1965_3_Aug

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NATIONAL HEADQUARTERS PI KAPPA PHI FRATERNITY

1924

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Charlotte, North Carolina


"It Was The Best Of Time It Was The Worse Of Ti1ne1 -a frank appraisal of Pi Kappa Phi's 60th year"'

It does appear that day always follows night, and vice-versa! From the nation and world at large it would appear that the storm clouds mount daily. War in Viet N am and elsewhere; civil disobedience ; Los Angeles ; teach-ins; pseudo-intellectual attacks on established order; ad infintum. Fraternities have not escaped the depth of the night for they too have been subjected to this "worse of years." From both extremes of the socio-political order we have heard of our faults, evils, and demise. Death and injury does seem to be more readily conveyed by the communication media, therefore from all sides the onslaught would indicate deteriation. However, in a day when those who adhere to "archaic" principles and ideals are considered undesireable; when traditions and customs are considered unnecessary and to be ignored ; when friendship of man for man must be demonstrated in public exhibition ; Pi Kappa Phi has indeed been taking advantage of the sun light and at the same time is a beacon in the dark. Set backs were in evidence, with two undergraduate chapters sinking into the area of extreme weakness, and no improvement occurring in the activity of our Alumni Chapters. Also, a much desired program of undergraduate chapter involvement in service and intellectual participation activities did not materialize. We also suffer, in comparison with other fraternities, with a lack of self-motivated alumni envolvement in the affairs of the fraternity as a whole. This latter weakness could have, and with improvement eventually will, overcome a deterior2

ation in undergraduate attitude toward ~ ~ chapter management. The noteable are9( j decline went hand in hand with a general v, t tive attitude of youth toward either interV~ external discipline and authority. fr Men still became better men as tbe " ternity exer~ed its combined influe~ce~ r 9hurch, Family and State. And in ever 1Jl~e< mg numbers, for the year witnessed a 101 number of pledgings and initiations. l'f 0. unwashed, bearded, foot-sore, campus c~ ~ t mist in the bunch. The Fraternity reabZ; long sought after dream of a permaneJl~'p ti tional Headquarters building, one wM~ y, functional, and at the same time esote~B t1 inspiring. During this crucial year Pi J SE ~hi became one of the few fraternitie~tt. \1; Its own story told on 16mm film, and 'W1 13 songs on record. A National Housing Cotf tr tion was formed to assist in undergr!l chapter house purchases, and the St!lr4 \\1 Lamp magazine fund saw its investrneJltE. W predate to 100 % of original purchase ~~ to One new chapter was chartered, and 1 ~~ colonies were formed. Permission was rec lb. to colonize at two additional schools. all Our beloved National President visit~ ~~ chapters, and the National Headquarter: f l\~ visited all but 2 chapters during the yea1路1 ' chapters moved into new quarters and 11 1, Pe ber of others made extensive improvelll b.l; The alumni responded to the Voluntar1rf Gc request in a record number and with a a financial support. Of the greatest importance, howeV~\-........ been the tendency of our members, an11.. cially undergraduates, to maintain tbe 0 posure; disregard their distractors; ~i 1.kl move forward in an ever increasing e0t ~ E of Fraternalism. They created a year 1c 0 best of times." This is indeed a tributj路o~ ~llc very reasons for our existance as out~~~ ~ the Ritual. Can we ask for more under cumstances? D. Owen. o\u THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI

KApP~


Dear Sir· I .

Letters To The Editor

atte~~?Udly take pen in hand to bring to your 10 ter a ~ ~ fact which I feel gives Alpha ChapChapte distinction held by few, if any, other I rs. electf~fer ~o the results of our recent school tive y ns. or the fourth time in four consecuter haears (1962-65) a brother of Alpha Chap' Body T~een elected President of the Student erntn~nt ~ new executive of our student govBroth Is Brother Richard Sanders. Yond h' er S_anders' capabilities reach far be·ear" Let lnels ass1.duous efforts in fraternity offices. Preside ~e~t10n that the office of Student Body of Chan 1s not taken lightly at the College stitutiorle(ston. The ancient and honorable infession~ founded 1770) turns out mainly pronot one . and academic men and women. Thus, has not ls even considered for the office who rd ~ Sober already proven himself a mature and :~.rens ~PPare~a~ of action and forethought. This _is ral P1 haltl Ret In our four presidents: Brothers Wilter!l~ now Rictan, Henry Strobel, William Gaud and We a ard Sanders. , f record 0t A.lp~a can think of no equal to this ~bees We feel \herv~ce t? an institution. Accordingly, ~~c c~ rushing th ?-t 1t wlll add to our advantages in • ~~-ll' 1s fall and in our alumni relations. al'fot Fraternally yours, Burwell Dunn 0v ~aJiZ~ Diar Sir: Gallup, New Mex.

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1e~[~n tific~[;atly_ appreciate

the Golden Legion cerw ric Ye.ar8 si Wh1ch I received. It will soon be 55 o~e~, tr1ou8 Fnc~ my affiliation with our most ill us?~ s ( sened ln ra ernity and the years have never lestle jti Bated / devotion to the principles which motiv;rP rother Fr founders . I am also grateful to Colld: the Nat' rank Stack for re-identifying me with 1r r .Brothlonal Office. st~ts Wth ea~h. Stack and I are in communication ne ~ . Stnal other monthly. He, Brother Walter tse t' touch . lwood and I never were far out of .ndece~ere ~~~each other since the days when we ! r n Berkel -mates at our Pi Kappa Phi House ~nd his d Y.. We lost Walter in October, 1965 risit~ oJgether ennse brought Frank and I even closer ters i l{d, reti~ ~nd particularly since we are both •elll\ allpa Ph~1 hand in poor health. I think Pi as _been a boon to us both. td D- 1, .\gain . ove!lr ~r~onanihankm_g the Grand National Office ;ar1 . Ga1n one a¥d With best fraternal wishes, I re1 a f' arntna Cho the "Last of the Mohicans" of apter, ·evef,-........____ ~VDery sincerely, 1 a!ld ~ enair A. Butler. .~..eif .l;' ~~r 1. :E:llsit e<J lke on Ch t · ld ~ 0i 'l'oha copy 0 f ap er, Davidson College, wou tr 11 a {\y OF the 1929 HISTORY AND DIRECutJi!ltl{1d Would P_I KA.PPA PHI. If you have a copy ut tn' 0le 473 D h~e to donate it please forward to er ' avidson, N. C. Thank you! ~pP~

Attention Alumni!

A.lJ

Gust

• 1965

The Star and Lamp

of Pi Iiappa Phi AUGUST, 1965

NUMBER 3

VOLUME XLX CONTENTS

YOUR NEW NATIONAL HEADQUARTERS_ 4 THE NATIONAL ROSE ----------------

6

THE FUTURE OF THE FRATERNITY ----

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ALUMNI BRIEFS ----------------------

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THE FRATERNITY OF THE FUTURE

15

ANTHONY VANAGAS: HERO ---------- 20 CAPT. CURTIS IN NAPLES ------------ 22 NEWS & NOTES ---------------------- 26 CHAPTER ETERNAL ------------------ 30

Durward Owen Editor-in-Chief

Paul R. Plawin Managing Editor

THE STAR AND LAMP is published quarterly by the National Council of the Pi Kappa Phi Fraternity, 1924 Vail Ave., Charlotte, N. C., in the months of February, May, August and November. The life subscription is $15 and is the only form of subscription. EDITORIAL OFFICE: National Office of the Pi Kappa Phi Fraternity, 1924 Vail Ave., Charlotte, N. C. PUBLICATIONS OFFICE: 224 W. 2nd St., Charlotte, N. C. 28202. Second-class postage paid at Charlotte, N. C. Changes in address should be reported promptly to National Office, P. 0. Box 4608, Charlotte, N. C. 28204. All material intended for publication should be in the hands of the Managing Editor, P. 0 . Box 4608, Charlotte, N. C. 50 days preceding the month of issue.

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Welcome To Your New HOine On June 1, 1965 your Fraternity rnof its national Office operation into a buil~ of its own. This followed 60 years of re~ 11 quarters in five different locations. Cert11 this represents another step forward fo!' Kappa Phi.

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tl The new office location is an attrllc I' two story, colonial building at 1924 5 A venue in Charlotte. Built originallY ~~~ private home by an architect, the lJt.ll is ideally suited for the Fraternity use路{l A beautiful reception area is taste furnished as a living room complete~ fireplace. A private office for the Et~c Secretary is conductive to a smooth plan of work. Offices for the Assistaii cutive Secretary and other Nationa1 1 staff members are provided, as vvel library and a completely furnished b~d~ for traveling personnel and visiting PI Phis. f A.IJ

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THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI KAPp.A


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NATIONAL

ROSE OF

PI KAPPA PHI MISS PEGI HARMON Omicron National Rose

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Mrss Pegi Harmon, Rose Queen of Omicron Chapter, University of Alabama, has been selected as the 1965 National Rose of Pi Kappa Phi. Pegi is a member of Alpha Gamma Delta Sorority at the University of Alabama where she is a Fine Arts major. She is a rising senior from Meridian, Mississippi. First runner-up in the National Rose Queen competition is Miss Sharon Huffman of Dreyton Plains, Michigan. Miss Huffman is a sophomore Speech major at Central Michigan University where she is the Rose Queen of Beta Xi Chapter. The other three finalists from the original

MISS SHARAN HUFFMAN Beta Xi Second Place 6

MISS GLENNA MORING Gamma Alpha Third Place

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field of fifty-three contestants in the ordel their selection were : ( t' Miss Glenna Moring, Livingston Stat~el tl lege, Rose Queen of Gamma Alpha C~ap ~ b Miss Dana Baker, Atlanta, Georg1a, ll Queen of Iota Chapter. Fn Miss Ricki Cox, Valdosta State College, n Queen of Beta Tau Chapter. ~ Judges for this year's National Rose Co~! were the staff members of the Photo BuJ'efr r, the University of Oregon with Bernar 路e li: nesser as chief judge. Also serving weftr tl staff members of the Office of Student r> e, at the University of Oregon.

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MISS DAN A BAKER Iota Fourth Place

MISS Beta Tall Fifth Place

THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI KAPp.A

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The Future of

the Fraternity By Henry A. Federa

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note With replacconnnittee ofome wry amusement that a subUnits elUent of fra th~ f\.mherst faculty is urging the anach because th termbes with a system of residential been ronis111, theey sa:y .f.r~ternities have become an the wexhausted ~oss1b1htJes for their reform have It Jnu ay of excitn that they now stand directly in h~s e~t he. remembg dew possibilities for student life. pities ~C!Sed a hi~Y: dthat Amherst, for several years, t now ere, sha . egree of control of the fraterthe sur appears tR~~~hthe fraternities as they pleased. their h &'ery Perfo e sub-committee is unhappy with andiworJ- rmed and is counciling throwing away

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Pleas~~g ,down ofBththe. r~port states as an aim, "the new Po e.. When .e ~ 1 gld separation of thought and lge, F no~ ha:d1bilities 0 jh1: dis rea~ as "open.ing up exciting, Using . .to iiUa . s u ent hfe," I begm to gag. It is lllan. s1111Ilar Iang~e a .leader of Communist China > co~t Pleasur llro;v Am[ age ~~ announcing the communal iure8v story of With thou erst Will be able to mix student Lrd ft f.e"oluti the commgh~ to faculty liking. Remember the on, You'll a~~~~ speaker who said "Comes the weref. t~tener spe coiUpJained ave strawberries." When one t ;\f I eate stra~ber answere~ha~Che didn't like strawberries, l errics " omes the revolution, you'll tn· sn't . . thl&'ht liklt iust Pos 81. .elnsel, e to mix b!e that the Amherst students tn1ght n es? Isn't . th~Ir pleasures and thoughts for 0 ~ Ssibi]jtt conside/t Just possible that the students c0 llntry Y for stude co~munal living an exciting new chUntry has draftednt lj{e? Why is it that although this 1'h0 ose fh8 ~11le educat co ege men to be killed for their r· ese 10 en· own m. 0{S feel they cannot be trusted to tWhts of e; supposedl ure of thoughts and pleasures? these ed reedom of Yh :vould fight and die for the co}jln fr~cators Wouldc tOICe and of expression and yet ege. 111 exercisin ry by f?rced fee?ing, to keep ., g these nghts while attending !he surest w ay to kill America's will to resist en-

slavement is to condition the minds of our future leaders to having their thoughts prescribed by their mentors; to accepting blindly all directions of an administration, whether college or governmental. The rights to dissent and to choose one's own way are precious and they should be practiced in order that they not atrophy. College teachers and administrators should be in the forefront of those who wish to protect these rights, even though they do not agree with the position taken. It is so easy to trample the individual in the name of efficient administration; next it could be the teachers who are trampled. Now let us look at DePauw University where the Trustees have forthrightly taken the position that fraternities have a right of freedom of choice of their members. In taking this position, they have chosen to follow the precepts of the U. S. Supreme Court which said that "groups which themselves are neither engaged in subversive or other illegal or improper activities, not demonstrated to have any substantial connection with such activities, are to be protected in their rights of free and private association." Incidentally, in a concurring opinion Justice Douglas used this language: "The First Amendment, in its respect for the conscience of the individual, honors the sanctity of thought and belief. To think as one chooses, to believe what one wishes, are important aspects of the constitution~:~! right to be let alone . . . For the views a citizen entertains, the belief he harbors, the utterances he makes the ideology he embraces and the people he associ~tes with are no concern of government. By the First Amendment, we have staked our security on freedom to promote a multiplicity of ideas, to associate at will with kindred spirits and to defy governmental intrusion into these prech:!Cts." It would appear that the Amherst sub-committPe dissents, while the DePauw Trustees concur.

This article was reprinted from the Delta Upsilon Quarter!). The author, Henry A. Federa, Delta Upsilon, International pres-

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h"e'"' nt"tive in

volu"teer work fn"J' Delta Up~tflon on

the International level since 1947. . In the business worldj hN Is secretary and general counsel for Raymond' Internationa • ew York based worldwide construction specialists, l't{r.l ,Federa !s ~ J"rPtf•u..te ,.._( the lTniver"ity ·· of Louisville where lle ah~o rece•je his law de~rree. H<! wa9"' eelcted International President o~ De :a Upsilon in 1962 and has been re-elected to that post tw ee, n · 1963 and 1964.

