1929_2_May

Page 1

=---=====FOUNDER SIMON FOGARTY

~lumeXV

MAY, 1929

=====~ !>\!>~-,..~

Number 2


r:-~

~

Fraternity Supplies THE STAR AND LAMP of Pi Kappa Phi, for life-------------------------------------------------------$10.00 Single copies, 50垄 each Apply to Central Office for prices on bound volumes. HISTORY AND DIRECTORY 1929, Anniversary Edition______________________________________ Membership listed alphabetically, geographically, and by chapters. A free copy with each five in group orders. SONGS OF PI KAPPA PHI, 1926 Edition, per copy__________________________________________________ Forty-two pages of Pi Kapp melody. A free copy with each five in group orders.

2.00

CONSTITUTION AND SUPREME LAWS, 1929 Edition, per copy________________________ Complete and official, with index and examination questions.

.10

.50

BAIRD'S MANUAL OF COLLEGE FRATERNITIES, Eleventh Edition --------- 4.00 Edited by Dr. Francis W. Shepardson. BANTA'S GREEK EXCHANGE, per year _______________ ,_________________________________________________ 2.00 News and comment from the college fraternity world. COLLEGE FRATERNITIES, per COPY----------------------------------------------------------------------An exposition of the fraternity system published by the Interfraternity Conference. INTERFRATERNITY CONFERENCE YEAR BOOK, per copy______________________________ Minutes of the last Interfraternity Conference.

2.00

ROBERT'S RULES OF ORDER (Revised), per COPY----------------------------------------------The official parliamentary guide of Pi Kappa Phi, based upon the rules and practice of Congress.

1.50

MEMBERSHIP CERTIFICATES, each-------------------------------------------------------------------Handsomely engraved; size 8x10. 路 Give full name, initiation date and chapter.

1.00

PLAQUES ----------------------------------路--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

6.50

.50

BOOK ENDS -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 7.50 THE SHORT HISTORY, a reprint from the current edition of Baird's Manual, is sent on request. PRICES OR REFERENCES ON SUPPLIES NOT LISTED ABOVE WILL BE FURNISHED ON APPLICATION. THESE INCLUDE : RITUALISTIC PARAPHERNALIA ACCOUNTING SUPPLIES STATIONERY

TABLEWARE PHOTOGRAPHS OF FOUNDERS, AND PAST SUPREME OFFICERS

Orders for Pi Kappa Phi jewelry should be placed only with our Official Jewelers, Burr, Patterson & Auld Company, Detroit, Mich. Orders for regalia and ritualistic pharaphernalia should be placed only with our Official Costumers, the Ihling Bros. Everard Company, Kalamazoo, Mich. Orders for tableware should be placed only with our official manufacturers, Lee F. Williams Company, Coshocton, Ohio. Other houses are not authorized to make Pi Kappa Phi designs and are not under the supervision of the Fraternity. SEND ORDERS AND MAKE CHECKS PAYABLE TO

PI KAPPA PHI FRATERNITY CENTRAL OFFICE 636 CHURCH STREET

EVANSTON, ILLINOIS


••"'"''::i

~

1r;

~

L.=======s=T=A=R==A=N=D=L=A=M=P==='=!::::===:!.I STAR AND LAMP 0E~H~ ctober, Decembet·,

is Published Under the Direction cf the Supreme Counci l of the Pi Kappa Phi Fraternity in the February, and May, at Charlotte, N. C. Appro d ~ered as Matter of the Second Class at the Postoffice at Charlotte, N. C., in Accordance with the Act of Congress 1917 ~ ~reb 3, 1879. Acceptance for Maili ng at Special Rate of Postage Provided for in Section 1103, Act of October 3, • ut 1JOnzed April 19, 1921. ' ;he Life Subscription is $10 and is the Only Form of Subscription. Single Copies are SO Cents. 11 Janu Material Intended for Publication Should be in the Hands of the Edior·in-Chief by the 15th of September, November ary .-and April. Months

Changes in Address S hould he Promptly Reported to the Executive Secretary.

Volvme XV

MAY, 1929

ctJ([y CVision for cpi By

Use Form in the Back of the Magazine.

Number 2

1\gppa cphi

DR.· A. P ELZER WAGENER

Supreme Archon of the Fraternity

~ VERYONE has at some time visited a h spot famous because there great events dave taken place, there notable deeds have been ~ne. Before his eyes in imagination has passed the Procession of actors in the drama of centuries t at are gone.

I see at the College of William and Mary. far back in Colonial times, a group banding itself together and taking as its motto the Greek words meaning " Philosophy th e Guide of Life ." I remember the story which tells how , as the Board of Visitors was seated in soleJ11ln We remember how Childe Harold speaks tn conference, there appeared before the dignified Byron 's poem : assemblage a committee from Phi Beta Kappa presenting a proposal for that liberalizing of " I stood in Ven ice on the Bridge of Siglrs; the curriculum which made William and Mary A palace and a prison on each hand: 1 a true university with schools of natural science, saw from out the wave her st ructures rise As from the stroke of the enchan ter' s wand: law, medicine , and the modern languages, and A !housand years th eir cloudy wings expand government by the honor system. The mother Around me." fraternity was even then pointing the way Here is one form of vision, the vision of th e which fraternities would follow in becoming a Past. vi tal factor in the American college system. there is also a vision of the future. Such is With the founding at Union College in 182 5 t he vision o f w h'tc h T ennyson stngs . . " Locks - of the Kappa Alpha society, of Sigma Phi and tn Iey 0nail": Delta Phi in 1827, begins th e unbroken course of fraternity history. No detailed review of "For I d' · tpt tnto the fu ture, far as human eye could see, this history is n eeded . Every fraternity man is Saw the visio n of the world and all th e wonder more o r less familiar with it. W e meet many that would be." glorious achievements, inevitably much that is whM.y vision for Pi Kappa Phi is based upon bad . h' at has transpired as I look back upon the Fraternities came into being and multiplied p~~ory of college fraternities and of Pi Kappa because, first of all they satisfied a desire for tu I. But the eyes with which I am looking are social advantages, for companionship, for symrned toward the future . pathetic help in achieving the objectives of col-


THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI KAPPA PHI

lege life. Second! y the fraternity provided a home which otherwise the boy entering college would not have had. Naturally the fraternity displayed the ambitions and ideals existing in society within and without the walls of the campus- unfortunately, its vices as well. Into such a fraternity world in 1904 was born Pi Kappa Phi . I am not one to attribute to the founders of our fraternity, or in fact to the founders of any similar organization a su perhuman power of insight or foresight. Our founders were college boys. A condition existed , a need, an opportunity. Three men saw these more clearly than did others . They cal led together a group which they felt would be sympathetic and congenial. Of these eight men, all but one were Charlestonians. They had gone through school together. Several had been friends from childhood . Their tastes were similar, their ideals of life alike. Surely these could have been no better basis for founding a fraternity. Growth came about in the normal way as probably every fraternity has grown. On the part of our founders there was the natural desire to expand and to increase the prestige of the body which they had created . In other institutions there existed or came into being similar groups which felt that by affiliation they could increase their prestige and power. We must pay our tribute, however, to the men who unselfishly guided our fraternity in the years of her development. Because of their judgment, we can be proud of our slow, conservative growth, and of the fact that the ideals of social culture, high morality, and worthwhile achievement in every sphere of college life have been held high . This is th e past. What shall our vision of the future be ? W e are now a fraternity of thirty -five chapters. We are like other fraternities in general constitution and administration . We uphold universal fraternity policies. We want our chapters to be leaders on their campuses in scholarship, in athletics, in every phase of student activity, in social rating. We want our chapters to be comfortably housed . \Ve cannot blind ourselves to the inevitable fact that the vices existing in other fraternities will be found existing in ours.

Is there then no possible vision of a distinctive Pi Kappa Phi? I think that there is. Some may wish to find it in social exclusiveness. Sornc may choose scholarship, others athletics, others political domination. I find my vision in a complete, untemporizing interpretation and eJC· emplification of brotherhood. In essence a fraternity is the family. Tht chapter is the small family; the united chapters. the comprehensive family; the " gens" as thC Romans conceived of it. If you will picture in your mind what family with its privileges and duties means to you and will transfer this out· line tracing , as it were, to your fraternity you will understand . I must develop my talents and achieve the utmost that is in me not merelY for my own glory but to honor those to whotn I am bound by ties of respect and love. The)' in turn are doing the same for my sake. I must be willing to carry out irksome, often distaste· ful tasks for them. I must live a clean moral life, not merely to preserve my own manhood· but to save them from shame and sorrow. l must obey and yield my own will becau~e I an1 obligated to them for life and support in ml' weakness. On its part the family will encour· age me , stand back of me, give of itself freelJ' for my well -being and happiness. The practi· cal application of such abstract ideas is easil)' made. What is fraternity, other than a family of brothers? In college we are brothers working together. As alumni we are older brothers bound to the fami ly by our interest in th1 younger brothers who are developing and meet· ing needs and problems which we can help thetn to face and solve. . Such is my vision of Pi Kappa Phi. A faJ11 Jl-y: ?f brothers with each man realizing th' pnvtleges and responsibilities which his meJ11' bership therein entails and ready to give the beS1 that is in him in doing his duty. I would haV' Pi Kappa Phi discard forever the evil accretions wh~ch have crept into the fraternity system an.0 whtch make it the frequent butt of hostile critr cism. I would not have her discard but rather exalt and intensify the noble traditions and idea:ls which have made the American fraternitl' such a force in campus life. If this becomes thi do.minant spirit of our fraternity, there are nc hetghts to which Pi Kappa Phi cannot climb The challenge is ours for the future.

(

t: ¥

rt \1

t1 \1

tl f1 \1

C n at o o "' al Ia

Q

p, h \II

o a tr b, lr

b, r< tc tl a, d, ci a, a1 tl cr I ti

A


THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI KAPPA PHI

Un CVia CVe Gallas En euba

net oJllf oJllC

By L. D.

hers n 3

eJ(·

(til\;:.:. 0 the readers of this article I take off my '\:J h . th at In profoundest respect. Yours is

· Whe courage 0 f t h e tgnorant who knowest not r en ~e is well off. I do hereby disclaim all esponstbi!'1t f Which Y or any serious consequences tu . may occur to those brave souls who ven . 'I'tze d sectton . . w re Into this unctvt of the l1terary 1 th~r d . . The writer was hounded in writing f Is article by on e Gonzalez Quevado. a Pi Kapp 0 ~ .U: Georgia Tech , and also at the present ntlng one of the engineers on the carretera Central . rn 0 h or C u b an Htghway. After many a h~t s of persistent effort he has finally c 1eved . success or shall we say results? My on 1Y al1b'1 IS · t h at I have been overcome while 0 ~ ah foreign soil and in an abnormal condition, It a . d a! mtn weakened and a tongue semi -par la YZed by terrific struggle with the Spanish 1 nguage. aCaramba ! [ aJ11 Q One hot Saturday afternoon in Matanzas, J!lY aue~ado and I decided to see a cock -fight for no :our· rt1cular . , h d reason. We d1dn t need any. We reeh a plent f · · w · Y o ttme, nothtng to do and there ·acti· ofas a cock -fight. So, we had one more drink asilY orange · · a . JUice, properly acclimated , and hailed . Pass1ng fot' tra] P 1ngo or town taxt. Around Ceny of bo d ark, Up and down various narrow streets ·king r . ered w.1th S pantsh . d wel11ngs . in we proceeded therl rtght g00 d h . batt! fi umor and finally arnved at the th 1 T~ eld of the fighting roosters. neet· ra· e arena had a wooden roof to keep out the theJ11 tn and s d . to k un an wooden bars around the stdes th feep out the unpaid guests and still allow faJTl e ree p . assage of atr for both the spectators and thf 11e fe · · t · roc10us coc k s. p asstng t h rough the ne.rtl' do beSI cir~r We entered the site of a typical one ring haV' andush There was the sawdust covered ring 1 tionl a d' e surrounding tiers of board seats for the L and u tence Th . I . ' · ere was a nngmaster, too, on y m crici· th 18 ather case he was to serve as the referee. We and cir~ssed the ring and took ringside seats where rnit 1 trnm d' made a rather curious examina :s thf t'ton ofe tately f :e nC A a owl which was stripped for battle. I iJ!lb rather queer looking spectacle he presented.

ThC terS· thC ·e io and out· you .ents !rei}' hot11 -heY nust aste· LOra I ood·

W

P

LONG, N

too , as his anatomy had been shamelessly ex posed with the neck, breast, and legs plucked bare. Just an ordinary looking rooster at first sight. (We raise bigger ones in Iowa.) But they seemed to be a little trimmer in build and they all had a glint in their yellow eyes which was a little different than that seen in the eyes of ordinary chickens. Under personal supervision of the referee the birds were carefully weighed on a beam balance and their heads and necks carefully washed with a sponge. The weighing in was for a reason quite plain but why should it be necessary to wash a rooster's face before he goes into com bat? Like everything else there was a reason and it had nothing to do with the fighting qualities of the birds as they can fight just as well with a dirty face as with one spotlessly clean . In the distant past it seems as though some unscrupulous cock-owner with an agile mind had devised a simple scheme of insuring success for his bird by smearing over the head and neck a grease containing some form of chemical which would blind or sicken his ad versary when the heads came in contact. After all the preliminary red tape bad been unrolled , properly accompanied by plenty of Spanish, the two heads of the birds were rubbed together and the fight was on .

L.

D . LONG

CHI CK QUEVADO


= THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI KAPPA PHI

Sparring like professional boxers, bare red gladiator stood over the body of his form' necks outstretched toward the opponent and opponent, gave a triumphant crow and was cat with that ridiculous looking tuft of feathers ried off the field by his highly elated owner. around the head at an angry tilt, the two cocks Y despues fuimos por otra copa . waded in , each with the sole intent and purpose ~ of annihilating that upstart rooster who dared to defy him . Heads lacerated and covered with Norris With Cardinals blood , but :fighting gamely on until a lightning Granville Norris, Alpha -Gamma, last year jab from one of those razor sharp spurs had baseball captain and outfielder of the Univct end ed the fight with death . sity of Oklahoma Sooner Nine, has signed. The afternoon slowly passed as :fight after contract with the St. Louis Cardinals, and WI fight was staged, but the excitement of the play his first organized baseball with Danvill crowd never abated until the end. What a of the Three Eye league this season. frightful waste of both good and bad Spanish there was that day mostly of the machine gun ~ variety. A sharp volley, some wild but emPi Kapp Headquarters phatic gestures and some hombre would clamber The Alpha1-Xi house at 33 Sydney Pla 0 over the railing , dart across the ring and wave a handful of bills in a man 's face or perhaps Brooklyn, has been designated as headquartC1 shake his fist under the most prominent feature. for all Pi Kapps in the vicinity of New Yor~ More and more I begin to find myself sub- or who are visiting in that territory. A few rooms are available to alumni at rel ject to the rath er dizzy spell, due perhaps not so much to the fighting as to the heat , the con- sonable rent. In the heart of downtown Broo~ tagious excitement of the crowd and that vil - lyn, the house is but a few minutes from V/3 lainous Villar y Villar cigar which I was sys- Street or downtown Manhattan . It is the meeting place of the New Yor tematically demolishing both fore and aft. The time finally arrived when the last victorious alumni chapter.

Handikapps

a1 Sc

n

nB h tl ti

n fi

B It

p Sc

0 Cc

b The kid who resolved to make the old lodge hum when he got in .

The g uy who promptly pays everything but his chapter bills.

