Z
0 ~ ~ ~ 00 ~
::J
0\ \0 0\ ~
..J ~
~ ~
•
~
~ ~
~ ~ ~ ~ O
::J
0
~
Q)
.,,0
0
~
u
0
DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY Volume 87
Number 4
October
OFFICERS PRESIDENT-ORVILLE H. READ, Misso"ri '33,219 Golf Edge, Westfield, New Jersey 07090 VICE· PRESIDENTSJAM'ES C. McLEOD, Middleb·/try '26, 418 Church Street, Apt. 2, Evanston, Illinois 60201 J. PAUL McNAMARA, Miami '29, 88 E. Broad Street, Columbus, Ohio 43215 JOHN R. WHITE, Toronto' 31, 30 Rocke· feller P laza, Room 2970, New York, New York 10020 SECRETARY-HARRY W . LAUBSCHER, Vir· ginia '50, c/o Delta Upsilon Fraternity, 1100 Waterway Boulevard, Indianapolis, Indiana 46202 TREASURER-CHARLES F. J ENNING S, Mari· etta '31, SO Walthery Avenue, Ridgewood, New Jersey 07450 ASSISTANT TREASURER-HENRY L. BACCUS, Texas 'SO, 2186 High Ridge Road, Stamford, Connecticut 06903
1969
®
Published by
THE DELTA UPSILON FRATERNITY Founded 1834 Incorporated, December 10, 1909, under the Laws of the State of New York General Office-IIOO Waterway Boulevard, Indianapolis, Indiana 46202 Telephone 317-632·5561
ARTHUR E. AUER, Western Michigan '65) Editor 8545 Huckleberry Lane, RR 2, Lansing, Michigan 48917 This issue edited by ORVILLE H. READ, M.issoul'i '33
DIRECTORS WILLIAM G. DILLON, Cornell '43, Simp son, Thacher and Bartlett, 120 Broadway, New York, New York 10005 (1970) HENRY A. FEDERA, Louisville '37, Raymond Intern ational, Inc., 2 Penn Plaza, 20th Floor, New York, New York 10001 (1969) GERALD A. HALE, Western Mt'chigan '52, 7 Winchester Road, Summit, New Jersey 07901 (1970) JOHN C. JADEL, Bowli1lg Green '52, 295 Or· chard Place, Ridgewood, New Jersey 07450 (1969) HARRY W. McCoHH, Michigan '25 (Chairman) , c/o Delta Upsilon Fraternity, 1100 Water· way Boulevard, Indianapolis, Indiana 46202 (1969) O. EDWARD POLLOCK, Virgi1lia '51, Vice Pr6sident for Student Services, Student Union, Monmouth College, W . Long Branch, New Jersey 07764 (1970) ORVILLE H. READ, MisS01<ri '33, 219 Golf Edge, Westfield, New J ersey 07090 (1969) RICHARD S . RIMANOCZY, M.iami '25, American Economic Foundation, 51 East 42 Street, New York, New York 10017 (1969) CARLTON H. ROSE, California '24, 60 Keats Road, Short Hills, New J ersey 07078 (1969) NELSON S CHAENEN, Cornell '23, Smith, Bar· n ey & Company, 20 Broad Street, New York, New York 10005 (1970) C. EARL SCHOOLEY, Misso ..ri '28, P. O. Box 36, Sharon, Connecticut 06069 (1969) W. D. WATKINS, North Carolina '27, Box 355, Liberty, North Carolina 27298 (1970)
PAST PRESIDENTS BRUCE S. GRAMLEY, Pe,," sylvania State '08 WARREN C. DuBOIS, Hamilto" '12 J. ARTH UR CLARK, K. C ., E sq., Toro1lto '06 HORACE G. NICHOL, Cam egie '21 MARSH M. CORBITT, Washington 'l7 WILLIA M F . JONES, Nebraska '27 CLARK W . DAVIS, Swarthmore '17 ARAD RIGGS, DePauw '26 CHARLES D. PRUTZMAN, Pen1lsylvania State ' 18 HENR Y A. FEDERA, Louisville' 37 HARR Y W . MCCOB., Michigan '25
STAFF E:t:ecutive Secretary \V. A. BUTLER. JR.
TABLE OF CONTENTS Report of the President.
169
Convention and Leadership Conference Attracts Record Attendance in Columbia
170
Business Sessions Climax 'W eek of Training and Fellowship
175
Moving Expenses Contribute to Deficit for Fiscal Year.
178
Scholarship Improves Slightly for Second Consecutive Year
182
Comment on Fraternity By W . A. Butler, Jr.
186
Violence on Campus Is Anti-Intellectual, Says Sevareid.
187
Trust Fund Income Declines as Emphasis Shifts to Growth
188
Del ta U N ewsmakers
190
a ff
196
the Press . By L ester G. 'Wells, S)J1'({cuse '18
Vital Statistics
197
THE COVER-Lynn Luckow of the North Dakota chapter r eceives the Scholarship Achievement Trophy from Dr. Herbert E. Smith at the 135th Convention.
Assista1lt to the Exec1ttive Secretary JOHN B. KNEZOVICH F1'Oternity Developm ent Director WILLIAM H. BRIED Alll,tnl1i Relat1"olls Director ROBERT S. MARZEC Field Secr etaries l\fICHAEL
F.
ARCHBOLD
MI CHAEL G. BOYLAN AARO N M. LEWIT
THE QUARTERLY is published in January, April, July, and October at 1201·05 Bluff Street, Fulton. Missouri 65251. The subscription price (checks and money orders should be made payable to Delta Upsilon Fraternity) is $3.00 a year in advance; single copies 75¢. Send changes of address and correspondence of a business nature to Delta Upsilon Fraternity, 1100 Waterway Boulevard, Indianapolis, I.ndiana 46202; correspondence of an editorial nature to the editor, Arthur E. Auer, 85 45 Huckleberry Lane, RR 2, Lansing, Mich. 48917. Second-class postage paid at Fulton , Missouri. ® T.M. Registered U. S. Patent Office.
REPORT OF THE PRESIDENT
If the fraternity system ever comes to an untimely end, what do you think the autopsy will show? For a long time I thought that the death certificate would read, "Killed by hostile faculty and administration officials." I've had to change my mind. They're responsible for a few chapter deaths in some fraternities, and have made life more difficult for quite a few others, but they alone can't even stop the growth of the movement. I've also discarded another popular theory-that one day the fraternity system will collapse because of the apathy and disinterest of undergraduates. This may cause the loss of a few chapters, too, but it will never bring down the system. This year's Leadership Conference in Columbia proved more than ever that an important and valuable segment of the undergraduate population is intensely interested in preserving and strengthening the fraternity system as a viable part of college life. Where the danger lies, I'm convinced, is at the top . _ Fraternity officers and administrators must understand the needs and the wishes of the undergraduate community. They must recognize the elements of college and public life that concern undergraduates. They must accept the fact that the fraternity of the 70's is not and cannot be the fraternity of the 30's or the 40's, or even the 50's or the 60's. The fraternity of the 70's will indeed be far different from the one most of us recall and identify with. But, if it meets the needs of the coming generations of undergraduates, if it assists in the development of character of the members, if it conforms to the standards of the college community, and if it still provides companionship and pleasure for its members, then it will continue to flourish and to have value. Delta U, it seems to me, is doing a better job than most fraternities in gearing its philosophy, its organization, and its operations to the tempo of today's campus and today's societal structure. So long as it continues to be in the forefront in these areas, it will continue to be an important fraternity and a valuable adjunct to the educational community. Fraternally yours,
DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY â&#x20AC;˘
October 1969
169
A Time jar Excellence!
135th Convention and Leadershicp Conference Attracts Record Attendance in Columbia AT
the first session of the 135th Anniversary International Leadership Conference and Convention, attention was focused on the chapters of Delta Upsilon located in Canada. To kick off the five-day program, which lasted from August 26 through August 30, representatives from all six Canadian chapters met to discuss common problems. The University of Missouri in Columbia was the site of the Leadership Conference focused on an inspiring theme-"A Time for Excellence." Field staff members Robert S. Marzec and Michael F. Archbold, who, along with officers, met with the Canadian representatives, challenged them to be aware of the changing times and to respond to the new trends of the Fraternity and its members. The differences between chapters in Canada and the United States were pointed out by the field staff members and discussed by the participants. Specific ways that the International Fraternity could be most helpful stimulated a good round of discussion. Also on the first day was an Orientation Seminar for colonies and petitioning groups. Discussing the necessary charter standards and requirements with the re'p resentatives from eleven interested groups was William H. Bried of the Fraternity field staff. He covered maturity, membership, size, growth plan, finances, alumni support, scholarship, housing, faculty initiates, and necessary college and IFC approvals.
n
While delegates, alternates, and other chapter officers continued to pour into Columbia, Missouri. during the afternoon, Fraternity officers and staff members met with representatives of chapters which had fallen below the minimum standards of the Fraternity and therefore were on a Project Chapter status with the Undergraduate Activities Committee. Personal interviews also were set up for the Canadian chapters and the colonies and petitioning groups. These interviews, as well as all of the afternoon sessions, had been moved from their original meeting places in the Mark Twain Dormitory to the Arts and Letters building because the air conditioning had broken down in the dormitory. Most of the 275 undergraduates who attended the Conference and Convention arrived in time to gather
PETITIONING GROUPS ATTEND
In attendance were groups from the California State Polytechnic University, San Luis Obispo; Colorado State University, Fort Collins; University of Delaware, Newark; University of Houston, Texas; Eastern Kentucky University, Richmond; and the University of Maine, Orono. Also representing interested fraternities were undergraduates from Marquette University, Milwaukee; University of Maryland, College Park; Central l'vIissouri State College, 'l\Tarrensburg; North Dakota State University, Fargo; and Wisconsin State University at Oshkosh. While exchanging new ideas, the representatives discussed their relations with their colleges and universities. The men also discussed the reporting forms and materials that are needed by the International Fraternity. The first two sessions of the Conference, both new this year, were very successful and acclaimed by the partici pan ts.
170
The leaders of the ClarilSon chatJter which won the "Sweepstakes T1'Ophy" this )le01' were also involved in winning the "Pledge Education Awanl" not many years ago. At that time the pledges maintained high scholarship and were among the most courteous, best inf01'l11ed, and highly motivated in the Fmternity. This tmdition ccl1'ried on as Harry W. McCobb jJresented the "SweetJstakes Tmphy" to James R. StJieche1' of the Clrnlison ehatJter, who peeks from behind the head of a stJectator. Thus did a "professional" tJhotogmtJher ruin the pictuTe of the evening. DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY.
October 1969
An unbeatable number one in scholm'ship since theh" colonization, Dl', Herbert E, Smith jJresents the "Scholm'ship Achievement Tl'Ophy" to Lynn Luckow of the N01'th Dakota chapte1".
at the Village Inn for an informal pizza supper and an evening of fellowship, On Wednesday morning the Leadership Conference Convocation set the pace for the intensive training of the three-day conference, Mrs. Helen Nowlis, Ph.D., of the University of Rochester in Rochester, New York, discussed the problem of "Drugs on Our College Campuses." One of the foremost authorities on harmful drugs, she offered advice that will help chapter leaders keep the drug problem out of the fraternity house. After pointing out the effects and dangers of harmful drugs, Professor Nowlis said, "Higher education is under serious attack. The younger generation is under attack. The one ready-made weapon is drugs. We are living in a chemically-dominated world and we'd jolly well better learn to live wisely in it." The undergraduates discussed her statements further in discussion groups and then came back together for a reaction panel.
center. Brother Bried also gave a slide presentation on the growth of Delta Upsilon over the past twenty years and compared DU growth with other competitive fraternities, At the Thursday evening banquet, recognition was given to Orville H. Read, Missouri '33, who is retiring' as editor of the DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY and president of the Fraternity, James C, McLeod, vice president of the Fraternity, paid tribute to Brother Read sayjng, "Tonight we honor a brother who definitely falls in that category of those who make things happen, and Delta Upsilon has reason indeed to be grateful." Dr. McLeod added, "This man, a product of one of the most distinguished schools of journalism in the nation, has kept DU in the minds and hearts of the brothers and before the Greek world with dignity, courage, and distinction," MERITORIOUS SERVICE AWARD
In his closing remarks, Dr, McLeod summed up the feelings of each and every DU member when he said, "Brother Read meets very fully what has become a classic definition of a gentleman as expressed by George Bernard Shaw; 'A gentleman is one who puts back into life a little more than he takes out.' Orville Read upset the balance of trade and Delta Upsilon is grateful that he is a brother." A Meritorious Service Award for "his devoted efforts to further the purposes of Delta Upsilon Fraternity" was presented to Brother Read by \Van-en R. Seering, president of the Missouri chapter, Brother Read served as chairman of the Board of Directors for five years and president of the Fraternity
INTRODUCTION TO GOAL SETTING
Culminating the afternoon session was an eyecatching slide presentation, "Introduction to Goal Setting," by W. A. Butler, Jr., executive secretary of the Fraternity. The presentation gave the undergraduates insights into what planning help they could expect from the workshop seminars. The after-dinner speaker for Wednesday evening was an assistant football coach of the University of Missouri, Prentice Gautt. In addition to discussing the capabilities of the 1969 Tiger squad, he showed a film highlighting the 1968 Big Eight Conference. The first series of workshops followed the banquet. Each undergraduate was assigned to attend one of the eight workshops that would best help his chapter. The workshops continued Thursday morning and afternoon. A break in the workshop sessions came after lunch when Brother Butler explained the Delta Upsilon administrative review and alumni records DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY.
