Friendship
Volume 129, № 1– 4
Culture
Character
State of the Fraternity 2 President’s Task Force 5 Leadership Institute 9 Alumni News 18 DUEF Annual Report 21 Chapter News 38
Justice
What is a Great Fraternity? That’s the question we have been asking ourselves the past several years. This question has been posed by the alumni. I personally wish there was as much concern and passion around this question from the undergraduates, but that has not been the case; and for many reasons. Many of our historic chapters are influenced by alumni to maintain long-standing traditions and customs. And undergraduates at these chapters often want to focus on the social aspects of fraternity life, and not the leadership and character aspects of how a fraternity culture can develop men for a swiftly changing global economy. It has been our newest chapters that have embraced what a great fraternity can provide for them. I have often said that today’s college students are the only consumer group that does not demand their money’s worth. They are paying higher tuition and chapter fees, yet they settle for outdated traditions and customs that have very little to do with developing men for the demands of a new age. Focusing on an over-indulgent social culture and earning less than mediocre grades is very hard to comprehend. However, that’s what we find in many of our chapters. Or should I say, this is what we are recruiting into our chapters. A fraternity culture at its best can produce men who are aptly prepared for the rigors of the future. A great education, supplemented with a great fraternity experience, can develop men who can deal with a troubled global and national economy, a splintered political system, a global health crisis, a fragile environment, the challenges of race, gender, faith, nationality, and many more challenges. In this issue we seek to share with you the vision for our fraternity. It is a bold vision, a grand vision. A vision that places us among the best of all fraternities. This vision may not resemble the fraternity that you pledged, but it is a fraternity that our history calls for. We were not formed as a social fraternity, a hazing fraternity, an organization of secrets and dehumanizing pledge and new-initiate rituals. We are a fraternity born out of a need to develop the brightest men; men who wanted a focus on justice, authentic friendship, the importance of culture and arts, and developing men of character and distinction. Today, we seek to expose men to the cultures of the world to prepare them for their future. We call our chapters to recruit men who have a passion for learning and growing, and not those who just want to hang out and have fun. And we raise the bar on how we develop men of the highest distinction. While we challenge our young brothers to consider new practices, we also call on our alumni to support our efforts. Please don’t encourage your chapter to continue to pursue destructive social norms just for the sake of romanticizing the past. These brothers will not live and work in our world, but in a world that requires critical thinking, creativity, international interpersonal skills, and a personal embrace of authentic and mature masculinity. Many higher education leaders and faculty believe fraternities are outdated, archaic, racist, sexist, old boys social clubs. And the truth is many fraternities are just that. We have an opportunity to once again strike a bold new course among the fraternity world. This is our time. This is your request to join us. Let’s ensure that the young men we attract are provided the experience they expect when they join. Let’s give them what they deserve, the skills to lead a new world! Let’s provide the higher education community a reason to believe that a fraternity can indeed prepare young men for a bold new world. What is a great fraternity? An organization of highly impressive and influential young men who, due to their personal character, intelligence, and interpersonal skills, utilize their influence and leadership in a way that has decisive historical impact on the world. Let the world say that Delta Upsilon is a great fraternity!
E. Bernard Franklin, Kansas State ‘75 President, Delta Upsilon International Fraternity Email: ihq@deltau.org
Delta Upsilon International Fraternity North America’s 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 ’75 Chairman of the Board Richard X. Taylor, North Carolina State ’82 Secretary Timothy C. Dowd, Oklahoma ’75 Treasurer E. Bruce McKinney, Missouri ’74
Copyright 2009 Delta Upsilon International Fraternity Inc.
Directors Charles E. Downton III, North Carolina ’66 John W. Duncan, Oregon State ’00 Robert D. Fisher, Alberta ’76 Jordan B. Lotsoff, Northern Illinois ’88 Brian Mudrick, Louisville ’82 Aaron M. Siders, Kansas State ’04 Robert A. Stewart, Washington ’84 Ben A. Pyle, Kansas ’12 Aaron Vince, Grand Valley State ’12
The Official Magazine of the
Delta Upsilon International Fraternity Since 1882
Volume 129, № 1-4 Delta Upsilon International Headquarters Office hours: 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday Office: 317-875-8900 / FAX: 317-876-1629 Email: IHQ@deltau.org / web site: www.deltau.org
Past Presidents Terry L. Bullock, Kansas State ’61 Samuel M. Yates, San Jose ’55 Bruce S. Bailey, Denison ’58 James D. McQuaid, Chicago ’60 Alvan E. (Ed) Porter, Oklahoma ’65
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
International Headquarters Staff
Copy deadlines: Winter, October 1; Spring, February 1; Summer, April 1; Fall, August 1
Delta Upsilon Fraternity Executive Director: Justin Kirk, Boise State ’00 Associate Executive Director: Karl Grindel Executive Assistant: Jana McClees Senior Director of Educational Programs: Noah Borton 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 ’11 Mark Gehrke, Boise State ’11 Mike Taylor, North Carolina State ’10 Senior Staff Accountant: Mary Ellen Watts Director of Communications & Editor: Jean Gileno Lloyd Social Media Director & Designer: Zach Thomas, North Florida ’09
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to Delta Upsilon Quarterly, 8705 Founders, Indianapolis, IN 46268.
North-American Interfraternity Conference
Delta Upsilon Educational Foundation: Executive Director: David R. Schumacher Director of Development: Craig S. Sowell, Houston ’92
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trending in a positive direction State of the Fraternity Justin Kirk, Boise State ’00 VISION– Delta Upsilon is the premier men’s fraternity committed to Building Better Men for a global society through service, leadership development and lifelong personal growth of our diverse membership. MISSION STATEMENT– Delta Upsilon’s mission is Building Better Men. We will accomplish this by: Focusing on our non-secret heritage and Four Founding Principles: •
The Promotion of Friendship
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The Diffusion of Liberal Culture
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The Development of Character
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The Advancement of Justice
The state of Delta Upsilon is as strong as at any point in recent memory. All key indicators are trending in a positive direction and have done so over a multi-year period.
Copyright 2011 Delta Upsilon International Fraternity Inc.
This past year was truly remarkable for our great Fraternity, and we are pleased to share with you the 2010-2011 Annual Report of Delta Upsilon Fraternity. The Fraternity is guided by a five-year strategic plan that was developed in 2007. The purpose of the Strategic Plan is twofold: improve the execution of the Mission Statement and make progress towards achieving the Vision Statement. The plan contains 32 action items organized in nine missioncritical areas. The Fraternity’s professional staff is charged with executing the operations of the Fraternity and ensuring advancement in the missioncritical areas. The Board of Directors monitors the progress using a Balanced Scorecard. A Balanced Scorecard is a strategic performance management tool for measuring whether the operational activities are aligned with the largerscale objectives in terms of vision and strategy. A stoplight indicator is used to measure the current status of performance to the specified goal or target. The 2010-11 academic year produced green lights in all nine of the mission-critical areas, with significant advancement in most areas.
Delta Upsilon by the Numbers
17%
INCREASE IN MEMBERSHIP
1,600 1,400 3,503 ASSOCIATE MEMBERS
MEMBERS INITIATED
UNDERGRADUATE MEMBERS
44% 46.7
GROWTH OVER FOUR YEARS
AVERAGE CHAPTER SIZE
842
ATTENDED A PREMIER PROGRAM
5,023 FACEBOOK FANS
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Membership Recruitment Delta Upsilon recorded one of its most successful membership recruitment years in recent memory, experiencing a 17 percent increase over last year. More than 1,600 associate members were recruited, and for just the second time in the last decade, the Fraternity initiated more than 1,400 men. While many national fraternities are reporting membership growth, the 17 percent increase is an impressive number by industry standards. DU chapters are not only seeing success in their recruitment efforts, but also, more importantly, they are retaining the members they recruit. Total membership in the Fraternity grew to 3,503 members, up from 3,296 the prior year. Delta Upsilon has grown an impressive 44 percent over a four-year period and now has an average chapter size of 46.7.
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To recognize those chapters achieving recruitment success, a Top 10 ranking was added to the homepage of the Fraternity’s website. The ranking is updated weekly as new members are reported. The top ten recruiting chapters for the 2010-11 academic year were: Central Florida Wisconsin Carthage Oklahoma Missouri Illinois Indiana California San Jose Lafayette Membership Development The Membership Development component of the strategic plan is at the heart of the Fraternity’s mission of Building Better Men. The number of members attending DU educational programs increased significantly. DU reached 842 members who attended a premier program in 2010-11. Delta Upsilon’s programs include: • • • •
The Association of Fraternity/Sorority Advisors awarded Delta Upsilon with the 2010 Excellence in Educational Programming Award for the Global Service Initiative. Communications The redesigned Fraternity website was recognized by the Fraternity Communications Association for excellence among international fraternity and sorority websites in 2011. The Fraternity has also taken on a number of social media intiatives including a Facebook page with more than 5,000 fans. Chapter Growth DU chartered seven chapters over the past two years with four of those chapters charted in 2010-11. • Embry-Riddle at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University • Chattanooga at University of TennesseeChattanooga • Virginia Tech at Virginia Polytechnic Institute • Boise State at Boise State University The Fraternity established three new colonies in the 201011 academic year at Boise State University, Elon University and Iowa State University The Boise State and Elon expansions resulted in the largest groups on campus with the highest GPAs. Following the recent colonization at Carnegie-Mellon University DU plans to colonize at the University of Kentucky (spring 2012), Christopher Newport University (spring 2012), the University of Iowa (fall 2012) and James Madison University (fall 2012). If you have questions or comments, please feel free to contact Executive Director Justin Kirk at kirk@deltau.org.
Regional Leadership Seminars Winter Educational Conference Leadership Institute Global Service Initiative
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Seven Billion and Counting – Who’s Going to Get the Jobs? A Report on the President’s Task Force Dr. E. Bernard Franklin, Kansas State ’75
Copyright 2011 Delta Upsilon International Fraternity Inc.
Fraternity culture today too often produces “dead men walking;” young men who are not in touch with their emotions and feelings, and are unable to lead anyone, let alone themselves to more significant and more noble lives. Too many of these young men don’t give a damn about making the environment around them better, not to mention eliminating poverty clear across the world. Many professionals on college campuses despise this dead culture, and there are forces waiting for fraternities to implode. Despite the number of chapters or the numbers of undergraduate men, it probably is just a matter of time before this dead culture will be given it’s last rites. Too many emerging college/university presidents will simply not tolerate or accept the distractions of a dead culture as they seek to spend their precious time and energy reshaping the larger academic community for the demands of a global marketplace. Our deepest challenge today is determining whether fraternities can regain the trust of college and university leadership, the trust of parents, and the trust of government, as well as the trust of profit and not-for-profit leaders. Can fraternities develop authentic change/entrepreneurial leaders who can use their great instincts and creative leadership to reshape Canadian and U.S. organizations into dynamic and strategic living organisms? Can authentic communities be developed with a clear mission, purpose, and defined strategies that will guide young men to levels of performance that engage and appropriately care for and allow men and women of all backgrounds and lifestyles to flourish on their leadership teams?
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Delta Upsilon International Fraternity President Bernard Franklin, Kansas State ’75 at the 2011 Leadership Institute.
Today, in response to the Greek chaos and to provide students with an opportunity to develop broader leadership skills, many campuses are expanding, renovating, and making on campus housing much more attractive for students. However, the data is quite clear that when fraternity life is done well it is the only on-campus institution that can provide the leadership skills and social development for young college men. Our challenge is to return to fraternity life done well. The DU President’s Task Force was a call for an extensive review of our Fraternity. Bucking the trend of primarily serving as a college “social” fraternity, with minimal emphasis on academic performance, focusing on Building Better Men to serve the world, the Task Force was given a charge to review our Four Founding Principles with a call to make those principles real and relevant for an emerging global community and make them serve as a guide for encouraging young men to play a vital role in addressing the great problems of our day. To ensure that we could conduct a thorough, deep review of our Fraternity, we carefully selected the Task Force members. An authentic organization review must have outside eyes that can look at every part of an operation and ask the tough questions. Reviews conducted by organization members often don’t get to the heart of the serious issues because of the nature of in-grown resistance to change and the desire to hold on to nostalgic traditions that may need updating or
eliminating. To this end, the President’s Task Force included some of the country’s most successful fraternity and student leadership professionals as well as members of Delta Upsilon. Members of the President’s Task Force •
Dr. E. Bernard Franklin, Kansas State ’75, Fraternity President
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Michael McRee, Vice President, LeaderShape
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Dr. Laura Osteen, Director of Leadership Studies, Florida State University
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Jeremiah Shinn, Director of Student Life, Boise State University
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John Duncan, Oregon State ’00, Board member
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Bruce McKinney, Missouri ’74, Fraternity treasurer
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Stephannie Bailey, Executive Director, Alpha Gamma Delta Fraternity
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Steve Veldkamp, Associate Dean of Students, Indiana University
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Justin Kirk, Boise State ’00, Executive Director
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Nick Welton, Lehigh ’10, Undergraduate representative
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Kevin McWilliams, Webster ’11, Undergraduate representative
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The Task Force met four times during the academic year 2009-2010, reviewing strategies that would advance positive results for our Fraternity in each of the following five emphasis areas: 1. Men achieving academic success and preparing for a productive future 2. Men attaining the education, life skills, and employment and/or community resources needed to increase income and save for their financial security 3. Men achieving better health by adopting healthy lifestyles (physical, mental, and spiritual) 4. Men understanding and learning to lead with collaboration and team-working skills 5. Men understanding how to live in a global community The result of the Task Force’s work was establishment of the outcomes we need to assist emerging young leaders in a global transformation to a 21st century mind. We concluded that we must encourage, assist, direct, and guide young men to become what noted psychologist Abraham Maslow termed “self-actualized.” To be self-actualized means that we accept ourselves and others, we have a strong focus on solving problems outside the self, and we have deep feelings of sympathy and affection for humankind. It also means that we have strong ethics, definite moral standards, and independent stability in the face of hard knocks.
Copyright 2011 Delta Upsilon International Fraternity Inc.
The Task Force explored everything about the Fraternity • Male only vs. Co-ed • Housing vs. No Housing • Mission and Vision • Fraternity process: recruitment, membership, alumni volunteers The Task Force reaffirmed that: • Fraternities (single-gender organizations) can be relevant and add value • Our principles endure • Our alumni have value and we must reach out to them to establish and support relevant, strategic alumni organizations The Task Force also acknowledged that: • Fraternities (DU included) have drifted from their roots • Current behaviors in the organization are not aligned with our values • To get back on track, we must be more intentional and purposeful • Many have benefited from a less structured experience, but it is not efficient or consistently effective •
We must prepare men for a global economy
Instead of our historical “random walk” approach, the next generation of DU’s will: • Participate in at least one global experience • Attend at least one professional educational program (Winter Educational Conference, Leadership Institute, Emerging Leaders Experience, Regional Leadership Seminar) • Have a structured Associate Membership Program that is consistent across all chapters • Use objective assessment data that provides independent proof of relevance/value vs. anecdotal commentary • Experience an alumni program that is meaningful The course we propose appears subtle, but is in most every way profound. With this as a starting point, the Task Force focused their recommendations in five working areas: • Purposeful Experiences – The integration of principle-based experiences to help men find a safe, healthy, productive and authentic sense of manhood • Chapter Structure - A comprehensive and consistent chapter model designed to produce desired outcomes aligned with the DU’s Four Founding Principles • Organizational Structure – The alignment and allocation of resources to deliver the DU experience • Research and Assessment - Collect, analyze, and disseminate knowledge and information in order to create the premier men’s fraternity experience • Funding Models - The cultivation, acquisition, and stewardship of financial resources to deliver and sustain the DU experience The recommendations also incorporate critical concepts relating to a strong alignment with our host universities and show that we are an organization of merit and consistent, documented excellence. The recommendations of the Task Force will guide the Board of Directors in the development of the 2012-2015 strategic plan. This is no time to think in small, limited terms about our own lives and the roles that we can play in developing leaders of the future. This is a time for an entirely new vision of human nature — one that is more complete, more caring, more creative and more effective than ever before. And I believe a fraternity like Delta Upsilon can and should play a role in beginning the revolution! In his new book, “The Coming Jobs War”, the chairman and CEO of Gallup, Jim Clifton, explains why jobs are the new global currency for leaders. More than peace or money or any other good, the business, government, military, city, and village leaders who can create good jobs will own the future. We need to recognize that the world is in a war for jobs. The school systems and colleges and universities need to inculcate students with the knowledge and personal leadership skills they’ll need to compete in the jobs war. There’s not a moment to waste: the war has already begun.
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Iowa State Colonized in September Delta Upsilon welcomed the Iowa State Colony on September 11, 2011 at Iowa State University in Ames, Iowa.
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Leadership Consultant Mark Gehrke, Boise State ’11 and Colin Finn, Iowa State ’05 conducted the ritual. Advisor and Alumni Board Member Jami Larson, Iowa State ’74 was master of ceremonies. The colony has 28 members and is already active in the Greek Community. The first IFC President’s Meeting of the year was held in the Iowa State DU house where the leaders of other organizations were able to meet the men of Delta Upsilon. When the old DU house at Iowa State was at risk of being sold, local alumni stepped in and saved it from being demolished.
Several Iowa State alumni were in attendance for the colonization including: Herb Harmisson ’56 who was chapter advisor in 70s and 80s; Steve Koch ’77 and Don Larew ’63, alumni corporation board members; Tom Hansen ’79, former executive director and past alumni board member; Craig Foss ’71, alumni corporation board member and board chair of the Iowa State Alumni Association; Mike Espeset ’91, past alumni board member; Jeff Cerniak ’07; Kyle Solberg ’09. In 2013 Iowa State alumni will join the newest DU members in celebrating the 100th anniversary of the initial chartering of the chapter.
Carnegie Colony Established in October On October 19, 2011, Delta Upsilon welcomed a colony of 21 men at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, Penn. With nearly 90 years of history at CMU, the colony returns to campus committed to promoting the Four Founding Principles of the Fraternity and to challenging the campus community to be better. Colony members have already participated in several events on campus and now turn to creating their own. The diverse group of members boasts substantial involvement in a number of organizations on campus. The colonization ceremony, held on campus at the University Center, was led by Leadership Consultant Mike Taylor, North Carolina State ’10 and Dave Williams, Carnegie ’64. The colony members were joined by more than a dozen guests including many of the Carnegie alumni who proved paramount in re-establishing the group. Also in attendance
was John DelSignore, Penn State ’92, president of Delta Upsilon’s Penn State Alumni Corporation.
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2011 Leadership Institute in Orlando Copyright 2011 Delta Upsilon International Fraternity Inc.
More than 400 Delta Upsilon brothers from across the continent gathered in Orlando in August for the 2011 Leadership Institute. The opening night celebration on Thursday gave brothers a chance to meet and reconnect before celebrating the initiation of seven men. The Fraternity’s model initiation welcomed men from two chapters: Erik Fessler, North Carolina State ’13, Aaron Jones, Isaac Lewis, Josh Rodriguez, Kenny Ortiz, Brian Ross, and Scott Wargula, all from the North Florida Chapter’s class of 2015. Brothers were honored to have Judge Terry Bullock, Kansas State ’61 give the charge.
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2011 Leadership Institute in Orlando Bullock encouraged brothers to look forward to the life story they will eventually tell and shared the positive impact his fraternity experience has had on his life. He explained how his DU membership prepared him to interview for and secure a job which led to a successful career as a lawyer, judge and mediator. On Friday, in addition to legislative business that was part of the Undergraduate Convention, Ben Pyle, Kansas ’12 and Aaron Vince, Grand Valley State ’12 were elected to serve as undergraduate directors on the Fraternity Board. The Alumni Volunteer Conference took place at the same time giving alumni the opportunity to review the last year of Fraternity operations and discuss the organization’s direction and key priorities for the coming year. With the emphasis on fraternalism, group discussion and feedback helped build awareness and engage alumni in Fraternity priorities. A new component of the Leadership Institute also began on Friday with the Ignite Series where eight alumni spent seven to 10 minutes each sharing topics they are passionate about. Their talks were based on the style of the acclaimed TED Talks which serve to unite opinion leaders in the fields of technology, entertainment and design and use those subject-area experts to answer questions with real life solutions.
For Delta Upsilon, each speaker followed up with a more focused breakout session on topics that included: •• ••
Utilizing a Chapter’s #1 Resource: Alumni Marketing Your Fraternity Experience to Potential Employers •• Travel for Good •• Instilling the Principles into Your Family Life •• Citizen of the World: Thoughts on Being an International Professional in our Century •• Brotherhood Stops at the Treasurer’s Door •• Continuing to Live the Ritual After You Graduate •• Personal Leadership in Today’s Multi-Generational Workforce During the Global Service Luncheon, President Bernard Franklin, Kansas State ’75 announced adoption of the Global Service Initiative as Delta Upsilon’s international philanthropy. In 2010, DU launched a pilot service program assisting the community of Negril, Jamaica. As part of DU’s Global Service Initiative in May 2011 students donated a week of service in Jamaica. The Fraternity has increased opportunities for participation in 2012 with a trip to New Orleans in March and trips to Jamaica in both May and June.
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Copyright 2011 Delta Upsilon International Fraternity Inc.
Each chapter of DU has been challenged to support DU’s global efforts in the coming years with a $75,000 fundraising goal set for the 2011-2012 academic year. The Oregon State Chapter was recognized with the Global Service Fundraising Award for their $4500 contribution toward the 2011 Global Service Initiative. Kaye Schendel was honored with the Dr. Augustus White III Award for Civic Engagement and Service. Established in 2009 to honor Brother White, the award is presented to either a member of Delta Upsilon or a fraternal partner who has made significant contributions at the local, national or global community level. Schendel is the assistant director of University Centers for the University of Wisconsin-La Crosse and serves as national president of Sigma Sigma Sigma. She has been instrumental in the development and implementation of Delta Upsilon’s Global Service Initiative.
Kappel, North Dakota ’12. The California Chapter had the most participants with four brothers running. Later, during the Awards Luncheon recognition began with A.S.C., Delta Upsilon’s program to spotlight longtime convention attendance. Once an individual arrives at his seventh convention he is recognized as a member of the A.S.C. (named after the Anti-Secret Confederation, which was formed in 1847 at what became DU’s first convention in Schenectady, New York). Dave Maguire, Southern Illinois ’73 led 2011 participants by attending his 37th consecutive convention.
President E. Bernard Franklin, Kansas State ’75 emphasized the importance of each DU’s role in our global society and encouraged undergraduate brothers to take charge of their lives in his keynote address. Executive Director, Justin Kirk, Boise State ’00 provided the State of the Fraternity report (see page 2) and shared information about upcoming Fraternity initiatives that evening. Brothers from eleven chapters braved the early morning Orlando heat to complete the DU Founders 5K run on Saturday. Ryan Chapin, Bradley ’11 completed the course in 20:46 followed closely by Pete D’Abrosca, Elon ’14 and John
Kaye Schendel, who was instrumental in the development and implementation of the Global Service Initiative, was honored with the Dr. Augustus White III Award for Civic Engagement. Photo page 9: Griffin Youngstrum, Carthage ‘12 attends the Leadership Institute in Orlando.
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Judge Terry Bullock, Kansas State ‘61 gave an inspirational charge following the model initiation.
The current record is held by Col. Frederick Crossett, New York 1884, who attended 51 DU conventions in a row. DU Foundation Trustees, Roy F. Allan, Lehigh ’68 and Craig R. Milkint, Illinois ’83 were both attending their eighth convention and were recognized for the first time in 2011. Kyle Lorts, Western Illinois ’06 was recognized for attendance at his seventh convention. The Outstanding Alumni Chapter Award was presented to the San Diego State Alumni Chapter who rallied together to invest in chapter property and develop a recruitment plan and academic plan that inspired the undergraduate chapter to excel. The San Diego State Greek Community also honored Bruce Howard, San Diego State ’70 as IFC Advisor of the Year in the spring.
Seven men were initiated in the model initiation.
Sarah Shinn, an alumna of Alpha Xi Delta Fraternity who serves as advisor for Boise State, was named Outstanding Chapter Advisor. Austin Peck, California ’12 was recognized with the 2011 President’s Award.
The Boise State Chapter Received their charter as DU’s 156th chapter.