-··ol§f 4 •·-


THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI KAPPA PHI

Ti Kgpp C0rchestra to ~cord By

FRANK EWING

PI aCt artcr '{ orl t

rei

roo~

V/3 Yor

6]} 1 KAPPS everywhere will soon have the

will make a tour of Eastern cities next summer anct . opportunity to turn on the phonograph in interest of that organization. The orchestra 1ISten t p· K . son a I app orchestra play a P1 Kapp has bee n favorably mentioned in College Humor rectg, When Frank Williams, Alpha-Gamma, di - also. Williams orchestra has just finished an enrnos~r of one of the Oklahoma University 's Bru P~pular dance orchestras, records for the gagement with the Daily Oklahoman and Okla hornnsw~~k Company this summer. The " Okla - homa City Times, Oklahoma City newspapers, the ans orchestra, which is known throughout in which it broadcast programs over WKY, the . rap1'dl y gammg . . a na - publishing company's station. tion state and w h'1c h IS · a1 rep The Pi Kapp personnel of this orchestra as net f utat10n, numbers among its person five ~i ~n.' two members of Pi Kappa Phi and shown in ·the picture, left to right, includes: Pledge Co leman Brock, Pledge La Vere John w· app pledges. h as s1gne · d a contract w1th . Bru Illiams . the son. Brother Williams, Pledge Horace Kent, nsw1ck C in Ch · ompany to record for that concern Pledge Mike Meadows, Pledge Vernon Stansell, Inset is Brother Pia Icago next June. According to present and Brother Everett Goins. son;s:.~he orche~tra will make records of the Williams. ~ ~se of P1 Kappa Phi" during its period of recordmg Banta's Greek Exchange for April contains a In. additio. n t o t h e d'IstmctJOn . . . corct o f b emg a re- good likeness of " George E. Sheetz, executive be Ing orchestra , the " Oklahomans" are mem - secretary of II K <1>, in his office at 4750 Sherirs of tb M . e us1c Corporation of America and dan Road , Chicago ."

°


THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI KAPPA PHI

70hy l<gep ehapter ~cords? By R. C. GRADY, E, 29 ITHIN a few months the Twenty -

fifth Anniversary " History and Di 6W rectory of Pi Kappa Phi" will be off the press and into the hands of our m embership-if a sufficient number of brothers will have signifi ed their intention of backing this much -needed project by subscription. Cards have already been placed into the hands of each Pi Kapp that could be reached. Have you returned yours with an affirmative answer? It is not the purpose of this article to elucidate on the merits of and the need for such a book. These have been amply outlined by the supreme historian , Leo H . Pou , in the last issue of THE STAR AND LAMP. But along with the present plans of the Supreme Council for this publication comes the query: why can not a hi~tory of each undergraduate chapter be included ? The answer to this question should be obvious to most of the members of our order. No chapter of our organization has adequately kept an account of its years to warrant it being in cluded in a general manual of Pi Kappa Phi. There may be one, maybe more, exceptionsbut these are few indeed . However, our supreme officers would undoubtedly welcome the opportunity to make such inclusions in future histories and directories if each chapter will take the initiative in deve loping its abundance of lore and fact into concise forms for such a purpose. Having served for two terms as historian of Epsilon chapter, and having communicated with the supreme historian and others on the advisability and tim eliness of attempting such an article, the writer will endeavor to offer any suggestions that may possibly be of aid to chapters and chapter historians, along the line of chapter histories and records. As to what Pi Kapp chapters are doing in this field is beyond the writer's knowledge . He shall present views and id eas gained solely from work which has been his in the chapter. How ever, this much can be said: some chapters keep

only the personal record cards, and these !1° altogether up to date as to addresses and actiVI ties of the alumni. Others make spasmodic cl forts at real chapter histories, and mainly b written accounts. Still others, is the opiniof bother no more about members' record care after filing them away following initiation. As an indication of what has been dont One chapter (Alpha-Iota) has kept a scrap boOi ever since the organization of the local whiC preceded the chartering. Another chapter (EP silon) has an up -to-date narrative -statistic; history, together with proper filing of membct ship cards and other records as given belo~l' Copies of letters to THE STAR AND LAMP; h' of its members in the World War with proJ11° tions, citiations, etc.; list of members furnish to national officers and committees of the frJ ternity ; a chronological list of initiates, giviP. date of initiation, death or expulsion, ho~1 town, when initiated and class number, ind1 eating graduation or not ; list of all chapter of ficers from establishment until present tiJ'Tl( list of members with current addresses-fc mailing purposes ; and, a mass of newspaP' clippings. snapshots, etc.-memorabilia-sill( Epsilon lacks a, scrap book for the keeping c such data . Even with these sources of inforJ11 1 tion , Epsilon chapter is far behind what cool be accomplished in this line. Other items saV for filing purposes include copies of each isS 11 of the chapter news -letter and of all artich written by and concerning members of Epsil 0 appearing in THE STAR AND LAMP. Brother Pou, supreme historian. submitt• these suggestions to the writer, to be made ~~~ of by the chapters: First, the keeping of pet sonal record cards up to date on all members. i~ eluding changes of addresses in after years ' well as record of college activities, and hon01 and recognition gained when "out in dJ world." Second, typed and bound chap 1' minutes in a durable and permanent binder. ~P chronologically arranged. Third, a scrap boO~ containing all clippings which appear in collcf

c c

F

V

t: tl

a, Y \1

r1 cl n

Y \1

t, h

c~

le cl d; ti, 1s a< IS

cu th st ti< co fa fa


THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI KAPPA PHI

an...: news . papers about the chapter, its members, All tbe above enumerated proposals may seem acttve and I . W'th a umm, and the fraternity, together to entail quite a bit of work to carry out. Sucb 1 t photographs of such members of the chap- is not denied . But now, wben our fraternity is er Who d 0 h t e unusual from time to time and still young and most of tbe cbarter members of Year Iy ph 0 t h s of the entire chapter. The eacb cbapter living, is tbe ideal time to under :se nc latter sugg ograp · B s' bi estton rother Pou believes to be pos - take sucb an overbauling and proper distribuactiVI 1 Y the best . . terest ' not only from standpotnt of tn- tion of tbe files , bringing tbem up to date. Tbe ,die ef 11Y b futu aroused but from standpoint of value in work may seem needless , in fact, boresome at re Years as an tn · d ex to the really human tbe present time of undertaking ; but, years from )inior side 0 f ~h~pter life. A history can only supply now , tbe results of sucb labors will be of inval care th e stattsttcal · , 'T . resume of facts as they happen. uable satisfaction, interest and wortb to eacb n. o the abo · . ve. suggest10ns the wnter would cbapter and to tbe fraternity as a unit. It is dortt add h t e foil · p· .ng to- only tbrougb tbe minute, detailed study and &etbe f OWtng: trst, the ga then ::> boOI 0 separate lists to include members ar- notation of tbe affairs of eacb chapter in our whi'· rang~ grap~· allphabetically, chronologically and geo- order that a full. life-like history of Pi Kappa : (EP 1 cam tea ly. Secondly, a compilation of all Phi can some day be obtained and handed down tistiC• of PUs honors held by members. Third, lists to posterity. ~ mbcr expelled d d . Chapters, and chapter historians, your attenFou h . ' ecease and marned members. )elo'\ rt ltst of · 1 f tion to this your duty is urged. Don't delay. . socta unctions of chapter and its p; Ji~ visito ' Don ' t wait until you have to elect some brother tions ~s. Ftft~, a "guest book" to include secroJ11C who, being disgusted at what has not been those the Signatures of visiting brothers and nish done, will attempt on his own to make such accou rom the "profane world." Sixth, an 1e frJ researchhis effort will probably be not as Year! nt of the scholastic standing of chapter givi~. worthwhile and as accurate at a later date as 1 Waul~· . Other suggestions, referred to above, bo~ your combined efforts today in your chapter 1 record tnc!ude the collecting of the World War ind will be. Lighten the burdens of future historichapt s of members , national officers furnished, :er ol er office A · ans; and preserve for the sake of your chapter's rs, etc. nd, most tmportant, a tiJ11l runnin grand past. a record of that past. Yea r t g account of the chapter's activities from :-f~ 'T 0 Year. May this meager effort have response on th ;paP' he latte ·1 · past of all interested and all should be interested r compt atton fell to the lot of the -sine Write such a work. May it stimulate others having in ng c t~rs t~ ;.,~n he was historian . As sources, letdifferent and better ideas to present them to the 3 orJ11 books f ~ STAR AND LAMP and past minute membership through the medium of THE STAR cept h urntshed all available information excaul AND LAMP. And may it inspire each chapter lette w a.t Was learned through interchange of sa''t rs Wtth 1 · which has not fulfilled its duty to itself and to a umnt. Each year's account inisstl eluded tbe fraternity to make a concerted effort to bring rticl< dates 7ames of men pledged and initiated, with its records in true and creditable form up to psilO tic addc ass and address, and the social. scholas0 campus endeavors of the chapter. date. nee such. a h'tstory has been worked up , it nitt• ts co add tmparattvely easy for future historians to le tt~ .ts w o the st ore o f d ata year by year. And tt . f per Marriage11 :s. i~ custoe that the historian be elected, through m,. to se rve consecutive · terms, although Clark E . Kirkendall. Alpha-Mu. to Miss ltS J this · IS , In S • • • • PUtt, a v10latton of the supreme con- Minna Smith , Westchester, Pa ., State Teachers' on or Stitut· tion ton and by -laws. Hence, no recommenda - School. at Philadelphia, Pa., January 3, 1928. 1 tP as to th' . ts ts made! But, above all. keep in At home at 632 West Wanut street Springfield , tapt• canst . ao· form alnt touch with the alumni through use of Mo., where Brother Kirkendall is connected bool fo rm ~tte rs and other notices when certain in - with the Southwest Building Supply Company atton may be needed. as sales engineer. 0 Jlcf

r

-·-t@f 7 j§l-·-


= THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI KAPPA PHI

cpi ~pps V¥Ceet at eolumbia By ~

JOHN

D.

CARROLL District Archon

MOST enjoyable meeting of South Caro-

YJI... lina Pi Kapps was held at the Jefferson hotel in Columbia on February 22. Its purpose was two-fold: first, to start the convention ball to rolling toward Charleston, and, second, to have a model initiation for the benefit of all the active chapters in the fourth district. There were in attendance about 100 men, practically evenly divided between undergraduates and alumni. Every active chapter in South Carolina was represented, and there was one undergraduate from Epsilon chapter, at Davidson. Alpha brought from Charleston eight out of her nine members, and thereby won the attendance prize, a wall placque of the coat of arms. Alpha had a peculiar interest in the meeting, however, since two of her pledges were initiated, along with two from Sigma. The initiating team was largely from Columbia, but was augmented by Theron A. Houser from St. Matthews and John Lanham and Paul Thomas of Spartanburg. The ceremonies were held in the ballroom of the Jefferson. It was the first time that many of the alumnj had witnessed an initiation since the revamping. and it was particularly impressive to them on that account as well as by reason of the splendid work and thorough acquaintance with the rituals on the part of the initiating team. The ceremonies were concluded about five o'clock in the afternoon, and the alumni and undergraduates all sought out Sigma's house to enjoy its hospitality In the evening a dinner was served in the ballroom of the Jefferson and a prepared program of speeches was presented. This part of the meeting was greatly enhanced by the presence of Simon Fogarty, one of the founders, who acted as toastmaster, and Harry Mixson, the other living founder, who made one of the principal speeches of the evening, as well as by the presence of Howard Leake, executive secretary, who had been sojourning in the South as a fitting way of celebrating the birth of a new daughter , and who was on the lookout for

places where celebrating was in vogue. Howar' made a very delightful address to the group. an' his visit furnished a splendid opportunity fc many of them to meet him for the first tifll' During the evening some of the Sigma men tri to make it appear that he was justly worthY~ suspicion by virtue of his recent residence 1 Chicago and insisted on having him searched 1 the dinner, and the search proved very interesl ing! During the afternoon two groups wcr formed for conference; one for the undergradU ares, who had Howard to answer their question and solve their problems, and another for t~ alumni , who were given the opportunity to c~ press their views and aspirations for the CharleS ton meeting. It developed that there were soJll very decided notions as to just what a conven, tion should be when it came for its twenty-fifti 1 anniversary to its birthplace and not on1 sought to celebrate that, but also to do honor r• its founders, to the city of its nativity, to rl} State that had chartered it, and to the thousand who are proud to wear its pin, just for what 1 means to them! These suggestions were al tabulated and transmitted to the Central Ofli' for digesting , and doubtless the most of then will find their way into the convention progran when finally shaped. All in all it was a very helpful as well ~ pleasant meeting, and the men who attended 1 left with the feeling that something definite ]la' been begun by Pi Kapps in South Carolina 1' properly equip themselves to play host to ther .{ brethren throughout the nation when Chr1 5 mas comes again. And while everything wJ not exactly settled, there was enough done make it extremely hazardous for any loyal Kapp to miss that Charleston party! . Credit for the success of the meeting got largely to Dawson Beattie, president of ColuJII bia alumni chapter, and general chairman the arrangements committee, and to those wll' composed the initiating team, and especiall~ 1' the Co-eds of the University of South Carohll: w:ho presented their ''Follies" during the eV• ntng .

...4!if 8 ~··-

f

°

( 01

b; rc

d· a

p 111

}J

I.

K

A p S

B G

a1 tl

t

~

1

'q

I!


~

~~ THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI KAPPA PHI -----------------------------------------------------------

~

1\(u CJ-eolds 1nitiation c;Banquet 0

war·

p. an· ty f tirtl' J

tri~

thY0 JCe I

hed J teres!

wcr ~radO ·stioO )r (~

to c~ JarJcS

Ciif

RID A Y night, March 15, was an his .nvco oc . toric night for Nu chapter. It wals the . . . . r- jj(t b casJon of our d own-town f orma I JflltJat!On on!• anquet. ro 1'he new University Club balcony dining JOf 1' :o til· ~111 Was the scene of the festivities. 1sat1d du enneth Pruden, Nu chapter archon, intrabat 1 a chted the initiates and after favoring us with s 0 t . re ~I Ford r mtroductory talk, introduced Roy B. offic• in Who acted as toastmaster. The follow tbeO }:.~ rothers composed the toast list : ,graO I - ~~ging . . .. ... ....... Carleton Hutchins . El men 1<.-nltlation · . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . w·mme 3 · omments H b H ell A.-ffir . . . . . . . . . . . . . er ert en d erson jed i p ~a.tJon . . . . ............ Judd Brenton e h3' S -a~t~cJpation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Eldon Kiffin -pint na 1' 1' · · · . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Charles Adams rhel Bt ~e newly initiated men were: Richard brisl Ga~~ ' Judd Brenton, Charles Davison, Lynn . vtJ and ~Way, Jack Luhn, Charles McReynolds, ~e r• Vor Samuelson. al P · ·· · th lhe . lUJtJat!On committee which put on De ntual of initiation were: Kenneth Pruden , gal ,luJ11 B~~ Arganbright, Carleton Hutchins, Ray .n o 1' ' Barry Humphrey, Paul Pettygrove, Ralph rester . Hedge. wh· I ' L eIand Blum, and Leshe ly r• )JiJ11 . qu n all t.here were fifty men present at the ban ev•' in·e~, Wh1ch number consisted of active men , ltJates, pledges and the following alumni: : soJll·

b

Roy B. Ford , Charles Collins, W. M . Elmen, " Ducky" Taylor, Ivan Hedge, Charles Adams, Carl Peterson, Knox Burnet t, Eldon Kiffin, Harold Zinnecker, Vic Schmidt, and Dick Lieurance . ~

Hannibal, the Great Carthaginian-The Fraternity Man's I deal By BILL BLALOCK Do you remember when Hannibal started across the Alps? Well. anyhow, he started across the Alps, and immediately found himself up against a stone wall. He couldn't go any further, and he couldn' t go back because the elephants got in his way.j So he just stood there and hollered : " Alp ! Alp !" An English man heard him and wrote it down . Have you heard that we have begun work on a new directory? WelL anyhow, we have. And being bold and brave like Hannibal. we haven'r yet started yelling for help. We may any d a~ now, but we haven't yet. Of course, we'd like to see your name in our n ew book, for there's no knowing just when we 'll want to drop into your town and board with you awhile, and all that. But if you won't give us any help without our asking for

-·..et 9 }Bt-·-


THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI KAPPA PHI

it, you can just keep on refusing to send in your directory information blank, and we'll put up at an hotel, if there's one in your town, or ride right on through. We've done our part. We've sent out questionnaire after questionnaire. We've written your cousins, your uncles, and your aunts, and even consulted the listerine ads. Now if you have murdered somebody, forged a check, or just escaped from jail and don't want anybody to know where you are, just drop us a line to that effect, and we'll quit bothering you. We just thought that we'd drop you this short line before finally giving up and putting your name in our book-it's going to be there anyway, whether you want it or not. We've got a nice little section already labeled "Lost, Strayed , or Stolen. " When our book comes out we hope you can come back to civilization long enough to borrow one and get that thrill and glow of prid e which ·comes from seeing your name in print.