Octobe'l" 1969
Vice President McLeod (l'ight) congratulates OnJille Read on his twenty-two years of service as editol' Of the DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY,
171
for two years in addition to the editorship of the QUARTERLY for the past twenty-two years. Friday morning provided an opportunity for undergraduates to get a capsule summary of each of the eight workshops. A hand-picked undergraduate representative at each workshop took notes and then presented a summary. A variety of activities filled the afternoon schedule. Convention committees met to add final touches to their motions and resolutions. At the same time, the Conference delegates had their choice of four other meetings. Host chapters for the 1969¡70 Provincial Conferences met to map their plans while others interested in opportunities to become Fraternity field secretaries attended the field secretary interest meeting. Brothers interested in the expansion opportunities and possible sites conferred with the Expansion Development Director. At the fourth workshop, Herbert E. Smith, who has worked with many IFCs and with the National Interfraternity Conference, presented an informative program, "Improving Interfraternity Councils." BY BUS TO ST. LOUIS
Chartered busses picked up the delegates in the late afternoon and travelled to St. Louis for a professional football game in Busch Stadium. The Kansas City Chiefs defeated the St. Louis Cardinals in an exciting game, and only one delegate missed his returning bus. Saturday was devoted to Convention business. The business was conducted so smoothly during the morning that the undergraduates had a free afternoon. The most exciting part of the Leadership Conference and Convention was the International Awards Banquet held Saturday evening. In the keynote address, Orville H. Read, president of the Fraternity, reflected on the year 1948 when most of the delegates were born, and the many advances that DU has made. He pointed out that 1948 brought with it significant changes-it was the year of the first Leadership Conference and the year the first general secretary was employed. As part of its growth Brother Read cited the addition of thirty-five chapters over the past twenty-one years.
Trophy," was awarded to the Clarkson chapter. Board Chairman Harry W. McCobb said of the chapter in presenting the award, "Every area of chapter operations is sound if not excellent, and the brotherhood counts numerous campus leaders and athletes. They boast a chapter relations program that is even better than the one which won them the Chapter Relations Award last year." The "Trustees' Award for Excellence" (for campuses with at least twenty-five fraternities) went to the Technology chapter. It has a program of regular re-evaluation and revision that insures sound chapter operations in every area. The Technology chapter has won numerous awards for chapter operations in recent years. NORTH CAROLINA WINS AGAIN
The North Carolina chapter, winner of the "Directors' Award for Excellence" (campuses with fourteen to twenty-five fraternities) , is no stranger to the winners' circle. Scholastically, they were first on campus with eight brothers in Phi Beta Kappa. Financially, the chapter finished the year with a remarkable $15,000 profit. The members are not only involved in nearly every campus organization but this year the ' chapter received special recognition for its willingness to involve itself in the University community . An outstanding spirit of enthusiasm won for the Oklahoma State chapter the "Director's Award for Improvement." They have experienced a steady growth, reaching a peak of eighty members this year. The development of the chapter program has matched this growth, particularly in chapter and alumni relations. (The Oklahoma State chapter has actively supported the Fraternity'S expansion program as well.)
TRANSITION IN DELTA UPSILON
More recent changes include the institution of the Chapter Loan Fund, the Delta Upsilon Educational Foundation, and the Alumni Support Program. "All of this-and much more," said Brother Read, was a part of "the transition of Delta Upsilon from what in 1948 we perhaps might have called a gentlemen's club, to what will truly be a brotherhood of gentlemen." He continued, "We are making real progress toward that goal, but we have a long way to go." Brother Read left with the undergraduates an important challenge, "If you have enjoyed Delta Upsilon and feel you have benefitted from it, then I hope that you, as alumni, will do your part to keep the Fraternity strong for the men who come behind you." The top award for the evening, the "Sweepstakes
172
"'A Time f01' Excellence' is our theme this August, and excellence f01' the brotherhood and for its individuals is a hallmark of the winner of the 'T1"Ustees' Award for Excellence,' " said Harry W. McCobb as he presented the award to the Technolog)I chapter. Receiving the alvm'd is Ben T. Wilson. DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY â&#x20AC;˘
October 1969
THE AWARDS STORY
1969
The highlight of each Convention is the presentation of the Fraternity's awards for chapter excellence. Using the standards for chapter operations outlined in the Delta Upsilon Superior Chapter Program, each chapter receives several extensive reviews during the year and at the end of the school year. Members of the Undergraduate Activities Committee and the Fraternity's professional staff weigh the progress of each chapter. Field reports, reports from the chapter Deputies, counsellors, alumni corporation officers, and Province Governors, all are evaluated, in addition to chapter officers' correspondence, SP-10 and SP-ll reports, newsletters, rushing statistics, financial reports, and scholarship standings. The Achievement Sweepstakes Award is presented to the most outstanding chapter in Delta Upsilon. Certificates of Merit are presented to runners-up and to chapters which have excelled in a particular area of chapter operations. In addition to the Achievement Sweepstakes Trophy are a host of other trophies, plaques, and citations-many of them almost as greatly treasured. ACHIEVEMENT SWEEPSTAKES AWARD Delta Upsilon's Most Outstanding Chapter . . .. . .... .. ........ .... . Clarkson TRUSTEES' AWARD (Chapters on campuses of more than 25 fratemities)
Award for Excellence
Technology DIRECTORS' AWARDS
(Chapters on campuses of 14 to 25 fratemities)
Award for Excellence . . . . ............. . .. . ...... ..... . .. North Carolina Award for Improvement
Oklahoma State PRESIDENT'S AWARDS
(Chapters on campuses of less than 14 fratemiti es)
Award for Excellence ..... . . . .. .. .. . .. . . . ......... ... .. Northern Illinois Award for Improvement . . . .. ... . . . .... . ... ..... . .. . ............ . Ripon SCHOLARSHIP AWARDS Scholarship Achievement . . ... ...... ... . .... . .. . .. . . . .. . .. . North Dakota Scholarship Improvement ...... . . .. . .. .. . . . .. . . .. ... .. .. Western Reserve OTHER MAJOR AWARDS Publications Trophy . . ........... ... .. .. ... . . .. . . . . . ... .... . .... Bradley Best Pledge Education Program ..... ... . . . . . ..... . . . .. .. Northern Illinois DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY'
October 1969
173
The "Presidents' Trophy for Excellence" (for campuses with less than fourteen fraternities) was one of two awards presented to Northern Illinois, as the chapter ranked first in scholarship on its campus. The Northern Illinois brothers put together efforts that won for them first or second place in twelve allschool competitions. A strong administration and an excellent pledge education program also added points for Northern Illinois. RIPON MOVES UP
The "Presidents' Award for Improvement" was awarded to the Ripon chapter, which will celebrate its tenth year in DU this year. Second on its campus in scholarship and first in five campus events, the Ripon chapter is also proud of several campus leaders and athletic team captains. The chapter membership includes students who have been admitted to the college under special academic requirements for disadvantaged applicants. They were the first fraternity at Ripon to admit such members. The "Scholarship Achievement Trophy" was 路 awarded to the North Dakota chapter, which, according to the National Interfraternity Conference statistics, led all chapters in scholarship for the 196768 academic year. The chapter has been number one on its campus since colonization ten years ago. In those years, the chapter has had seven Rhodes finalists, and this .year a brother was awarded a Rhodes Scholarship. Two other members won a Danforth Fellowship and a Woodrow ''\Tilson Fellowship in the same year. The winner of the "Scholarship Improvement
Receiving the "P?'esident's Trophy. for Excellence" is Robe?'t E, Houston ot the Nm'thern Illinoj~ chapter. The presentation was made by President Read. This was the second award that No?,thern Illinois received during the evening.
17'1
Award," Western Reserve, gained over 26 per cent Oil the all-men's average in one year and moved from last on campus, a position occupied for nearly a decade, to fourth out of ten. This DU award is presented each year to the chapter which achieves the greatest index increase as reported by the National Interfraternity Conference. The "Publications Award" was presented to Bradley, a chapter that put out four alumni newsletters, a rush booklet, and a weekly summer chapter newsletter. A key factor in the chapter's success was the consistency and creativity of the Bradley program, The Northern Illinois chapter also won the "Pledge Education Award" for improving its pledge education program since its founding as a local fraternity not too many years ago. Last year they initiated forty-two of forty-nine pledges and were second scholastically among the pledge classes on campus. The Northern Illinois program was based on constructive criticism and individual merit. MISSOURI A FINE HOST
Under a fitting theme, "A Time for Excellence," the International Awards Banquet climaxed a week full of learning experiences for over 275 undergraduate representatives from Delta Upsilon chapters and interested colonies and .petitioning groups, The Missouri chapter must be given a big pat on the back for a job well done in making many of the arrangemen ts for the 135th Anniversary Leadership Conference and Convention. Bill Hayton was responsible for coordinating the overall program on the local level which involved many other members of the Missouri chapter, A. E. A.
The "Directors' AwaHl .tor Excellence" is ?'eceived by 路Fmnk McIb"oy, for the Nm'th Cam/ina chapteL Dr, James C. McLeod, who made . the pl'esentation, emphasized that this was the ninth consecutive year that the North Carolina chapter had received an aluaI'd. DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY路
October 1969
Convention Business Sessions Climax Week of Training and Fellowship
((WE
are assembled as brothers in Delta Upsilon, united in a common cause, which we avow to be the Promotion of Friendship, the Development of Character, the Diffusion of Liberal Culture, and the Advancement of Justice." '!\lith those words the 135th Anniversary Convention was called to order by Lewis Blanton, MissottTi '61, Convention chairman. He went on to say, "It is my privilege and duty to urge you that as we do here meet, we may be mindful of the objectives for which we exist as a fraternity." The auditorium of the Arts and Letters Building on the campus of the University of Missouri was crowded with delegates and alternates from the chapters. This year four more campuses were represented by chapters that were installed during the past school year. In addition, there were representatives from eleven colonies and petitioning groups eagar to learn more about the inner workings of Delta Upsilon. First to address the Convention was the chairman of the Board of Directors of Delta Upsilon, Harry W. McCobb, Michigan '25. "The most significant effort undertaken by the Fraternity this past year," Brother McCobb reported, "was the moving of th e international headquarters from New York City to Indianapolis." He pointed out that the move was inevitable and the result of many years of hard planning, "The move to Indianapolis will save the
RepTesenting the Bradley chapter to receive the "Publications Award" from Chal'les F. Jennings is Raymond E, SteWG1't, DELTA UPS ILON QUARTERLY.
Octob er 1969
W. Donald Watkins p1'esents the "Dil-ecton' Award for Improvement" to W. Edwin De1Tick of the Oklahoma State chapter for its outstanding 1'ec01-d of improvement in the tJast year.
Fraternity money in the long run, but the added services of the Fraternity have not been matched by a proportional income increase. This," he said, "must be remedied by a close surveillance of the budget and a vigorous membership increase," In the report of the president of the Fraternity, Orville H. Read, Missow'i '33, told the Convention of the retirement of Brother McCobb and praised him for his outstanding service to the Fraternity. The members of the Convention showed their agreement with a long, resounding ovation. Brother Read then forecast an appraisal of the fee structure of the Fraternity for the next Convention. H e pointed out that the schedule of charges levied upon the undergraduates is, in effect, fifteen years old. Dr. James C. McLeod, Fraternity vice-president, was called upon for a report of the newly formed organization committee, of which he is chairman. "It is the committee's opinion," Brother McLeod said, "that the offices of president and chairman of the Boai-d of Directors could be merged and a smaller and more streamlined Board be form ed." He said his committee also felt that the Board could meet less often yet still effectively serve the Fraternity. Charles F. Jennings, treasurer, distributed the financial statement and made several clarifying remarks, He noted a decrease in the income from
]75
pledge and initiation fees and stated that, "either chapters are pledging and initiating fewer men or there are problems in reporting. In either case," Brother Jennings continued, "each chapter must work to relieve the Fraternity of this problem." The executive secretary, W. A. Butler, Jr., was next with his report and had some tips for chapter officers. A recent fire at one of the chapters prompted him to remind chapter officers to check their own chapter's fire prevention program. Brother Butler reported that the use of illegal drugs was a major factor in the loss of one DU chapter this year and that continued diligence on the part of chapter leadership is imperative to prevent this unfortunate occurrence in the future. He concluded his report by urging chapters to evaluate their programs to attract the contemporary college student, to reevaluate chapter fees in the light of rising costs, and to investigate the initiation of more faculty members. The Chapter Loan Fund Committee was the first of the standing committees submitting written reports to the Convention. W. Donald Watkins, North Carolina '27, chairman, reported that loans or guarantees are outstanding to twenty-six chapters. Because an increasing number of larger loans have been requested recently, he reminded the undergraduates that, "the Loan Fund is a relatively small revolving fund depending principally for lendable money on the timely repayment of loans previously granted." O. Edward Pollock, Vi?·ginia '51, chairman of the Committee on Undergraduate Activities, reported that the committee had met three times during the year and spent much of its time restructuring the Province Conferences and developing the 135th Leadership Conference. He reported with regret that
After only ten years as Delta Upsilon the Ripon chapter is awarded the "President's Awm·d tor Improvement." Presenting the award to Robert Zimme1·man is o. Edward Pollock.
