisconsin, Lafayette, Columbia, and Lehigh Chapter established in 1885; a record number until 1949 Convention was held in Rochester, New York Western Reserve changed its name to the Adelbert Chapter which was the name of the menโs college at the university; reverted back to Western Reserve in 1906 Hans Stevenson, New York 1873, was appointed Surveyor of the Port of New York by President Grover Cleveland
Prominent DUโs from the class of 1910: Heywood Broun, Harvard, co-founder of The Newspaper Guild (labor union) in 1933, drama critic, syndicated columnist; Clarence Francis, Amherst, President of General Foods, worked for Presidents FDR and Eisenhower on food production and distribution issues; Ralph N. Good, Colby, Major league baseball player โ Boston Nationals; William L. Jenkins, Swarthmore, US Consul in Russia during WWI and Russian Revolution; and William G. Pickrel, Miami, Lieutenant Governor of Ohio 1928 & 1931-33. Charles Evans Hughes, Colgate and Brown 1881, was named Associate Justice in the US Supreme Court John Wesley Coombs, Colby 1906, was the major league star pitcher with 30 wins in the season for the Philadelphia Athletics, and they won the World Series with Brother Coombs pitching three victories in six days.
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75 years agoโฆ
25 years agoโฆ
Two chapters were established in 1935; British Columbia and Alberta
Texas Tech chapter was established in 1985.
Penn State Chapter moved into a new house
Convention was held in Indianapolis IN Prominent DUโs from the class of 1985: Chad G. Little, Washington State, NASCAR driver and commentator
Convention was held in Oklahoma City OK Prominent DUโs from the class of 1935 include: Andrew Currie, Manitoba, Professional football player โ Regina Roughriders, Canadian Football Hall of Fame; Robert Letts Jones, Stanford, President of The Copley Press, Inc. (owner of more than a dozen newspapers) โ 1965-73; John G. McCoy. Marietta, creator and CEO of Banc One; Hugh E. Rodham, Pennsylvania State, owner of successful fabric business, father of Hillary Clinton but was a lifelong Republican; Robert T. Stafford, Middlebury, Vermont Governor (1959-60), Congressman (1960-71) and Senator (197189).
Peter V. Ubererroth, San Jose 1959, was named โMan of the Yearโ and appeared on the cover of Time Magazine on January 7, 1985 Brewster Shaw, Wisconsin 1967, commanded the Atlantis Shuttle, Mission 61-B, which made 108 orbits of the earth from November 26 through December 3, 1985
The Alberta Chapter set the record for the coldest installation in history with an official temperature of 43 degrees below zero on January 19, 1935 Laurens Hammond, Cornell 1916, invented the pipeless organ
40
Frank B. Jewett, Chicago 1902 / Brown 1903, was awarded the Faraday Medal by the Institution of Electrical Engineers Chester L. Lamberton, Alberta 1936, wrote the official war song of the University of Alberta Seaman A. Knapp, Union 1856, was honored by the first memorial authorized by Congress for high achievement in agriculture: the โKnapp Memorial Archโ connecting the new Department of Agriculture Building with the main building
50 years agoโฆ One chapter was established in 1960: Oklahoma State Louisville Chapter moved into a new house Convention was held in Banff AB Prominent DUโs from the class of 1960 include: Neil R. Austrian, Swarthmore, NFL President & COO 1991-99; Theodore H. Boehm, Brown, Chairman & CEO of the 1987 Pan-American Games Organizing Committee, Indian Supreme Court Justice 1996-2010; Robert S. Phillips, Syracuse, poet and author; and Richard D. Threlkeld, Ripon, CBS & ABC news correspondent 1966-89. Robert W. Burgess, Brown 1908, counted almost 180 million Americans as the Director of the Bureau of the Census