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Presbyterian-BETA-J. L. Barnett, '19 is Secretary and Treasurer of Perfection Spinning Co. He also acts in this same capacity for South Fork Mfg.-both loctaed in Belmont, N. C. John Lincoln Donaldson, Jr., '61, is a Navy ensign stationed aboard the attack transport USS Thuban at Norfolk, Va. California-GAMMA - Young D. Stewart, '54, is an area training coordinator for the California State Department of Social Welfare. He lives in Citrus Heights, Calif. Furman- DELTA- Lt. Charles D. Graham, '61 is now serving as Director of Information, Lindsay Air Station in Germany. Glenn E. Turk, '48 is a Vice-President in Retail Sales Division of Hart, Schaffner, and Marx Co. Glenn is married, father of two daughters, and is Jiving in Sioux City, Iowa at the present time. Davidson- EPSILON- James R. Morton, '17-enjoyed retirement as a structural engineer but a short time. He reports he is happily engaged for a Private Consulting Engineer in Kensington, Md. Charles W. Robinson, Jr., '53--after completing four years as resident-fellow, became resident-instructor in Pathology at North Carolina Medical Hos8

pital. Charles is expecting to report to the army sometime in fall of '65. He resides with his wife Jean, daughter Ashly, and son Charles in Chapel Hill, N. C. William H. Neal, '49National director of U. S. Savings Bond division of U. S. Treasury received the "Exceptional Service Award" for Treasury personnel. He previously had received the "Distinguished Service Award." Prior to his Treasury appointment, Bill was senior Vice-President of Wachovia Bank and Trust Co. Belton O'Neal Bryan, '54-served as assistant and executive assistant in various fields of the government: Assistant legal advanced U. S. Dept. of State '46-'48; Special Assistant to Under Secretary of State '48-'50; attached American Embassy, Athens, Greece, 1950, Consulor and secretary in diplomatic service '50-'52; assistant director for mutual securety '52-'54; director office and diplomatic control '54-'55; foreign service officer, consulor and diplomatic service '55-'59; political adviser to commander-in-chief U. S. Army in Europe, Heidelburg, Germany '59-'60. Executive director Security and Consulor Affairs Dept. State '60-'61; deputy administrator '61-'62; consul general, Glasgow, Scotland. Col. Bryan is the recipient of two commendations awards for meritorious service U. S. Army. He

b1 an~ also received the Alumni M, ( fto· ment award from George wasbJPI ghi. University. At the present tiJ!led,~ ,}~ . nt .,tn Bryan JS contracts manageme . ~ Pir. 11 tor for Martin-Marietta Co. 1tO bee York City. He is married ( a! former Mildred M. Herlent- btl' f,~t have three sons and one daU!( j,J for Virgil 0. Roberson, '59, is a~ bl' tie( lieutenant, stationed at :Fa1r I•' ~.t. 18 Alaska. Virgil is married to tbe , ~ea er Jane Heylmun of GreenvJ. '5~ !rta Malcolm N. Goodwin, Jr., '59, 15col' diu~ ing medicine at the Medical ~4 Chi· of South Carolina, where ~e ~ Ge~ research fellowship last Sprl~g. : colm and his wife, Eve, live 1: i' 'sat leston. Frank C. Cenegy, '5 inc• fr 0~ sociated with the Sun RealtY'• ed Woodbridge, N. J. ~~e

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Wofford-ZETA-James ;1: A.1r '50 - Electrical Engineer pre ' ~aj with Western Electric CO·•, • flea James, wife, three daughter~· 1\f~~ son live in Winston-Salem• 901 Lt. Zeb C. Williams, '51-<lid grd I ~ert 11 work at Emory Universi~Y ~J11f h~~ umbia Seminary after havmg c 5 1· to i ed theology school. Lates~ ne:e ~ic~ Zeb tells us he is at Prov1den J. st0t < byterian in Clinton, S. C. esl· eli~~ Lineberger, Jr., '53-News co~ ~·IVa~ Jim that he received his B.S. 1 ~JI} pic~ ematic Education in '61, and ·~e# ~~~ ust, '64, he completed reQ 01 , A, lJ I

THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI KAPp.A

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for BD Schoo]. 11gre~ at Duke Divinity churches 1. e JS now serving two ~Y, N. c H~out~ern Granville CounNaby and Jls WlJ!e Mary, 7 mos. old · C. m JVe in Franklinton, '5 Elllory ET .3-M:ajo-; . A-. Robert L. Slimp, Slstant Div'1~hmp 1s serving as as~uarters of :hon Chaplin, with headt. Iiood T e 1st Armored Division tJoe w~ite:x. _Joe S. Graham, '22 th seeing a he 1S looking forward e 40th number of Pi Kapps at at t:. tJ "'!Uory annive Un· rs~ry of 1925 class eci 9 Lary • 521V~rs1ty this year. G. M In Priv~te -Is 3:n a~torney engagb ~Ed . Practice m St. Charles, ~1 lding a h~n H .. Rappe, '19-Ed is c ter 42 y me m Clearwater Fla m~' the fi~!rs ~ervice with S~ift & th nager of C sjx of which he was lei~~ are looki~ umfbia, S. C. plant, re time 0 f g . orward to some G the1r own. to eorgia Ins . llr T~-J. Rh htute of TechnologyPo~Sident of F~es Mitchell, '30-vicerect~lllac Tile Cane~, Chesapeake and Insr{ of the R?··h IS also serving as is ll;. 0~te. --Dr 1}. mond Professional at G essor of·. au! _T. Eaton, '55, '18 ~orgia T hmdustnal engineering b -lnv·t ec p· K Guy E · "!OUnt .1 es all .. Mannmg, enj 0 a1n Rom 1 apps m or around bil any y. the b e,_ Ark., to fish and }.~ from t 1me of e~hhful Ozark foothills 'asbJP(1 Chi Dnderw .·~ Year. Guy retired tiflle,_ Gu~a_go after ~12 ers Laboratories in pt dl· gin eels Vice-Pre .~ears service where 1 e 'Jl ~ F'itst rL for the s\ ent and Chief En ). 1 been t. Jero ast several years ~d to a! of s.elected ~ A. M_ichel, '57-ha~ t. ~ llerfo fleer train~ special profession1 btl· ry \v{lllance in mg because of his aug J,f forth~ attend ua~rospace force. Jere.~ )lS~ tied tis SPecial ~~v~r~ity of Colorado FaJ! Lt. c 0 the f Iammg. He is martbe I•' his co]. Dent Bor.;ner Lucy Aldridge , ·J!e, ~ Yearser_tificate ~f ngrl_lm, '40-display~ n. t1 gram Jn D. s ~ebrement after 21 I, IS; J) cluste ~as Pres~ Air Force. Col. Inal co da] / .to DSA~ted the first oak leaf 01 0 be ~ ghief f his mer·f l!Jmendation Mejpg'·, eminiol Operati~nonDo~s. ~erv~ce as r . G aunch v . s !VISion m the e Jll. , DNc ehicle directorate. 11 6 •52 3..._ -- RApp ior frolll g{;aduated w~- Jo~n B. Fisher, t;y, ed \Vit Nc and . h BS m Chemistry ¥hen Indust;is !Presently employ'' hholllas I] Co. RS: hProducts Dept., d v as b 1\f ' 1c thr mond , v·Jrgmla. ·· .P' ~ A.· een . 1\tacGI pres , Mil·. F'or Promoted ot JMn, .Jr.,. '490 t.aJol· ce at E aJor m the CO·• , 'lead l\1:acGJot ~reux AB, France. hter:1 ~ase qGarters shim commands the Jl'l, L oniguer~up at qEadron, 7333rd Air tB~ t. Ja Is a n . nreux. His wife g d ( (ertifie~es B. ~i);e of, France. 2nd ' all r h~l' 1\F'Bas Wea er, 61-has been g coJllt t~s A.B • Ala. poLs dir~ctor at Gunnel\'; r: 'ti the p·om UN Ct. M1lle_r received ~~'mer Kat·h He 1s married epee p0chatd tee callt ""· . Starner ryn 1' stud· '53 M. . T ay1or. · ,1· di 1. les a1n and • -1s an Air o~e ~' "'~ Sion ~} the guide~entir ~ompleted ;. 111 ! b· Ys at :p Pan A e. mlss1le range d jP ~~~k is m atrick A.{erpcan World AirauireJII Burkharried to \h Oif·ce Base, Fla. ~ A. ead of 1\f· e ormer Marif lJ" lJ lshawaka Ind pf. " s 't ' .

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University of Georgia-LAMBDA -James Austin Ruvis, '58-is a district representative with Texaco, Inc. Jim's headquarters are in Gainesville, Fla. 2nd Lt. William C. Clary, III, '62- graduated from the technical training course for accounting and finance officers at Sheppard, Tex. He is being assigned to Headquarters Command at Bolling AFB, Washington, D. C. Herbert S. Maffett, '29, is vice president in charge of the Washington office of Merritt-Chapman & Scott Corp. of New York. Marion W. Luckey, '35, is vice president of a pecan shelling firm in Harlem, Ga. Dr. J1ames R. Butler, '52, teaches geology at the University of North Carolina. John H. Coman, '51, is an Army captain stationed with the Army's Technical Escort Unit at Rockville, Ind. John is married and has two children. Duke--MU-Sloane W. Payne, '23 Being President of Taylorsville Building and Loan Association has not kept Sloane from the educational field. He is also County Superintendent of Schools, Alexander County, Taylorsville, N. C. Louis P. Jervey, Jr., '53-a secretary and partner as well, in the L. L. Manery and Sons, Inc., Insurance Agency of Franklin. Louis is also a certified Lay Speaker for the Va. Conference of the Methodist Church. S. C. Brawley, Jr., '27 - currently, and for the past two years, Durham County Democratic Executive Commission, has had as its chairman, Brother Brawley. He is immediate past president of Durham County Bar Associa-

tion and is practicing law with officers in Wachovia Bank Building, Durham. Warren H. Pope, '44has been transferred to St. Louis area to coordinate construction of two new distribution centers. He is connected with McGraw-Hill, Inc . Raymond H. Baur, Jr., '50, is manager of a structural mechanical design section of the Chrysler Corp.'s Florida missile operations. He and his wife, Frances, and their son, live in Cocoa, Fla. Gary C. Farmer, '55-Gary was ordained in June, '65, from Episcopal General Theological Seminary in N. Y. He and his wife Mary hope to return to Florida to begin his ministry. Heyward L. Drummond, '45-is manager of Marketing Industrial Textile Products, OCF International, with offices in New York City. Heyward has taken an active part in the civic development of his community more recently serving as Vice-President and membership chairman P 1 y mouth Township Republican League. He, wife Eleanor, and three children reside in Mahwah, N. J. Reynold C. Wiggins, '16, recently retired last year after a career as a federal civil He lives in Gulfservice worker. port, Miss. Raymond E. Vickery, Jr., '61, is attending the University of Ceylon on a graduate fellowship . University of Nebraska - NU Judd Paul Brenton, '29-was appointed Judge by Governor of Ohio in the city of Vandalin, Ohio. Judd is enjoying the work and experiences of becoming a judge after 29 years of private practicing. Capt. Leon J.

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Kroenke is an Air Force missile combat crew commander assigned to a Strategic Air Command unit as Ellsworth Air Force Base, S.D. Leon's wife is the former Donna Herde of Columbus, Neb. Roanoke College-XI-Robert Lowell Petry, 27'-a former National Scholarshpi Committee member, and senior professor at University of the South, retired after 35 years of teaching. Dr. Petry was chairman of the physics dept. since 1930. Dr. Petry is also listed in Men of Science. An interesting note also is that Mrs. Petry was a fellow physicist who taught at the University in World War II. Thomas H. Moore, '36Tom is a Captain in the U. S. Navy and is presently assigned to the Dept. of Defense at the Pentagon in Washington, D. C. Dick Emberger, '56 writes he had a wonderful time in 'Tokyo as a member of the U. S. Olympic team. He placed lOth in the decathlon event in the olympics. Robert L. Petry, member of the fraternity's national scholarship committee from 1930 to 1935, recently retired as professor and head of the department of physics at the University of the South at Sewanee, Tenn. Howard D. Yerger, '54, is an industrial engineer, for Sears, Roebuck & Co. in Chicago, Ill., and writes that he's on the road, working with projects in various cities most of his time. University of Alabama-OMICRON --Capt. John C. Carson III, '51has completed the final phase of training in "escape and evasion techniques at Albrook AFB, Canal St. 2nd Lt. Franklin, W. King, '61-is shown by the T-33 jet trainer in which he made an orientation flight at Janes Connally AFB in Texas. Henry. A. Leslie '41-has the honor of bemg vice-p~esident and senior trust officer of the Union Bank and Trust Company, Montgomery. Hen!Y _held a similar position with the Bummgh~m Trust National Bank for the past five years and was a professor _of la:w and assistant dean at the Umversity of Alabama. Robert L. Shepherd, '53 - has been promoted to Program production manager for UDCN-TV, Nashville. W. W. Young, Jr., '43Southern Bell Telephone Company announces that W. W. Young has been appointed as head of the Nashville district. 1st It. Allan C. Viguerie, '57-graduated from squadron officer's school at Air University, Maxwell AFBV, having been selected for this training because of his leadership in the aerospace force. Lt. Viguerie will be permanently assigned to Seymour Johnson AFB, North Carolina. Captain Clarence G. Meadows, Jr., '57-has arrived for duty at Scott AFB, Illinois. Captain Meadows, a pilot, is involved in the operation of providing global airl~ft of U. S. military forces and equipment. 10

LT. KING W & L-RHO-Wm. Birkley MacKenny, Ill, '60-is a naval navigator for Military Air Transport Service at McGuire AFB in New Jersey. George W. Summerson, '23, is president of Abingdon Inns Corp. anrl g-eneral manager of the Martha Washington Inn in Abingdon, Va. George recently was president of his Washington County United Fund drive. Robert K. Park, II, '61, is vice president and assistant manager of a building and loan association firm in Ravenswood, W. Va. Bob and his wife, Mary Beth, have a daughter and live in Ravenswood. University of South CarolinaSIGMA-Ray W. Edwards, '31joined the Post Office in Florence October 1, 1935, thus enabling him to celebrate 30 years service. __ John L. Bradly, '62-in answering his call to active service as a 2nd Lt. is assigned to a unit which supports the U. S. Air forces in Europe mission of providing major air contributions for defense of the NATO countries. Fred E. Sojourner, '57-supervisor of Safety Responsibility and Accident Records, South Carolina State Highway Department especially thanks W. P. Shofstall on his article "Alcohoi." Rufus C. Wactor, '58-is a trainee in the manager training program of the Belk-Hudson l;o. in Spartanburg, S. C. Leroy W. Thomal-is an Air Force captain serving as a member of the faculty at the Air University's Squadron Officer School at Maxwell Air Force

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CAPT. CARSON

. to Base, Ala. Leroy is married JO~ f Ed p 11 0 f co ormer na owe •51V S. C. John I. Rogers III, ttS~ practicing attorney in Benne ~ • o S. C. David W. Cromer-15 ~· Exchange Officer at the lJ. S-~~ Station in Trinidad, West d t n David, his wife, Carolyn, 11 5 t~ three sons will spend two yenr 1 THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI KAppA

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. ports that he is now astmg an~Ith Quality Mills, Inc., Knit~oh1Pany GRrment Manufacturing een Promot ufus Herring, '48-has ianager of Ad to. General Production g~ny, locatedm~ncan Furniture Comh1ria. D m Martinsville, Vir! e Ping the onald E. Rink, '59-is t) .being as:race Program by recentFrit at the Ggned to the Techniques t lght Cent eorge C. Marshall Space ory as a Per Computation Laborarogramming analyst.