The Virginia Chapter was recognized with the McKeag Award for 100 percent participation in the Oak Circle, the DU Foundation’s undergraduate giving program. The award is named for Brother David McKeag, Minnesota ’04 who had a significant impact on the Oak Circle’s success in the program’s first three years. The Cornell, Houston and San Jose Chapters were honored as Silver Chapters for the Oak Circle with a total of more than $500 in contributions while
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Indiana, Iona, Kansas, Kansas State, Oklahoma, Virginia and Washington were honored as bronze chapters of the Oak circle with a total of more than $250 in contributions. Foundation Chairman Steve Rowley, Ohio ’65 presented the $1,000 Oak Circle Scholarships to Ryan W. Chapin, Bradley ’12 and J. Michael Kirk, Kent State ’13. Former DU Fraternity President Jim McQuaid, Chicago ’60, who is a recipient of the DU Distinguished Alumni Award and a current member of the Board of Trustees of the Delta Upsilon Educational Foundation, announced $2,500 McQuaid Undergraduate Scholarships awarded to Johnathan D. Lott, Florida ’11 and Jesse L. Rosenthal, Boise State ’13. Matthew Nance, DePauw ’10 and Joshua A. Sawyer, Arlington ’06 were recognized with McQuaid Graduate Fellowships. All participants were part of the loss prevention education session on Saturday afternoon and had the opportunity to participate in additional educational sessions. Recognition of Fraternity accomplishments continued with the much-anticipated Grand Awards Banquet on Saturday night. Sweepstakes finalists included the following chapters: California, Florida, Kansas, Kansas State, Missouri, Rochester and San Jose. Sweepstakes finalists excel in multiple areas such as the chapter’s standing on campus, the example they show to other DU chapters, recruitment, Chapter Excellence Plan score and academic standing. The 2011 Sweepstakes winner was the Kansas Chapter. The Delta Upsilon Remembrance followed with a moment of silence for all of DU’s fallen brothers. Foundation Vice- Chairman Craig Franz, Bucknell ’75 then gave the invocation.
Copyright 2011 Delta Upsilon International Fraternity Inc.
Rick Taylor, North Carolina State ’82 presented the Chairman’s Award for Outstanding Alumni Volunteer of the Year to Todd Sullivan, Santa Barbara ’95.
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Alumni initiate Kevin Smith, Ohio ‘10 talked about personal leadership in a multi-generational workforce during the Ignite Series.
The California Chapter was named as the Most Improved Chapter and the San Diego State Chapter was the first runner-up. President Franklin welcomed DU’s newest chapters: Chattanooga, Embry-Riddle, Boise State and Virginia Tech. Greg Nance, Chicago ’11 was recognized with the Distinguished Undergraduate Award based on his leadership, service and involvement to improve his chapter, campus and community. The award emphasizes the attributes of an undergraduate’s leadership throughout his college career. Finalists included Matt Panzano, Florida ’11, Justin Pierce, Kent State ’11 and Chase Johnson, Boise State ’11. The 2012 Leadership Institute will be held in downtown Chicago from Thursday, August 2 through Sunday, August 5, 2012. Learn more at www.deltau.org.
The Kansas Chapter was honored with the 2011 Sweepstakes Award.
Get video footage from the 2011 Leadership Institute online at www.youtube.com/deltaupsilonmedia
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Tweets from #duli11 @kplagge Kevin Plagge, Carthage ’12 Just touched down in Orlando. Getting ready for #duli11.
@imagineerleader Bernard Franklin, Kansas State ’75 #duli11 it’s on. In a cynical world, there is something great about men and brotherhood.
@benweigel Ben Weigel, Boise State ’13 “I will daily affirm my new beliefs about myself and my future.” Powerful words from the keynote of @ImagineerLeader. #duli11
@zacmabry
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Founders Medal Presented to Paul Rosenthal, Florida ’73 Paul Rosenthal, Florida ’73 was honored with the Founders Medal, in recognition of the extraordinary time and inspirational service he has given to DU and the Florida Chapter. He served on DU’s board of directors in the 1980s and since his graduation in 1973, Brother Rosenthal has been an integral part of the Florida Chapter. He served on the house corporation board in a number of roles beginning in the 1970s and has always been the go-to alumnus in a time of need. “Simply put, Paul is one of the main reasons why there is still a Florida Chapter today,” said Florida Chapter House Corporation President Troy Finnegan, Florida ’00. As one of DU’s most actively engaged alumni brothers he has not only had a profound impact on his chapter, but has given to DU as a whole. Whether he was guiding the organization of the undergraduate chapter, counseling an undergraduate brother, organizing an alumni event, attending a DU Convention, or serving on the Board of Directors of the International Fraternity, Rosenthal has given selflessly for the good of the Delta Upsilon. Recipients of the Founders Medal embody the spirit of Delta Upsilon’s 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 Founder’s Medal.
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Zachary Mabry, Oklahoma ’12 @deltaupsilon has adopted the Global Service Initiative as our official international philanthropy! #duli11
@bhs5041 Brice Smith, Penn State ’11 @deltaupsilon is the #Apple of the fraternity system. #duli11
@jrcabby John Cabral, Western Ontarioo ’12 Just finished the service luncheon, such moving stuff with GSI! Now getting ready for more educational breakouts! #duli11
@tcs228 Todd Sullivan, Santa Barbara ’95 Congrats @KayeSchendel @trisigma Nat’l Pres on receiving @deltaupsilon Service Award! #duli11 http://t.co/cPffqZM
@davidjlemon David Lemon, St. Norbert ’08 Can’t want to hear what the amazing men of @deltaupsilon take away from #duli11. Get inspired and get ready to do something big!
@ryanegregg Ryan Gregg, Boise State ’13 Excited to be accepting our charter tonight with my @boisedu brothers! #duli11 Get news and updates by following us at www.twitter.com/deltaupsilon.
Pediatrician helps those in Need The incredible poverty encountered in El Salvador was Interestingly, El Salvador has a high vaccination rate, but eye-opening for Dale Heisinger, San Jose ’62. Sixty percent the lack of prenatal and maternal infant care has a profound of people live on one or two dollars a day in primitive living and often heartbreaking impact on families. There is no conditions, lacking things that we often take for granted program, for example, to provide resources for a baby failing such as running water and indoor to thrive if a mother’s health is not plumbing. Eighty to 90 percent “As global citizens, conducive to breastfeeding. Without of children in El Salvador have nourishment, the baby simply won’t everybody has a parasitic disease because of the survive. water they are drinking responsibility to An experience like this helps
Heisinger, a pediatrician with to “personalize the perspective,” help those who Madrona Medical Group, is Heisinger said. “When you go to the are under-served involved with Peace Health through country you see the abject poverty and and in need.” St. Joseph Hospital in Bellingham, suffering.” He encourages everybody Washington and volunteers on to do some type of service. missions in El Salvador. He has always had an interest in In addition to DU’s Global Service Initiative, he points providing medical services to those in need, and previously out that there are many non-governmental organizations worked with Native American communities in Michigan and that serve third-world communities, including both religious Montana. organizations and non-religious organizations. “As global citizens,” Hesinger said, “Everybody has a responsibility to help those who are under-served and in need.”
Copyright 2011 Delta Upsilon International Fraternity Inc.
His recent work in El Salvador has left him greatly impressed with the spirit of the people. “So many lovely people are just trying to get by,” he said, “They are gracious and warm. Many would bring fruits to the clinic for the physicians.” In February he returned for his sixth trip, traveling with a team of eight doctors plus a support staff of 25. One of their goals was to do vision testing and distribute 4,000 to 5,000 glasses collected by the Lions Club. Heisinger donated glasses when his father passed away, and he says he appreciates knowing they will help someone else to see. Each year this mission group visits a different community in a poor part of the El Salvador. In pediatrics, the team treats 100 to 150 children each day. Many have respiratory disease related to cook stoves used in enclosed spaces. Other common maladies include tuberculosis, skin infections and gastrointestinal infections. In the past, he encountered a child affected by cretinism, a deficiency of thyroid hormones that retards mental and physical growth. In the U.S. babies are screened for this condition at birth, and most of the effects can be reversed with early diagnosis.
Experienced pediatrician, Dale Heisinger, San Jose ‘62 provides valuable care for familes in El Salvador.
As an undergraduate, Dale Heisinger, San Jose ’62 was president of the San Jose Chapter. His brother, Brent Heisinger, San Jose ’58 is a retired, award-winning doctor of music at San Jose State University and has been an advisor to the San Jose Chapter for many years. Dale’s nephew (Brent’s son) Doug, San Jose ’85 is a founding father and was president of the recolonized of the San Jose Chapter in the early 1980s.
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Cabela’s CFO Values DU Connections, character, integrity When Ralph Castner, Nebraska ’85 joined DU at Nebraska in 1981, friendships and academics quickly merged: he found several DU role models who were accounting majors like him, including his pledge dad. His talents led to a leadership role in the Chapter, where he served as treasurer for two terms -not a surprising role now that he is Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer of Cabela’s Inc, the largest mailorder, retail and Internet outdoor outfitter in the world. Castner has been the Chief Financial Officer of Cabela’s Inc. since July 2003 and serves as its Principal Accounting Officer. He took on the role of Executive Vice President in January 2010, having previously been in the roles of Vice President, Director of Accounting and Finance and Treasurer of World’s Foremost Bank, Cabela’s Inc.’s bank subsidiary. He has been Chairman of World’s Foremost Bank since March 2006 and a director since 2001. Prior to joining Cabela’s Inc., he was employed by First Data Corporation from 1990 to 2000, and served as its Vice President. Before to joining First Data Corporation, he served as Certified Public Accountant of Touche Ross and Company. The business environment has changed dramatically since Castner graduated from Nebraska, and he acknowledges the
value of DU’s increased emphasis on embracing the global community. “The world has become a much smaller place. Particularly in the Midwest, we had so little exposure to nonNorth-American entities. I would have never thought that I would have an issue dealing with Europe, much less dealing with Asia or any place else. Now we have people who go back and forth to Asia all the time to source product.” Castner reflected on the fact that he once employed a woman from East Germany. “I would have told you in the ’80s, in the middle of the Cold War, that I would have had a better chance of going to the moon than I would to have an East German woman work for me. It was just a different world.” His position at Cabela’s may be a long way from chapter operations of his undergraduate days, but Castner emphasizes how important Delta Upsilon is to him. “The whole concept of self-governance was a real lesson for me. The Fraternity was sort of a leadership lab where you could test things and really get exposure to leading a large group of people. All of that experience is relevant to building a career and your leadership as an executive in the working world.”
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Cabela’s main world headquarters building along Interstate 80 in Sidney, Nebraska
17 Castner advises today’s undergraduates to be involved in all different aspects of any organization so they can gain invaluable experience. “To see different industries, different skills, both leadership and business skills, to help with the advancement of their career is incredibly valuable,” he said.
Copyright 2011 Delta Upsilon International Fraternity Inc.
He continues to place a high value on the simple relationships built through Delta Upsilon and the character and integrity found in those relationships. “I continue to experience relationships with guys who were in the house with me who were both older and younger than me who I continue to meet out in the business world and ask for advice. It’s tremendously valuable to build those relationships.” Castner and his wife, Kim, a Kappa Alpha Theta alumna from Nebraska, are also passionate about giving back to their community. They were instrumental in getting a new high school built in Sidney, Nebraska, and they support higher education as well. They have established the Castner Family Scholarship for students from Sidney who attend the University of Nebraska. Castner grew up knowing Delta Upsilon was part of the equation for lifelong friendship. His first exposure to the Fraternity was through his father, C. Lloyd Castner, Nebraska ’57, who maintained many DU friendships throughout his lifetime, and his uncle, Gene Castner, Nebraska ’49. His brother, Clarence “Clarey” Castner, Nebraska ’87, is also a DU, as are two cousins, a first cousin once removed, and now his oldest son, Luke, Nebraska ’15, who just joined the Nebraska Chapter in August.
Cabela’s is celebrating 50 years at the World’s Foremost Outfitter of hunting, fishing and outdoor gear this year. The outdoor equipment company that had a modest start by two brothers at a kitchen table in 1961 grew to a world headquarters with more than 250,000 square feet in Sidney, Nebraska. The company produces nearly 100 different catalogs per year with distribution in all 50 states and 25 countries. In 2001 the catalog ranked fifth most popular behind direct-mail giants J.C. Penney and Sears in a consumer shopping survey. While the catalog was the original cornerstone of the business, the internet department has grown exponentially since 1998 and the retail division operates destination stores throughout the U.S. Cabela’s made its debut on the New York Stock Exchange in 2004. In addition, Cabela’s employees were instrumental in naming the company one of the Top 100 Companies to Work For in Fortune magazine’s January 2000 issue. Cabela’s continues to embrace the original customer-based philosophy instilled by founders Jim and Dick Cabela.
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Alumni News Alberta The Alberta Alumni Board met to set goals and plan support for the undergraduate chapter’s recruitment efforts, scholastic pursuits, finances and events.
Florida Michael A. Mone, Florida ’85 was appointed to a fouryear term on the Ohio State Board of Pharmacy by Ohio Governor Ted Strickland. His term runs through June 2014.
Arizona Jonathan Sweeney, Arizona State ’09 passed the Certified Financial Planning (CFP) exam in July. Fewer than 55,000 people in the world hold the designation.
Iowa John L. ( Jack) Burge, Iowa ’61 has been appointed as Entrepreneur-in-Residence for the city of Aurora, Ohio and at the Kent State University College of Business Administration with the Center for Entrepreneurship and Business Innovation. He will advise students on various aspects of launching and running their businesses.
Bradley In August brothers from the classes of 1967-1972 held a reunion in Napa, Calif. Previous reunions were held in Colorado and Oregon and the next reunion is scheduled for spring 2013 in Naples, Fl. The group tries to include more alumni with each gathering.
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Bradley class of 1967-1972 alumni
Carnegie Brothers of Delta Upsilon accounted for about 25 percent of the members of the Carnegie Mellon University (formerly Carnegie Institute of Technology) Class of 1960 who attended their 50th reunion in 2010. Chicago Rotarian Michael Yesner, Chicago ’65 was selected the District 6440 to be the District Governor-NomineeDesignate and will serve as District Governor in 2013-14. He is a member of the Rotary Club of Skokie Valley in Illinois. Yesner holds a BA in political science and an MBA in marketing from the University of Chicago. For more than 20 years, he has operated Yesner Marketing, Inc. He also teaches marketing at the graduate and undergraduate levels at The University of Phoenix, both Online and Chicago Campuses. Yesner’s career started at Procter & Gamble and he has also worked for Sears, J. Walter Thompson, and other ad agencies. His clients have included McDonald’s, Marriott, Arby’s, and Popeye’s. Yesner is married with two children and one grandchild.
Michale D. Johnson, Iowa ’94 is cofounder and co-owner of Symbuyosis. com where selected merchants agree to donate an item to a nonprofit a consumer selects, if that consumer also purchases an item. Johnson and his co-founder met at Cornell University as graduate students and Park Leadership Fellows. Johnson said Delta Upsilon helped him develop many of the foundational leadership skills which have led him to receive the Park Fellowship and grow businesses like Symbuyosis.com. Steve West, Iowa ’68 of West Music Company, Inc. was honored by Junior Achievement of Eastern Iowa for outstanding achievements in the business community, epitomizing four key standards of excellence: their impact on their industry, integrity as ethical business leaders, commitment to bettering the community as a whole and leadership qualities which allow them to be exemplary. Junior Achievement is the world’s largest and fastest-growing organization dedicated to inspiring and preparing young people to succeed in a global economy. Louisville The Louisville Alumni Luncheon drew 85 brothers in April. The oldest DUs attending the annual luncheon cut a cake marking the 90th Anniversary since the founding of the Louisville Chapter.
Louisville Alumni at the chapter’s 90th Anniversary Luncheon: Jack Hunt ’54, Robert Maddox ’56, Louis McQuady ’48, Clifford Rompf ’49, Robert Adams ’49, John Wilson ’53, Kenton Hayes ’50.
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Copyright 2011 Delta Upsilon International Fraternity Inc.
Daniel C. Ulmer, Louisville ’55, received the Charles Farnsley Distinguished Alumnus Award, the highest honor given by the Louisville Chapter. After graduation Ulmer served as a naval officer and then attended Rutgers University School of Banking, Stanford University Executive Program. He devoted most of his professional career to banking and after 40 years, eventually retired as the Chairman and CEO of PNC Bank of Kentucky. Brother Daniel C. Ulmer, Louisville ‘55, received the Charles Farnsley Distinguished Alumnus Ulmer is perhaps best Award, the highest honor given by the known for his efforts Louisville Chapter. to move the Louisville Bats Baseball franchise to Louisville, eventually leading to the development of Slugger Stadium. He currently is chairman and an owner of the Bats franchise, which leads the International League in attendance every year. He has also served as chairman of the Board of Trustees for Minor League Baseball. His commitment to his community includes stints as chairman of the Metro United Way Fund Drive, Operation Brightside, Norton Healthcare and numerous other community agencies. Brother Ulmer is a former member of the University of Kentucky Board of Trustees, former chairman of the Board of Trustees of the University of Louisville and a member of the U of L Board of Overseers. He is a past chairman of the Kentucky State Fair Board. He has served on numerous civic boards, including the Louisville Fund for the Arts, Regional Airport Authority, Metro Parks, Chamber of Commerce, and Metropolitan Sewer District. In 2009, he was elected to the Kentucky Sports Hall of Fame. As chairman of the construction committee that built the KFC Yum! Center, where the University of Louisville’s basketball teams play.
Michigan State Robert B. Hughes, Michigan State ’59 was honored at the 18th annual induction ceremony of the Michigan Insurance Hall of Fame in August. He spent his career as a staunch advocate for a positive regulatory environment and ethical/professional conduct as a member of the financial services industry. He was the leading producer for American Community Mutual Insurance Company until 1977 when he began representing Maccabees Mutual. In February, 1988, he became a senior agent with the Principal Financial Group. Minnesota Alumni from the Minnesota Chapter hold monthly networking dinners to which all TwinCity area DU alumni are invited. For more information, contact Rod Nelson, Minnesota ’63 at lerone01@comcast.net. North Carolina State Mike Taylor, North Carolina State ’10 was one of only four students recognized by the Chancellor during NCSU’s commencement ceremony in December 2010. Chancellor Woodson commended Taylor for his many accomplishments, emphasizing Taylor’s five international service trips focusing on global health. Taylor joined the Delta Upsilon staff as a leadership consultant in the spring of 2011. Ohio State Tim Voght, Ohio State ’97 participated in a 12 day Christian Missionary trip in July to Taveta, Kenya in East Africa through e3 Partners Ministries. Voght worked with local pastors and a team from North America to build and grow four churches and share the gospel with over 2,400 individuals. He graduated from The Ohio State University with a degree in Industrial & Systems Engineering, and is the Sr. Manager of Engineering and Product Development for Tigerpoly Manufacturing in Grove City, Ohio.
McMaster Stephen Burns, McMaster and Toronto ’95 and his wife Sharon welcomed Jack Stephen Burns, born on July 23, 2010. Miami More than two decades after the completion of his second bachelor’s degree, Morgan R. Morris, Miami ’87 returned to pursue an English degree at the University of Connecticut. He plans to later attend law school.
Tim Voght, Ohio State ‘97 participated in a 12 day Christian Missionary trip in July to Taveta, Kenya in East Africa.
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The Greater Bucky Open was founded by Derek Hildebrand, Wisconsin ‘93.
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Oklahoma Pat Moore, Oklahoma ’64 has been the District Judge for the Muscogee (Creek) Nation (11 counties, w/ 71,110 enrolled citizens) since 1987, working out of the Nation’s Tribal Complex in Okmulgee, Oklahoma. He developed and modernized their judicial system, and has presided over thousands of lawsuits not only between Creek citizens, but over complex and contentious litigation between the executive branch (principal chief ) and the legislative branch (national council), particularly in exposing and rooting out corruption. The Nation recently honored him as a “Living Legend”. He tried to retire last summer, but the leadership have not been able to agree on a replacement, and he reluctantly continues from month to month on an emergency appointment. Oregon State Jim Wise, Oregon State ’68, head golf professional at Rogue Valley Country Club, retired after nearly 39 years at the club, the longest stretch in Oregon and the second longest in the Pacific Northwest Golf Association. Wise was on the mission that recorded the last air combat victory of the Vietnam War when he and his F-4 Phantom fighter crewmates brought down a North Vietnamese MiG-17 fighter over the Gulf of Tonkin. It happened on Jan. 12, 1973, as peace talks were underway in Paris. The mission was launched from the USS Midway, which has been decommissioned and converted into a museum in San Diego. Purdue Al Parker, Purdue ’75 is the new campus president of Harrison College, a private sector college with 6,100 students studying at 12 campuses and online. Parker has served as the executive director, senior manager or director of development for 14 organizations during his career. He most recently was the president of Parker Consulting. Virginia Robert G. Doumar, Virginia ’51 is a federal judge in the U.S. District Court, Eastern Virginia. Recent cases he has ruled on include Somalia piracy and the detention of a suspected Taliban operative.
Washington The Washington Alumni have been busy improving the chapter house and recruiting advisors for the chapter. This fall we have installed a new roof and gutters, new doors to the study/sleeping rooms, and totally redecorated the main floor formal room, dining room and library. Our Advisory Board is fully functioning now and each chapter officer has an advisor. Also, we recruited a faculty advisor who is a Washington alumnus. Our Founder’s Day Weekend was held October 14-15 with a dinner on Friday night and UW/ Colorado football game on Saturday. Wisconsin Derek Hildebrandt, Wisconsin ’93, a former Bucky Badger mascot, founded the Greater Bucky Open (GBO), an annual fundraiser for the American Family Children’s Hospital. The GBO, in its 15th year, also supports the Wisconsin mascot program. Held on a home football weekend, the GBO includes a hospital visit with Badger football players and Bucky Badger to pass out donated toys, a golf tournament on Friday (where roughly 30 percent of the 120 golfers are DU alumni) and a Saturday football game. For more information, visit greaterbuckyopen.com.
Delta Upsilon Remembers Philip Shriver, Kent State ‘49
Delta Upsilon mourns the loss of Phillip R. Shriver, Kent State ’49, who died in April at the age of 88. In 1985. Shriver was one of the first DU alumni to receive the Fraternity’s Distinguished Alumni Achievement Award. Dr. Shriver was president of Miami University from 1965 to 1981 where the much-beloved Shriver was known for his deep fondness for the university, respect for students, incomparable knowledge of history and, over many decades, remembering the names of everyone he met. “My most powerful memory of Dr. Shriver was a dinner where I watched him speak for over an hour about Delta Upsilon history, Miami of Ohio Greek history, and how the two intertwined,” said Tyson Vaugh, Miami ’98. A public memorial service took place on the Oxford, Ohio campus in May.
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Delta Upsilon Foundation 2010-2011 Annual Report
DU Foundation Announces a New Giving “Experience” Last August, the DU Foundation recently unveiled the new www.DUEF.org. The new website is already receiving rave reviews and the attention of other Greek professionals. The website is designed behind fueling the donor’s philanthropic passion and making it easier to find information about where their gift goes. Each Fraternity program that is supported by the Foundation has its own project page that includes an annual goal, as well as a “giveo-meter” to gauge the current fundraising progress. The projects or giving opportunities are arranged by category, such as scholarship, leadership, education, service, etc. Donors can now easily find and support the particular programs that are of importance to them, in addition to their annual gift.
Supporting our Alumni Fundraising process
Chapters
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Just this past October, the Foundation also introduced Chapter Specific Projects on www.DUEF.org. Alumni Chapters can now submit their own qualifying projects to the Foundation and have a fundraising page of their own with all the same bells and whistles of the other project pages. Gifts to these projects go directly into a Chapter Education Account established by the alumni chapter. Alumni chapters now have an additional fundraising tool at their disposal provided as a service of the DU Foundation. Visit the website and click Projects, to find the link for Chapter Specific Projects for more information.
Foundation Announces Trustee 2011-12 Changes
Words of Thanks Cannot Be Said Too Much…
Special thanks go to Brother Bob “Tybo” Tyburski, Colgate ’74 who has stepped down from the DUEF Board of Trustees after 22 years of service as a Trustee. We are heavily indebted to his service, involvement and dedication to our efforts.