176
Always a popular speaker, Dr. James C. McLeod held the u.ndergraduates' attention at the Thw·sday dinner.
the committee had found it necessary to request the Board of Directors to suspend the operating privileges of two chapters during the past year. He pointed out however, "The General Fraternity will continue to work with both of these chapters and all others as long as there is any possibility of retaining them as active groups." The report of the Committee on Financial Program was ~mbmitted by John C. Jadel, Bowling Green '52, chairman. His report dealt with some of the statistics that have been developed concerning the pledging and initiation fees. He told the Convention that two other studies in this area should be completed this next year to shed more light on these two major sources of Fraternity revenue. The move of the Fraternity headquarters from New York City to Indianapolis was the major business of the Committee on Administration, as reported by C. Earl Schooley, Missouri '28, chairman. Also of concern to the committee was the perennial problem of recruiting competent field secretaries in quantity to be of proper service to the chapters. As charged by the 1968 Convention, the Committee on Public Relations reported on the resolution urging all chapters to take the lead in proposing that their IFC organizations undertake a study and examination of campus situations that have led to student protest. Richard S. Rimanoczy, Miami '25, chairman of the committee, said that 70 per cent of the chapters have reported on their policy. Of those chapters, 59 per cent reported that their chapter membership has approved the idea and are examining the problems involved in its implementation. W. Edwin Derrick, Oklahoma State '70, chairman of the New Business Committee of the Convention, DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY •
October 1969
With the anticipation of an even bette,. program this year, Robert E. Houston of the Northern Illinois chapter receives the "Pledge Education Award" for the best program from Charles F. Jennings, Fraternity treasurer.,
called on the other undergraduate members of his committee to give their reports. First was J. Dennis Biggs, Kansas '70, chairman of the Scholarship Committee. A motion supporting the 135th Anniversary Fund for chapter cultural programs was introduced by the Scholarship Committee and adopted unanimously. The motion called upon "Chapters to use this Anniversary Fund as a supplement to already existing programs rather than the sole content of said programs." Larry E. Ward, Kansas Stat,e '70, chairman of the New Chapters Committee, offered three resolutions. One, in support of the Oklahoma State chapter's resolution to continue expansion, was reaffirmed by the Convention delegates. They also supported the committee's resolution that, "the controlled expansion program of Delta Upsilon Fraternity be continued and increased to the greatest feasible level." The third resolution introduced by the New Chapters Committee and adopted by the Convention, read in part, "WHEREAS, There are many established and newly developing predominately black colleges and universities across the continent today; be it Resolved, That Delta Upsilon International study the feasibility of directing its expansion program to these institutions." The Convention also concurred with a motion made by the chairman of the Administration Committee. Ben T. Wilson, Technology '70, as chairman, introduced the proposed legislation to amend the Constitution of the Fraternity. The amendment will eliminate the automatic seating of the last past president on the Board of Directors. The purpose of this amendment is to give the Assembly the right to elect all of the Directors, where presently they elect all except the last past president. Under the present provisions of the Constitution it is possible that a past president might, through a combination of circumDELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY.
October 1969
stances, continue to serve as a Director for several years whether or not it was the wish of the Assembly to have him do so. This provision does not rule out the possibility that the Board of Directors could continue to elect one or more past presidents to the Board. This amendment, which was proposed by Orville H. Read, the retiring president of the Fraternity, was endorsed unanimously by the Board of Directors at its April 3 meeting. This amendment needs the final approval of the Trustee's Assembly, before becoming law. Of the amendment, Brother Read said, "There is a need for new leadership and fresh ideas. After a brother has served our Fraternity as president it is time for him to step down and turn the reins over completely to the new guard." Many resolutions were presented by the chairman of the Resolutions Committee, David R. Seward, Union '70. The Convention adopted resolutions of appreciation thanking the staff of the Leadership Conference and the special speakers for their part in the week-long activities. Adopted unanimously was a resolution which read: "WHEREAS, Orville H. Read, MissoUTi '33, has served devotedly as chairman of the Board of Directors and president of the Delta Upsilon Fraternity; and WHEREAS, His position as editor of the QUARTERLY for twenty-two years is substantial evidence of his devotion and interest in Delta Upsilon; be it Resolved, That we give our thanks to Brother Read for his service and interest in Delta Upsilon throughout all those years." A similar resolution of sincere appreciation was made in honor of Harry W. McCobb, Michigan '25, who has served as a member of the board of directors, president of the Fraternity, and chairman of the board. A resolution sponsored by the Oklahoma State chapter was proposed from the floor by Brother
(Continued on page 182)
An alumnus ot the host chapter, Orville Read, pj'esident ot the Fratemity (right), with John DeStefano after receiving the Meritorious Service Award.
177
Expenses of Moving Fraternity Headquarters Principal Factor In Deficit for Fiscal Year Heavy Staff and Travel Requirements Related to Move; Plus Demandsof Expansion Program, Added to Drain on F unds, Treasurer Reports PERATIONS of Delta Upsilon during- the fiscal year ending- June 30, 1969, showed a substantial excess of expenditures over income, because of the move of the business offices of the Fraternity from New York City to Indianapolis and expenses related to that move, and because of heavy staff and travel requirements, as well as some decline in pledg-e and initiation fees. Reporting- to the 1969 Convention in Columbia, Missouri, in Aug-ust, Charles F. Jenning-s, Marietta '31, expressed complete confidence in the financial stability of the Fraternity, and in its ability to operate in a satisfactory financial manner in the long- run. At the same time, he pointed out the need to keep close control on expenses, and to examine our income position. His full report to the underg-raduates at the Convention follows:
O
As you all know by now, the fiscal year ended June 30, 1969, was a most unusual year for the International Fraternity. That we emerg-ed bloodied but unbowed was not just fortuitous. It reflects the strong- base from which we have been operating-. The attached statements are an integ-ral part of this report and have been audited and "present fairly the financial position of Delta Upsilon Fraternity at June 30, 1969." Let's refer to them as last year passes in review. The first statement g-ives us a condensed "Statement of Financial Position ." At fiscal year end, our consolidated g-eneral funds totaled $502,000, the Cox Fund $208,000 and the Permanent Trust Fund $1,307,000, for a net worth of $2,017,000. This was about $10,000 less than the previous year. The g-eneral funds dipped $70,000 and this was only partially offset by increases of $8,000 and $52,000 in the Cox Fund and Permanent Trust Fund respectively. To be only $10,000 worse off after moving- from New York to Indianapolis and accelerating- our program to expand the number of our chapters is a major accomplishment. Next let's refer to the "Statement of Chang-es in Fund Balances." The first five comprise the g-eneral funds . The first one, "Operating- Fund," which stood at almost $53,000 at the beg-inning- of the fiscal year, ended up very much in the "red" after net expenditures of amost $99,000. More about this fund later on .
178
The "Chapter Loan Fund" had an opening- balance of $419,000, to which was added $13,000 for interest received. For the record, we do not accrue such income, but credit it only after it is received . The fund also received an allotment of $18,000 from the "Operating- Fund" as heretofore. After charg-es ag-ainst the fund, including- leg-al fees, and out of pocket expenses in connection with settling- the Arizona loan, as well as reserves for slow-payingnotes receivable, the fund showed an increase of about $25,000. Payments are due in installments throug-h 1988. In some cases the orig-inal payment dates have been extended. Loans outstanding- after reserves of almost $21,000 are about $307,000. The "Equalization Fund" did not benefit from the usual transfer from the "Operating- Fund" and has a balance of over $21,000 after charg-es of about $7,000 for transportation costs of the Manhattan, Kansas, Convention. This fund was created to accrue or equalize
Charles F. Jennings, Marietta '31 DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY â&#x20AC;˘
October 1969
the transportation costs of Conventions and has provided funds for all previous Conventions, whether they were centrally located or otherwise_ We are uncertain whether to phase out this account and use the "Operating Fund" instead_ Charges for the Columbia, Missouri, and Manitoba Conventions will almost liquidate the fund unless additional funds are transferred to it. The "Emergency and Colonization Fund" did little better than break even during the last fiscal year. Emergency loan repayments with interest were just about offset by new loans and grants. This fund might also be liquidated and its functions performed by the "Chapter Loan Fund" and the "Expansion Fund." The latter fund received a somewhat smaller amount from the "Operating路 Fund," and interest on a note, and had minor direct charges. Its current
balance is almost $76,000, about $10,000 greater than at the beginning of the fiscal year. The "Lester E. Cox Fund" which was bequeathed to us with no strings attached, is still being held intact. However, it could be tapped to finance our new headquarters site and building. Eight thousand dollars in income was added during the year to bring the fund to almost $208,000. There was market depreciation of about 10% at June 30, 1969. The fund includes almost $19,000 in cash. The "Permanent Trust Fund" had a book value of about $1,255,000 at the beginning and $ 1,307,000 at the end of the latest fiscal year_ The increase was due entirely to net gains on the sale and redemption of securities. The proceeds were reinvested in the fund. All income from the fund was credited to the "Operating Fund" and was used first to provide for the QUARTERLY and then for other operating expenses.
STATEMENT OF FINANCIAL POSITION GENERAL FUNDS Assets:
June )0
Cash (mainly interest-bearing certificates of deposit) . . ....... .. . Investment income receivable Fees receivable from chapters Chapter supplies ..... . . . .. Canadian Govemment bonels, at cost (approximate quoted market, 1969-$3,400;
1969
1968
$ 148,017 16,553 25,224 10,756
$ 243,308 20,972 23,455 14,277
5,000 306,933 39,224
5,000 259,440 34,063
$ 551,707 49,539
$ 600,515 27,898
$ 502,168
$ 572,617
1968-$3,200)
Notes receivable from chapters, less estimated doubtful notes (Note 1) Office equipment, at cost, less accumulated depreciation, 1969-$16,542; 1968-$12,034 Less-Accounts payable and accrued expenses
Net general fund assets LESTER E. Cox FUND Assets: Cash available. to fund ............. . .... . . .. . . Investment income receivable Investments, at approximate fair market value on date of receipt or cost (approximate quoted market, 1969-$170,400; 1968-$171,600 ................. . .... , .. .