1' Dniver .

heordor!I:t of lllinois-UPSILONfolonet and · C. ~athje, '28-being a 1':0 111 D. s A earnmg his retirement p d, Who i~ rmy was not enough for inortation b:~w engaged in the transArton, Withsmess. in Seattle, Wash-._ a~ka Rail B services going to the · ·elt. K · A · W1'don , '26 antstill "' '"amt Pe to the aih~ the office of assistcr:nsytvania CR I~f Engineer of the Base, '35-w ai ro3:d. Gordon R. 1' ~ Associatrs Pfresident of Chicago ti~ 1 ntbur ,on or 1964-65. Ivcr 1\ioed afte;' 221 -having recently retakntgohlery ~ Years service with ageen a Posi .ard and Company has factnt !or a ch tlkn assisting a sales -._is u.ring. a and tackboard manurepr In his 3 6 ~Y E. McCormack, '35 fir111.esentative h ~ehar as a registered lives ?f liornbt Wit the investment Planj 1n, LaGra~wer a!ld .Weeks. Ray senio e, 36-wh ge_. Ilh.no1s. C. w. C0 111. r lb.anagin hves m Pasadena, is engiPany, Inc g Partner of Case and cha 1· neers andorporated-management alld \';Ian of thconsultants. He is also And "~etats c e Board of Alley Steel arch~~\V J. C!~~Pa,~y in Los Angeles. drew ec~urat f' e, ?- heads his own boy~ h1s Wifelrm m Chicago. AnFreue n.d a girl B:nd two children, a llositi tick 1'. 1\'1~ hve, in Chicago also. Enginon of D rus, 21-recently took ~e is e~ring, Da!l of . the College of Ica"; hhsted in ~Wer~Ity of Maryland. 0f the as served ho s Who in Amerhas re N!l-tionat Rs a member at large Iesearcchlved the ~earch Council and ~Stitu by the ats~n Medal (for Ill lot ie). M. Amencan Concrete Of the de!t I10 ;E. Myers, '51heel\ c~' along ~.~ng . B58 Hustler ~ccurac ed for th I . his crew, has <\eadill .Y' duri e h1ghest bombing also r ess Ins ng . the operational ~edaJ eceived th:ctl~n. Pilot Myers truct 0 ~f outstand ;Air Commendation · mg duty as an in-

°

state of Alaska has been the home of Harry and wife Ruth. Harry is teaching Physical Education and coaching at Central Junior High in Anchorage where they also plan to celebrate their 30th anniversary Oct. 22. Kemp A. Maser, '48-is community service director for the East Ridge Lutheran Retirement Village in Miami, Fla. Kemp is married and has one child. Ira J. Giroir, '46-is associated with a Ford Motor Co. dealership in Leadville, Colo. Tom W. Mahaffey, '53-recently was elected president of the Jacksonville, Fla., chapter of the Florida Public Relations Association. Tom is advertisingcommunity relations director for WJXT-TV in Jacksonville. He and his wife, Kathleen, have two daughters and live in Jacksonville. Gerald D. Kruhm, '54-is secretary-treasurer of the Florida Vocal Association and laso serves as interim choir di rector of the First Baptist Church in New Smyrna Beach, Fla., where he also directs a community choir.

Cornel-PSI-Joseph W. Adams, '56-DVM through a fellowship is studying at University of Pittsburgh, Joe, after having completed an asMercer-ALPHA ALPHA-John C. signment with the Peace Corps at Garvin, Jr., '53-after graduating the University of Nigeria. Leonard from The American University in Stock, '22-writes that he's just a Washington, D. C., with an LLD Deretired farmer and county politician gree in February of 1962, John has in Bridgeton, N. J. Leroy Carlson, assumed the position of Patent At'62-is assistant business officer of torney for the Army Missile Comthe State University College at New mand, Redstone Arsenal, Ala. Paltz, N. Y. Purdue University - OMEGA Oklahoma-ALPHA GAMMA-Sam Charles R. Isaac, '30-sales engineer with Allis-Chalmers Manufacturing Pangburn, '27-operates the finest Company; is now making his home in motel and restaurant in Alva, Okla. Los Angeles, California. Thomas The Elks, Shrine, Masons, Chamber V. Alliman, '43-is a pharmacist in of Commerce, Kiwianis, and Highway Orange, Texas, where he resides with Association take Sam's free time. He his wife and four children. Law- is a long way from other Phi Kapps rence D. Hines, '52-has transferred and would like to hear from you. Don C. to Corning Glass Works in Martins- Better yet, come visit. Diltz, '30-is a professional engineer and land surveyor in Denver, Colo. W111shington- ALPHA DELTADeane Winston Parker, '35, is a practicing attorney in Seattle, Washington, and active in the Pi Kappa Phi Alumni chapter there. Joe Klaas, '39, is an account executive with a San Francisco radio station and lives with his wife and five children in Hayward, Calif.

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r/' '25~:-CIIIoecreta IS now T~omas Meade Bak-

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?f the :J:'Ice-President and Ro hlbla S ederal Land Bank lll Shfc u~wen: ,~g~ Carolina. Ted p;lldiJ~~sGassistant aG Lt. Colonel in th ntaine eneral's St -4 on the Comt\.e Air' their ~ff. He, his wife ~ <'<al\1( l> Station5 children reside on tjUntant orter 1\'lcL a~ Cherry Point. soR'ht Co "':ith the am, '~4-is an acG0ns alld . In 1\'lia .Flonda Power & tdo11 .~wo gra~1 · Frank has two , 5-..our sons. Harry S. A.IJ GlJ vast and beautiful Sl' • 1 9 6S

burg, West Virginia as senior EDP Systems man. The Hines have a daughter and son. Jeffery F. Oaffel, '60-is athletic director and basketball-baseball coach at Madison Township High School in Portland, Indiana. John R. Dienhart, '61is manager of Jerry's Cafeteria in Market Square, Lafayette, Indiana. Ronald J. Eyer, '58-is a pharmacist and Vice-President of the Jaycees in Eaw Galli, Florida. Ron's wife Marian is a librarian at the Mabry Junior High School, Satellite Beach, Florida. R. W. Raney, '39-resident of Wawatesa, Wisconsin, now has a son at Vanderbilt University. Donald C. Swager, '43-sales manager for division of General Electric. Is living in Erie, Pennsylvania, along with his wife and three children. R. D. Ormsby, '49-reports that he is presently head of the Systems Design Department, Bendix Systems Division, and resides in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Robert Goodenough, '43-is in the technical sales department of Dow Chemical in Midland, Mich. James King, '42-is supervisor of recruiting for Dow Chemical in Midland.

ti

HARRY S. GORDON

Florida - ALPHA EPSILON Thomas F. Moxley, '40-is now Lt. Commander Moxley, and following a two year tour of duty in Newfoundland is stationed at Moffett Field, Calif., where he is with a VR-7 Military Air Transport Squadron flying CI30 Hercules. His two sons, Tom and John, are attending Foothill Junior College. E. J. Loi, '53-is Customer Service Manager for Sears Roebuck and Company in Fort Pierce, Fla. Charles W. LaPradd, '50 former University of Florida football great has been named Assistant Dean of Men of Florida State University. 1 1


is in his 25th year with the Union Carbide Corp. in New York City. He lives in Weston, Conn. 2nd Lt. Dennis M. O'Hara, '59-is an Air Force pilot stationed in England with the Alconbury RAF Station, a NATO operation. Dennis' wife, Linda, is the former Linda Foster of Newport, Ore.

Before this, he was Assistant Football Coach at FSU. David Tisdale, Jr., '63-recently married the former Margaret Beasley in Gainesville, Fla., with John E. Slaughter, Jr., of Alpha Epsilon Chapter as his best man. David and his bride are now serving the United States Air Force in Pakistan. John B. Shaw, '53-after joining the Foreign Service in 1962, John spent the following two years in Athens, Greece. He has now been assigned to New Delhi, India where he is with the American Embassy. John reports that brother Phil Swanson and Torn John on, both of Alpha Epsilon Chapter, are now with the Foreign Service. He indicates that you can't appreciate the United States until you have served in a number of foreign countries and observed other ways of Jiving. Fritz K. Mitchell, '48-is partner in charge of the Lakeland, Fla. office of Milligan & Burke, an accounting firm. Michael E. Lewis, '62-is a management trainee with the J. C. Penney Co. in Fort Pierce, Fla. University of Georgia-Mark W. Eastland, Jr., '30-is now Chairman of the State Board of Accountancy of Florida and resides in Tampa. Carl Zimmerman, '61-resides in Huntsville, Ala., where he is employed by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.

Howard- ALPHA ETA-M.D. Barnett, '41-is now a Salesman with Walker Wholesale Drug Company of Birmingham, Ala. He resides with his wife, son, and three daughters in Sylacauga, Ala. Elbert B. Bruce, '27-after leaving Howard College, Brother Bruce was an engineer with the st~te of Alabama through 1941. Followmg 1941, he served with the United States Engineers in various parts of the world. He returned in 1945 to the Alabama State Highway Department where he is Assistant Division Engineer. Raising cattle on

Auburn-ALPHA IOTA-Walt Rozelle, Jr., '52-Walter is now n \: tile engineer with Crompton '-'u· Mills in Waynesboro, Va. WI~· B. Smith, '61-is now in the Sc · of Veterinary Medicine at Aubt University. Major Russell Su 1 ~. '46-serves with the United S 1 Army in New Delhi, India whet~ is with the United States ArmY •'t tary Mission. Bryan Rozelle, ~1 has been employed since 1961 bY Upjohn Drug Company out of Shpr~ port, La. Second Lieutenant Medlin, '60-is with the Tactical' Command assigned to Elgin Air f& Base, Fla. Gaptain Joseph C. ton, Jr., '43-is stationed at And; Air Force Base, Md., residing ; with his wife, Louise. Georg. Coleman, '37-completed 20 yen~; service with the United States ending as a Commander. He i.s an engineering administrator w1tht Vitro Laboratories in Silver Sptl Md. Sidney Lanier Taylor, Jr··~ -is territory manager for the~ tex Co. in Birmingham, Ala. 1 C. Bryant, '59-is an Air Force n gator in the Military Air Transf Service. Ens. Henne Kiviran" 8't -is stationed with a Navy air P~ squadron at Barbers Point, IIa

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the 160 acre farm was a hobby, therefore, when the city Tuscaloosa grew around him, he acquired real estate development as a hobby by necessity. Glen Hearn, '35-is now mayor of the city of Huntsville, Ala. Prior to assuming the office of mayor of Huntsville, he served since 1937 with the Fe~eral Bureau of Investigation. He retired on May 1, 1964.

Michigan-ALPHA KAPPA __..~I Maebius, '28-is the Exploration 1~ ager for The Tidewater Oil CoCll pti 8 out of Houston, Texas. n WilliJam Simon, III, '57-thej,?IIi 1 another Alpha Mu initiate, V' j. Simon, Jr., is stationed at Cast!eal> in California. His wife, El~Zh t and daughter, Christine, are w1t fi at his present assignment. 15. r Lieutenant Charles Bail, '60--- ),1 manently assigned to Glasgow r I Montana. John G. Schmucl<.~h. '56-is an Air Force captain '\\e Military Air Transport SerV~or· Dover Air Force Base, Del. d p~ R. Stover, '41-is founder an 119 dent of Custom Extrusion, Inc., fti' facturers of plastics, in She Iii Mass. Francis Warner, '4~i· his adopted city, Midland,, ctt where he has his own arch 1te company.