We are extremely grateful to all DU brothers and friends who supported our fundraising efforts and our 2010-11 fiscal year appeal. 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.
The DU Foundation welcomes Brothers Malcolm P. Branch, Wisconsin ’69 and Coady H. Pruett, Cal Poly ’02 as newly elected Trustees to the Board. We look forward to continuing our great work with these brothers on the team.
Despite the challenges of life and our current economy, many have stayed loyal and some others have stepped up to a new level. We are grateful to all of you for your level of commitment as we help DU be the best it can be. We look forward to your partnership in 2011-12.
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DUEF Board of Trustees Chairman: Stephen K. Rowley, Ohio ’65 Vice Chairman: Craig J. Franz, FSC, Bucknell ’75 Treasurer: P. David Franzetta, Michigan State ’70 Secretary: Lewis D. Gregory, Kansas ’75 Vice-President - Investments: William C. Rappolt, Lafayette ’67 Vice-President - Development: Craig R. Milkint, Illinois ’83 Trustees: Roy F. Allan, Lehigh ’68 Bruce S. Bailey, Denison ’58 Malcolm P. Branch, Wisconsin ‘69 Anthony B. Cashen, Cornell ’57 John A. Delaney, Florida ’77 Thomas F. Durein, Oregon State ’92 John R. Eplee, Kansas State ’75 Gary S. Killips, Alberta ’71 Martin Krasnitz, Chicago ’57 Maurice S. Mandel, Chicago ’55 James D. McQuaid, Chicago ’60 Coady H. Pruett, Cal Poly ‘02 John T. Weisel, Oregon ’48
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Delta Upsilon Foundation
2010-2011 Annual Report
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. Bold indicates those added to the list since last year.
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Samuel Alboy, Northern Arizona ’01 Anonymous H. James Avery, Illinois ’44 Bruce S. Bailey, Denison ’58 James G. Bell, Calgary ’94 George A. Blair, Miami ’37 Jerry L. Bobo, Houston ’77 Anthony B. Cashen, Cornell ’57 Aaron D. Clevenger, Central Florida ’97 Robert E. Collins, Eastern Kentucky ’74 Harry A. Crawford, Ohio State ’47 Robert A. Dahlsgaard, Bradley ’63 William F. Darlin, Miami ’56 Stephan C. Davis, Northern Colorado ’94 John A. Delaney, Florida ’77 Howard W. Dennis, Nebraska ’52 Henry J. Down Jr., San Jose ’53 Charles E. Downton III, North Carolina ’66 Darrell E. Dukes, San Jose ’53 Thomas F. Durein, Oregon State ’92 Clint M. Dworshak, North Dakota State ’00 John R. Dytman, Syracuse ’71 Steven R. Fisher, Washington ’87 Frederick R. Ford, Purdue ’58 P. David Franzetta, Michigan State ’70 Jeffrey L. Fuhrman, Northern Iowa ’94 John E. Giacomazzi, San Jose ’52 Ole J. Gilbo, Kent State ’65
William R. Gordon, Kansas State ’60 Lewis D. Gregory, Kansas ’75 Terrence F. Grimes, Eastern Kentucky ’71 Benjamin L. Harper, Indiana ’54 Thomas E. Harrison, Johns Hopkins ’53 David A. Heagerty, San Jose ’50 Richard A. Hegeman, Purdue ’49 John C. Herron, South Carolina ’88 Melvin H. Iverson, Washington ’48 Aldie E. Johnson, Jr., Iowa State ’47 Everett C. Johnson, Arizona ’62 Michael O. Johnson, Arkansas ’90 Orville E. Johnson, Washington State ’39 Rodney P. Kirsch, North Dakota ’78 Thomas M. Koehler, Carnegie ’87 Martin Kraznitz, Chicago ’57 Allan M. Lansing, Western Ontario ’53 Donald E. Larew, Iowa State ’63 Kelly S. Leach, Nebraska ’85 William T. Liebermann, Miami ’51 Jordan B. Lotsoff, Northern Illinois ’88 Carroll L. Lurding, Ohio State ’59 Dave Maguire, Southern Illinois ’73 Maurice S. Mandel, Chicago ’55 James D. McQuaid, Chicago ’60 Craig R. Milkint, Illinois ’83 Charles L. Miller, San Jose ’59 Robert W. Muntzinger, Kent State ’51
Rodney L. Nelson, Minnesota ’63 Warren P. Nesbitt, Wisconsin ’76 William H. Noble, Missouri ’50 H. Paul Picard, Houston ’82 Alvan E. “Ed” Porter, Oklahoma ’65 Philip G. Ranford, Culver-Stockton ’00 Daryl W. Reisfeld, Rochester ’03 John W. Rogers, Miami ’57 Paul E. Rosenthal, Florida ’73 Stephen K. Rowley, Ohio ’65 Michael H. Sarra, Auburn ’64 Jeffrey W. Sears, Northern Arizona ’98 Trent A. Shepard, Illinois ’73 William A. Sigman, Iowa State ’50 Craig S. Sowell, Houston ’92 Tyler K. Stevens, North Carolina State ’11 Haruo Taga, Bradley ’54 Richard X. Taylor, North Carolina State ’82 James R. Tormey, San Jose ’57 Ben T. Walkingstick, Oklahoma ’52 Allan A. Warrack, Alberta ’61 James T. Watkins, Iowa State ’53 John T. Weisel, Oregon ’48 Scott W. Wilson, Colorado ’73 Venlo J. Wolfsohn, Pennsylvania ’48
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: “I 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.” Founders Memorial Courtyard Now Online The courtyard has gone “virtual”. Now, you can see and read every brick in the courtyard from the comfort of your own computer chair. Can’t make a trip to Indianapolis to see your brick? No problem. Just go to www.DUEF.org and “Click the Brick”, and navigate to the virtual courtyard. What’s more, viewers can now also see which bricks are still available and when buying their own brick in the courtyard, can now choose their own specific brick location. Choose any blank brick, fill out the information and you’re on your way to leaving your own, permanent legacy. Bricks are still just $150 and count as a tax-deductible gift to the Foundation. Why wait? Go to www.DUEF.org and “Click the Brick”.
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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 will be 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 144 donors have reached a gift level that qualified them to have their name added to the wall, with 24 names added in the 2010-11 fiscal. The current list of 350 names* are separated into the following five levels of recognition: $5,000 $10,000 $25,000
Friendship Society Character Society Culture 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! 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 Ben T. Walkingstick, Oklahoma 1952 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 Wilford A. Butler, Western Michigan 1961 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 David D. McKeag IV, Minnesota 2004 William L. Messick, Lafayette 1968 E. Lee Musil, Kansas State 1971 Warren P. Nesbitt, Wisconsin 1976 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 Patrick Spooner, San Jose 1959 Mrs. Ashton M. Tenney, Jr. Richard B. Thompson, Michigan State 1967 Peter V. Ueberroth, San Jose 1959 Ralph O. Willard, Kansas State 1958 CHARACTER SOCIETY - $10,000 OR MORE Anonymous Horace L. Acaster, Pennsylvania 1944 Dale H. Anderson, Iowa 1949 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 R. Brammer, Jr., Oklahoma 1947 W. Perry Brown, Miami 1952 Keith B. Bruening, Iowa State 1980 Joseph H. Buchanan, Iowa State 1933 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 Robert A. Dahlsgaard, Jr., Bradley 1963
Julian L. Dawson, Jr., Oklahoma 1935 Frank S. Dodd, Miami 1949 Timothy C. Dowd, Oklahoma 1975 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 Robert D. Fisher, Alberta 1975 P. David Franzetta, Michigan State 1970 Ross K. Fuller, San Jose 1949 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 R. 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 Rodney P. Kirsch, North Dakota 1978 Stephan G. Kouzomis, Illinois 1968 Donald E. Larew, Iowa State 1963 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 E. Bruce McKinney, Missouri 1974 Robert C. McKinstry, Iowa State 1950 J. Paul McNamara, Miami 1929 *Names as of June 30, 2011
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Delta Upsilon Foundation
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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 Nebraska Alumni Association John C. Nemeth, Kent State 1967 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 Rice Family Foundation / Mrs. Arthur L. Rice, Jr. 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 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 Charlotte B. Terry Charles T. & Marion M. Thompson Foundation James R. Tormey, Jr., San Jose 1957 Thomas E. Tuckwood, Kansas State 1979 Robert L. Tyburski, Colgate 1974 Gail B. Wakelee Allan A. Warrack, Alberta 1961 W. Donald Watkins, North Carolina 1927 Winston Scott Trust Roger W. Wothe, Technology 1958 David H. Wynja, Iowa 1967 Samuel M. Yates, San Jose 1955 FRIENDSHIP SOCIETY - $5,000 OR MORE Ronald C. Abbott, Kansas State 1961 E. Lysle Adams, Miami 1929 Jaime M. Aguero, Houston 1998 David V. Allard, Indiana 1970 Charles L. Allen, Michigan State 1955 Richard C. Allendorf, Iowa State 1983 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 William B. Becherer, Kent State 1949 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 Malcolm P. Branch, Wisconsin 1969 B. Chris Brewster, Colorado 1977 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 Ryan J. Carroll, Kent State 2001 Mitch Castor, Kansas State 1985 Huntly G. Chapman, British Columbia 1968 Donald A. Chew, Kansas State 1981
2010-2011 Annual Report
Robert J. Clanin, Bradley 1966 Clement C. Cole, Carnegie 1979 Edwin D. Crane, Arkansas 1976 Robert H. Croak, Oklahoma 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 Walter A. Dwelle, California 1967 John E. Esau, Kansas 1978 John H. Eyler, Washington 1969 Jon T. Flask, Kent State 1967 Craig R. Foss, Iowa State 1971 J. William Frank III, Lehigh 1968 E. Bernard Franklin, Kansas State 1975 Craig J. Franz, Bucknell 1975 Joseph Gibson, Kent State 1968 Robert C. Gimlin, Purdue 1942 William N. Godfrey, Miami 1958 Wayne B. Goldberg, Louisville 1983 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 Oliver H. Heely, Jr., Auburn 1968 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 T. Michael Knies, Tennessee 1971 David R. Knuepfer, Iowa 1976 Douglas C. Kramlich, Northwestern 1959 David A. Krebs, Miami 1980 William C. Krommenhoek, Nebraska 1957 Andris Lacis, Purdue 1964 Robert J. LaFortune, Purdue 1951 Robert S. Lannin, Nebraska 1957 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 David L. Marston, Iowa 1963 Michael B. Martens, Kent State 2003 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
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Howard L. McGregor, Jr., Williams 1940 Richard S. Melvin, Indiana 1930 Michael A. Menius, North Carolina 1968 Craig R. Milkint, Illinois 1983 William B. Miller, Jr., San Jose 1952 Michael G. Mitchell, Texas 1965 John L. Moodie, Iowa State 1945 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 L. Rice, Jr., Illinois 1936 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 Douglas J. Stussi, Oklahoma 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 Richard J. Thorpe, Syracuse 1960 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 Charles F. Witte, Miami 1951 Robert G. Yingling, Jr., Missouri 1962
James F. Zboyovsky, Jr., Pennsylvania State 1951
2010 – 2011 DUEF Scholarships Chapter Leadership Scholarships “A New Chapter in Leadership” 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. Thirty-four DU undergraduate brothers received scholarships to attend DU’s 2011 Leadership Institute in Orlando, Florida and five DU chapters received scholarships to attend DU’s 2011 DUEL Experience program, which took place in June at Williamstown, Massachusetts. In addition to these scholarships a “New Chapter in Leadership” fund allowed for an additional $26,000 grant in support of the Leadership Institute. The following chapters presently have fully endowed Leadership Institute (LI) or DUEL Experience Scholarships: Chicago
Illinois (2)
Kent State
Missouri
Oklahoma
Cornell
Indiana (2)
Lafayette
North Carolina
Purdue
Denison
Iowa
Lehigh
North Carolina State
South Carolina
Florida
Johns Hopkins (4)
Miami
Northern Iowa
Rutgers
Houston
Kansas (3)
Minnesota
Northwestern
Wisconsin (2)
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 2010-2011 DUEF Scholarship Program was completed with the announcements of the 2011 scholarship recipients during the Saturday Awards Luncheon on Saturday, August 6, 2011 in Orlando, Florida. This year, four McQuaid Scholarships of $2,500 each were awarded in addition to two $1,000 Oak Circle Scholarships. Congratulations to this year’s recipients.
The McQuaid Scholarships
Photo by George Wada
Jesse L. Rosenthal, Boise State ’13 Johnathan D. Lott, Florida ’11* Matthew C. Nance, DePauw ’10* Joshua A. Sawyer, Arlington ’06* *Graduate fellowships
The Oak Circle Scholarships Ryan W. Chapin, Bradley ’12 J. Michael Kirk, Kent State ’13
DUEF Trustee Jim McQuaid, Chicago ’60 presents a scholarship to Jesse Rosenthal, Boise State ’13 during the 2011 Leadership Institute in Orlando, Fla.
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Delta Upsilon Foundation
2010-2011 Annual Report
Consecutive Giving to DUEF for 25 years or more It has been said that change must always be balanced with some degree of consistency. Such is true with consistent giving to the DUEF. We can change, we can excel, we can improve and continue to innovate because of consistent giving. Below is a list of those brothers who have been the most consistent in their giving. The giving leaders listed below have given for a minimum of 25 consecutive years, and have the eternal and sincere thanks of the DU Foundation. We are proud honor you on this page.
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41 Years
35 Years
30 Years
Horace L. Acaster, Pennsylvania ’44 Leland J. Adams, Jr., Bucknell ’64 Harold D. Barker, Miami ’50 Michael G. Boylan, Bradley ’69 David L. Cutter, Stanford ’51 Keith O. Kaneta, Washington ’59 Maurice S. Mandel, Chicago ’55 Robert J. Martin, Washington ’59 Thomas E. Mattson, Oregon ’63 Howard O. Mielke, Carnegie ’51 Michael G. Mitchell, Texas ’65 Donald R. Morse, Tufts ’42 J. David Nelson, Northwestern ’63 Aubrey H. Polser, Jr., Texas ’65 Richard R. Popham, Purdue ’40 Nelson Schaenen, Jr., Cornell ’50 Richard B. Thompson, Mich.State ’67 James V. White, Michigan ’50
Frederic Ackerson, Iowa ’44 Bruce C. Anderson, Purdue ’65 John R. Ashby, Arlington ’74 John L. Cassell, Jr., Texas ’70 P. David Franzetta, Michigan State ’70 Paul E. Rosenthal, Florida ’73 Mark L. Rupert, Oklahoma ’74
Charles L. Allen, Michigan State ’55 Stephen J. Anderson, Northern Iowa ’79 Michael B. Donnelly, San Fernando ’68 John R. Ehrlich, Missouri ’67 Edward W. Furst, Lehigh ’60 William B. Hallam, Delaware ’80 Richard G. Jacobus, Wisconsin ’51 Mark S. Jones, Arlington ’75 Stephen C. Martinelli, California ’52 Kenneth D. Miller, Iowa ’67 Brian E. Mudrick, Louisville ’82 Roger F. Ray, Arlington ’70 Gary A. Rugel, Illinois ’78 John T. Weisel, Oregon ’48 Scot A. Yezek, Colorado ’80
40 Years Jere E. Bremer, Bradley ’66 John O. Cronk, Iowa State ’60 Richard B. Hallman, Purdue ’54 Benjamin L. Harper, Indiana ’54 Aldie E. Johnson, Jr., Iowa State ’47 John K. Johnston, Penn. State ’58 Howard Kahlenbeck, Jr., Indiana ’52 Robert J. LaFortune, Purdue ’51 Charles A Phillips III, Clarkson ’64 James S. Roberts, Florida ’63 William A. Sigman, Iowa State ’50 George S. Studle, Washington State ’57 Paul W. Wilke, Jr., Minnesota ’50
39 Years Dennis S. Kanemori, Western Mich. ’66 John W. Sprout, Bucknell ’48 Ben T. Walkingstick, Oklahoma ’52 Harry L. Wilkinson, Tufts ’69
38 Years William C. Krommenhoek, Nebraska ’57
37 Years Robert G. Yingling, Jr., Missouri ’62
36 Years Gregory L. Allemann, Missouri ’69 Thomas P. Bays, Oregon State ’42 Robert A. Dahlsgaard, Jr., Bradley ’63 Lewis D. Gregory, Kansas ’75 Joe H. Petty, DePauw ’36 John W. Rogers, Miami ’57
34 Years David E. Chambers, Arizona ’60 Mark A. Clemente, Cornell ’73 George J. Hamilton, Arkansas ’77 Bradley B. Hoot, Michigan State ’65 David O. Johnson, Kansas State ’75 Charles L. Kavanagh, California ’64 Thomas F. Keating III, Cornell ’57 Martin Krasnitz, Chicago ’57 Eugene A. Lucadamo, Lehigh ’71 Angelo J. Magistro, Rochester ’60 V. Edward Perkins, Brown ’35 Christopher L. Saricks, Kansas ’70 Henley L. Smith, Lafayette ’51 Ronald E. Wischhusen, Clarkson ’76 Sheldon Wylie, Brown ’57
27 Years
Kelley J. Brennan, Marietta ’64 Alan R. Chapman, Illinois ’69 Daniel E. Fitzgerald, Purdue ’49 Andris Lacis, Purdue ’64 Stephen L. Mahannah, Colorado ’61 Alan L. Mores, Iowa State ’80 Charles F. Witte, Miami ’51
26 Years Michael E. Hogan, Purdue ’85 Charles R. Kurtak, Washington St. ’42 Willard C. Loomis, Miami ’59 Michael A. Nickey, Iowa State ’65 George G. Rinder, Chicago ’41 Albert P. Stauderman, Jr., Syracuse ’58
29 Years
25 Years
John A. Buist, Illinois ’78 Clement T. Cole, Carnegie ’79 Philip E. Eubanks, Georgia Tech ’71 Patrick S. Hobin, California ’59 Robert W. Shively, Nebraska ’82 Charles E. Trunkey, Iowa State ’52 Richard B. Wilcox, Florida ’68
M. Dunbar Ashbury, Jr., Virginia ‘54 Bruce S. Bailey, Denison ‘58 Jerry L. Bobo, Houston ‘77 Walter R. Brookhart, Virginia ‘71 Daniel L. Costello, Northwestern ‘54 Michael D. Huke, Technology ‘65 Douglas P. Love, Alberta ‘46 Peter A. Marzek, Illinois ‘81 Gary E. Middleton, Carnegie ‘86 Robert C. Nelson, Missouri ‘83 Jack A. Ritt, Illinois ‘52
33 Years
28 Years
Larry W. Amos, Wash. State ’68 Dieter F. Czerny, Lehigh ’74 John A. Delaney, Florida ’77 John K. Dunlap, Texas ’73 Terry D. Finnell, Syracuse ’57 Robert W. Haerr, Creighton ’72 Stephen G. Katsinas, Illinois ’78 William T. Lauder, Columbia ’44 Dave Maguire, Southern Illinois ’73 David W. Rusk, Iowa ’76 Leland W. Waters, Texas ’73 Keith W. Weigel, Iowa ’78
James D. Hallihan, Miami ’67 Dennis A. Johnson, California ’63 L. Geoffrey Lawrence, Wash. & Lee ’59 James A. Oppy, Kansas State ’64 Jeffrey A. VanEenenaam, Colorado ’79
Foundation Gifts July 1, 2010 – June 30, 2011 $794, 597
32 Years Robert B. Buchanan, Illinois ’55 John H. Eyler, Washington ’69 Scott D. Hahner, Rutgers ’78 Conrad L. Hoover, New York ’40 Grayson L. Moss, Purdue ’47 Warren P. Nesbitt, Wisconsin ’76 James L. Ryan, Michigan State ’55 Richard L. Smith, Colgate ’68 Smith T. Wood, Technology ’69
31 Years Jerry E. Brennan, Jr., Purdue ’55 Keith B. Bruening, Iowa State ’80 Thomas W. Foote, Purdue ’50 John F. Herma, Rutgers ’70 Thomas E. Hoover, Ohio State ’56 Alan C. Jeveret, Bowling Green ’59 David A. Krebs, Miami ’80 David C. Myers, Tennessee ’74 Robert G. Noah, Pennsylvania State ’57 David E. Vinson, Wisconsin ’59
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Annual Appeal 54%
Other Restricted Gifts 5%
Chapter Educational Accounts 41%
President’s Club The President’s Club was created more than 30 years ago by then-Fraternity President W. D. Watkins, North Carolina ’27. Today, it honors all donors who give more than $200 to the annual fund within a fiscal year. Members of the President’s Club receive a president’s Club lapel pin at every five-year renewal interval and various benefits and advance notices for special events as applicable. In 2011, there were 565 members of the President’s Club, including 173 donors whose gifts totaled $500 or more who are honored as part of the President’s Trust. Sincerest thanks to our giving leaders! JAMES A. GARFIELD CIRCLE (Gifts of $25,000 or more) Paul B. Edgerley, Kansas State ’78 - CEA+ Arthur K. Lund, San Jose ’55 - CEA Charles D. Miller, Johns Hopkins ’49 E. Lee Musil, Kansas State ’71 - CEA Ben T. Walkingstick, Oklahoma ’52 - CEA+ CHARLES EVANS HUGHES CIRCLE (Gifts of $10,000 to $24,999) Wilford A. Butler, Jr., Western Michigan ’61 Julian L. Dawson, Jr., Oklahoma ’35 Donald E. Larew, Iowa State ’63 - CEA Raymond E. Mason Foundation - CEA John C. Nemeth, Kent State ’67 - CEA H. Clayton Peterson, Kansas State ’67 - CEA Patrick Spooner, San Jose ’55 - CEA+ Charlotte B. Terry Gail B. Wakelee JAMES S. MCDONNELL CIRCLE (Gifts of $5,000 to $9,999) Roy F. Allan, Lehigh ’68 H. James Avery, Illinois ’44 William B. Becherer, Kent State ’49 - CEA Ryan J. Carroll, Kent State ’01 - CEA Anthony B. Cashen, Cornell ’57 Ross K. Fuller, San Jose ’49 W. H. Harwell, Jr., Missouri ’51 Rodney P. Kirsch, North Dakota ’78 Glenn A. Mull, Kansas State ’73 - CEA Warren P. Nesbitt, Wisconsin ’76 John W. Rogers, Miami ’57 Nelson Schaenen, Jr., Cornell ’50 Douglas J. Stussi, Oklahoma ’77 - CEA+ Robert L. Tyburski, Colgate ’74 JAMES B. CONANT CIRCLE (Gifts of $2,500 to $4,999) Bruce S. Bailey, Denison ’58 - CEA+ Scott R. Bayman, Florida ’68 Douglas A. Cassens, Kent State ’68 - CEA+ David L. Cole, Wilmington ’72 Timothy C. Dowd, Oklahoma ’75 - CEA+ Charles E. Downton III, N. Carolina ’66 - CEA+ Thomas R. Harney, San Jose ’52 - CEA+ Michael B. Martens, Kent State ’03 - CEA+ James D. McQuaid, Chicago ’60 - CEA+ William C. Rappolt, Lafayette ’67 Richard X. Taylor, N. Carolina State ’82 - CEA+ Peter V. Ueberroth, San Jose ’59 John T. Weisel, Oregon ’48 HERBERT BROWNELL CIRCLE (Gifts of $1,000 to $2,499) Horace L. Acaster, Pennsylvania ’44 William W. Adams, Iowa State ’56 - CEA