$
18,784 817
$
10,389 817
188,348
188,348
$ 207,949
$ 199,554
$ 19,451 1,287,318
$
Permanent trust fund assets
$1,306,769
$1,254,692
Total net assets
$2,016,886
$2,026,863
$ (45,644) 443,763 21,446 6,788 75,815
$
Total general funds Lester E. Cox fund Permanen t trust fund
$ 502,168 207,949 1,306,769
$ 572,617
Total fund balances
$2,016,886
$2,026,863
Lester E. Cox fund assets PERMANENT TRUST FUND Assets: Cash available to funel ...... .. ... . . . .. . Investments, at cost (approximate quoted market, 1969-$1,097,300; 1968-$1,132,400)
Representing balances for: ...... .. . . .. ... . Operating fund Chapter loan fund Equalization fund Emergency and colonization fund Expansion fund
DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY'
October 1969
30,857 1,223,835
52,958 418,982 28,786 6,130 65,761 199,554 1,254,692
179
No funds were credited to it this year from initiation fees nor were transfers made to it from the "Operating Fund." There is market depreciation in the fund of about 15% and cash of about $19,000. With the accelerating rate of growth in the number of chapters and the prospects of larger chapters, this fund will have to be expanded to fulfill its primary function of keeping the alumni informed on Delta U doings through publication of the QUARTERLY. Now let's examine the "Operating Fund" and the net excess of expenses over income during the last full fiscal year. Income itself was down $20,000 and this was reflected primarily in pledge and initiation fees. For the second straight year we had fewer pledges and initiates. If this is the start of a trend we must arrest it. If it is due to a lag in reporting we must keep our reports and cash flow current. Expenses of the out-of-pocket variety were $100,000 greater than the previous fiscal year. Let me say at the outset that we know where the money has been spent and that the extraordinary expenditures were authorized in principle. We also believe we are at a point where we should begin to benefit from some of our outlays and that there is some room to economize without hurting programs already authorized. Salaries and expenses of our executive and field secretaries reflect the budget increases of an extra man, a full staff for the entire year, and necessary merit increases for experience, as well as the unbudgeted extra travel cost incident to the move to Indianapolis and the cost of visiting project chapters, colonies, petitioning groups, and colleges in which Delta U should be represented. Office expenses reflect expected increases and those
which are related to our move. For a period we had office personnel in two cities. We paid rent on two places for one month. We had extra expense for telephone, stationery, printing, supplies, depreciation, social security taxes, insurance, and audit work. Personnel placement services cost us $2,000. QUARTERLY expenses rose a little over budget, but were tightly controlled. Convention expense included expenses of about 50 more undergraduates than the prior year. We will get some of this cost back from the Educational Foundation. Expenses for initiates covers three items, all of which were higher. The cost of badges has gone up due to a surcharge on gold. Membership certificates are higher and we just bought a new supply. Installation expenses also went up due to travel costs and greater representation from the official family. The cost of running the fraternity rose as officers and committees were more active in visitation and developing and revising material for undergraduate and chapter use. You will note that for lack of excess of income over expenses we have drastically curtailed transfers to other funds. We must not continue this policy because it is a step backward. To summarize, the year ended June 30, 1969, was the year of the moves-the move to Indianapolis for better servicing facilities and the move toward accelerated expansion. The cost of implementing these moves, we believe, will pay big dividends. The two steps taken last year will be the forerunner of giant strides in the future.
STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN FUND BALANCES FOR THE YEAR ENDED JUNE 30, 1969
Balance, beginning of year Income: Interest on notes receivable from chapters (Note 1) Investment income . .. . . .......... . Oili~
Emergency Equali- and Colonization' Expansion zation Fund Fund Fund
$ 52,958
$418,982
$28,786
$6,130
$65,761
Lester E. Cox Fund
Permanent Trust Fund
$199,554
$1,254,692
570
13,213
8,395
. . . . . . . . . . . . . ...... . .. .
Net gain on sales and redemptions of securities .... .. .. .. .. . ......... . . Collection of Emergency Loans, including interest . .... .. . ... . Excess of operating fund expenses and transfers to other funds over income ..... . .. . Transfers from operating fund Expenditures and other charges Provision for doubtful notes receivable, net (Note 1) . ... Balance, end of year 180
Operating Fund
Chapter Loan Fund
80 51,997 5,507 (98,602) 18,000 (4,554)
9,600 (7,340)
(4,849)
(116)
(1,878) $ (45,644)
$443,763
$207,949 DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY.
$1,306,769
October 1969
STATEMENT OF OPERATING FUND INCOME, EXPENSES AND TRANSFERS TO OTH ER FUNDS
For the Year Enwed June 30, 1969 1968 INCOME
Pledge and initiation fees Alumni support ... Investment income Interest on time deposits Other ....
$167,732 24,628 60,493 9,958 5,417
$187,931 23,414 64,439 10,495 2,330
$268,228
$288,609
$ 96,935 138,385 32,151 26,633 24,766 12,360 8,000
$ 63,139 94,752 28,706 18,997 17,847 8,279 8,000
$339,230
$239,720
EXPENSES
Salaries and expenses: Executive and field secretaries Office (Note 2) . . . .. . . . . . QUARTERLY
Convention, conferences and assembly Expenses for initiates Officers and committees .. Grant to Delta Upsilon Education Foundation
TRANSFERS TO OTHER FUNDS
To To To To To
permanent trust fund .......... ....... ... . . ... . ....... . . .. . . chapter loan fund .. . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . .... .... . . .. .. . . . .. . .... . . . .. ... . expansion fund .......... . . . ..... . . ....... . . ....... . . . .. .... . . . ..... . . . . . equalization fund ... . ........ . .... . .. .. .. . . . . . . . . . . . ... . . . . . . .. .. . .. . .. . ....... . . . . . emergency and colonization fund . .. . . . .. .. . . . . . . .. . . . . .. . . ..... .. ..... . . .. . ..... . . . . .
Excess of operating fund expenses and transfers to other funds over income
$ 18,000 9,600
$ 27,000 18,000 10,000 8,400 2,400
$366,830
$305,520
$ 98,602
$ 16,911
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS JUNE 30, ;1969
Note 1: The notes receivable from chapters bear interest at 5% to 8% per year and are due in instalments through 1988, although payment dates on certain notes have been extended by the chapter loan committee. Some of the notes are fully or partially secured by second or third mortgages on chapter properties. Notes receivable from chapters are stated net of an allowance for doubtful collection of $20,878. Interest on notes receivable is recorded only when received. Note 2: The Fraternity headquarters has a contributory, insured pension plan covering eligible employees as set forth in the Plan. The pension expense for the year was $1 ,655 . Note 3: In a few instances, the Fraternity has guaranteed certain liabilities of its chapters. At June 30,1969, guarantees were outstanding on approximately $95,000 of such liabilities. Note 4 : The financial statements do not include $33,469 cash received from an estate including accumulated interest thereon which is held in trust with the stipulation tha t it be used for the benefit of the New York University Chapter of Delta Upsilon Fraternity if such chapter is activated by February 1972; if the chapter is not activated by that date, the cash and accumulated interest are to be remitted to Delta Upsilon Educational Foundation . DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY.
October. 1969
181
Scholarship Improves Slightly for Second Consecutive Year-Still Below Satisfactory Level
F
OR the second consecutive year, Delta Upsilon showed some slight improvement in scholarship, with the net result still falling far short of a good record. Statistics recently made available by the National Interfraternity Conference show that thirty-three Delta U chapters improved in scholarship during the school year 1967-68 and twenty-six declined. In the year before that, thirty-eight chapters had shown improvement, and twenty-two had declined. Two factors detract from the significance and value of the N.I.C. data. In the first place, the figures when released are more than a year old, and thus are of more historical interest than of value in assessing the current scholarship effort of the individual chapters. Also, a considerable number of colleges and universities refuse to make fraternity scholarship data available ... which is something of a paradox at a time when many of these same schools are critical of the scholarship stance of fraternities. One university which did make scholarship records in a usable form public for the first time at the end of 1968 was the University of North Dakota. As might have been expected, it showed Delta Upsilon first among thirteen fraternities, with a rank 25.38% above the all-men's average. Thus, for the first time, our North Dakota chapter became eligible to compete for the Fraternity'S Scholarship Trophy .. . and promptly took it home. In its several years of existence, this chapter has never been out of first place on campus in any semester! They were closely trailed by two perennial leaders, Kansas and Kansas State. Kansas ranked 24.68% above the all-men's average, and Kansas State 18.89%. Among the more depressing aspects of the record for the year, only two Delta U chapters, North Dakota and Pacific, finished first on campus, while no less than five, Rochester, Wichita, San Fernando, Auburn, and Carnegie, finished dead last. Rutgers and Minnesota were only one notch from the bottom. Also, while eleven chapters ranked in the top quartile, sixteen were in the fourth quartile. Spectacular progress was made by a few chapters. Western Reserve jumped 26.43% and finished above the all-men's average, where they had been at the very bottom of the Delta Upsilon scholarship chart the year before. . Florida, normally a high-ranking chapter, which had fallen temporarily on hard times, improved by 19.37% and stood ninth on campus, as compared to a rank of 27th among 27 fraternities the year before. Nebraska, up 10.30%, and Iowa State with a improve-
182
ment of 10.18%, were also outstanding in improvement. Delta Upsilon continues to devote substantial effort to scholarship programs for its chapters. Several programs are also sponsored by the Delta Upsilon Educational Foundation. Three study films, financed by the Foundation and produced by the Fraternity'S educational director, Dr. Herbert E. Smith, are circulated to all chapters upon request, and two more are planned . The films cover such aspects as "Lecture Note Taking" and "Study Time Budgeting." The original film in the series, dealing with the Survey, Question, Read, Recall, Review approach to study, is accompanied by the SQRRR booklet, also produced by Dr. Smith. The Fraternity's "Action for Scholarship" program, with weekly bulletins mailed to chapter scholarship chairmen, has encouraged more chapters to elect or appoint scholarship chairmen. Last year, unabridged dictionaries were given to all chapters by the Educational Foundation, which is considering the distribution of other basic reference books in future years.
Convention
(F1'om page 177)
Wilson. The resolution, which passed, charged the Fraternity to investigate the possibilities of establishing a fund, separate and above those funds available from the Chapter Loan Fund, for the express purpose of guaranteeing loans for chapter housing and building' programs. A motion to establish a Leadership Conference advisory committee was proposed by John MacGowan, British Columbia '70. The motion, which passed, will allow for the committee to assist the Undergraduate Activities Committee in planning the agenda and program of the 1970 Leadership Conference. The final business of the Convention was the approval of the University of Manitoba in Winnipeg, Canada, as the site for the 1970 Leadership Conference and Convention. Convention business was moved along so well that the scheduled afternoon session was not necessary. Assisting the chairman, Brother Blanton, in the smooth direction of the Convention were Michael S. Proctor, Missouri '65, vice-chairman; V. Tell Neff, Missouri '66, parlimentarian; Dr. James C. McLeod, lvliddlebury '26, chaplain; and Michael G. Boylan, Bmdley '69, recorder. DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY路
October 1969
1967-1968 SCHOLARSHIP STANDING 1967· 1968 INDEX
CHAPTERS
1966-1967 INDEX SHOWN BY DOT
& RANK ON CAMPUS
1 1966-67 Index data not available. 2 Improvement in "Rank on Campus," bul actual Index is not avai lable. 3 As of Oecember 1, 1967. 4 1967-68 GPA is above the AMA, but Index is not available. 5 Precise data not available, but estimates are within 0.50. Data not available for British Columbia, Chicago, Cornell, DePauw, Johns Hopkins, Manitoba, McGill, North Carolina. Northern Iowa, Northwestern, Technology. Texas, Toronto, and Tufts.
DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY •
October 1969
183
The 135th
Colull1bia, Missouri 184
DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY'
OetobeT 1969
Convention
August 26-30, 1969 DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY'
October 1969
185
COMMENT ON FRATERNITY
Founding and Renewal The calendar announces the start of another fraternity year, now underway at the 98 colleges and universities where Delta Upsilon is represented. Next month, chapters and alumni groups will gather to observe the 135th anniversary of our founding . Such an event, as important as it is, gives pause for a bit of reverie, of recalling our rich history, remembering the heritage of Delta Upsilon established on the ideal of Justice. But an anniversary should be something more. As we pause to honor the memories of the past, we must also consider the present and the future. It took great courage and perseverance for our Founders to establish our brotherhood .. There were many hardships and much skepticism, but their belief in the simple virtues of character and human worth, of friendship, justice, and culture, sustained their faith against all obstacles. We are the beneficiaries of their vision, but ,QuA( inheritance is a meagre one, our legacy hollow, if we do not S'eize upon this oc.casion to look ahead, to strive for greater excellence, to ever attempt to mold our Fraternity in the image of our great purposes. To stop, to take stock of our activities and direction; to chart new ones; and to renew our belief in our objectives will make our anniversary more meaningful and our Fraternity more responsive and viable. ~I
186
DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY.