The Detroit Alumni In their choise of vocations the D etroit Pi Kapps are so varied as to present a surprisingh' representative cross section of the economic Jjfe of the city itself. We are represented in th1 automobile, building, electrical and chemical ifl dustries, as well as in finance, insurance, defl tistry, law, medicine, teaching and a variety of sales work. Dr. Edwin C. Galsterer, Alpha Kappa. i! completing his first year as interne at Harper Hospital, and is planning to spend the next year in specialized study. Orson Bird, Alpha- Theta, ha1s been engaged in research in Biological Chemistry with Parke· Davis~ Co., one of the foremost pharmaceutical chemical establishments in the world. Adrian F. Blume, Psi, is a landscape engineer with the local office of the Lewis ~ Valentini company, who make a specialty of moving and transplanting large trees. Charles L. Lewis, Alpha-Kappa, is in thi sales promotion department of the Burkhardt Co., bookbinders and manufacturers of adver tis in g special ties and developers of the famoll 1 Burkhardt process for embossing leather fro111 dyes. Lucius C. Gould, Alpha-Kappa, has been aP' pointed manager of the recently established AnO Arbor branch office of Merrill, Lynch ~ Co·· brokers and financial underwriters. ~

Marriages William Frank Chapman, Roanoke College• '25, to Miss Wilma Cross, Salem, Va., Marcl1 16, 1929 . Lester R. Engleby, Xi, '2 6 , to Miss Elizabet11 Wills, Roanoke, Va., Randolph -Macon, March 23, 1929.

·z6.

James Maurice Williams, Stetson Univet' sity, '26, to Miss Eloise Gaillard , Summerli11 Institute, and Florida State College for Womefl• of Bartow, Fla ., February 2, 1929. CLIFFORD C. SIMPSON, N

who has made an enviable record as Secretary of the Chamber of Commerce at Danville, Ill.

Bill Elmes, Alpha-Mu, '27, to Miss Frances Brown, Geneva and Pitt, Barnes Falls, Pa., feb· 14, 1929.

-·-tfif 10 lBt-·-


THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI KAPPA PHI

[t

PUI_JSE OF THE FRATERNITY

pi

nglr :life

Alpha Entertains

thC

1 ill' den·

y of a, i!

upcr year aged

arke·

,tical ineer 1till1

and

th• 1ard1 iver· no us

'rol11

lege·

arch

By

JOI-IN

F. R EYNOLDS

h Alpha chapter entertained the fraternities at College of Charleston on Friday evening, arch l . with an informal smoker in the chapter ro R b . oms. efreshments were served and ndge Was played. Again on March 23, Alpha gave a delightful c~rd Party to help finance new furnishings for ~ e rooms. It was given for the active mem -;rs, the alumni, their lady friends and relatives. fiiie;'· . Reynolds , recently initiated , very ably h1s post as chairman of the event. B At a recent meeting our former archon, rather " Nick" Doscher, on account of the ap~roach of senior exams, resigned his office. r~ther Earle Halsall was elected in his place. h rather T. W . Reynolds was elected to fill ~ e office of secretary, which Brother Halsall orrnerJy held

~e

Alpha

boa~ts

ation of seven men . The new brothers are Bill Grimes, Ken White, Ben Hamlin, Bob Krost , Harry Freytag, Ken Lawrence, and Fred Fisher. At the end of our rushing season we had pledged nine new men, as follows: AI Reason er, Tut Howell. Red Taber, Barney Cahill. Christy Flanagan , Ray Lawrence, AI Gibbs , Pansy Richmond, and Jorge Ormachea . Gamma continues to gain prestige on the yard by engaging in campus activities. Duke Valianos is completing his second year on the varsity baseball team as regular shortstop, and counting the days until that team leaves for an extended tour of the Orient during the summer vacation. Scotty Macdonald is one of Duke' s teammates . Scotty is holding down second base with the first squad.

another new member and two

~ew pledges. Our new brother is John M. Jor P~~l1 . of Charleston. The pledges are Louis

A

ltps of Sumter, S . C., and Hudson Vunk of rnsterdam, N. Y.

E Alpha is proud to announce that Brother arJ Balsa I! won the Bingham oratorical contest at the College and received a handsome gold tneda! B IS ' su b Ject · . an d D emocwas "Ed ucatton racy " · . · Brother Halsall also quahfied to com~ete in the South Carolina Oratorical Associa10~ to be held in Rock Hill. S. C., on April 26. b II he chapter is going to give its annual spring fa on April 26. Brother " Nick " Doscher rorn the acttve . chapter and B rot h ers " H amp " M.· iXson and "Buster " Huguenin of the alumni ch apte h D r. are t e committee on the dance . i fi on t forget, brothers, things are working up n ne shape for that convention here this year. ~

Gamma Has Successful Year By ·0f

TED GRASSI

G~~rna

started the spring semester with a l~t splnt, the outstanding feature being the initi-··-~!if

11 }St--


THE STAR AND LA.MP oF Pr KAPPA PHI Bill Woodward is hard at work every afternoon with the famous California Crew. Benny Hamlin, our farthest away member, coming from Boston, was one of the stars on California's first ice hockey team. Ken White, better known as "the Haig," for his prowess on the links, has just finished a great season as a member of the frosh golf team. Shorty Raeder has been dividing his time between the swimming team and the water polo team and bas succeeded in adding two more minor sports awards to his already imposing collection. AI Croce was a recipient of one of the few gold medals awarded to the Pacific Coast Lightweight Basketball Champions. Gamma is also getting her share of initiates in to the numerous honor societies. Duke Valia nos was recently initiated into Phi Phi , national upperclass honor society. Duke is also a member of Wingde Helmet and Big "C" societies. Bill Woodward was initiated into Alpha Kappa Psi, national commerce honorary society. AI Croce and Shorty Raeder were initiated into Scabbard and Blade.

ers Archie and Bowers are members of the sen· ior class, ·while Brother Boyd is a junior and Brother Smith a member of '32. Epsilon bas at present seven men taking thC advanced course in R. 0. T. C., three of wbo!l' are seniors and the other four of whom ari juniors. Of the seniors: W. C. Archie is cap' tain of "B" Company and senior captain of thC battalion; R. M. Gant is captain of " C" coJ11' pany, and B. 0. Geer is captain of the R. 0. 1. C. band. All of these men were initiated into Scabbard and Blade, national military frater· nity, with the first eight of their class to be bid· Of the juniors: L. L. Boyd is first sergeaJit of "A" company and a recent initiate of Scab· bard and Blade, while R. D. Croom, Jr., W. VJ. Harrison, Jr., and D. C. Hunter are platoon sergeants. Epsilon will be represented at Camp McCJel· Jan, Anniston, Ala., this summer by Brothers Boyd, Croom, Harrison and Hunter, who are looking forward to meeting Pi Kapps fro111 other chapters while there.

~

Pi Kapps Active at Zeta

~

By J. A. MciNTYRE, JR.

Epsilon !-folds Initiation .BY R. C. GRADY On February 16 the following freshmen neo phytes were initiated into the order in the Pythian hall of Charlotte, N. C.; Frederick Steven Curdts, Greenville, S. C.; Edward Stephen Grady, Wilmington, N. C.; Allen Jordan Graham, Jr. , Greenville, S. C.; Richard Anderson Hall, Statesville, N. C.; Peter Seymour Knox, Thomson, Ga.; William Palhler Mills, Moores ville, N. C.; Francis McK'~y Southerland, Jr., Wilmington, N. C.; Hugh Walker Turrentine, Jr., Wilmington, N. C., · and Allen Hallett Whitehead, Wilmington, N . C. Following the above regular spring 'initiation the four following men were also brought through the mysteries on the night of April 17 : William Council! Archie. Salisbury, N. C.; Charles Tay loe Bowers, Washington, N. C.; Lawrence Lewis Boyd, C.h arlotte, N. C.; and Edward Russell Smith, Thomason, Ga. Broth-

-··..a{ 12

After auditing the rolls of the college book5 one finds that the brothers at Zeta chapter arc entering into all the athletic, scholastic, scieJl' tific, and journalistic activities. At the beginning of the second term the officers of Zeta chapter were elected as follows: J. R . Owings, archon; D. F. Patterson, secre· tary; Bernard A. Foster, Jr., treasurer; R . J(. Johnson , chaplain; R. C. King, warden; M. A· Owings, historian and assistant treasurer. In the field of science Brother M. S. Hudso~ is the outstanding student at Wofford CalleS~· being president of Chi Beta Phi. national sci' entific fraternity, and assistant instructor i~ chemistry laboratory. He is planning to dO research work in chemistry after leaving Wof· ford. In the International Relations Club, scbol· astic organization , are two Pi Kapps, Bernard A. Foster, Jr .. and M . A. Owings. Brother Owings is a member of Deutscher Verein, Ger·

liJ..·-


THE STAR AND LAMP OF Pr KAPPA PHI sen·

and

ca,P' : thC ·oJll·

'.1· into ater· bidean! cab·

VJ. too~

: lei· :hers , are 'roJll

man club • an d Is . h Istonan ' . of the sophomore represented by R . C. King , Leland Jackson, T. 1 ~rass. . Both .Foster and Owings spoke in the L. King , J . A . Mcintyre, J . C. Rogers , Jr. , and atoncal contest here on April 15 . S. G. Rivers. John Speake has made a fine recst On the Wofford gle~ club, which won the ord in tennis. ate . championship and made a tour of the Three brothers have left college since Septemstate In M h Z arc . was Brother T. T. Taylor. ber : H. P. Oats, of Hartsville, S. C.; A. M. of h eta ch~pter is well represented in the list McNeill, of Union, S. C. , and J . E. Hood , of . onors 1ll the literary societies. The follow- Hickory Grove, S. C. tng are so f h . At the :final commencement exercises on June ers J me. o t e maJor honors: J. C. RogT?· ' r., president of the Calhoun society · R. C. 3 nine brothers of Zeta chapter will receive their 1\.In · . · ' T? g, VIce-president of the Carlisle society; R. diplomas. They are W. M . Allen, W. R . 1 '- · Johnso · · . n, VIce-president of the Calhoun so- Drake, Jr., M . S. Hudson, R. K. Johnson, R. Ciety· J R . p ' · · Owtngs, :first critic of the Alpha C. King, J . R. Owings, D. F. Patterson, S. G. reston s · ·of th octety; and D . F. Patterson , president Rivers , and J. C. Rogers, Jr. e Beta Preston society. ~ te iwo of our brothers are on the debating ams this D sit year. . F. Patterson is on the var To Start Kappa Home fteam and David H. Derrick is a member of The winter trimester began with some very in th reshman team. Derrick will also compete definite plans put forward for Kappa's new e freshman declamation contest in May. 0 home. Having purchased a lot, the chapter ~ baseball squad this spring we were at once began to cast around to find a suitable

th:

:>okS . arc :ien·

f1

~

\'

of,ws: ~ ere ·

J{ . . A·

,II

!so~

:egc.

r

SCI '

b

i~

dO rof·

1 ol·

tard ther

il ~ l

t ....

11>

H " '

~

I ,. <1\

~ttl>r.t'J '·

:Jer·

H 1\.\.

kAI'PA •

+' .. ,

ll ""'

-·-tlif 13 }at-\


THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI KAPPA PHI

company with whom to let the contract for construction. As soon as the minor details and specifications are settled the actual construction will begin . The chapter confidently expects to occupy the new house at the beginning of school next fall. The cost of the house will be approximately $45,000, and it will be located at the intersection of Pittsboro street and the new No. 10 highway. We have recently had as our guest, Howard Leake, the executive secretary of the fraternity. who, although his visit was cut short, was a great help to the chapter. It was he who was large ly instrumental in organizing an alumni chapter in Greensboro , N . C., a strong Pi Kappa Phi town. The new alumni chapter will be installed in the near future. In chapter scholarship, the law school brothers have aided exceptionally. Five men made the much -coveted honor roll , quite a signal dis tinction. The intellectuals are: J . B . Fordham, Walter Hoyle , Moore Bryson , H. T. Powell, and Wadde ll Gholson. Brother Fordham stood highest among the male students. In the active chapter, Brother Charles Banner wi ll receive his Phi Beta Kappa key this month. Brothers George Newman and C. E. Pleasants were received into membership in Alpha Kappa Psi , honorary commerce fraternity . ~

Lambda's Activities of '2 9 By W. H.

LUNDY

E leven pledges have recently been initiated at Lambda. The new brothers are James Hill , Rome, Ga.; Curtis Harper, Jesup, Ga.; Wyck liffe Knox, Thomson , Ga. ; Hoyt Wells, Watkinsville, Ga.; Howell Lott, Monroe, Ga.; Wal ton Stewart, Americus, Ga .; John Hanger, Fitzgera ld , Ga .; Herbert Moffett, Atlanta, Ga .; Earl Colvin, Jesup, Ga ., and Morton Sanders. Los Angeles, Calif. Lambda chapter has contributed its share to University of Georgia's ath letics this year. Brother "Chick" Shiner was in charge of the varsity ends , while Brother " Gene" Smith coached the championship freshmen. Brothers Maffett and Bryant made their letters at end and tack le, respectively, while pledges Patterson and

-·..af

Stanioff made their numerals on the freshman team . Pledge Patterson also made a numeral on the boxing team. Much is expected of these two next fall. With baseball season now under way, we have Brother McGaughey as a strong contender for the shortstop position, while Bro· ther Peeler is trying for an outfield berth . Bro· ther Wells is out for the freshman team. Brother Maffett is out for the track tearn· while Brothers Hill and Sander are trying for the freshman track squad. Lambda chapter gave its " Spring Formal" at the Athens Country club on March 22. ManY of the brothers from over the state were present· Dinner was served at the chapter house befor< the dance. In campus activities Brother Davis is prorni nen t, being cheer leader and a member of th( Blackfriars Dramatic club. Brother Armstrong is also a member of the Blackfriars DramatiC club , Alpha Kappa Psi, commercial fraternitY· secretary of the D emosthenian Literary SocietY a n officer in the University Y. M. C. A., and 3 member of the Monkey drill squad. Brother Mitchell, who came to us from Iota chapter· is third associate editor of the Red and Blac~ and also a member of Sigma Delta Chi, jour nalistic fraternity. Seven brothers were recentlY initiated into the Senate club , which is the our· standing social club at the University. Brothers Preston and Harper are on the Gie• club this year. Brother Preston is leader of th' club , and is also president of the junior la 11' class. "Little Commencement," which is probabh the biggest social event of the year, was held Apri l 25-27. ~

M u Chapter Initiates Nine By F. L. KRUPP The most important news from Mu chapter is the initiation of nine neophytes wh ich oc· curred February 23. Many of our alumni re· turned Saturday to witness the initiation. 0~ the following night Mu chapter gave its annua . ~ banquet to Its new members and pledges. Tl1 1 was an assured success, with Brother Kenner~ Brim, district archon, returning and acting a~

14 )5.-


THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI KAPPA PHI

toastmast B h er. rothers Sam and Dick Bundy 1ped ente t · e · amustng · · te . r am us Wtth as well as m restmg talks.

a!11·

for ·• at .ani :ent·

fore )rni· thf

·ong Jaric 1 itY· ietY·

nd '

,the!