Charles L. Allen, Michigan State ’55 Jan R. Bauer, Kent State ’57 - CEA Malcolm P. Branch, Wisconsin ’69 Ralph W. Castner, Nebraska ’85 - CEA Michael A. Cesa, Kent State ’76 - CEA John A. Delaney, Florida ’77 Richard L. Delano, Indiana ’85 Christopher B. D’hondt, Illinois ’88 - CEA+ Thomas F. Durein, Oregon State ’92 Clint M. Dworshak, North Dakota State ’00 John R. Eplee, Kansas State ’75 Richard F. Fagan, Washington ’52 Robert D. Fisher, Alberta ’75 - CEA+ P. David Franzetta, Michigan State ’70 Jeffrey L. Fuhrman, Northern Iowa ’94 John E. Giacomazzi, San Jose ’52 - CEA Wayne B. Goldberg, Louisville ’83 Lewis D. Gregory, Kansas ’75 Richard A. Hegeman, Purdue ’49 Stephen J. Henning, Nebraska ’85 - CEA+ Thomas W. Johnson, California ’53 - CEA+ Howard Kahlenbeck, Jr., Indiana ’52 Charles H. Kamm, San Jose ’57 - CEA Gary S. Killips, Alberta ’71 Justin J. Kirk, Boise State ’00 - CEA+ David R. Knuepfer, Iowa ’76 Martin Krasnitz, Chicago ’57 - CEA+ John G. Lewis, Kansas State ’76 - CEA Robert M. Loch, Nebraska ’54 Jordan B. Lotsoff, Northern Illinois ’88 Michael B. Magnani, California ’59 - CEA William G. Malloy III, Northern Illinois ’69 Maurice S. Mandel, Chicago ’55 - CEA+ David D. McKeag IV, Minnesota ’04 - CEA+ E. Bruce McKinney, Missouri ’74 Mildred V. Horn Foundation - CEA Craig R. Milkint, Illinois ’83 William C. Moodie, Jr., Lehigh ’47 John P. Morgridge, Wisconsin ’55 Robert V. Noreika, Lafayette ’67 Rice Family Foundation / Mrs. Arthur L. Rice, Jr. - CEA Stephen K. Rowley, Ohio ’65 Jeffrey Siegel, Maryland ’78 Edward J. Stephens, California ’44 - CEA Tamer N. Talaat, Louisville ’82 Mrs. Ashton M. Tenney, Jr. Michel C. Thielen, Iowa ’57 Richard B. Thompson, Michigan State ’67 Charles T. & Marion M. Thompson Foundation Peter A. Tuohy, Washington ’53 Jo Ellen Walden
EDGAR BERGEN CIRCLE (Gifts of $500 to $999) James C. Aitken, Washington ’70 Edwin P. Baldry, San Diego ’90 - CEA Ted J. Biggerstaff, Nebraska ’63 Jerry L. Bobo, Houston ’77 - CEA+ Paul T. Bohlander, Kent State ’67 - CEA Ernest J. Bontadelli, San Jose ’50 - CEA+ John J. Bowyer, Kent State ’65 - CEA Peter W. Bridgford, Northwestern ’56 Christian Brim, Oklahoma ’92 Robert W. Broad, Syracuse ’60 Teresa S. Brown - CEA David H. Carnahan, Denison ’60 Steven L. Cox, Oklahoma ’92 Robert A. Dahlsgaard, Jr., Bradley ’63 Thomas E. Darcy, San Diego ’72 - CEA+ James H. Davis, Northwestern ’65 Joseph A. DeBlasio, North Carolina ’62 Robert W. Deichert, Jr., Johns Hopkins ’97 W. James Edwards, San Jose ’61 - CEA Craig R. Enochs, Houston ’94 - CEA+ Raymond P. Faucher, Jr., Kansas State ’79 - CEA Craig J. Franz, Bucknell ’75 John E. Fraser, San Jose ’55 - CEA John R. Freitas, San Jose ’55 - CEA Nicholas T. Giorgianni, Kent State ’56 - CEA+ Fred M. Goolsby, South Carolina ’81 Robert F. Gruenig, Western Illinois ’85 Scott D. Hahner, Rutgers ’78 Jay R. Hamann, Minnesota ’59 William H. Harkey, Oregon State ’71 Oliver H. Heely, Jr., Auburn ’68 John F. Herma, Rutgers ’70 Bruce V. Howard, San Diego ’70 - CEA+ Stanley L. Iezman, Washington ’70 Vaughn Jeffery, San Diego ’69 - CEA Michael R. Judd, San Diego ’70 - CEA Joshua A. Katz, Central Florida ’97 - CEA+ Mark T. Ketner, North Carolina State ’82 - CEA William T. Killian, Auburn ’69 Martin R. Klitten, Jr., California ’66 - CEA B. Allen Lawlis, Houston ’97 - CEA+ Byron O. Lee, Jr., Purdue ’51 Erin E. Lehaney, Kent State ’99 - CEA Jeffrey D. Long, Kent State ’54 - CEA George C. Long, Bowling Green ’67 Richard R. Mahoney, Houston ’83 - CEA Stephen C. Martinelli, California ’52 John S. McConnell, DePauw ’66 Michael A. Mone, Florida ’85 John B. Morey, Jr., San Jose ’58 - CEA Robert W. Muntzinger, Kent State ’51 - CEA+ Corbin G. Navis, Kansas State ’03 - CEA+ J. David Nelson, Northwestern ’63
Key: CEA indicates Chapter Education Account donor CEA+ indicates donor gave to both CEA and annual fund
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Reginald B. Newman II, Northwestern ’59 Evan M. Nosek, Northern Illinois ’85 Robert A. Pajak, Houston ’89 - CEA H. Paul Picard, Houston ’82 Thomas S. Rakow, Northwestern ’65 Matthew R. Reeping, Kent State ’94 - CEA David L. Reiner, Rochester ’03 Daryl W. Reisfeld, Rochester ’03 James S. Roberts, Florida ’63 Charles N. Rodgers, Kent State ’60 Paul E. Rosenthal, Florida ’73 Michael A. Ryan, Virginia ’86 Samuel A. Santandrea, Rochester ’56 Christopher L. Saricks, Kansas ’70 Terry K. Schmoyer, Jr., South Carolina ’88 David R. Schumacher Aaron M. Siders, Kansas State ’04 - CEA+ William A. Sigman, Iowa State ’50 James S. Simpkins, Washington State ’81 G. Michael Slovak, Cornell ’77 Craig S. Sowell, Houston ’92 - CEA+ Michael T. Stoddard, San Jose ’61 - CEA Frank E. Wellersdieck, Brown ’51 Judson E. Wilhelm, Florida ’68 Clark K. Williams, Northwestern ’62 Samuel M. Yates, San Jose ’55 CHARLES G. DAWES CIRCLE (Gifts of $175 to $499) Anonymous John S. Adams, Wichita ’04 James R. Allan, Oregon ’53 David V. Allard, Indiana ’70 Alden L. Allen, Minnesota ’49 Richard C. Allendorf, Iowa State ’83 Robert L. Allman, Wisconsin ’58 James A. Allums, Texas ’59 H. Robert Altwegg, Kansas State ’62 - CEA+ Larry W. Amos, Washington State ’68 Bruce C. Anderson, Purdue ’65 Brent A. Anderson, North Dakota ’84 Stephen J. Anderson, Northern Iowa ’79 L. John Arbizzani, Auburn ’68 Stephannie Bailey Robert C. Baldwin, Pennsylvania State ’57 Harold D. Barker, Miami ’50 William E. Barnes, Syracuse ’68 John R. Baron, Lehigh ’79 Donald G. Bates, Ohio State ’59 Thomas P. Bays, Oregon State ’42 Mark H. Beaubien, Jr., Northwestern ’64 C. Robert Bell, Indiana ’54 K. Michael Berkley, Kansas ’61 Kristopher P. Biesiadecki, Houston ’97 Lawrence A. Bilker, Rochester ’91
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Delta Upsilon Foundation
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Anthony Billick III, Miami ’77 Robert J. Black, Iowa ’95 Wayne V. Black, Missouri ’59 Mark K. Bowen, Purdue ’82 John W. Boyd, Jr., Florida ’81 Henry B. Brackin III, Georgia Tech ’71 Terry J. Brady, Missouri ’62 William C. Brainard, Kansas ’56 Robert J. Brand, Louisville ’70 Jere E. Bremer, Bradley ’66 Jerry E. Brennan, Jr., Purdue ’55 Kelley J. Brennan, Marietta ’64 B. Chris Brewster, Colorado ’77 William F. R. Briscoe, Purdue ’65 Walter R. Brookhart, Virginia ’71 Robert W. Brown, Purdue ’46 Keith B. Bruening, Iowa State ’80 John A. Buell, Jr., Technology ’56 Benjamin T. Burson III, Georgia Tech ’67 Richard B. Campbell, Nebraska ’68 Paul G. Cantor, Alberta ’62 J. Fred Carey, Jr., Delaware ’70 Kevin D. Carlton, Washington ’86 Peter W. Carmel, Chicago ’56 William K. Carr III, Houston ’75 William L. Carter, Florida ’71 John L. Cassell, Jr., Texas ’70 Jack P. Caulfield, Manitoba ’54 David E. Chambers, Arizona ’60 Bradford E. Chambers, San Jose ’88 Clark G. Channing, California ’58 J. Michael Chaplin, Carthage ’96 Alan R. Chapman, Illinois ’69 Philip N. Christiansen, South Dakota ’75 Scott A. Church, Indiana ’86 Joseph W. Ciatti, Oregon ’64 Brent L. Circle, Indiana ’67 Aaron D. Clevenger, Central Florida ’97 C. Dee Clingman, Bowling Green ’69 Clement T. Cole, Carnegie ’79 Joseph M. Colonell, Colorado ’58 John A. Copland, Cornell ’59 Michael R. Coppola, Jr., Kent State ’65 William G. Cornell II, Kent State ’01 - CEA Barry D. Cory, Northern Iowa ’75 Lawrence M. Costa, California ’62 Jeffrey W. Courter, Iowa State ’84 Donald D. Cowe, Tennessee ’73 Kim C. Cox, Illinois ’76 John W. Crabbe, Auburn ’68 Allyn J. Crofts, Purdue ’47 John O. Cronk, Iowa State ’60 Charles M. Crowe, Jr., Northwestern ’55 H. Richard Crowther, Technology ’54 Jeffrey D. Croxen, Western Reserve ’03 - CEA+ Adam L. Culley, Northern Iowa ’00 William C Cutler, Washington State ’55 - CEA Bernard A. Dahlem, Louisville ’51 Alfred W. Dalcher, Kent State ’57 Lawrence W. Dam, Washington ’68 Chester H. Danielson, Iowa State ’47 Richard B. Davies, Oregon ’49 W. Marshall Dawsey, Pennsylvania State ’55 Sean P. Devine, Western Illinois ’06 Robert C. DiRenzo, Wisconsin ’50 W. Blake Down, Oregon State ’43 Dennis D. Duke, Kent State ’77 - CEA Andrew M. Dunham, San Jose ’86 Douglas E. Dutcher, Houston ’73 William H. Dwight, Washington ’79 John R. Dytman, Syracuse ’71 William E. Eastham, Brown ’48 John R. Ehrlich, Missouri ’67 Christopher J. Ellingson, Minnesota ’92 Howard R. Elliott, Jr., Indiana ’77 Andrew A. Englehart, Michigan ’06 Brian K. Erickson, Houston ’96 - CEA
2010-2011 Annual Report
Troy D. Erickson, Michigan Tech ’02 Herbert P. Evert, Northwestern ’56 John H. Eyler, Washington ’69 Philip D. Farley, Houston ’04 - CEA+ Bruce H. Fellows, Wisconsin ’51 Marion L. Fessler, Bowling Green ’56 James W. Fields, San Jose ’66 Paul J. Fieri, San Diego ’73 - CEA+ Troy W. Finnegan, Florida ’00 Jon T. Flask, Kent State ’67 - CEA Joseph E. Fluet, Jr., North Carolina ’65 David C. Fohr, Wisconsin ’73 Thomas W. Foote, Purdue ’50 Garrett M. Frankamp, Kansas ’12 E. Bernard Franklin, Kansas State ’75 Robert C. Franklin, Iowa ’97 Norman H. Frazier, Jr., Virginia ’99 James D. Freyer, Sr., Syracuse ’61 David J. Fulton, Miami ’61 Larry R. Gaddis, Colorado ’63 Richard L. Galyen, San Diego ’70 - CEA Patrick L. Gerhart, Northern Colorado ’04 Daniel S. Gibbs, Illinois ’85 Joseph Gibson, Kent State ’68 William H. Gibson, Jr., Miami ’51 W. Andrew Glasscock, San Diego ’85 - CEA Roger K. Godfrey, Wisconsin ’54 Matthew A. Goering, Kansas ’91 William R. Gordon, Kansas State ’60 - CEA+ Bradford S. Grabow, DePauw ’85 Eugene Grandone, Illinois ’70 R. McDonald Gray, North Carolina ’59 Dominic K. Greene, Oregon ’99 Gary W. Gregory, Arlington ’77 J. Mark Gresham, Texas ’71 Gerald E. Gross, Michigan State ’63 Robert L. Grottke, Northwestern ’52 David J. Habib, Washington ’86 Steve B. Habib, Washington ’83 Grayson M. Hajash, Alberta ’47 James E Hall, Wisconsin ’50 Richard B. Hallman, Purdue ’54 Keith R. Halpenny, Western Ontario ’55 William A. Hamilton, Oklahoma ’57 Benjamin Lee Harper, Indiana ’54 James F. Harris, Wisconsin ’72 Gregory L. Haymon, Oklahoma ’77 David A. Heagerty, San Jose ’50 Tim L. Heiman, Kansas State ’76 Timothy D. Heins, Texas ’65 Bill A. Helvey, Kansas State ’58 - CEA+ Thomas R. Hendrickson, Washington ’67 Charles J. Herro, Wisconsin ’43 John C. Herron, South Carolina ’88 William P. Hesse, Union ’49 Ormond M. Hessler, Cornell ’42 Edward M. Hipke, Wisconsin ’56 Roger W. Hirsch, Nebraska ’66 Patrick S. Hobin, California ’59 William E. Hole, Jr., Michigan ’51 Stanley V. Holm, Oklahoma ’92 Charles W. Hoppe, Purdue ’57 Robert F. Horvath, Northwestern ’59 Sidney B. Howard, UCLA ’41 Paul K. Huffman, Iona ’06 Robert B. Huggins, Georgia Tech ’98 John L. Hysom, Jr., Kansas ’57 Richard G. Jacobus, Wisconsin ’51 Barney F. James, Oklahoma State ’79 Miles S. Jenney, Syracuse ’55 Alan C. Jeveret, Bowling Green ’59 Frank G. Jewett III, Colorado ’63 Richard N. Johannes, Oklahoma ’61 Bradley M. John, Iowa ’96 - CEA O. Kepler Johnson, Jr., Kansas ’52 Christopher E. Johnson, Massachusetts ’92 David O. Johnson, Kansas State ’75
Top Ten Chapters by Amount of Donations Annual Appeal 2010 – 2011, As of June 30, 2011 Chapter 1. Oklahoma 2. Kansas State 3. San Jose 4. Kent State 5. Johns Hopkins 6. Cornell 7. Illinois 8. Wisconsin 9. Missouri 10. Florida
Amount of Donation $173,590 $104,901 $ 62,311 $40,152 $26,765 $14,355 $13,808 $12,751 $11,148 $ 10,265
Top Ten Chapters by Number of Donors Annual Appeal 2010 – 2011, As of June 30, 2011
Chapter
# of Donors
1. Virginia 2. Kansas State 3. Purdue / Illinois 4. Miami / Washington 5. Lehigh 6. Indiana / Kent State / San Jose 7. Wisconsin 8. Northwestern 9. Houston / Nebraska 10. Bradley / Florida / Missouri
Jeremy R. Johnson, Cornell ’58 Everett C. Johnson, Arizona ’62 John K. Johnston, Pennsylvania State ’58 Clifton C. Jones, Kansas State ’77 - CEA+ Rees M. Jones, Manitoba ’67 Mark S. Jones, Arlington ’75 Thomas E. Kaercher, Bucknell ’57 Keith O. Kaneta, Washington ’59 Stephen G. Katsinas, Illinois ’78 Charles L. Kavanagh, California ’64 Edward Kavazanjian, Jr., Technology ’73 James A. Keller, Southwest Texas ’73 C. Bruce Kern II, Michigan ’84 Darrell L. Kerr, Nebraska ’69 Rod D. Kiefus, Illinois ’63 Michael J. Kilbane, Bradley ’78 Brett A. Killips, Alberta ’03 J. Scott King, Missouri ’75 Bryan L. Kinnamon, Iowa State ’69 Austin H. Kiplinger, Cornell ’39 Paul A. Klinefelter, North Carolina State ’80
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73 59 53 48 43 41 40 36 35 32
John E. Knechtel, Alberta ’60 T. Michael Knies, Tennessee ’71 Alfred J. Knox, Northern Illinois ’77 Leo E. Kolk, Kent State ’54 - CEA Ronald R. Kovener, Indiana ’55 Barry S. Kramer, Rutgers ’62 Douglas C. Kramlich, Northwestern ’59 David A. Krebs, Miami ’80 Mark S. Kristoff, Cornell ’84 William C. Krommenhoek, Nebraska ’57 Mark D. Kuchel, Iowa State ’76 Charles R. Kurtak, Washington State ’42 Steven F. La Buda, Western Illinois ’88 R. Allen LaBerge, Washington ’87 Andris Lacis, Purdue ’64 Robert A. LaFontaine, Santa Barbara ’91 Robert J. LaFortune, Purdue ’51 Robert S. Lannin, Nebraska ’81 - CEA+ Joseph Laquatra, Jr., Cornell ’74 Mark D. Lausier, Maine ’85 Kenneth J. Lee, DePauw ’47
Jeffrey M. Levine, Florida ’85 Richard B. Levy, McGill ’89 Anthony M. Linares, Lehigh ’58 William C. R. Line, North Dakota ’07 Anthony D. Link, Kansas State ’74 - CEA John B. Little IV, San Diego ’72 - CEA Thomas C. Litwiler, Kent State ’56 - CEA Willard C. Loomis, Miami ’59 Brian D. Lowder, San Diego ’80 - CEA Jon D. Lundy, DePauw ’90 Carroll L. Lurding, Ohio State ’59 Joseph M. MacDonald, Colorado ’69 Angelo J. Magistro, Rochester ’60 Dave Maguire, Southern Illinois ’73 Joseph J. Marinelli, Florida ’65 Thomas L. Markl, Carnegie ’70 J. Lawrence Marsh, Colgate ’75 David L. Marston, Iowa ’63 Robert J. Martin, Washington ’59 Peter A. Marzek, Illinois ’81 Thomas E. Mattson, Oregon ’63 Kelly W. McClain, Purdue ’71 Robert A. McDonald, Ohio ’73 Ian G. McDonell, Alberta ’72 William C. McIntosh, Michigan ’53 Robert S. McKeeman, Georgia Tech ’77 George S. McLaren, Rutgers ’75 Benjamin J. Megel, Purdue ’02 Thomas O. Meinhardt, Kent State ’54 David M. Merenda, Pennsylvania State ’77 David M. Mertens, Michigan Tech ’94 Michael C. Miller, Bradley ’80 Kevin W. Miller, Carthage ’99 - CEA Christopher L. Miller, Miami ’90 Michael G. Mitchell, Texas ’65 Arthur H. Mittelstaedt, Jr., Syracuse ’58 Corey R. Mock, North Dakota ’08 David A. Moody, Georgia Tech ’67 James R. Moody, Brown ’58 Richard L. Morrison, Kansas ’70 Theodore C. Mortenson, Michigan State ’61 Gerald H. Morton, Alberta ’60 Lindy G. Moss, Indiana ’49 Grayson L. Moss, Purdue ’47 Donald J. Moulin, California ’53 - CEA+
David C. Mouron, Jr., Tennessee ’77 Brian E. Mudrick, Louisville ’82 Mark J. Mueller, Wisconsin ’82 Anthony S. Murray, Cornell ’60 Michael J. Navrides, San Jose ’87 David S. Nelson, Clarkson ’69 Rodney L. Nelson, Minnesota ’63 Michael A. Nickey, Iowa State ’65 George Nicolau, Michigan ’48 Michael C. Norman, Oregon ’67 Thomas H. Norris, Missouri ’60 James B. O’Grady, North Dakota ’71 Christopher P. Olson, Houston ’92 Martin J. O’Meara, Jr., Union ’50 John W. Orendain, San Diego ’78 Julius A. Otten III, Michigan ’62 Mark Parseghian, Lehigh ’49 Arnold J. Parus, Bradley ’53 Sid W. Patterson, Oklahoma ’42 Harry Pawlik, North Carolina ’54 V. Edward Perkins, Brown ’35 Charles A. Phillips III, Clarkson ’64 Daniel A. Picard, Tufts ’81 Michael A. Pizzuto, Illinois ’81 James P. Plessas, California ’53 Jeffrey L. Pollack, San Jose ’67 Aubrey H. Polser, Jr., Texas ’65 Neal R. Popham, Purdue ’54 Ashutosh A. Pradhan, Johns Hopkins ’96 Jon L. Prime, Bradley ’63 Coady H. Pruett, Cal Poly ’02 John W. Puth, Lehigh ’52 Philip G. Ranford, Culver-Stockton ’00 Bruce D. Raskin, Washington ’85 Wesley M. Ray, Kansas State ’93 - CEA Roger F. Ray, Arlington ’70 Richard M. Rettstadt, Florida ’82 Don C. Reynolds, Southwest Texas ’73 Ronald A. Rhodes, Western Ontario ’59 Reid M. Ricciardi, Purdue ’94 Phillip S. Rice, Arlington ’95 - CEA+ Donald L. Riechman, Bradley ’60 Reynaldo Daniel Rodriguez, Houston ’07 Mauricio Rondon, Houston ’92 - CEA William D. Rose, North Carolina ’69
Kenneth P. Roy, Bowling Green ’61 D. S. Rudd, Western Ontario ’51 J. Preston Ruddell, Jr., North Carolina ’71 Rick A. Rumford, Indiana ’80 Mark L. Rupert, Oklahoma ’74 Chris H. Sarlas, Illinois ’63 Thomas D. Sauppe, Bowling Green ’53 David N. Schettler, Kansas State ’84 - CEA Craig D. Schnuck, Cornell ’70 John A. Seitz III, Missouri ’59 Edwin B. Shaw, Syracuse ’66 William R. Shepherd, Jr., Oregon ’55 Frank L. Shera, Miami ’63 Jeremiah Shinn - CEA Andrew C. Sigerson, Nebraska ’93 Thomas Slintak, San Jose ’08 Thomas C. Smith, Kansas State ’70 Walter R. Smith, Jr., Washington ’70 Wendell A. Smith, Johns Hopkins ’54 Richard L. Smith, Colgate ’68 Richard L. Smoot, Colorado ’62 Christopher C. Stanton III, Florida ’76 Albert P. Stauderman, Jr., Syracuse ’58 Norman J. Steffey, Kansas State ’57 Arthur R. Steiger, Purdue ’48 Richard L. Stern, Georgia Tech ’90 Matthew L. Sternig, Carthage ’99 - CEA H. A. Stevens, Northwestern ’46 Robert A. Stewart, Washington ’64 Robert C. Stites, Rutgers ’53 Stanley F. Stockhammer III, Florida ’88 Peter Stork, Kansas ’65 George S. Studle, Washington State ’57 Kenneth H. Suelthaus, Technology ’66 Todd C. Sullivan, Santa Barbara ’95 Shelley Sutherland William S. Symons, Rutgers ’66 Joshua D. TeBeest, Carthage ’08 Richard J. Thorpe, Syracuse ’60 James R. Tolonen, Michigan ’71 James. R. Tormey, Jr., San Jose ’57 Barry S. Turcotte, Houston ’92 Robert G. Twist, Stanford ’60 Michael A. Valentine, DePauw ’04 Mark T. Vanderberg, Colorado ’69
David E. Vinson, Wisconsin ’59 Drury L. Vinton, Tufts ’52 Thomas W. Vogelsang, Wisconsin ’84 James B. Wadsworth, Jr., Florida ’65 Ronald S. Walcisak, Wisconsin ’74 Joseph A. Walker, Illinois ’67 Edward E. Waller, Jr., Oklahoma ’51 B. Michael Walsh, Oregon ’64 Allan A. Warrack, Alberta ’61 William F. Waters, Cornell ’54 Keith W. Weigel, Iowa ’78 George G. Weingardt, Ohio State ’55 Steven D. Weiss, North Carolina ’77 Richard A. Wells, Oklahoma ’82 Gregory J. Wessling, North Carolina ’74 Richard A. West, Lafayette ’53 James V. White, Michigan ’50 Nicholas Wilder, Colorado ’61 Paul W. Wilke, Jr., Minnesota ’50 Scott W. Wilson, Colorado ’73 Matthew D. Wilson, Guelph ’97 John P. Wingard, Ohio State ’63 John W. Wingate, Hamilton ’85 Charles F. Witte, Miami ’51 Samuel D. Wolcott, Jr., Pennsylvania State ’57 Bradley K. Wolf, Kansas State ’80 Steven T. Wolf, Texas ’76 Andrew D. Wood, McGill ’64 Warren P. Woodworth, McGill ’51 Roger W. Wothe, Technology ’58 Scot A. Yezek, Colorado ’80 Robert G. Yingling, Jr., Missouri ’62 Robert S. Zakos, Jr., Pennsylvania State ’02 James A. Zeese, Minnesota ’59 John T. Zembron, Lafayette ’74
Memorial and Honorary Gifts HONORARY GIFTS Stephen B. Appel, Chicago ’54, in honor of Maurice Mandel, Chicago ’55
Justin J. Kirk, Boise State ’00, in memory of Wilford Butler, Western Michigan ’61
Melinda B. Sopher and the COMM 466 Class, in honor of Justin Kirk, Boise State ’00, and Richard X. Taylor, North Carolina State ’82 Melinda B. Sopher, in honor of Richard X. Taylor, North Carolina State ’82, for his leadership and in appreciation.
