1930_3_Oct

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SUPREME ARCHON WAGENER are at al l sens iti ve to impre!isions, the open ing days of coll ege cannot fail to fill us with a thrill of anticipation and with the in spiration Thrills which comes from the possibilities for worth-while achievement which li e Anticipation before us. open to our g rasp. A lready the sound of the pigskin as it strikes Opportunities shoe or jersey is heard on the football f1elds of many a campus. Soon the tang of autumn will be in the air, bringing an anticipatory whiff of the bonfires which, we hope, will celebrate ma ny a ;victory won by our team . There is even the thrill of: sampling new courses an d of determining that this year will find 11s roundiri g out into rea l scholars. as we store up in our minds the equipm ent of knowledge which will assure business or professional success. How fine it is to he back once more on the old campu s !

Speaks of

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The fraternity is but one of the multitudinous int路erests in coll ege lif e. Equally with stud ies and athletics, however , it offers to the co ll ege man unlimited possibilities for personal develpoment. At the same time. it demands of: him that he g ive his very best efforts to the realization of these possibilities, if th ey are to contribute to hi s mental training and to the building of hi s character. Pi Kappa P hi wants her athletes who wear the star and lamp to keep their bodies clean a nd their minds alert, to fight fairly a nd fearlessly. to uph old be for e the world the honorable traditions of their A lma Mater. establi shed by gen erati ons of her sons. S he wants her stud ents to cultivate learnin g with eq ual zealousness and to maintain a respected position in the classronm . If. in short, a Pi Kapp performs hi s task. in w hi chever of the man if old activities of coll ege hi s interest li es, to the best of hi s abi lity and with out shirking, he is thereby showing that he has assimilated the precepts and ideals of his fraternity. It is the influence of such a man which insensibly enriches the lif e of hi s chapter . lf e1路ery Pi Kapp. alumnu s and active, will now, when the year is before him. d etermine to be an asset, not a handi cap, to hi s com munity, hi s coll ege. hi s fraternity, and will carry out hi s determination, Pi Kappa Phi wi ll come to Detroit next summ er with a record of which we can be justly proud. Let us each do our part.


THE STAR AND LAMP Of PI KAPPA PHI Volume

XVI

OCTOBER,

1930

Number

3

Application for transfer of second-class entry pending at the Post o fficr at Evanston, Ill ., in accordanc e with the Act of Congress approved March 3, 1879. Acceptance for mailing at specia l rate of post ago providod for m Soction 1 103, Act of October 3. 19 1 7, authorized April 19, 19 21.

THIS ISSUE

THE COVER

The finish of the annual collegiate regatta at Poughkeepsie, New York. Story on page 14. Photo

by

Int erna ti ona l

News

Photos.

Inc.

• The December issue wi ll find the f ootba 11 season of 1930 in a state of stati stics and resume. It will be an opportune time to review the representation of Pi Kappa Phi on the gridiron. There is no reason why an a ll-Pi Kappa Phi team cannot be ascertained.

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ALPHA RHO INSTALLED AT WEST VIRGINIA . . . . . . .

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By John R. Gass

COMING

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OMEGA WINS EFFICENCY CONTEST. . . . . . . . . . . . . .

The value of a college education in terms of dollars and cents wi ll be of interest. Co ntact has been made with Pi Kapps in foreign lands in the hope that we may enjoy in the future the breath of the exotic. The results mav indicate that the romanti"c g litter of strange strands is not all golden, that cosmos and chaos are still at loggerheads, but it is bound to be interesting. Then, there are the items of four new chapter housesthe introduction of the Pi Kappa sc holars-the chapter letters - additional information concerning convention plans-and many other matters of in formation.

JosEPH W. CANNON , Jn. , BECOMES AssisTANT SECRETARY . . . . . . . ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .... . UNDER TI-IE STUDENT'S LAMP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ...

10 11

By Dr. Wi ll E. Edington ALBERT '0/. MEISEL DiscussEs FnA'l' tmi'\TTY ENDOWMENT FuNDS .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 PI KAPPS PARTICIPATE IN PouGT-IKEEPSTE INTERCOLLEGIATE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14

By E. H. Olse n and R. M. Snider WHERE MEN ARE I\1EN (Part two) . . . . . . . ... . . . . 17 EARL L. CARROLL AccEPTS PosrTJON rN PHILIPPINES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 TnE CLEVELAND ALu~rNI OnGANJZE . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22

By R. E. vVorstcll

'vV ASI-IINGTON

PI KAPP

Go as

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By R. :M. Snider Pr KAPPS oF PROMI NENCE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 J. WILSO RoBINSO HEADS CoNVENTION CoMMITTEES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ...

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MTAMI PI KAPPS E--zTEND INvT'l' .<\TJO N ... . . . . . . . . 30

By E. B. Lowry ATLANTA ALUMNI ENJOY OuTING . . . . . . . .... ... 31

By ]. S. Havis PERSONALS . ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... .. ... 32 FROM TI-IE GREEK PRE fS .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 35

By Leo H. Pou SEALING wAX, CABBAGES AND KINGS . . . . . . . . . . . . 36

All in all, an issue to anticipate.

and other features -------------~----------~-------------------------------,-------------!he Life Subscription ~s $ I 0 and is the only s~rrn of -;ubscr iption . Ingle coph.s are 50

The St:\r and Lamp is published at Evanston,

tents.

; h " n g e s in address h 0 u \ d be reported b~mptly to Ce ntral ICc, Box 3 8 2. Evanston , Ill.

Ill.,

under th e

direction of the Supreme Council of the Pi Kappa Phi Fraternity. in the months of October. Dcccmbu. February and May.

Supreme Editor RICHARD L. YOUNG

Managing Editor

.Business Manager

HOWARD D. LEAKE

JOSEPH W. CANNON, JR.

Cont ributing Editors Loo H. Pou. Roymond 13. Nixon Ralph M. Snider. Ernost H.

All

material

intended

for pubticat ion should be in the h;mds of th e

Managing Editor. Box 382, Evanston. Ill., by the 15th of the month preceding the month of issue.

Olson


Omega Pictorial

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AnovE: Omega makes a s11ccess of Mothers' Day. In the exh·eme lower right comer is P1·o fessor G. W. (Dad) Munroe. CENTER: Treasurer, now Archon, La·n y Cond·r ey; the chapter house; Don Bttrge, D1·. Edington, and Albert Ginther, past Anhon. BELOW: The active chapter. [2]


Omega Wins Efficiency Contest fjf

$$$ $$$ $$$

INTERESTING DATA CON-

THE

award of one hundred dollars for being d ~he most efficient chapter of the Fraternity Curmg the year of 1929-30 will go to Omega bhapter, located at Purdue University. It has een asked time and again which of the chapters ~ 0 ttld be given first place in a comparative ratIng, and now, by means of the first annual con~est conducted by the Central Office, this has een ascertained. With an excell ent personnel, ~0 y1e number of forty-odd men, and a splendid Ptnt of co-operation among them, Omega was a~le to accumulate a total of 2,075 points to Wtn. " 'I'he winning chapter cannot be said to have wa!ked away" with the contest, however. Alpha 0 ~路Heron (Iowa State) with a total number of POtnts of 1,915 ran a very close second and becomes the recipient of the addressing equipment ~":'arded to the runner-up. It is quite fitting that . ts chapter should get this particular award, for ~t c.ertainly takes first place among the chapters ~n ~ts contact with the alumni of the chapter, . aVtng distributed during the year five issues of tts Publication, The Almicron. During the past summer the Central Office received the summer anct sixth issue. b I~ might be said that Omega won the award Its excellent scholastic showi ng, by its COm~ ete co-operation with Central Office, and by the t romptness with which each member of the chapPaid hi s obligations. Alpha Omicron is also t? be congratulated on the last fact. In addi/011路 this chapter won many points by its activity 11 co~municating with the alumni , by its co0 oPeratton with Central Office, and by becoming s路e of two chapters to subscribe 100% to the n 1.story and Directory. Upsilon Chapter ( IlliOts) was the other. a 'I'o Professor G. W. Munro, Chapter Adviser, C~d Dr. Will E. Edington, in the case of Omega Acta~ter, and to Registrar J. R. Sage, Chapter ~I ser , and I. J. Scott, in the case of Alpha 0 f mtcron, must be ascribed much of t he credit c~r the excellent showing of their respective in:Pters.. They were unfailing in their active Po erest 111 the chapter affairs, doing all in their Wer to guide and inspire.

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CAPITULATION BRINGS OUT CERNING CHAPTERS

The relative standing of t he chapters contest was as fo ll ows:

1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. 36. 37. 38.

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Poi nts Omega .... . .... . .. ... ......... .. 2,075 Alpha Omicron .. . ...... .. .. .. .... 2,015 Beta ........ . ... . .. .. . . ...... .... 1,130 Epsilon . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 945 Alpha Xi . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 718 Alpha Theta . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 595 Upsilon . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 540 Alpha Alpha . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 470 Delta . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 455 Alpha Mu . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 360 Alpha Pi ...... . ...... . ... . ...... 305 Xi ....... . ...................... 287 A lpha Gamma . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 195 Zeta ................... .. ........ 275 Mu ... . .......................... 145 Nu . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 90 Alpha Nu . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40 A lpha Delta . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 Alpha Kappa . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 Tau . . ............. . ... . ......... - 90 Alpha Lambda ................ ... - 115 Alpha Iota ... ........ . .. .. . ...... - 150 A lpha ........ ............ . .. .... - 175 Pi .................. . ... . . . . ... . -225 Iota .. ................. . ... .. . .. . -280 A lpha Epsilon ...... ... . . .... . ... . -450 Alpha Zeta ........... . ........ . .. -480 Omicron ......... . ............... -490 Chi .............. . ..... .. .. . .... -535 Psi . .. .. . . ................. .... .. -570 Kappa ... .. .............. . ..... . -570 Sigma . . ............ . . . . .. ....... -580 Rho ......... .... .. ............. - 580 Eta ........................ . .... - 760 Alpha Eta ........ . .............. -805 Gamma . ... . ... . .. .. .... ........ . -810 Lambda ........... . ...... .. ..... -895 Alpha Beta ..... . . ...... . .... .... -925


RELATIONS WITI-I CENTRAL OFFICE EMPHASIZED Gamma-captain of baseball, captain of water polo. The schedu le of points to be gained or lost Epsi lon-captain of baseball. places the major emphasis on the relation of the Lambda-captain-elect football, baseball. chapter with the Central Office and under that Xi-alternate captains of basketball. general classification places much weight on the P i-captain of basketball, captain of baseball, promptness of receipt and condition of the chapcaptain-elect of basketball. ter treasurer's monthly report. Therefore, the Rho-captain of boxing, captain of wrestling. majority of the chapters in the minus li st can be said to have failed to send in the required Tau-captain-elect of football. reports to the Office, failed to get them in Upsi lon-captain of water polo. Chi- captain of baseball, captain and alternate promptly, fai led to make the required payment captain of football. of fees, or sent in reports A lpha Gamma- cap· in poor condition . They Announcement tain of baseball. were penalized heavily Beginning with this issue, the STAR AND A lpha Delta-captainon part or all of these LAMP wi ll be published out of the Central elects of track and counts, and in instances, Office. In the future, all communications in the secretary of the chapcrew. its connection and in formation for publication should be directed to the central office of the ter penalized his chapter A lpha Epsilon -cap· fraternity, Dox 382, Evanston, Ill. additionally by not sendtain of baseball. RicHARD L. YouNG, ing in the final report of A lpha Eta-captain of S11P1"C11le Editor. campus honors won by tennis. The following chW his chapter, which might have served to overcome some of the other penalters had managers of sports : ties. A lpha-manager of boxing team. Delta-manager of football, manager of base· Because of the delinquencies in send ing in the ball. fina l report requested by the Central Office, it Eta-manager of track. might be said that the above is not an accurate Pi- manager of football, manager of baseball. rating of the chapters. It did place a great deal A lpha Theta-manager elect of track. of weight on the final report, but there was no There were ninety-six representations in ~he other way of obtaining the information in a compublications field. Beta Chapter led in this 1•11 • plete way. The Office did what it could to garstance with a total of twelve positions to Jts ner the desired information by searching the cred it. Among these were the positions of edito~­ chapter publications and chapter letters in the Star in-chief of the weekly newspaper and the busi· and La1np. ness managers of both the weekly and the col· RESUME 'oF ACTIVITIES AND HONORS lege annual. Concerning the last two positions, For that reason, too, the foll owing resume of Beta boasts of having a member who held doWI1 the activities of the chapters is not complete. Tt both managerships. is rather interesting as it is, however, and makes Others that possessed ma jor editorial positions an excellent showing despite its incompleteness. were: T here were 204 Pi Kapps engaged in intercolZeta-editor of the college weekly. . legiate sports of various kinds and in different Eta- editor of the literary magazine and bust· capacities. Of the chapters, Xi (Roanoke) is to ness manager of the year book. be credited with the greatest number of repreXi-business manager of the college annu?l. sentations in athl etics, having twenty-three in all. Tau-business manager of the literary publtca· Of this number, twelve were football letter men, tion. f five were basketball letter men, two were memAJpha Theta-editor and business manager ~ 1 bers of the tennis squad, one was assistant manthe Michigan State Coll ege agricultl1 111 ager of football , and one was P resident of the periodical. General Athletic .Association. Alpha Delta was Alpha X i-editor of the yearbook. runner-up with nineteen representations. A lpha Gamma-managing, news, and sports A total of twenty-three captaincies or captaineditors of the university daily. cies-elect were held by the chapters. The distrilpha Delta- managing editor of the univer· bution is as follows: sity daily. Beta- captain of the riAe team. (Co11timted on Page 41)

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Alpha Rho Installed at West Virginia BY JoHN R. GAss District Archon, Eighth District

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N MAY 16, 1930, Pi Kappi Phi entered the "Panhandle" state and selected for its thirty-ninth undergraduate chapter the local fr~ternity Delta Epsilon, located at the West VIrginia University, Morgantown, West Virginia. l3 1'he installation ceremonies were in charge of rather John R. Gass, Eighth Di strict Archon; assisted by Dr. A. Pelzer Wagener, Supreme irchon; Brother J ohn C. John ston, Supreme reasurer; Brother Edwin C. Jones, Upsilon; anct a member of the Faculty at the University, and an initiation team of six from A lpha Nu iha1~ter, consisting of Brothers Freel Rector, R. chvm Stickel, Walter Insley, Marcy Powell, Obert Crossley and A lvin Frye. It was a glorious event for the men of Delta ~.Psilon, and Pi Kappa Phi has acquired a splenJd group of young men and a well-organized ~nd progressive chapter. E laborate preparations or the social part of the in stallati on had been ~~?e by the local fraternity, the high lights of 11 Ch were a formal banquet, formal dance and reception . The installati on consumed three days ~d there was something do ing every minute. · Wonderful spirit of {ri endlin ess and loyalty Prevailed among the thirty odd visiting Pi Kapps ~Presenting the following chapters: A lpha, Psi, ·/o, Kappa, Omega, Upsil on, X i, Theta, Alpha heta, Alpha Mu, and A lpha Nu.