oter· :Jack 0 ur·

ntiY

our

Beginning in the early fall with the opening cry of the gridiron competition, two Nu brothers responded to Coach Bearg's call and as the Tho · · · ton, N se t~ttla~e~ were: F. C. Allan, Warren - season progressed showed their ability with outRichard ;· · Wd!tam Bundy, Charlotte, N. C.; standing success. Snow D ordan, Newport News , Va.; Brewster Merle Zuver played his third and last year ders ' . urham, N. C.; Frank Rozzelle, Hen for Nebraska at both guard and center. He gets S. ;~v~Ile, N. C.; ~en Miller. Hickory Grove , · · dward Atkinson Louisville Ky · Eu- his degree this semester and will coach a high ge ne B · · ·· W ughes, Hampton , Va.; Percy Young. school and play professional football in, and alkertown N C around Akron, Ohio, next year. M ... Clair Sloan played his second year of varsity Pled ~ chapter also wishes to announce the and ~ng of Wallace Simpson, Charlotte, N. C.. football and established himself as one of the highest ranking backs in the country. He was D r~nk Parker, Fort Pierce, Fla. . . selected on several "All -American" squads and Uted Unng the Wtnter sports season M u contnbteams mu~~ .to.. the success of Duke University landed a position on "Rockne-Warner-Jones" the · . Ztp Brawley was high scorer on second team, which in itself is a marked dis SWt ' Folk mmtng team for the season. Brother tinction, along with All-Western team and that Was a great help to the basketball team every Big-Six team selected. But his activities Co fWent through to the finals in the Southern aren't confined to the gridiron, for he has landed Bro~~rence bask~tball tournament in Atlanta. a berth on Nebraska 's baseball team as a hurler. Looking to the future, Nu chapter has three ho Ralph Pttts was Duke University's one du ~e tn the 440-yard dash on the indoor track frosh numeral men in Brenton, Strayer and Bly. nng the winter. They all showed marked ability last fall in For th · Utin e spnng sports, the chapter is contrib- freshman football and are working out regu. fi n d s B rother Folk as larly in Spring football under Nebraska's new one g feven m ore. T enms tennio ;he best men eligible. In addition to coach, Dana X. Bible. Judd Brenton is a red hurd!s. olk. stars at track where he is a high headed backfield man who is working hard this · and bas- spring and so far has seen action in all the ketba!Ier · Bts a.bT t tty at trac k . tenms. finds make htm an all-round athlete. Track practice games besides getting lots of the coach's Pitts D u ~h~pter represented with Brothers attention. Krup' omtntck, Folk. Brawley, Jones. and Elmer Strayer was a high school record holder p. in track and is a real all-round athlete. He has to ~he Glee club has just returned from a trip managed to divide his practice between both Southe:" York City, where it represented the football and track this year, having made a very test. ~n the Nat!onal ~ollegiate Glee Club con- creditable showing as an end and also placed M: rother Ktrkpatnck made the trip. well up in the quarter and half mile on the one uf c?apter is sorry to announce the death of cinders. Durho tts charter members, B. 0. Rigsbee of Wayne Bly is another man who is showing rece ~m. N. C. His passing, occurring only ability in two sports. Besides proving his abilnt y, Was a shock to his many friends. · ity on the gridiron as a halfback he is a mighty good broad -jumper. ~ Seldon Davey. a sophomore, was Nu's contribution to the Nebraska basketball team and N u Strong Athletically saw service in several games. However, Seldon N th e cIose of the school year approach- didn't stop at basketball but is making a seriingWith Pro u chapter presents a review of its athletic ous bid for honors on the baseball squad. sentWe~ during the year-a review which preIn baseball we have several brothers earnestma .s t e accomplishments of Pi Kapps in every ly attempting to show their ability. They are Jor and severa I mtnor . sports at Nebraska. Brothers Sloan , Davey, Carpenter, and Hutch -

:r

M

-··-~@{

15

~·-


THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI KAPPA PHI

Nu Athletes

TOP- T...c/1 to R ight :

C LAI R SLOAN,

BOTTO M-·Lcft t o Rinll t:

WAY NE IlLY , } uo u~ CA R PENTE R, i nfie ld .

lt alfback and pitcher;

?\ f E RL E 1

Z uv ER,

g uar d , center ;

ins, as we ll as Davison , who is a frosh candidate. Ray Hall. who returned to Nebraska this year. was elected baseball manager. He was junior manager in 19 25, when baseball was discontinued, and although slated for senior manager then was forced to forego the honor until 1929. • But you haven't heard the half of it yet for we have a world's champion in our midst. He is Don Arganb right. As a hurdler he is mighty good. A lways a strong contender as a hu.rdler in individual competition he more than held up his end when Nebraska set up the record in the " Shuttle Relay" event at the Illinois relays. Future track prospects are Brother Strickland and Pledges Strayer and Bly. Brother Strickland is a second semester freshman and thus not eligible for varsity competi-

-·..of

D oN

BR ENTON ,

AR GANU RI G il T,

EL MER

/11trdlcr;

S TRAY ER,

R AY

H ALL ,

nu m eral m en,· M A HI.O~ basrba/l nw11agr r .

tion. He won the Missouri V a Jley Conference half-mile last year and has been winning Nurtl ' era! meets with regularity. Therefore with an All -American footba ll player, a world's champion track man and seV' era l other men of proven ability, Nu chapter is athletically very well represented. ~

Xi's Having Big Year By BILLY WILLIAMS Xi is closing up what is probably the most prosperous year of leadership it has ever enjoyed on the Roanoke College campus. The pledging season was moved up frortl January to November 20 and Xi pledged seventeen. They are: Robert Lee Abbott, Francis Trimmer, John Lee Harne, Jr., Eppa Claude Pace, Jr., Herman LeGrand, Marvin Lemond,

16 lit-·-


---

THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI KAPPA PHI Neil G'lb 1 ert, Calvin Grady Cates, Jr., all of R

L oa~oke, Va.; Wesley Chapman and Seibert avmder, of Salem, Va.; Claire Boring, Ports~outh, 0.; William Eversole, Coeburn, Va.; J arleton Ball, Paterson , N. J. ; Robert Hyatt, Ron esv 1·u e, Va.; Norman Potts, Staunton , Va.; obert McPherson, Clifton Forge, Va. . Of thirteen winners of varsity monograms ~ football six were Pi Kapps: Fix, Williams, Ut~erford, Bell, Goode, and Ramsey. Soc out of the eight basketball lettermen ~:~~e Pi Kapps: Williams, Rutherford, Goode, . · Ramsey, and Fowler. Fowler also won h IS lett . er 1n the capacity of manager. In summing up Xi's achievements it is ~orthy of mention that Pies Ramsey in winnln h' g IS basketball letter became the only four Ietter m · R · H e was ca t 1· an 1n oanoke College h1story. P a n of track , football halfback, basketball guard and baseball first base artist on Roanoke's tea · rns In the past year. ~

Plan Budget at Alpha-Xi Alpha-Xi chapter has been concerned in the few months with internal improvements. e officers and heads of activities have been · h eads together and d evlSlng .. PUtting th e1r ways and mea f . . . ffi . ns o mcreasmg the operatmg e c1ency o f the act.1ve ch apter. 0 h ne of the outgrowths of these consultations w~~1 been the skeleton of a budget system which ~supersede the present financial methods. . II this heavy business has not crowded out soc1a] a · · th ct1v1ty as several house dances testify. At f e Present plans are being laid for the spring orrnaJ Which is to be held at one of the large, ~e:V Brooklyn hotels. This year's formal is we~:g n~anage~ by th~ Pi Kapp~ P~i Bridge club h IS an mterestmg orgamzat10n. Several Y . d a I umm. g ears ag o some of the young, marne oft together and formed this club with the idea 0 co . . 1'h ntmumg the fellowship of college days. rn e club has grown tremendously and now eets .every month at which meetings both al urn t' n1 and actives are present. When the queston · th of t h e spnng formal came up, the c1u b d ought that it would be a fine thing to run the ance and give the actives a rest. At any rate

~tt1

:nee It11 '

10st

yed

the actives will enjoy a dance which they didn't have to plan and oversee. Another house dance and a full attendance at the interfraternity dance will close the social season for this year. ~

Two Managers at Alabama By

EDWARD MUNDINE

Omicron boasts of an unusual accomplishment this year, in having both the manager of the football and baseball teams. Brother Jack McGuire proved exceptionally capable in managing the Alabama Crimson Tide through a very successful season. Manager "Red" Ram sey of the baseball aggregation, has just started in his position. As a senior lawyer Brother Ramsey is able to look back on an enviable scholastic record. Again Omicron boasts. In university politics two of our men , Bob Mundine and Jack McGuire (the same Jack) are making strong bids for editor of the college annual and busi ness manager of the Crimson- White ( university newspaper), respectively. The freshmen are very active in athletics this year. "Monk" De Bardelaben has a regular berth on the freshman pitching staff. while Harry Carroll is giving several men plenty of competition for the shortstop position . The men graduating this year are ( besides Robert Ramsey) Sylvanus Hamilton, Jr .. the last of the Jasper crew, who graduates from the commerce school with high honors. Then there's William Monroe, Jr. The last of our list of graduates is James Wimberley Cook Miree, who hails from Birmingham . He graduates from the A.B. school and has chosen real estate as his profession. At present the house is being painted, and several improvements are being made on our grounds. ~

Eight Initiates at Tau By F. LEON JOYNER In spite of the loss of nine men , Tau chapter is nearing the close of a very successful year with the remaining brothers carrying on the affairs of the chapter very well. Those who left are: Brothers W. M. Hackett, G. M. Harrell, J. T.

-··..af 17 }5t-··-


THE STAR AND LAMP OF Pr KAPPA PHI

Stephenson, H. S. Wimbish , Jr. , J. W. Fields, D . S. Cox, Jr., R . B. Morrow, and Pledges H. H. Strickland and I. J. Gillette. Brother Mor row was married to Miss Catherine Cosgrove, of Raleigh, on February 16th, and is now living with his bride on their poultry farm about ten miles from Raleigh. The interior of the house was made much more attractive this spring by the add ition of some new furniture, a new drugget, and a few other furnishings . Just before Easter, eight men were initiated: J. W. Halstead, Jr. , of Norfolk, Va.; A. W. Welborne, Statesville, N. C.; R. E. Noblin, Clinton, N. C.; W. C. Bangs, Hendersonville, N . C.; C. F. Harris, Pantego, N. C.; H. Harris, Louisburg, N . C.; J. B. Midyette, Aurora, N . C., and H. E. Moore, Clinton, N. C. Of these, Brothers Halstead and Bangs made the honor roll in scholastic standing this year. Brothers Midyette and Moore, and also Pledge Foust are out for freshman baseball. Tau was host at a delightful house party the three days following Easter and on the Tuesday following gave the second tea dance the chapter has had this year. ~

George Bodwell. Chicago, Ill. ; Joseph Ondrus. Berwyn, Ill. ; and Stanley Perkins, Chicago, IlL Brother McEuen made his numerals in foot· ball and he is now working hard to gain a set in track. Brother Schroeder is on the swimming tear11 again this year. He has proven his ability b) consistently winning the 200-yard breast stroke· He was on the conference championship water polo team last year and he hopes to obtairl another gold water polo ball this year. J\t Chicago this year he took third place in the Big Ten meet. . Brother Bracken is president of Kappa Ph~ Sigma, literary society, and also of Alpha Ph 1 Epsilon . Paul Leppla has just been pledged to Phi EtJ Sigma. Brother H. A. Fife has returned to the old grind after spending four years in California. Brother E. J. Furness is also back among us this semester. At a recent meeting the following officers for the second semester were elected: W. E. Hasel· wood, archon; H. E. Bridge, treasurer; L. rJ. Thaisen, secretary; T. A. Rathje, historian ; s. G. Weinberg, chaplain, and G. L. Bodwell· warden.

News From Upsilon

~

By WILLIAM N. KNUDSEN

New Officers at Chi

Upsilon started its rushing this semester with great spirit and now twelve men wear the gold and white diamond. They are: Kenneth Endsley, Armstrong, Ill.; Harold Wilson, Danville, Ill. ; Samuel Haight, Mendota, Ill. ; Earl Feicht, Bloomington, Ill. ; Walter McWade, Dorman , Pa.; Clarence Frazer, Chicago, Ill. ; Earl Schaefer , Wausau, Wis.; Wilber Tammeus, Delavon, Ill. ; E. K. Campbell. Kansas City, Mo.; H. C. Lawsen, Chicago, Ill. ; R. W. Pirtle, East St. Louis, Ill., and Paul Leppla, Rock Island, Ill. Last Founders' Day, E. C. Jones, a grad student from Morganton, W. Va., and William N. Knudsen were initiated into the brotherhood of Pi Kappa Phi. During the interim between semesters five neophytes exchanged their gold and white pins for pins bearing the Star and Lamp. They are: Clayton W. Wells, Harvard. Ill. ; Charles McEuen, Riverside, Calif.; ·-··~

By JoE HINES On March 8, Chi chapter elected new officers as follows: Brother Mikell, archon; Brother Mathas, secretary; Brother Mac Kibben, treas· urer ; Brother Hines, historian; Brother Heo· drix, chaplain, and Brother Welshinger, war· den. March 15 was the time set for the Pi KapP~ Phi spring balL held at the Peninsula club, DaY' tona Beach. The entertainment was furnished by the Florida Rhythm Monarchs. The ball was beautifully decorated, a large crowd attend· ed, and the dance was the outstanding event of the year on the Stetson campus. We enjo'yed the visits of Brothers Lawson of Alpha Epsilon and Reeves of Rho. This year completes the college and fraternitl' life for several of our brothers. Those leaviog

18 }ilt-·-

c

I

'a l

r

a t \


THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI KAPPA PHI

lrus.

Ill. 0 ot·

set

1

us are· B E . · err usttce , Larry Bernard Joe Jen . ntngs Ch t F ' W '. e reeman, Lloyd Layton, and Carl elshtnger.

p· l

~

Kapps Prominent at Cornell By

ROBERT

J . HARPER

ti When the smoke of the battle of examinaons had cl d . stand· eare away, Ps1 chapter was found grad In~ firmly, although wounded through the anor~atlon of three men and the transfer of rece· edr. Brothers Clade!, Taylor and Hoke . F ebruary. Mer!IVe . deg rees m Brother Hal lif .e shifted the scene of his activity in selling e tnsuran Paig I ce to SO 7 East Green Street, Cham-

a. g us

icers the! eas· {en · v-ar·

1

1'he de t' abJ . s tny of the chapter is now under the 8 e guidance of the following men: Carl randt J h Ure . r. , arc on; David Dusinberre, treas rettr' lchard Stein berg. secretary; John BarRob' Warden: Edward Babcock, chaplain, and . has ert Bar per, h'1stonan. Also, Brother Knapp assumed th d . stew d . e ut1es o f house manager and l'~r Wtth Brother White as his assistant. term ~ chapter held its regular lntttatwn last fill ' Ut at present has five pledges who will 1 1'he~ 1e places left by those who graduated. J e pledges are: Charles A. T. Johnson, amestown. R I h . aid R ' ~ 'P F. Bnmmer, Albany; Ger Miscaii Crownmgshield, Ticonderoga; Darwin Brook!' Albany, and Edward J . Calhoun, the dJ.n: The chapter is also strengthened by and ~I ltlon of Brother Bill Wood of Gamma p . pha-Delta chapters. Sl chapt . h . . est · er IS s owmg more and more mterln the · · · in a . act1v1t1es of Cornell and is represented At the junior srnok Wide number of fields. l<.ap er, two football letters were awarded to Pi is al~s-Br.others Scott and Steinberg. Scotty 0 cal!y rowing in the varsity boat and is practiDon assured of number five position. Jim has ovl an Was awarded his insignia in soccer and Pay d · 'Whe he tn many of the basketball games. and t e basketball team went to New Haven Pi K ew York to play Yale and Columbia , two Don apps made the trip-Brothers Brandt and ovan award d ·. B rot h er Brandt, our archon, was ter the his letter in basketball, giving Psi chapWork' ree letter men. Brother Brandt 1s now lng to make the basebalheam .

R.·

N

of

~

Omega Initiates Twelve Men

II.

n,

old

Brothers Creagh and Pitkin are working for the managerial positions on the lacrosse team and Brother Babcock is out to make the team. Smith Tompkins is still lending a helping voice to the glee club and Bob Harper is still participating in dramatics. Among the freshmen, Bob George was awarded his numerals in soccer and Brothers Walker and Goff are out for lacrosse. Pledge Crowningshield has entered the competition for the Cornell Daily Sun.

By 0. L.