October 1969
Violence on Campus Is Anti-Intellectual, Says Eric Sevareid in Television Program Summary ,
I
A MERICA is a land of the youth cult. In no other ncountry big country is youth so cherished. In no other is it a social sin to be old, because this nation has always been spiritually geared to the future, not to the past. Oscar Wilde said, "The you th of America is their oldest tradition. It has been going on now for three hundred years." The generational gap is, in large measure, the difference between feeling and knowledge. Lyric poets generally do their best work when they are young, philosophers when they are old. The old infuriate the young, because the old have forgotten the agonies of youth. The nerve ends, after all do not remember pain-nature's secret arrangement for man's survival. The young infuriate the old, because the old cannot transmit their experience to the young-nature's secret arrangement for man's creativeness. YOUTH MEASURES IN ONE DIRECTION
Youth can measure in only one direction, from things as they are over to their idea of what things ought to be. Older people must add two other measurements: backwards to things as they used to be, and latterly, to things as they are in other societies. Otherwise, life, experience, has no meaning. Assuming it does, a few observations may be in order. Student revolutionaries seek greater personal freedom, but what successful revolutions really increases is the power of the state machines, which these students hate. If the young really do try to stage a revolution, it will be symbolistic, but it would be met by a repression that would be realistic. It is always the assumption of the young that the removal of something bad will, by some law of nature, mean the automatic arrival of something better. History suggests some doubts about this. They assume that modern technology stifles the human individual. The best study of this, now underway at Harvard, suggests the very opposite. Student radicals assume that universities are the enemies of truth and justice; if so, then justice and truth have no friends at all. They tell us they understand the true biology of history and the true anatomy of American society and what must be done; in the same breath, they tell us our educa.. The above summation was presented by Mr. Sevareid at the conclusion of a CBS television special, "The Col路 lege Turmoil," this spring. DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY'
October 1969
tional system is no good. This puzzles adults. They tell us they know far more at a far younger age, and this does not puzzle adults. This is what they had in mind; the code word for this is progress. Violence on a college campus is not only antiEstablishment; it is anti-intellectual. To use fascist methods is, essentially, to be a fascist. Means are what the centuries-old struggle for the rule of law and reason was all about. SOME GRIEVANCES ARE NEW
Some of the grievances of the young are different from the previous years, though hardly more severe, but the feelings of the young are not different. A distinguished English author wrote this about his own college generation: "We were convinced," he said, "that everyone over 25, with one or two remarkable exceptions, was hopeless, having lost the elan of youth, the capacity to feel, and the ability to distinguish truth from falsehood." He was writing about the year 1903. But if the feelings of youth are born afresh with each generation, they cannot be devoid of validity. There is a powerful vision in the eye of the innocent. The child does see when the emperor has no clothes. And at various points of his anatomy, the emperor is naked: on his premises behind the Vietnam war, in which t~e y~:n~ng are doing the dying, on the workings of th@ .draft, on the creaking machinery of our electoral and administrative processes, on the coexistence of immense wealth and awful poverty, on the fantasy of racial inferiority, on the creeping, choking undergrowth of the military establishment. COLLEGES NOT DIRECTLY RESPONSIBLE
But only in minor and indirect ways are the colleges responsible for all this. Young rebels attack them for the same reason climbers climb mountains: because they are there. Most institutions in this country require reform, colleges included. A strong advisory role for students makes not only for justice, but for common sense. The one thing colleges cannot stand up against, and the one thing that the Ameri. can people will not stand for, is mass violence. A very great professor, Alfred North Whitehead, once made a chilling remark. "Wait for the back streets," he said. "When they move, the intellectuals will be swept aside." That would be a pity.
187
Trust Fund Income Declines as Emphasis On Investments Shifts to Growth Program Stocks and Bonds Continue to Yield High Return on Investment and Produced $62,774 Income for Fraternity Operations NCOME from the Permanent Trust Fund declined during the past fiscal year for the first time in many years, dropping from $66,934 for the year ending June 30, 1968, to $62,774 for the current year. This drop in income reflected both a change in the current investment policy of the Permanent Trust Fund committee, and the present-day condition of the market. In reporting for the committee, Nelson Schaenen, Cornell '23, chairman, wrote:
I
"The Fraternity had for many years relied heavily upon the income produced by the Trust Fund. Since selections for the Fund had to conform to the statutes relating to the investment of Life Insurance funds it was not until 1953 that common stock investments were permitted. We invested at that time in the common stocks of public utility companies because this group provided a high income, and dividend increases were experienced almost annually. The result was that for the ensuing 10 to 12 years this portion
of our portfolio experienced a very large price enhancement-in many cases of 300-500%. "In 1965-1966, however, this group of stocks lost its investor appeal, and interest was shifted to the "glamor" stocks. We were laggard in following the trend, being unwilling to exchange a 302 to 402% income (on market value-the return on our cost was in most cases 12 to 15%) for a very much lower dividend return. "Somewhat over a year ago the directors concluded that, while income from our investments remained important, it was willing to ask the investment committee to adopt an investment policy that entailed employment of a portion of the Trust Fund in seeking above-average capital gain . It cannot be said that the initial excursion proved conspicuously successful even though the market performance has been better than for the average stock falling into the "rapid growth" category. "We feel that we have an imaginative yet sound investment committee and I am confident that the market performance of the Fund over a period of time will prove considerably better than average."
PERMANENT TRUST FUND ANALYSIS OF INVESTMENTS JUNE 30, 1969 Cost
MaI'ket Value % of Market Value Amount Under Cost Total
Income % of Yield Cost Market
Amount
%of Total
Public Utility Bonds Industrial Bonds Public Utility Preferred Stocks Railroad Preferred Stocks Common Stocks ... . . . . . . . . . .
$ 399,453.45
32.49
434,309.51 73,719.88 17,037.93
1.39
24,212.50
2 .32
(7,174.57)
867.00
5.09
3.58
304,763.41
24.79
323,216.63
31.02
(18,453.22)
8,460.69
2.78
2.62
..
$1,229,284.18
100.00
$1,041,967.88
100.00
$187,316.30
$62,774.31
5.11
6.02
$ 833,762.96 90,757.81
67.83
$ 632,658.75 86,092.50
60.72
$201,104.21
$51,266.62
6.15
8.10
7.38
8.26
4,665 .31
3,047.00
3.36
3.54
304,763.41
24.79
323,216.63
31.02
(18,453.22)
8,460.69
2.78
2.62
$1,229,284.18
100.00
$1,Q41 ,967.88
100.00
$62,774.31
5.11
6.02
7/ 1/68613 0 / 69
11
TOTAL 6 / 30 / 69
. . . . .. . .
Total Bonds . . . . . . Total Preferred Stocks Total Common Stocks TOTAL
188
. ....
.. ..
28.45
$103,002.20
$28,256.30
35.33
32.27
98,102.01
23,010.32
5.30
6.84
6.00
61,880.00
5.94
II,839.88
2,180.00
2.96
3.52
$187,316.30
DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY.
7.07
9.53
$ 296,451.25 336,207.50
OctobeT 1969
Alumni Support Program
New Editor to Take
Yields Important Income
Over Quarterly Chores
By the first of October, more than $10,000 had been received in the Fraternity office as contributions to the annual Alumni Support Program_ Now in its sixth year, the program each year produces about $25,000 in voluntary gifts from alumniAlong with a scattering of checks up to $100, more than 2,000 alumni annually contribute $10_ These contributions are used to provide additional services to our undergraduate chapters, largely in the areas of leadership training and scholarship developmentAlong with support given to the educational aspects of the Leadership Conference by the Delta Upsilon Educational Foundation, this money makes it possible for the Fraternity to conduct a greatly expanded Conference, with a much larger attendance of undergraduates_ On-site living and entertainment expenses of all chapter officers can be paid, and this has more than doubled the number of undergraduates in attendance_ Not only is the Conference valuable in developing leadership traits in young men, but it also has great worth in unifying the undergraduate membership of the entire Fraternity. While there is no obligation on the part of any alumnus to contribute, since lifetime membership is included in the Delta Upsilon initiation fee, many alumni recognize that the dollars which they paid to the Fraternity for their lifetime membership have greatly diminished in purchasing power, so that the Fraternity cannot accomplish as much with the income from the Permanent Trust Fund. At the same time, Delta Upsilon is now providing many more services to its increasing number of undergraduate chapters, all in times of rapidly-spiraling costs. The net result of all these changes is that contributions to the Alumni Support Program, though entirely voluntary, are vital to the Fraternity'S operations. Within the past few months the mailing lists of the Fraternity have been converted to a computer, a necessary step in long-range developments but one which has resulted in the confusion which is almost inevitable when a computer is introduced. Some members have received two or more requests for contributions, and others have received none. Both types of error are unfortunate, and the staff has asked that those who have been bothered with duplicate letters excuse the inconvenience. It has also been suggested that those alumni who have received no letter are encouraged to send in their checks anyway-directed to the Fraternity at 1100 Waterway Boulevard, Indianapolis, Indiana 46202.
Arthur E. Auer, Western lVIichigan '65, has been appointed as editor of the DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY. He will assume that position effective with the January, 1970, issue of the magazine. Brother Auer is on the public relations staff of the Michigan Tuberculosis and Respiratory Disease Association in Lansing, Michigan, and is also editor of their monthly publication. For several years he has
DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY â&#x20AC;˘
October 1969
also been active with free-lance writing and designing for several associations and businesses. He has been active in Delta U affairs, both as an undergraduate and as an alumnus. He has been a staff member of several of the annual Leadership Conferences, and advisor, house corporation officer, and alumni club officer for his chapter. As an undergraduate, Brother Auer served his chapter as publications editor and as chapter pres ident- On campus he was president of the Interfraternity Council, columnist on the student newspaper, and the founding editor of a fraternity-sorority newspaper. All correspondence concerning the QUARTERLY should be addressed to Arthur E. Auer 8545 Huckleberry Lane RR2 Lansing, Michigan 48917
189
拢1 U NEIIVSAAAKeRS Joins Dyna/Comp
Promoted by Chemical Bank
Joseph R. Francis, RochesteT '55, has joined Dyna/ Comp, Inc., of Palo Alto, California, as vice president, marketing. Brother Francis was IBM marketing manager for
Frank E. Conticchio, Rutgers '63, of Chemical Bank, was recently promoted to assistant secretary in the Metropolitan Credit Department. He has been with the bank for five years. Chemical Bank is the fifth largest bank in New York City and the sixth largest in the nation.
Joins Consultant Firm David E. Chambers, A"izona '60, has joined the manageme nt consultant firm of Antell, Wright and Nagel of New York City as a partner. Previously, Brother Chambers had been president of David E. Chambers Company of Chicago, a man agement consultant firm, and later was manager路corporate personnel for Allied Chemical Corporation, He is a member of the Fraternity'S committee on administration. Three other Delta U's-Bertel W. Antell, Comel! '28, Carl E. Nagel, Stanford '37, and Dale M. Flanagan, Kansas '58, are also partners in the executive recruitment firm.
Joseph R. Francis, Rochester '55
process industries in Southern California, and was associated with Chrysler Corporation before joining IBM in 1960.
Joins K. U. Staff Larry Heeb, Jr., Kansas '63, has joined the Kan路 sas University Endowment staff as director of de路 ferred giving. Brother Heeb spent about ten years with the Lawrence, Kansas, Joumal-Wor(d, starting as a carrier boy and working up to assistant to the business manager during his school years. He served two years as a lieutenant in the Army, and for another two years was with a public accounting firm in Kansas City, Missouri. 190
II
David E. Chambe1's, A1'izona '60 DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY'
October 1969
Director of Marketing Lowell M. Anderson, Miami '58, has been ap· pointed director of marketing of the Hol·Gar Di· vision of Whittaker Corporation, of Primos, Penn· sylvania. Prior to ]OlI1ll1g HoI-Gar, Brother Anderson served as ~ eastern district sales manager, building ;, ~:Pi-9ducts. department, of Corning Glass Works, and .~ - rri._a rketiJig . manager of Zeus Generator Company.
Medical Association at their meeting in New York City in July. Brother Dorman has served on the AMA board of trustees since 1960. He retired last year as second vice president and medical consultant of the New York Life Insurance Company, having joined them in 1945 after serving in the Army as a colonel in command of the 307th General Hospital. He was born and ' IIyed for 16 ,years in Lebanon, . where his father .i¥a's , deari ..ofq~e · scho.ol. of- )nedi, . cine of the American University, which had been founded by Brother Dorman's great grandfather in the 1860's.
New Company President Donald P. Nielsen, Washington '60, has been named president of Environmental Sciences CorpOl'ation of Edmonds, Washington. For the past six years, Brother Nielsen has been with VWR-United Corporation, most recently as director of special projects. He was student body president as an undergraduate at Washington, and presently serves as chairman of the University's alumni fund. Environmental Sciences Corporation is engaged in the manufacture and sale of research apparatus and animal-housing systems for use in the life-sciences industry.
)
Joins Law Faculty
Lowell M. Ande1'son, Miami '58
Anthony S. Zito, Jr., Western Reserve '64, has been named an assistant professor of law at Chase Law School in Cincinnati. He had been teaching at Dyke Business School since 1966. He holds both a J.D. and an LL.M. from Case-Western Reserve Law School.
An officer in the United States Marine Corps from 1958 to 1962, he earned his Navy pilot's wings in 1960. He was a pilot: with all-weather fighter squadron VMF 531 at Cherry Point, N.C. and later at Atsugi Naval Air Station near Tokyo, Japan.
Forms Science Group Formation of Urbdata Associates, Inc., has been announced by Dr. Jay Hilary Kelley, Penn State '42, a former member of the White House science staff. Utilizing the computer to attack urban environmental problems will be the major activity of the group of scientists and engineers who will be based in Philadelphia. Brother Kelley is a former professor at both Rutgers and Penn State. His new organization will direct activities in computer technology, advanced systems research, statistical design, environmentalmedicine, and instrumentation.
AMA President Gerald D. Dorman, M.D ., Harvard '25, was inaugurated as the 124th presiden·t . of the American DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY'
October 1969
Anthony S. Zito, Jr., West em ReseTVe '64
191
7r:tJ/ D U NEWSAAAKERS
Heads New Agency John B. Moran, Missouri '51, has been named president of Moran/Andrews Company, Inc., a new marketing services and advertising agency at 535 N. Michigan A venue in Chicago. Brother Moran has been advertising manager of
men, labor leaders, and government officials, 10路 cates private sector jobs for persons who have difficulty finding employment. He h as served the Fraternity as a Province Governor, and was Trustee for his chapter from 1953 to 1955, and from 1962 to 1966.