Oregon State-ALPHA ZETAJohn P. Bollman, '57-resides in Dallas, Oregon, where he is proprietor of the Bollman Funeral Home. Second Lieutenant Leslie R. Haan, '59has graduated from the training course for United States Air Force Nuclear Weapon Officers and has been assigned to Travis Air Force Base, Calif. E. Frederick Thompson, '43-is now Chief Psychologist at Northern State Hospital in SedroWooley, Wash. Second Lieutenant Clifford 0. Stephenson, '60-has been assigned to Holloman AFB, N. M., where he is attached to the Tactical Air Command. First Lieutenant Johnny D. Muesch, '58-is assigned to the Air Force System Command's Kirkland AFB, N. M. George Cadmus, '27-is Assistant Vice President of the First National Bank in Turner, Ore. M. N. Sigovich, '36p' 12

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Brook) SchtnoiJ Yn - ALPHA XI - Frank Workinger£ !r., '~1-Frank is now Pany as 01 N~tJonal Biscuit Comoffice i aN engmeer in their general Jatzen, ; 8 _~w York ~it,v. Billy ed . States Is. a Captam m the Unit~Pl'Ingfiled t r Force residing in r olvig, •28 • ass. Lawrence J. ent)y dire twas a founder and cur~~nicationcCor of. the Industrial Coml'tcal E .ouncii. Although an Elecstudied v ~gmeer, Brother Bolvig of Music ~~e at the Julliard School ~U~erou~ ~ has been identified with ar1ous r d' roadway musicals and :nces. La:r 10 . and television appearlllpJoyTI!en Y 1 ~ now retired from his Phone c t With the New York Tele0TI1Pany. Iowa S

~aPtain ~ate-ALPHA OMICRONF'~e~ awar3:J 1d Alex~nder, '53-has 1

i\ ~e Air the Umted States Air i\ C~eveTI!ent .Me~~l for Meritorius n~ owen • ~n . tet Nam. Donald i\ et· ~or Mar6 -Is an industrial engilllertcan C athon Operations of the an Co. at Neenah, Wis. \ 'l'ennesse gY~tkins, J:-:ALP~IA SIGMA-Ben En e.er With'' t 56-ts presently an enBo gtn eering h~ Bu1·eau of Sanitary s 00~'.d of Beal 0 the Florida State --h tl!e, Fla th, and resides in JackSec as been ·r Barry M. Griffin, '62 Sta~nd Lieu~cently ~ommissioned a sig es Air F enant m the United ned to Sh 01'Ce, and has been aseppard AFB, Texas.

lia~ensselaer A tena M..Bedi;- L~HA. TAU- WilWh nt tn th ger, 61-Is now a Lieu· Offier e he serve U mted States Navy -._i8 cer. F es a~ a Naval Aviation 1 he . 'esiding _redenck Wilson Jr '40 Is v· In Ans . c ' ., and C tee Pr . oma, onn., where !tau hutter C estdent of Apex Tool sear~h' '59-i~mpany. Charles M. l>hilc and De now working as Re0 0 Ca)if Aerona~~l P~ent Engineer for ~at·tne .. Donald c~ mWNewpo~t Be~ch, ••eiss 1 In the f'1 · helan, 40-ts a :Ne 1v and Ass r!l1 of Joseph Douglas --fo]JYo~·k CityOctates, Architects, of from 0 Wtng a C. . Frank Presta, '54 Gear :Renssel lVII Engineer Degree gradgetown De~, Frank attended gree. '\ted in 19~~ver~ity where he <\me . ••e is With an LLD Dei\tto lican Ca Presently employed by lte 1·:~~dy in the·~omNpany as Patent 1 n Wo 1 es With II. ew York Office. J. llouOdcliff La his wife, Mary Beth, ~hocte chard, •5 ke,. N. J. Richard lion Island s~-IS director of the gram and Land tjewide Transporta• and lives . se Planning Pro!) m Barrington, R. I. hertrexel--AL Schad~c\ade ·~~A. UPSILON-AI~ ~ear nc.; and-Is V-P of Ward & 0 ciet~ as Chairm has just completed Of Mech at: of the American amcal Engineers. Al

is married, four children, and lives in Fort Washington, Pa. Lt. Hector Negroni, '57-has received an Air Force scholarship to continue his studies at the University of Puerto Rico after which he will return to the Air Force Academy, from which he graduated as a Spanish Instructor. S. R. Parris, '51-has recently been promoted to Staff Engineer in charge of Electronic Components Section, Burroughs Corp. in Detroit, Michigan. Frederic T. Clarke '60-is a Navy ensign stationed 'aboard the USS Limpkin at the Naval Amphibious Base at Little Creek Va. William L. Campbell, 57-i; a methods accountant with the Pennsylvania Power & Light Co. in Allentown, Pa. He is married to the former Catherine Hurley of Salem, N. J. Vick J. Melada-is assistant business manager of the George School, a Quaker boarding school, near Philadelphia, Pa. Gary R. Braun-is a Marine Corps lieutenant serving as a naval aviator wit~ a jet fighter-interceptor squadron 111: Hawaii. William A. Stoker-1s ~n Air Force captain stationed a~ an Atr Force hospital at Maxwell Atr Force Base, Ala. Miami-ALPHA CHI-Lt. Colonel I{Jay Kroepsch, '48-has returne~ from a tour of duty in France and IS now vice commander of a Mobile Communications Group at Hunter AFB, Ga. Nathan P. Xanthes, '52-is business manager of the college department of Appleton-Century-Cr?fts, book publishers, in New York C1ty. Indian,a-ALPHA PSI-Alan J. Rom mel '55-is in his third year of medical' study at the University of Tuebingen at Tuebingen, West Germany. Alan is a geologis~ and. chemist and spent a year workmg w1th the late Dr. Tom Dooley in Laos. I I T--ALPHA PHI-Ed Hoffman,

'57-is now an assistant professor with the Psychology Department of Northwestern University. Ary V. Infante, '48-is President of the MidWest Phone Company, Inc., of Indianapolis, Ind. Elmer C. Johnsonis a practicing attorney and teacher of law and accounting in Oxnard, Calif. Michig1an State-ALPHA THETA -Alex Laurie, '27-Alex, who was formally head of the Dept. of Horticulture at Ohio State, is now a Horticultural Consultant in Pine Mountain Ga. He is a member of the Horticul: tural Hall of Fame and a FellowAmerican Society of Horticultural Science. Paul Stein, '57- is now Product Manager for Bendix Corporation in Elmira, N. Y. Lt. James Coon, '56-is with the U. S. Air Force as a B-52 pilot at Castle AFB, Calif. Clark Swayze, '59-is an industrial designer with Dow-Corning in Midland, Mich. Harold Lukin, '25-now serves the state of Michigan as deputy director of the Michigan Soil Conservation Service. Per Lundin, '25is retired and enjoying such a status to the fullest. Albe Munson, '27has a landscape service in Roseville, Robert Titus, '30-is maintMich. enance engineer for Dow Chemical Company in Midland, Mich. Willand Perry, '25-is also with Dow Chemical in Midland as a supervisor of the chlorine department. Joseph Jasper, '25-has completed a book for publication while serving as a professor at Wayne State University. ·walter Dernbarger, '26-has advanced to project engineer with Michigan Bell Telephone out of Detroit. Alex Vanis, '53-welcomes all to his restaurant, The Eagles Cafe, in Lansing. Edward D. "Shorty" Clifford, '25retired from the U. S. Forest Service last November after nearly 18 years as superintendent of Michigan's Chittenden Nursery and 32 years in the Forest Service. Shorty's retirement plans are to lo?k after his tree farm in Wellston, MICh., and do some consulting work for the Dow Chemical Co. and other firms. Richard L. Goetz, '56-is manager for special services and correspondence with the Michigan Medical Service (Blue Cross) in Detroit. Richard lives in Highland Park, Mich. J. E. Martin, '48-is supervisor of employment and placement for the Chrysler Corp. Space Division in New Orleans, La. He and his wife, Phyllis, and their three children, live in New Orleans. Lee Cobb, '60-is a designer-salesman for R. D. Brooks Custom Homes in Grand Rapids, Mich. Lee and his wife, Jacqueline, live in Grand Rapids. James F. Stoll, '50-recently was elected president of the Michigan Educ~tion Ass.ociation's. Regi.on 8 which mcludes f1ve counties. J1m lives in East Lansing.

13


MORE ALUMNI BRIEFS University of Louisville - BETA GAMMA- Robert T. Connor, '55is serving his internship at Floyd Hospital, Rome, Georgia. George Harrison MacDonald -is a dentalmedical missionary in Taiwan. Ed Weber-is on the staff of Catherine Spaulding College in Louisville. Dr. Clifton Miles Hiauenstein III-has opened a second office in Louisville for the practice of dentistry. Er~ol Richardson-is president of the Lomsville Fireplace Corp. in Louisville. James K. Dooley, 'GO-recently was married to the former Martha Jeanette Bayens. Drake University-BETA DELTA -Paul D. Fry, '57-has been promoted to captancy and is currently studying for a MA's in Atmosphere Sciences at the University of Washington under the Air Force program. Robert D. Howell, '49-was decorated with the Air Force Commendation Medal at Maxwell AFB, Alabama. U. of Missouri-BETA EPSILON -Harry L. Dilley, '53-Harry reports he never thought he'd wind up in the printing business for real 'cause he was just "kicking it arou~d" in the basement of the Fratermty House in Columbia, Missouri. He has his own company and looks forward to its growth in Kansas City, Mo. FSU-BETA ETA-Johnny Walker Guy, '61-is a Special Agent with the U. S. Secret Service and at this writing, is in Charlotte, North Carolina. Johnny, wife Allison, and ~utu~e Pi Kapp Stephen Walker reside m Charlotte. Gordon L. Mize, 'GONewest communication from Gordon tells us he is in a training program with State Farm Insurance Company. Dr. Walter G. Jarrell, '50-is a practicing physician in Jacksonville, Fla. Richard B. White, '62-is an Air Force lieutenant stationed at Glasgow Air Force Base. Mont. __ Charles M. Wilson, '62, is a technical editor and writer for the Martin-Orlando Corp., builders of the Pershing missile, in Orlando, Fla.

News comes from Joe that he is with F. W. Woolworth Company in management training. Joe is married to the former Laura Mistietla of Tampa. Robert Ashley Myers, '58-Bob had lots happening to him in the last few months: discharged from army, returned to Retail Credit for employment, got married also! Gerald L. Voye, '53-is assistant minister at the Royster Memorial Presbyterian Church in Norfolk, Va. He participated last fall in the chartering banquet for Gamma Beta Chapter at Old Dominion College.

son, Michael, live in Mount J'f pect, Ill. ~I Central Michigan - BETA George Hewitt, '56-teaches ~~~ Fenton High School in Fenton'sct Don Perry, '56-is a High il teacher in Woonsocket, R. I. "~ Cramton, '56 - also teaching 0 ~ school in Pigion, Michigan. Dot Friebe, '56 - not to be left ,0 1 the high school teaching field IS~ Rochester High in Rochester •. 0g Harry Grether, '59-is teach! Ypsilanti, Mich., while continUI~f( graduate studies at the Unive.rs ~ Michigan. Harry received hiS ( degree from Eastern Michigll,Il 1 versity last October. He and hiS Helen, have one daughter.

Northwestern- BETA OMICRON -Captain W. H. Rutledge, '61-has assumed position of personnel services officer with the 7030th Combat Support Wing at Ramstein AFB in Germany. John D. Mize, '60-is an Air Force lieutenant serving with the 3507th USAF Recruiting Service detachment for Minnesota, North Dakota and western Wisconsin.

·ty of v·ngm1a · · - P · U mversi U~SILON-Walter H. Brin~J11 8 ~ - 1s employed by First UnJ?!l 1 of Memphis. Walter is workJs!l&tt the colonization of Memphis Colony Advisor.

Houston-BETA NU-Willie Thurman Hall, '56-is now associated with Houston Chemical New Paper, as well as owning a vending machine company. Willie, his wife, and five children live in Fort Worth, Texas.

E.T.S.U-BETA CHI-Joe ~~ taway, '63-is a vocational llg~ ture teacher at DuncanviJle ot School in Duncanville, Tex. Ge~' Cruse, '64-is working for electric Company in Atlanta·

Northern Illinois-BETA SIGMAJohn Arthur Tremore, '58-is an associate structural engineer with the General American Transportation Corp. John, his wife, Judy, and their

Livingston State College-?!js ALPHA-Lynn A. Smith, '6 11 t I sociate professor of Englis? fsr~ ingston State College and 1Scvsl advisor for Gamma Alpha

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University of T13mpa - BETA LAMBDA-Joseph A. Pullara, '6214

THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI KAPp.A


HE fact that I have chosen T to talk about the fraternity of the future should be comfort-

THE FRATERNITY

ing in itself. Unlike many of our recent authors, I sincerely believe that fraternities will continue to exist - and not only to exist but to play vital, dramatic roles in our future educational enterprises. In my opinion, the fraternity of the future will have a more acceptable image than does today's Greek-letter organization. Our future fraternity may not be significantly different from the chapter of today but its image, its reputation, its acceptance will be vastly improved. The "Joe College" Image

OF THE FUTURE

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By Dr. John T. Bonner Jr. Executive Dean for Student Relations Ohio State University

,

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ST, 1965

Portraits of fraternities have remained virtually unchanged on the mental canvases of their critics for an entire generation. Although the raccoon coat has gone the way of all flesh, fraternity men continue to live in the image of "Joe College" with flask on hip and bloody paddle in hand. Several of the articles about fraternities which I have read recently appear to have emanated from an abysmal depth of ignorance in combination with a plethora of biased opinion. They would have been factual and timely stories if written three or four decades ago, but fraternity men have changed. The change began when combat matured veterans of World War II returned to the campus. They were not in the mood for the racy aspects of college lifeand neither were their wivesnor children. But it was probably that dramatic moment when Sputnik I first twinkled across the sky that fraternities and their members changed most dramatically. To fraternity men, as well as their independent associates, scholastic conquest became a kind of fettish. Math, chemistry, and physics were no longer merely tolerated by the man behind the fraternity badge - they were eagerly attacked to the very heights and depths of their precious scientific dimensions. 15


It has been fascinating to me to observe, in our pre-college orientation sessions, the growing number of our entering freshmen who have already set their sights on a graduate or professional degree. If they do not realize it at first, they soon learn that the key required to unlock the doors to graduate education is demonstrated scholastic excellence. For this reason many of our high-potential students fail to consider fraternity membership for fear that fraternity affiliation will dissipate their scholastic endeavors. These top-level students are afraid that joining a Greek-letter social organization would jeopardize their chances of entering the rarified atmosphere of graduate education.

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cussions of the opposite seX·fr are firmly convinced that ternities and sororities are:' carrying the gleaming tore. scholarship wi~h g!eater. :'1£ than at any bme m then tory. This image of the fraternl as the champion of high sc 1 lastic purpose and endeavor:~ however, never adequatelY i conveyed to the non-fratern observer. Our fraternity of tornor~ will project a better image t cause of what you and I are lt to do today. We must see our fraternities reach out, high school principals and c~ selors with the story that _Grel letter organizations are, 1nd

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We have facts to show that these fears are unfounded. We have examined statistics which reveal that fraternity and sorority grade-point averages are consistently above the all-university averages. We have observed that our recent Greeks are now rushing with their eyes firmly fixed upon the candidates' academic potential. We have seen the study table become a fraternity institution. We have heard academics discussed in chapter houses to the extent that scholastic topics, believe it or not, now rival dis-

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champions of high schOI endeavor. In addition, ourt~e ternities must accelerate ff programs of inviting norypf ternity pr~fessors t~ 5si' houses for mformal d1scU 0c[ sessions. Finally, our 5511 groups must continue to. e91~ lish even higher scholast1c f dards for membershiP. BYnt! lowing these suggested P' !' we will correct eventual!J11 1 much distorted image whlC have long endured.