Promptly at the appointed hour on Friday morning, all candidates, the members of the installing group, and many visiting brothers assembled in the ballroom of the Hotel Morgan and the ceremonies started. After an hour's recess for lunch, the installation proceeded, and when the smoke had cleared, twenty-seven men had been initiated into the mysteries and fellowship of Pi Kappa Phi. A splendid feature of the installation was the initiation of Dr. John E. Winter, head of the department of Psychology at the University, and his son, James E. Winter, a Senior. Dr. Winter is an alumnus of Delta Epsilon. The charter was very ably and impressively presented by Dr. Wagener, a former member of the Faculty at the University. FoRMAL BANQUET HELD

Capping the events of the day, a formal banquet was held in the main dining room of the hotel, with places marked for fifty. The big table was arranged in the form of a letter "U" and was decorated in the colors of the Fraternity. Huge vases of reel roses also adorned the table and everyone present was given a rose as a token of friendship. Brother Edwin C. Jones presided as toastmaster. Toastmaster Jones introduced Brother Charles Leet who welcomed all present. Dr. Wagener

R ecently Brother Gass was appo inted by Supreme Archon Wagener

to th e position of District A r chon of the Eighth Di strict, and shortly

ns

thereaf ter the duties of hi s position called on him in a major way; the s up er vis ion of th e in stallation of a chapter. He writes of th e installation in this a rti cle in a very a ttractive way. \Nith r egard to his part in the ceremony, which he doesn't m enti o n, it ca n be said that th e duti es fo r which he was responsible were never mor e capably fulfilled. Born, French Lick, India na, October 3, 1896. G r ~duated from Purdue U ni vers ity with a Bachelor of Sciet)ce degree in Mechanical Engineeri ng, wher e he was a charter member of the local that became Omega of Pi Kappa P hi and w here he a ttained th e fo llowing und ergr ad uate honors: Captain of two class baseball teams; baseball in in ter mural competition; Senior Class Purchasing Agent; Fraternity Steward; ac tiv e in Y. M. C. A. and church, becoming a memb er of "Th e Twelve," a n ho nora ry religio us organization. As a preliminary to his present position as Mechanical Engineer with Mills, Rhines, Bellman & Nordhoff, Architects and E ngineer s, of Toledo, Ohio, he spe nt some yea r s as Instructor of Physics at I owa State and Inst ructor of Practical Mechanics at Purdue. Present duti es: supervising the installat ion of mec hanical equipment in the new buildings of the U niversity of Toledo, a $2,000,000 total outlay. H e is President of th e Toledo-Purdue Alumni Association; a Mason· married, two children; hobby, golf. '

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R.

GA SS

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The Installation Team CROSSLEY, I NSLEY, FRYE, GAss, PowELL, SncKEL, REcToR

Thanl~s of the ' entire fraternity (page 37)

then addressed the gathering in behalf of the Fraternity. His remarks were an inspiration and were enjoyed keenly by all present. In a manner that was most interesting, he outlined the history and progress of the Fraternity, spoke of its ideals and purposes, and explained just what will be expected of the new chapter. Having been a charter member of Alpha Chapter and the incumbent of many offices in the Fraternity, including the highest, which he holds at present, Dr. Wagener is well acquainted with his fraternity, and his talk was intensely interesting and instructive. Dean Harry E. Stone, Dean of Men of the University, followed Dr. Wagener with a splendid address, giving the University's attitude toward fraternities in general and Pi Kappa Phi in particular, and welcoming Pi Kappa Phi to West Virginia. He made some fine predictions for the future of Alpha Rho Chapter, based on his intimate knowledge of the past performance and standing of Delta Epsilon and of the character and type of men composing the new chapter. Dean Stone mentioned that it has been his experience that within five years after a local fraternity has gone "National," in practically every case, the new chapters have gone into a "nose dive" scholastically. He stated, however, that he expected Alpha Rho would prove an exception to this established custom and would not follow the example set by its predecessors on the campus. Following Dean Stone, Brother James C. Wilson spoke for Alpha Rho and pledged the co-operation of the chapter to Pi Kappa Phi and to the University. [ 6]

Many telegrams and messages of greetings from alumni, friends, and other chapters of fi Kappa Phi, that had arrived during the day and evening, were read at intervals by the Toast· master, adding to the enthusiasm that alread) prevailed. Brief remarks were made by Brothers Job~ R. Gass, John C. Johnston, Gene Dunaway, fre Rector and others. Brother Dunaway is Arch0° of the Second District and hails from Roanoke, Virginia. A:fter telling of the narrow escape be and Brothers Ed Bell, Neil Gilbert and R. ~· Rush had on their journey to Morgantown, 1 ~ which the four brothers "stood on their heads literally and actually for Pi Kappa Phi, Gene cut loose with a facetious tale that contributed much mirth in contrast to many of the more 1 serious talks that preceded his remarks. 13° telling stories is not Gene's failing; it is "wi~· min." Attest the young lady that caused bl~ party to be half a clay late in getting started bacJi to Roanoke. A fitting climax to the banquet was the an; nouncement by Dr. Wagener of the appointrne 11 of Brother Jones as Chapter Adviser to Alplll Rho Chapter.

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OTHER EvENTS ENJOYED

Saturday morning was spent in sightseein~ The visiting brothers were taken on trips throug the University campus and buildings, to Ch~~ Mountain, Lake Lynn and other points of ~0 1 terest. In the afternoon practically the ent1 ~1 group of members and visitors attended the 13'; Four track and field meet, consisting of teartli from Washington and Jefferson, University 0, Pittsburgh, Carnegie Institute of Technologl. and West Virginia University. Brothers Charle:

Alpha Rho Chapter H O!tse

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JohP [<'red choP 1oke, ,e be

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liiii and Joe Van Voorhis took part in the meet crystal bowl of snap-dragon, larkspur, roses and as. members of the University team. Brother iris, and the lighting was · supplied by tall tapers ~Ill ce.lebrated his initiation into Pi Kappa Phi in silver sticks, placed at each corner. A pink Killarney· rosebud was the favor on each plate. Y tak111g first honors in the shot put, discus. and hammer throws and fourth Mrs. Edwin C. Jones was in place in the javelin throw. charge of the refreshments and was assisted by Mrs. H. E. Stone, Mrs. ~n the evening the formal instal1atton dance was held in the ballJessie M. Stewart, Mrs. John E. Winter and Mrs. Robert T. Donley. room of the Hotel Morgan with a . , Miss Francis Chenoweth played a lproXJmately one hundred and program of piano numbers during bfty couples in attendance. The the receiving hours. . allroom was artistically decorated 111 Brother Charles Leet introduced the colors of the Fraternity and the guests to the following honor ~lllsic was furnished by a splendid guests: Dr. A. Pelzer Wagener, ranee orchestra. In the receiving John C. Johnston, John R. Gass, Tne were President and Mrs. Edwin C. Jones, Allison Ament and llrner, Dr. Wagener, Brother William Simon. bohnston, Dean Ruth Noer, Brother The reception was a beautiful ass, Dr. A. L. Darby, and Brother demonstration of the genuine spirit :nd Mrs. Jones. The dance proved of hospitality and fri!!ndliness that fo be one of the outstanding social prevails at this instiftiti n, and will unctions of the year. long be remembered By those prest An unusual and interesting feaent. It was a fitting climax to the Ure of the proceedings took place events of the twb preceding clays. ~t the chapter house after the dance 1!1 th. e f orm o f a regular c1mpter The chapter officers elected were 111 Charles Leet, Archon; John W. . eetmg, held for the purpose of 1 Musgrave, Treasurer; Elton R. ~structing the officers of the new Smith, Secretary; Freel Stewart, cfapter in the manner of procedure 0 Historian; W. W. Murrill, Chapconducting chapter meetings. To 111 lain; and E. A. Bradley, Warden. ake it the more impressive, the Officers were attired in their official Other members are: John Adkins, robe . s and all members present were Freel Fisher, Day Fitzsimmons, Charles Hall, Donald Headlee, :~ eye.n!ng dress. The members of r, e 1111ttation team served as the ofEdward Higgs, Charles Hill, leers of the chapter for this meeting. Edward Kime, Carl Lewis, August Marques, Wilbur Masonheimer, An informal reception was held Howard Martin, Lawrence One:~ the chapter house on Sunday acre, Edward Rodgers, Jack Ship~ernoon in honor of the Supreme man, Joseph Van Voorhis, James " ficers, members of the installing .,rou1) . . . Wilson and James E. b , anc1 v1slt1ng Winter. dtothers. Over two hunAlumni members are: ted guests were ente rt · Dr. John E. Winter, Gail amed d u r i n g the afterno on, COnSJStmg . . f P. Auldridge and Theo0 111 dore R. King. fr~lnbers of the Faculty, ti~ends, and representaTHE WEST VIRGINIA UNIVERSITY ti es of campus fraterniThe W e s t Virginia hes and sororities. The University is located at deo l1 s e was beautifully Morgantown, the county ij Corated W i t h garden 0 seat of M o n o n g a 1 i a 1'hWe rs an d greenery. County, in the foothills of r00e table in the dining 111 the Appalachian range of Was centered with a Campus Scenes, West Virginia U1~iversity

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lNSE'r: Offi.ce1路s of A lpha Rho-Bradley, Warden; Mnnill, Chaplain; St ewart, Historian; Smith, Secretor~/

Musgrove, T1路easttrer; L eet, Archon. ing eleven chapters.

UPPER: A lpha R'1o Chapte1路. LowER: A lpha Rho guest group, 1路epresCI

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Joseph W. Cannon, Jr., Becomes Assistant SecretarY all the undergrad uate hotl· ITH an atmosphere ors one man could hope to of the undergraduate accumulate without the still about him and accompanied by an aura of effinecessity of showing con· ciency gain ed in hi s father's triti on because of a manor· bank in Cordele, Georgia, oly. For all this, he is unas· the newly chosen Assistant suming. His attractive per· Secretary, Joseph W. Cansonality is evident from an non, Jr., recently stepped enumeration of the ab0 1'e over the lintel of the doorand demands no other way leadin g to the central eulogies. He is the ty~e offices and promptly asked that would rather have ht' what t here was that he actions ·speak of hi s quali· coul d do. Since there was ties, and it cann ot be other· no dearth of matters crying wise in this column . 'fhC to be accomplished, he was Fraternity is indeed forttt· just as promptly intronate to have obtained a 111 311 duced to work in line with of hi s type in partial cha rg~ hi s new duti es. 0 J oe came to Evanston Jo-e CANNON ETA of the national affair~ ' with th e exceedingly en' the organi zation. thu siastic endorsements and recommendations of For the time being Assistant Secretary Cannot; will concentrate hi s efforts on the supervision other men preced ing him and with a wealth of undergrad uate experience behind him. In the the routine of Central Office: accounting, con·e· short time that he has been in the office he has spondence, handling of chapter reports and r.ec· 011 ord s. In addition, he will assist in the publicatt proven conclusively that the endorsements were well fo un ded and that he knew how to use that of the period icals and manuals of th e FraternitY.5 experience that serves as a background of hi s To Executive Secretary Leake, the Coun cil h~ new work. In the chapter at E mory U niversity given th e acti ve ed iting of the Star and LG1 11 f' which is to be published henceforth by the cefld he served as secretary, treasurer, and for three terms as archon. Other fra ternal affi liation s that tral offices, and other publications, and assigne he enj oyed as an und ergraduate, add ing to hi s the responsibilities of the major amount of per· . the cI1apters. I n a ell' . , he store of knowledge and at the same time indicatsonal contact wtth c tt!Ot1 ing his popularity and prominence on the cam · is to continue the general supervision of the cen· pus, were O micron Delta Kappa ( honorary lead- tral offices. ership), Pi Delta Epsil on ( honorary journali stic ), Famili arity with the problems of the organiza· and Alpha Kappa Ps i (professional commerce). tion, gain ed through the central office experie~c~: Other honors accruing to Assistant Secretary will serve as an excellent background fo r Ass t ~ 1 ant Secretary Cannon when the future find s httl Cann on included: President of the School of traveling and in direct contact with the chapterS· Busines~ Ad mini stration Student Body, Manager of Varsity Track, member of th e Honor Council Successful Pledging Season Inaugurated S tu~ ent's Activiti es _Council, Senior Honorar; Advance information from chapters that ~o: Society, Owls (J umor Honorary), Toreadors (Sophomore Honorary), President of a literarv underway in September brings every indicati·~· society, member of the "E" Club. He served fo-r of a successful year for the chapters in obtat d three years on the Cabinet of the Y . M. C. A ., ing new blood. The following have reporte. was Vice-president of th e Interfraternity Council unofficially and state there is more to c0111;: an~ Assistant Editor of th e university annual. Gamma, 11; Epsilon 11; N u, 13; Rho, 1 : Bnefly and generally stated, he attained just about Upsilon , 8 ; Alpha Iota, 7, and Alpha Omirron, 5

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Under the Student's Lamp

ry

DR. WILL E. EDINGTON

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PI KAPPA PHI SCHOLARS FOR 1930 and answers

.. WHY WORRY ABOUT SCHOLARSHIP?''

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HE Pi Kappa Phi Scholars for 1930 are a group of men who represent the very . best scholarship among our active member)ther ship. The group for this year is unusually intype ~erest_ing for four reasons, none of which has to = hit d? _With any of the members of the group as inuali· \:v~cJuals. First, the number in the group is eight, ther· hich is the largest number to be so designated 'fhC anc] honored in any one year in the history of or ttl" ma 11 ~ur scholarship awards. Second, these eight brothers represent memberships in and bring targe ~nor to nine distinct chapters. Three members ~ o•' ~ the group each have membership in one chapby initiation and in a second chapter by affi lianno'' Ion, and their scholarship records were in each ,11 of case fi led by the chapters with which they afiiliorre· T hird , two of our chapters, Omega and rec· ~ed. 1 . Pha Delta, are each represented by two Schol:ttio'' a;s. This year is the first in which a chapter has nit)'· ~aced two members in this select group. And ]laS Ourth, for the first time, the members of the mJlf· group are more representative of the national ce!l' aspect of the Fraternity. r:rned 0 1'he chairman of the Scholarship Committee per· t~·esents the following li st of brothers as the Pi J, he appa Phi Scholars for 1930: cen· Cecil M. Hefner, Xi, affiliated with Iota. \V.William C. Davis, Jr., Alpha Eta, affi liated nitll' Ith Omicron. =nee, )ames 8'grna. B. Holman, Jr., Rho, affiliated with ;sist· 1 ]1itt Silas G. Weinberg, Upsilon. .terS· Ar thur I-I. Bostater, O mega. ~<;lwin T. Sherwood, Omega. ·d tctor B. Scheffer, A lpha Delta. got 11aynarcl L. Pennell, Alpha Delta. ltio'' th ~hese brothers are to be congratulated upon taifl' ~I eir excell ent scholarship and their respective >rted '-1apt ' Pr ers and our whole fraternity may well be )rOe: ~cl of their splendid scholastic rating. 13; 1' he award of the Pi Kappa Phi Scholarship n, 5rophy will be made to each of these brothers

on Founders' Day, December 10. The December number of the Star and Lamp will contain a detailed story of their achievements. In the past the Pi Kappa Phi Scholars have been men of outstanding abili ty both in scholarship and extracurricular activities, in their respective colleges or universities. WHY WORRY ABOUT SCHOLARSHIP?