Lou Holtz, Kent State 1958, was named the Notre Dame football coach; he amassed a 100-30-2 record during his 11 years in the position Galen S. Hall, Pennsylvania State 1962, was appointed head football coach of the University of Florida after serving as interim coach for part of the 1984 season with a 40-18-1 record in his five plus seasons D. Geoffrey John, Arizona 1962, was named President of Temporaries, Inc., a nationwide temporary help company W. Campbell MacArthur, Manitoba 1937, was made a Member of the Order of the British Empire Kurt Vonnegut, Cornell 1944, had his 11th novel โGalapogosโ published
Courtland D. Perkins, Swarthmore 1935, was appointed Assistant Secretary of the Air Force Ron Husmann, Northwestern 1959, made his Broadway starring debut in the musical comedy โTenderloinโ
WWW.DELTAU.ORG
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Alpha & Omega Brothers whose death was reported between June 21, 2010 and December 31, 2010. Alberta John D. Alton 1952 Derek S. Batcheller 1954 John H. Chamberlain 1937 Anthony T.Chernushenko 1962 James A. Fraser 1933 John D. Guild 1956 James Arthur Kelly 1959 William M. Kendrick 1942 John C. Kudryk 1970 Laurie D. MacLean 1952 Tom Mayson 1952 Richard B. McWilliam 1959 Harold S. Millican 1954 Robert W. Pulleyblank 1945 Otis F. Reinhard 1940 Robert A. Weeks 1950 William A. Weir 1954 Amherst Robert B. Pirie 1949 Andrew C. Redding 1944 William Jay Rose 1968 James Biddle Yarnall 1948 Arkansas Scott B. Durren 1985 Arlington Stacy Lynn Farmer 1995 Mark Brian Scott 1979 Baylor Michael Cecil Cushman 1985 James Tipton Jones 1978 Bowdoin John T. Caulfield 1945 John C. MacCarey 1939 Bowling Green Richard B. Bugeda 1960 Edward Joseph Dimare 1957 Bradley Rudolph D. Bartholomew 1953 John Vernon Leengran 1950 Hugh Andrews Norris 1949 George Allen Polkow 1960 Robert L. Webb 1956 British Columbia Jack A. L. Collum 1949 Derek Davidson 1949 Brown Charles J. Cooper 1951 Charles B. Kiesel 1936 Alexander Marshall 1950 Robert Ward Minnerly 1957 Eugene M. Scanlon 1952 Bucknell David Morgan Boyd l 1955 John R. Fenstermacher 1976 Paul M. Humphreys 1928 Keith William Reitz 1973 John Frederick Zeller 1941 California David Armstrong 1948 William E. Biggerstaff 1940 William Roscoe Boone 1938 Charles J. Carey 1944 Gary Sinclair Kaveney 1953 Alex Lowenstein 2012 Carnegie Thomas Roy Allen 1958 Richard A. Boschetto 1954 Richard Brennan 1954 Bryan Francis Kennedy 1954 Arthur G. Klein 1940 Philip A. McDermott 1939 Chicago Spencer Ernest Irons 1938 Donald H. McPherson 1967 Samuel Victor Zapler 1964 Clarkson Russell J. Hutchins 1940
Robert John McGill 1935 Colby Thomas J. Crossman 1952 Elliot H. Drisko 1939 Nathanael M. Guptill 1939 Henry Fidele Poirier 1950 Colgate Charles A. Cooley 1954 William F. Gallagher 1963 John Harold Goewey 1951 Olav Brent Kollevoll 1945 Robert J. Mantica 1940 John V. Mundy 1952 George R. Murdock 1945 Arthur W. Saunders 1950 James Edward Wehrell 1940 Harry A. Wheeler 1940 Charles Thomas Wood 1949 Vernon M.O. Zane 1956 Cornell Richard T. Fowler 1980 Clarence C. Larkin 1950 Robert S. Sanborn 1934 Michael Gray Wood 1964 Creighton Eric Page Jacobson 1993 James D. Leahy 1970 Dartmouth John W. Gore 1937 Denison Colin M. Bloor 1955 Colin M. Bloor 1955 Robert Lee Burrows 1997 Edwin S. Robertson 1956 Jerry D. Wicke 1959 DePauw Hal E. Miller 1958 Stewart Neff 1946 