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THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI KAPp.A


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morrow' f solved t 0sd r,aternity will have unable ay s problem of being Perclas to frovide competent upsecret ~h eadership. It is no sororitie at tur fraternities and mature : 0 today still lack the their 0 fPeal ~ecessary to hold ~eniors ~standmg juniors and Ing fro~ ur older men are movment houchapter house to apartare turni se ..Our senior women r~sultin ng m their pins. The filled ;.t~eadershiu vacuum is and the ! the inexperienced fraternitnnrnature. Many of our s~ab!e fi~aProblems such as unhes, and nces, unplanned pararship lll~nderemphasized scholthe lack 0 be traced directly to ership, mature, stable lead-

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of fraternity administration. Society for Advancement of Management, and other similar groups will be more acceptable outlets for the extracurricular time of serious students. As a second step, the Greek chapte?· of the futuTe will pTovide havens jo?· uninter?·upted study. Conscientious scholars will not only be uninhibited in their personal study efforts, but will also be challenged to tutor those underclassmen who experience scholastic difficulties. Appropriate recognition will be given to the men or women who serve their chapters as proctors. Third, the Greek house of the futU?·e will employ upperclassmen as consultants to work with younger officers in eve1·y aspect

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re Upperclassmen? th~Ps thatg~~llt four significant 1 s goal, help to achieve /i'· it tr-st th 'P~ 0!. the 1~[ratern:ity or sorortiv?1:ttie8 of ure Wtll re-arrange in~t~es. Work :::tracurricular acser ecorati Ing on homecom11Ia enades ons, skipping off to Sopb he fin~n~ rehearsing skits l'ec 0 °~ores or freshmen and \'Vorffnition 'rn b~t due priority Zatio With rus b~ given to the dent ns Wh~hofessiOnal organiso1.0 s. seek, I upperclass stuti011:1~Y of th~ the fraternity or Le 1ks the M:future, organiza~hy . ercie F athematics Club Sica] 'I'h rancais, Student erapy Association '

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Seniors will find rewarding experiences in consulting on finance, on social functions, on alumni relations, on rushing, and on special projects. Finally, the frate?-nity of the future will instill in its upperclassmen the burning desire to repay those who have helped them by assisting those who come after. We all recall the poem of the old man who leaped the chasm and returned to build a bridge for youth who was following him, for, as he related, "This chasm which was naught for me to this fair youth may a pitfall be." It is this spirit which the fraternity of the future must regenerate in her upperclassmen.

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Alumni Guidance Needed Other steps must be taken, too, for in the fraternity of the future, leadership by older, more mature members will not be enough. There must also be the even more mature guidance of alumni. Those of us who work daily with young people know of the inherent difficulties of relating to them. All of the textbooks on entomology do not help us in understanding the Beatles. In the war with Hitler (and was not that only yesterday?), if something was tough, it was bad. Now, if something is tough, it is good. Even the youthful art forms seem to be gigantic paste-ups from the comic strips. Yet, we must communicate with our young people. Dr. Dana L. Farnsworth, that eminent psychiatrist who directs Harvard's University Health Service, insists that, "Effective communication between our young people and those men and women of real worth in our communities should replace the idealization by our teenagers of trivial or disreputable characters. This cannot be done unless we develop better channels of communication between generations than we have now." While our fraternities urgently need more counseling and guidance from responsible alumni, I have been informed that many of our sororities are probably suffocating from over-supervision by their alumnae. It is, of course, difficult to walk the tenuous tight rope between under-supervision and domination. This is the same problem faced through the centuries by the parents and teachers of those on the threshhold of adulthood. How to counsel without dominating. How to guide without dictating. How to allow the widest spectrum of free choice while setting those limits which only experience teaches. How to enjoy working with those in the fullness of youth without expecting to relive this pleasant period through them. How to forgive and forget when affection is thrown back by the turbulent tide of independence. The 18

difficulty of this problem is well illustrated by the satirical remark of George Ross Wells that, "Man is probably the only animal which even attempts to have anything to do with his halfgrown young." Yet, the problem of arriving at the correct mixture of alumni guidance and student independence must be solved by the Greeks of tomorrow. The University's Role Perhaps the solution to this problem lies in the offices of the third member of the triad partnership - the University. Our offices are designed to serve you and your active chapters. We are always available as an impartial mediator and a vital channel of communications. We hold an abiding belief in the worth of fraternities and sororities and back this belief with the annual exnenditure of tens of thousands of 路 dollars solely to assist fraternity and sorority programs. The fraternity of the future will have established an even more meaningful relationship with the University of which it is a part. It is my profound belief that the fraternity of tomorrow will continue to turn the tide of youthful enthusiasm into channels of excellence. Yes, there will be a fraternity tomorrow, and it will continue to be an inseparable organ of the academic body. In the pulsating vitality of the future, fraternity men and their alumni, and sorority women and their alumnae, will, with the assistance of the student-oriented faculty, continue the forward surge to the very perimeters of knowledge.

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"T H E FRATE RNI TY OF TH E FUTURE" by Dr. John T . Bonner Jr ., Ohio State University dean, is the fourth in a series of articles prepared for fraternity magazines by "Operation Challenge" a project of the College Fraternity Editors Association. Permission to reprint the article or any portion thereof must be obtained from the Author and the Operation Challenge Com mittee . The members of the "Operation Cha llenge " Committee are: Ralph F. Burns, Alpha Sigma Phi, Herbert L Brow':'1 Phi Sigma Kappa, Robert D. Lynn, Pi l'..appa Alpha, Durward Owen, Pi Kappa Phi, John Robson, Sigma Phi Epsi lon, Carl J . Gladfelter, Chi Phi, and Francis Wacker, Delta Sigma Phi, Chairman .

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CAPTAIN PURCELL SQUADRON SKIPPER aptain J w C da , · · Purcell, Lambthe D. s' J9, ~s c~mmander of

F'our at havy s Mme Squadron arleston, S. c. A. native 0 fA a &"tad thens, Ga., he is Schoo} uate . of Tifton High Georgi~ and IS a University of . graduate, class of 1941. Prtor t of 1\iin assuming command tain p e quadron Four Cap!b.ancteirsell ~erved with' ComPacific F ervice Force, U. S. and Fo leet as Assistant Fleet rce Personnel officer. c·

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a t t e n d e d the General Line School, Newport, R. I.; served as damage control officer aboard the aircraft carrier USS MINDORO. After two years as an instructor at the Naval Reserve Officer's Training Corps Unit, Georgia Institute of Technology, he reported to the destroyer USS LLOYD THOMAS, where he served as executive officer. Two years later he was ordered to duty on the staff of the Commandant, 15th Naval District at Fort Amador, Panama Canal Zone, where he served as assistant chief of staff for personnel and administration. He served from 1956 to 1960 as head of the Standards and Policy Branch, Recruiting Division, Bureau of Naval Personnel.

Dr. Mavis Dean To Professor

After 32 years in administration as department head or dean in four major universities, Dr. Frederic T. Mavis, Upsilon '21, resigned as dean of the College of Engineering, University of Maryland, to become professor of mechanical engineering at the University effective September 1, 1965. Before going to the University of Maryland as dean in July 1957, Dr. Mavis was head of academic and research departments at the University of Iowa, Pennsylvania State University, and Carnegie Institute of Technology. He holds four degrees from the University of Illinois and studied

From 1960 to 1962 he commanded the destroyer USS HYMAN. He ent on to become surface operations and plans officer on the staff of Commander Navy Task Group Eight Point Three. During this latter period he also served as chief staff officer and operations officer for Commander, Johnston Island Navy Operations Task Unit. He was awarded the Navy Comin Europe in 1927-28 as one of the mendation Medal for his work first group of Freeman Traveling Felthere. lows of the American Society of Civil

1\f to •neswee In addition to the Navy Comser Captain P~ duty is familiar of Yed as urcell, who has mendation Medal and the Purple tnflcer-in-c~ecutive officer and Heart earned while serving Ofpesweepe argUe of the coastal aboard the SKYLARK, Captain lni lcer-in-chr SS TURACO, Purcell holds the American Camoaign Medal, Asiatic-Pacian~esweeperalJssof the coastal fic Campaign Medal (two enthe as &"unn STALWART gagement stars), the World War Sl(-y fleet e~y officer aboard th LA.R:l( nun~sweeper USS II Victory Medal and the N~­ du~· S!<Yt.A.~ IS ~ survivor of tional Defense M e d a I (Asia ing lng Pre-in ~hich was lost Clasp). 111 °Perar1 vasion minesweepCaptain Purcell is married to arch 28 1 ns off Okinawa on F' 0 ' 945. the former Peggy Tribble of C llow· thalltain png World War II Fort Lauderdale, Florida. Capo/s~avy nrcen saw duty with tain and Mrs. Purcell have two ips in eWPart~ent's Bureau children, Jones W. Jr., 8, and A.IJ ashington ' D . c .,. Catherine Elizabeth, 10. Gus,.

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Engineers. He has published extensively in fields of hydraulic engineering, structural analysis, applied mechanics, and engineering education. He was awarded the Wason Medal for Research by the American Concrete Institute. Dr. Davis was employed in professional practice by Kelker, DeLeuw and Co., consulting engineers, in Chicago from 1922 to 19?7, and ~e is registered as a professiOnal engmeer in Iowa, Pennsylvania, Maryland and Illinois and as a Structural Engineer in Illinois. He is a Fellow and Life Member of ASCE, a member of ASME, A WWA, ACI, IAHR, ASEE, SAME, Cosmos Club, and other professional and honorary societies. He will engage in teaching and research in applied mechanics and in related areas involving applications of graphical and numerical methods to engineering problems. 19


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Anthony Vanagas:

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c( ODAY Capt. Anthony C. Vanagas, Beta T Alpha '57, is the most decorated pilot at McGuire Air Force Base in the United States. In August 1963 he was in the thick of a fire fight over a Vietnam jungle, where the struggle between the communist Viet Cong and the U. S.-backed South Vietnamese still rages. You could call Brother Vanagas a hero. His actions in Vietnam a year and a half ago are the stuff heroes are made of. That August, the Viet Cong had infiltrated a South Vietnamese village, and two companies of their guerrillas had terrorized the local citizenry and retreated to the cover of the lush, jungle hills surrounding the village. Capt. Vanagas got his orders shortly after the village raid: locate the enemy and allow his vietnamese observer to mark the guerrilla

positions with smoke for an airstrike by yie i\J namese fighter pilots.

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Vanagas, aU. S. Air Force "pilot observj:· took off in his observation plane with hi~ " 1t B1 namese observer. To mark a position JJl 1 Wi jungle with smoke required low flying. \~ ac spot the enemy hiding place required e lower flying. On successive sweeps over the jungle ~ where the Viet Cong were reported to be 0r ing, Vanagas and his observer could see 3e~ ing. They swept lower and lower. Sud ~the unseen enemy began firing at Va!lll fil aircraft with every weapon in their arsefl• f tl Bullets tore through the windshield ~ If plane, shattering it and flinging ple1C 1g ·· splinters into Vanagas' face. His plane's eJJIP was hit and began to falter.

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Serious] agas neve Y wounded, his plane damaged, Vanthe fiercelth~l~ss made yet another sweep over to :mark th firm~ .enemy to enable his observer h.eroic fin e POsition with smoke bombs. This fighter Pilalt sweep enabled the Vietnamese 0 %, s to make their strike a success. 1 vvhen he 1 d Jency treat an ed, Vanagas was given emerlown to Wmen~ for his wounds. Then he was re.tnovect th ashm~ton, D. C., where surgeons With no e plexiglass splinters from his eye F' Permanent injury to his sight. Unde~~i his devotion to duty and his heroism l<'lying 0 Vanagas received the Distinguished ~~r~er of t~· For his wounds, he received the Ylng 1 e Pur~le Heart Medal. And for ardous 99 h other missions in Vietnam all hazV ' ere cei·ve d the Air Medal. ' ~ngi~~:r1~s g~aduated from Newark College of egree in g m J~ly, 1959 with a bachelor's I<'orce Ror~echam~al. engineering and an Air . lie h commissiOn as a second lieutenant. 1Cn an 1\.i:t received his private pilot's license A. ol!ege Whorce sponsored program at Newark rnoJct 'Ai esre .he also was a member of the r ociety Vieg~~rrPi Kapp .alumni also have served in A. ·" ecently. B .t"\.ll' F' P8ilon ·s~ce Capt. William J. Lewis, Alpha Wtth two ' recently received the Air Medal achievernen1a~ lea~ clu~ters for "meritorious ]3 In aenal flight over Vietnam." rother L ew1s, · an air operations officer,

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CAPT. LEWIS (Right) now is assigned to a Tactical Air Command unit at Hurlburt Field, Fla. He received the Air Medal in ceremonies at Hurlburt Field from Brig. Gen. Gilbert L. Pritchard, commander of the Special Air Warfare Center there. Lewis graduated from the University of Florida with a bachelor of science degree and an Air Force ROTC commission. He and his wife, Jean, now live in Miami, Fla. Navy Lt. Bernard R. Baugh, Eta '48, recently completed a year's tour of duty in Saigon, Vietnam, where he was frequently ~C?ordinator on the staff of the Com. mander, Mihtary Assistance Comman d , V1et nam.

ANK. PARRISH, Traveling Counselor

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Ua cron inU~rish, an Alpha Omih te of l late and recent gradS~f joine~wt~ StNate. University, f as a 1' e at10nal Office raveling Counselor Broth calb. er Par · h · WelJPUs life ~Is was active in 0 . as bei a Iowa State as lb.Icron C~g a leader of Alpha S A. gr apter. ~~nior B~~te of ~orth Platte j 0 /~h .Plattesw-oolm his native tio e 1n inct' e~raska, he maor8n ~t the u ~stn~l administraPh 1!1 fina Diversity, with minba~h1cs. II~ce, accounting and g1'ad elo:r of W:=ts awarded the Uation . science degree on 'Vh·I1 In June \Vas 1 e at I · cha· F'c as . owa State, Frank l'usftl'lb..an a~~\~nt summer rush the chairtna en IFC summer thre lF'c Run for two years, on 8 Of Ge Years ~ Committee for reek We:k . sales manager 4lJ G m 1964. He was I.Jsr, 196s

tapped into Gamma Gamm~, Greek honorary for leadershiP and service, and received a ~er­ tificate of merit from Cardmal Key, senior men's honorary group. He also was a member of Alpha Kappa Psi profess~onal fraternity and of the Busmess Students Association, Frank entered Iowa State on a National Merit Scholarship. He worked at a number of summer jobs during college to earn almost half his university expenses. In Alpha Omicron Chapter, Frank was a leader. He was secretary of his pledge class, homecoming chairman for the chapter house manager, assistant tre~surer, activities chairman, rush chairman and Archon for two terms. He also serrved t~e chapter as summer rush chairman and secretary of the building corporation.