In this day of rapidly moving automobiles and high speed airplanes and the equally rapid changes in the flow of li fe all around us, the matter of scholarship has come to be looked upon by many, both inside and outside our colleges. as of secondary importance and as by no means necessary to future success. Cases are cited of individuals who apparently are highly successful and yet had no college training or were very mediocre in scholarship while in college. Illustrations are given of individuals who rode the social or athletic ponies through coll ege without giving much thought to scholastic achievement and who have reached heights of success fn the estimate of the man of the street. However, in spite of these apparent exceptions, and when they are investigated they are the exceptions, the business and scientific worlds have found that scho larship does pay, and modern business and industry is insisting more and more on the thoroughly trained man, the man who knows.

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Real scholarship is characterized by the fact it requires time and persistence for its attainment and that it cannot be acquired except by hard work and conscientious effort. Everyone is agreed that th is is a scientific age, and the wonderful scientific developments of the present century are clue to the scholarship of the past as well as the present. The great scientific laboratories to be found as adjuncts to all our great industries are manned by scholars, derived for the most part from our coll eges and universities.

[ 11 ]

( Contimted on Page 15)


Albert W. Meisel discusses

FRATERNITY ENDOWMENT FUNDS Albert W. Meisel, Alpha Xi, besides being the District Archon of the First District, is also Secretary of the Committee on Endowment Fund. This article is indicative of the constructive thought the committee is applying to the proposed endowment campaign.

HEN the Charleston Convention of Pi Kappa Phi approved the proposal of an Endowment Fund, the delegates were merely keeping step with a movement already prevalent in the Greek-letter world. The general spread of the endowment idea is due to the fact that it affords a method by which the individual may do something to perpetuate his idealism in the future organization, long after he has joined the Chapter Eternal. It was natural enough that the early efforts for endowment first appeared among the older fraterniti es, whose alumni were more mature and who were financially able to carry on such an undertaking, but it is equally true that the younger organizations soon followed suit and initiated endowment plans with great zeal, though often on a small er fi nan cial scale. Upon request, the Research Bureau of the Interfraternity Conference gathered some informative data on the extent and manner of raising fraternity endowment funds, which is undoubtedly of such general interest that much of it may be repeated here. The largest endowment thus reported by the Bureau was $394,443.69, rai sed by an organization of 34,103 members; the smallest reported was $5.000, obtained by a frate·nity of 600 members. In the groups numbering approximately our membership are found the following: one of 4,190 members with $8,00~; one of 4,836 members with $10,000; one of 5,197 members with $25,000; and finally, one of 4,061 members with $12,000. Readers in considering these figures must, of course, remember that, in the absence of definite information as to the age of these

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organizations, accurate comparisons may not be l made. The confidential nature of the Bureau's report prevented the names of the reporting or· ganizations from being published, and they are therefore not available. The purposes for which the funds are being raised vary with the ideals of the various organ· izations and the present status of their develop· ment. What is a necessity for one fraternity 111a! already be possessed by a more mature groUP· What may be desired by another may play no part in the program of its rival. One aim, which seems fairly general, is to pro· vide endowment for the fraternity magazine· Practicaly all of the reporting organizations have special or general funds to insure the success 0 ~ their publications. It is pleasing to note that :fli Kappa Phi, through the wisdom of its earlier conventions, now has a magazine fund of splen· did proportions. Other declared objects include the establi sh· ment of a national headquarters building, extend~ ing assistance in chapter building programs, an meeting the general expenses of the national or· ganization. Fostering scholarship has also recent· 111 ly taken an important part in some endowme programs. Hence there is found provision fo; financing worthy scholars, the establishment 0 tutors in chapter houses, and, in some instanceS· graduate scholarships. The methods for raising the endowment funds 1 reported have been various. They naturally ha" 11 varied with the age of the several organizati0 : and the financial capacity of the members. A one extreme is found the funds which have bee~ 1 raised by purely voluntary subscriptions. 0tJ '

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standing examples are a fraternity of 3,003 mem-· hers thus raising $72,500, another of 3,299 collecting $20,890 and pledges of $88,750, and still another of 6,831 securing $50,000. It would appea~ that these organizations relied entirely on the Idealism of their members and that their faith Was justified . . In the middleground, there are the organizations which set aside a proportion of initiation fees, require a definite pledge from each initiate, or sell so-called life memberships. The endowtnent funds of such fraternities grow slowly but ~Ure!y and result in every brother participating 111 the movement. b' 1'here are a few fraternities which have com111ed all of these methods. Not satisfied with the gradual growth from the undergraduate fees, they have also solicited subscriptions from their alurnni, . Finally, there is still another group of organIZations, much smaller than the others, that build an endowment by setting aside each year a pro~ Portion of any surplus realized from general operations. Such fraternities appear to lose all ~~e benefit of the individual's participation in their 1 ea!istic effort. A. recent innovation in adding to the total of ~ndowment funds, which has attracted some at~;1~ion, is the endowment life insurance policy 11 ch the member takes out and designates all ~ Part of the principal sum for the endowment. organization collects a $5 fee from each P edge. Both of these means are efforts to get tnoney outside the fraternity and are not apPr?ved by many for this reason. When the endowment funds are secured, how <Ire thev administered? Gene.rallv, there is a board of trustees constitUt d · purpose, made up of past supreme e for this 0 l fflcers, experienced business men and lawyers. ; lllost states the law provides for the investlied £ ent of. such trust funds in securities speciTh' i Or sav111gs banks and trustees generally. 1s vnsures the utmost conservatism in principal inestment 11 a f~w instances, trust companies have been 8/ w~~ted as custodians for endowment funds. is lie t_his insures safety in administration, there tr a diminution in income by reason of the Ustees' commJSSlOnS. is ~here the principal of the endowment fund Pr o~ned to chapter or individual member, as is 0 ity ~ 1 dec! for in certain endowment trusts, securllla or the repayment of the loan is generally dePa;lded. The chapter, as a rule, is required to 6 per cent interest and give a first mortgage

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ELECTED CAPTAIN OF

TRACK

Another track star that was introduced to these columns last issue, as holder of the uni· versity indoor record for the 220, and who again merits recognition, is Talbot Hartley, Alpha Delta. He placed fifth in the 220-yard dash in the intercollegiates at Chicago in June and returned to Washington to be elected captain of the track team for 1930.

on real estate. The individual member must deliver a promissory note endorsed by parent or guardian or other satisfactory endorsers. It goes without saying that there are only a few national fraternities whose funds are large enough to permit the loaning of money, and practically all of them, in any event, lend but a portion of their resources. The limitations of space have necessarily prevented a detailed examination of all the various endowment plans in operation. The study of the data, however, clearly demonstrates that a fraternity endowment fund is a good thing. There is no Pi Kapp who does not realize that much could be accomplished with such additional resources. With the experience of others available, Pi Kappa Phi could examine itself and see how the desired result may be best accomplished. Beta Alpha Lambda Delta, a fraternity of Northwestern University, whose requirements demanded of the member that he be baldheaded is no more. It expired from lack of members: Possibly "herpicide did it."

[ 13 J


Pi Kapps Participate

1n

Poughkeepsie Regatta U THE

NATIONAL ASPECT OF THE ORGANIZATION IS BROUGHT OUT IN THE CREW REPRESENTATION

By E. H.

OLSEN

aud R. M.

SNIDER

last g reat crew in 1915. But stubbornly this crew kept the lead by a foot or two at Coe's Cnt ... At two and a half miles Cornell was a quarter of a length out and Syracuse had passed California. Then, "Open water," yelled the Cor· nell crowd. Captain Shoemaker and Coach Jin1 Wray, following their men in the Cornell launch, saw a slowly widening space appear between the Cornell stern and M. I. T.'s bow. Washington and the Navy were still in striking distance, but at the railroad bridge they were out of it and M. I. wttasse ttC·ying w ildly anfd use Jessdly to ho 1d off Syrad· C . orne11 was so ar a 11ea now t 11at the spee boats following behind moved up and let their wash rock the shells of the losin g crews. Cornell was three lengths in front of Syracuse, eight in front of M. I. T., Columbia ... "

HEN Cornell won the annual Pough~ keepsie Regatta, it tossed a bursting bomb( shell of surpri se among the gathered spectators \' and upset all tbe dope buckets that had been filled h beforehand by all sportd om. In the buckets it .T was predicted that Cornell would be an "also ran 1: -or r owed," and they were considered only as a part of th e background, a littl e add itional color to a kaleidoscopic occasion, until the closing secP onds of the thrilling event. The margin of W victory of three lengths was another source of tc . Pi Kappa Phi had its share of representation h; astonishment. 111 the crews that gathered for the climaxing In its characteristic fashion, Tim e discussed competition of the rowing season . Norman Scott, cr the event in this way: Psi, pulled No. 2 oar in the winning shell, thttS h~ "Because intercollegiate championship races rounding out his career at Cornell in a blaze of have been bungled at Poughkeepsie in the past, glory. In the feared, heavy Washington ere\~'· to a new rule was mad e this year that any crew late pulling No. 2, was Don Morris, Alpha Delt~· th at the starting line would be disquali ti ed. A ll nine California, considered by the savants of sur1 1 1S shell s were on time; there were no false starts ; events as the dark horse of the day, had in itS to in sweltering heat they moved away together clown the choppy river, with the nm e coxswains crew Vlilliam \Voodwarcl , Gamma. Earlier itt yelping in different keys. They had gone almost a mile when the people mopping their faces on the observation train s began to yell. Massachusetts Tech had pulled out in front, nervy enough to be pacemakers for the big Washington crew that was the favorite, the picture-book Navy crew that was the main hope of the East, _the formidable clark horse, California. At a mile and a half Cornell came out of the pack and at the end of the second mile ~aught Tech. Nobody took this move seriously because up to that time nobody had considered Cornell seriously. "Cornell had not won a Poughkeepsie regatta since the late Charles E. ("Pop") Courtney's NoRMAN ScoTT, Psi, inset a11d second from left in the group.

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the day, the Junior Varsity race fo und two Alpha Delta men in the Washington shell: Walter Poot and Wendall Swanson at No. 2 and 3. This event was also won by Cornell. Of the chapters, WILLIAM WooowARD Alpha Delta has the Gamma greater crew complex, having a total of nine men in the sport. Other than those mentioned above the chapter \Vas represented in subordinate crews by the following: Maynard Pennell, John Odegard, Lyle Jenks, Don Gill, William Everitt, and Karl Etzkorn.

·nell

Don Morris rowed in the annual regatta the Previous ,year as acting captain. The race was \Von by Washington that year. His contribution 0 .tiOII ~ the showing of the crew in t he recent years las resulted in his being elected as captain of the ){ing cott, ~rew during the season of 1931. More will be t hUS leard of this commodore. e of Gamma had two men in this sport. In add ition re11·, to Brother Woodward, Bernard Cahill held clown •eltn· ~he berth of assistant crew manager. \i\/oodward such Is a senior this coming year and will be expected 1 jtS to retain his place in the crew next season. He .t j!l

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will also be the head of Gamma Chapter, having been elected Archon in the spring elections. Scott received his degree in the spring commencement of Cornell, and t he Universitv thus loses an important cog in its crew and it f~otball team. He won his fres hman numerals in the latter sport, his varsity letter in his sophomore year. For three years he was one of the most consistent ground-gainers in the backfield. In 1929 he served as alternate captain. The year 1928 saw him in the junior varsity shell, 1929-1930 in the varsity crew. The extensive representation of the fratern ity in this colorful college event and the possibilities of f uture representation will arouse in the organization a keen interest in the competition in the coming years. The West will have an opportunity to avenge a decisive defeat, with Washington or California in the forefront. Then, again, it may be that Cornell has DoN MoRRIS found her old stride and Alpha Delta will continue her victories. Elected Capta·in

Under the Student's Lamp ( Contin11ed from Page 11)

tl Scholarship pays financially as has been shown · lrough many statistical studi es. Scholarship pays ~ that sati sfaction that comes with real achieveS ~t and the power to help mould the future. 0 c olarship pays in its tendency to broaden one's etitlook on life and to aid in the acquiring of tolsr~nce, understanding and wisdom. To be a real 1~ olar and to be recognized as such by one's fel\~ 111 en is to acquire real honor. Scl t behooves every fraternity man to strive for chlolarship and to insist that the pledges of his be~Pter meet a truly high scholarship standard ga ~re they are admitted to membership. The lagrrer or the loafer should not be tolerated. It is "' neraJl Y recogmze · d now m · f ratermty · · Ies th c1rc Ob~~ th~ man who is lax in meeting his financial Igahon s is a distinct liability and should be [15]

disciplined even to the point of dropping him from the fraternity if he does not mend his ways. And likewise the time is not far distant when the man who is lax in meeting hi s scholarship obligations will be similarly disciplined without waiting for the college or university t o do it. Such a man brings his chapter into disrepute in the eyes of the college authorities and exposes his chapter to the financial menace which follows from hi s withdrawal at all times of the school year as well as the fact that he is alm ost a transient in the college and likely will never graduate. Fraternity chapters should seek the advice of their alumni on scholarship matters as well as financial rna tt ers. Tl1e we 11 manage d ancI we I1 balanced chapter with carefully selected pledges rarely needs to worry about scholarship.


Alpha Delta Is Snapped e by Leake's Kodak e

UPPER LEFT: The Famo11s Ford of A . D.; old as its owucr, 1'. McFarland (at the ~uheel)路 1 UPPER RIGHT: Bea11 Han11a, tlrC! Archon. CENTER LEFT: A. P路 s member of the H ottse of Davrd; H. McFarland returns fromk ?. h1mt. CENTER RrGH'l': "H11s ~路e Roy Squires, a 'mainstay of 1 1e football team. LoWER LEFT : 1 Alpha Delta M othed Cl11b meet~; LowER RIGHT: Crewmm Morrl and P oot.

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Where Men Are Men fr JJd \

Executive Secretary Leake continues here the story of his rambles through the West, which consists of portrayals, descriptions, and reactions.