Brent A. Anderson, North Dakota ’84, in memory of Matthe McGauley, North Dakota ’84
Merry June Cooch, in memory of Robert L. Cooch, Union ’43 David A. Copple, DePauw ’00, in memory of Joe H. Petty, DePauw ’36 Jonathan M. Furmanski, Bradley ’13, in memory of Maj. Gen. Rudolph D. Bartholomew, Bradley ’51
George S. McLaren, Rutgers ’75, in memory of Gregory “The Duke” Dordeuk, Rutgers ’75 David S. Nelson, Clarkson ’69, in memory of Stanley Nelson
MEMORIAL GIFTS
Thomas M. Ashton, Lafayette ’86, in memory of Lee Pesky, Lafayette ’88
Jon D. Lundy, DePauw ’90, in memory of Joe H. Petty, DePauw ’36
J. David Nelson, Northwestern ’63, in memory of Wilford A. Butler, Western Michigan ’61 Lillian H. Nutt, in memory of Walter Nutt, Lehigh ’36 Shelley Sutherland, in memory of Wilford A. Butler, Western Michigan ’61 Mrs. Ashton M. Tenney, in memory of Ashton M. Tenney, Jr., Chicago ’43 Muriel A. Vogel, in memory of Willis R. Vogel, Miami ’47 John T. Weisel, Oregon ’48, in memory of Douglas Ackley, Oregon ’49
John E. Giacomazzi, San Jose ’52, in memory of Ross Fuller, San Jose ’49 Carlton D. Huff, Jr., Rutgers ’74, in memory of Gary Golden, Rutgers ’74
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29
Delta Upsilon Foundation
2010-2011 Annual Report
Honor Roll 2010-2011 Donors to the Delta Upsilon Educational Foundation The donors recognized on the succeeding pages gave gifts between July 1, 2010 and June 30, 2011. 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 t P. Cantor ’62 (8) D. Davila ’02 (2) mR. Fisher ’75 (4) CEA+ t G. Hajash ’47 (2) l R. Jacobson ’59 mG. Killips ’71 (9) t B. Killips ’03 (2) t J. Knechtel ’60 (2) l D. Love ’46 (25) t I. McDonell ’72 (2) n B. McRae ’01 t G. Morton ’60 (2) l M. Stanford ’64 t A. Warrack ’61 (14) n D. Wenger ’06 AMHERST l J. Fairman ’52 (14) R. Lewin ’66 l F. Tesch ’66
30
ARIZONA t D. Chambers ’60 (34) t E. Johnson ’62 (4) P. Lennan ’63 J. Moravetz ’64 l G. Stoesser ’63 l T. Strasburg ’64 (5) n R. Sypult ’67 (2) ARIZONA STATE P. Haslag ’10 (2) n J. Ochoa ’14 ARKANSAS n E. Crane ’76 (19) G. Hamilton ’77 (34) l K. Satterfield ’83 l M. Zimmerman ’90 (2) ARLINGTON J. Ashby ’74 (35) S. Atchison ’70 (8) J. Branstetter ’12 (2) t G. Gregory ’77 (12) N. Hall ’13 l M. Hawkins ’70 (11) t M. Jones ’75 (30) l D. Marrufo ’13 J. Martinez ’10 t R. Ray ’70 (30) t P. Rice ’95 (5) R. Sepanski ’85 S. Valdes, Jr. ’12 AUBURN t L. Arbizzani ’68 (5) t J. Crabbe ’68 (6) l J. Dixon, Jr. ’65 (4) m O. Heely, Jr. ’68 (12) J. Henderson ’62 (17) m W. Killian ’69 (4) M. Sarra ’64 (18) BAYLOR n J. Morris, Jr. ’83 l R. Shull ’85 (13)
KEY m = President’s Trust ($500+) t = President’s Club ($200+) n = Golden Delta ($100+)
BOISE STATE m J. Kirk ’00 (5) CEA+ BOWLING GREEN W. Broaddus ’62 t C. Clingman ’69 (8) l N. Elkins ’97 (10) t M. Fessler ’56 l R. Hayek ’69 (4) t A. Jeveret ’59 (31) A. Koester ’59 (2) l W. Koons ’71 (3) m G. Long ’67 (12) l D. Mielke ’59 l D. Morgan ’58 (13) t K. Roy ’61 (2) t T. Sauppe ’53 (3) l C. Schaffer ’73 (12) BRADLEY n M. Boylan ’69 (41) t J. Bremer ’66 (40) R. Chapin ’12 mR. Dahlsgaard, Jr. ’63 (36) l B. DeSplinter ’84 (9) l J. Faltinek ’60 (13) n J. Furmanski ’13 t M. Kilbane ’78 (11) n J. Kless, Jr. ’78 n C. Lain ’12 (2) n D. Maisel ’55 (4) n D. McCalpin ’86 l L. Meyer ’64 (4) t M. Miller ’80 (15) B. Miller ’11 l R. Norkus ’51 (8) n B. Olson ’88 (8) l D. Olson ’13 t A. Parus ’53 (17) D. Peterson ’78 (13) t J. Prime ’63 (12) t D. Riechman ’60 (13) T. Ruestman ’11 (2) M. Schardt ’85 (2) S. Smith ’12 (2) n H. Taga ’54 (11) W. Tekien ’69 (16) T. Terry ’61 (5) R. Tringali ’51 (14) n J. Ward ’12 (2) l B. Wernke ’79 (11) n L. Yenkole ’60 (2) BRITISH COLUMBIA n K. Macgowan ’43 BROWN E. Bennett, Jr. ’52 t W. Eastham ’48 (6) R. Judd ’43 n R. McGovern ’48 (2) l W. McKibben ’49 t J. Moody ’58 (4) W. Nash ’44 (2) l R. Norman ’57 (8) t V. E. Perkins ’35 (34) m F. Wellersdieck ’51 (9) n K. Wulfekuhler ’89 (9) l S. Wylie ’57 (34)
BUCKNELL n L. Adams, Jr. ’64 (41) mC. Franz ’75 (11) D. Hopkins ’42 (3) t T. Kaercher ’57 (3) L. Lawson ’48 n A. Romweber III ’91 l L. Rost ’67 (5) n A. Saunders, Jr. ’57 (2) l J. Sprout ’48 (39) l J. Watters II ’64
R. Ten Bruin ’97 (2) l M. Tokarz ’10 (5) R. Van Riet ’08
CAL POLY M. Brown ’08 (3) l L. Doble, Jr. ’68 (23) M. Onnen ’11 t C. Pruett ’02 (11)
CHICAGO n S. Appel ’54 (7) A. Brunk ’08 (6) t P. Carmel ’56 (8) l Q. Johnstone ’36 (17) m M. Krasnitz ’57 (34) CEA+ m M. Mandel ’55 (41) CEA+ l J. McClure ’42 m J. McQuaid ’60 (20) CEA+ l J. Morgan ’51 G. Nance ’11 n M. Nanninga ’47 (24) l G. Rinder ’41 (26)
CALIFORNIA t C. Channing ’58 (11) M. Chase ’65 t L. Costa ’62 (2) n J. Fry, Jr. ’63 (2) t P. Hobin ’59 (29) mT. Johnson ’53 (9) CEA+ D. Johnson ’63 (28) t C. Kavanagh ’64 (34) m M. Klitten, Jr. ’66 CEA W. Lewis ’47 (10) m M. Magnani ’59 CEA m S. Martinelli ’52 (30) n R. Merrill ’56 CEA t D. Moulin ’53 (14) CEA+ t J. Plessas ’53 (13) l C. Rea ’81 (2) l L. Rea ’54 H. Roth ’52 (4) m E. Stephens ’44 CEA l D. Witt ’49 (2) CARNEGIE D. Bradley ’62 (11) n R. Churchill ’84 (2) t C. Cole ’79 (29) n R. D’Angelo ’61 (3) l J. Ferrell ’50 (2) n A. Icken ’65 (11) W. Leete ’58 (21) t T. Markl ’70 (14) l G. Middleton ’86 (25) H. Mielke ’51 (41) W. Murdock ’83 (2) l J. Vassil ’52 n D. Williams ’64 (11) R. Young ’53 (3) n R. Zimmerman ’78 (13) CARTHAGE l B. Brubaker ’12 (3) n R. Campea ’13 t J. M. Chaplin ’96 (8) n T. Johnson ’13 n D. Kniss ’97 (12) t K. Miller ’99 CEA n K. Plagge ’12 (3) J. Robinson ’13 D. Ross-Jones ’06 (4) t M. Sternig ’99 CEA t J. TeBeest ’08 (5) S. Telkamp ’09
l = Silver Delta ($50+) (#) = Consecutive # of years as a donor CEA = Chapter Educational Account gift
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CENTRAL FLORIDA t A. Clevenger ’97 (11) m J. Katz ’97 (9) CEA+ n R. Krausmann ’02 CENTRAL MISSOURI l G. George ’89 (22)
CLARKSON l P. Davidson ’69 (2) n C. Elliott ’73 (9) R. Hopkins, Jr. ’76 (2) n K. Klafehn ’61 (3) n R. Naylon, Jr. ’72 (5) t D. Nelson ’69 (3) t C. Phillips III ’64 (40) R. Wischhusen ’76 (34) COLBY n J. Alex ’50 (13) D. Hailer ’52 (2) l P. Salmon ’53 COLGATE n F. Bradley, Jr. ’50 J. Cameron ’73 C. Collier ’85 (2) J. Germano ’11 R. Gross ’10 n D. Levy ’12 A. Lorraine ’12 t J. L. Marsh ’75 (2) t R. Smith ’68 (32) m R. Tyburski ’74 (16) D. Wesley ’07 (2) COLORADO l H. Blake, Jr. ’65 (5) t B. C. Brewster ’77 (22) l J. Byrd IV ’65 (3) l K. Clark ’76 (2) t J. Colonell ’58 n K. Dobrovolny ’70 W. Drum, Jr. ’61 (5) K. Dunham, Jr. ’62 t L. Gaddis ’63 (7) t F. Jewett III ’63 t J. MacDonald ’69 (9) S. Mahannah ’61 (27) W. Oliver ’62 (12) E. Pflum ’65
l K. Pober ’62 (17) t R. Smoot ’62 t M. Vanderberg ’69 (2) n J. VanEenenaam ’79 (28) t N. Wilder ’61 (10) t S. Wilson ’73 (2) t S. Yezek ’80 (30) COLORADO STATE n D. Walter ’86 COLUMBIA n W. Eckert ’61 n W. Lauder ’44 (33) l J. McCormack ’39 (23) CORNELL n R. Attiyeh ’55 (14) m A. Cashen ’57 (6) n M. Clemente ’73 (34) t J. Copland ’59 (7) n P. Daverio ’60 (9) l P. Dziudziel ’12 n P. Feliciano ’11 (3) n T. Gardner ’65 n G. Gershenfeld ’11 D. Grimberg ’12 (2) t O. Hessler ’42 (4) B. Ilingi ’10 t J. Johnson ’58 T. Keating III ’57 (34) t A. Kiplinger ’39 (14) n M. Korenvaes ’11 t M. Kristoff ’84 (10) t J. Laquatra, Jr. ’74 (6) n J. Maier ’69 (7) t A. Murray ’60 (5) m N. Schaenen, Jr. ’50 (41) t C. Schnuck ’70 (4) m G. M. Slovak ’77 (2) n J. Stevens ’10 (4) l R. Swisher ’12 (2) n C. Vail, Jr. ’61 (2) t W. Waters ’54 (12) CREIGHTON l R. Haerr ’72 (33) P. Knapp ’89 CULVER-STOCKTON l A. Leach ’07 (3) t P. Ranford ’00 (4) A. Robertson ’11 (2) DARTMOUTH l J. Colwell ’55 (6) l J. Giddens ’59 (15) DAYTON R. Harris ’69 (2) A. Maggio ’72 l W. Maselko ’81 (8) DELAWARE l E. Anzalone ’72 (9) J. Brzostowski ’79 (9) t J. Carey, Jr. ’70 (10) n W. Hallam ’80 (30)
CEA+ = donor gave both to CEA and annual appeal Red text = also a donor to the Brick Campaign Italics = gift was a Parent gift
DENISON m B. Bailey ’58 (25) CEA+ l W. Bartlett ’60 (3) R. Carleton ’60 (10) m D. Carnahan ’60 (4) n J. Lawson ’50 (8) E. Mancini ’94 D. Shell ’59 (15) DEPAUW J. Ayers ’61 (3) l A. Billingsley ’11 (3) l E. Boldrey ’63 (19) M. Calby ’09 D. Copple ’00 (4) n R. Current ’59 (2) H. Fjord ’47 (23) J. Gordon ’88 (22) t B. Grabow ’85 (3) C. Graham ’82 (20) l P. Groebe ’62 (24) R. Haduch ’12 l M. Herrell ’60 (6) l W. Hunn ’59 (3) l A. Kaufman ’05 (2) l J. Koch ’53 (4) l W. Kyhos ’66 (9) t K. Lee ’47 (5) t J. Lundy ’90 (21) K. Madden ’94 (10) m J. McConnell ’66 (16) l M. Miller ’88 (8) l W. Murphy II ’93 (11) J. Novak ’49 (20) l K. Sims ’97 l N. Smith ’52 (16) l R. Tilly ’64 (2) t M. Valentine ’04 (8) J. Volkman ’63 (4) n J. Ware ’85 (8) EASTERN KENTUCKY n R. Collins ’74 (9) EMBRY-RIDDLE C. Holbert ’10 S. Ryan ’10 FLORIDA m S. Bayman ’68 (20) t J. Boyd, Jr. ’81 (6) n H. F. Bush ’85 (6) t W. Carter ’71 (2) m J. Delaney ’77 (33) t T. Finnegan ’00 (2) n P. Forrest ’58 (2) D. Goldfarb ’11 (3) J. Gordon ’10 (3) B. Griffin ’10 (3) S. Hernandez ’12 t J. Levine ’85 (13) t J. Marinelli ’65 (15) m M. Mone ’85 (12) l M. Osborne ’13 M. Panzano ’11 (3) J. Parady ’13 n G. Pritchard ’62 (4) t R. Rettstadt ’82 (16) m J. Roberts ’63 (40) m P. Rosenthal ’73 (35) n M. Shuster ’13 J. Sillick ’12 t C. Stanton III ’76 (3) t S. Stockhammer III ’88 G. Tozier ’10 J. Tully ’69 (10) J. Vawter ’76 l R. Wade ’61 (15) t J. Wadsworth, Jr. ’65 R. Wilcox ’68 (29) m J. Wilhelm ’68 (13) FRESNO l R. Buhl ’90 M. Johns ’10 l T. LaBrue ’72 (13) J. Takeda ’71 (8) n G. Wada ’74 (3) GEORGIA TECH l D. Autin ’66 t H. Brackin III ’71 (7)
t B. Burson III ’67 (8) n S. Chait ’14 l D. Crawford ’61 (15) R. Davis III ’83 (3) J. De Priest, Jr. ’61 (7) l P. Eubanks ’71 (29) l S. Flax ’78 C. Fulghum III ’78 (19) n M. Fuller ’79 (19) R. Grant ’12 n J. Harvey II ’92 (2) l W. Hay, Jr. ’71 (13) t R. Huggins ’98 (3) M. Kazmier ’11 t R. McKeeman ’77 l K. Menezes ’08 (5) CEA+ l C. Monfort, Jr. ’68 (8) t D. Moody ’67 n K. O’Toole ’94 (11) E. Schepps ’81 (15) n T. Slovak ’87 (14) t R. Stern ’90 (20) l E. Vietor ’91 (13) l H. Whitehead ’72 (4) GRAND VALLEY STATE N. Harvey ’12 R. McLatcher ’11 n A. Plotkowski ’14 GUELPH t M. Wilson ’97 (9) HAMILTON l C. Andruss ’95 (7) K. Foote ’60 (5) l P. Luney, Jr. ’70 (2) n P. McNall ’57 (3) n S. Mello ’11 l S. Nye ’52 (7) l F. Romano ’49 (2) l D. Wefer ’54 (8) t J. Wingate ’85 (17) HARVARD l W. Spang ’38 (23) HOUSTON t K. Biesiadecki ’97 (7) m J. Bobo ’77 (25) J. Burden ’10 (3) C. Cannon ’93 t W. Carr III ’75 (3) l R. Cowan ’67 (10) t D. Dutcher ’73 (13) l C. Einspahr ’94 m C. Enochs ’94 (5) CEA+ t B. Erickson ’96 (8) CEA l L. Evers ’10 (5) CEA+ t P. Farley ’04 (3) CEA+ L. Figueroa ’11 (2) m B. A. Lawlis ’97 (8) CEA+ n J. Loyd ’06 G. Maduzia ’94 (2) m R. Mahoney ’83 CEA A. Mehdi ’12 (2) T. Menegon ’10 (3) t C. Olson ’92 (3) C. Orellana ’12 (2) l T. Ortiz ’10 (5) m R. Pajak ’89 CEA m H. Picard ’82 (11) t R. Rodriguez ’07 (5) t M. Rondon ’92 (10) CEA l M. Sachs ’96 l D. Self ’12 (3) T. Shelton ’11 (3) m C. Sowell ’92 (17) CEA+ n E. Tulin ’99 CEA t B. Turcotte ’92 (2) D. Tvrdy ’96 (3) n E. Valdes CEA S. Zamir ’05 (3) ILLINOIS n G. Auble ’59 m H. Avery ’44 (14) l R. Buchanan ’55 (32) n J. Buist ’78 (29) l C. Carey ’82 (2) t A. Chapman ’69 (27) l E. Clements III ’71 (2)
t K. Cox ’76 (22) l D. Dees ’55 C. Dexter ’51 (2) m C. D’hondt ’88 (4) CEA+ l T. Duffy ’78 (4) l D. Dungan ’84 l C. Erickson ’43 n M. Finney ’53 n E. Foster ’93 t D. Gibbs ’85 (3) l D. Giffin ’62 (5) t E. Grandone ’70 (5) T. Hoard ’10 n R. Hougham ’72 (7) t S. Katsinas ’78 (33) l P. Kempfer ’64 (10) t R. Kiefus ’63 (4) J. Kimmel ’60 (10) l D. Kohout ’74 (8) B. Krause ’14 H. Lang ’59 (2) R. Magnussen ’60 (19) t P. Marzek ’81 (25) l M. McLees ’75 (12) m C. Milkint ’83 (7) l D. Nixon ’73 (8) J. O’Donnell ’82 (6) t M. Pizzuto ’81 (12) C. Pudelek ’11 (2) m Rice Family Foundation / Mrs. Arthur L. Rice, Jr. (9) CEA J. Ritt ’52 (25) l G. Rugel ’78 (30) t C. Sarlas ’63 (9) A. Scharf ’12 n R. Selby ’66 (9) n T. Shepard ’73 (16) l A. Siegel ’11 n J. Sladek ’74 (4) l R. Smith ’50 (15) n M. Smith ’91 K. Smits ’90 M. Sturgeon ’12 (2) n W. Svoboda ’67 l K. Ulatoski ’76 (2) t J. Walker ’67 (2) n C. Zelent ’84 (17) INDIANA n J. Akhtar ’92 t D. Allard ’70 (16) M. Bear ’55 (2) t C. Bell ’54 (6) n P. Borgmeier ’69 n J. Boyd ’65 (8) t S. Church ’86 t B. Circle ’67 (10) T. Cook ’48 (7) n J. Cutter ’52 (2) m R. Delano ’85 (3) t H. Elliott, Jr. ’77 (6) n D. Epstein ’90 (13) n R. Fishburn ’67 (7) n L. Fowler ’13 P. Gutman ’52 t B. Harper ’54 (40) n S. Jaren ’76 (3) T. Jelonek ’12 (2) m H. Kahlenbeck, Jr. ’52 (40) n M. Kerbis ’10 (2) l T. Kilpatrick ’57 (13) t R. Kovener ’55 (18) n J. Lambert ’87 (24) n R. Levin ’87 (22) l M. Los ’12 A. Moler ’12 n S. Moore ’69 (2) t L. Moss ’49 (2) C. Passolano ’13 l B. Rains ’13 l R. Rock ’67 (2) t R. Rumford ’80 (3) n G. Sims ’82 (13) A. Singer ’10 l K. Smith ’63 (12) n L. Stuckey II ’97 (11) n R. Swanson ’56 (14) l B. Vainrib ’84 n R. Williams, Jr. ’58 (2) n F. Wolf ’67 (12)
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IONA n S. DeRosa ’12 B. Di Chiara ’11 (2) t P. Huffman ’06 (3) M. Opoku ’07 (5) n E. Paparo ’11 (2) G. Rost ’12 (3) IOWA l F. Ackerson ’44 (35) t R. Black ’95 (5) l T. Drake ’78 (12) t R. Franklin ’97 (2) n H. Hearst, Jr. ’88 n M. Heckt ’46 (8) n D. Hinson ’57 (23) F. Huebsch ’52 (6) t B. John ’96 (9) CEA n C. King ’96 (2) m D. Knuepfer ’76 (7) R. Kodros ’68 (2) G. Lamb ’94 (17) t D. Marston ’63 (4) J. McCarragher ’68 (21) n K. Miller ’67 (30) n K. Nelson ’44 (4) l J. Pattie ’58 (2) n R. Renfro ’48 (2) m M. Thielen ’57 t K. Weigel ’78 (33) IOWA STATE m W. Adams ’56 CEA t R. Allendorf ’83 (4) n J. Ashbaugh ’83 l M. Bowman ’65 (13) t K. Bruening ’80 (31) J. Carson ’73 (2) t J. Courter ’84 (10) t J. Cronk ’60 (40) t C. Danielson ’47 (3) n R. Fleck ’49 (9) n C. Foss ’71 (11) D. Heckmiller ’57 l R. Holland ’80 n S. Hudson ’84 (6) n L. Johnsen ’68 n A. Johnson, Jr. ’47 (40) l L. Kempers ’75 t B. Kinnamon ’69 (15) t M. Kuchel ’76 (11) m D. Larew ’63 (2) n A. Lauver ’06 n R. Long ’51 (7) l A. Mores ’80 (27) l D. Morse ’52 (10) t M. Nickey ’65 (26) m W. Sigman ’50 (40) A. Snyder ’86 (11) n A. Staidl ’69 (2) C. Vermie ’73 (5) l B. Welbourne ’99 (2) JOHNS HOPKINS n H. Bigley, Jr. ’64 M. Boyd ’73 (11) m R. Deichert, Jr. ’97 (8) n W. Gibson ’50 (8) n D. Hanson ’50 (23) J. Hildebrandt ’43 (3) m C. Miller ’49 (3) n C. Miller ’60 n J. Parker, Jr. ’67 (5) t A. Pradhan ’96 (2) t W. Smith ’54 (6) C. Summers ’50 (3) KANSAS l W. Abels ’51 (5) t K. M. Berkley ’61 (9) t W. Brainard ’56 (2) l D. Buechel ’45 (2) n E. Clarke ’42 (8) n K. Cochran ’13 M. Crowther ’59 (10) T. Emery ’57 (2) t G. Frankamp ’12 (3) T. Gage ’11 (3) t M. Goering ’91 (7) G. Gray ’12 (2) m L. Gregory ’75 (36)
N. Hart ’56 (21) l E. Hayes ’11 (3) C. Hayes ’13 (2) t J. Hysom, Jr. ’57 (19) t O. Johnson, Jr. ’52 (13) J. Monson ’12 t R. Morrison ’70 (6) n T. North ’69 n N. Phillips ’11 m C. Saricks ’70 (34) t P. Stork ’65 (4) M. Thomas ’62 (5) J. Wright ’75 (9) KANSAS STATE t H. Altwegg ’62 (2) CEA+ n W. Bahr ’94 (2) CEA l R. Baker ’11 (2) n K. Barrow ’91 CEA+ n L. Butel ’87 (11) CEA+ l J. Callen ’62 (10) l S. Carmichael ’87 CEA n T. Curran ’05 (2) CEA m P. Edgerley ’78 (17) K. Engle ’13 m J. Eplee ’75 (10) m R. Faucher, Jr. ’79 CEA l R. Flickner ’07 CEA W. Foster ’13 t E. B. Franklin ’75 (3) n M. Gilmore ’96 CEA t W. Gordon ’60 (24) CEA+ R. Greene ’58 (3) n D. Hawkins ’81 (3) t T. Heiman ’76 (2) t B. Helvey ’58 (4) CEA+ n M. Howell ’13 l J. Howland ’71 (2) CEA t D. Johnson ’75 (34) l C. Jones ’11 (4) t C. Jones ’77 (17) CEA+ l F. Jurenka ’59 (17) CEA+ n W. Kennedy ’70 CEA n J. Knopp ’74 (2) CEA S. Lawrence ’87 (2) m J. Lewis ’76 CEA t A. Link ’74 (3) CEA n C. Lund ’13 l D. McMillen ’89 CEA n T. Michel ’86 CEA n J. Miesse ’72 (8) S. Moore ’99 (2) m G. Mull ’73 CEA m E. Musil ’71 (5) CEA m C. Navis ’03 (5) CEA+ n J. Oppy ’64 (28) n J. Patterson ’70 CEA m H. Peterson ’67 (4) CEA t W. Ray ’93 CEA l D. Rogenmoser ’11 l K. Ross ’02 (2) CEA t D. Schettler ’84 CEA K. Schmidtberger ’12 n G. Sharpe ’86 CEA m A. Siders ’04 (2) CEA+ l A. Sloup ’05 (4) t T. Smith ’70 n M. Stearns ’66 t N. Steffey ’57 (2) n M. Swanson ’57 CEA S. Taylor ’08 S. Wible ’66 n M. Wietharn ’78 t B. Wolf ’80 KENT STATE m J. Bauer ’57 CEA m W. Becherer ’49 CEA m P. Bohlander ’67 (2) CEA m J. Bowyer ’65 CEA l J. Cady ’12 (2) l M. Callen ’93 CEA n P. Camerino ’57 (9) m R. Carroll ’01 CEA m D. Cassens ’68 (13) CEA+ l R. Cellone ’67 (2) m M. Cesa ’76 (2) CEA t M. Coppola, Jr. ’65 (22) t W. Cornell II ’01 (2) CEA t A. Dalcher ’57 (10) t D. Duke ’77 (4) CEA