As the fraternity's traveling counselor, Frank will visit chapters throughout the country as a representative of the National Office. 2 1


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CAPT. CLIFFORD B. CURTIS, JR.

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CAPT. CURTIS COMMANDS NAPLES AIR BASE

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U • S.'36,Navy Capt. Clifford B. Curtis ~Hi commands a Naval Air Facl \r.:

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Naples, Italy, that houses a half dozend t9t fa Fleet units, Coast Guard and Air Force . e sl· ments, an Armed Forces Courier Ser_v1ce..1~: , ,,. it,· tion and an air terminal through whlC'' 11rt than 30,000 U. S. servicemen pass each ye stJ their way to and from the United StateS· 1 Sij For this RHO Chapter alumnus the i~tl mand is another in a series of varied and esting assignments with the Navy. e11 Curtis joined the Navy in 1941 with~~ ~ earned law degree from Washington ~ntr~' University. He entered the Navy's flig~t ed t. ing program, and even before he rece1"1lJJS commission he was hunting German s the Gulf of Mexico. rt

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THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI KAPpA

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que lie Was commissioned in 1942 and subseSer l:l~]y served in the Naval Air Transport Wa;lce. After a tour with an Anti-Subm~rine att fare Patrol Squadron, the naval aviator untWd~g Navy Line School in 1948, then served Cent 50 at the Navy's Air Missiles Test er at Point Magu, California.

~a~iteAr. he served as aide to the Chief of Peti a Ir Reserve Training, aboard ~n exairbmental guided missile ship and with an cific~rne electronics training unit in the PaD. b~ 1953 Capt. Curtis went to Washington, \Tisor to Put his law degree to use as legal adfor A!o the Deputy Chief of Naval Operations tetur~rd After four years at the Pentagon, he air s e to the Pacific Fleet to command an Parti~fadron. In 1958 Capt. Curtis' squadron from t Pated in the Laos and Quemoy patrols gator he Philippines. After two years as naviCurtisof the attack aircraft carrier L exington, 196o Was ordered back to Washington in

The NAF Air Termirual which processes over 30,000 · servicemen an d military dependents yearly enroute to or from the United States.

F'or f !:ley fo Cour years he served there as an attorfice 0 / ·O~gressionalliaison in the Navy's 0!this j ;eglslative Affairs. His performance m Of theo Won him the praise of the chairmen tJ. s Sarmed services committees of both the · enate and House of Representatives. Wh~~e.1 Naval Air Facility stands on a site ed. In ~ 8~812 gas-filled balloons were launchground 3. the site was a military parade dtome and _In 1907 it was a military hippocaned CaDur~ng. the first World War the area, a site f Podi_chino, was tagged permanently as or aviation activities.

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lnans an~e d w.as jointly operated by the Ge:1943 A ~tahans in World War II, and m ~ccuPie:?~rican troops captured the field and toh the It }~ until 1946, when it was returned e Am a _lan government. From 1947 to 1950 etated ferican Grave Registration Service oprom the site.

. . h here with the Naples Air FaciliCaptam Curtishs O\~n NAF Naples is the "Home S 0 ftball C ampwns. ty . , h ving dominated the sports scene of the Champwns a for the past four years.

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Jr., American Air unit was based at !iii~. , Ceen desi In 1950, and by 1956 the airport had

f U~tis is g~hated _the Naval Air Facility. Capt. acllity s· e fifth officer to command the lnce then. rice ·c' :p ~~ ~ ~. .,89 t stles hav:n hanger in 1950, the station's facilJ .l'Ucture grown to include today about 50 81 :S· 0 te. lt iss on the 55-acre Capodichino Airport }le ·~(t co: f ~aPle s.about 10 miles northeast of the center ld l "' th -~.heN . e'' !n l'ee Yea aval Air Facility's galley for the past a 1l v te ess han rs has been judged the U. S.'s top andtr~l scatn has ash?re in Europe and its softball 1t d ~ ib ene in thdommated the armed forces sports 8 iV h 5 lllg the st et.area for the past four years, earn0 stlJJ tls:• a Ion the title, "Home of the Chamu

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Got You! But it is down right near impossible to keep up with all of our Brothers! We a~·e now missing over 2,000 of them. Missing 1n that we have no current address for theJl'l· They are just like you and I-they we~: initiated and remain members. Some at 1 from your chapter. However, they are JJ 0 receiving this message. You can help recapture the Fraternity fo~ these missing Brothers. Search through th 1 listing that follows and advise the N atioJl~ Headquarters of the address of those Bro.t ~ ers that you recognize. You will be doJI1 both he and Pi Kappa Phi a tremendous serif· ice if you do.

Alpha Omicron-IOWA STATE Thomas C. Madden, Jr:

Eldon Hollis Anderson Robert E. Applea:ate Carleton Griswold Austin Dale Wm. Beck Wilbur C. Biederman R. S. Brown R. 0. Brown Jerry La verne Dick Lester D. Dunham Carl W. Files Capt. Harold Fischer H. Vieth Griffith David L. Hancock Donald Gordon Harmon Kent W. Hawkins Robert D. Herman John Maurice Kennedy Thomas Vietor Lapsley W. R. Madden Jack E. 1\farte Theodore D. Meyer James Allen Nelson Otto John Paul E. A. PerrY R. Killian Porter Howard D. Roberts Fabian F. Saukup Oliver N. Sparks James Russell Sparbee Robert C. Spearing BrYce \Vm. Tonley Raymond Waite Rothe! Walker Eugene C. Zobel

Alpha PI-TULSA Thomas D. Byrne Jackson Crose David E. Frierson

Alpha Rho--W. VA. James ll. Arbuckle John Brown Arbuckle Stanley G. Biega Charles Clinton Hall Donald Robert Headlee Woodrow Shellia Horn Issac Paul Judy Theodore R. C. King

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Wilbur Lynn 1\fasonhe•mer Clarence w .. Men~a"!" Allen Luvat1s Phllhps Paige E. Sapp . John Thomas St. Cla1r Frank Marvin Watring Samuel Ralph Woodburn

Alpha Sigma-TENNESSEE Joe M. Arnold Wm. P. Bracy Sam. T. Beaman Paul W. Beck K. E. Boring Ernest Marvin Bowles Harold E. Brown, Jr. Robertson W. Buck Richard J. Burnette Wm. H. Carson James L. Clarke George W. Cole Earl E. Cox Harold E. Crawford Edward L. Dew Billy E. Farmer Keith Webb Gilbert Lewey 0. Gilstrap, Jr. Wayne I. Gochenour Wm. D. Hall Robert D. Harris A. Bruce Henderson Charles L. Hendrix W. D. Hill Jimmy M. Hunn Martin Glenn Jones Everett E. Kiser Theodore Lee Wm. J. Len· Jimmie A. Martin Robert C. McKelvey Arthur C. McKinney Richmond McKinney Thomas W. McKinney Leighton A. Meeks Joe M. Miller Telvia Velmer Murphy John G. O'Hara Robert H. Payne Clyde E. Pearce James R. Phillips

Calvin Eugene Pippin Glenn Paris Reeder Willard D. Richardson Jeff Anderson Rorex Roy Earl Sehulta, Jr. HenrY C. Settle Billy B. Shirley Robert L. Shobe Roy Benjamin Smith George S. Stanley, Jr. Arthur D. Sullivan Harold F.. Thomas Tom Vnughnn Charles H. Vann, Jr. Andrew Jackson Waldrop Robert Gray Whitfield Ted Chester Weltig

FJavio A. Muniz AHred V. Musumeci Joseph C. Newman John George O'Brien Anthony Panagakos David Charles Pastore Kenneth Theodore Pruyn E. S. Quest Gilbert P. Roberts Frederick Charlton ShaW Murray S. Sherman D. W. Smart James Wm. Sole J. C. Spaeth Paul E. Titus Conrad George Youngbuilt

Alpha Tau-RENSSELAER

Wm. H. Bishop Ru ssell Thompson Boice Juliu s C. Bremo, Jr. Gerald R. Brunat James R. Burtnett Harvey Weller Bush John Leo Byrnes Willard C. Calkins, Jr. Ronald T. Cannel M. Richard Cauffman G. Martin Cloud Walter C. Culln Wm. T. Day Kurt E. Eisele W. J. Gilliford Albert L. Gray, Jr. Ellsworth Paul Fitting Wm. D. Hagen John E. Hall, III D. J. Herbert, Jr. Wm. R. Hewlett W. H. Hitchens Wm. Price Logan Edward D. MacDonald Edward R. Mahoney Ernest Baldwin Nute, J r· Raymond L. Rafetto, 1r· Lincoln Robert Rau, Jr. Harold B. Rendall Harry Renner, Ill Wm. T . Ricci Stephen George Rice H. D. Ruch

John E. Anthony Edward P. Baker, Jr. Peter George Beinetti Robert Emile Bernier John Thomas Blake C. J. Buczek Francia M. Clifford Clarence H. Clum Wm. Cummina-s Robert W. Curran Anthony Cutonilli Deall Daymond George T. Droste, Jr. Chas. W. Elliston Reginald W. Evans Peter Murray Fenton G. E. Farnham Stephen Finta, Jr. James M. Furman Edward N. Goodrich Henry Hasbrouck Capt. James F. Hoffman, Jr. Oliver C. Jackson F. E. Jarema Ferry Gardner J ohnaon Arthur S. Jones Edgar D. Kersey Stanley F. Kesnow John M. Lamb John Marcel Lesieutre John R. Long, Jr. Stephen H. Maslen

Alpha Upsilon-DREXEL

THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI KAPPA

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Charles Raymond Parker R. C. Palmer Richard James Pittman Quentin Way Randall Ralph Gene Swenston Wayne Wm. Tennant

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Edward L. Benz, Jr. J. E. Blazier J. R. Bonscher Robert Charles Curry Eugene T. Daum L. J. Grzesinski Wm. Laffey Wm. J. Krouse G. P. Kurth Richard J. Mascia Burley Robert Melton, Jr. P. E. Michelotti Charles J. L. Nugaris Ralph Paul Pochank Ronald L. Pollard Peter A. Sereico Richard A. Walsh

Beta Beta-FLA. SOUTHERN

Frank B. Barr Wm. H. Beckman Thomas L. Blyth, Jr. Charles E. Bradley Frederick R. Brant Paul Hardin Breedon Donald Perry Brown Robert J. Chapin Demetrios S. Chios Ray Bascom Deloach George D. Earley Charles E. Fay Gerald C. Federspill John L. Flatly Theodore L. Flickinger Thomas Walter Gannaway T. S. Hardin~r Richard Elmer King Richard John Lark Wm. James McLain Leroy Thomas Mills James W. H. Noble Robert F. Patterson George G. Peterson Robert L. Reid, Jr. Jerome A. Rlgolosi James H. Stepp Donald Tatro Earling R. Thonneson Edwin Stephen Waters, Jr. D. A. Wilhelm Elvin H. Wiliams

Beta Gamma-LOUISVILLE Robe.r t Lee Beanblossom Charles Young Coghlan C. A. Hernandez Charley Miller Monroe Capt. R. J. Parsons Larry C. Powell Joseph Francis Schneider Clyde W. Swink John Rodney Will, Jr. Herbert Maxwell Zimmerman. Jr.

j)t

Beta Delta-DRAKE William H. Bahnks Larry Coleman Ballard John Carroll Nolan Collins Richard A. Hill Harley G. Hoyt Willis D. McConaughy Keith George Miller J erlad D. Morris D. A. Rapp Pvt. LeRoy Rusnok Jack D. Starr, Jr. E. E. Stephen George A. Wood

Beta Epsilon-MISSOURI Fred E. Ashcroft Frederick R. Bowie Roger Lee Brown Robert Eugene Cates Pt. H. M. Curry

pA

pt

Charles A. Dobbins Bill J. Evans Charles H. Garner Philip Elza Gray Charles C. Harnden Richard D. Hindley L. C. Grieb Billy Joe Isenhower Alphonsus L. McCormack R. D. Morphew Richard Matthew Persyn Arthur Eugene Spears Jack B. Wade Orvan D. Walker Robert Hunter Williams Garrett C. Williamson

Beta Zeta-SAMPSON Loren Gore, Jr. Willis Halverson Walter Keen Robert S. Trevethan

Beta Eta-FLA. STATE Gary L. Allen Max W. Bagley Fred E. Bailey J. T. Barfield William Wesley Brannin1r John A. Beatty Bruce Nelson Cole Larry Joseph Dannelley Michael Joseph Donahue Charles Dorsey Benjamin F. Gillis, Jr. C. G. Grant Peter Joseph H eagerty George B. Holler R. T. Jernigan Billie C. Kimberlin Jose M. Marti G. W. Mayne J. R. McClellan J. C. Miller Michael J. O'Farrell Ronald Gibbs Pickett Walter Ranew Daniel Angel Rodriguez Henry R. Tribble, Jr. Harry James Scarborough Orel Thurman Stevenson, Jr. Jetty Allan Tesar Charles C. Wells, Jr. D. D. Whitaker

Beta Theta-ARIZONA Richard August Bideaux Bert Franklin Crandall R. G. Freeman~ Jr. David Charles Hively D. E. Hoagland Thadeus C. Johnston R. A. Jones, Jr. Charles W. Kittell James C. Leary Benjamin H. Rector, Jr. Franklin G. Smith Richard Lee Twito

Gerald Bradley Daniel A. Carroll Edward Engelking Howard K. Gre~rory J. R. Hewlett David Janasik Harry G. Jennings Michael T. Kovach R. L. McConnell, Jr. Frederick McNaughton Elmer A. Nichols, Jr. Gene Peeples John Pellegrino Victor G. Pezzulla J. Sasser Frank J. Scerbo Larry Dirck Voetberg Robert E. Wofford Robert F. Yates

Beta MU-McNEESE T. D. Abbott Chester B. Arceneaux, Jr. Leo Luther Bass Stephen S. Coleman Edgar Lee Frye, Jr. B. C. Harlow M. H. Hayes Sam Randall Mayson Cnpt. Wane Padgett Richard Travis Sandlin Doyle Odell Sivils Camille Paul Sonnier

Beta Nu-HOUSTON

Arthur BriUant Wesley Love Chism Lyn Del Davis George Wm. Dortch, Jr. J. J. Lester Bobby Jerome Newby Benedict Ambrose Sowa Jon Alex Spradlin Charles Edward Webb Joe Henry Wieser

Beta X-CENTRAL MICH.