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N to Washington! It has been the rallying one of the well-known Grafton boys of Beta A. cry of many organizations; viz, Coxey's Chapter. Brmy, the Republican Party, the California Brother Snider needs no introduction to many n1~ars, etc.; and now it was running through my of the members of the organization. He was at Ind as Brother DuPuis and I turned our faces the last Convention as Alpha Delta's representasouthward and placed behind us the attractions of tive, and his name has appeared often in this ~anada. With a sense of great virtue and rec- publication as the author of interesting articles. titude we pulled up for inspection at the cus- His heart is commensurate in size with his body ~0111s. Apparently our physiognomy was a sign- -he is a big chap- and it is all for the Frater)Oa~路d, for deigning but a cursory glance at our nity. On second thought, I beg pardon for that equipment, which we had taken such pains to all encompassing statement. I had forgotten, arrange handily, the officer grunted a permission momentarily, the young lady to whom he is ento P:oceecl. We sped on, Fred regaling me with gaged. There is no doubt that she is part posstones of lumber camps and his experiences on sessor of that organ. S~lrnon expeditions to Alaska, and we arrived at Ralph was kind enough to take me to his home 1 t e chapter house without mishap, in time to get in Puyallup for an overnight visit, where I had a full night's rest. the privilege of becoming acquainted with his It Was good to get back, for the Washington very attractive mother, father and brother, and, 111 en are hospitality itself, the campus is beautiful, incidentally, had the opportunity of seeing a bit and the city is most interesting. I found the men of the city of Tacoma. His brother had planned ~nticipating a formal dinner-dance to be held on a fishing trip the following morning- trolling in aturday night of the following week-end, and Puget Sound-and, being enthusiastic Waltons, as they insiste I that I remain in Seattle for the Ralph and I decided to go. Cold , damp, and Occ 路 th as1on, personal plans were arranged to spend 1 :00 a. m.! It took considerable enthusiasm to .e Week with them. It was not particularly overcome those drawbacks, but the fishing bug (Ilftl cult to persuade me to do so. has made fools of better men than we. Ralph . 'I'he intervening days were spent in viewing the and I had a boat between us, and we each took Dt~resti~1g point_s of t~e city of Seattle a~1d the turns rowing and warming up while the other tl 111 Vers1ty, playmg a little golf, and carrymg on held the line. No luck-maybe it was the rain 1 .e routine of official inspection. Much of my or the cold (there is always a reason). We got 1 ~Isure time was spent with Roy Squires and the greatest enjoyment from the trip by sitting alph Snider. Roy was a most entertaining conin a warm restaurant swilling coffee. Possibly Versationalist and a speed demon in his Ford. I you will say that that is a better reason why ~~reciated. the fo~mer but de1~recated the latter. there was no depletion of the ranks of the finny spoke mterestmgly of Chma-he was born tribe. alnd_ reared in Shanghai- and was careful to Since three can compose a mob under certain :lliCidate clearly on the many points of interest circumstances-Ralph was driving the aforesaid )Out Seattle. . young lady back to Seattle for the dance-! ret l-Ie related one coincidence that it pleases me turned to Seattle by bus. Yes, I slept most of the way. do Pa~s on to you. He spoke of his high school "ays In Shanghai showed me a picture of the A brief resume of inspection facts would be as .,rou ' i11 P, and proceeded to tell me that there were follows: 路 Personnel-Excellent. l<:a tb e ~Ictur_e three men who later b~came p路1 Finances-Poor. Although in the main withkn!:s 111 different chapters and entirely unkn 11 to one another. In some way it became out outstanding indebtedness, they were operatan~wn, through the Star and Lamp or Directory, ing one month behind. This was due to delay . You can imagine the pleasure these men ex- in obtaining a sufficient number of men at the Pe tien d ce . I recall that one of the other men was beginning of the year and to permitting several [17]


men to delay the payment of their house bills. The books were in bad condition . The treasurer elected was not particularly interested in his duties. Activities-Well represented excepting clramatics. The chapter can be described as athletic. A letter man in football, two lettermen in crew, one letterman in basketball, three lettermen in track, will be sufficient enumeration to indicate this tendency. All told, there were nineteen representations in sports. College relations-Fair. Some member of the chapter inadvertently purloined the Dean of Women'ii favorite feline pet, and thi s was a sore point with the faculty for some time. It was finally straightened out to th e satisfaction of all concerned. It was my pleasure to attend a well-conducted meeting of the chapter and a meeting of the Alumni Association held at the house. Don MacKen zie, Instructor in Business Administration at the U niver sity, was taking a dili gent lead in the attempt to finance the building of a new house, plans of and lot for which had already been provid ed. Since that time th ey have decided

AncHoN PEAcocK Alpha Zeta

to purchase rather than build, and I think that they were wise. The dinner-dance was most enjoyable and served as a pleasant climax to my visit. Several members of the local at the University of British Columbia were present to enliven the occasion. My visit with the men of Alpha Zeta was ~egrettably short, three clays, made so by the receipt of a telegram from Gamma, urging that I pull up my stakes and come immediately. There was no denying the. appeal and Alpha Zeta was fortunate accordingly. T he Oregonians were exceedingly elated at the prospect of a new house this Fall, and, thanks to the untiring efforts of Chapter Adviser 'f. J. Starker, they are among the four chapters that reside in new houses thi s year. Of course theY showed me their lots, and I agree that they are excellent ones. Alpha Zeta lost their old house by fire-theY received more congratulations than conclolencesd and at the time of my visit they were ensconce in the much too small quarter s of a rented bouse· They were exceedingly cheerful about the matter, however, and were carrying on in an excellent way. d They have an excellent group which I waul rate A-1. Under the leadership of Peacock fro~~ Pendleton and Howard Davis, whom many WI remember as the chapter representative at the Convention, respectively Archon and Treasu:e: of the chapter, the chapter was progressing. 1 h only hole in the ice was the accumul ation of ac· counts receivable on the latter's books. Would to heaven these treasurers would refuse .• !1 to allow this ! I am now firmly of the opm 10 11 that the prime requisite of a good fraternity ttlt is that he pay his obligations fully and prompt Y· 1 Forestry is one appealing profession to 11 e' and I eagerly accepted the invitation of Brothe~ Starker to look over the laboratory equipttle~ 15 and the college "tree farm". The latter part too much like farming to appeal. The men studY' ing forestry are required to spend so many hour: a semester in this work, which consists of ploWo 5 ing, harrowing, hoeing and planting. Not good on a warm day. I did offer to take forestr~ provided a stipend of $2000.00 was connecte therewith, but the offer fell on barren ground· I saw more kinds of trees than I will hope t~ see again, unless I travel extensively, for the~ were species from all over the world represent~s· Row upon row, transplanted from seedling be ; where they look like so many youthful flowers ~'f vegetables. When they attain a sufficiently stur

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The active chapter, 1930.

CENTER : Office rs (front)

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g"rowti1 rest • they are sold and shipped and used to 1'ock cut-over land.

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or

dY

chal;~e f_ollowing will indicate the activity of the sent ~r 111 extra-curricu lar affairs: Sixteen repret\v0 a_hons in sports, two in the publication field, · In dr amatlcs, · · d vlce-pres· Identpresident and th1r tion ~lect of the student body, six representaanct s ~n honorary and professional organizations. ):lt~ne other miscellaneous representations. Patioe ge Bradley of Alpha Zeta fired my anticin of seeing California. His words of approba-

LowER RI GHT: Chapt er A dv ise1· Ed Wood - genial and i11ttmse/Jr int erested i11 the F ral emit3'·

tion of his native state might be paraphrased into: "you ain't seen nothin' yet." Yes, he is from California; in fact, the membership is just about 50-50 between California and Oregon. Once in a while they take an outsider, as Frank Little from Montana. However, he is an excellent football player, which overcomes the drawback of coming from a state other than the two mentioned. Bob Peacock kindly drove me to a near-by town to catch the S. P. south, and again I was on rolling and clicking wheels.

[ 19]


Just north of the Cali fornia State Line, a uniformed man apeared in the coach and called for fruit inspection. Thinking I would be sent up for bootlegging, I surreptitiously tossed my two dozen lusc ious bananas out of the window. Woe is me. They were only being particular about the kind of bugs that enj oyed the Cali fornia sunshine. Seriously, the scenery in northern Californ ia surpassed any that I had seen previously, and I am of the decisive opin ion that few sights could surpass that of Mt. Shasta in the moonlight. As I continued south the land became more rolling. Hi ll s that down South in Di xie wou ld be good for nothing except scraggly trees, in Califo rnia were covered with a lux uriant covering of grass. I think they were laid out by the gods as a private golf course. However, I understand that I was in the state at an excellent time of the year; that during the summer these green, green fairways become a dull brown. I was not enlightened by a Californian, of course. Bill Grimes and Bob Krost met me at the Berkley station and drove me to the house. It is an attractive house and really shows the money invested in it more than the average run of houses. It was the fear of losing the house that caused the men to hurry my coming. Fortunately, the alumni have filled in the breach sati sfactorily for the time being, and the und erg rad uates have the opportunity of showing their ab ility to surmount obstacles, which is undoubted in my mind . Since I spoke of these men in the article, "Gamma and Golden West,'' in the last issue, I will go into no further eulogies. It is one of th e few chapters that have no deadheads on the roll. I enj oyed my stay exceed ingly and am indebted to the men for their exceptionally warm hospitality, and this includes the alumni of San Francisco and Berkeley.

Fm£ Vrsrrs Ar. PHA ZETA

a t

TREASURER,

Now ARCHON, DAvrs Alpha Zeta

The "Overland Route" was negotiated without untoward happening. Nevada was an offsho~: of hades even at that time of the year. I can wed ' understand that there are only ninety thou sa!1 1 people in the entire state. I q~testion only t~: reason why they are there. Divorces must greatly desirous at times. the A bri ef stop at Denver and Boulder were d on ly breaks in the trip to Norman, Oklahoma, a~o Alpha Gamma; consequently, I was deli ghted be see the oil fields and know that I would soon e with another attractive group of men and ha"a the opportunity of stretching my muscles f,~~·Jd' . Gush.mg "vvi t satisfactory period of time. Mary" gave me a thrilling welcome. (Guess t11a one.) . the Alpha Gamma was another chapter 111 5• throes of excitement and anxiety over the pro 11 pect of a new house the coming fall. Throtl~r the efforts of Di strict A rchon Robinson, Chart d Adviser Ed Wood and many other interes~e g alumni, the chapter had the privilege of enter!l'lt· the portals of a permanent, new home. Congra ulations, fellows! s It is interesting to note that, of the six cbapte;e that I visited west of the Mississippi, two we

[ 20 l

cl

a, h 1 ti C;

h


building, or planning to build, one was planning

~0 build or purchase, and another was contemplatIng purc11asing a lot for future building. The last ~Vas Nu Chapter, Nebraska, which, although ownIng and occupying its own residence, has decided to PUrchase a lot nearer the campus. 'rhe combination of House Mother Walker, Ed Wood, and a likable group of undergraduates tnakes a visit at Oklahoma very pleasant indeed. 1'he three days in Norman were quiet and uneventful, unless an exciting game of playground bali be mentioned, wherein the Pi Kapps were defeated by the Kappa Sigs, by the score of 27 to 24. Both teams were overcome by exhaustion and had to be carried from the field on stretchers. If that were the usual exhibition of ball, I venture the opinion that each team should be given a Period of training similar to that undergone by the track teams. . Alpha Gamma might be said to have the pubhcation complex. They have a considerable number of journalists, six or seven, among whom 80 111e important positions on the 0 !?lahoma Daily ~re distributed. Dick Pierce was managing edItor and slated for editor-in-chief in the spring elections. He won the position handily. Jack Frost was sports editor. There were other staff Positions of importance held in the chapter. In sports they had seven representations, including the captains of three baseball teams and additional lettermen. There was no lack of other 10 11ors, among which were two Ph.i Deta Kappa'~· ~here were forty-six honors and Important posthans in all in the chapter, including sports, publications, dramatics, class offices, professional and honorary fraternities. In other words, a wellrounded chapter. a 1'he condition of the chapter finances wa~ ~ot . cceptable. Just another instance of men nclmg ~nst~ad of pushing. Probably this s~atemen~. PPhed to almost every chapter, is gettmg a brt l11onotonous so I will discontinue such remarks unn1 ' the next time. Gbr. Robinson, J. Frank Fletcher, Omicron, an_d eorge Bennett Omicron drove clown to Norl1J an from Oklahoma ' • d to City. ' It was good melee ~e0111them again. Fletcher is with the Oklahoma . Pensation Rating Bureau but I have learned ~ ' 1nee that Bennett has returned to his home town, 1obile, Ala. . I 1After three days of most pleasant associatton, 11~ft· ~orman and headed for the e~st sid.e of the 81 h ~ SStppi and stopped at Phi Chr of Pr Kappa ~-ht 111 · 1\r to b ~~ew Orleans. That gentlemen, presumes e a "wise-crack", and th~ explanation lies in the

!

(Conti11ucd

011

Page 28) [21]

Earl Carroll Accepts Position in Philippines EARL CARROLL, A 1p h a Eta, recently resigned hi s position as Secretary of the State Young Men's Christian Association of Tennessee to accept a position with the National Y. M. C. A. of the United States as General Secretary of the National Y. M. C. A. of t h e Philippine Islands. His work will concern primarily the expansion program of the organization in the Islands, particularly the Isla~d of. ~uzon, wh:re there are many cities and umversttles requestmg that a local branch be established. Since this is practically a virgin field, it will be a su~reme test of Carroll's ability to educate, to orgamze and to lead. His specific duties in the development within the I slands will be: (a) To organize new Y. M. C. A.'s; ( b) to supervise and place these a~cl those already organized on a sound financtal basis; (c) to discover and train native secretaries; ( cl) to develop a program of ~ork that will be adequate for the needs of the native young men and boys. Earl L. and Mrs. Carroll left in July for Manila, the seat of his headquarters. They jo~tr­ neyed to the West Coast by automobile, stoppt?g over in Mobile, Alabama, for a · final chat wtth Supreme Historian Pou. Taking their car with the;n they boarded ship at San Francisco on Augt;st 29 for the Philippines: via Honolulu Kobe Yokohama, Shanghai and Hong- · kon~. A 'brief period of s~~htseeing_ w~s permitted at each stop on the rtmerary. Thetr period of stay in the Islands will be not less than three years and not more than four and one-half years, after which they may return for another period. Brother Carroll will be remembered well as the very efficient Chairman of the Publicity Committee of the Birmingham Convention and donor of the Carroll Key to his undergraduate chapter, Alpha Eta, to be presented each year to that man who has done the most for the chapter.


Left to right: front !'ow-HARRELL, KuNZLER, WoRsTELL, WooDHOUSE, PETERS; second row-MYERS, Arrr.EYARD, HAAS, LIPPUS, EHRHARDT; third I'Ow-Tn.toN, CuMMINS, MowEN, ]ACKSON, TooMEY (visitor).

The Cleveland Alumni Organize By R. E.

T

WoRSTELL,

HE twelfth edition of Baird's Manual states that Pi Kappa Phi Fraternity has a total of twenty-one alumni chapters. The prevailing impression resulting therefrom is to be corrected by the following announcement that one more has been added to the ever-growing list, making a grand total of twenty-two. Last winter a number of Pi Kapps living in or near Cleveland, Ohio, decided that birds of a feather should flock together, and accordingly, the fraternity directory was consulted, a very substantial list of names obtained and an invitation extended to each. A few well-attended meetings were held, and within a remarkably short time an organization was perfected and a charter granted by the Supreme Council. Brother John R. Gass, Archon of the Eighth District, presented the charter to the new alumni chapter in a very pleasing and impressive way. Immediately following the prec:;entation of the

Omega tW

charter the chapter went into session for the Pthe t. l)ose of electing officers. Those chosen for·c1en' honors were: R. E. Worstell, Omega, Prest E. D. Kiinzler, Alpha Nu, Secretary; and ~· S· Woodhouse, Alpha Nu, Treasurer. Brother · e· Myers, Chi, was recently elected Archon to ~lY place Brother Worstell who has tempora.rt moved his residen~e to .Los An~ele~, Cal. ideil The accompanymg picture w11l g1ve a good in of what may be expected when visitors droP ys on the Cleveland bunch, which they are alwand welcome to do. The chapter meets the :ec~he Tuesday in every month at 6 :45 p. m., 111 ddi· ~llerton Hotel in downtown Cleveland: In ~oW tJon to the men shown in the accompanymg P vr 11 graph, the membership list includes the f~J~h~ ing: D. S. Ellicock, Xi; V. B. Hoffman, rnS· Nu; J. C. Kilgore, Omicron; R. H. Se~e ]<e~ Alpha Nu; J. M. Smith, Epsilon; C. A. Sttc Alpha Nu; and C. J. Snoble, Alpha Kappa.