Robert W. Newell 1934 Joe Holmes Petty 1936 John Howell Wolf 1939 Florida James Wallace Gribble 1978 Georgia Tech Herman W. Johnson 1965 Hamilton Stuart Baker 1929 Albert Carl May 1956 Charles Francis Rice 1950 Robert Post Worden 1937 Houston Albert L. Bynum 1982 Illinois Roger M. Fitz-Gerald 1957 Russell Miles Johnson 1954 Hollis L. Logue 1942 Gregory Paul Matic 1975 David Conklin McKay 1946 William Francis OโDell 1931 Bryant S. Procter 1944 Charles C. Vial 1951 Samuel D. Wright 1943 Indiana Charles A. Beal 1944 J. P. Boxell 1940 Phillip Eugene Braskett 1952 Keith Hanson Cochran 1952 Howard R. Elliott 1943 Brett Ryan Fleitz 1987 S. Dwight Handley 1942 Virgil Monroe Howes 1946 Frank Bradford Jones 1946 Allen A. Mossler 1950 William E. Turman 1943 George Peter Vlassis 1952 Iowa Harold Vincent Harsha 1942 Victor Herbert Hoglan 1956 John W. Hovland 1950 Frank Robert Kerrigan 1949 Douglas J. Larson 1960
John W. Rathert 1954 George E. Robey 1958 Iowa State James W. Hanley 1971 William Leroy Johnson 1941 John Reid McCall 1944 Douglas A. McKenzie 1979 Gerald Eugene Mundt 1955 Herbert H. Specker 1937 Johns Hopkins John H. Allan 1929 Kansas William Henry Avery 1934 Fred M. Bolick 1965 James Richard Brooks 1962 Wilbur E. Friesen 1949 Ted Mervin Gardiner 1970 Wayne Calvin Granger 1946 Cornett Eugene Hall 1953 Clayton Joseph Harbur 1943 Larry J. Heeb 1963 John Konek 1954 William G. Landess 1953 Patrick David Little 1959 Ranie Harold Love 1936 Bruce Hess Robinson 1975 Robert F. Sweet 1958 Daniel A. Thomas 1975 Donald Kirk Williams 1979 Kansas State Max M. Ginter 1962 Herbert H. Hischke 1959 Gary L. Walter 1972 Kent State Bruce G. Eckert 1959 Joseph A. Franko 1956 Thomas G. Johanni 1963 Eugene W. McCord 1943 Richard Lee Mehl 1964 Mario J. Pisanelli 1959 Lafayette Richard Allen Burns 1968 Robert T. Renfrew 1954 Lehigh William R. Dixon 1956 Stanley L. Glaser 1980 John Sharrard Kaufman 1948 James Thornton Lodge 1938 S. John Oechsle 1948 Carlton G. Smith 1955 William Layton Smith 1949 James M. Walton 1940 Louisville Robert L. Able 1949 Robert Bruce Besten 1951 John B. Fischer 1970 Arthur V. Greenwell 1951 Robert K. Preston 1995 Robert D. Tuell 1965 Manitoba James H. Ashdown 1945 David H. Dyson 1947 R. Gordon Fogg 1948 Barry D. Hawkins 1968 Duncan Earl Kippen 1963 William Lawrence Palk 1932 Trevor J. Roberts 1945 Marietta Macelyn V. Anders 1940 Alsoph H. Corwin 1928 Fredrick M. Dunlap 1943 Dwight Johnson 1957 Stanley W. Knowlton 1944 George D. Malcolm 1951 John Gardner McCoy 1935 Raymond E. Weekley 1956 Massachusetts Michael Lawrence Iuso 2005 McGill George Mitchell Bourke 1949 Robert M. Everson 1947 John G. Ireland 1949 Redmond C. Quain 1951
Parting Quote
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Antony S. Skinner 1956 Alan G. Thompson 1941 Fred G. Wilmot 1953 E. Paul Wilson 1952 Miami John E. Bentley 1953 T. Girard Lee 1960 Thomas C. McNeal 1937 Andrew G. Mikkelsen 1946 Kirk Robert Sweet 1969 Michigan Edwin M. Allmendinger 1947 David B. Cobb 1958 William A. Ford 1949 John A. Goldsmith 1961 K. Kevin Hepp 1939 Jay Robert Wiese 1976 Michigan State William E. Beaver 1971 Roger Charles Nauert 1965 Don E. Schlitt 1964 Middlebury Robert I. Katz 1958 Leroy M. Kotzen 1958 Richard Edward Mac Neill 1948 Kevin B. OโConnor 1953 Minnesota Edwin R. Bjorkman 1941 Missouri Freeman M. Bullock 1950 Raymond A. Deffry 1951 Ronald D. Fagan 1960 Doyce L. Leach 1952 William M. Leach 1963 Henry J. Ochs 1933 Duane Chilton Randall 1969 Herbert E. Segelhorst 1957 Phillip Ray Smith 1961 Arthur A. Stanley 1956 James L. Weatherby 1934 