MILLER

On April 14, Omega conducted its regular spring initiation for twelve new brothers. They are: C. B. Bruse, Wilmette, Ill. ; H. A. Lungberg, Chicago; F. E. Penny, Oswego, N . Y.; R . A. Reed, Columbia City, Ind .; R. B. McN ea r, Columbia City, Ind.; L. C. Dermond, Anderson, Ind.; Geo. Fortune, Cleveland, 0. : G. L. Nord, La Porte, Ind .; F . W. Edwards, Nashville, Tenn.; J. H. Robinson , Wabash, Ind., and R . E. Bainbridge, Cleveland, Ohio. In finishing the winter campus activities and now entering the spring activities, Omega has been proud of its record . We p layed in the fourth round of the inter-fraternity bridge tournament before being eliminated and entered the basketball and baseball tournaments. We are now competing for the scholarship trophy cup offered on the campus to all the fraternities. We now have five freshmen before the fall rushing starts next semester. They are: S. Rus sell , Indianapolis, Ind.; V. H. Hiatt, Marion, Ind.; K. C. Chriswell, Peru, Ind.; R. D. Frisinger, Decatur, Ill .. and F. C. Mirgain, Howe, Ind . On February 16 we held the regular semester formal and welcomed many alumni and brothers from other chapters. We also had open house to all the fraternities and sororities on March 24, and it was well attended. Our new chapter house is now entirely completed . It was recently inspected by the dis frict archon, J. W. Robinson, who praised its arrangement.

-··..sf 19 }!Ji-·-


=

THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI KAPPA PHI

Chapter Groups

TOP-Xr CHAPTER AT ROANOKE COLLEGE BOTTOM-ALPHA-BETA CHAPTER AT TULANE UNIVERSITY

-


THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI KAPPA PHI

Chapter Groups

tOP-PI CHAPTER AT OGLETHORPE UNIVERSlTY WITH ITS SPONSOR. MISS CAROL THOMPSON . BOTTOM-EPSILON CHAPTER AT DAVIDSON COLLEGE.

-..46{ 2 1 }St-路-


THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI KAPPA PHI

Cannon Mercer Captain By

WILLIAM

N. ETHRIDGE

Darby Cannon has been elected captain of the 1929 Mercer baseball team. He is a senior and is playing his third year as varsity shortstop. Cannon is also archon of Alpha-Alpha. The annual spring dances, sponsored by the Pan -Hellenic council. were held on the weekend of March 28th, and were a huge success. Many alumni of Alpha-Alpha and many out of town guests were present.

DARBY CANNON

In the recent interfraternity basketball tournament Pi Kappa Phi was defeated by Kappa Sigma by one point when that team shot a field goal in the last half minute of play to win 25 to 24. Initiation ceremonies were held April 10. J. E. Rudisell of Canton, W. E. Storey of w ·a verly Hall. and J. H. Wilson of Pinehurst, were received.

Darby Cannon and Howard Leonard wer• elected to membership in the Round Table senior honor society. R. U. Harden of Whigwam · was recent!( pledged. He is a member of the first year IalI' class and led his class in scholarship for r!J• winter term. ~

Mardi Gras Through Easter at Alpha-Beta By

HUGH SHANE

In recalling the happenings of Alpha-Betl in the last few months, Mardi Gras, though now distant, comes first in our minds. Tl1 31 day Pi Kapps had a better truck -ride than ever· with gay costumes and gay girls, the dan'' afterwards at the house, and a good time bl all. We still remember the winter formals, aod even the breaking of Lent by several good par· ties. A tea was given March 24th. Our netl dance is scheduled for April 6th, and an io· formal affair at the house. Outside of rnor• frequent teas, we give dances about every otl111 month. Brother Wimberly and his orchestrJ have furnished extraordinarily good music. Easter everybody lost a lot of sleep, clotheS etc., over at our house party at Bay St. Louis There were dances, auto rides, boating, fishing swimming, etc., all accompanied by dating Tulane and Newcomb usually move over to till Coast for the Easter holidays. We were forro· nate to get the house we did, and thanks for obtaining so excellent a domicile are due t( Brother Walsdorf, a very loyal alumnus. Our scholastic record for the previous year was seventh place of nineteen nationals. 'V/I were glad to see the Sewell Brothers of Omicro~ play in New Orleans when Cleveland invadc 1 the town. Brother Jones maintained his usU 3 good reputation in basketball. Brothers Bird well, Harding, and Thompson loom up wei in baseball. Birdwell having been on the varsit' twice before. Brother Boots Thompson JJa' recently been initiated into Phi Phi. Of oor nine medical students, eight are Phi Chi's al1° 11 one IS a Nu Sigma Nu. Birdwell and Jofl

-··-t!ii 22 }ill-·-


THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI KAPPA PHI

wer• 'abli enth · Ia'' r!J•

·have bee n eIecte d to Pathogen an honorary lnter-f · · ' raternlty medical society. Pled B'J1 cent! ?e. I Howard of New Orleans was regrad y 1.nttiated . We lose only three men by . uatlon this year: Harding, Elick and McCa tn. · 1'he new and S . regtstrar at Tulane, College of Arts cte · fr nces, IS B rother T. S. Hasty, a Pi Kapp om Mercer.

Br:-~ Wer~ all glad to hear of the marriage of \Vi ~r BI!~ Thompson, '27, to Miss Hazel no: e d.unng the Christmas holidays. They 1' IVe In St. Louis. ch he recent election of officers showed little ange· H . Wood · ardmg, Thompson, Jones, and trea s we re ree"I ected to the offices of archon, We~~rer, house -manager, and chaplain, while respe .a nd Shane became warden and historian , Ctively.

f.

-BcP

ough ThJ·

ever Jan'' e bl and

par· net1 1 j(l

rnot• Jthrr

estt3

1

~

0. U. Pi Kapps Active By

FRANK EWING

Alpha-G . amma has been outstanding among Greek cam orders on the University of Oklahoma PUs d · unng the past semester. 0 Ur first annual Pirate costume ball, given

February 16, was pronounced a success. The pirate theme was carried out on a distinct plan. A miniature pirate junk ship in dragon design accommodated the orchestra , while a pirate bar at one end of the ballroom together with chattering parrots, Captain Kidd chests, crossed swords, skeletons and skull and cross bone ban ners. lent color to the affair. New initiates for the :first semester are: AI Aldrich, Pond Creek; Glenn Dunnington , Cherokee; Frank Ewing, Higgins, Tex. ; Russel Fagin, Altus; Jess Faulkner, Alva; Charles Fentress, Tipton; Everett Goins, Rocky Ford , Co lo., and Ralph Johnston, Granfield . Seven new men are wearing the white dia mond and scroll as a result of mid -yea r rush . New pledges include Walter Scott, Idabel; Vernon Stansell, Tipton; Lysle VanArsdale, Tulsa; Bill Willingham , Tecumseh ; Fred Marsh, Oklahoma City; Hansford Landes, Granfield ; and La Vere Johnson , Oklahoma City. Plans for Alpha-Gamma's new house are rapidly crysta lizing and present prospects indi cate that our new home will be under construction by September. Pi Kapps at Oklahoma continue to garner many of the responsible positions on the Okla-

MEMBERS AND PLEDGES OF ALPHA-GAMMA

-4ij{ 23 ~-


THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI KAPPA PHI homa Daily, student newspaper . Dick Pearce is campus editor ; Frank Ewing, news editor; Clarence Frost, sports editor, and Paul Partridge, chief editorial writer. Claude Burton is university reporter for the Norman Transcript, local daily. Elbert Cook was elected representative of the school of law to the student council. student governing body. One of the highlights of chapter honors came when Ross Hume was elected to Phi Beta Kappa. National honoray and professional fraternities have taken their share of Pi Kappa Phi's during the semester. Phi Delta Phi, honorary legal fraternity, pledged Brother Cook and Brother Hume; Phi Alpha Delta, honorary law fraternity, pledged Walter Scott; Sigma Delta Chi, honorary professional journalistic fraternity, pledged Brothers Pearce, Eurton, Partridge and Ewing; Phi Mu Alpha, honorary musical fraternity, pledged Brother Harold Barrett; Alpha Chi Sigma , professional chemical fraternity, recently initiated Pledge Van Arsdale. Bill Willingham, pledge, was initiated recently into Bombardiers, local honorary military orga niza tion.

H.

Hovr Es

R.

SQUIRES

Brothers Cook and Bus Wall are members c the university baseball nine, Cook being stl tioned at second and Wall at right field . ~

Alpha-Delta Initiates Alpha-Delta takes pleasure in announcing tilinitiation, April 14. of the following men Harmon Shay, Kermit Wright, Virgil Cunning ham , Walter Crim, Dean Arbagast, Elton Rulll berg. Alpha-Delta's building fund insurance plaf has progressed admirably, and plans are alread 1 being formulated for the early realization of rl> new house. Alpha-Delta maintained its high scholas!l• average during the last quarter, and althougi the final grades are not yet available, almost on• hundred and fifty hours " A" were secured bl members of the chapter, several men receivio~ ten or more out of their fifteen hours of workBrother Walt Jones, our district archon made his formal report and investigation of dJ• chapter recently, and commented favorably on the activity of its members.

M. PENNELL (Left) T. HARTLEY (Right)

G.

DODD S

i\Iay nard P ennell, member of University of Washington cre w, anrl Talhot Hartley, 440-yard a nd relay runner. Gordon Dodd•· who is Pacific Coast champion in the half-mil e with a record of 1 : 56. Roy Squires, who won letter on Washington football varsiO· H a rold H ovics, star underclass football and basketball player.


THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI KAPPA PHI ers o· sta

Parsons Makes Cuban Tour

is captain of the team and is regular keystone sacker. Blackie is holding down the hot corBy DANIEL A. KELLY, JR. ner and Dan Kelly is a member of the hurling fol?n .February 9, Alpha-Epsilon initiated the staff. Br OWtng men: John Davitt, Miami Beach; Alpha -Epsilon entertained during the April ~Ward PoppelL Ft. Pierce; Ralph Sanford, Follies with a tea dance at the Woman's Club. tncy· B 0 b H' ford. tghleyman, Jean Adams, San- The interior of the spacious ball room was rne ' enry Swope, New Smyrna; Gene Per- beautifully decorated with the color scheme of "Bnter, Jacksonville; Harry Barcus Leesburg· gold and white. Ust ,, ' ' New ~r Phillips, Bartow; Jimmy Morris, Brother Bill Parsons, the highest ranking lowin myrn~, .a~d. Dave Frye, Tampa. Pol- journalism student, was sent along with three in· . ~ the tntttat10n ceremonies, the annual of his classmates by the University to Havana tttatton b 1'h anquet was held at the Hotel to make a survey of the Cuban newspapers. The omas D . · of B : tstnct Archon George B. Everson party was welcomed in Cuba by President Ma '" asttngs, acted as toastmaster. Neophyte chado and were royally entertained during the vva 1ter " R d" age e Barber of Sanford. whose aver- week they were there. Bill is head of the Uni fresbWas 9 6 per cent, was awarded the chapter's versity News Bureau, and is university correWrnan scholarship cup. spondent for the state's two largest dailies. by Be are Well represented on the baseball team During the recent student body election rothers Owens, Black and Kelly. Owens Brother Herlong was elected business manager

Qu

.g t~

.men nillg ~uJll

plar read! ,f tP. .last!• ougr t on• d bl ivinl .rk· :hon jf th• y or'

B

D odd' ,arsit ¥·

I<..

BLA CK, Third Base

TOMMIE OWENS , Captain

-··o!!i{ 25 j!lE-·-

DAN KELLY ,

Pitcher


THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI KAPPA PHI

of the F. Book, while Brother Kelly was made a member of the Lyceum Council. Kelly and Herlong polled the third and fourth highest number of votes. Eight members of Alpha -Epsilon will have their names on sheepskins in June. Tommie Owens receives a B.S.E. Tommie made letters in football, baseball and track, alternate captain football and captain of baseball, and is a member of Black and White Masque, Blue Key , Pirates L ' Apache, Bacchus, Theta Ribbon society .. Chambliss and Thrower graduate from the law college. Chambliss was elected archon four times and was prominent in many social clubs on the campus. Thrower is remembered for his activi ties on the diamond. Sam Leonard , he with the " laugh for everybody," graduates from the busi ness school. Herbie Frazier is a member of Phi Kappa Phi and Alpha Kappa Psi, receiving a degree from the business college. Bill Parsons gets a B.S.J . and is a member of Phi Kappa Phi, Blue Key, Sigma Delta Chi. J. D. Renfroe will be remembered by his never tiring work for Alpha-Epsilon serving in the capacity of archon and treasurer. John Davitt receives an A.B ., but will enter the law school next fall. We are pleased to announce the pledging of AI Mann of West Lafayette, Ind., and Fred Bell of Sanford. ~

Alpha-Eta News By

BURT PoE

Baseball season has come and the boys are beginning to think about the interfraternity baseball series. Last year Alpha-Eta won the loving cup which is awarded each year to the winning team. The outlook is very favorable this year. The whole winning team is back with the exception of two men. There are a number of likely looking freshmen to make up for this loss. The Pi Kapps are expecting to come out on top again this year and retain the cup. Speaking of baseball, Alpha -Eta has two men, Ed. ·Britt and Vic Goodwin, who are showing up well on the varsity nine. Both of these men made a good record on the freshman team last year.

Tw~ more of the brothers, John Will G3' and Bascom Woodward, are expected to de some good work on the tennis team this spring Bascom is president of the tennis club . The' chapter gave a dance April 16 at Bigh land Park Country club. This wa~ the fir dance that the chapter has given since the I'la tiona! convention ball in 1927. ~

Alpha-Theta Carrying On By E. R.

COOK

Throughout the winter the new white a!l· gold uniforms of Pi Kappa Phi were aJwal'' prominent in the field of interfraternity ath letics . In competition with nineteen fraterJll ties, Pi Kapps placed third in basketball. thirl in indoor track, seventh in swimming, eighth 1 ~ bowling, and seventh in indoor baseball. . In varsity competition Brother Kahl rnad• the southern training trip as a member of th< pitching staff on the baseball team. Brother· Harold Sprague, 0. Schuster, and R. Deari!l~ bid well to make places for themselves on rh· track team. After a hard -fought political campaigf Brothers Hurd and Davenport were e!ec t''( editor and business manager, respectively, of rh· Michigan Agriculturist , Brother Davenport S11 c ceeding Brother Schuster as business manager At present we have fourteen pledges. Piedg• Buist tied the freshman low hurdle record (i!l door). Hendie and Kling are dash men, a!l(' Field, who specializes in pole vault, failed b' only one inch to equal t he fresh pole vault rc t• 1 ord . Nolan and Driscal won numerals in fres football. Nolan also taking the football sch~IM1 ship cup. VonVoightlander, '31. won htS · in fencing with foil and sabre. Other pledge are Eldred, Mier, McCune, McCall. AldriclJ and Curren. The climax of this year's social season "'1 our formal dinner dance at the Hotel oJdSt music furnished by Cruzet's Cotton Pickers 0' Detroit. Our spring season started with .~; open house on April 20th and will finish W11 a summer party June 22nd at Meadowlark 111 11 1 Jackson, Mich. Spring initiation and banqllc was held on April 27th.

-··..g{ 2 6 }51-·-


THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI KAPPA PHI

~

-------------------------------------~-----------------------------The chapter has five seniors graduating in J une· W H Ph·1 Dernberger, B.S., a member of J S appa Phi and Tau Sigma honoraries; 0 . · chuster B S · ' · ·• a member of Alpha Zeta and Pi D 1 e ta Epsilon· A E L S , Ph.1 lambd · · . angwort h y, B .. Tau; Kline Sprague, B .S., Scabbard and R ade and Mortar and Ball; and L. W. aymond, B.S.