L221

c.


s.

e路

IY

to Ford Airport via Canadian ROTHER J. WILSON towns, airplane trip over city. ROBINSON, Eta, is well Evening, formal dance. known at present as the effi4th day-Morning, business. cient and energetic District Archon of the Ninth District Afternoon, open. Evening, and as the leader of the Unformal banquet for men, dergraduate Roundtable at the theatre party for ladies. last Convention, but following AN O uTSTANDING ENGINEER the Sixteenth Supreme ChapRecently Brother Robinson ter Meeting, he will be even decided to capitalize on his better known, for it is he who knowledge of construction will be the pilot of the Detroit and his contact with building forces in charge of the plans firms by organizing hi s own and consummation of that company for the distribution event. He was appointed Genof constructing m a t e r i a 1 s. eral Chairman by the Supreme This is the culmination of a Council in its meeting in June. life-time spent in various conTo his new responsibility in struction firms, in different the Fraternity he brings a sections of the country, and ":ealth of experience in planon varying types of engineerJ. WILSON ROBINSON nmg and providing the maing work. His general experiEta terials necessary for the fulence would be covered by the fillment of plans. As a confollowing: struction engineer he has run District Archon 1. He was with Carnegie the gamut of every duty in and Steel Company for three and Engineer c?nnection with that profesone-half years at Pittsburgh, Sion. He realizes fully the One year in Pennsylvania. v.alue of a detailed organizacharge of field corps on pretion, of detailed plans; he is Wilson Robinson liminary and location surveys a man who is accustomed to for the construction of five :etain at his finger-tips the Heads Convention miles of railroad costing tntimate details of a project; $5,000,000 or $1,000,000 a Committees and he has the dynamic energy One year as draftsman mile. to fully control and guide. + + on maps, situation p 1 a n s, 'I'here is little doubt in the alignment, grade and earthwork computations, tninds of those who know Robinson well that flat slab bridge and reinforced concrete arch and tl:e Detroit Convention will prove the best in the One and one-half years retaining wall design. h1story of the organization. . assistant engineer in field on construction includ.The dates have been set-August 25-28, 1931; ing tunnel, flat slab bridges, reinforced concrete ~ 1 ~h the one exception of Chairman of the Pubarches, retaining walls, deep rock cuts and heavy hetty Committee, his organization is complete; and fills involving removal of over 1,500,000 yards the general outline of the program has been laid of material. out. In the coming year, the committees will con2. With W. J. Rainey, Inc., of Uniontown, centrate on the completion of the duties assigned Pennsylvania (one of the largest soft coal mining them. The preliminary program, as outlined in companies in Pennsylvania) for over a year as the recent issue of the Fokromix, is: field engineer in charge of construction of their ~st day-Morning and afternoon, business. Stewart Mine at a cost of over $2,000,000, work Bndge party for ladies. Evening, theatre party covering construction of two concrete lined hoist and back to hotel for informal dance and recep- and fan shafts, railroad siding and yards, power tion. house and warehouse, tipple and loading dock, 2.nd day- Morning, business. Afternoon, sight- also town site including houses, water supply and seet~g. Evening, picnic dinner at Belle Isle and sewage disposal. Posstble moonlight boat ride. 3. Assistant engineer on the design and con( Continu ed on Page 30) 3rd day-Morning, business. Afternoon, trip

B

J.

[ 23]


PI KAPPS Off .B-~ginning

a series of a~les are outstanding in the Pre who in addition to fltnit B~ tion, find the tHTli'AI SJ of the r• er I

] OHN

H.

ROBINSON

Phi

THURMAN ].

STARJ<~B

Alpha Zeta

Dr. John H. Robinson Is District Archon of the Thirteenth District T here is no stronger or firmer pillar in the edifice of Pi Kappa P hi than Dr. J . H. Robinson, of Oklahoma City. He has worked consistently and indefatigably in t he interest of the organization, the more recent result being the building of a house for A lpha Gamma, Un iversity of Oklahoma, which was ready for occupancy this Fall. Doctor Robin son was born in 1894, in Barnesvill e, O hio. He graduated from the Muskingum Academy, New Concord, O hio . He was in the army as Sergeant, first class, of the Med ical Department, spending fo urteen months at Camp Sherman, O hio. Af ter the war, he attended coll ege at Muskingum and the U ni versity of Tulsa, where he was a charter member of Zeta X i, which became the P hi chapter of P i Kappa P hi. He was in itiated into Pi Kappa P hi with the installation of P hi chapter in 1921. He enter~d th~ med ical school of George Washington U mvers1ty, 1921, and later did work at the U niversity of Chi cago. · In 1925 he received hi s B. S. and M. D . degrees at the U niversity of Oklahoma. He assisted in getting the charter for Alpha Gamma chapter at the U niversity of Oklahoma. He was always an offi cer of the F raterni ty when

The House of Alpha Zeta Is Due to the Efforts of T. J. Starker Alpha Zeta, Oregon State College, is another chapter that will resid e in a new house this Fall ; this is the result mainly of the interest and untiring efforts of P rof. T. J . Starker, Professor of Forestry. E ight years of service as F aculty and Chapter Adviser ind icates f ully the great loyalty and interest he has held for his chapter and the Fraternity. Very few others can boast of thi s term of service. He was born on July 14, 1890. He married on June 30, 1914, and has two children, Bruce 12 and J ean 10. F or nine years he served with the U. S . Forest Service, and fo r three years as manager of the Box Department of the Western P ine Manufacturer's Association. For eight

[ 24]

( Continuati01t of

,~ t/tfSf

artie/

e


DfPROMINENCE >f a~les about Pi Kapps who , the Pr~fessions and those to llrnrng . '1 , sue h recognrtir1l~~spend in behalf

~he P' ernity.

RJ(tR

A. GRAESER Alpha

CHARLES

JOHN

E.

WINTER

Alpha Rho

A Recent Initiate of Alpha Is Prof. Charles A. Graeser

On Recent List of Appointees of Supreme Archon Wagener

. /'"'-..

On the recent list of appo!ntees of Supreme Archon Wagener was the name of Dr.)路.~路 Winter, Professor of Psychology, West Vtrgmta University. Together with Dr. Petry, now located at the University of the South, he was selected to assist Dr. Edington in the duties and work of the Scholarship Committee. H is induction into the Fraternity together with hi s son, on the occasion of the installation of Alpha Rho, wi ll be considered always as one of the happy events of recent years. Dr. Winter was born in Holland, Michigan, and was educated at Holl and H igh School, Hope ~ollege, and the University of Michigan, receivtng thus hi s A. B., A. M., and P h. D. degrees.

/ art;cl.~ tJrrsr 'cles o11

following page)

Those who attend ed the Charleston Convention of 1929 and the dedication and gift of the Memorial Gateway to the College of Charleston need little introduction to this attractive gentleman. It was he who was chosen by the Coll ege of Charleston to make the acceptance speech in c'onnection with that ceremony, because he was so closely identified with and representative of the institution- A First Honor graduate and a highly respected and beloved member of. its teachino路 staff- and because he was a close fnend of the ~1en who founded Pi Kappa Phi, having taught them in high school. Thus, he has been associated with the organ ization very closely in many ways, and his initiation into A lpha Chapter met with approbation in all quarters. Since 1923路, Professor Graeser has been Professor of Modern Languages at the College of Charleston. This is the more recent phase of a li fetime devoted to study and teaching. Briefly, his career from 1888 to 1930 is as foll ows: A. B., Coll ege of Charleston, 1888, and M. A., 1896. Graduate student, University of Gottingen, summer session, 1895; U niversity of Chi cago, summer session, 1900; University of Berlin, summer session, 1907; and University of Heidelberg, summer session, 1912. Instructor in French

[ 25]


PI KAPPS OF PROMINENCE

Dr. T. P. Abernethy Becomes University of Virginia Professor

(Coutinued from Preceding Page)

Dr. John H. Robinson associated with Phi or Alpha Gamma chapters. and has been District Archon of the Thirteenth District since the installation of Alpha Gamma. In 1927 he organized the Pi Kappa Phi Alumni Association in Oklahoma, and has been president of the alumni association since organized. He is chairman of the Building Committee which let the contract for the $60,000.00 fraternity house on March 15, 1930, which is to be ready for September residence. He interned in New York City, where he unofficially attended路 the Interfraternity Conference in 1921. He became head of the Department of Gynecology and Obstetrics at the Oklahoma City Clinic, Wesley Memorial Hospital, in 1926. He is a member of Phi Beta Pi, medical; and of Pi Kappa Delta, forensic; a Mason; married.

Professor T. J. Starker years he has been Professor of Forestry at Oregon State College, C6rvallis, Oregon. He is a member of the Xi Sigma Pi National Honorary in Forestry, and for two years served as National Secretary-Fiscal Agent of this society. He is the President of the Lion's International, Corvallis Den, and a Trustee of the Congregational Church.

Dr. J. E. Winter In his early teaching experience he was at different times instructor in Greek and English and superintendent of schools. After completing hi s graduate study, he taught psychology and education in the following institutions: Goshen College, 19,13-1915; University of North Dakota, 1915 to 1916; Parsons College, 1916-1921 , and West Virginia University 1921. He is at present Professor of Psychology and head of the Department of Philosophy and Psychology at West Virginia University. Professor Winter is a member of the following professional societies: American Psychological Association, Southern Society for Philosophy and Psychology, American Association for the Advancement of Science, West Virginia Academy of Science, and the National Society of College Teachers of Education. He is a member of Kappa Delta Pi, honorary educational fraternity, a Presbyterian, an Odd Fellow and a Kiwanian.

Dr. Thomas Perkins Abernethy, Alpha, outstanding educator and author, former Chapter Adviser of Omicron Chapter, has accepted a position with the University of Virginia as Associate Professor of History. Dr. Abernethy was initiated into the Fraternity at the College of Charleston in 1911, in which institution he obtained his A. B. and A. M. degrees. He attended and obtained his Ph. D. degree at Harvard University. From his facile and capable pen has come many writings to enrich the knowledge of the nation. Among these are: "The Formative Period in Alabama," "Andrew Jackson and the Rise of the Southwestern Democracy," "The Evolution of a Frontier Democracy," which will be forthcoming shortly, and numerous monographs. In addition, he is a contributor to th~ American Historical Review; to the Mississippt Historical Review, of which he is a member of the editorial board, and to the Dictionary of American Biography.

l

s~

~aca

Ukul

~iri s

1ng,

jllras De!t ltlan

!ong

1ncet 1

lllne ~ers

ltleet sity the t

l It

on a

In 1 Stret the

illak,

Professor C. A. Graeser and German, High School of Charleston, 189196 and 1898-1910; Superintendent of the Darlington Public Schools, 1896-98; Professor of French and German, University of South Carolina, summer session, 1914-17; Professor of French and Spanish, Winthrop College, summer session, 1919 and 1921; Professor of French, Cornell University, summer session, 1920; Professor of Modern Languages, The Citadel, 191023; Acting Professor of Spanish, College of Charleston, 1921-23, and Professor of Modern Languages from 1923. On the 20th of May, 1930, Professor Graeser was initiated into the Alpha chapter of Pi Kappa Phi. In a recent letter to Central Office he says: "The recent distinction conferred on me by the active members of Pi Kappa Phi Fraternity brings me the comforting assurance . that the younger generation of my students has confide~ce in me, and the speeches of welcome by the sentor members at the supper that followed my induction confirmed the flattering implication."

then y feeii lhre1

Of

lohr Year ltligl

lCap1 tean~

Yard

to s

8ttch

jharcl

A the

on ~ Of

J

hay

a sil

Deau Ihe

conv the ~ty

M. Truman Woodward, Jr., Alpha Beta, is connected with Milling, Godchaux, Saal and Milling, Attorneys at Law, of New Orleans, Louisiana.

[ 26 ]

"-'ith ~ty

"-'est,

1illoctc


Washington Pi Kapp Gobs Visit Hawaii Bv

RALPH

M.

SNIDER

S

EEING Hawaii through a porthole- Hawaii, the theme of many dreamy songs, the ultraVacation land ; moonlight nights, throbbing U~uleles, softly caressing breezes, dancing Hula ~lrls, swimming, sightseeing, hiking and playIng, all mixed into maddening whirl ,of thrills~as the experience of three brothers from Alpha elta. These experiences were the realization of illany a day and pipe dream. Often during the !ong drill periods of naval R. 0. T. C. the only Incentive to carry on was the thought that on June 18th about 100 naval cadets from the UniVersity of Washington would go aboard and illeet a like number of cadets from the University of California and together they would visit the magic land of the Pacific. It is a wonderful feeling to cruise the Pacific ~n a battleship. The feeling of untouched power In the monster engines below, the massive strength of the decks and sides coupled with the seeming limitless energy of the big guns ~akes one feel as though 路 nothing could wipe / em from the high seas. Among this group ~f ~oung Naval Reserve Officers enjoying the thehng of security and a novel experience were ree Pi Kapps: Talbot Hartley, Don Gi ll, and )0hn Odegard. As Don and John are threeY~r crew men it is easy to understand that they ~ 1 ght take to the sea, but for Talbot, who is aptain of Washington's track team and the outstanding 440Yarct man on the coast, to go to sea when he would make Sl!ch a good infantry man IS ~rd to understand. After ten clays of cruising the Islands were sighted, and 011 Saturday morning, the 28th O f J h une, the Idaho entered the ay and dropped anchor. What a . ~ S1g~t to beh~ld ! Honolulu, a thautlful tropical city where t e principal steamship lines thnverge at the "Crossroads of ti e Pacific." It is the largest 'l!~y in the Hawaiian group tilth a population of 90,000; a 'l!ty of cosmopolitan air and ~estern aspect, with every 0 dern improvement, and most TAI.DOT &

I

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[ 271

appealing of all , with a climate that varies but a few degrees the year around- a veritable everlasting spring, with an abundance of native. fruits, flowering trees, and blossoming bushes and plants. After leaving Honolulu, they proceeded with naval drill, such as target practice, formations, plotting, etc. Here is a little bit of advice from one of the men, "Praters who know not when bedtime comes or the hour when students should arise, NEVER FOLLOW THE SEA, for it is to bed at nine-thirty and up again at six." Certain conditions aboard a battleship have been written about to a considerable extent, but it is always enjoyable to get the facts first hand, as in the following: "We embarked on board ship in time to stow away and get ready for lunch. Lunch no more路 mess is the word from now on, and wi1at ames~ when everyone has finished ! You have gone to formals where you could not decide which of the array of hardware should be picked up next and you were afraid to touch the china for fear of breaking it; but this is not so at the mess table. One plate, one cup, one mushbowl, none of which could be broken with a steel bar, were issued each man together with a knife, fork and spoon, and that s p o o n a tablespoon. Imagine stirring your coffee with that or getting a spoonful of prunes into your mouth." Cruises such as this one are annual summer experiences of JoHNNY


the men in the naval R. 0. T. C. Last year they went to Alaska, this vear to Hawaii. Next year will bring something ~ew, possibly a trip through the Panama Canal and back. This branch of military training is gaining rapid favor on the campus and the reason is self-explanatory. If you would like a cruise such as this, just come out to W~shington and we will see that you become a "sailor boy."