William Archie Clark H. V. Herriman

Beta Omicron-N. W. STATE

Ben Ellis Ash Thomas L. Debusk C. D. Monk Wm. H. Rutledge, Jr. Barnabas Seiler Beta Pi-E. Mich. Alan George Sebert Richard Thomas Wilbur Beta Rho-Clarkson Everett Olin Greenwood Bruno Uwe Lewandowski Kenneth John Lewis, Jr. Robert Paul Regan Henry Oren Schaab Jeffrey D. Schaffer

Beta Sigma-N. ILL.

Beta Iota-TOLEDO

Ronald Christiansen Wm. A. Green Robert Edward Heitschmidt Eugene F. Sokolowski

Beta Kappa-GA. STATE

George Norman Bennett James Carter Bentley, Jr. R. L. Coppage Anthony P. Corso, Jr. James J. Hathaway Robert S. King

Charles R. Harper Gordon E. Johnson G. J. Katchur Ralph G. Maniak

Lawrence Beall Jerry Delayne Coleman Earl Lloyd Collins Charles Clifton Curry, Jr. William M. Gammage James Richard Gross Walter Dozier Guthrie Tommy G. Harris Jimmy Francis Hodges Ernest John Keen George Milton Lane . Thomas Henry Summersg•ll D. G. Turner David Ray Ward (Lt.) L. A. Wells, Jr. Eugene Manning Wilkes

Beta Lambda-TAMPA Harold Akins Calvin C. Baker

Beta Tau-VALDOSTA

Beta Upsilon-VIRGINIA J. R. Burnett Larry Hoyt Ellis T. L. Sxabo

Beta Phi-EAST CAROLINA Lt. R. M. Hood

Beta Psi-TENN. WESLEYAN

John Edmonds, Jr.

Beta Omega-EAST TENN.

John Thomas Whelahan

25


INI'ORMATION OF INTfRfST TO GRADUATE MfMIIfRS 01'

PI KAPPA

PHI

I'RATERHITY

Grade Average= Stay Up For ] Fraternities aJ

SCHOLARSHIP A VERAGFJ~i~ I\ m e m b e r s o f college frate. 0t1 rc throughout the nation have ma~r ed their substantial lead o"fot I respective all-men's averages to Vi past academic year, accordin~ 9 tl 1 analysis just released by the Vi al Interfraternity Conference. der The final figures for the year, 1963-64, reveal that 06 1 fraternity average exceede1 ~II r men's average in 59.3 % o d (J leges in the United States an teO: ada where fraternities are loCIId sr total of 290 institutions repo~tdivid lastic data, involving 3,112 10 fraternity chapters. d~ The fraternity scholastic le~t r the all-men's average the pas ~ was the same as the prevJouaii·~ which had established an record for improvement. s~ A similar improvement hn e~ recorded in the nationw~de fn9Pi age of individual fratermtY 11 I above all-men's average~ 0 g~· respective campuses. Dunng 1) of slightly over one-half (50.4~0 ot fraternity chapters throug n's '; nation exceeded the all-me age.

s

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BROTHER BEN COVINGTON, former national officer of Pi Kappa Phi, admires the Merit Citation he was awarded by the Fraternity's 30th Supreme Chapter. The picture was taken in the den of Brother Covington's home in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina. 26

MU ALUMNI-NO'ffJ: Mu Chapter at Du~e 5 versity will celebrate 1t~JII a.nniversary on homec 1 weekend, December 4, c~ in Durham. Write the ter for further detailS· NU ALUMNI-NO'f~i: Nu Chapter at theY sity of Nebraska wdl tl'' brate its 50th anniversll or' homecoming wee~end:Li 11 co: ber 23, 1965, m {ott~ Write the chapter for details.

THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI KAPp.A

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EDWARDS NAMED

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VEEP POSITION w

:prect has bEdwards, Omega '29 n.edwly crea~e~ appointed to th~ 81 ent-Int e Post of Vice Prejpct Lie erryational Marketing ollstn.anen sing for Standard rose Park, In~ustries, Inc., Mel-

v·l\.Ir. Edw S~Ce Preside ards Was previously Vi ~ndarct I{nt of engineering for 0 81 0n.

11 sman's Tuner Di-

In his new position, Mr. Edwards will be responsible for all phases of licensing agreements entered into by the corporation and its various divisions and subsidiaries. In addition, he will establish an organization that will handle all orders and requests from licensees. Starting with Standard Coil Co. (Standard Kollsman's predecessor company) in 1946 as chief engineer, he became director of engineering in 1958. In 1960, he was elected vice president of engineering of the firm's Tuner Division. Prior to joining Standard Coil, Mr. Edwards was an engineer with Aladdin Radio Industries, Inc. in Chicago. Mr. Edwards was graduated from Purdue University in 1932 with a bachelors degree in electrical engineering. He is a member of IEEE, Administrative Committee Broadcast and Tele-

vision Receiver Group; and the Institution of Electronic and Radio Engineers (British). Mr. Edwards is a graduate of McCallie School in his native Chattanooga, Tenn. He and his wife Jane currently live at 320 Merrill Avenue, Park Ridge, Ill.

~4-l'roN s[1e8tle A.L

PRE . . . lis ate p~· center SIDENT MEL METCALFE left, enjoyed a reunion recently WI~h his college roommate Orville .E. sts!lciatjess Ass~ ~nd_ Mrs. Priestley President Metcalfe appeared on the convention program of the !'Jew Mexico ~aUdellts on. 'I'he p~hon in Las Cru~es, N. Mex., at the invitation of Brother Priest!ey, a former president of the tural!y the. Okl~h~~P Jr~side!lt and Brother Priestley roomed tog«;ther at the : 1e!d::t :~~cs:lf~v~j; c~!: 4.1J r h1m-Jn .a !11Vers1ty. For his part of the )lress convention program, r G lJ S l ag1c tr1cks. • 196s 21

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BROWNING FELLOWSHIP WINNER

Books on the

Over 11,000 faculty-nominated college seniors in the United States and Canada competed for the grants, and 1,395 were chosen for the academic year 1965-66. Among them was Edgar K. Bt·owning Beta Upsilon '62, son of Mr. and Mr~. John S. Browning of Flint Hill, Virginia. His undergraduate college was the University of Virginia. "The competition alerted thousands of undergraduates to the critical need for qualified college teachers," said Sir Hugh Taylor, president of the Foundation and dean emeritus of Princeton University's graduate school. Recipients of Woodrow Wilson Fellowships receive tuition and fixed fees at the graduate school of their choice, plus $1,800 for living expens~s. Extra allowanc-:;s are made for children.

28

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Pi Kappa Phi Shelf

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Geometry ...

THE WOODROW WILSON National Fellowship Foundation marked its 20th anniversary this year by announcing the winners of $5 million in graduate fellowships designed to recruit new college teachers.

~ '~

GEOMETRY AND ANALYSIS OF PROJECTIVE SPACES. By C. E. Springer (Alpha Gamma, '23. University of Oklahoma), W. H. Freeman and Co., San Francisco and London, $7.50. In this unique elementary approach to projective geometry, the author introduces projective notions by means of interpretations incorporating recent techniques from linear algebra and analysis. The material in this text, according to the publishers, never before has been contained in one volume and has previously been neglected in most mathematics courses. This new book will be of particular importance to high school geometry teachers as well as college students of analytic projective geometry. Brother S p r i n g e r was a Rhodes Scholar and is listed in the various Who's Who volumes

TOLEDO, OHIO ALUMNI Toledo Alumni Chapter Luncheons, 2nd Wednesday each month, noon, PAR 4 CAFE, 2248 Ashland Ave.

PORTLAND, OREGON ALUMNI Portland Alumni Chapter Luncheons 3rd Wednesday each month 12:00 noon IMPERIAL HOTEL 400 SW Broadway

lo: and in American Men of Sciet de He is a professor at the as versity of Oklahoma. bi

•.• And V~1 TOUCHED WITH V ALOF·l Col. Harold B. Simpson.~~ silon - University of Ilh~i Hill Junior College Press, boro, Tex. Touched With Valor is a et pilation of the Civil WarP~(: of Gen. Jerome B. Robe~f commander of Hood's TeJC!l gade in the Civil War. ·s!' Brother Simpson, a b~ll professor at Hill Junior Cder and director of the Confe 1r1 Research Center there, h~rt: ten a biography of :Ro e (. and recently completed tb rsr' of editing the general's f~e r and military papers. dil book is a result of his e efforts. fI Simpson has written ore three other books.

DES MOINES, IOWJ\ ALUMNI ~~ Des Moines Alumni CltliP9cl Luncheons, last W ednesdaY.4e~,, month, 12:00 noon, NO ARK RESTAURANT.

NEW YORK ALUMril ttl . CltliP I New York Alumni eB' Luncheons, 3rd Frida~ ,v: 0 month, 12:30 P.M., LUC t~ 51 RESTAURANT, 110 :E. 1

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Sident of '~as been electJed preCornpa anion & Goodman lead·1ngny, Belleville rn • N . J ., a brushes anufacturer of paint ~ A and rollers. ~ ~t 35 St the Yo ' ewart becomes one of lh.ajor ~ngest presidents of a lie had anu~acturing company. cie~ Ion & G Previously served Han. 00 · presihe tk~ dent 1n chdman c 0 · as v1ce ~s. Productrge of operations and lVision. manager of the Roller

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" n to serve years as 'presihi:r. Ste as hoard chairman dedlcated · Wart IS · an mstinctive . ' 1 sorbSinforead ~r, a man who ab-' ?ets What hmabon and never forcIs exactly e. lear ns, a man who 0lnPany t nght to guide this ll'l'owth." owards long - range Ste . a graduate of RensalaerWartp lS (l951) ?1Ytechnic Institute lh.a With lb. nagelll.ent a B . S degree in tt echanica] engmeering with •1e · a ll1. en gmeermg · · h Is option. ••tan elll.ber 0 f th th agelll.ent . e American a : A.lll.eri Association and lllcaJ En c~n Society of MechA. gmeers. hi native h.r. Stewa tof Suffern, N y ls Wife r resides there ~ith and three children .

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l'Arttp A, FLOR l'allt IDA ALUMNI Lunc Pa Alu . lllont heons, 3r:n• .Chapter llAz h, 1 :Oo p Fr•day each O ROOM .M., THE TER, Floridan Hotel.

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lltRMINGHA ALUM, ALABAMA 1st MNI ( lloon and 3rd . tO's; IliA' BRl'I''I'LINFriday, 12:00 1tlt ' 309 N GS CAFETE· 20th St. / ___________J / 1 A\J Gusr

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YOUR VOLUNTARY DUES BUILD YOUR FRATERNITY 29


Jn <!&ur C!Cbapter Cfternal Oh, death could be triumphant-death in battle, death in love, death in friendship and in peril, could be glorious if it were proud death, gaunt death, lean, lonely, tender, loving and heroic death, who bent to touch his chosen son with mercy, love, and pity, and put the seal of honor on him when he died! -"The Web and The Rock," by Brother Thomas Wolfe, Kappa '18, University of North Carolina. Used by pennisslon of the publishers, Harper and Brothers.

ALPHA, '11-M. S. Stover, St. Petersburg, Fla. BETA, '32-M. W. Miller, Winchester, Kentucky GAMMA, '55-J. R. Pf1ager, Toledo, Ohio '14-Clifford R. Stewart, Perris, Calif. '11-J. B. Wright, Walnut Creek, Calif. ZETA, '33-G. B. Felder, Jr., St. Matthews, S. C. ETA, '22-Wm. T. Belcher, Roanoke, Ala. LAMBDA, '52-James W. Brown, Savannah, Ga. XI, '16-A. S. Cmft, Roanoke, Va. '20-Wm. Charles Haberer, West Hyannisport, Mass. '25-Paul Ingles, Centreville, Md. '16-Albert Karl Mock, charter member of Xi chapter. Former mayor of Damascus, Va.; World War 1 veteran; retired employee of The Mead Corp. of Lynchburg, Damascus, Va.

OMICRON, '17-A. W. Hovater, Donathan, Ala. '29-Charles Hubert Leggett, Laurel, Miss. UPSILON, '21-M. E. Broom, President of Southern School of Optometry, Memphis, Tenn. '21-Donald D. McGuire, Wooster, Ohio '21-Donald A. Rittenhouse, Denver, Colo. PHI, '25-Silas Archie Lang, Nowata, Okla. PSI, '24-Walter B. Brandt, Hamburg, N.Y. '22-J. L. Davidson, Royal Oak, Mich. OMEGA, '24-G. E. Spencer, W. Lafayette, Ind. '63-J. C. Watson, Chicago, Ill. ALPHA ALPHA, '27-R. M. Nix, Commerce, Ga. ALPHA BETA, '33-Junius Hart Payne, Jr., Gulfport, Miss. ALPHA GAMMA, '27-David Frost, Norman, Okla. ALPHA DELTA, '24-C. A. Collins, Morris Plains, N. J. ALPHA EPSILON, '30-J. R. Kelly, Fernandina, Fla.

'30-Rayford Charles McCormick, Daytona Beach, Fla. ALPHA ZETA, '25-Marshall S: co Hubbard, San FranciS Calif. ALPHA ETA, '25-J. C. Hutto, Charlotte, N. C. ALPHA IOTA, '27-W. D. l\{cL9 ~ Midland, Texas ALPHA XI, '54-Theodore Crowlef· Brooklyn, N. Y. '28-Thomas R. Farrell,N y. Brightwaters, L.I., ' '28-John E. Fitzsimons, Largo, Fla. pi· '28-Raymond E. Houg~19 y. Rocksville Center, · g1 ALPHA TAU, '32-James R. Lar Troy, N. Y. J~ ALPHA PHI, '35-Frederick J!. East St. Louis, Ill· '57-E. W. Lackaff, Downers Grove, JJI. fel• BETA IOTA, '51-Richard Toledo, Ohio BETA TAU, '60-D. R. Bennett, Jesup, Ga.

E.'

lLtbtng ~emortals ORE and more, nowadays, it is becoming the custom for friends and associates of recently deceased persons to make contributions to a worthwhile cause or institution in lieu of the usual floral tributes sent to funerals. Such contributions are termed living memorials, as they are more lasting than flowers and can accomplish much as permanently recorded tributes in the name of the deceased. These tributes finance services which create benefits for others in the future. Gifts of this kind to the Pi Kappa Phi Memorial Foundation can provide benefits for many Pi Kappa Phi brothers far into the future. Such gifts, in honor of a departed brother, may send the son of another brother through college, or permit another brother to pursue his education to an advanced goal. The names of donors of such gifts and the deceased brothers so honored are permanently recorded in the records of the fraternity.