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Delta Upsilon Foundation n D. Evans ’12 t J. Flask ’67 (2) CEA t J. Gibson ’68 (12) O. Gilbo ’65 (4) m N. Giorgianni ’56 (13) CEA+ P. Hall ’49 (4) l J. Kirk ’12 (2) t L. Kolk ’54 CEA m E. Lehaney ’99 CEA t T. Litwiler ’56 (17) CEA m J. Long ’54 CEA J. Manninen ’57 (22) m M. Martens ’03 (5) CEA+ n J. McConnell ’06 l R. McNeil ’51 (8) t T. Meinhardt ’54 (15) W. Miller ’65 (2) m R. Muntzinger ’51 (14) CEA+ m J. Nemeth ’67 CEA J. Pierce ’11 (3) R. Potter ’64 (3) m M. Reeping ’94 (2) CEA n R. Robertson ’64 CEA m C. Rodgers ’60 (13) l W. Rummell ’53 (2) R. Stevenson ’47 (16)
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LAFAYETTE T. Ashton ’86 (10) l J. deRuyter ’73 (4) n T. Klein ’68 n P. Moser III ’68 (6) m R. Noreika ’67 (5) m W. Rappolt ’67 (7) G. Sanchez ’10 (2) l H. Smith ’51 (34) l N. Snook ’59 (2) N. Sullivan ’00 (11) t R. West ’53 (8) J. Wren ’52 t J. Zembron ’74 (4) LEHIGH n A. Alber ’65 (10) n J. Alcaro ’74 (8) m R. Allan ’68 (17) A. Baker ’13 n A. Barker ’61 (5) t J. Baron ’79 F. Batson, Jr. ’50 (16) A. Beeken III ’45 (2) P. Berg ’44 l A. Cannon, Jr. ’74 (23) n J. Carl ’89 B. Conchar ’41 (12) l J. Corcoran ’84 n C. Curtiss ’43 (12) n D. Czerny ’74 (33) C. Edwards ’41 (4) S. Flannery ’13 n J. Frank III ’68 (13) l R. Frey ’70 (2) E. Furst ’60 (30) R. Gabriel ’51 (10) l B. Goldman ’58 (2) B. Hughes ’13 l M. Kelly ’13 A. Krentz ’13 J. Larach ’13 n P. Leonard ’91 l J. Lichter ’68 (2) t A. Linares ’58 E. Lucadamo ’71 (34) N. Meier ’50 (14) m W. Moodie, Jr. ’47 (13) M. Moreau ’13 G. Naylor ’71 (23) t M. Parseghian ’49 (20) t J. Puth ’52 l J. Ramsay ’58 (6) n G. Ramsden ’44 (23) D. Shaw ’52 (2) n J. Sini ’68 (13) n H. Sklar ’78
KEY m = President’s Trust ($500+) t = President’s Club ($200+) n = Golden Delta ($100+)
n N. Welton ’10 (3) M. Wickware ’12 LONG BEACH C. Cooper ’88 (14) LOUISVILLE l M. Barnes ’76 (2) t R. Brand ’70 (19) J. Brian ’87 (12) t B. Dahlem ’51 (9) l P. Disney, Jr. ’51 (2) P. Fussenegger ’79 (5) m W. Goldberg ’83 (4) J. Griffiths ’69 (23) n S. Hartstern ’70 (16) n J. McKinnon, Jr. ’77 (2) mMildred V. Horn Foundation CEA t B. Mudrick ’82 (30) W. Rogers ’66 n R. Sneed ’80 m T. Talaat ’82 (11) l W. Thompson ’57 MAINE l H. Hinrichsen ’76 C. Hoak ’76 (4) l T. Hooper ’89 (2) t M. Lausier ’85 (6) S. Spear ’83 (13) D. Stairs ’80 (12) MANITOBA t J. Caulfield ’54 t R. Jones ’67 (7) J. Livesey ’93 n D. McInnes ’50 n G. Pulak ’55 H. Sommerfeld ’10 M. Thomas ’13 MARIETTA J. Bako ’63 (2) t K. Brennan ’64 (27) M. Chatterton ’94 (3) l T. Forbes ’64 (2) R. Krupp ’64 (4) W. Richards ’57 (7) C. Schmidt ’53 (8) l W. Thiessen, Jr. ’60 (3) l D. Trabilcy ’59 (10) l G. Woodring ’59 (6) l G. Yester ’51 (22) MARYLAND n M. Caporaletti ’73 (22) R. Costello ’65 (6) n J. Girolami ’75 (18) R. Goco ’87 (13) n W. Kalin ’87 W. Kirkpatrick ’68 l P. McCusker ’85 (10) m J. Siegel ’78 (24) MASSACHUESETTS M. Crosscup ’96 (8) t C. Johnson ’92 B. MacDonald ’11 n G. Titus ’82 MCGILL t R. Levy ’89 (8) t A. Wood ’64 n W. Woodworth ’51 MIAMI B. Backoff ’10 (3) t H. Barker ’50 (41) t A. Billick III ’77 n W. Brown ’52 (2) n R. Bruckman ’49 (7) l J. Burgess ’00 (3) l H. Burr ’62 (2) l B. Case ’03 (7) CEA+ S. Frazer ’66
2010-2011 Annual Report
t D. Fulton ’61 (3) l D. Garrison ’90 P. Geiger ’63 (9) l W. Gerspacher ’63 (2) t W. Gibson, Jr. ’51 (7) l B. Gilleland ’51 (5) J. Goessling ’12 l W. Gurney ’53 (4) J. Hallihan ’67 (28) l F. Hershner ’49 (3) l W. Jones ’64 (2) n G. Kavanagh ’81 J. Koch ’71 t D. Krebs ’80 (31) R. Loges III ’86 t W. Loomis ’59 (26) G. Marsteller ’43 l R. Mayberry ’51 (3) n M. McCollum ’54 (8) t C. Miller ’90 (10) J. Newport ’13 l T. O’Keefe ’82 (10) n M. Plummer ’56 (2) M. Ponder ’67 W. Porter ’12 m J. Rogers ’57 (36) E. Sarkisian ’85 (13) R. Schoenherr ’63 (5) D. Sechnick ’76 (14) t F. Shera ’63 (2) M. Silverstein ’12 n A. Snyder ’97 (6) CEA+ T. Springer ’99 (2) l J. Steen ’41 l R. Sunkel ’53 (24) l P. Swanson ’59 (2) R. Vernon ’54 (7) l J. Wettengel ’65 (5) t C. Witte ’51 (27) MICHIGAN l W. Alexander ’47 (3) n G. Dickson ’49 t A. Englehart ’06 (4) S. FitzGerald ’12 t W. Hole, Jr. ’51 (7) t C. Kern II ’84 (8) l G. Lowery ’83 (2) t W. McIntosh ’53 (13) R. Munt ’64 n K. Murray ’79 (3) t G. Nicolau ’48 (7) t J. Otten III ’62 G. Seraydarian ’12 (2) n R. Spencer III ’59 (12) J. Stevens ’11 (2) J. Stuart ’52 (6) n T. Tanase ’63 C. Theisen ’12 t J. Tolonen ’71 (2) l R. Waddell ’61 t J. White ’50 (41) P. Winer ’61 MICHIGAN STATE m C. Allen ’55 (30) l R. Anthony ’69 (2) D. Carpenter ’63 (12) n D. DeVries ’56 (2) m P. D. Franzetta ’70 (35) t G. Gross ’63 (14) l B. Hoot ’65 (34) T. Hyslop ’80 (6) n R. Johnson ’54 (2) l S. Knox, Jr. ’68 (4) L. Maccani ’56 (14) t T. Mortenson ’61 (7) n D. Neese ’68 (21) l J. Ryan ’55 (32) l W. Savage ’56 (19) l J. Schmidt ’59 (2) l G. Shannon ’62 (2) n G. Snyder ’57 (11) l J. Tanton ’56 (12)
l = Silver Delta ($50+) (#) = Consecutive # of years as a donor CEA = Chapter Educational Account gift
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m R. Thompson ’67 (41) l R. Zimmerman ’53 (17) MICHIGAN TECH n T. Davis ’92 t T. Erickson ’02 (3) n J. Hudson ’10 (2) l M. Lathia ’04 (3) M. Massucci ’14 t D. Mertens ’94 (11) l A. Mitteer ’03 (5) MIDDLEBURY l T. Carey ’86 (9) P. Dunham ’45 (11) l W. Fuller ’54 (4) n R. Johnson ’58 (19) MINNESOTA t A. Allen ’49 (19) D. Coto ’12 t C. Ellingson ’92 (7) n J. Gausman ’50 (19) m J. Hamann ’59 (13) S. Kim ’75 (2) n J. McDevitt ’67 m D. McKeag IV ’04 (9) CEA+ R. Nelson ’63 (15) l J. Sullivan ’49 (4) C. Torkilsen ’11 t P. Wilke, Jr. ’50 (40) t J. Zeese ’59 (16) MISSOURI l G. Allemann ’69 (36) n P. Berkovsky ’14 G. Bistline ’76 (6) t W. Black ’59 (4) W. Bradley ’54 (12) t T. Brady ’62 (4) J. Capps ’67 (2) n J. Culpepper ’57 (9) n P. Edwards ’02 (5) t J. Ehrlich ’67 (30) n R. Ellis ’59 (3) m W. Harwell, Jr. ’51 (16) C. Howard ’13 l A. Kaestner ’57 (2) A. Karst ’12 t J. King ’75 (2) m E. McKinney ’74 (9) Z. Moosa ’12 l R. Nelson ’83 (25) t T. Norris ’60 (11) l D. Press ’58 (5) l G. Rector ’62 (15) W. Rowland ’79 n W. Schoenhard ’71 (2) t J. Seitz III ’59 (19) R. Sobule ’09 S. Sportsman ’09 l B. Tarantola ’81 (15) n F. Tennant, Jr. ’62 D. Tesarek ’55 (10) W. Weber ’55 (5) t R. Yingling, Jr. ’62 (37) NEBRASKA m T. Biggerstaff ’63 (4) t R. Campbell ’68 (16) m R. Castner ’85 CEA J. Cheloha ’87 l D. Dauel ’13 n H. R. Douglass ’59 (6) R. Glover ’62 (2) R. Green ’50 l R. Harmon ’64 (3) m S. Henning ’85 (9) CEA+ t R. Hirsch ’66 (4) n J. Houchin ’85 (10) l M. Humphrey ’63 (2) t D. Kerr ’69 l C. Kokjer ’46 (2) t W. Krommenhoek ’57 (38) W. Kubert ’64 (2)
t R. Lannin ’81 (11) CEA+ K. Leach ’85 (12) B. Lee ’74 (11) m R. Loch ’54 (8) A. Melville ’96 (11) n L. Million, Jr. ’53 M. Naslund ’74 n R. Neal ’56 (3) G. Novotny, Jr. ’66 (2) n K. Randecker ’55 R. Seline ’78 (2) n R. Shively ’82 (29) t A. Sigerson ’93 (2) H. Smith ’65 (16) n D. Spencer ’85 (2) l E. Straka, Jr. ’53 J. Trenhaile ’13 l J. Warrick ’59 (12) NEW YORK C. Hoover ’40 (32) NORTH CAROLINA J. Allen ’73 (2) n R. Ayres ’65 (14) l M. Baratta ’81 (18) l D. Barwick ’79 l E. Bunting, Jr. ’67 (2) n R. Coleman III ’68 (3) l W. Crawford ’76 (13) m J. DeBlasio ’62 (13) m C. Downton III ’66 (6) t J. Fluet, Jr. ’65 (3) t R. Gray ’59 (6) J. Hiday ’85 l C. Hoffman, Jr. ’75 n J. Joyner, Jr. ’77 (24) n S. McClanahan ’74 (16) l D. Myrick ’65 t H. Pawlik ’54 (2) n C. Pippert ’91 (6) t W. Rose ’69 (24) t J. Ruddell, Jr. ’71 (3) n G. Smith ’89 l A. Subramanian ’97 (14) l K. Sullivan ’86 (16) n R. Swacker ’71 n E. Taff ’61 (23) t S. Weiss ’77 (2) t G. Wessling ’74 (4) n B. Wright, Jr. ’64 (2) l T. Yermack ’78 (15) NORTH CAROLINA STATE A. Compton ’09 (3) n J. Harke ’07 (2) T. Hoffman ’78 m M. Ketner ’82 CEA t P. Klinefelter ’80 (13) B. Pack ’80 (9) m R. Taylor ’82 (7) CEA+ S. Warren ’13 NORTH DAKOTA t B. Anderson ’84 l J. Atkinson ’09 (5) l D. Bruschwein ’74 (13) n C. Campbell ’76 T. Dolan ’72 (13) n D. Finke ’74 (2) n L. Galehouse III ’68 J. Hanson ’79 l W. Harwood ’68 D. Kack ’87 n W. Karlstrom ’14 m R. Kirsch ’78 (4) M. Lerfald ’63 t W. Line ’07 E. Lybeck ’97 n D. McLeod ’63 (19) t C. Mock ’08 (6) t J. O’Grady ’71 (2) n S. Swenson ’75 (2) n R. Szczys ’69 (12)
CEA+ = donor gave both to CEA and annual appeal Red text = also a donor to the Brick Campaign Italics = gift was a Parent gift
NORTH DAKOTA STATE M. Christiansen ’14 m C. Dworshak ’00 (10) H. Hagen ’86 (8) NORTH FLORIDA n M. Breidenstein ’07 (2) NORTHERN COLORADO C. Belt ’92 (5) t P. Gerhart ’04 (6) NORTHERN ILLINOIS S. Borbely ’66 (5) n R. Cardott ’77 J. Carlson ’70 (5) W. Carmichael ’78 R. Cherry ’73 (2) l A. Cornelio ’12 t A. Knox ’77 (13) J. Landstrom ’70 (4) m J. Lotsoff ’88 (24) m W. Malloy III ’69 (6) n L. Michna ’84 (13) m E. Nosek ’85 (13) n J. Rembusch ’66 (4) l W. Tyler, Jr. ’65 (5) NORTHERN IOWA t S. Anderson ’79 (30) t B. Cory ’75 (4) t A. Culley ’00 (11) m J. Fuhrman ’94 (11) M. Gonnerman, Jr. ’94 K. Krause ’83 (3) Northwestern E. Akemann ’62 (4) D. Armstrong ’46 (2) t M. Beaubien, Jr. ’64 (8) n W. Boyd ’48 (13) m P. Bridgford ’56 (5) n T. Chuchna ’13 l D. Costello ’54 (25) n R. Countryman, Jr. ’50 (6) R. Coyle ’52 t C. Crowe, Jr. ’55 (9) m J. Davis ’65 (10) l J. Dorn ’54 (11) t H. Evert ’56 (12) l A. Ferraro ’59 (3) t R. Grottke ’52 (16) G. Happe ’50 (5) t R. Horvath ’59 (4) l J. Karwath ’97 (3) t D. Kramlich ’59 (12) N. Losole, Jr. ’79 D. Martens ’59 (4) n S. Martin, Jr. ’56 (4) l J. Montgomery ’43 (9) m J. D. Nelson ’63 (41) m R. Newman II ’59 (16) n C. Norborg ’62 (2) m T. Rakow ’65 (7) l S. Spar ’83 l R. Spencer ’51 (2) t H. Stevens ’46 (10) l M. Sutanto ’08 R. Van Vooren ’53 (10) n G. West ’52 R. Whisnant ’98 (2) l R. White, Jr. ’52 (2) m C. Williams ’62 (7) OHIO l G. Logsdon ’62 (10) l M. Logsdon ’64 (10) t R. McDonald ’73 (6) W. McNutt ’63 n K. Mick ’67 (8) n W. Mock ’66 (2) l H. Opperman ’65 l E. Paxton ’68 (2) m S. Rowley ’65 (21) l W. Spanfellner ’61 (22) T. Walker ’80 (8) n J. Wills ’70 (2) l W. Wright ’61 (10)
OHIO STATE n W. Ballinger ’49 (8) t D. Bates ’59 S. Blozis ’80 (5) l D. Gordon ’63 (10) T. Hoover ’56 (31) A. Kimbrell ’99 (7) t C. Lurding ’59 (7) m R. Mason ’41 l S. McCormick ’92 (19) J. McLain ’42 n J. Northcraft ’48 l P. Porter ’50 (20) l B. Reagan ’78 (5) l R. Reamer ’64 (13) l R. Schieferstein ’66 (11) l L. Selvey ’48 (6) B. Silla ’52 (2) l M. Stone ’69 D. Veverka ’78 (2) l T. Voght ’97 (14) l W. Walker ’54 (9) t G. Weingardt ’55 (11) n C. Wertz, Sr. ’52 (2) t J. Wingard ’63 (6) OKLAHOMA m C. Brim ’92 (4) l G. Carr ’83 (15) l C. Coleman ’81 (8) m S. Cox ’92 (2) m J. Dawson, Jr. ’35 m T. Dowd ’75 (6) CEA+ n C. Due ’13 n C. Frymire ’79 (2) t W. Hamilton ’57 (9) t G. Haymon ’77 (2) l K. Hirsch ’74 (9) l J. Holly ’12 (2) t S. Holm ’92 (4) t R. Johannes ’61 (2) l K. Kickingbird ’66 (3) M. McCarver ’13 n G. Noland II ’86 (2) n T. O’Bannon ’82 (15) n A. Ochoa ’13 t S. Patterson ’42 (14) t M. Rupert ’74 (35) n M. Seddelmeyer ’07 (3) m D. Stussi ’77 (11) CEA+ m B. Walkingstick ’52 (39) CEA+ t E. Waller, Jr. ’51 (9) t R. Wells ’82 (9) l A. Whiteman ’10 n H. Wilson ’55 (7) OKLAHOMA STATE t B. James ’79 n J. Seals ’68 (4) OREGON t J. Allan ’53 (18) B. Anderson ’57 (23) t J. Ciatti ’64 (2) t R. Davies ’49 (6) l D. Donile ’95 (4) n W. Duhaime ’50 E. Goffard ’49 (8) t D. Greene ’99 (12) n D. Kirtley ’63 l F. Lovell ’49 (2) t T. Mattson ’63 (41) D. Mecklem ’53 (4) l G. Moulds ’64 (12) l R. Neely ’50 (2) l R. Newell ’65 (7) t M. Norman ’67 N. Pereira, Jr. ’62 n R. Price ’62 (23) t W. Shepherd, Jr. ’55 (2) A. Shields ’69 (5) l J. Smith ’92 (13) n D. Sorenson ’71 (6) J. Trigg ’58 (12) t B. M. Walsh ’64 (2) R. Watson ’71 (11) m J. Weisel ’48 (30) T. White ’53
OREGON STATE t T. Bays ’42 (36) l S. Carda ’85 t W. B. Down ’43 (8) m T. Durein ’92 (19) n J. Graham ’65 m W. Harkey ’71 (8) l D. Hendrickson ’51 (2) n R. Smith ’95 (3) N. Smith ’11 (2)
l R. McVay ’54 (6) A. Noble ’51 (13) n J. Shellenberger ’52 l B. Short ’91 (2) l C. Stehman ’49 (2) PENNSYLVANIA STATE n B. Balderston ’76 (21) t R. Baldwin ’57 (17) J. Batchelor ’84 (7) n R. Crosby ’54 (10) n L. Dash ’92 (19) t W. M. Dawsey ’55 l R. Devon ’62 J. Dubinsky, Sr. ’59 (7) W. Haffner ’54 (2) t J. Johnston ’58 (40) C. Margolf ’50 t D. Merenda ’77 (14) R. Noah ’57 (31) J. Phelps ’73 n B. Pinzone III ’11 l C. Prutzman, Sr. ’72 (5) W. Reynolds ’49 (2) K. Rinda ’14 l T. Samuel II ’91 (2) P. Strittmatter ’50 (2) J. Temple, Jr. ’74 (3)
PACIFIC n J. DuMond, Jr. ’66 (2) l G. Hess, Jr. ’64 (2) J. Madsen ’65 (3) PAN AMERICAN M. Lindquist ’11 PENNSYLVANIA m H. Acaster ’44 (41) J. Beach ’62 (8) B. Blecherman ’82 (4) l R. Canfield ’61 (7) n G. Curchin ’50 (10) n A. Elseroad, Jr. ’53 (7) E. Gentino, Jr. ’50 (6) G. Graf, Jr. ’55 (23)
$4.0M $4.0M
l P. Warburton ’91 t S. Wolcott, Jr. ’57 t R. Zakos, Jr. ’02 (10) PURDUE l L. Alexander ’45 t B. Anderson ’65 (35) n H. Arnold, Jr. ’46 K. Baumel ’62 (11) l J. Beacham ’54 (6) D. Bielefeld ’61 (7) t M. Bowen ’82 t J. Brennan, Jr. ’55 (31) t W. Briscoe ’65 (6) t R. Brown ’46 (21) l R. Byrne ’68 (19) t A. Crofts ’47 J. DeVoll ’63 (11) n D. Fitzgerald ’49 (27) t T. Foote ’50 (31) n F. Ford ’58 (2) n G. Forszt ’72 l R. Fox ’63 (12) l R. Gimlin ’42 (3) l M. Guthrie, Jr. ’45 (2) t R. Hallman ’54 (40) m R. Hegeman ’49 (16) M. Hogan ’85 (26)
Delta Uspilon Foundation Total Assets $3,717,64*
$3.5M $3.5M
$3,529,676
$3,516,098
$3,169,272
$3.0M $3.0M
$2,854,678
$2.5M $2.5M
$2.0M $2.0M
$1.5M $1.5M
$1.0M $1.0M
$500K $500K
0
0
2006-07
2007-08
2008-09
2009-10
2010-11
The chart above details the total assets of the DU Educational Foundation over the past five years. The DUEF acknowledges Bill Rappolt, Lafayette ’67, Chairman of the Investment Committee for his oversight during some difficult economic times. On an annual basis the Foundation’s financial statements are audited by K.B. Parrish & Co. LLP of Indianapolis, Indiana. Copies of the 20102011 audited financial statements will be available upon request from Delta Upsilon Headquarters. *Unaudited
WWW.DUEF.ORG
33
Delta Upsilon Foundation t C. Hoppe ’57 (6) C. Houff ’53 (2) K. Kolmer ’81 (10) M. Laccavole ’12 (2) t A. Lacis ’64 (27) t R. LaFortune ’51 (40) m B. Lee, Jr. ’51 (14) l E. Letts ’67 (11) t K. McClain ’71 (7) t B. Megel ’02 t G. Moss ’47 (32) l M. Murrill ’01 D. Parker ’13 n T. Pinson III ’81 l R. Popham ’40 (41) t N. Popham ’54 (13) l R. Rhine ’77 (11) n W. Ribble ’65 t R. Ricciardi ’94 n W. Robinson ’98 (5) W. Schatz II ’56 n M. Scheeringa ’11 n W. Shumaker ’55 (6) l J. Smith ’52 (14) t A. Steiger ’48 (10) l E. Stocker, Jr. ’48 J. Sweeney ’64 (16) F. Travelute ’66 A. Voelker ’95 (13) l N. Williams ’64 (13) RIPON l J. Beisner ’71 (3) G. Rieder ’82 (2)
34