To Appeals Court President Nixon's appointment of Eugene A. Wright, Washington '34, of Seattle to the U.S. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals was approved recently by the U.S. Senate. While court headquarters are in San Francisco, at the request of Chief Judge Richard H. Chambers, Wright will keep his residence in Seattle and commute to California when necessary. Brother Wright was admitted to practice in 1937 upon obtaining his law degree at the University of Washington. He served as municipal judge 1948-52 and was superior court judge from 1954 to 1966, when he became vice president and trust officer of the Pacific National Bank, Seattle. During World War II, he served as a Japanese linguist and Army intelligence officer. In 1965 he reo tired as a colonel in the Army Reserve.
John B. Moran, Missouri '51
Kroehler Mfg. Company, Naperville, Ill. Prior to that, he was sales promotion manager of Bell & Howell Company, Chicago.
Named Special Aide Albert McGovern, Jr., Michigan State '50, an assistant vice president of Retail Credit Company in Atlanta, has been named special aide to W. Lee Burge, newly-appointed regional chairman of the National Alliance of Businessmen and president of Retail Credit. Brother McGovern will effect liaison with local NAB chairmen in 16 southeastern metropolitan areas. NAB, a voluntary organization of business-
192
Eugene A. W1'ight, Washington '34
For the past five summers he has been an instructor at the National College of State Trial Judges at the University of Nevada and in 1965-66 was a lecturer in the School of Communications, University of Washington. Last year he was ap路 pointed chairman of the Washington State Commission on Law and Justice. DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY.
Octobe1' 1969
Heads Bell Department Ralph W. Wyndrum, Jr., Columbia '59, has been promoted to head of the Loop Transmission Systems Department at Bell Telephone Laboratories, in Holmdel, N.].
he attended the School of Aerospace Medicine in San Antonio, Texas, and was then assigned to the 2793rd Air Force Hospital at McClellan Air Force Base, Sacramento, California. He was a flight surgeon and was then successively chief of the Outpatient Department, chief of the Hospital Services and assistant hospital commander at that base. He was released to civil life on June 12, 1964. Dr. Westbrook came to Rochester, Minnesota, on July I, 1964, as a fellow in medicine of the Mayo Graduate School of Medicine of the University of Minnesota at Rochester. In 1966 he concentrated his major graduate sequence on thoracic diseases and pulmonary physiology.
Named to Superior Court Horton Smith, Washington '45, was sworn in August 18 as a King County (Seattle) Superior Court judge upon appointment by Governor Daniel ]. Evans. He has had considerable judicial experience, having- acted as judge pro tern while serving as King County Court Commissioner from 1964 to early this year. Brother Smith was graduated in engineering in 1945, business administration in 1947 and law in 1950. He served in World War II and was commanding officer of Naval Reserve crews on two destroyers during the Korean War.
Dr. Ralph W. Wyndmm, Jr., Columbia '59
In his new post, Dr. Wyndrum will be responsible for the electronic design of PicturephoneÂŽ loop systems and the subscriber loop multiplexer system. He joined Bell Laboratories in 1963 and has been engaged in thin film circuit development in a number of areas. He has been responsible for work on an ultra-high frequency amplifier, distributed RC network synthesis, active integrated circuit filters, and tone generators for Touch-Tone@ telephones, and is an authority on distributed RC network synthesis. Before assuming his new position, he was supervisor of the exploratory circuit applications group. Dr. Wyndrum has held the position of Adjunct Assistant Professor at New York University and currently is Adjunct Professor of Electrical Engineering at the Newark College of Engineering.
Appointed to Mayo Staff Dr. Philip R. Westbrook, Stanford '57, has been appointed to the staff of the Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota, as a consultant in internal medicine. In 1960 and 1961 Brother Westbrook was an intern in the Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington, D.C. In 1961 he was commissioned in the Medical Corps of the United States Air Force; DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY â&#x20AC;˘
October 1969
Horton Smith, Washington '45
Enters Investment Firm Donald R. Heacock, North Camlina '64, is now a registered representative of the investment banking firm of Alex Brown & Sons of Baltimore. He is located in their Washington, D.C. office.
193
~~ ~ '--'
..
D U NEWSIWAKERS Receives Scholarships Gregory L. Allemann, Nlissow'i '69, has been awarded two scholarships at Kansas City University. A fifth-year student in the school of architecture and urban design, Brother Allemann has received the $500 Goldsmith Scholarship and 'the Greater University Fund Scholarship, covering a portion of tuition fees. Brother Allemann has served as president of his chapter. The Goldsmith Scholarship was established by the late Professor Goldwin Goldsmith, Colgate '96.
Leads Toastmasters Ralph E. Howland, Wisconsin '45, has been elected president of Toastmasters International at their 38th annual convention in Cleveland in August. Brother Howland is president of Craftwood Corporation in Oconomowoc, Wisconsin. He has served the world-wide toastmasters organization as senior vice president. Another Wisconsin Delta U, Donald W. Paape, '55, was elected third vice president of the organi-
RaijJh E. Howland, Wisconsin '45
194
Donald W. Paape, Wisconsin '55
zation at the same convention. He is Calgary, Alberta, and is exploration visor with Pan American Petroleum He has been a director of Toastmasters an organization with more than 3,500 past two years.
a resident of group superCorporation . International, clubs, for the
Honored by B'nai B'rith Dallas H. Smith, Joh11s HOj)kins '29, director of the Presbyterian (U.S.) Guidance Program, has been awarded a certificate of achievement by the National Commission of the B'nai B'rith Vocational Service. The award was presented at its national professional staff meeting in Atlantic City, N.J., on June 28. Brother Smith presented a professional paper to the assembly. The plaque called attention to his dedicated leadership in the growth of the counseling and guidance movement. "This award honors the faithful and dedicated service of Dallas Smith," said John B. Evans of the Division of Higher Education of the Presbyterian, U.S., Board of Christian Education. "It also honors this Board and the church which has supported his efforts for more than 18 years," he said. The BBVS award is the second national nonchurch honor Brother Smith has received in recognition of his pioneering and innovative leadership in the field of career and educational counseling. In 1967 the National Vocational Guidance Division of the American Personnel and Guidance Association recognized his distinguished contribution to the advancement of professional vocational. guidance and the principles of career development. DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY'
October 1969
Transferred to Tokyo
Honored by Photo Scientists
James M. Van Buren, Colgate '50, has been ap路 pointed associated publishing director in Asia, for Life Magazine. For the past two years he had been the United Kingdom advertising manager of Life, based in London. His new office is in Tokyo. Brother Van Buren joined Time Inc. in 1955 as a representative for Life in Detroit. His first overseas assignment was for Time International in Amsterdam from 1962 to 1964.
E. Scudder Mackey, Lafayette '42, senior technical associate and head of the coating technology laboratory of GAF, Binghamton, New York, received the Fellow Honor award of the Society of Photographic Scientists and Engineers at their annual conference in Los Angeles this summer. Brother Mackey, who has been with GAF for 23 years, has published a number of technical papers and has received more than a dozen patents.
Heads Tulsa Office Robert J. Casper, CLU, Wisconsin '65, has been appointed Tulsa agency manager for Mutual Of New York. Brother Casper joined MONY in their Green Bay agency in 1965 and was appointed assistant manager in 1967. In March of this year he was named a training assistant at the home office in New York City.
Promoted to Vice President S. Ross Johnson, British Columbia '52, has been promoted to resident vice president in Canada for New York Life Insurance Company. He will have his headquarters in Toronto. Brother Johnson joined New York Life as an agent in Vancouver in 1952. He was appointed agency manager of the Edmonton office in 1957, and supervisor of the company's offices in ''''estern Canada in 1964. He was named superintendent of agencies in the New York City home office in 1967 and became director of agencies in 1968. E. Scudder Mackey, Lata)'ette '42
Resigns Presidency F. Edward Lund, Washington &- Lee '33, has resumed a teaching career after serving as president of Kenyon College. He is professor of history and chairman of the department of history and political science of Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond. Brother Lund, who resigned his presidency of Kenyon in 1968, has been at Cambridge University in England for the past year. He received an honorary LL.D. degree from Kenyon College last year.
Field Representative
l I
S. Ross Johnson, British Columbia '52 DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY.
October 1969
Richard S. Atwood, Colgate '37, has joined the Institute for Business Planning, Inc., as a field representative in the Rhode Island and Massachusetts area. The Institute for Business Planning publishes business aild financial planning information in letter, loose-leaf and bound book form for business executives, attorneys, 路 accountants, the banking, insurance and real estate industries.
195
OFF THE PRESS
(By and About the Brother1 By LESTER G. WELLS, Syracuse '18 The Bear Seeds by James C. Asendorf, Chicago '51. Boston, Little, Brown and Co., 1969. 74 pages, $3.50. Illustrated by Ingrid Fetz. Brother Asendorf, a production analyst for the Rocketdyne division of North American Rockwell Corporation has stated that this is his first published book; "I think of it as an 'I-want-to-read-toyou book' because it does appeal to both adults and children. I've found that my grown-up friends remember some aspect of their childhood from the book and feel that maybe they can share that with their own children." One is reminded of what Kenneth Grahame said about his classic The Wind in the Willows-that it is suitable for children and for adults who recall their childhood. Another book which fits into this category is Robert Lawson's Rabbit Hill. The author's book is "a book for children about a girl named Mary and her friend, Custer, a bear that mayor may not be imaginary" (from publisher's book-jacket). Ingrid Fitz's illustrations are superb, and fittingly depict the episodes of the story. There are many amusing statements by the characters, e.g. "In the future people would be too busy to fight because airplanes (sic) would take them all over the earth and even to the moon." As suggested above, an adult can derive a great deal of amusement from a reading of this story. The author has a fine style-grammatical and clear. The publishers have handsomely designed the volume and it is a joy to hold it as one reads.
Overlive; Power, Povel路ty and the Univel'sity by Dr. William M. Birenbaum, Chicago '50, Delacorte Press, 1968, 206 p. Brother Birenbaum is president of Staten Island Community College. He acts as a consultant with Education Affiliate in the Bedford-Stuyvesant section of Brooklyn. He has been dean of the New School for Social Research, and provost of Long Island University. "He is the initiator and adviser of a project to set up a college in the heart of the Bedford-Stuyvesant area where half a million Negroes live." The author takes a critical look at the nation's educational system as a result of student revolts. He says "We have created an overlive society-a country in which a substantial number of the citi-
196
zens do not share in the technological and industrial success which is there for all to see; and in which many of those who do fail to discover any meaning in the success." He states that it is "the alienation of the individual from the community and from the university housed by the community." The three divisions of the book are: 1. A general critique of the inequities of the American society. 2. A specific critique of the systems of higher education in this country. 3. A blueprint for urban institutions of higher learning where there is a reciprocity and a real exchange between the university and the commu路 nity. Comments on Brother Birenbaum's book are very favorable. Among such reviews are those by H. M.
All Delta U's are urged to send information concerning their own recent publications, or those of others, to Lester G. Wells, 300 Burt Street, Apartment B-1006, Syracuse, N. Y. 13202, for inclusion in these columns.
Kallen, professor emeritus of the New School; Charles Vevier, vice-chancellor of the University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee; and the Library Joumal. An excellent index is included. The publisher, Delacorte Press, 750 Third Avenue, New York, N.Y. can supply a hard-bound edition at $4.95 and a paperbound at $1.95.
Selecting Advertising Media: A Guide tor Small Business by Harvey R. Cook, Rutgers '23 (Small Business Administration, Washington, D.C.) A coadjutant staff lecturer in University College, the evening degree-granting division of Rutgers, where he has taught advertising courses for 13 years, Brother Cook in this 114-page booklet ex路 plains that, according to a rule-of-thumb formula, 80% of advertising dollars are spent for media and 20% for preparing the advertising message to be printed or broadcast. After an opening chapter on "Advertising-What It Is and What It Does" and a following chapter on media in general, he covers direct mail, business papers, consumer magazines, newspapers, directories, radio, TV and miscellaneous media, including outdoor advertising and advertising specialities. There also are chapters on where small business men can get help in preparing their advertising, how to choose an advertising agency and how to budget advertising money. This booklet is the 34th and latest in a Small Business Management Series. DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY.
October 1969
路V ital Statistics STANLEY R. SMITH, Colorado '59
Marriages BUCKNELL '66-Christian Lance Poulsen and Miss Mary Margaret Dunagin of Merkel, Texas, on July 12, 1969. CORNELL '67-John H. Bruns and Miss Beth Dunbar of Horseheads, New York, on June 21, 1969. WISCONSIN STATE '70-Paul Keith Chase and Miss Bonnie Kay Risic of Fennimore, Wisconsin, on June 7, 1969.