K · ·

figh firs' ]'la

Bt

~

Alpha-Iota Elects By A. N.

mad· f

rho

.thCf'

arin~ :1

rJ!•

paigr [ectct ,fth : sill

,agcr

jed¥' (in an•· d bl · rc' frcst ol3r

. I

)IS '

~dg~"

ricl1

DAVIS

Politics h ld . Ja e sway over Alpha-Iota late m nuary re 1 . · . . 1'h ' su t1ng m a very successful electiOn. thro eh archon who will guide our destinies sch oougl y the . remaining months of the current dersbur eaAr IS Edwin Russell Jones, of Chilour g. Ia . " Pup" is a senior "Eiec" and out mos~ outstanding brother. Not only is he standln · also _g In scholastic endeavors, but he is Jon P:omlnent in social and student activities. es IS am b . hon em er of Eta Kappa Nu, a natiOnal of ~ra~y electrical engineering fraternity, and l11ilit ca bard a_nd Blade, a national honorary of A.a? organ1za.tion. He is an active member and · E. E., captain instructor in R. 0 . T. C., . licatinews edit . or o f t h e A uburn Engtneer, a pubburn on ~!ted by students in engineering at AuYears. d ~ room~d at the dormitory for three &Uished ~nng Wh1ch period he became distinnity or the fact that he was the first fraterhous man .ever to hold the office of dormitory e Prestdent 1'homas M .R b Was · o erts, Jr., of Sylacauga, Ala., re-elected . ence secretary. Luc1en Owen, of F lor. Was d and A N rna e treasurer for the second time. histo . · · Davis, of Wetumpka, was re-elected Only na~. For chaplain Johnny Barrow, our . b rot h er, was ch osen. E . L . Dean actiVe f Ge org1a 0 1'~ 0 Montgomery, was elected warden. ing 1. . recent initiations have been held, bringn sue lando F new members. M. F. Barnes, of OrPhar ' la ., and William Cumbee, a third year tiate;acy student, from Stroud, Ala., were ini O on December 7, 1928. freshn February 15, initiation was held for four r-· rau[kl11en J ·· Cut' r IS Cl'ff 1 ord C annon, L ev1· 0 ms Upch' ames Robbins, Jr ., and Howard Burton Urch . Cannon hails from Lockhart, A la.,

and studies pharmacy. Faulk is proud he is from Troy but not so proud he chose "Eiec" for his life 's work. Robbins comes from Selma and takes Pre-Med. Upchurch of Montgomery, is our most scholarly freshman, even though he is taking architectural engineering. He won the jeweled pin given annually by Alpha-Iota to the freshman having the highest scholastic average. Our interfraternity council representatives for the year 1929 -3 0 are Thomas M. Roberts, Jr .. and A. N. Davis, with A. W. Herren as alternate. Brother Roberts, senior representative. was re-elected to serve another year. Brothers Davis and Herren are both members of next year's junior class. ~

News From Alpha-Nu By Eow ARD S.

W ELLS

The spring season has opened up with many bright prospects for Alpha-Nu. We seem to have all the star bowlers under our roof this year. Thus far we have won two cups in intra mural competition, in both Class A and B. and are entered in the finals for intrafraternity championship. Playground ball starts soon, and we are pinning our faith upon Woodhouse and Frye to aid us in hanging up another scalp in the chapter tepee. After winning the cup offered in the Alpha league A lpha-Nu kept up their victorious pace and won the Intrafraternity Class A bowling

-··..a! 2 7 }at-·-

TROPHIES OF ALPHA -NU


THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI KAPPA PHI

championship, taking the cup from Phi Kappa Tau fraternity, last year 's " A " championship winners. We bowl one more game in the near future for the University title. We are happy to announce the election of John Daniel Corley , Eng. 3, Columbus, 0 . ; A lvin Henry Frye, Jour. 2, Huron. 0 .; and R~bert Stanley Toomey. Com. 2. Huron, to chapter membershipp. Corley will be initiated into Eta Kappa Nu , honorary engineering fra ternity. Frye is the only journa li sm student in the house , and we wi ll certainly recognize his editoria l capacity , especial ly in the field of sports wnttn g. Toomey is our musician , and will be initiated into Kappa Kappa Psi. national hon orary band fraternity , soon . A lpha Nu has pledged one man this quarter - Frank Pichler, Eng. 2, Dayton , 0. The pledge group has been rather active. Lester Thompson is wearing a Freshman Dramatics key, Joe Kovic is working out with the freshman footba ll squad, and Bob Cross ley and Dick Kiinz ler are in line for numeral awards in fencing. The p ledges recently gave a very successful dance in honor of the active chapter. Char les Rusler. our varsity debater. returned last week from a trip, on which Ohio State met Iowa and Minnesota.

On March 23, Brother Adam Hamm. E~ '28, was married to Miss Merle Hatler, of Chil· lecothe, Ohio. Brother George Heinzelrnao acted as his best man. Brothers Charley Rusler and Bob Everhart are members of Forum, honorary national pub· lie speaking fraternity , the membership of whiC~ is limited to fifteen at any one time.

Speaking of chapter correspondents and thi . r way some of them neglect the job, the ed tt 0 of The Rainbow of Delta Tau Delta expresse! our own sentiments in forceful fashion. Here's what he says: " Get a Jive man on the job. That's thi answer. " A pleasant, amiable, well -meaning, nice!)' dressed, pompadour-haired somebody whc means well and never gets anywhere or doeS anything except from twenty-four hours t~ thirty days late, if at all, is no gent for this job " Let him carry the battle-axe. SomebodY can always hand it to him, and then tell }Jirtl where to put it when the excitement is over· " And if you don't happen to have a live· wire in the chapter, for the sake of high heaveO go out and pledge one."

Honor Men at Oregon State

I~O U E R T

P f.: ACO C K

Pi Epsil on Delta Alpha Delta S igma

W ~ 1.

RH UMAN

X i Sig ma Pi

IT . D AVIS Ka ppa K ap pa P si

-··..e{ 2 8 l!J.·-

R. \i\~ I LLI AMS E ta Ka ppa N u

D. G. G t LLES PI>: Alpha Zeta


:;:::;

~

Et· hi I·

-~

THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI KAPPA PHI

Chapter Archons

0 ao 1art

.ub ich

1

thi

:elf wh~

does S tO

job

,odl' hi~ 1

,vet Jive· aveO

lgP- J. R. OWINGS (left), Zeta Chapter ; JAS. W. CHAMBLISS (rig ht ), Alpha -E psilon Chapter. TTOM- WHIT MIDDLETON (left), Epsilon Chapter ; E. R. JONES (right ), Alpha -Iota Chapter.

,.___

~================================================ Births

1'o M cron . r. and Mrs. J. Fred Crowder (Omi29 8, ) · a dau ghter, Katharyn Anne, March 29

1g

a 8;

0

To Mr. and Mrs. Joe S. Graham (Eta, ' 22) , Bradenton, Fla ., a daughter , Delia Elizabeth , February 27, 1929.

~r.

and Mrs. Edgar George David (Pi), n, dgar George, Jr., January 13 , 1929 . 1'o M rna , . r. and Mrs. J . Robert Peebles (Gam25 ary 7 )' a daughter , Roberta Blanche, Febru, 1929.

M

daug~· and Mrs. Leo H . Pou ( Omicron, '2 1) , a ter, Betty Jane, March 5, 1929. 1'o M si ion ) r. and Mrs. T. Harold L. Peet ( Up , a so n, Rob ert D ea n, March 13, 1929 . 1'o M lon) r. and Mrs. John C. Brown ( Upsi ' a daughter, Floy Anne, March 12, 1929.

Engagements Philip S. Showell. Alpha -D elta, '24, to Miss Dorothy B. Flick . New York University, 1927, of East Orange, N . J. Jas. R . Crandall. Alpha -Mu. '27, to Lottie L. Pease, Oberlin College, '23.

Mi s~

Paul J. Saunders, Alpha -Epsilon . '2 9, to Miss Lida Warfield, Jacksonvill e, Fla . John F . Bracken , Upsilon , to Miss Mary Bassett, Chicago. Ill .


THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI KAPPA PHI

RECENT INITIATES Date of Juitiatio1~

Namr

No.

ALPHA Colle,qe of Cilarlrston

11 -30-28

192

1268 N. Morningside Drive, Atlanta, Ga.

112

Guy Ackerman Kirton .. .. ..................... 12-20-28 162 Wentworth St., Char leston, S. C. Comeliu s Huguenin-' Jt· . ............................ 12-20-28 .15 Tradd St., t..harleston, S. . Thomas Willard Heynolds .... .. 2-18-29 90 Broad St., Charle"ton, S. C. Jn hn 1\ lil es Jordan, J r. .. 2-22-29 .12-B Hutl edl(e Ave .. Cha rleston. S. C.

114 115 116 117 118

1-14-29 1-14-29

195

1·14-29

196

1-14-29

197

1-2 1-29

1 9~

1-21-29

199

119

12 1 J 22

BETA 2- 18-29

11-.10-28

John David Humphri es, Jr. ------------.... 914 Rock Springs Road, A tl anta, Ga. John Robinson Bell ......................................... ~lonroe, Ca. Adolph F rederick Roemer, Jr . .......................... J 9 Galena Ave., Montgomery, A la. Haymond Edwin Cole .......................______ .......... Dallas, Ga. i\ l erri tt Ryals Clements ................. ... .. 401 Twelfth Ave. E., Cordele, Ga. Joseph Wilson Patteroo n ·----------·-- ... Tallas!!t!c, Ala .

120

Presbyterian Co/lrgr of Sottlil Carolina Gus Cornel ius Adams __ ..... South Roston, Va.

Halph Mason Cannon ............................ Lavonia, Ga.

11.1

hurch St ., Lau rens, S.

102

10TA Crm'{Jin School of Trclwoloo)•

219 Hobert Peyton H all ...................... _.. _ -----6- 9-28 44 N. Crest Road, Mission Ridge, hattanooga, Tenn. 2- 17-29 220 James Walmy, Jr . ................................. El Comodure H otd, Miami, Fla. Glover llood Rollinson ................................... 2-17-29 1 I 0 I Vernon St ., La Grange, Ga. Hohert Julian 1\fcCamy ---------------------·----------- 2-17-29 Lindale, Ga. Ceorge Dwight Littl e ........................................ 2-17-29 1\ladison, Ga. 2-17-29

na rn; r~l ~;~a ~;~~~~ iss t!, r b~c-~-t~;;:;··c·;;:·---------·-----

GAMMA

Frank Jackson Whitly ...................................... 2-17-29

U-uivrrsit)' of Califonlia

Sa lvatore Grassi ..... .. .. .. . . . . .. 9-19-28 10 M erced Ave., San Francisco, Calif. Charles H icharcl Raeder 9-19-28 1906 Brown St., Napa, Cali f. Alexander Loui s Croce 9- 19-28 1R16 1\lason St., San Franci sco, ali f.

La Gra nge, Ga.

22.1 224 225

EPSILON Duncan annic hael Hunter ............................ 11-15-28 Cli o, S.C.

105

Jan tes

106

Gowen Johnso tJ __ ----------------------------------- 1-1 0-29 \Vartrace, T enn.

William Reid Walker .............................. . 2-17-29 406 Hill St., L a Gran ge, Ga. Stephen ljierrc ott raux _ ------ _____ ---------------· 2- 17-29 250 J\lorcland Ave,, Atlanta, Ga. Hu gh A ugustus Groves .................................... 2-17-29 Comer, Ga .

Da11idson Collr,qe

ZETA

Frederick Boyd Morgan ----·-·----·----·-·--·----·------ 2-17-29 402 Third St., Manchester, Ga. John Eldor Tt·ost .............. ....... ....................... 2-17-29 214 Ponce de Leon Ave., 1\fontgomery, Ala. Lawrence Tf unter Ellis ..................................... 2-17-29 904 Ponce de Leon Ave., Atlanta, Ga. Charlie Fore Wilkinson, Jr . .......................... 2- 17-29 172 Fourth, N. W., Atlanta, Ca. Boyce Leon Estes ................................................ 2-17-29 807 Forest Ave,, La Grange, Ga. James Alexander Byars .................................. 2-17-29

23 1

8 N inth Ave., Rome, Ga.

Wofford Collrw

Leland Arthur Jackson ................................... 10-16-28 Sta:T, S. C. Joe Eggar Hood ........................................... 10-16-28 Hickory Grove, S. C. lfat·old L eo n Tool e ..... . .... .. .... .. .. 12- 4-2R .120 Saint John St ., Spartanburg, S. C. Dwight F leming Patterson ....... ................... 12- 4-28 Lanford, S. C. Charles Edwin Godfrey, Jr . ...................... _ 1-17-29 North Charleston, S. C. F ranklyn William Fairey, Jr. .... ................. 1-17-29 Kingstree, S. C. David Tf arper D errick ........ ............................ 1-17-29 Walterboro, S . C. 1-17-29 E lbert E lm a1nc H.ivers .... ------------------1\•fount roghan, · S. C .

16.1 164

Edwi n Evans Camp ...... ................................ 2- 17-29 Bluff Road, Rome, Ga. Stephen Olin Sh inholser, Jr. ........................ 2-17-29 1408 Oak Ave., Sanford, Fla. John Frank S tewart ...... . ................. 2-17-29 407 N. H ansell St., Thomasville, Ga.

165

KAPPA

166

167

Univrl'sit)' of North Caroh'ua

............... 10-24-28 Clifton Edward Pleasants 6 15 Brook stow n Ave., V{ inston-Salem, N. C.

16R LAJI[BDA

169

u ,,:vc.rsit:y of Ccm·g ia

ETA Emory Uuivc1·sity William Gibson Benton .. ... 1 01 1 Oakdale Road, Atlanta, Ga.

Na·mc

] a mes Ca rr Grizzanl .....................................

John Taylor West .. . ..... ..... . ... I 0-27-28 200 W. Park Ave ., Tarboro, N. C. Earl Buggie H alsall ... _ .. 10-27-2R 651 King St., Chadeston, S. C. Lehby Baynard King . 10-27-28 Jam es Island, S. C. Lucius Stewart Jennings ..... .... .. .............. 10-27-28 409 N . Main St., Sumter, S. C. Dav id Lamar Lee, Jr . ....................................... 10-27-28 Scranton, S. C. John Fogarty Heynolds ................................. 10-27-28 90 Broad St., Chat leston, S. C. William Thomas Bolt ................................ 2-24-28 .114

Cilaptrr Date of No. In.:tia.t-iou

Chapter

. 11 -30-28

190

David Rodman Brown ·-··------------- .. ----------·-· 11 -30-28 160 Superior Ave., Decatur, Ga.

191

Hal ph Lafayette Gt·iffin ................................... .1- 15-28 808 Maple ~t., R ome, Ga. Cli fford Holmes McGaughey ......................... 5-15-28 305 Main St., College Park, Ga. Thomas Cut hbert Burton .................................. 5- 15-28 Canon, Ga.

--·~

orton Landiss Sanders --------------------· .. ___ 3-14-29 938 S. Plymouth Blvd,, Los Angeles, Cali f.

30 }ilc-··-

I iS


THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI KAPPA PHI Date of Chapte·•· Initiation No.

Name John

I 92

19i

176

··························-----······· 3-14-29 ~larshall E ' · La Gra~~ene GGroover, Jr . .......................... -3-14-29 Walter 1-To e, a. s· M onroc,wellGa.Lott ' J r . .................................... 3. 14 . 29

ptrr

(o·

195

w·w Fit;g~~~~ld 1~<,:•ger

"" J~~~~i.sG~larper ................................. Herbert s· I . Atlant~,"c~. 1\J affett .................................... Jackson Ea rJ C 1 . Jt!Sup, Ga. o vm J,lmes c 1 810 ~ eman Hill, Jr. Walton laple t., Home, G·a-:--· .....................

177 178

3·14-29

179

3- 14 -29

180

3- 14-29

181

3-14-29

182

.108 \>~att'\ Stehv~~t .......... .... ........... 3-14-29 \Vyck]iffe :urc • t., Americus, Ga. TJ uso~n Knox ............ ---................. 3-14-29 \V tomson, Ga. atson Hoyt W II Watkinsville~ Ga.'- ....................................... 3-14-29

184

A

183

Date of Chapter lnitiatio11 No. Name 3- 2-29 Francis Wilson Trimmer 133 344 Day Ave. S. W., Roanoke, Va. 3- 2-29 134 Seibert Welford Lavinder 357 Main t., Salem, Va. 3- 2-29 135 William Neil Gi lbert .. W•lliamson Road, Roanoke, Va. 136 William I egg Eversole ................................ . 3- 2-29 Coeburn, Va. Robert Lester Abbott ................................... 3- 2-29 .137 New Castle, Va. Wesley Aletteauer Chapman ............ _ .... . 3- 2-29 138 Salem, Va. 139 .1- 2-29 Robert Burrow Hyatt --------------------------Jonesville, Va. John Lee Harne, Jr. . . . .. .1- 2-29 140 608 Dennison Ave., Va. Jrts., Roanoke, Va. Carlton AI. Ball . J- 2-29 141 383 Lafayette Ave., Ilawthornc, N. ].