Miami Pi Kapps Extend Invitation

BY E. B. LowRY, Eta HILE the rest of the boys throughout tl~e country have had their feet to the fire th~S summer, we have been taking it_ mighty_ easy 111 this land of palms and sunshme. W1th cool breezes blowing and big moons shining doW 11 here it's been hard to realize that the weather 1 has i)een so hot everywhere outside of Florida· When next summer rolls around and you pick Where Men Are Men up the old time table to select that vacation s~ot, ( Contimted j?·om Page 21) look for the schedule to Miami and Flonda. fact that nine of the then active chapter list of grab a ticket and come on clown to Miami, ti:e nineteen of Alpha Beta Chapter were members warmest place in winter and the coolest place Ill of that professional medical fraternity. Possibly summer in the entire United States. We guar·l there are more now, since there were some pledges antee that you will want to come back and come also. Membership in Pi Kappa Phi is an in- back to stay, for there is something in th~ troductory to and a part of the pledge training of weather, the scenery, or maybe the bottles, tha that organization. The atmosphere reeks with makes you like it better all the time. the odor of medicines and the conversation with And about the Miami Pi Kapps, who've been medical terms. enjoying all of this? Well, here' s the "lo'i Another peculiar thing about the chapter is that down": Our legal talent is composed of Bo~ they have deleted from all their dictionaries and Gilroy, Alpha Epsilon; Inman Padgett, Lambda• their language the word "breakfast". I never and Thomas J. Reedy, Chi. Woody Fouch~ realized fully the importance of the position I hold Eta; Kermyt Callahan, Alpha Epsilon; and E until I learned that fact and yet was privileged · Marsh, of Chi, are all connected with the sa111~ to enjoy toast and eggs. From this day forward chain dry goods store; while Dick Dickson, 01 my family coat of anns shall consist of eggs ramEta, is with A. T. & T. Co.; an~ ?i ~onnallYl pant, toast or, coffee sable, and motto: "E Pluri- of Pi, and AI Caesar of Iota are hvmg m Cora bus Unum." Gables (sometimes known as Coral Fables). . Outside activities are few, unless we speak of Rus Cureton, Chi, Eta, Omicron, etc., 1: the daily pilgrimage of the men from the house operator of the chain system known as Famotl to Sophia Newcomb, that famous seat of femCleaners; Bill Brimm, Beta, is with a builde~: inine ed ucation, the nightly peregrinations among supply concern, and A. C. Spencer of Beta, 1. the Southports and the playing of pool. With few with Third National Bank. Chas. Costar, CJ~I., exceptions, the campus activities are declasse is our efficient auditor. Ed Lowry, Eta, is 111 among the fraternities of Tulane and left entirely the fruit jobbing line. 1 to the "barbs." Then, too, the study of medicine John Carlton, of Chi, has just ret~1rned fr~ll; and the climate are hard taskmasters. New York City where he was mar ned to JV.fiS· ' Nevertheless, a great bunch of men. Louise Posey, Delta Zeta, Florida. John oper Had some enjoyable confabs with Di strict ates Carlton's Cafeteria. Harlan Lloyd, Iotn Archon Latham and saw the town with Wally and F. J. Popham, Pi, have just gone to Ne~' Walsdorf, Alex Thompson, Archon, Gene RobiYork. J. J. Calnan, char~er mem?er of Iot ; chaux, ex-Archon and Archon-elect, Jimmie Dick is prominently connected w1th a budders supP1· Purcell, Secretary and Treasurer-elect, and A. F. company, and W. L. Wooton, Iota, is with thl Caraway, Treasurer. Florida Power and Light Co. ]1. Could not pass through Mobile without speakFrequent visits are paid us by Thos. Caldwe. ing to Supreme Historian Leo Pou. I then Pi who is connected with Eastern Air Tra115 , ' in a traveling capacity. Ed Bruce, Eta, a~, headed north to be introduced again to Mildred port Ann as her father. It was rather difficult to hi s wife come clown from the wilds of vert persuade her to believe it. Beach occasionally too. To all : Salud ! . wor k'mg witP Thomas P. Graham, Kar)pa, 1s tte· T. N. Spence, Tau, is connected with the the Alexander-Garsed Company, Char 10 Texas Company, Charlottesville, Virginia. North Carolina.

W

I

I

[ 28]


n t the

thiS ;yin cool Jowtl 1 tthet,

rid3· pick spot. rida, , the :e in

'u ar·l :ome the that

I

been "l o'~

Bob tbda; uche, 1 r;d san1e 1 , of

1aJlY• ::;oral

I.

., is notJ 5 IdetS :a, is Chi· is i!ll frot11 lVIW Jpet· Iot~ ·

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u

LEADERS IN CAMPUS JOURNALISM, 1929-30

~~~d "i.~'mR Row, LEFT: R. S. Crawfo 1·d (B eta ), bttsiness manag er of both weekly and annual-"The Blue Stocking"

Pao Sac"; CENTER: C. W. G1·ajton (B eta), edito1· oj "The Blue Stocking"; RIGHT: Ralph Vallotton (Jilta), 68 gza Gozamanager of ammal-"The Campus." LoWER now, LEFT: J. A. Mcintyre (Zeta), business manager of "The Otvle and Black" weekly; CENTER: William T1tmlin ( Jilta). editO!' of "The Phoenix," lit era1·y; RIGHT: L. N. Y (Alpha Xi), editor, " The Polywog," annual, and elected ecUtor of weekly, "The R epo1· t er," 19 3 0-31. 1tstn

: 6

[ 29]


J. Wilson Robinson Heads Convention Committees ( Contin11ed from Page 23)

struction of the Liberty Twin Tubes in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, a twin tube highway tunnel through the South Hills of Pittsburgh approximately a mile long costing about $5,000,000. 4. From 1922 to 1929 with Everett Winters Company, general builders, of Detroit, Michigan, whose operations have carried them to Chicago, Boston, Buffalo, Pittsburgh, Indianapolis, Racine, Wisconsin, and Saginaw; in charge of coordinating all building operations, scheduling and following progress in the field. 5. He left the Everett Winters Company to accept the position of chief engineer with the Walbridge, A ldinger Company, general contractors, of Detroit. He is a member of the National Safety Council, serving for two years as Secretary of the Construction Section and recently elected First Vice-Chairman; a member of the American Engineering Standards Committee of Washington, D. C., representing the Associated General Contractors of America; a member of the Detroit Board of Commerce; a member of the Civitan Club. He served fourteen months in France with the 29th Engineers, Company "B," first company to take up sound ranging in the American army, a new science developed during the war whereby mathematical formulas, etc., were applied to range the arti ll ery and locate enemy batteries.

Alpha Rho Installed at West Virginia (Continued from Page 9)

Twenty-four hundred stud ents were enrolled during the past year. In athletics, West Virginia's rank is well established . Her opponents are mostly from the Eastern and Central States. West Virginia's prestige in football dates from 1919, when her team ranked second in the country. In the eleven years that have elapsed since then, her teams have made a creditable showing against formidable teams from Princeton, Virginia, Pittsburgh, Carnegie, Washington and Jefferson, Washington and Lee, Missouri, Detroit, Fordham, Georgetown, Oklahoma, Gonzaga, Lafayette, Colgate, Penn State, Centre, and Boston College. Basketball, track, and baseball are other major

sports in which the University takes active part. Intramural sports are well established. The first national social fraternity was estab· li shecl at \Vest Virginia University in 1883. At the present time there are twenty-two national fraternities and fo ur locals ; seven nati onal soror· ities and three locals. Fraternities are governed by the Council of Administration and the Inter· Fraternity Council. In order for a local fratern· ity to petition a national fraternity it must have the approval and consent of both of these Coun· cils, and all members must be in good standing scholastically. There are thirty-five honorary fraternities and organizations at the University, among which ar~ Phi Beta .Kappa, Tau Beta Pi, Sigma Xi, Ph1 Delta Phi, Alpha Zeta, Phi Beta Pi, Delta Sigrna Rho, Kappa Delta Pi, Scabbard and Blade, and Mortar Board. ~

I

DELTA EPSILON FRATERNITY

~

The Delta Epsilon Fraternity was founded i~ the Fall of 1924 by the efforts of a small grouP of students, at the instigation of Coach C. VJ. Spears. The group was granted a charter \Jj the University Board of Administration on MaY 21, 1925, which permitted them to operate as a local fraternity under the name of Delta Epsilo11 • The organization progressed rapidly from its in· ception, socially, financially and scholasticallY' and in the Fall of 1926 moved into a house. The first formal initiation was held December 12, 1926. The charter members of the fraternity were: John Coleman, William Cosgrove, Jr. , Be~ Evans, W. S. Hayes, Edwin C. Jones, G. f. Jones, Lyic Langfitt, George Phillips, Leo Shinfl• and Edgar Snyder. These men drew up the cotl' stitution, formulated a ritual, and designated the pin and coat of arms. There are approximately fifty alumni men1• hers of Delta Epsilon, practically all of who~ have signified their desire to be taken into fi Kappa Phi at the first opportunity. The members of the chapter have always bee~ active in university affairs and the chapter iS represented in eighteen different honorary org~n· izations. They have taken active part in varsitY and intramural athletics, student governme111' and campus publications. Five members ha"e held student assistantships in the departmentS of instruction of the University. The alumni members have been organized since 1926 and have shown a splendid spirit of co· operation and interest in the chapter.

[ 30]

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>art.

YOUNG.CORDELii MAN WINS MANY HONORS AT EMORY

tab·

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t· rath• r~o~ d !~t:X•·•·utlvr•t'omrnltlt:•·,th• V

1'he Ytth Ooll-olane, whe will pla:t t.a -~- _ )lllmmt•••rt•

and are

PI KAPPf PHI _NEW DIRECTOR FOR

and

OFFICERS HERE GlEE ClUB NAMED FOR CEREMONY Claude H. Phillips Succeeds

Phi l gma

hutallation

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r·.

A .·:.lolu• t, :h,J 1/u• lulo r

Yarborough As Head Of Group At Howard

Epsilon

tQ Alpha Rho Ch a pter Starts

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~H.~~lESfONIAN ·~ ";'.'1-';~·:.:~.:""T& I lo BE ORDAINED to '"·

ny LISTON II OrKI S S, tp, T he ordlnarJ law coura In collta;e.

~~~ !01 ~~r:...no;, 0:.~:!r, 111~',': !~ 'ill

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lfr. ond 1fr1. Cllarlcl Willie of p Allnnta boy, Allen w aUr.lns by

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••• Jro••·"'· LV /'On l lllc,

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ev. Charles de Vincal 8 e~co~c Pncst at Cer· onJes Next Week

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tqt,ot-. .,.., ut', il )l n n d G toi CMl<Cr . , .Jlyol~~ Cll l 0101('ga ID'f'Ori/ JI, Dr, ;;,;.)(r: «.. a grod11a fe of tll n Vn~

.,.,.,,1/ 0/Jtlel\lgll n cuul f.t o niM or'al lllfiJ t!l"l/ .,a(/ ot "'' Dnlve,..• rft11 ho• Jri t a.l ot Ann .d.r,tlor l/e U

me, who will probably fin d hla lno'

\:~n •t!r.llan•ard

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Join Forc:N or Crrtirird Puh lic: J{udil a Compan)' . \Ul:'Ul'( J. l

~d:::rd ~~~~eyhlc~~~~~.~~ f~:IJJ,•.,.>mn,..,,u,.,

Uen, the .on o f Edrar Wlltkhu, t nh110l or ~mmern Unh•trohv kno• n Atlanlll lawyer, J ~arned Soutll Cuohn~. and waJ the French and Latt n t'.e knew ~~~th:r ~.!~~~~ ~ u;~::~,!~. ~~~~~;: of books at Boys' W ah S:llcwl ~rd thlll o ffic-e. r lfrtth·e Julv 31. Qalrtllor pe Unh•trsJty. ltf'tiJI a poullon "'ith the Cert!rlrd

etretrd

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1 a ll o! h b law In French an d

A PAGE FROM THE PRESS

Att Gotjen (I) rates Sunday supplement of the

lJ: 0 jnta, Journal;

The State, Columbia, speaks of car/nan s ( S & P) success; the Atlanta JOttmal Pop 'ld .the ~theridge (AA) head lines; Robert's (B) Nezu anty IS publicized in the Greensboro Dailj' Dis us; Cannon's (H) hometown paper, Georgia a 1:atch, honors him; the Morgantown Post carried (i\.Ifgthy ~tory of the installation; P ledge Phillips Pro Ill) recetves recognition in the Birmi1tgham News; Jour l11ence is given Johnson (I) in the Atlanta nat; another captaincy for Lambda, McGaughey,

[ 31

the Marietta J o1tmal informs us; one on us-this chapter at Ft. McClellan-as told about in the Anniston Sta1·; the Sewell's (0) are mentioned in Banta's Greek Exchange; the Charleston N l!'Ws and Dispatch speaks of de Vineau's (A) ordination; the Chicago Tribune carries the picture of Porritt's (AK) fiancee; Watkin's (N) versatility is an item of news in the Atlanta J oumal; The Columbia State speaks of Hunt (S); Alpha Zeta gets publicity in the Portland Suitday Oregonian; this important event in the life of Preston ( V) is spoken of in the Savannah News.

J


Enioy

Atlanta

Outing

Alumni

j.

a

1 f.

I View of the lake. LEFT: Vic/~ (1), Havis (1), Pe1·l~ins (?J), Carswell (1), Brem (A), Teague (M). RIGHT: Ritch (M) - note the fishand Rourk (A). UPPER:

By]. S. HAVIS, Iota URING the month of June, the Atlanta Alumni gave the first of a series of entertainments planned for the year in the form of a fishing trip held at Lake Burton, located in the mountains of north Georgia, about 125 miles north of Atlanta. It was an enjoyable trip and will long be remembered among the pleasant memories of the brothers that were able to attend. The party was arranged by Brother John Rourk, Lambda, who has proven himself by this event a master along such lines. He did not forget a thing except the fishing tackle, but it was not missed until the party was ready to leave for home. Four of the brothers left Friday night and arrived at camp about midnight. Those who could not get away from their jobs, came up Saturday afternoon, increasing the number to sixteen. The four had managed to get the party well under way by the time the rest of the brothers arrived. It was a big time for everybody until the wee hours of the morning, when we finally clecicl ecl to call it a clay. A few of the party were up bright and early and off for a clay's fishing, but as the fish were not feeling well, and it being Sunday, the wouldbe fishermen gave up early and spent the remainder of the clay with the rest of the party swimming, riding in speed boats, lounging and hulling. We did have, however, two real fishermen in the party who stuck to it all day. T hey started out soon after breakfast with enough paraphernalia to catch all the fish in the lake, and it was in the late afternoon before they returned. After so long a time, we saw them coming down the lake with the boat loaded clown with the day's catch

D

. l1t or mne . me . l1es 1on g. The"d -one bass about etg are still talking about the big ones they hooke but lost. d J. W. and Benny Whitaker brought their ~p~~g boat along. Everybody had a great time nd. d in it until J. W. saw a girl on the bank and ;r~e t to chase her up a hill without getting out. r at . the real story, proven by the looks o £tl1e boa• ts but J. W. has another. I feel sure I am right. d In aclclit.ion to the big events we have plannek· · · wee for the Fall, the Atlanta Alumni hold thetr otel. ly get-together luncheons at the Ansley II 'fhe every Tuesday between 12 :00 and 1 :30 P· 111·. to heartiest welcome is extended to all brothel 5 bC attend any of these gatherings that they maY able to make.