Births KANSAS STATE '64-Lt. and Mrs. James C. Wray of Lackenheath Field, England, a son, Todd Clayton, in July, 1968_ LA FA YETTE '63-Mr. and Mrs. Robert Longo of Roseland, New Jersey, twin daughters, JUlie and Maggie, on June 4, 1969. NORTHERN ILLINOIS '64-Mr. and Mrs. Michael Flick of Leaf River, Illinois, a daughter, Nicolle Lee, on July 24, 1969_ WESTERN ONTARIO '46-Mr. and Mrs. E. T_ Galpin of Ottawa, Ontario, a daughter, Vanessa Allison Nenagh, on July 22, 1969. WESTERN RESERVE '64-Mr. and Mrs. Anthony S. Zito, Jr., of Cincinnati, Ohio, a daughter, JUdith Amy, on May 29, 1969.
Obituaries ALBERT F_ ROGERS, Bowdoin '21 Albert F. Rogers, sixty-eight, -a retired U.S. Customs Service official, died recently in Plymouth, Michigan_ Brother Rogers served in the Customs Service for most of his life at Fort Fairfield, Maine, before moving to Portland. He was transferred from the Portland office to Philadelphia, and later to New York City. EARLE G. LINSLEY, Colgate '04 Dr. Earle G. Linsley, eighty-six, a professor of astronomy at Mills College for thirty-five years, died in Walnut Creek, California, on January 24, 1969. Brother Linsley also held a doctor of divinity degree from Berkeley Baptist Divinity School and was a former chairman of that school's board of trustees, where he also taught. He was on the faculty of the University of California, Berkeley, before joining the Mills College faculty in 1912 where he taught until his retirement in 1947. He is still shown as the leading astronomer for Bishop Museum in Honolulu, where he lived from 1957 to 1962. W. HOWARD ALLEN, Colgate '33 W. Howard Allen, sixty, president of the First National Bank of Fort Lauderdale, Florida, and Governor of Delta Upsilon's Province V, died suddenly of a heart attack on May 31, 1969. Brother Allen had been with the bank since 1954, joining them as a vice president. He had formerly been with a bank in Gowanda, New York, as vice president. He became president of the Fort Lauderdale bank in 1961, and at the time of his death was also president of the Ocean National Bank and Guaranty National Bank, and was vice chairman and former president of Plantation First National Bank. During World War II he served in the U.S. Navy as an officer. He was deeply interested in Delta Upsilon and conscientious in the discharge of his responsibilities as Province Governor for the southeastern chapters. DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY.
October 1969
Major Stanley R. Smith, U _S. Marine Corps, was killed in Quang Nam Province, South Vietnam on May 11, 1968, when the vehicle in which he was riding hit a land mine. WILLIAM C. SALOME, Kansas '33 William C. Salome, Jr., seventy, twice mayor of Wichita, Kansas, died May 17, 1969_ He was the owner of Salome's Mount Hope Nursery in Wichita. Brother Salome was first president of Flood Control, Inc., of Wichita. He was a member of the University of Wichita board of regents, and executive vice president of Wichita Home Builders_ He led the campaigns to build Wichita's Century II auditorium, and to establish McConnell Air Force Base. From 1957 to 1961 he was executive director of the department of administration for the state of Kansas. C. KENNETH HUNTER, MG1'ietta '21 C_ Kenneth Hunter, seventy-two, died in Barrington, Illinois, on Aug,ust 3, 1969. He was chairman of the board of Hogan & Farwell Real Estate at the time of his death, and had been a Chicago real estate 'e xecutive fOl" more than forty years. ARTHUR J- EGGENBERGER, Marietta '28 Arthur J . Eggenberger, sixty-two, died in Los Angeles, California, on June 27, 1969. He had been an all-risk insurance adjustor in Los Angeles for more than forty years, specializing in motion picture cast losses. He was vice president and a director of Toplis and Harding, Inc., international adjustors and surveyors, at the time of his death. ROY M. PICKARD, Middlebury '05 Roy M. Pickard, ninety-one, a retired attorney, died April 21, 1969, in Keene, New Hampshire. He practiced law in Keene from 1911 until his retirement fifty years later in 1961. CHARLES B. WELD, MiddlebUl), '05 Charles B. Weld, eighty-five, died April 29, in Waterbury, Connecticut_ He had headed the English department of the Taft School of Watertown for twenty-eight years until his retirement in 1950. Brother Weld ran the Taft School summer camp at Lake Clear, New York from 1916 until 1942. GUY M. WRIGHT, Middlebu1)' '10 Guy M. Wright, eighty-one, of Gloucester, Massachusetts, died March 29, 1969. A landscape architect, he was with the Corliss Brothers Nursery from 1941 to 1966, and at the time of his death was employed at the Walsh Garden Center in Danvers, Massachusetts. WALTER S. B. TATE, Middlebury '30 Walter S. B. Tate, sixty, died on April 21, 1969, in Geneva, New York, following a long illness. From 1964 until his retirement last year, Brother Tate was assistant to the president of Nazareth College in Rochester, New York. He had served the Brown University administration and Central Intelligence Agency before joining the English department of Thayer Academy in 1954_ In 1960 he became director of development at Hobart and William Smith Colleges in Geneva, New York.
197
EUGENE ROBB, Nebraska '30 Eugene Robb, fifty-nine, died recently of a heart attack. He was publisher of the Hearst Corporation's Capital Newspapers in Albany, New York. Brother Robb was a director of the Associated Press and former president of the American Newspaper Publishers Association . A member of Phi Beta Kappa, he spent a year in Europe with the American Peoples' College and a semester at Princeton's Woodrow Wilson School of Public Affairs. He joined the Hearst organization in 1933 as editor of the Advertising Almanac, and was named publisher of the Albany Times-Union in 1953, the Knickerbocker News in 1960, and the Schenectady Union-Star earlier this year. ROBERT F. SCHOEN, Oregon '59 Robert F. Schoen, thirty, of Newburg, Oregon, a captain in the United States Air Force, died of injuries received when his F-IOO Super Sabre jet crashed on June 18, 1968, near Madrid, Spain. In 1963 Brother Schoen was assigned to a year 's tour of duty in Vietnam, where he flew 150 missions and earned the Silver Star for gallantry in action. At the time of his death he was serving at Torrejon Air Base in Spain. LOTT M. PECK, Pennsylvania '13 Lott M. Peck, eighty, a retired real estate broker, died in Watertown , New York, on June 13, 1969, after a long illness. Following several years in newspaper work with the Watertown Daily Times and the Syracuse Post-Standard, and after serving in the air corps during World War J, Brother Peck entered the real estate business in New York City. He returned to ''''atertown in 1931 and operated a real estate office there. JAMES A. STONE, Swarthmore '10 James Austin Stone, a Washington pa tent attorney for fifty years, and a leader in the Society of Friends, died May 17, 1969, after an illness of four weeks. Except for a year of Army service in "World War I, Brother Stone practiced p atent law from the time of his admission to the D .C. bar in 1917 until his death. He was chairman of the board of trustees of Sidwell Friends School from 1935 to 1956 and continued as a trustee un til his death. He also was chairman of the board of trustees of the Friends Meeting of Washington. AMOS
J.
PEASLEE, Swarthmore '07
Amos J . Peaslee, eighty-two, former United States Ambassador to Australia and deputy special assistant to President Dwight D. Eisenhower, died August 29, 1969, at his home in Clarksboro, New Jersey , after a long illness. Brother Peaslee, an international lawyer, was adviser to the United States delegation to the United Nations in 1957 and vice chairman of the United States delegation at the London disarmament discussions in 1957. In 1948 he was campaign manager for Harold E. Stassen in his attempt to win the Republican presidential nomination. In World War I he served as a major in the Army, and in 1919 was with the American delegation to the Versailles peace talks. After the war he organized and headed the law firm of Peaslee, Brigham, Albrecht & McMahon in New York City. He re- entel"ed military service in World vVar II as a commander in the Navy in charge of training members of the Goast Guard to prevent sabotage in ports abroad. It is with son"ow that we ?"eco?"d th e death of the following brothe1"s:
Tryque Bjorn Sletteland, Amherst '42 " Brenton W . Roberts; Bowdoin '29 " Dr. Arthur H. Loomis, Bowdoin '40 Rev. Walter H. Young, Bowdoin '41 Fred B. Perkins, B1"Own '19, died in March, 1969.
198
F. D. Brigham, BTown '20 John G. Greene, Brown '27 Walter H. Edwal"ds, Buckn ell 'J} Evan W. Ross, Bucknell '22 Noel H. Garrison, California '00 John L. Brown, California '16, died in January, 1969. D. A. Brown, Califomia '22 Patrick E . Masterson, Califomia '43 Albert H. Saylor, California '51 Guy Wehr, Camegie '13 Howard C. Depew, Carnegie '37 C. Arthur Bruce, Chicago '06 Edson M. Finney, Chicago '15, died in September, 1968. Adrian Klassen, Chicago '29 Ernest E. Venu'es, Colby '01 F. G. Brehmer, Colgate '14 Kirtland Flynn, Columbia '16 Stanley R. Smith, Columbia '59 Franklin G. Smith, Denison '4 6 Guy Newhall, Harvard '98 Henry H . Richards, Hm'Vard '98 Mansfield Branigan, Harvard '36 Phillip Miller, Harva1'd '39 Lester D. Berger, Ha1'V{!1'd '40 Fred W. Kasten, Illinois '05 John O. Cedarberg, Illinois '09 Herbert F. Kemman, Illinois '12 Wilbur C. Disosway, Illinois '14 J . H . Bannister, Illinois '17 F. W , Alwood, Illinois '20 R . C. H ayes, Illinois '22 Thomas R. Smith, Illinois '30 Schuyler C. Mowrer, Indiana '21 Merrill Gaffney, Iowa '27, died in Ja nuary, 1969. T . M. Buck, Indiana '22 Edgar C. Corry, Iowa '34 " Ralph Fuhrmesiter, Iowa State '08, died in August, 1968. Dr. P. V, Neuzil, Iowa State '20 Robert R . Anderson, Iowa State '34 Albert G. Kriel, Johns Hopkins '31 Raymond C. Rockwell, Kansas '18 Lloyd S. Roberts, Kansas '23 K. D. Crumly, Kansas '25 A. Omar Hodges, Kansas '33 Gomer Lewis, Kent State '31 Woodrow K. Barkett, Kent State '40 C. A. Sandt, Jr., Lafayette '00 Lee S, White, Lafayette '05 Nathaniel K. Harris, Lehigh '23 Spencer C. Kittinger, Lehigh '25 Stuart M Hoyt, Lehigh '33 Dewey A. Windsor, Marietta '14, died in March, 1966. Lewis H . Roberts , Marietta' 16, died in March , 1968. David M. Chenoweth, McGill '38 Edward E. Elder, Miami '14 S. S. Lowe, Miami '17 Thomas H. Riley, Miami '30 Willis D. Nance, Michigan '17 James A. Dorsey, Michigan '19 Charles B. W eld, Middlebm'Y '05 Guy M. Wright, Middlebury '10, died in March , 1969. Harold S. Hughes, Middlebury '10 Walter S. B. Tate, Middlebury '30 George F. Weisel, Minnesota '09 Samuel D. Clinton, Nebmslla '02 Chester Q. Thompson, N ebmska '18 Charles C. Wright, N ew York '86 Henry B, Singer, N ew Y01'k '95 Charles R . Hard y, New l'Q1'k '05 Wilson G. Nichols, New YQ1'k '20 Gal'y S. Grunow, N01,them Illinois '69 Roy C. Crowder, M.D., N01"thwestern '18 S. M, Singleton, Jr., Northw es tern '20 Carl T . Addington, Oklahom.a '34 Jack W. Myers, Oklahoma '39 Paul H . Horst, Ohio State '15 Forrest H , Scott, Pennsylvania '06 William H. Hollenback, Pennsylvania '08 Harry A. Hey, Penn State '09 W. S. Millener, III, Penn State '24 DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY路
Oetobe1' 1969
Benjamin B. Weld, Rochester '23 Harold D. Leslie, Rutge1's '11 J. P. Williams, Rutgers '21 Williams H. Black, Rutgers '38 William Mendose, San Jose '52 Roderick A. Kolze, San Jose '55 L. Shoemaker, Swarthmm'e '17 J. H. Kahler, II, Swarthmore '25 C. Stansbury Miller, Swm·thmm·e '28, died in December, 1968. Andrew K. Snyder, Swarthl1wre '59
Wray Congden, Syrac'WSe '14
D. R. Van Praagh, Tm'on"to '52 Rufus C. Read, Tufts '94 Charles H. Danforth, Tufts '08 William W. Rose, TUfts '12 Jack R. Rehm, Washington '28, died in April, 1969 J. P. Whealen, Western Ontario '47 Douglas N. McCutcheon, Western Ontario '65 Dudley Ward, Williams '04 Harlow B. Brown, Wisconsin '13 E. A. Mylecraine, Wisconsin '19
Fund Established to Encourage Cultural Programs To encourage Delta U chapters to inaugurate or expand cultural programs, and in connection with the observance of the 135th anniversary of the founding of the Fraternity, the Board of Directors has established a fund which will be used to help chapters finance such programs. Grants of matching funds will be made by an ad hoc committee of the Committee on Undergraduate Activities, after a review of the proposals of the individual chapters. Because of the limited total funds available, the committee will not be able to grant more than $250 to any chapter. In announcing the program to the undergraduate delegates to the 1969 Convention, it was pointed out that many valuable programs could actually be implemented with very small amounts of money. Among the suggestions made by the Committee on Undergraduate Activities are programs in the fields
of music, visual arts, drama and poetry, and speakers on current events, cultural projects, reasearch, etc. Some chapters already are carrying on fairly extensive programs in these areas with very helpful results. To qualify for a grant, each chapter must submit a written request for funds, and must give a detailed outline of the program proposed, and an itemized budget of expenses (and income, if any). Following completion of the project, the chapter will submit a detailed report which will include an evaluation of its success. Each program will be judged with regard to the committee's estimation of its potential cultural and/ or intellectual contribution to the chapter, the campus, or the community at large. Each application will be judged also by the degree of planning manifest in the presentation and from whatever other sources the committee deems necessary or appropriate.