185

O~tiCRON

U11ivcrsity of Alabama

J\LU

219 Rowla

Uu!.·c University SDu l'imm Folk 11- 6·28 Eugene F · L~n~common Rd.,- Ri,;er~id~: 111. 2JJ rr:nciS I lughes .. ... . 2-23-29 \Vi]]' "' Salle Ave., llam pton, Va. lam Brewster S II ope Vall now .... .. ................ 2-2.1-29 ey • 0 urham, . C. Frank C I02Jalj;=ft Rozzelle . . .... .. . .. .... 2-23-29 Frank B. on t., llendersonville, N. C.

15~d

221

Edw~~~r~~~~~n~~~nc. --- ............................. St . fr~·;~h~,;kinKon, Jr . .............................. fcrcy WI· s, y. n· Warr~~~~;~r NYoung ................................... 1

227

Vilf-"

2.16

1

102

3-14-29

.. .......... 3-14-29

Charles 1\J' nwooc Ave., Lincoln, Neb. p 2Soo S~~~~hDSavison. .... . ..................... 3-14 -29 'Obert 1 t., Lmcoln, Neb. 144SYEn Galloway ... ..... ....................... 3-14-29 lvor \Vi]]'" St., L•ncoln, Neb. Truml~:l't SNanl•uelson -- .............................. 3-H -29 I

JOO

2-23-29

Hichar I Sea, 1a. 4 d ][ erbert Black 05 South 26 S .. . ........................... 3-14-29 .) ack arl t 1t t., Lmcoln, Neb. 1 IOJ• " 11 hn · 3 14 ?9 V. Cha - ~ S.i\J4th, Lincol~; -Neb_...................... · -..

464/Gre~cReyn olds ... . .........

99

101

c...................................

NU • University of Nebraska 1 B•·enton

98

2-23 -29

2-2 .1-29 •chard Ed • · · 2-23 -29 200 '" , ward Jordan William -~h- Bachtel St., -:N~;u,--· ;;-~;;, ,;:-- 0'.' ... 104 Pe~b•as Bundy ... ... .. . 2-23-29 Ben Nee) ~ ~-oke Ave., Myers Pa1·k, Char lotte, N. C. llick;;.y g~~~e:· s.'.. 2-23-29

Judd p

97

C),

104 105 106

207 208 209 210 211

Roanoke College .... ........... 10-18-28 t., Bnstol, Va. ~n N~;~'ir Gold _ . __ ... .... 1 1. 2-28 l-loward Alt' Braddock St., \Vinchester, Va. 8] IZCr Pi 1 I Jth St S \ ---- ----- ....... ........ 11- 2-28 · · V., Roanoke, Va. eas Ra 'l'h Sale~:s~ra. ------............ __________ ........................ 11- 2-28 omas Pr l Bedfordstv' Turner .................................. 11- 2-28 le,bert St • ~1046 · 1• •r Boring J· 3 2 29 lSth St., Ports:no:,ih-, --0:----------------- · -

~ulhe.· ford

170

2- 8-29

171

2- 8-29

172

2- 8-2 9

173

2- 8-29

174

2- 8-29

175

2- 3-29

J 76

Oneonta, Ala.

Chal'les JJ ubert Leggett ................ 808 Filth St., Laurel, Miss. Arthut· ~tariou Espy Abbeville, Ala. PI

Oglrthorpc U11iversity . ..... 11-14·28 John Burns j ones Branchville, S. C. 11-14-28 ... Louie Jeffries Clancy 802 Abbott Ave., Selm a, Ala. I J-14-28 Hceves Kendall Jor ian .... ... . ...... 90 I Argonne Ave., Atlanta, Ga. J oseph Banning Freeman ... . ..... ........ 11-14-28 Greenvi ll e, Ga . John Henfroe, Jr. .............................................. 2-27-29 i\lirlville, Ga. 2-2 7-29 George Park Brinson ··-······ i\lillcn, Ga. 2-27 -29 Robert Wilson Jones -------Pelham, Ga. 2-27-29 John William Whitesides 304 S. Broad, Rome, Ga. 2-27-29 Eugene Raymond Boone Route 3, Valdosta, Ga.

Alarion Wade i\ c onalrl 2-18-29 186 Bethlehem Pike, Chestnnt llill , Philadelphia, Pa. Chal'les Ga lphin Allan ... . .. ........................ 2-18-29 Fernandina, Fla.

---------- .... --------- 2-18-29

Seminary ]Jill, Barre, Vt.

128 129 130 131 132

-··..c£ 31

1.10 131 132 133 134 135 136

Wasilillytoll and L ee U.nivrrsity

Stanley Miller Rowland .... 127

128 129

RHO

212 213

2- 8-29

3120 Dodson Ave., Chattanooga, Tenn.

ll enry Il olm an ll'lize .. .114 34 th Ave., Tuscaloosa, Ala. Luther Darden Bynum ···-···-··

!OJ

XI Stanley \\ 716 Ha~~~~ll 'illiam ][

llarry L. Carroll Slocomb, Ala. Alvin Steele Davidson .... 806 ~4th Ave., Tuscaloosa, Ala. Charles Zell Taylor, Jr.

Cha•·les B·itton Fnlton .. .. ................. 2-18-29 .l18 Tenth Ave., Lakcworth, Fla. Erwin Jerome Ade - ... . .. ... ........... 2-18-20 14 'Forest St., Montclair, N. J. Geo•·ge H arwood Boutwell .. 2-18-29 1325 W. Lakeside Drive, Lakeworth, Fla. Haymond Adc .... .. 2-18-29 14 Forest St., Montclair, N. J, William Gordon Weagly ................... 2-18-29 72 W. i\fain St., \.Vaynesboro, Pa. David Brainard Kirby . . .............. 2·18-29 136 S. Second St., Chambersburg, Pa.

~--

93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101


THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI KAPPA PHI Date of lllitia.tian

Na m e

Date of

Chapter No .

UPSl LON u ,.,:ve rsit )• of 11/ill ois Edwin Cha nning J ones -------------------------------------. 12·10-28

141

Smithburg, W. Va .

William Nelk Knudsen ------ -------------------·-·----- 12- 10- 28 4744 Gladys Ave., Chicago, Ill. C harl es Francis McEuen ---------------- _... ---------- 2- 4-29 414 E. Date St., Ri verside, Cali[. Geo rge Lyman Bodwell ____ ----------------·-·------------ 2- 4-29 6947 Eggleston Ave ., Chicago, Ill. S tanley New hall Perkins --------------------- ·--- _ ---- 2· 4-29 7 156 LaFaye tte Ave., C hi cago, Ill. J oseph Ondrus --------------------------------------- ·------ 2- 4-29 2440 S. Ridgeland Ave., B erw yn, 1ll. C layton Wa ll ace W ell s ________ ---- ------------------ 2· 4-29 1 11 S. Avon St. , R ockford, Ill.

14 2 14 3 144

14 5 14 6

I nitia.tiou

/\la me

j oseph Addi son C lark ....................................... 11-25-28 Lowell , Tnd . Donald S ni,ler Burge ..................................... 11-25-28 .123 chool St., Hobart, Ind. l, aw renco 1\Ierrill Condrey ............................. 11-25-28 729 Cottage Ave., Indianapoli s, lnd. Oscar H e m y Beyer -----·------··---·-··- -···· ........... 11-25-28 1607 Maxwell Ave., Evansvi lle, Ind. 1\f a ri on Max fie ld -·------------------------------------------- 11 -25-28 Greencastle, Ind. George Gra nt Fassnacht ------------------------------11-25-28 4 1.3 W . Navarre St., South B end, Tnd. Osca•· Loui s 1\1 ill er . .... ..... ..... ... 11-25-28 .114 Baya rd Park Drive, Evansville, Ind.

C/wptrr

No. JIU

1Ji 112

14 7 ALPHA-ALPlfA

CHI John B. Sti.'lson Uu iv c•,.s£ty (;ilherl Vi ncent Betschick ------ ·----------- ··------- 1 0-2 1-28 Sa lt Air H otel, W. Palm Beach, F la. lear I A If red J i nki nson ---------------------------------------- 1 2- 16-28 Sheldo n , Ta. Edwin Vosburg, Jr. ·---------------------- . __ 12- 16-28 409 S. Melcher St., J ohnstown, N. Y. William El li s Brown ------ _ -------------------- 12-16-28 127 W. Henry Ave., D e Land, F la. C ha rl es Zebulon Osborne, Jr. ---------------- ______ 12- 16-28 Uma tilla, Fla. Pi erce Olliff Mikell ------------- ---------- _ _________ 12-16-28 141 E. Tnrliana Ave., D e Land, Fl a . Ed wanl S ta nley Ferguson, 111 -----------------·--- 12- 16-28 S tetson Ave., De L a nd , Fla. John A lhert Bu sh ____ ----·----------· --------------- 12-16-28 10 2 Georgia St., \Vinc hester, Ky. J a mes le11 n Justice, J .-. ----- _ __ __ ... 12-16 28

Mercer Univctsit')'

134

Robert Wi lson Coursey ................................... 1-23-29 ~I

137

ALPHA-GAJ\IMA

1.19 14 tl 141 H2 144 143

112 11 3 114

U11ivcrsity of OklaiiOIIW

Robert Van L owry . ....................................... ]] . 4-28 820 E. 12th S t. , Pawhuska, Okla. Claude Leroy Eurton --------------------·------------·--·· 11- 4-28 C harl es Ra ;y Fentress ----------------------··---··--·--··· 12- 17-28 Freden ck, Okla. Franklin Word Ew ing ------------------------------ -- 12-17-28 Higgins, T ex.

12-1 7-28 Russell D ecatur Fal{in 620 Commerce St., Altu s, Okl a. Willi a m Glenn Dunnin gton -------·------------------ 12-17-28 C herokee, Okla. J\ le rlx n Avalon Aldrick -----··---------·---·---------- 12-17-28 P ond Creek, Okla. J esse Dunn Faulkner .. ...... ....................... 12-17-28 214 Church St., Al va , Okla. Everett Franklin Goins ........... ------------ 2- 11 -29 60 1 S 12th St., F ocky Ford, Colo. R a lph S . Johnston --------------------·----------------·------- 2-11 -29 Grand Field, Okla.

]] 5 ALPHA-EPS TLON 11 7 11 8 119 120 .1 2 1

122 123 124 125

P1trd1te University

108 109

1.JU

] .li

Fai rv iew , Okla.

11 6

OMEGA

S trau g htJ, Tnd.

Ga.

illard Andrews Copela nd , Jr . ..................... 1-23-29 llntn s wi ck, Ga.

138

P SI

Chester Alpha Langston .................................. 11 -25-28 Camb1 idge City, Ind. Chalmers Wil son Gilbert ................................ 11-25-28

l ~yo n s,

136

Carnell U11ive·r sity

Foster H a milton \Vhite, Jr. ----------------------- .... 12-15-28 Seneca F all s, N . Y. Edward Phi ll ip B abcock -------------------------------·- 12-15-28 \Varwick, N. Y. J a mes Satterlee Goff ---------------------------------------12-15-28 Main S t., Hyannis, Mass. ha rl es F•·ede rick W a lke•· ------ ----·------------------12-1 5-28 39 Not re Dame S t., Three River s, Que. Horace Moulton Riggs -------------·-····---·-····-····--12-15-28 2 10 Willard Way L oop, Ithaca, N. Y. j ohn Henry Barrett ·-------···---·--···------·--·-··-····-··· 12-15-28 Norwich, Conn. Hobert . tirling George -···--·---·---·· --·----------------12·15-28 118 E. Falls S t ., Ith aca, N. Y. Dav id Wilm ot Du sinberre ............................. 4-14 -28 57 Wa in S t., W ell sboro, Pa. Ri cha rd Wilbur Steinburo: ..• __ .................... 4-14-28 11 0 Conklin Ave., Nedeow, N. Y. Emerson Scott Bruce Pitkin -------·-·----------···--- 4-14-28 Corinth, N. Y. John Willi a m White ................................... 4-14-28 48 Center St., Bangor, Me. Frederik Groeneveld .... ..................... .... .... 4- 14-28 185 Schoeman St., Pretoria, Sou th Africa. Cha rl es F.dward Clade! ................................ 4-14 -28 2290 Sedgewick Ave., New Yo rk City. j a mes Jooeph Creagh .................................... 4-14-28 1232 Pembroke St., Bridgeport, Conn.

71

H nmilton , Ga.

1.15

Cor. B eacon J-Iill and Seminole Trai l , Lakeland, l'la.

ll a rr y Lu cas Va nderwerp __ -------· --------·-- 3-11 -29 519 N . Fourth S t ., Manitowoc, Wi s. Ray Eugene U lm e•· ·-------------------------------------- __ .1-11-29 Palm H a rbor, F la.

Pl eaoan t Jl enry A skew, J•· . ....................... 10-24-28 Nas h\'i ll e, Ga . • William la•·ence Askew ................................. 1-23-29

U11ivcrsity of Florida

Th omas Cole P owell . . ----------- ..... ............. 110 VIi. 12th S t., Jacksonvill e, Fla. John Edmond Davitt -------------·------·--·--------------·Miami Beach, Fl a . David Bar tl ett Frye ·---------- .......................... 3703 San Jua n , T a mpa, Fl a. J can Stacy Adams ------------ .......... ·---------------1807 French Ave., Sanfonl, F la. l [e n•·y Corbin Swoope ....................... -------------New Smyrna, Fla. Robert L. Highley man ... _________ ... .... ------555 Vale ncia Drive, Sa nford, Fla. Edga r Broward Po/>pell -------------·--·------------------Fort Pierce, F a. Euge ne Lawrence P ermenter --------- ---- ___ _ 1472 Edgewood Ave., Jacksonvi ll e, F la. James Edward Morri s ---·---- ----------·---· ··-·----·41 2 Palmetto St., New S myrna, Fl a. Ralph S helby Sanford ------·· --·-----------------------SO l Kin g St., Quincy, Fla.

1- 8-29

2- 8-29 2- 8-29 2- 8-29 2· 8-29 2· 8-29 2- 8-29 2- 8-29

2- 8-29 2- 8-29

JI a rry Edward Barcus ----------------- _--------- ------- 2- R<!9

1434 W . Main St.. L eesburg. Fla . Enoch Bothwell Phillips, Jr. ---------------------- 2- 8-29 Bartow. Fla.

--·-!§{ 3 2 ~·-

] ,!.!


THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI KAPPA PHI Date of l11itiaJion

Na111c 1)0

Ill 11 1

Chapter No.

1\ LPHA-Z li:T A Orcgou Aorimltural Col'r<JC l\liu'~]~hs Evanoff ......... ·······---············· 10-13-28 Clark E · y, 0 re. 12o~'W ~oardsley --··-···--- ··--·· .... 10 -l.l-JS John A h · 3d St., Los Angeles, Calif. 112~ Bny Dutro 2-10-29 Orville ~oadw_ay, ()-;kj;;;d~---··-;;i-if." -· ...

James N"

.

67

68 69

70

Willl?av,d Lulll ··-······-····-·-·········-·-··-···-· 2-10-29 '""na, Ore. •liard Harold Ormsb . 408 E. Blt1If S Y -·········--·-·········-········ 2-10-29 George W t., Pendleton, Ore. 1044 (;sledy Reese ··-········ ···--······-··········- 2-10-29 or ova St., Burbank, Calif.

71

ALPHA-ETA Ed ware] Cl H award College tarlesAla. Britt ··-···-······--··········-····--. J0-22-28 II 'N atasulga, arvelle B . 200 De enJaAin Goodwin ........ ···-·-·- ..... 10-22-28 Edward I nny v~., Powderly. Ala. 5 I 2 sili'bA·t V I CC - ·:·····. • . •• •••• ·- ••• I 2- .1-28 Emer~;: h . ve. W., Btrmmgham, Ala. L' I s~~ts~;~a~ IGa ay ·······-····-············· -· . .. I 2- 3-28 c.r e

. ..