Visitors at Central Office . cal· 0 . B. Gaston, N u. Editor of the Vall eJO ~ the ifornia) Evening Chronicle; in Chicago fo \ cal 0 Rotary Convention. He is secretary of the club. }1otl• George D. Driver, Nu, Past Supreme Arc}1otle Commercial Engineer with the Bell Telep System ; in Chicago on business. duate· John M. Nelson, Alpha Delta, recent gr~ the 11 on his way East to assume a position wtt New York Bell Telephone Compan~. recellt Theodore Meyer, Alpha Omtcron,, dutieS graduate, on his way East to take up hts ster, with a grinding wheel concern of worce Massachusetts. . . }..rt11Y• Dillard B. Lasseter, Eta; Major Bnttsh . and one-time U. S. Consul to Antung, Manchuna,bli5h later to Hankow, China; in Chicago to e~a ,viii an agency of the Piedmont Plush Mills. I e be located in the city permanently.

[ 32]

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PERSONALS

~r~.-W--.-E-.~p~~~-e~sc~o~t~t~O~m~t.c~r~o~tl~A~.~B~.~a~n~d~B~.~S~.• ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

I Alabama; M.. D.,- Ru~h Medical College; interne

Edward S. Carothers, Omicron, will be a professor of political science at the University of and Resident Surgeon of the Ford Hospital, Alabama. 1 ?28-29; Resident Surgeon of the Bethesda HasW. T. Bundy, Mu, is working with the AmeriPt~al, Cincinnati has begun private practice in can Tobacco Company, of Durham, North CaroB~rmingham, Alabama. He will be associated !ina. \Vtth his father in East Lake. Richard E. Jordan, Mu, is connected with the t' Coctie D. Bell, Alpha Eta, has accepted a posiChesapeake Telephone and Telegraph in Newton as assistant in the Mathematics Department port News, Virginia. Of the University of Michigan, where he will . Leslie M. Stone, Alpha Gamma, is connected also take graduate work in actuarial mathematics. with W. D. McCoy, Realtor, of Tulsa, Okla_Dr. Frank Howard, Alpha Zeta, recently re- homa. ~etvect his Ph.D. at the University of Iowa. He Paul D. Stitzel, Nu, is working with the Real ts at present a National Research Fellow at Har- Silk Hosiery Company, Indianapolis, Indiana. varct University, studying Cryptogamic Botany Edgar George David, Pi, is with the GoodDr. Will E. Edington, Upsilon, capable and rich Tire and Rubber Company, of Birmingham, energetic Chairman of the Scholarship Commit- Alabama. t~e, has left Purdue to accept the headship of Johnson w. Sutton, Pi, is working with the he. Department of Mathematics at DePauw Universal Credit Company, 101 Marietta Street, nrversity. Atlanta, Georgia. Calhoun H. Young, Pi, is connected with the 1 Charles C. Shutt, Alpha Omicron, was recentappointed as Section Engineer of the Power Brunswick Radio Corporation, Atlanta, Georgia. t ~gtneering Department of Westinghouse ElecA. M. Verner, Jr., Pi, is Vice-President of t~Jc Co. He has made an enviable record with Verners' Incorporated, "Atlanta's Oldest Rese Company. tam·ant," at 37 Marietta Street, Atlanta, Georgia. Joseph Rosser Bobbit, Jr., Kappa, is now con~e~ted with the Virginian-Pilot, Norfolk, Va., as J0 Urnalist. CHAPTER ETERNAL Neil D. Adams Nu is connected with the CarOn July 14th, Ralph Gordon Miller was very Penter Paper Company ' ' of Omaha, Nebraska. happily married to Miss Nancy Lyell of Wash}f Walter E. Christensen, Nu, is with the World ington, D. C. Less than ten days later, the "mov. , to h'1s l'f erald, Omaha, Nebraska, ing finger " wrote "fi ms 1 e. 1:. F. Kendall Nu is working with MontgomBrother Miller was a member of the class of •ty ard & Company, of Concordia, Kansas .. 1924, of Mercer University, and joined Pi Kappa W~enry G. Kirchoff, Nu, is connected wtth Phi through Alpha Alpha Chapter in 1923. ~ ker and Fulk, Lincoln, Nebraska. After leaving the university, he sought a position au] Koehler Nu is connected with the Inter- in his field, accountancy, in Washington and had "atj ' ' ~ ona] Harvester Company, of Chadron, become firmly established and his qualities recebraska. ognized when his untimely demise took place. h A. B. Wright , Omicron , is with The Fair, ••!o The Fraternity and Alpha Alpha Chapter join ~tgomery, Alabama. . in extending to his widow and parents heartfelt th va C. Reeves, Alpha Eta, is connected wtth sympathy for their great loss. Aiel Federal Phosphorous Company, Anniston, a )al1la ·h John Franklin Bowman, Alpha Xi '16, entered theCeo rge· A. Jackson, Iota, is connectec1 wtt the chapter eternal Sept. 10, 1930. Fraternal servAt! Lumbermen's Mutual Casualty Company, of ice was attended by the officers of the active chapW~t~, Georgia. 11 terne .harn Carmel Roberts, Omicron, is an in- ter and representatives of the corporation board. In St. John's Hospital, of Tulsa, Oklahoma.

i

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[ 33 J


Engagements Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Cross, Marion, N. C., announce the engagement of their daughter, Alice Roan, to John Henry Tyler, Mu, Duke University, the wedding to take place in October. Mr. and Mrs. Fred L. Moreland, Adrian, Michigan, announce the engagement of their daughter, Anne, to James Thomas Smith, Chi, Stetson University. Mr. and Mrs. P. M. Borders of Ludlow, Missouri, announce the engagement of their daughter, Ester L., to Theodore D. Meyer, Alpha Omicron, Iowa State College. Mr. and Mrs. Harry A. Dean of Crystal Lake, Illinois, announce the engagement of their daughter Rutha A. to Edwin W. Dean, Alpha Omicron, Iowa State College.

Marriages Carl Hobbs Lippold, Eta, Emory University, to Virginia Marie Blanchaine, June 3. William T. Bains, Jr., Alpha Eta, Howard College, to Miss Madeleine Bell, October 18, 1929. Norman Gardner Johnson, Alpha Delta, University of Washington, to Miss Elizabeth Baer, July 5. Charles E. Boynton, Pi, Oglethorpe, Princeton and Emory University, to Miss Evelyn May Thompson of West Palm Beach, Florida, April 26. Jesse Forrester, Alpha Iota, Alabama Polytechnic Institute, to Miss Katherine Pruett of Newton, Alabama, July 31. Augustus Hayes Monroe, Jr., Pi, Oglethorpe University, to Miss Frances Lenora Baxter of Jacksonville, Florida, September 10. Cornelius Huguenin, Jr., Alpha, College of Charleston, to Miss Evelyn Dukes Anderson of A lbany, Georgia, July 16. At home, \i\Tadesboro, N.C. Martin Janasik, Alpha Kappa, University of Michigan, to Miss Luvera Ziegler of Covington, Kentucky, June 18. John Hale Nunez, Iota, Georgia Tech, to Miss Marion Hazeltine Lynes, of Chattanooga, Tennessee, August 2. Wi_ll iam _M. Jennings, Rho, ·w ashington & Lee, to M1ss E hzabeth Gossom, of Custer City, Oklahoma, June 25. D~vid Wiley _Henry, Jr., Alpha Epsilon, University of Flonda, to Miss Bessie Sharick of New Jersey, April 22. Charles J. Raley, Pi, Oglethorpe University,

to Miss Josephine Lee, of Atlanta, Georgia, April 22. Joseph Kirkland Hall, Jr., Epsilon, DavidsO!l College, to Miss Lucille McGowen of Belmont. N. C., June 26. \i\Tilton Mays Garrison, Rho, Washington_ & Lee, to Miss Ruth Love Turner, of Statesville, N. C., June 22. At home, Carlisle Street, Spar!· anburg, S. C. Glenn Brown Hasty, Alpha Alpha, Mercer University, to Miss Luetta Smith of Monticello, Georgia, August 21. Paul Sharp Etheridge, Jr., A lpha Alpha, :Mer· cer University, to Miss Laura Bruce JohnS 011 ' of Mars Hill, N. C., July 8. John T. Ballenger, Epsilon, Davidson College. to Miss Helen Johnson, June 24. At hoJ1le, Seneca, S. C. H. Baxter 'Williams, Iota, Georgia Tech, tO Miss Carolyn Smith, August 5. · er· John Brown Frazer, Pi, Oglethorpe Umv sity, to Miss Louise Elizabeth Newman of .At· lanta, Ge01·g~a, J un~ 25. . _ of Robert Re1d, Ups!lon, to M1ss Betty BenY Wilmette, Illinois, September 20. After Octo' ber 1, at home in Evanston, Ill. Henry Dickinson, Alpha Omicron, to ]\1is~ Charlotte Mullin of Britt, Iowa. Since SepterJl ber 1, they have made their home at Miles, Iowa· J. Frank Rogers, Zeta, to Miss Louise Jack· son, of Campobello, S. C., on June 20. At hoJ1le, Woodruff, S. C. Eugene Ullemeyer, Upsi lon, to Miss Louise Lickert, of Marshall, Ill., on August 4. At hoJ1le, Detroit, Michigan.

co: en tif

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Births

Born to Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Watkins, Jr·• P i, a daughter, Mary Louise. Born to Mr. and Mrs. Adam Hamm, Jr·· A lpha Nu, a son, on August 3. Born to Mr. and Mrs. Maurice C. Crew, lit>' si lon, a son, John Edwin Crew, on July 10. To Mr. and Mrs. George V. Denny, Jr-·v Kappa, twins, George Vernon, III, and Mar. Virginia, on June 9. nega• T o M r. and Mrs. George H aase, Ol son, George Frederick, on August 2. el'et1 T o M r. and Mrs. E. W. Kiffin, Nu, a S and one-half pound boy, on A ugust 5. - on, Born to Mr. and Mrs. J. Wilson Ro bl 115 Eta, a girl, on Monday, September 8.

[ 34]

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FROM THE GREEK PRESS &

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MONUMENTS AND MEMORIALS (Banta's Greel~ Exchange) 1'he chief event of the Sigma A lpha Epsilon convention, to be held at Evanston, Illinois, at the ;.~d of 1930, will be the dedication of the beau1 ul Levere Memorial Temple, now almost comPlete. This magnificent building was erected at ~ co~t of approximately $400,000, and occupi~s .a C<lhon facing the camr)US of Northwestern Um\rer · "B·Sity. The memorial, named for the renowned · tliy" Levere beloved of all fraternity men, is tn 110 ' . nor of all members of S. A. E. who served ~n the World War. It will house a chapel, a lirary, and a museum, besides the national offices anct, headquarters of the fraternity. 1 he Evanston convention wi ll also commem?rate the seventy-Jifth anniversary of the found~~g of Sigma Alpha Epsi lon, at the University Alabama on March 9, 1856.

I

JeW

to the Uni\ M:ost original is Chi Omega's ~e-ift . . of Arkansas, the place o{ Its btrth. On ttne 28, 1930, the sorority dedicated a beautiful 0 ti~Itcloor theater, a building of white marble, in style of a Grecian temple, to be called b'_ounclers' liall." Modeled after the theater a~l!lt by Dionysius at the foot of the Acropolis . Athens nearly 2400 years ago, the structure \Vtll I . . u seat almost three thousand people. t 1s sitsat~cl on a hillside, with a naturally effective ethng. · J'er Stty

'F

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1111

Pressive monum ents now mark the graves of is ~~y fratern ity fou nd ers. Not the least of these G e White marble erected last fall at Columbus, }.,!eorg· b ta, to .the founder of Sigma Al~ha E.. psi'1~n, 0 ap le Leslie DeVotie. It was dedicated with s·Propriate ceremonies on December 27, 1929. tgtna Cl . of . 1t dedicated the fourth monument to one ter Its .seven founders in the hi stori c Bilox i Ceme19{0 In Mississippi Sound, on February 15, Calct · 'I'he Founder so hon ored was James Parks Well. l1l

'l'hLafayette has established an Alumni College. Occe ~nen who return to their alma mater on the aston 0 f t I1e sprmg . Priv·] commencements have t I1e Part~ ege of attending a series of lectures designed tcuiarly for them. It has proven successful. [35]

I

NEW FRATERNITIES There are few subjects taught in college that haven't their particular foll owers who are desirous of signalizing themselves and their subject. The recent issue of Banta's GTeel~ Exchange carried the news of the formation of two organizations that may be added to the ever-growing Jist: A lpha Nu, honorary astronomy, organized at Colorado College in 1928, and now consisting of three chapters; A lpha Kappa A lpha, honorary philosophy, founded at Moravian Coll ege, Bethlehem, Pa. Rather unique in the field of coll ege organizations is Phi Eta, whose membership is made up of and limited to the mothers of the members of Phi Kappa Tau Fraternity.

GREEK-LEITER POLICEMEN The town of State Coll ege, Pa., seat of Pennsylvan ia State College and numbering some three thousand sou ls during the coll ege session, is policed by college students. There are twelve men from the institution assisting the chief of police, all of whom are members of college fraternities. Five of these are ordinary privates, the remainder made up of two sergeants and five corporals.Banta's G1'eek Exchange. GOOD FOR A CHUCKLE Chicago alumni of Sigma N u on May 20 presented a jewelled badge to "Chic" Sale, actor and author of "The Specialist. " Rumor has it that he will be made Grand Architect of the fraternity."-The Magazine of Sigma Chi. This gem from the Kansas City Star: "Any number of coll ege students and grads, listen ing in on Rudy Valee at the Fleischmann hom over WDAF Thursday night, were amused to hear the maestro's reminiscences of the good old clays at Maine U ni versity when he was a member of the 'Sigmer Alpher Epsil ong' Fraternity . . . . That's just the way Rudy pronounced it . . . . And he wasn't kidding . . . . So Rudy was a 'Sigmer Alpher Epsilong' at coll ege . . . . That's a surprise . . . . From hi s looks we'd have imagined he'd be a 'Baiter Thater Pie.' "-Ibid.