ROCHESTER P. Avakian ’55 l T. Barnes III ’66 (10) n J. Bassingthwaite ’92 (10) t L. Bilker ’91 (2) E. Garfield, Jr. ’53 (19) n J. Leslie III ’70 n M. Letaconnoux ’11 (2) t A. Magistro ’60 (34) l J. Pomeranz ’65 m D. Reiner ’03 m D. Reisfeld ’03 (10) l P. Rouff ’96 (16) P. Ryan ’46 (2) m S. Santandrea ’56 (9) l R. Schonbrunn ’63 l R. Woods ’42 (16) RUTGERS C. Adelizzi ’62 (17) l D. Barone ’12 L. Cipriani, Jr. ’75 (5) m S. Hahner ’78 (32) n C. Hart ’54 (11) m J. Herma ’70 (31) n A. Herr ’54 (6) C. Huff, Jr. ’74 t B. Kramer ’62 (2) l F. Kroesen ’44 (4) l C. Little ’60 (12) n A. Malekoff ’73 (12) t G. McLaren ’75 (2) K. Miller ’79 l J. Nazzaro ’62 (11) D. Novelli ’73 t R. Stites ’53 (2) l J. Strampfer ’72 (8) t W. Symons ’66 (2) n R. Weitzner ’79 SAN DIEGO m E. Baldry ’90 CEA m T. Darcy ’72 (9) CEA+ n J. Duffel ’88 CEA n S. Ferguson ’83 CEA t P. Fieri ’73 (2) CEA+ n P. Gallagher ’71 CEA t R. Galyen ’70 CEA t W. Glasscock ’85 CEA n A. Glaves ’81 (2) KEY m = President’s Trust ($500+) t = President’s Club ($200+) n = Golden Delta ($100+)
n M. Hartell ’67 (2) CEA m B. Howard ’70 (9) CEA+ m V. Jeffery ’69 CEA m M. Judd ’70 CEA n J. Landstrom ’89 CEA S. Lewis ’96 (3) t J. Little IV ’72 CEA t B. Lowder ’80 CEA D. Maiolo ’91 CEA n G. Marshall ’71 CEA n T. McCormick ’79 CEA l C. O’Connor ’91 (2) t J. Orendain ’78 n R. Thompson ’82 CEA SAN FERNANDO l M. Donnelly ’68 (30) SAN JOSE l J. Agan ’57 (5) J. Anin ’11 m E. Bontadelli ’50 (12) CEA+ R. Brady ’63 (14) B. Brown ’56 (14) t B. Chambers ’88 D. Christiansen ’59 n D. Colby ’56 (13) t A. Dunham ’86 (6) m W. Edwards ’61 CEA n A. Eisiminger ’11 (3) t J. Fields ’66 (3) m J. Fraser ’55 CEA m J. Freitas ’55 (3) CEA m R. Fuller ’49 m J. Giacomazzi ’52 CEA m T. Harney ’52 (11) CEA+ t D. Heagerty ’50 (2) l C. Henderson ’10 (4) T. Hernandez ’15 R. Hirschnitz ’11 l H. Jorgensen ’07 (3) m C. Kamm ’57 (8) CEA l P. Kauffman ’11 (2) l A. Law ’11 (2) m A. Lund ’55 (12) CEA m J. Morey, Jr. ’58 (5) CEA t M. Navrides ’87 D. Notaro ’10 (5) t J. Pollack ’67 (5) t T. Slintak ’08 (7) l L. Spolyar ’52 (2) m P. Spooner ’55 (14) CEA+ m M. Stoddard ’61 CEA L. Sweeney, Jr. ’55 (2) l H. Thompson ’58 (5) t J. Tormey ’57 (12) m P. Ueberroth ’59 (2) N. Valenziano ’12 (2) R. Wallace ’90 (5) m S. Yates ’55 (19) SANTA BARBARA t R. LaFontaine ’91 (8) t T. Sullivan ’95 (13) SOUTH CAROLINA l W. Anderson, Jr. ’84 J. Freyer ’94 (8) m F. Goolsby ’81 (9) n R. Heroux, Jr. ’84 (5) t J. Herron ’88 (24) l M. Pine ’85 (10) m T. Schmoyer, Jr. ’88 (16) n M. Shiels ’12 l M. Washburn ’91 (4) SOUTH DAKOTA t P. Christiansen ’75 (4) n M. Harrington ’71 (7) SOUTHERN ILLINOIS l M. Carr ’73 (10) t D. Maguire ’73 (33) SOUTHWEST MISSOURI n S. Davis ’87
2010-2011 Annual Report
SOUTHWEST TEXAS t J. Keller ’73 (11) t D. Reynolds ’73 (5) ST. NORBERT l L. Brehm ’11 n J. Flanagan ’93 (10) n B. Hammer ’11 (2) n J. Palliser ’12 STANFORD A. Breech ’74 (3) l L. Chaffin, Jr. ’56 (2) l J. Cusick ’51 l D. Cutter ’51 (41) l R. Flatland, Jr. ’46 l W. Hirst, Jr. ’40 (3) R. Hoffman ’49 l J. Seeley ’59 l R. Smith ’59 (5) t R. Twist ’60 P. Vermeil ’66 B. Wilson ’50 (23) SWARTHMORE l L. Argo ’57 l H. Bedolfe III ’74 (5) H. Bode, Jr. ’55 (4) R. Hall ’52 (9) S. Heiser ’72 (4) V. Jose ’44 (8) l B. Snavely ’57 (2) SYRACUSE t W. Barnes ’68 ‚K. Berlin ’92 (4) m R. Broad ’60 (16) n G. Caplan ’55 (4) t J. Dytman ’71 (12) n R. Eckardt ’66 (3) l T. Finnell ’57 (33) t J. Freyer, Sr. ’61 (2) n J. Heider ’54 (12) t M. Jenney ’55 (7) n G. Larson ’83 (2) n G. Ludwig ’51 t A. Mittelstaedt, Jr. ’58 W. Namack III ’57 (3) n D. Pipher ’73 (4) l M. Reiser ’68 (8) n L. Rhodes ’57 (2) l D. Robitaille ’82 (2) n R. Sack ’82 (2) t E. Shaw ’66 (4) W. Stark, Jr. ’47 (9) t A. Stauderman, Jr. ’58 (26) n K. Stein ’83 t R. Thorpe ’60 (23) TECHNOLOGY D. Alusic ’64 (4) n N. Ambrogi ’14 S. Balsbaugh ’54 (10) n R. Bayles ’63 t J. Buell, Jr. ’56 (6) n T. Ciesielski ’11 (3) t H. Crowther ’54 (10) n H. Drab, Jr. ’69 (8) l J. Glowienka ’71 C. Hagge II ’57 (2) l T. Hoffman ’87 (14) l M. Huke ’65 (25) t E. Kavazanjian, Jr. ’73 (10) R. LeBoeuf ’88 (23) l R. Mackintosh ’53 (3) l S. Martin, Jr. ’50 (9) n D. Maurer ’78 (13) T. Nowak, Jr. ’71 (3) K. Shimberg ’91 t K. Suelthaus ’66 (6) Z. Swanson ’71 (3) R. Taylor ’82 l J. Ward, Jr. ’92 n G. Welti ’45 S. Williams ’11
l = Silver Delta ($50+) (#) = Consecutive # of years as a donor CEA = Chapter Educational Account gift
WWW.DUEF.ORG
l S. Wood ’69 (32) t R. Wothe ’58 (2) TENNESSEE t D. Cowe ’73 (2) t T. Knies ’71 (8) t D. Mouron, Jr. ’77 (9) n D. Myers ’74 (31) K. Snyder ’94 (7) TEXAS n H. G. Adams ’88 (6) t J. Allums ’59 (9) t J. Cassell, Jr. ’70 (35) l J. Dunlap ’73 (33) t J. Gresham ’71 (8) n G. Grissom ’85 (2) CEA t T. Heins ’65 (6) J. Jett ’73 (2) t M. Mitchell ’65 (41) l D. Moore ’86 l W. Nelson ’59 (9) t A. Polser, Jr. ’65 (41) l W. Tibbitts III ’61 (22) n L. Waters ’73 (33) l J. Whitehill ’74 t S. Wolf ’76 (3) l J. Word ’68 (7) TEXAS A&M K. Hickman ’87 (13) TORONTO M. Economopoulos ’93 (9) n R. Taylor ’38 TUFTS E. Casabian, Jr. ’64 (14) l C. Erickson ’64 (9) n J. Fonda ’51 (2) n D. Morse ’42 (41) t D. Picard ’81 (2) I. Ritter ’10 t D. Vinton ’52 (7) UCLA t S. Howard ’41 (24) n D. Lyons ’44 (12) l R. Mancini ’50 (2) UNION B. Bonanno ’77 (3) l N. Botsford, Jr. ’54 (23) D. Cate ’62 (14) n J. Gardeski ’51 (14) l J. Greve ’51 (2) n S. Hayes ’89 (16) t W. Hesse ’49 (2) M. Meslink ’65 (2) R. Obremski ’59 (10) t M. O’Meara, Jr. ’50 (2) l J. Thompson ’76 VIRGINIA A. Alvarez ’13 l M. Ashbury, Jr. ’54 (25) B. Ball ’11 l D. Barbour ’77 (23) D. Barrow ’10 K. Becker ’13 Y. Biton ’12 G. Bondoa ’13 N. Bremenstul ’12 T. Brewer ’12 t W. Brookhart ’71 (25) J. Brown ’10 R. Burnette ’11 C. Conklin ’11 J. Craig III ’11 (2) R. Cunningham ’10 (2) J. Dembo ’12 J. DiLorenzo ’13 S. Driever ’69 R. Edsall ’10 (2) B. Eichner ’10 E. Elron ’13
L. Eppard ’90 (3) G. Ferrell ’70 (11) J. Fogarty ’10 (3) t N. Frazier, Jr. ’99 (10) J. Gill ’11 B. Grier ’13 A. Haesler ’11 J. Hall ’11 R. Hanrahan ’13 N. Haynes ’12 (2) Z. Hochberg ’13 P. Hodskins ’12 n J. Hoover, Jr. ’81 (2) n M. Houff ’08 E. Hutchinson ’65 A. Jain ’13 C. Joynson ’12 l S. King ’69 (5) M. Kremenchugskiy ’10 B. Lal ’11 R. Lee III ’11 B. Luke ’11 (2) J. MacMichael ’13 P. McClure ’13 P. McGregor ’12 B. Mercer ’11 (2) P. Merril ’13 K. Mikkelsen ’12 S. Miles ’13 M. Minneman ’11 M. Myers ’13 T. Neale ’74 (4) M. Neider ’12 C. Owlett ’13 S. Patel ’10 M. Patel ’11 L. Pina ’13 D. Price ’11 J. Quinteros ’11 H. Reed ’10 l W. Reusing ’62 m M. Ryan ’86 (3) l A. Saufley ’54 (24) S. Schweitzer ’11 K. Sledge ’12 H. Sodhi ’11 D. Stein ’12 E. Wangerin ’13 N. Wapner ’11 Z. Whittaker ’13 R. Winslow ’12 WASHINGTON m J. Aitken ’70 (9) n P. Anderson ’09 (6) n D. Baer ’82 (13) t K. Carlton ’86 (10) n J. Chapman ’11 (2) n A. Coombs ’13 t L. Dam ’68 (6) H. Dobb ’41 t W. Dwight ’79 (7) n B. Elfers ’92 (19) t J. Eyler ’69 (32) m R. Fagan ’52 (14) S. Fisher ’87 (12) l B. Fortier ’87 (10) t D. Habib ’86 (8) t S. Habib ’83 (2) n G. Harris ’71 (17) l I. Hastings ’56 (2) n W. Henderson ’59 (5) t T. Hendrickson ’67 (2) R. Horne ’89 (11) l F. Hunkins ’89 m S. Iezman ’70 t K. Kaneta ’59 (41) l B. Keen ’50 (16) D. Kraft ’48 (2) t R. LaBerge ’87 (13) K. Mackey ’77 (12) l V. Martin ’66 (5) t R. Martin ’59 (41) n V. McDonald ’48 (2) n T. McKay ’50
CEA+ = donor gave both to CEA and annual appeal Red text = also a donor to the Brick Campaign Italics = gift was a Parent gift
n R. Meier ’73 l G. Morse ’96 n D. Nielsen ’60 (2) D. Ramsey ’56 t B. Raskin ’85 (2) n D. Ravander ’86 (12) R. Robinson ’59 J. Russell ’79 (2) t W. Smith, Jr. ’70 (3) t R. Stewart ’64 (2) l J. Taylor ’90 (9) m P. Tuohy ’53 (11) n J. Walsh ’89 J. Wiltse, Jr. ’60 (7) n J. Winters ’52 (3) n R. Yeasting ’55 WASHINGTON & LEE J. Hess ’60 (11) L. Lawrence ’59 (28) P. Muller ’55 (2) l G. W. Whitehurst ’50 (13) WASHINGTON STATE t L. Amos ’68 (33) J. Clark ’01 t W. Cutler ’55 (2) CEA n K. Dickerson ’94 l D. Hambelton ’75 (10) t C. Kurtak ’42 (26) T. Lawrence ’12 n J. Lehmann ’79 l V. Moreman ’63 (10) l G. Motteler ’63 n R. Sherwood ’64 (3) m J. Simpkins ’81 (11) t G. Studle ’57 (40) WEBSTER R. Krieg ’11 (2) E. Lowry ’10 K. McWilliams ’11 (3) n P. Petri ’11 WESTERN ILLINOIS S. Brown ’86 (14) M. Clark ’13 t S. Devine ’06 l J. Ford ’95 (4) J. Ghera ’08 n J. Goulart ’80 m R. Gruenig ’85 (13) t S. La Buda ’88 (16) J. Leffew ’13 n J. Nevel ’00 (11) l T. Polaski ’80 (5) n J. Porro ’91 (7) l B. Spencer ’13 WESTERN MICHIGAN m W. Butler, Jr. ’61 l D. Kanemori ’66 (39) n D. Pew ’63 (2) n V. Sutherland ’57 (12) WESTERN ONTARIO n K. Halpenny ’55 l K. Hay ’56 R. Malcolm ’52 (2) t R. Rhodes ’59 t D. Rudd ’51 (6) WESTERN RESERVE n J. Angelotta ’45 (2) l P. Barratt ’69 (5) C. Bizga, Jr. ’69 (2) C. Cookson ’51 (6) W. Cotton ’77 t J. Croxen ’03 (2) CEA+ l T. Diego ’66 (3) l W. Frederick, Jr. ’69 (4) l B. Ghiloni ’86 M. Hawley ’12 (2) J. Hilty ’13 l W. Howard ’75 P. Kaluszyk ’73 (11) J. Kendel ’59 (15) G. Kish ’63 l S. Marshall ’87 (8) G. Powers ’54 J. Sabo ’67 (2) R. Sacks ’09
WICHITA t J. Adams ’04 (10) D. Baty ’12 (2) l G. Butts ’60 (9) l L. Carey ’59 n J. Little ’58 (15) J. Mattson ’82 F. Schneider ’08 (6) l R. Scull ’55 (7) l C. Trammell II ’68 (5) M. Wedel ’12 l N. Weidner ’04 (2) WILLIAMS J. Gepson ’65 (9) J. Hay ’48 n D. McDonald ’50 (8) l J. Pilgrim ’60 (10) n J. Snyder ’51 (2) O. Svenson, Jr. ’50 (21) WILMINGTON m D. Cole ’72 WISCONSIN t R. Allman ’58 (2) l M. Baer ’80 (11) m M. Branch ’69 (7) n G. Camberis ’78 l C. Chabalowski ’72 (3) T. Coogan ’58 (5) t R. DiRenzo ’50 t B. Fellows ’51 (14) l R. Ferraro ’12 t D. Fohr ’73 (5) t R. Godfrey ’54 (9) t J. Hall ’50 n J. Harden ’59 (14) t J. Harris ’72 (23) t C. Herro ’43 (14) t E. Hipke ’56 (17) A. Hugunin ’67 t R. Jacobus ’51 (30) l D. Johnson ’70 (11) n P. Laper ’68 (22) C. Lawler ’12 (2) n R. McLimans ’68 (11) n S. Miller ’70 (11) m J. Morgridge ’55 W. Morrisey ’43 t M. Mueller ’82 (5) n W. Murray ’64 m W. Nesbitt ’76 (32) l C. Roup ’67 (8) n L. Seno ’71 (5) J. Sippl, Jr. ’70 l C. Thomas ’59 (10) l R. Thompson ’67 (10) F. Trubshaw ’43 (2) t D. Vinson ’59 (31) t T. Vogelsang ’84 J. Voss ’72 (2) t R. Walcisak ’74 (6) l M. Wiener ’11 (3) n D. Yenerich ’82 (13) FRIENDS OF THE DUEF t Anonymous t Stephannie Bailey m Teresa S. Brown CEA l Chattanooga Colony Merry June Cooch n Edward Kirklin Jean G. Lloyd (5) Lillian H. Nutt m David R. Schumacher (12) t Jeremiah Shinn (2) CEA l Melinda B. Sopher (5) t Shelley Sutherland m Mrs. Ashton M. Tenney, Jr. (17) m Charlotte B. Terry m Charles & Marion Thompson Foundation (21) n Muriel A. Vogel m Gail B. Wakelee m Jo Ellen Walden n Webster Chapter (2) CEA
Where do Your Dollars Go? Every year Delta Upsilon’s donors’ faithful and generous gifts go towards the support of many areas that help make our Fraternity stronger. They include: The Leadership Institute – 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 – First instituted in 1995 as the Presidents Academy, the WEC includes educational programming for chapter presidents. The four-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 – This program was established to employ graduate members of DU to serve as representatives of the Fraternity. The representativesare trained to assist chapter/colony members and alumni advisors to advance the principles of DU. Global Service Initiative – The Global Service Initiative offers members a unique opportunity to engage in direct service in developing nations and regions of the world while uniting their actions with Delta Upsilon’s Four Founding Principles. Through an application process, members travel to, study in, and work with a community where social and economic conditions are substandard. They engage in a variety of cultural, educational, recreational, and reflective activities. Participants will roll up their sleeves to build or rebuild in areas and engage in dialogue of social justice with other Delta Upsilon members. Chapter Services Support – 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 – Launched at the 2000 Leadership Institute, the DUEL Program is designed for our chapter’s 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 near Williamstown, Mass., where the participants experience the history and heritage of DU at the Fraternity’s founding site. Regional Leadership Seminars – Held in five major cities, RLS is designed to unite and assist the chapters in officer training, sharing ideas, and learning 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 – Undergraduate Scholarships and Graduate Fellowships of $2,5000 each are awarded annually to help further the education of those brothers who apply and are selected. The scholarship was established in 2000 to honor the service of Brother James D. McQuaid, Chicago ’60.
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Delta Upsilon Foundation
2010-2011 Annual Report
Wilford A. Butler Education Chair DU lost a treasure in December 2009 with the passing of our friend, brother, and mentor, Bill Butler, Western Michigan ‘61. Bill was a one-of-a-kind person who left a remarkable legacy of leadership, loyalty, and vision. He served as Fraternity executive director and editor and executive director of the Delta Upsilon Educational Foundation for 24 years. To celebrate Bill’s impact on the Fraternity, the Delta Upsilon Foundation has launched an initiative to endow the Wilford A. Butler, CAE, Education Chair to support the Director of Education position. This important position is responsible for the development and delivery of DU educational curricula and programs meeting the needs of undergraduates, alumni, and chapters. The educational experience portfolio includes: • Leadership Institute • Presidents’ Academy • Advisors’ Academy • Recruitment Symposium • Regional Leadership Seminar • DUEL Experience • Global Service Initiative Since announcing the Butler Chair project in the fall of 2010, a number of former staff and board members from the Butler era have responded generously. We are pleased to report that gifts and pledges for the Butler Education Chair total over $157,500. This represents 79% of our initial Phase One goal of $200,000 and is a great beginning.
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More on this endowment project and donor recognition is available at www.duef.org, or contact: David Schumacher, Executive Director Delta Upsilon Foundation 8705 Founders Road Indianapolis, IN 46268 (317) 875-8900
Many of us have made pledges over five years to enhance the size of our total commitment, and there has never been a better time or way to support the educational work of DU than through this initiative. The strong health of the Fraternity is resulting in an increase in opportunities to create the most innovative, robust, and impactful educational programming available in the Greek community. (See State of the Fraternity, page 2.) We hope you agree that there can be no better legacy for Bill and for us as alumni brothers than to ensure DU has the financial wherewithal to educate our Brotherhood now and in the future. Fraternally, Ed Crane, Arkansas ’76 Bob Dahlsgaard, Bradley’63 Craig Franz, Bucknell ’75 Rick Holland, Syracuse ’83 Gary Killips, Alberta ’71 Rod Kirsch, North Dakota ’78 Brian Mudrick, Louisville ’82 Warren Nesbitt, Wisconsin ’76 Bob Tyburski, Colgate ’74
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DUck tales…
People, places and events in Delta Upsilon’s history, compiled by Bill Briscoe, Purdue 1965, Historian@deltau.org 175 Years Ago... • Prominent alumnus from the class of 1836: Josiah Lyman, Williams, a fraternity founder, inventor of Lyman’s protracting trigonometer 150 • •
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Copyright 2011 Delta Upsilon International Fraternity Inc.