71!t~Y Jotlinson 0

'red M

"·

J.!l 1.12 1.1.1

gO

9.1

-·-······························ 12Y' Ia. JOts Crson Jackson ...... .. __ 12ITenry ]: aldwell Terrace, Birmingham, Ala. Alex·;~'ct!; t'·ikin -·-····························· . 12~lason C . ' Y• Ala. 333 J~lt'er Crow .... ............. . ---······ ..... 12William B lnson St., Decatur, Ala. Lincolt~e'A't' Yongue ···············-·-···-·········· 3a. Dan S . • Jarne~lp~~it~!;i~~- ···· ··--······---············-·--··········· 3-

3-28

108

3-28

109

3-28

I I0

3-28

Ill

4-29

I 12

4-29

1 13

ALPHA-THETA llrarshall B Michigan State Colle[/r Cass d~dfoMrq Burt -·--·······--··---········· 1 J-27-28 l\e 1111 h Y, •ch. et F'tz Albert B eJl'mge1. ..... .. ..... ................. 1-26-29 603 Edwin R ' gerald St., Durand, Mich. 1 31 6 yert Crook ·····-··--··-·--·· .....•.......... 1-26-29 Robert M erry Court, Flint, Mich. 596 Lo~t Branch ............... .. __ ........ 1-26-29 \\' illian e Ave., Battle Creek, Mich. R.i~hla~dva r9. Brigham ..... -··· ····---··········· 1-26-29 Trvin , :Lt ch . 11 Cas~ (:'.~t Striffier ---········-········-···-·-··· 1-26-29 1 Glenn Cl Y, Mich. 426 ~dEDailey . ............. 11-27-28 Victor l1' · ast St., Morenci, Mich. 51 ~\d ~efer ..... ........... ... _ ··········- 1-26-29 !\art Tt nn t., East Lansing, Mich. ·rh llr u1RJ;~~~.1w~hn ········-·······--···--······---·-···· I I -27-28 on1a N' · Ecfwar~IJ'an Hurd .................................... 11 -27-28 Heward ;... l ttr g, Mich. 56 c!!hs hElmer ....... ..... . . 6- 2-28

11

s

nur an Ave., Battle

gu 9i

98

o?

reek, 1\lich.

AT.PifA-TOTA Uohert L . Alabama Pol)•leclmic h1stit~tlc AndrAsht ~;;J.s ATJ~k ·········· ....... ·····-·········· ..... J 0- 3-28 E . W~tu~~~a.~)~is ·· ···---·-··-···········-·····-·· .. I 0''Quet Taylor . hrcc~~:· Pinson:·:..i;~·-····-·············-··-·· .............. I 04J 6e1s Fnr~ Barnes ........ ... .. .............. 12\Viiliarn e aney St., Orlando, Fla. Stroud,eM~. Cumbee --······-···················--12-

If

104 105

.... - ----··- . . I 2- 3-28

33/j~j','S Crow, Jr . ........ ·····---·······-·-···-·· 3- 4-29 William L nson St ., Decatur, A la. •m Traylor ···················-··--·--········· 3- 4-29 Wed 0Wee, Ala.

89

103

107

A"te~~~:~~~~nCi~skAv

t-r"

102

lOG

c.ntlllett C

J .10

72

......... ···-.... 12- 3-28 mes St., Huntsville, Ala.

Ale.x:h~~t~gC~ty?OA~a--······-··--····

,.

71

114

115

107 108 109 110

Ill 11 2 I 1.1 1 I4

11 5 I 16

1 I7

66

3-28

67

3-28

68

7-28

69

7-28

70

-··4§{ 33

/Jatr of IniliaJion

Name

]ames Elijah Robbins .......................•................ Selm a, Ala. I toward Burton Upchurch .... ·······--····· 500 Plum St., .Montgomery, Ala. Curtis Cli fford Canuon .... ··--················· ........ Lockhart, Ala. Levi On is Faulk ........ ---····--··-··············-···· 306 E lm St., Troy, Ala. ALPHA-KAPPA University of M ichirta" Lawrence Dennis Rahilly ···········-··· ................ Michigamme, :Mich. john \ 'I alter Barnard ....... ···-· .. _ ...... ···--···· 480 Piper Blvd., Detroit, Mich. Robert Glenclen Reynolds ····-------·- _ .. .......... 816 Packard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. Sidney Elwood 111 iller ..... ·······-········ ........... Belleville, M ich. l lcnry A. Pullen ........... ·····-········· •............ B ellevi ll e, Mich. Freel Flynn .......................... ........ ............... I 7(,3 E. 1Oth St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Carroll Charles Foster .. .. ........... Grass Lake, l\lich. Vernon George Hawkins . -·· .................. I 527 Lyon St., Flint, Mich. Ct:orge Ed\\ ard Lindemulder ----·- . . .. ----1035 Logan St., Grand Rapids, Mich. Roscoe Clark Bow hall ........ -··· 38 N. ll lain St., Norwood, r. Y. Theo Richard Lewandowski ........... ............... 2306 Fraser St., Bay Ci ty, Mich. William Gnodtke . ·-· ...... ·············-· .............. Bridgmao, Mich.

Chapter No.

2-15-29

71

2-15 -29

72

2-15-29

73

2- I 5-29

74

2-23-29

65

2-23-29

66

2-23-29

67

2-23 -29

68

2-23-29

69

2-23-29

70

2-2.1-29

71

2-23-29 2-23-29

73

2-23-29

74

2-2 .1-29

75

2-23-29

76

University of MisS1'ssippi Ralph Woods Henry ... ··········-····-·········---- 10-11-28 829 Broadway, Paducah, Ky. William Briggs Hopson ·-······. ······-············· 10-11-28 F lora, Miss. John Edward May, Jr. ············-·········-·············· 10-11-28 Meridian, Miss.

22

ALL'IIA-I,A!VtUIJA

21

23

WilliP~nt~~~.. - ~{i~~~er ······-·······-·······-············-· 3- 8-29

24

Virgil Edward O'Neil -----·-··-····--······--···· 3- 8-29 · Hazelhurst, Miss. James Otis Taylor ........................ ········- 3- 8-29 734 Fifth S t., Laurel, Miss. Theodore Bernard Tew .. ...... . _ ..................]. 8-29 1520 First Ave., Laurel, Miss.

26

ALPHA-llfU PcJIIJS)•lva11ia Stale Collc{fc Hobert Christi an Kieffer . ····-···--·······--······· 10-27-28 900 N. Fifth St., Reading, Pa. Ceorge T. Daugherty .. . ......... . . ..... 10-27-28 II 1-JI 208th St., St. Albans, N.Y. ..... 10-27-28 Earle A ndrf:w Deily .. ....... ····- ···274 N. 13th St., Philadelphia, Pa. ALPHA-NU Ohio Sta te Univcrsil)• Donald Lamar Dartlett 10-28-28 1655 N. Fourth St., Columbus, 0. 10-28-28 Norbert Emi l Fuchs ..... -············-·········· Putin Bay, 0 . Eugene Frank Poling . .... -·-··· 10-28-28 200 Harker St., Mansfield, 0. I Iarry Clyde Wirls .. .. ... ........ . I 0-28-28 1519 J\orth land Ave. , Lakewood, 0 . I la •·old Cu rtis Freshwater ---·-··-··-·· ............... 1-27-29 Ostraudcr, 0. Homer Iludson Henrie ···--···-1-27-29 139 W. ]\[arket St., Columbus, 0. Walter C. Insley ... -·····--·-······ .............. 1-27-29 Arcadia, 0. ALPI-TA-XI The Pol~•tccl"'ic Instit .. te of Brookly" Henry F1·ancis Lyons, Jr. ··-·-····--··.... 2- 8-29

I!JI-·-

25

27

54 55

56

54 55 56

57 58 59 60

133


THE PE.R MANENT INSIGNIA for the home. Official Pr KAPPA PHI designs accurately and clearly executed by the NATIONAL COLLEGE EMBLEM COMPANY. Shields of solid black American walnut beautifully grained.

BRONZE NAME PLATES BOOK ENDS

COLLEGE EMBLEMS MEMORIAL TABLETS

Plaques, $6.50 each. Meta! book ends with bronze emblems, $7.5 0 per pair. Solid bronze book ends with bronze emblems, $10.00 per pair. PAY IN ADVANCE AND SAVE C. 0. D. CHARGES Send for illustrated folder listing the college emblems available. prices on plaques finished in mahogany or mission oak.

ORDER FROM THE CENTRAL OFFICE

Pi Kappa Phi Fraternity 636 CHURCH STREET EVANSTON, ILL.

Reduced


'W!p~~ i .. ~~ li!§J31JjgJ8!J3!!31!3f!JJtl8!!Jit!Et/3!!3!13!18t!JJt!3t!3t/3t!3t!3tJfttft!31!3!!3!!31!3t!itlft!31!3!!3t~!itJftJft!31!¥1!3!~!3t!3!lit~t31!31!3!Mft!3!!3!~!3!l!itim

~

~

~

fl

-

-

-

~

N

-

~

~ ~

<:

~

0 -J

':JYlJ.

:;, -< ~

~

~

~ ':Pl1.

~

~

::vll

~

~

~

':J.Jl1 ~ ':Pr1 ~ ':JYlJ. ~ ':JYlJ.

~

':JYlJ. ~ ':JYlJ.

~ ~

';JYf1

~ ::O'!I ':JYlJ. ~ ':JYlJ.

~ ~

1 I

I

I I I

1 1

:;,

1

· -< 0

c:;

()

::t:

::.. -,.

<..

()

t!1

'"<

1 1 I

I I

1 I

~·~

~I

::0 ;:::: "'J

V, .._

<;

'-) ..,_

......

ttJ

51

;

~:

~

b

D1

.::: I

0 <::;

,....., v

I

-~

I

01 ;:: 1 " :::.1

::o

!

aI 1 I I I I 1 I

I I I I I I I I I I I1

iSI

~

<:

;:

1 I

1

I

I

I

I

c. - ·

~ 8...,

ii

1

1

3

I 1

I 1

:::!

~

1 I

1 I

I

!I

I

1 I

I

I

1 I

1 I

I

I

"'

o:~

:· I

I

I

II

I

Ull

I I I

1 1 •

~.o Il = 1 ~ I :0 .1

S' l I ti l

~ I ;:>1

~I

I I I I I I

>

n

8 ~

I

I

I

~I

1 I

1

;;" II = 1 r.- 1 II

c:i l - ·1 :::. 1

~.J g 1 1

ol

~ I

,.. 1

-1

~I

II

I

! I

i

II 1

"

"'

II

II

<

1 I I I I 1

1 I I I I 1

I I I I I I I I I I I 1 1 I

I I I I }

I

oq

() 0

=

n>

~

- ·

=.· 1 '< I

"'

~

~ ~~ --3 ..__ ..J-"

3l ::: ~

I I 1

I

I I I I I 1 1 I

··

1

oq

oq

,.,

,.,

I I I 1 I I

I I I 1 I 1

I I I 1 I I

~

"'

-<g ::l-<

-"'

~ :1JrJ.

<';

1 I

._., I I I 1 I I

.., ;;;;:

lI

II

II

II

lI

II

l1

l1

':JYlJ. :;QII ':JYlJ.

m

II

II

II

II

II

I1

l1

1 I

':JYlJ. ~ ':JYlJ. ~

~

~ ~

:S:: t!1

....

-.

.

I

I 1

I

1

I 1

I

I 1

I

I '

I

I 1

I

I 1

I

I 1

I

1 1

I

::r:

1

0

3

..,

>

I

I 1

: !

1 I I I I 1 I I

~1

!!' 1 "I

t;l

~:I I

lI

1 1

):-

2:: ..,

o-

-<

I

I

! I

I

1 I

I I 1

I I 1

i I 1

I I I

-J

1 1 I I I I 1 I

I I I I I 1 I I I 1 I I

I I I I I

I I I I I

I I I 1 I I

I I I 1 I I

I I I 1 I I

I1

II

II

II

l1

II

II

II

5 1

"- 1 /'>I

.:;,.1

I

: 1

I

I

!

I

1 1

1

I

I 1

"i::l

I

1

! i

lI

1

;:;:,

I

~

1 1 I I I I 1 I

1

o

1 I

lI

lI

~I

1

II

1

• 1 I I I I I I I I I I I I 1 I I

~ t!1

I

1 I ~ 1 : 1 o. l 1

~~ ~

I

" I

-J

I 1.11

tl

...

OQ

;;l ~

-,..

:;·1 "'I .::.1 I I 1 1 I 1 I I I I . I

l

l

N ·

o<';

0

::!.

<l

::0

'C

lI

II

I I

II

II

I!

I

I 1

g;

I

I 1

-

..,

"' () ::; "'

::s

..-1 =' 1 1 - 1 <:!-1

~1

v

"3 .

;;; ,.., I I I 1 I I

1

~

Our Members Located There R eturn t he. D"1rectory

rza:. ~ rza:.

Quest10nnaues Promptly WHILEHEREATHOME • We Make Th1s

Th.Ifd A ppea1

<...

~l "'1 1

I

1 1

-.: : :;:

-..

'-l

tr1

rza:.

In spite of the turmoil. severed . . . . commumcaitlOns, a n d tsolat10n amid Mexico's debacle

~I

I

I

lI

o0

;;: ~

1 1 1

I

~

-

I1

1 I

I

I1

I

:

1 I

I

to)

~

::l..,

1

z

~

1

"'

'vJ

I 1

~

II

1 I

c;· ::s

~

"' I

a!

0'\

o:1 on c 5· 8 ffi ~

o

Q.

:; 1 "I !! 1

;;"

"'

I

:l

n

~1 Ull

I I

1 I I I I

~

1 I

1

I

~

I

'U ~

3

-.....,J

I

::;

0 £.

1

1

~ 5

0 £.

1

~

~

c.

1 I 1 1 I I I 1 1 1

g I

~

I

1

I

I 1

-nl

II

1 I I I I 1

1

..,

iI

I

I

o

I

I

I

"'

1 I

I

I

::r:

I

I

1

~

I

~ II

0 ::; ~

i

- ·

:l

0

~

~ =

1 I

0 ....,

§"

"'

~

!:!"'

1

~

~

<>

:; "' ~ "'

o

:::r

REVOLUTION! 00

\0

~

"'

I

I

1 I 1

~

For InformatiOn to be . Included 1n Our

N ew

n·1rectory

p LEASE A NSWER T HIS O NE

~

~

~

!iQ;:

rxA

~

~

'JXA

ti~

~

/2($:.

~ ~

U~

~ 1SQ;

~ ~

'fl!;f:..

lSQ;

~

1SQ;

~

h'"Q;;: ~

~

lf£

I MMEDIATELY

~ ~

Maz·z to

~ ~

PI KAPPA PHI FRATERNITY

~

rJ£:f:

l:lQ:

~ ~

'fl{J:.

l5Q;:

Box 382-EvANSTON, ILL.

J2d:: ~ ~

(D o N ot Detach )

~ .~

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


BADGES skillfully wrought in 14K gold, jeweled with pearls or other precious stones, distinguish the fraternity men-truly the badge is a beautiful sentiment, beautifully expressed.

GUARD

PINS

attractively jeweled to match your badge identifies you with your chapter, and makes your badge doubly safe.

PARTY FAVORS "put the party over," whether they be clever novelties, adorable compacts or bracelets, or useful art metal.

PROGRAMS of smart leather, or gaily colored celluloid of fancy papers lends charm to your party.

RINGS next to badges are the most popular fraternity symbols.

GIFTS for all occasionsgraduation, weddings-birthdays. Please advise if your chapter is not receiving its copy of Fraternity Life Sent free to all fraternities

All can be most advantageous! y secured from

The

1927-8 edition of The Book for Modern Greeks will be off the presses soon . Write for your copy now .

Burr, Patterson & Auld Co. MANUFACTURING FRATERNITY JEWELERS

DETROIT, MICH.


,.

.

II , !·

I

I SPECIALISTS IN

I

I -·+ ~

The Production of

i

College and High School Annuals AND

High-Class Publications

CORRESPONDENCE INVITED

~ ,,,,,,,,,.,,############################################~#######################~ ••


I

~~============~

n K ~

\

~~l============~f


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.