Delbert L. Wood 1978 Nebraska Robert W. Baker 1980 Stuart M. Carlson 1954 Richard Cole 1946 Howard W. Dennis 1952 Charles H. Edholm 1941 Dean E. Forke 1946 Richard Lewis Johnson 1949 Marlyn E. Kinder 1948 Carter Hines Kokjer 1946 Kent P. Kratz 1945 Jonathan Russell Moravec 2005 Ronald L. Parsons 1960 Gordon L. Pauley 1949 Kenneth N. Plith 1952 Donald Raymond Smidt 1959 Basil C. Wehrman 1944 Norman H. Wilnes 1952 Dean D. Yates 1942 Richard B. Young 1939 New York Leonard Merritt Beman 1938 North Carolina Philip Reed Adkins 1974 Peter H. Gerns 1948 John W. Kendrick 1937 James Harry Menzel 1959 Northern Colorado George K. Orr 1990 Russell F. Phillips 1948 Northwestern Byron Hill Beaton 1942 Warren McArthur Bigler 1935 Gerald Francis Fitzgerald 1949 Maurice Edward Hardy 1946 Edgar F. Heizer 1951 Stuart Lake 1941 Lorence A. Laning 1946 Paul N. Lideen 1936 Warren Dale Porter 1937 Robert Craig Potter 1959
Michael Joel Powers 1979 Barton L. Richardson 1956 Terence J. W. Venezia 1985 Ohio Matthew E. Blosser 2002 James Trusler Shipman 1956 Tod Raymond Stevens 1975 Ohio State Fred W. Baumgartner 1946 Arthur Franklin Cecil 1963 F. Leonard Christy 1940 Truman Brouse Clark 1942 Lyle Pennock Crum 1957 Willis Riley Deming 1935 George V. Glaskin 1955 Richard C. Greathouse 1949 Donn Horchler 1946 Robert W. Little 1945 Raymond E. Mason 1941 Richard J. Seifert 1954 Harry French Smith 1951 Andrew C. Thomas 1940 Oklahoma Robert V. Anderson 1945 Joel H. Blake 1953 John L. Boyd 1942 Rob Hale Brown 1987 James E. Gilchrist 1958 William Wallace Jamar 1947 Pinkney Cleveland Largent 1950 David Dow Miller 1975 Phil Terry Newkumet 1967 William Allan Rayson 1943 Franklin Pierce Robinson 1937 Roger B. Sprague 1959 Don Stephens 1966 Robert W. Thompson 1962 Charles William Wilkerson 1960 Oklahoma State Mark OโDowd Mandeville 1981 Richard James Metscher 1965 Ronald C. Rylander 1963 Oregon Douglas Warren Ackley 1949 C. Edward Best 1928 Donald Gregory 1953 Floyd L. Wright 1950 Oregon State Richard W. Boubel 1952 Thomas Marsh Davis 1939 Thomas Marsh Davis 1939 Carl W. Gregory 1961 Carl J. Henniger 1941 Gregory T. Hornecker 1952 Elmer Scovel Kyle 1950 Thomas Philip Moll 1959 John Roger Obye 1957 William Charles Oetinger 1943 Holley Ed Phipps 1966 Robert A. Robertson 1955 Richard Morehouse Rogers 1946 Harvey D. Ronne 1941 William D. Rupp 1965 Pennsylvania Harvey Bartle 1930 Jean Treffle Brouillette 1961 Edward J. McVay 1961 Ernest Andrew Stelzel 1951 Frederick R. VanWort 1950 Venlo J. Wolfsohn 1948 Pennsylvania State Donald A. Andrews 1952 Edward M. Czekaj 1948 Anthony Pasquale DeJulius 1956 William J. Landherr 1959 Robert Owen Mitchell 1943 John Donald Parris 1952 John Henry Storch 1949 Purdue Hugh S. Crim 1946 Meredith M. Fessler 1931 Robert G. Hannam 1945 William H. Hobbes 1949 Russel Elmer Hoshaw 1933
Stephen Krstovich 1949 Theodore D. Lent 1939 Louis H. Munkelwitz 1946 Yngve Ramstad 1963 Donald Drake Stewart 1950 Ripon Richard C. Grossman 1973 Rochester William C. Bowden 1957 Dean Freiday 1936 Donald Gordon Warner 1944 Rutgers Paul Edward Liniak 1969 Robin A. Oxenford 1949 San Jose Ray Bartosh 1957 Ross K. Fuller 1949 L. Richard Marriott 1949 Dale L. McPherson 1956 Arthur S. Wellington 1947 Southwest Texas Robert Carl Williams 1974 Stanford Robert A. Cookson 1944 Horton H. Honsaker 1959 Raymond Hornby 1936 John J. OโConnor 1951 James Bowmar Rodgers 1937 Swarthmore John Franklin Cromwell 1951 Eben Harrison Sales 1957 Donald K. Youngblood 1947 Syracuse Harry I. Beardsley 1941 George O. Bluhm 1942 James Franklin Bond 1966 Paul C. Brownrigg 