M

30

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Gifts to living memorial funds usuallY 1f~ from $5 to $100. As a substitute for tls& gifts, these funds can be particularlY J1lp: to an alumnus who, living in a distant C00rp: nity, belatedly learns of the death of aoiteP chapter brother or alumni associate. f. is too late to send flowers to the funer~tls ~ it is often impossible to locate the n!l'Jlljetl' addresses of survivors in order to wr1te riP' of condolence. The living memorial pays a special t0vi• to the deceased, and at the same time, P,r sf a means of getting word of the donor ~pli pathy to the bereaved family through P tions of the fraternity. ·de 1 Further, of course, such gifts proVl jt1 contributing brother a "plus" opport~Jl1{9f give to the good cause activities of 1'1 Phi's educational foundation. !lp1 It is an opportunity to do much for Jll the fraternity. ,. A.o THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI KAppA


PI KAPPA PH I 1924 Vail Avenue, Charlotte, North Carolina Founded at The College of Charleston , Charleston, S. C.-December 10, 1904

FOUNDERS ~'

ANDREW

·~Ar

A.

SIMON FOGARTY, 151 Moultrie St., Charleston, S. C. KROEG JR. (chapter eternal) L. HARRY Mrxon (chapter eternal)

·

~·•sid•••~~N~L COUNCIL

NATIONAL COMMITTEES

'"''"' elvllle T.; E Metca Ife, 41 I Adams Bldg., Port Arthur, Texas. Tarra "'- Charles m Henderson, Asst. Allorney General, State of Florida, l!,s 10 ,. Y- K,m Je Chan,~~~-J ack WPs~n, 300 Stoddard Bldg., Lansing 23, Mich . P•st p ~r -Jamas· l eward, 4375 Pearl St., Eugene, Ore. Pa. ''11 dtnt- John. WMay ~r., Merchants National Bank Bldg., Mobile, Ala . ~1 • De1mler, 1149 Green Tree Lane, Penn Valley Narbeth

S~<teta~asse?, Fla.

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'

Trust Investment- Francis H. Boland, Jr. , Chariman, 180 Central Park South,

New York 19, N. Y., exp. Dec., 1967.

Pi Kappa Phi Memorial Foundation- John D. Carroll, Chairman, Box 66,

lexmgton, S. Fla.; George l. long, The Scholarship- Or.

'

A. Cowles, Iowa State University, Ames, Iowa .

e.,,"r IONAL HEADQUARTERS

Endowment- J ack Be ll, Chairman, 6764 La lorna Dr., Jacksonville 17, Fla.

!••

Edit0 , Secretor 1924 Vail Ave., Charlolle, N. C. r •••• I;~··Chief, ST~RDXNWard w. Owen, Charlolle, N. c. l.lanag· 9 Counsel 0 . D LAMP- Durward W. Owen Birrn'i"9hEditor S~A:•IIAD•cks, Dan Ray, Frank Parrish, Charlotte, N. C. ng arn, Ale . NO LAMP- Paul R. Plawin, 1640 C. Valley Ave., DrsrRrcT

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DISTRICT V- T. Phil Tappy, P. 0. Box 1184, Macon, Ga. Iota- Georgia Institute of Technology, 719 Brittian Way, Atlanta, Ga. lambda- University of Georgia, 930 S. Milledge Ave., Athens, Ga. Beta Kappa- Georgia State College, 24 Ivy St., S. E., Atlanta, Ga. DISTRICT VI - J. Martin Pearce, c/o Dept. of Chemistry, University of Fla., Gainesville, Fla. Chi -Stetson University, 1241 Stetson, De Land, Fla.

Be" IV- w a. A.ipha~66, Anct~e~ys Brooks, P. 0.

Alpha Epsilon- University of Fla ., P. 0. Box 14423, Gainesville, Fla. Alpha Chi- University of Miami, 9370 S.W. 120th St., Miami, Fla. Beta Beta- Fia. Southern Co llege, Box 416, lakeland, Fla . Beta Eta- Florida State University, Box 3085, Tallahassee, Fla. Beta Lambda- Uni versity of Tampa, 304 Plant St., Tampa, Fla. Beta Tau- Va ldosta State College, Valdosta, Ga. DISTRICT VII- Vacant Alpha Beta {Colony)- Box 2255, 31 McAllister, New Orleans 18, La. Beta Mu- McNeese State College, Box 141 , lake Charles, La. Beta Omicron- Northwestern State College of La., Box 431, Natchi-

a•••-~ St., Ch a j'f Charleston, 19

Beta Chi-East Texas State Univer-

, S. C.

S. C resbyteri; eston, S. C. n College, Clinton bur 0 fford ' Si~n,~:_ S. C. College, Spartan-

l•••-w /lila

Un lversit

Ritual and Insignia- H. B. Fisher, Chairman, Box 412, College Station, Texas.

Architecture-{Advlsory)- Fred Hallmark, Chairman, 620 S. 38th St., Birm ingham, Ala. Advisory- J. AI Head, Park Towers, Apt. 403, 200 Maple Ave., Falls Church, Va.

DISTRICTS OF PI KAPPA PHI 25 High St.,

sit Cornell U~iv . A.ipK Ave., lthe e rSity, 722 Univer· Br a Xi - Poi ca, N. Y. ly~ 0 klyn, 33 YJ~chnic Institute of A.iph~ •dney Place Brooklnsr Tau-Re Beta 'l..u te, 49 ;sdelaer Polytechnic gi 1Pho- N n St., Troy, N y , N."~erin 9 , 24~w~{-k hCollege 0 ( En: •IStRri:r •g St., Newark, 10o " 11 -R ich d l.ld. " •<Kendree arA G. Anderson, A.ipha ve., Annapolis, Bo" "'•-Pen A.ipha 8~0, Stat.""c wate University, Tech Psilon o ege, Pa. D Phila~o logy, 3-;j 00 ~exe l Institute of IStRrcrelphia, Pa Powelton Ave., hurst 111-Ray · ~kR ' Va, mond Hatcher, AmSal oanoke C Rh 0 ~~ Va. ollege, 327 High St., Sity ashingto • Ita.' lock Ore~ and l ee Un iverer 903, l exing ton, ••ta lJ . Rugb P••lon - u . Ga., Y Rd., Chn•versity of Va., 510 le 9 ~• 8eta- orlollesvi lle, Va. DrsrRrcrNorfolk ~d Dom inion ColGree College

C.; Jack Bell, Treasurer, 6764 La lorna Dr., Jacksonville 17, B. Helmrich, 32990 lahser Rd., Birmingham, Mich.; Leonard Da rlington, Suite 7, 2025 Peachtree Road, N.E., Atlanta, Ga. Donald Come, 4437 Greenwood Drive, Okemos, Mich.; Harold

' Coiurnb· Y of South Caro•a, S, C.

toches, La. sity, Commerce, Tex.

DISTRICT VIII - Donald S. Payne, 106 Sunset lane, West lafayette, Ind. Upsilon- Un iversity of Illinois, 306 E. Gregory, Champaign, Ill. Omega- Purdue University, 330 N. Grant St., West Lafayette, Ind.

Alpha Phi- Illinois Institute of Technology, 3333 S. Wabash Ave., Chicago 16, Ill. Alpha Psi- Indiana University, 408 North Indiana, Bloomington, Ind . Beta Gamma - Universi ty of Louis·

vi lle, Office of The Dean of Stu· dents, Louisville, Ky.

DISTRICT IX-Robert S. Kuhlman, 940 Alvison Rd., Toledo, Ohio. Alpha Theta- Michigan State Un i· versity, 121 Whitehills Dr., East Lansing, Mich.

Beta Iota-University of Toledo, 1702 W. Bancroft St., Toledo, Ohio Beta Xi- Central Michigan Un iversity, 508 S. College, St., Mt. Pleasant, Mich. DISTRICT X- Vernon A. Sodawasser, 909 Fleming Bldg., Des Moines, Iowa

Nu- University of Nebraska, 229 N. 17th St., linco ln, Nebr. Alpha Omicron - Iowa State Universi ty, 407 Welch Ave., Ames, Iowa Beta Delta- Drake Un iversi ty, 3420 Kingman Blvd., Des Moines 11, Iowa .

DISTRICT XI -Kurt Engelstad, 1990 S.W. 139th, Beaverton, Ore. Alpha Zeta- Oregon State University, 2111 Harrison, Corvallis, Ore. Alpha Omega- Uni versity of Ore· gon, 1790 Alder St., Eugene, Ore. 'DISTRICT XII -Rev. C. J . Tyler, 2003 E. 29th St., Oakland, Calif. Gamma - University of California, 2434 Warring St., Berkeley, Cali-

DISTRICT XIII -Robert Bourne, 6801 Woodstream Dr., Charlotte, N. C. Epsilon - Davidson College, Box 473, David son, N. C. Kappa- Un iversity of N. C., 206 Cameron Ave., Chapel Hill, N. C. Mu- Duke University, Box 4682, Duke Station, Durham, N. C. Tau- N. C. State, 2401 West Fraternity Court, N . C. State College Station, Raleigh, N. C. Beta Phi-East Carolina College, 1301 E. 5th St., Greenville, N. C. DISTRICT XIV-Wi llard W. Young, Jr., c/ o Southern Bell Telephone & Telegraph Co., Nashville, Tenn. Alpha. Sigma- University of Tennessee, 1800 lake Ave., Knoxville, Tenn. Tau- N. C. State, 2401 West Frater· nity Court, N. C. State College Station, Raleigh, N. C. Beta Psi-Tennessee Wesleyan College, 344 lynn Ave., Athens, Tenn. DISTRICT XV-Fox H. Brunson, Jr., 2751 Ralston Road, Mobile, Ala. Omicron-University of Alabama, 312 University Ave., Tuscaloosa, Ala. Alpha Iota-Auburn Un iversity, 255 College St., Auburn, Ale. Alpha Eta-Howard College, Box 1032, Howard College, Birmingham, Ala. Gamma Alpha- l ivingston State College, Bo x 411, Livingston, Al a.

Kappa Phi {Colony)-Troy State College, Box 135, Troy, Alabama. Kappa Phi {Colony)- Memphis State Univers ity, Box 1352, Memphis State Un iv., Memphis, Tenn .

fornia

ALUMNI CHAPTERS Detroit, Mich .-Karl Jepson,

1788 1

Beechwood, Birmingham, Mich. Des Moines, Iowa- Harry Wh itmore,

7309 S.W. 13th, Des Moines, Iowa. Eugene, Ore.-A ian C. Graves, 275 31st Ave. W., Eugene, Ore. Georgetown-Myrtle Beach, S. C.-Joe Shaw, 13 Meeting St., Georgetown,

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,.

Greenville, S. C.-Mac Adams Chris· topher, PO Box 3507, Park Place Dr ., Greenville, S. C. Houston, Texas-Harold F. Simpson, 1507 Calif., #13, Houston 6, Tex . Indianapolis, lnd.-David Bibler, 401 East 37th Street, Ind ianapolis, Ind. Jacksonville, Fla.-Ralph Saffy, 3451 Remington, Jacksonville, Fla . Kansas City, Mo.-Mi lton S. Broome, 6120 N. Mich igan Dr., Gladslone, Mo. Lakeland, Fla.- Gene Caufield, 213 Anne Marie Circle, l ake land, Fla. Lanting, Mich.-Kim Jepson, 508 Ful· ton Place, Lansing, Mich .

Lincoln, Neb. -Winfie ld Elmen, 2640 l ake St., lincoln, Neb. louisville, Ky. - Rebert Schroader, 2403 Wallace Ave., louisvi lle 5, Ky. Memphis, Tenn .-Warren Cruzen, 539 Cherry Rd., Memphis, Tenn. Miami, Fla.-Richard 0 . Whipple, 2921 Louise St., Miami, Fla. Montgomery, Ala.-Marvin H. Killinsworth, 3983 Thomas Ave., Mont· gomery, Ala. New York, N. Y.- Joseph Flaherty, 771 Fourth Ave., Brooklyn 32, N. Y. North Tex.-Rober! W. Wylie, 13327 Flagstone Lane, Dallas 30, Tex. North New Jersey-Kort Gorshkoff, 59

Eastbrook

Terrace,

Livingston,

New Jersey. Orlando, Fla.-Peter C. Barr, 3316 Charow Ln., Orlando, Fla. Phila., Pa.- Lawrence Ba rnard, 315 Airdale Rd ., Rosemont, Penna.

Portland, Ore.- Kurl Engelstad, 1990 S. W. 139th Beaverton, Ore. Raleigh, N. C.- L. M. Shirley, 3107 Sussex Rd., Raleigh, N. C.

Roanoke, Va.-W. J. Lawrence, c/o lawrence Trans. & Stg. Co., Roa· noke, Va.

Salem, Ore.-Richard Shaffer, 780 Ratcliff Dr., S.E., Salem, Ore. Seattle, Wash .-Harold V. McPherson, 3043 East 203, Seattle 55, Wash. Spartanburg, S. C.-Thomas K. Flet· cher, Jr., Box

s. c.

1509, Spartanburg,

Sumter, S. C. -Edw in B. Boyle, 111 Mason Croft Drive, Sumter, S. C. Tallahassee, Fla.- C. Tom Henderson, Tallahassee, Fla. Tampa, Fla.-Gerald Bobier, 3301 Sierra Circle, Tampa 9, Fla. Toledo, 0. - Richard Smalley, 3313 Anderson Parkway, Toledo 6, 0. Tuscon, Ariz.- Rebe rt T. Francis, 2658 Avenida Carolina, Tucson, Ariz.

Valdosta, Ga.-Charles Powell, 1710 N. Lee Street, Valdosta, Ga. Vero Beach, Fla.-John l. Graves, Box 974, Ve ro Beach, Fla. Washington, D. C.-Capt. Mitchell Disney, 608 Niblick Dr. S.E., Vi· enna, Va .

3 1


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RETURN REQUESTED Postmaster: Please check cause of non-delivery and notify PI KAPPA PHI P. 0 . Box 4608 Charlotte, N . C. 28204

0 D

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0 0 D

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--------------------------------------~' ~ If you're moving soon, let us have your new address so we can k up with you.

Present Address: NAME: STREET: - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - CITY: New Address: STREET: - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - CITY: - - - - - - - - -ZIP CODE: - - - - MAIL THIS COUPON TO THE NATIONAL OFFICE PI KAPPA PHI P. 0. BOX 4608 CHARLOTTE, N. C. 28204

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