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50 years ago… • Clarkson, Auburn and North Dakota were established in 1961 • Ohio and San Jose Chapters moved into a new house • Convention was held in Bloomington, Ind. years ago… • Prominent alumni from the class of 1961: John S. Convention was held in Waterville, Maine Herrington, Stanford, US Energy Secretary; Fred Prominent alumni from the class of 1861: William Arbanas, Michigan State, AFL/NFL Football Player; H. H. Miller, Hamilton 1861, Attorney-General of John E. Brown, Kansas, President of Coe College; the U.Ss; Cyrus Hamlin, Colby 1861, General in the Neil Austrian, Swarthmore, Chairman of iWon. Civil War; Llewellyn Powers, Colby 1861, Governor co; Thomas E. Burgess, Miami, founder of Burgess of Maine; Bartlett Tripp, Colby 1861, Chief Justice of Cellars wine company the Supreme Court of Dakota; Benjamin A. Willis, • John P. Robarts, Western Ontario 1939, became Prime Union, Congressman from New York Minister of the Province of Ontario • Darrell Royal, Oklahoma 1950, Head coach at years ago… University of Texas, was named College Football Tufts was established in 1886 Coach of the year Convention was held in Hamilton, New York • C. William O’Neill, Marietta 1939, former Governor Prominent alumni from the class of 1886: Rufus C. of Ohio, named Ohio Supreme Court Judge Dawes, Marietta 1886, President of the Century of • Kenneth E. BeLieu, Oregon 1937, appointed Assistant Progress Exposition held in Chicago in 1933-34; Secretary of the Navy for Material Frederick C. Hicks, Michigan 1886, President of • Franklin B. Lincoln, Jr., Colgate 1931, named President University of Cincinnati of the Monroe Calculating Machines Co. • Linus Pauling, Oregon State 1922, two-time Nobel years ago… Prize winner, appeared on the cover of the January 2, Penn State was established in 1911 1961 issue of Time Magazine Williams, Cornell and Marietta Chapters moved into new houses; Colby’s house was destroyed by fire 25 years ago… Convention was held in New Brunswick, N.J. • Michigan Tech Chapter was established in 1986 Prominent alumni from the class of 1911: Albert • Convention was held in St. Louis. Mo. W. Hughes, Colgate, President of JC Penney Co., • Prominent alumni from the class of 1986: James A. Paul H. Davis, Chicago, President of the Chicago Les, Bradley, Professional Basketball Player, won the Stock Exchange; Robert Cushman Murphy, Brown, Frances Pomeroy Naismith Hall of Fame award for ornithologist, curator of birds for the American the outstanding collegiate basketball player under Museum of Natural History; John D. Scott, Chicago, 6-feet tall in 1986; Richard N. Cyert, Carnegie, President of Delta Upsilon 1928-31; Philip C. Nash, President of Carnegie-Mellon University, Jonathan Harvard, President of University of Toledo; Billy M. Frankel, Syracuse, NBC News correspondent Foulds, Toronto, Canadian Football League Hall of • Wilford A. Butler, Western Michigan 1961, retired as Fame; Charles B. Swartz, Lafayette, Rhodes Scholar; Executive Director of Delta Upsilon after 24 years Wayne C. Bosworth, Middlebury, Rhodes Scholar • Arnold O. Beckman, Illinois 1922, founder of Frank H. Hitchcock, Harvard 1891, U.S. Postmaster Beckman Instruments, donated $40 million to the General, began U.S. Airmail service. University of Illinois for the building of the Beckman
75 years ago… • Alberta and Stanford moved into new houses • Convention was held in Columbus, OH • Prominent alumni from the class of 1936: Arthur I. Rice, Illinois, President of Technical Publishing Co.; Semon E. Knudsen, Technology, President of Ford Motor Company; James E. King, Jr., Harvard, Rhodes Scholar • James Bryant Conant, Harvard 1914, President of Harvard, appeared on the cover of the September 28, 1936 issue of Time Magazine
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institute of Advanced Science and Technology Lawrence Downing, Iowa State 1958, was elected President of the Sierra Club; Arthur E. Wible, Michigan 1959, named publisher and CEO of the Dallas Times Herald.
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Chapter News Alberta Chapter The Alberta Chapter was honored with the Order of Omega Chapter Scholarship Award from the University of Alberta. Arizona State Chapter The Arizona State Chapter hosted its annual alumni golf invitational in April at The Raven Golf Resort at South Mountain. Bradley Chapter The Bradley Chapter raised $25,975 for St. Jude’s Children’s Research Hospital. During winter break, members were privileged to visit St. Jude’s Children Hospital in Memphis, Tenn. and see how their contributions help the organization.
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Central Florida Chapter Central Florida Chapter members provided pizzas, and more than 20 gift cards to local child friendly establishments to the Children’s Home Society of Florida, a non-profit organization that provides services to families and children coping with domestic family issues. Georgia Tech Chapter The Georgia Tech Chapter raised $13,715.00 for the St. Baldrick’s Foundation. More than 150 IFC members shaved their heads and collectively raised more than $55,000 for St. Baldrick’s Foundation, a volunteer-driven charity committed to funding the most promising research to find cures for childhood cancers and give survivors long and healthy lives. Grand Valley State Chapter In June five members of the Grand Valley State Chapter worked for the ONE Campaign to End Global Poverty at the U2 360 Tour stop in East Lansing, Mich. Aaron Vince, Grand Valley State ’12 serves as a Congressional District Leader for ONE in Grand Rapids, Michigan. He is a cofounder and special advisor to the ONE Campus Chapter.
Grand Valley State members Steven Sohasky ‘13, Corey Stevens ‘12, Aaron Vince ‘12, Zach Lantz ‘14, Shawn Driggers ‘11 at the ONE Campaign to End Global Poverty event.
Kansas Chapter The Kansas Chapter was one of only two chapters (out of 26) to win all seven of seven Greek Awards from the University. Two DU freshmen received “Outstanding New Member” awards. The chapter joined Pi Beta Phi to host a dinner in support of ovarian cancer awareness. Kent State Chapter The Kent State Chapter handed out their first two $1500 general student body scholarships last year. This was the first time the chapter’s scholarship was awarded since becoming fully endowed. The Delta Upsilon Dylan Fitzgerald Carlton Scholarship, has been funded through the chapter’s Annual Flash ‘n Duck Run, and Bi-annual Cornhole Tournament Philanthropies, since 2007 when it was established in memory of their chapter advisor’s son Dylan who passed away at the age of 15 from complications of a congenital heart defect. Lehigh Chapter The Lehigh Chapter received the Quay Cup from Lehigh University for ranking at the top of 20 fraternities at Lehigh. Missouri Chapter The Missouri Chapter conducted a fundraiser for the American Cancer Society in April after Kevin Hasselfeld, Missouri ’11 was diagnosed with testicular cancer. Past Chapter President Nick Park told KOMU, “We wanted to show him that we care about him and love him.” Purdue Chapter The Purdue Chapter placed third among all fraternities at Purdue in the spring of 2011. Seven men earned above 3.5 GPA and 14 brothers earned above a 3.0 GPA after vice president of scholarship Brandon Kresca implemented a new system of goals. Members volunteer regularly at the Lafayette Boy’s and Girl’s Club and had 100 percent participation in the campussponsored “Boiler Blast,” where more than 1,000 Purdue students worked to improve the general appearance of the West Lafayette by picking up trash, mowing and raking lawns, and painting fences in the community. A group of 31 brother traveled to Wrigley Field for a Cubs vs. Dodgers game. San Diego State Chapter The San Diego Chapter earned the top GPA award for all the fraternities on campus. They hosted the Second Annual Tim McGee Memorial Wiffle Ball Classic at Mission Beach and are offering a $1000 Better Man scholarship for freshman males this fall.
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Technology Chapter Columbus Leonard, Technology ’12 is featured in an article on NCAA.com. Leonard is president of the Technology Chapter and captain of the MIT water polo team. He was an honorable-mention All-American and named CWPA Northern Division first team last season. And as an environmental engineering major with a minor in energy and a concentration in economics, he recently participated in a class called Development Lab Energy in conjunction with a non-profit organization in Nicaragua. Tufts Chapter Philanthropy Chair Evan Parker, Tufts ’12 organized a donation of 100 Thanksgiving meals to families through the Somerville Homeless Coalition. Parker hopes to repeat the project.
Copyright 2011 Delta Upsilon International Fraternity Inc.
Virginia Chapter The Virginia Chapter raised money for Boys and Girls Clubs of America through a House of Blues event featuring university and local and musicians who brought a taste of New Orleans to the University. The chapter is also a top fundraiser in Dance Marathon, the University’s largest school-wide philanthropy event benefiting the Children’s Miracle Network and the University of Virginia Children’s Hospital. Other philanthropic and service related activities include donations to Habitat for Humanity, volunteer work at The Haven, a dynamic, multi-purpose community space that features resources for the hungry, disadvantaged and homeless, and beginning this spring, participation in endurance events on behalf of the Friedreich’s Ataxia Research Alliance (FARA). The Virginia Chapter was recognized as Most Improved Chapter and Jay Hoover, Virginia ’81 was name Outstanding Alumni at the campus Greek Awards. Paul Hodskins, Virgina ’12 was named president of UVA’s Order of Omega chapter. Washington Chapter The Washington Chapter house is undergoing an extensive remodel of the first floor including the library, dining room, entry way and formal room. The chapter posted a 3.25 cumulative GPA for the spring, which was a slight improvement from the winter.
Roy James Harney Four Founding Principles Scholarships Roy James Harney, Nebraska 1917 was a graduate of the University of Nebraska College of Law and the first baseman on the Cornhusker baseball team, who later helped with the installation of the DU Chapter at San Jose State University and served as the alumni advisor there for many years. Scholarship awards are given to Nebraska and San Jose brothers who have “Most Successfully Demonstrated the Ability to Carry Out the Four Founding Principles of Delta Upsilon Fraternity.”
Nebraska undergraduates Brian M. Sunderman ’13; Jakeb A. Geisert ’14, James A. Trenhaile ‘12, and (not pictured) Arman Zeljkovic ‘12 were honored in April as recipients of the third annual Roy James Harney Four Founding Principles Scholarship. Shown with honorees are Robert S. Lannin, Nebraska ‘81, Chapter Advisor; Thomas Roy Harney, San Jose ‘52, son of Roy James Harney and Scholarshiop Sponsor; and Patrick Gerhart, Northern Colorado ’04, Alumni Advisor.
San Jose undergraduates Eric Freeman ’12, Andy Weiss ’13, Kevin Condon ’13, Nicholas Valenziano ’12 were honored in April as recipients of the third annual Roy James Harney - Four Founding Principles Scholarship. Shown with honorees are Edwin T. Mosher ’52, Sand Jose Corporation Board President; Thomas Harney ’52, son of Roy James Harney and Scholarship Sponsor; Dr. E. Bernard Franklin, Kansas State ’75, International President, Delta Upsilon Fraternity; and Kevin C. Swanson, ’85 Alumni Advisor.
Get additional news, information on upcoming events and track your chapter’s progress with the Chapter Excellence Plan online at www.deltau.org.
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DU Mourns Karl Huntoon, Illinois ’72
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H. Karl Huntoon, Illinois ’72, former Chairman of the Board of Directors of Delta Upsilon Fraternity, passed away January 1, 2011 at the age of 61, after a short battle with aggressive brain cancer. The respect to which Karl was held in his community is best summed up by the article in the Quad Cities Times announcing his passing. ” As Karl Huntoon saw it, everyone deserved respect and a smile…a strong supporter of his community, an advocate for his clients, a role model for his profession and a man who sought to make others laugh.” Karl’s involvement in Delta Upsilon ran deep, as did his lineage. His father Harry K. Huntoon, Illinois ‘37 and grandfather Harry A. Huntoon, Illinois 1905 were both DU’s, which naturally set the stage for Karl’s involvement. After serving as President of the Illinois Chapter as an undergraduate in 1971, he graduated from the University of Illinois at Champaign-Urbana where he received a B.S. with honors in Economics in 1972. He then received a Juris Doctor Degree from the College of Law at the University of Illinois in 1975. He was accepted to the Illinois Bar Association in 1975 and the Iowa State Bar Association in 1992. He was also admitted to the US District Court, Central District of Illinois and the US Tax Court. Karl practiced law for thirty five years in Moline, Illinois and the Quad City area concluding at Katz, Huntoon and Fieweger. Karl improved his profession with involvement with the Rock Island County Bar Association serving as Secretary/ Treasurer, Vice President, and President. He was an Assembly member from 1994 to 1999 for the Illinois State Bar Association and also served as a member of the Real Estate Section Council from 1992 to 1999. He had been a member of Quad City Estate Planning Council since 1992. Karl strived to improve the future by being an Instructor of Business at Augustana College and was awarded the Outstanding Teacher Award for 1979-1980 and 1980-1981 One of Karl’s greatest gifts to the improvement of the community was his dedication of ten years on the Library Board which included the fundraising and construction of the new Moline Public Library that opened in 2006. He served on the Moline Police and Fire Commission and the Quad City Arts Board. As a member of the First Congregational Church in Moline, he was a volunteer Sunday school teacher who served on its board of trustees and, at one point, was elected its chairman. All of this service affiliation was in addition to his involvement in Delta Upsilon Fraternity. Following his graduation from law school in 1975, Karl’s involvement in DU continued. He became Alumni Corporation President of the Illinois Alumni Chapter,
serving in that role until 1980. In 1981, he was elected to the Fraternity’s Board of Directors. He chaired the Chapter Loan Fund Committee from 1981 to 1986, served as Treasurer from 1987 to 1988, followed by three years as Chairman of the Board. In 1991 he concluded ten years service on the International Board of Directors. After his departure from the board he was called upon numerous times to assist the International Fraternity during times of transition. In 1992 he was an instrumental part of the committee that completed the first major redraft of the International Fraternity’s Constitution and By-Laws, adopted in 1993 and remain in place today. During his fraternity service he was a frequent member of the faculty of regional and international leadership conferences of Delta Upsilon and was called upon on numerous occasions to address local, regional and national interfraternity meetings. He was the recipient of many fraternity awards and honors including the Outstanding Alumnus Award, the Fraternity Special Citations, and one of the highest awards presented to alumni of Delta Upsilon, the Delta Upsilon Meritorious Service Award. Even after stepping down from the Fraternity’s Board, he continued his support of the Fraternity and Foundation and was always ready and willing to do what was asked of him when called upon. The Fraternity is grateful to Brother Huntoon for the legacy of hard work and dedication that he leaves behind. In accordance with the Fraternity’s protocol of being a former Chairman of the Fraternity, the DU Flag at the Fraternity’s Butler Memorial Headquarters Building in Indianapolis will be lowered to half staff during the week of January 10, 2011. He is survived by his wife Andrea “Anne”; two sons who were honored to have him as their father James (Molly) Huntoon of Pawley’s Island, SC and Mark (Sabrina) Huntoon of Bettendorf, IA; three grandchildren he very much adored; a sister Elizabeth Huntoon of Chicago, IL; and a very dear friend Truman Symmonds who helped him tirelessly during his illness.
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Alpha & Omega Alberta Robert L. Bijou 1948 David L. Cuthbertson 1942 Robert Charles Dilke 1947 Thomas Arthur Hatch 1960 James John Rolston 1958 Roy R. Spackman 1949 Arizona Allan G. Anderson 1960 Bowling Green Robert P. Hanrahan 1956 Bradley Dallas L. D’hondt 1955 Donald L. Markley 1963 Robert W. McCallum 1950 Brown Walter Steneck Bopp 1935 David G. Lubrano 1952 Robert M. Mosher 1947 Bucknell Stanley R. Kleppe 1952 Kenneth L. Wightman 1960 California Eugene I. Angus 1961 David D. Harper 1950 John Watson Roeth 1950 William L. Weirich 1946 Carnegie Wayne Howe Kohl 1964 Graham I. Smith 1950 Colby Hubert S. Beckwith 1943 Colgate William S. P. Reichert 1960 James M. Scott 1950 Harold Frank Walter 1937 Colorado State Derek O. Walter 1986 Columbia William B. Anderson 1938 Creighton J. Dennis Flavan 1984 Culver-Stockton John Foster Courtney 2004 Dartmouth George H. Pert 1944 DePauw Thomas L. Kelly 1944 Fresno Lloyd M. Ramirez 1988 Illinois H. Karl Huntoon 1972 Neil S. Linders 2006 Robert D. Litvan 1957 George T. Wilson 1953 Indiana David K. Endwright 1956 Robert S. Hansen 1953 George C. Held 1956 John G. Johnston 1942 Eran H. Julien 1949 Iowa Robert J. Christianson 1970 Hugh D. Johnson 1984 Delmar J. Kloewer 1958 Dwane B. Noser 1954 David William Rusk 1976 Elijah W. Shacklette 1949
Iowa State Thomas G. Anderson 1965 Charles F. Clark 1936 Phillip H. Mayer 1949 Carl G. Paetz 1947 John Leslie Stevenson 1952 Willis A. Strauss 1944 Johns Hopkins Vernon T. Frankwich 1952 Lester S. Smyth 1932 Kansas Thomas R. Evans 1961 Sidney L. Harrison 1959 O. Kepler Johnson 1952 Bentley A. Nelson 1944 Marvin D. Rausch 1952 J. Carson Rockhill 1951 Kansas State James E. MacDonald 1961 Ralph Owen Willard 1958 Kent State August C. Benz 1966 Dennis H. Parsons 1964 Phillip R. Shriver 1949 Lafayette Robert G. Clarke 1934 Lehigh William Knerr Adams 1946 Walter F. Nutt 1936 John A. Quincy 1942 Wayne E. Robel 1951 Louisville William E. Exely 1965 Brisoe Greenwell 1950 Donald Maloy Jacobs 1958 Joseph W. Larkins 1948 Mark A. Lenahan 1974 Claude M. Talbott 1946 David S. Talbott 1992 Larry K. Tucker 1964 George H. Yenowine 1951 Clifford G. York 1955 Manitoba J. E. Reesor Bingeman 1941 Marietta David P. Burr 1965 Richard T. Huling 1947 Avery M. White 1957 Massachusetts Jamie C. Markewicz 1987 McGill Douglas M. Lindsay 1952 John B. Wight 1947 Miami Roy J. Battis 1965 Frank Smith Dodd 1949 Josef Hajda 1951 John D. Holschuh 1948 Keith W. Johnston 1961 Richard E. Kramer 1956 Willis R. Vogel 1947 Michigan Benjamin V. Andrews 1953 Harold S. Boggs 1946 M. Brian Cavanaugh 1990 Edward J. Horder 1941 Ralph H. Mertz 1947 Benjamin A. Stolz 1955
Michigan State James F. Bradley 1952 Raymond B. Dhue 1968 Missouri Richard A. Andreaus 1949 Thomas E. Austin 1940 Maurice C. Barnes 1943 Fred I. Bensley 1948 Eldred W. Bowen 1938 William E. Bricker 1948 Melburn F. Brooks 1946 James E. Brown 1950 Leonard J. Cannon 1967 James A. Cheney 1986 Alan C. Chettle 1967 Charles H. Cole 1935 David E. Dexter 1937 Stephen L. Eifrid 1944 W. T. Elkins 1942 Verinaud Goncalves 1949 Paul S. Grant 1939 Anderson W. Harris 1958 Charles W. Havill 1933 E. Jack Hildreth 1935 Lester B. Jackson 1954 Ronald A. Jansen 1948 Robert E. Langenbacher 1957 Howard I. Lawler 1931 Edward T. Lucas 1947 Barton E. McGann 1932 Justin E. McKelvey 1935 Denver P. Miller 1935 Robert S. Morrison 1943 Werner A. Mueller 1949 Norman W. Noble 1935 David C. Novak 1974 Robert W. Pendergrast 1949 Paul C. Phillips 1934 James H. Porchey 1966 Donald E. Prescott 1951 Glenn D. Richardson 1949 James Robert Rowland 1964 Royal Schwendinger 1939 George A. Segall 1933 Daniel C. Smith 1972 Glen W. Smith 1943 David H. Thomas 1942 Claude G. Todd 1938 James D. Trout 1975 John Howard Vinyard 1949 Nebraska August N. Christenson 1945 William D. Harris 1950 Fred J. Meier 1942 Wilbur H. Preusse 1948 William H. Steinkruger 1975 Bernard Wagner 1954 North Carolina Harvey D. Bradshaw 1954 North Dakota Kenneth L. Ulland 1964 Northwestern Mark H. Beaubien 1964 Kenneth C. Forman 1947 Robert Ladd 1964 Robert A. Maakestad 1947 Edward P. Sullivan 1949 Wade F. Wilkenson 1986
Ohio State William K. Barnes 1949 Barry C. Betts 1975 Richard W. Bolton 1962 Richard F. Hart 1964 Harold A. Hecklinger 1942 Nils P. Johnson 1943 Robert Bruce Mahaffey 1963 Oklahoma Carl Bartholomew 1954 Wendell Hill Boyce 1972 Leo Robert Brammer 1947 Richard N. Brammer 1948 Julian L. Dawson 1935 Gomer Allan Evans 1966 Mac N. M. Hower 1964 Larry W. Kurtz 1969 Oregon Louis M. Duncan 1945 James W. Nelson 1949 J. William Neuner 1962 Gary F. Smith 1962 John R. Vaughn 1939 Robert E. Wren 1944 Oregon State Eugene D. Kiel 1958 Richard Owen Powell 1944 Thomas V. Robinson 1964 Pacific Jack Robert Hyman 1949 Pennsylvania Alan H. Pfaff 1936 Robert F. Sinclair 1941 James L. Wilson 1943 Pennsylvania State Charles C. Baldi 1942 Henry R. Carl 1986 William R. Ludvigson 1959 Purdue Gregory S. Caine 1981 William H. Deitch 1938 Harry W. Hughes 1937 Rochester Richard L. Altier 1949 Robert Judd 1959 Rutgers Arthur L. Herr 1954 San Jose John K. Colwell 1955 John K. Colwell Robert J. Guenther 1949 James C. Haugaard 1956 James E. Lutz 1959 John B. Morey 1958 Kenneth Reid Senour 1951 William E. Watson 1943 South Carolina William H. Gladden 1985 Stanford Frederick M. Kalenborn 1934 Graeme Lee MacDonald 1973 Frank D. Wigmore 1948 Syracuse Robert A. Aikman 1956 Frederick Barr Benedict 1963 Stephen B. Folts 1960 John H. Sheerar 1946
Texas J. Richard Wallace 1973 Tufts Victor R. Borg 1945 Robert Jeffrey Cutler 1961 Richard Timothy Hurley 1954 Richard D. Kirkpatrick 1940 John B. McCracken 1967 Edward J. McMellen 1958 Aristotle N. Vontzalides 1946 Harry L. Wilkinson 1969 Union Robert L. Cooch 1943 Norman H. Rice 1947 Charles E. Snow 1950 Virginia John J. Bibb 1959 Sam W. Crickenberger 1949 Washington Herbert James Dobb 1941 Donald E. Haggen 1953 Richard F. Haugen 1950 Francis Wayland Pattison 1946 James F. Senechal 1943 Donald C. Simpson 1950 James S. Turner 1951 Robert A. Young 1950 Washington State William E. Brandt 1942 Western Illinois Brian R. Charters 1994 Western Michigan Gordon E. Marcinkoske 1960 Western Ontario Geoffrey Kent Caldwell 1952 Russell M. Hall 1950 Western Reserve William W. Loebman 1969 Anthony S. Zito 1964 Wisconsin Donald T. Anderson 1945 David Fellows 1949 T. Jordan Gallagher 1970 Pieter Y. Godfrey 1982 Richard D. Wittig 1962 Past Headquarters Staff Rosemary T. Brady
This list reflects notices received at Delta Upsilon Headquarters between January 1 and September 30, 2011. Please notify the Fraternity of deceased brothers or any errors. Delta Upsilon International Headquarters 8705 Founders Road Indianapolis, Indiana 46268 Phone 317-875-8900 FAX 317-876-1629 ihq@deltau.org www.deltau.org Memorial gifts may be directed to the Delta Upsilon Educational Foundation at the same address or online at www. duef.org.
Parting Quote “There will always be a frontier where there is an open mind and a willing hand.” – Charles F. Kettering, Ohio State 1904
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Contact Delta Upsilon International Headquarters at the address shown above, call 317-875-8900 or or email information to: ihq@deltau.org. Please include your full name, chapter and graduation year. Parents: Your son’s magazine is sent to his home address while he is in college. We encourage you to review it. If he is not in college and is not living at home, please send his new permanent address to: ihq@deltau.org.
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Global Service Initiative The Delta Upsilon Global Service Initiative offers members a unique opportunity to engage in direct service, while uniting Delta Upsilon competencies and principles with the customs and cultures of global communities. Members travel to, study in and work with this community where social and economic conditions are substandard. During the global experience, members engage in a variety of cultural, educational, recreational and reflective activities. Participants roll-up their sleeves to build or rebuild in areas of need, teach literacy skills to children and engage in dialogue of social justice with other Delta Upsilon members. 2012 OPPORTUNITIES: GSI New Orleans, Louisiana March 18-24 Deadline for applications: February 1, 2012 GSI Negril, Jamaica May 12-19, June 2-9 Deadline for applications: March 1, 2012 Apply online at www.deltau.org/service.