1951 Edwin O. Salisbury 1940 David W. Smith 1942 William A. Wallace 1960 Technology Irvine Henry Dearnley 1945 Craig Michael Fletcher 1960 James Thomas Lawson 1944 Herbert Joseph Scholz 1953 Tennessee Jerry L. Gardner 1973 Patrick S. Malone 1971 Texas Nathan Frederick Cliett 1962 Roland Lee Hurter 1951 Charles Lee Watkins 1971 R. R. Wiley 1945 Toronto Thomas E. Evans 1954 William B. Trimble 1943 Tufts Frederick Waldo Ames 1946 William Henry Bowen 1952 Gilbert D. Boyd 1950 John Richard Sisk McGrail 1958 Wilbur J. Morin 1950 John Hamlin Porter 1943 Donald James Winslow 1934 Tyler Robert B. Reddell 1989 UCLA William Hardin Corbett 1940 Charles V. R. Craig 1939 Union Edward J. Barry 1938 Richard C. Bower 1956 David Gardner Hayner1940 Louis M. Killeen 1947 John Robert LaPann 1944 Patrick A. Mosca 1982 Robert Angus Munro 1954 Calvin S. Thurber 1957 George E. Tole 1959 Virginia James H. Chalmers 1940
Eugene E. Mathews 1951 Raymond D. Sigler 1939 Walter Stevens 1990 Washington Scott Powell Ager 1973 Charles G. Barclay 1940 David James Baugh 1985 George A. Bayless 1949 Wilbur W. Bender 1949 Clinton L. Boyd 1948 Robert Coda Harris 1969 Robert E. Harris 1949 Charles P. Haskins 1959 Stanley R. Haynie 1950 John Kostelyk 1951 Robert M. Lamphere 1949 Ashton D. Marcus 1949 Robert W. Marek 1959 Edwin Albert Olsen 1950 Ronald E. Patnoe 1956 Brian A. Putra 1966 Donald B. Saboe 1954 John W. Simpson 1956 William Tyler Sprake 1948 Lewis Russell Ulrich 1940 Dennis Knute Voll 1966 Washington & Lee Walter Garrett Riddick 1949 Washington State James Frank Bills 1974 Keith R. Bogard 1952 Greg G. Early 1980 Orville E. Johnson 1939 George R. Lewis 1943 Reed Douglas Martin 1977 A. Byron Youngs 1937 Wesleyan Frank Eugene Halleck 1948 Austin F. Stephan 1936 Western Illinois Robert Francis Baldwin 1993 Western Michigan Wilford A. Butler 1961 Jeremiah E. Halbert 1958 Frederick W. Kopplow 1950 Bryan W. Ridley 1969 Western Ontario Robert Angus Bandeen 1952 Arnold W. Brewer 1938 Donald W. Coleman 1949 Douglas M. Mills 1949 Western Reserve Michael Cappe 1945 Walter R. Davis 1949 William B. Dreyer 1945 Don Clair Freeman 1945 Charles Fuller 1945 George P. Handyside 1911 Bruce C. Huston 1950 Glen B. Morgan 1951 Daryle R. Stuckey 1947 Anthony Ventresca 1953 Williams Karl F. Arndt 1929 A. Clinton Kellogg 1928 Wisconsin Donald H. Anderson 1948 John C. Buist 1953 Bryard Louis Giroulx 1945 Richard M. Gregory 1956 Leland B. Hansen 1947 Richard D. Miller 1951 James Oliver Rewey 1959 Paul R. Sunderland 1975 Allan T. Tetzlaff 1956 Frederick C. Winding 1951
โWisdom is knowing what to do next, virtue is doing it.โ โ David Starr Jordan, Cornell 1872
8/1/11 10:53 AM
Delta Upsilon International Fraternity Inc. 8705 Founders Road Indianapolis IN 46268
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Since 1916,
members of Delta Upsilon Fraternity have enjoyed the benefit of a standard manual published by the Fraternity. The first edition of the manual included a summary of Delta Upsilon history, memorabilia and government and identified a number of famous Delta Upsilon alumni. The book progressed in various editions, from a mere historical record to a guide to assist members and associate members in their college experience. In 2010, the Fraternity published the 25th edition of โThe Cornerstone,โ dedicated to the men of Delta Upsilon past, present and future and in memory of Wilford A. Butler, Western Michigan โ61 โThe Cornerstoneโ is provided to each new member of Delta Upsilon Fraternity.
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