MOVING?
TOCHANGEADDRESS:Clip this box, paste your QUARTERLY address label in the space provided, print your new address and ZIP code number below and mail to DELTA UPSILON FRATERNITY, 1100 vVaterway Boulevard, Indianapolis, Indiana 46202. Name
............ . ..... . .... .......... .... . ...... . .. . .
New Address ........ . . ... . .............. . .... . .. . .
City . .. . ........ . . ..... State . ............. Zip .. .
PLEASE
CHANGE YOUR ADDRESS PRDMPTLYI
DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY •
When writing us about your add1·ess, elij) and iH1.ste yow' j)resent QUARTERLY address label here to sjJeed your address change.
October 1969
199
BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY STEPHEN A. HELMKE, San Jose '63
RESORTS CANNONS BY.THE·SEA. Luxury family type cottages. Finest private Gulf beach plus complete boating and fishing facilities 011 Sarasota Bay. Open all year. 6051 Gulf of Mexico Drive Longboat Key, Sarasota , Fla.
The "Stockbroker to Know" in Northern California Paine, Webber, J ackson & Curtis 333 Pine Street San Francisco, Calif. 397·3800
CONSULTING ENGINEERS
PAUL D. MILLER, Ohio State '33 ZETLAND PLANTATION Situated 1000' high on Mt. Nevis. Offers ideal summer and winter plantation suites- large hotel rooms. Homesites-Magnificent sea and mountain views. Rest, cool air, beach, and relaxation. Box 12 Chartestown Nevis, W .I. Phone 454
Box 126
E. L. TENNYSON, Carnegie '47 Consulting Urban Transportation Engineer Economic and Traffic Studies Philadelphia, Pa. 19150
931 vVoodbrook Lane
NORMAN P. FOSTER, Penn State '34 Devon, Pa. 19333
FOREIGN MARKETS BUILDING CONTRACTORS
ERIK W. WENTGES, McGill '60
H. C. KRANICHFELD , INC.
Are you opening up a market in Europe?
Builders-Engineers 1 Chase Manhattan P laza, New York 10005 H. C. Kranichfeld, N. Y . '1 7 W . H. Kranichfeld, Colgate ' 44
Transport, Stevedoring, Storage, Insurance Apply to C. Steinweg, P . O. Box 1068, Rotte rdam, Holland
KUHN, SMITH AND HARRIS, INC.
MANUFACTURERS' REPRESENTATIVES
159 W est 33rd St.
Established 1921 LO 4-4983
New York I , N. Y.
R. P. SPEAR, Manitoba '48
THORNTON E. SMITH, Technology '45
Automotive and Industrial Parts and Equipment
GIFTS AND INCENTIVE PROGRAMS
Full Coverage Throughout Western Ca nada 885 Wall Street Winnipeg, Manitoba
RANDY TOBUTT, Rochester '40 Executive Gifts, Sales Incentive Programs, Premiums Promotional representative for prestige lines such as Gorham, Fostoria, Longines, L e-nox, etc. The Certif·A·Gift Company 130 Park Avenue Apopka, Florida 327 03
MICROFILMING GEORGE BLAIR, Miami '37 Box 700
Phone : 201·741·1123
Red Bank, New J ersey
ADVERTISING AGENCIES PHOTOGRAPHERS RUDY F. MO ELLER, Louisville '47 Fessel, Siegfri edt & Moeller , Inc. Advertising Marketing, and Merchandising Specialists 204 Commerce Buildin g Louisville, Kentucky
VALLEY PHOTO SERVICE P. O. Box 191
North Aurora, Illinois 60542
H . A. GUSTIN , JR., Missouri '49
NEIL R. BERNSTEIN, Carnegie '58 The Golnick Group Franchised advertising campaigns for automobile dealers and banks 1123 N. E utaw St. Baltimore, Md. 21201 301·728·6 800
FINANCIAL PLANNING LAWRENCE EDWARD ZEHNDER, UCLA '52
CANADIAN MARKETS COVERAGE ACROSS CANADA On Indu strial. Electrical a·nd Hardware & Tool Products
Estate Planning, Capital Budgeting, Financial Analysis and Investment Counseling. Write for obj ective help with your personal financial planning. Mail $3. 00 for Do·It·Yourself Financial Pla nning Kit. Money·back guarantee.
CHARLES ALEXANDER, Iowa State '55 Ajax (Toronto)
SUPPLIES CANADA CO . Ontario
2013 Veteran Avenue Canad a
Loe Angeles, Calif. 90025 Telephone 213·479·5688
INVESTMENTS DATA PROCESSORS H. PETER SCHAUB, JR., Dartmouth '44 HARRY P. SCHAUB, INC. Stocks-Bonds-Profit Sharing and Retirement Plans Personalized Investm ent Programs-Mutual Funds 744 Broad Street N ewark 2, New Jersey
200
CHARLES F. L. WEBER, C.D.P., UCLA '50 Certified Data Processor 455 Gentry St.
Hermosa Beach, Calif. 90254
DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY.
213·3 76·5077
OctobeT 1969
"
BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY INSURANCE ALLEN G. BUTLER, Bucknell '5 1 Butler Agency, Realtors
S. ROSS JOHNSON, C.L.U., British Columbia '52 Superintendent of Agencies New York Life Insurance Company Life, Group, Accident, and Sickness 51 Madison Ave. New York, N. Y. 10010
7 DeForest Avenue
Summi t, New Jersey CRestview 3路7700
RICHARD D. PEEGE, Louisville '57 LOUISVILLE MORTGAGE SERVICE COMPANY
LEO H. McLAUGHLIN, C.L.U., Toronto '39 General Insurance Life Insurance Group Insurance Tarcan General Insurance Agency, Ltd. 220 Bay Street, Room 702 Toronto, Ontario 368-4715
FHA-GI- Conventional and Commercial Loans 101 West Broadway 215 South 5th St. Louisville 4050 Westport Road Kentucky
GERARD D. SNOVER, Union '56 ROBERT B. HUGHES, Michigan State '59 General Agent-American Community Mutual Life-Health-Disability Programming, Estate Planning, Business Insurance, and Pension and Profit Sharing 502 Hollister Bldg. 517-485-9451 Lansing, Michigan Qualifying Member of Million Dollar Round Table
SNOVER & CO ., INC., REALTORS Residential, Commercial and Industria l Real Estate Appraisals, Mortgage Loans 193 E. Main Street Babylon, L. 1. , N. Y. 516 MOhawk 1-2500 -01 -02
JACK E. RUCK, Louisville '63 JACK F. HOLMES, Indiana '41
THE RUCK CO., REALTORS
Life Insurance for Business and Estate Planning 3703 Washington Blvd., #100 Indianapolis, Ind. 46205 Telephone: 317-924- I 264
Residential, Commercial and Industrial Real Estate Member of Photo Multiple Listing Service 4850 Brownsboro Center Arcade Louisville, Ky. 897-2525
FRANK C. McCOWN, III, Colgate '50
WARREN MOORE, Oregon State '61
McCown & Co.-Insurance Advisory Service 2 Industrial Boulevard Paoli, Pennsylvania 19301 215 MUS-3500
Moore Realty, Inc. Residential-Commercial-Industrial Land-Ranches-Property Management 2057 Salvio St. Concord, Calif. 415
COVERAGE CONSULTANTS, INC. General & Life Insurance
TED HOUGHTON, Lehigh '51
RICHARD T. COFFIN, Dartmouth '36 342 Madison Ave.
New York, N. Y.
689-2410
Ranch & Industrial Real Estate Central Texas, Houston Area La Grange, Texas
Phone: l\IU7 路8520 Box 9
968-3123
LANDSCAPE NURSERIES L. BENJAMIN PALMER, Pennsylvania State '36
ALAN P. HOWELL, Cornell '5 0
Rose Valley Nurseries, Inc. Plans, Plants, Plantings, Maintenance 684 S. Middletown Rd. Media, Pennsylvania 19063 TRemont 2-7206 LOwell 6-2480
Our photo files cover 13 towns in Suburban New Jersey, including Ridgewood, Ho-Ho-Kus, Saddle River, Glen Rock, and Wyckoff. Ho-Ho-Kus, N. J. 201 444-6700 14 N . Franklin Tpk.
Real Estate & Insurance
REAL ESTATE AND MORTGAGES
Listings on these directory pages are $8 per year for four lines. Additional lines are $2 each. Please send your listings
ROBERT E. RONEY, Syraclise '22 Roney Realty Company Residential and Commercial Real Estate Appraisals, Mortgage Loan Correspondent 343 E . Onondaga St. Syracuse, N. Y.
to
Delta
Upsilon
Fraternity,
1100
Waterway
Boulevard ,
Indianapolis, Indiana 46202. Make checks payable to Delta Upsilon
QUARTERLY.
A pair of perfect gifts Order your DU Chairs noW', before November 10 for holiday giving NOn
H ;:l-
'i:l ..... '"0 -' n D' ..... 0(1)D' 0.. ...... (1) _en ;:l ,...., C1> ..... en s= ...... '"f
S ..0' 0''"0 • (1) ::1'5' '"f ::l n 0 ..... ::l '-<l
,.... 0
§. _.
D'S=;:l (1)'"faq
-<~
0::r: C~
toz
>--<
tjO tjC
to
~n
~::r:
>Z
::1. ::l'-<l aq(1)O
c;J
g':S~ ~
~
~
~
::l 0.. 0..
o..o..~
S p.)
......
-
'"f (1) en (1) ~
Con
;:;~&
o (1) .. - ::l 0.._
VlOZ
..... - . CD
~-< ~
CD
»c..
You'll enjoy the classic beauty of the DU Chair, made by century-old New England furniture craftsmen. The DU Chair in hand-rubbed black finish with gold accent trim is at home in contemporary or traditional settings at hearthside or office. With the DU Coat of Arms in gold, the price is just $43.00 each, two for $85.00 shipped to you from Gardner, lVIassachusetts, by express collect. Order before November 10 . for Christmas delivery. Allow at least three weeks for delivery. Send your orders to Delta Upsilon Fraternity, 1100 Waterway Boulevard, Indianapolis, Indiana 46202.
.,c..
CD
lit lit
t-'
~s=Z ::l_ ~~'"rj o.j>..~;;o
RJ'"f>
0::L 1\0
""-l ~
i'::I
Z
~:
My check is enclosed for $ .................. . .... ....•.. . . .. •.... ........ ......... ...
........ . . . .. .......... .. ........... .. .. ............ .... . . .... ....... ..... .. . . .... ... Your Name
I ..... ... ........ .. ............. .. .. .. . .......... .. . ... ... .............. . ... .... . . .... I Your address I I I 'Stai~ C~d~ ' I I IL _____________________________________________________ •
...... ... .... ....... .... 'Zip' .
:...~~
--""-l-<
Please send me .. .. . ... .. .. DU Chairs @! $43.00 for one, or $8 5.00 for two
cit; ............ ...... .. ...... ... ......
g.~c::
~':S 'i:l
fr.~O
Delta Upsilon Fraternity, 1100 Waterway Boulevard, Indianapolis, Indiana 46202
PLEASE PRINT
~~~
~~> '"0 .....
::l '-<l
. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Clip and Mail Order Blank - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ..
I I I
H_~
[:;~ ..... · 0 t-'
... ... .
"tJ
'1