Some "Do's" for the Chapters

Regarding College Fraternities An Editorial in the Boulder (Colo.) News-Herald

1. Monthly news letters to alumni and parents.

Only by keeping the "older heads" informed will you ever obtain their interest and support. 2. A definite all-year social program. Lay out your whole social program tentatively now. Figure the respective cost of different events. Include the social assessments in the monthly dues. Don't wait until the last minute to plan the programs and raise the money for social events. 3. Train the pledges thoroughly. 4. Get the files in good order. Buy upright manila correspondence folders even if you cannot afford anything but a packing box to keep them in temporarily. Sort out your chapter's correspondence. Check over your form supply. Request from the central office all forms needed. 5. Get the money. Collect from eve?"Y man ·when the money is d~te. Enforce automatic suspension. In no other way can the chapter avoid financial difficulty. 6. Organize the chapter library. Set aside a small fund to buy new books. Provide shelves for proper protection and elect a librarian to see that they are not lost or misused. 7. Make scholarship the chapter's major activity. Scholarship comes first. Men low in scholarship have no business participating in other activities, and other activities which undermine scholarship should be abandoned. Our chapters which stand lowest in scholarship usually do not amount to much in other lines. 8. Improve chapter tone. Discourage an excess of rough housing, rough talk, carelessness, and disorderliness. School the freshmen in proper conduct. Cut down on rough "initiation." Of course the freshmen will be "cocky" toward the sophomores. It would be a shame if they weren't. A freshman who is disrespectful toward intelligent upperclassmen should be given a raking over the coals ... in the pledge court, however. There are scores of other definite things worthy of doing this year, but that's enough to think about now . . . \Vhen your term is ended what will you say to the question : What has your chapter done this year? . . . Will it have been operated in a businesslike manner with all men paying up, all credits satisfied, all the university community pointing the finger of admiration? Or will the chapter have gained a reputation for irresponsibility and incompetency and the behavior of a bunch of yearlings? Will the house

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AX MASON, who resigned as President of the University of Chicago to beco!lle associated with the Rockefeller Foundation, gave an address before the Fraternity Club in Chicago in which he brought the following indictments against college fraternities: 1. Greek letter societies have achieved the pill' nacle of fellowship and sportsmanship, but have failed to make for real college education. 2. The fraternity does not foster scholarshiP• but regards the serious student who applies hi!ll: self to real study as a "nut ready for the psychO pathic hospital." 3. Fraternities are the homes of intellectual poverty. f 0 I " goo cl scottts" do . . I1ave mace 4 . F ratermtles students, but they haven't clone all they can in the lasting game of ability to foster things worth while. We hold no brief for the college fraternitY· But the fact remains that since man is a grega· rious animal, and the flocking or herding togethe~ instinct is more pronounced where the exuberancf of youth is found, one might as well try to pus~ the Rocky Mountains over as to attempt to pre . . togetl1er 111 . clttbs, vent human bemgs from commg fraternities and other collective organizations. . teJ11 True enough it is that the fratermty sys . through dividing college students into two se~ rate divisions, "frat" and "non-frat," develoP." false ideas of importance or "codfish aristocrac) among immature youth. Higher educational institutions have favored o; tolerated the fraternity system. It is too ~~~· now for such educators as Doctor Mason to s f cessfully indict college fraternities for evils ~. which officials "over the years" are more r sponsible than the organizations themselves. -Kappa Alpha Journal.

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have been clean, orderly, and kept in repatr, bit will it look like a battered dugout or a two··de flop-house where no one is responsible and prt rc is unheard of ? Will the tone and atmosphe]c· of the house bespeak of cheerful, c1ean, who vr1 · youth or wt'11 tt · be J<nO' some, sportsmanhke . ]e, for petty bickering, surly looks.-The Pttl P Green and Gold of Lambda Chi Alpha.

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[sEALING WAX, CABBAGES AND KINGS

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Does this issue of the magazine meet with Your favor? Is it any way comparable to the unstintedly praised work of Brer l)e~cel!ent, rck?

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No local has come to us with a more favorable reputation on the campus than Delta Epsilon of West Virginia University; no chapter has had a more auspicious beginning or more enthusiastic send-off than our infant, Alpha Rho; therefore, we look Welcome, to hear much of and from Alpha Rho the thirty-ninth addition to the organization. District Archon Gass, Chief Installing Officer writes with regard to the installation: "The thanks of the entire Fraternity are due the Supreme Officers and members of the installing group, and particularly the initiation team from Alpha Nu. They were untiring in their efforts, and their exemplification of the ritualistic ceremony was superb and most impressive. The Fraternity also appreciates the loyalty of the many visiting brothers, many of whom traveled hundreds of miles to be present for the installation and to lend their assistance to the new chapter. "Pi Kappa Phi welcomes its newest chapter into the fold and reposes much faith and confidence in it, and feels that it will take its place among the leading chapters of the Fraternity." We heartily concur with District Archon Gass and believe that it is a case for mutual congratulations. We hope that Alpha Rho will not disappoint Dean Stone in his expectations that it will be an exception and will not take the usual "nose-clive" in scholarship. Welcome, Alpha Rho! May you ever find the affiliation under the star and lamp one of inspiration, of supreme satisfaction, and a door to greater accomplishment!

lf we were told that it compares favorably, although there is a feeling in our hearts when T' we write the above that it is he Star lese majesty, we would imand Lamp to mediately search for a few Evanston clouds to trod and feel that g we had received one of the i reatest compliments that it is possible to give connection with the editing of this publicat? ton.

"' \' es; Dick has given up active charge of the '"ag . He did not feel that he could afford t azme. ro c~ntinue to give the time that the magazine heqtured of him; and when we realize that he ras Performed this service in addition to his ~g.ula.r daily occupation, that it demanded the la~~O~tty of his evenings, the usual time for re\\1 bon and recreation of the average human, ine can readily sympathize with him and concur ;he wisdom of his action. zin or approximately ten years now, the magaha e has taken most of his available leisure hours, be s taken much of his time that might have Of er~ . spent with and on that attractive family 115 \Ira t and other things that make of this a tha~ hwhile world. He has perused every word Pla Went into its make-up, planned and rePr nne? the layout of each issue, studied to imin ~~e It,. thought and lived it. He has nourished it a Ao at.tu~e from staggering, weak-kneed youth to that ~rtshmg, healthy maturity. Don't you know say It ?roke his heart to part with it. We will itrb!l1 Dtck, that the Fraternity is not exactly anct ant about it, that it realizes fully its loss Ii suff:rs a corresponding regret. llla e .w111 remain in general supervision of the anlazme, giving us his advice, his suggestions Oft;nWe h.ope, a message now and then, or more to f · It IS the future of ours of Central Office tion ace the major responsibilities in its publicaOf 0 and to look to the unavoidable comparison lheie~: ~ork with that of his of the past. Neverthe t ' It will be our aim and endeavor to hold high orch just as high, to maintain the same to0 ,_,standards, hoping that we will not suffer ''lllcl1 . 111 the comparison. 1

Kindly overlook our habit of back-patting with this additional item. On two counts we must indulge in a few self-congratulations on the appointment of Joe Cannon to the position of Assistant Secretary: First, that the Fraternity has obtained the services of a man The New of his high calibre; second, for the significance his appointment Assistant has towards the future developSecretary ment of the organization. The position that made the bid for his talents is, to an extent, an experiment, the development

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of its value incumbent upon its holder. It possesses multitudinous duties requiring time and effort. These duties, in turn, offer a tremendous field for possible development, for in many instances they have been merely assayed and not developed. They were known to be there, needing a mind to establish their worth and a guiding hand to align them in their importance. The position demanded, then, a man of vision and energy plus an intense interest in the improvement of the organization. We believe that Joe Cannon is the man for the position. Unassuming, despite a rather remarkable undergraduate record, quietly competent, eagerly interested, he has taken hold of a rather difficult position in a manner that bespeaks well of the future of the Fraternity. We have spoken of the many duties of the position, and their number is legion. The placing of an additional man in the office is a distinctive step forward, however, in that it permits the entrance of specialization. Blalock, in hi s two years as Assistant Secretary, worked indefatigably in the more routine department of the Central Office, and had little time left for other matters. This still left much of routine on the shoulders of the Executive Secretary and the responsibilities of a variety of duties that certainly could not be classed as routine. It was demanded of him that he be a jackof-all-trades, a type of individual considered quite passe in these days of specialization. The disadvantages of such an organization are easily perceived and need no elucidation other than to state that it is rarely possible for an individual to do many things of fairly equal importance in a limited amount of time and do each well. Something has to suffer. A greater specialization in duties under the present situation of a stenographer-clerk handling the purely routine matters of filing and recording and two additional men in the office is possible. It is going to permit more intensive concentration on the duties found essential, with a resulting greater contact and control; it is going to permit thought to be applied to the exploitation of ideas that will lead to the improvement of the organization. Ju st another rung on the ladder. We cannot do otherwise than rejoice over the addition to our ranks of Professors John E. Winter, of West Virginia University, and Charles A. Graeser, of the College of Charleston ,

two outstanding men in the field of educatiott· It is a tacit and unspoken recognition of the value of frat~rnities in the educational schetne· The character and work of both men will be a~ inspiration to the undergraduate and source 01 pride to the alumni. Rarely is it a privilege of the Fraternity ~0 t initiate father and son at the same time, as 1~ t the case of Professor Winter and his son, at1 ! therefore it is correspondingly precious. 11

p It is brought to our mind that we shoull a invite criticism and comment from our readerS· tl We are doing the best that we can but we readil~ t1 realize that there will be many errors, man;. ft failings; that there will be muc : ft room for improvement at al· n Criticism, Comment, times. Many eyes and mat1)01 0 minds are better than one 111 Copy two, so we extend an invitatiof to each and everyone to become our assistant: ar in the publication of the periodicals of tht 111 Fraternity. a This is your magazine. It is to please ): 01 th that we are apply'ing our energies and expendttl: ha money. Therefore, you have the absolute t:i~~ se: of commenting on the layout, the composttt 0• \Vt and its handling, the statements made, and tltt tht material used. re; The material used is limited by the amotl~ an and character of the copy we receive, so 11; Po ask that you take communion with yourself, rtt· sit over in your mind what you have personally doli' to to increase and improve the amount of copy, 11 Cc fore you become critical. The source of 01~ copy is the membership. vVe can complain tl~ is we are not getting the cooperation that we shot~ err like. Many members are apparently publicity \ tio or totally indifferent, if we may judge by 1 en . Jl elt• lack of response to our requests for materta a personal nature. Five thousand men ar~bi ch; considerable number and it is quite imposst tn< to follow each of their careers so closely that 11 Cttt may know when they marry, become fat 11er· e;az build a better mouse trap, become political dar Prt horses, and so on ad infinitum. We must clepe~ toe on a Pi Kappa Phi-conscious brother of the~ Off to inform us or get the information from ~ld1 , cu direct. In both cases we could enjoy const e· ha ably greater co-operation without it becoming · burden. Prt The consensus of opmwn of all fratet ·nil an, of-ficials and others, whose duties call for ~· Of interest in the administration of fraternitieS,

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1tioJI· that finance and scholarship are the outstanding that the chapter obtains the proper income and ; the Problems faced by the organization. does not spend more than it is taking in. The Jett!C· problem of income is mainly that of collection. While the record Je ao Chapter Scholarship of Pi Kappa Phi The chapters do not seem to lack a sufficiency of :e oi and Finances a 1 o n g scholastic men but they do find some men who cannot or will not face their share of the obligations, a b lines is nothing to ty tO .ecome unduly elated over, yet with the excepsufficient number to affect the situation adversely. as itJ :~on ~f a few chapters it is fairly acceptable. By This is the crux of the matter in regard to inand Ee ,dll:t of intere7ted, persistent effort, J?r. Will come. The chapters and officers must adopt the ' policy that all who dance must assist in paying ·. Edmgton, Chatrman of the Scholarship Comthe piper. The man not willing to pay his share llllttee, . has emphasized the importance of this Phase of activity in such a way as to make it and pay promptly is not at heart a real fraternitv houlil man but a leech of the worst sort. There (s an outstanding point of endeavor for most of Lderlonly one place for him: Outside. the chapters. (Incidentally, we are glad to note ~aclil~ ~hat Dr. Edington will have the assistance in the V.Te consider the law of heredity unju st ; we rnaJJ~ try to reason why the third and fourth generamUC~ fllture of Doctors V.Tinter and Petry.) His ef~rts have been ably seconded by the efforts of tion must also suffer. It is as unjust that the Lt af ~e. officials of the Fraternity and the Central incoming members of the chapter must pay the 111 an) fhce. It still remains a problem but not as bills of former members, and it is without the 1e or llluch as it has been in the past. consolation of the law of retribution. The ones tatior Not so chapter finances. There is a fear who should pay those bills are those that enjoyed stant' £ thl a~long official circles that Pi Kappa Phi will be the reasons for their accumulation. It would be lll!nus a few chapters in the coming years unless rather difficult to persuade the men in question a ract· 1 to accept this statement, therefore the present e yot th ' Ica improvement takes place. For most of ese chapters the accepting and ~iving of credit increasing emphasis on the budget as a preven,11 diJJf 1 tative. sl~s been their greatest weakness, which is in itrigh' \ e f an indictment of the chapter officers who >sitiO~ Omega is to be congratulated for the winning t~ere responsible for the financial guidance of td th• of the Efficiency Contest. It is to be congratre~ ~roups. They face a heavy burden of cur- ulated, in addition, on the outstanding reasons a dt lllclebtedness brought about by extravagance for winning the award : The monthly treasurer's moun' the failure to enforce an adequate collection ;o ,,, reports carried few or no indications of delinf, rt( si~ lc~. Whether or not they can overcome this quent members; the obligations of the chapter t llatJon is the question each chapter will have were paid promptly; and it has a co-operative , cloV ~face during the coming year, for the Supreme group of men with a fine sense of their responsiy, bt llncil ha s issued its ultimatum. bilities. The esp1-it de corps of Omega is excellent f ott 'fhe immediate problem, then, in these cases, i and un surpassed a direct proof of the inter-relan till es Cttrative measures. The Central Office has tion of finances and fraternal functions and that ;haul the efficiently functioning chapter is the one that the carefu l preparation and applica.lllPhasized t :y sh Ion 0 f is financially solvent. The budget is given a serie a chapter budget. Supreme Archon Wag•Y t~ ous consideration in this chapter. ial 1 e::,: . has importuned the District Offici~ls to ch C !se greater control over these part1cular Therefore, we can say that chapter problems are· are present in smaller or greater quantities, are ,ssibl llla~~t~rs during the coming year. However, the c11 llllpetus must come from the object of the of minor or major significance, in direct ratio at 11 ther' ca r.e. Each chapter should fully realize its pre- to the presence or lack of presence in the group dar Pr~tous situation, shou ld desire intensely to im- of that quality of g roup spirit-the will to realize and do. The intangible quality mentioned, on epen to 1"e conditions, should seize the methods and the other hand, is usually directly related to the theit om~ calcttlatecl to remedy. As physicians, the thef Cttrct~ls can and do prescribe the budget as a financial condition of the house, one of the most important of the chapter problems. Thus, we side~ ha 1~j bu~, like other prescription s, if it is not ; eel 111 the proper manner it is worthless. have a vicious circle of relation. Without doubt, iflf however, the key to the circle is the problem of as he same prescription may be, and is, advised finance. E liminate that problem and you obtain Pre Preventative measure. The budget is to be the esprit and eliminate the other problems. A anlared properly at the beginning of the year budget, a simple set of financial rules, a grou{J of tl'1lonthly closes applied. The main purpose of competent officers, an interested adviser, are lese monthly doses of the budget is to see

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all that is needed to relegate the bugaboo of finances to limbo. No chapter can say that they are impossible to obtain. Swaffield Cowan, Sigma '29, sent in the following. He writes, "Both the title and name of the author are missing, but in its meaning it may cause some of our Returning alumni, who have drifted from the crowd, to try to get Alumni in touch with the boys." "If your joints are getting rusty, And rheumatics make you shout; If the ills of age assail you, Or you're getting far too stout; If your knees are getting wobbly, Or you're troubled with the gout; If your head is getting shiny On the place you hair should grow; If the little things annoy you And make you suffer so; It's time you took a tonicGet out, yell, and make a noise; Take a day off from your labors And spend it with the boys." It happens to remind me of a conversation that took place among a group of alumni the other evening. When urged to go back to the chapter as much as possible, one or two of them expressed a1 total lack of enthusiasm. One of them voiced his feelings thus: "Why should I go back? They do not know me from Adam's house cat. I do not know any of them. If I go, it will be a dead-stick party for all concerned." We are also reminded of an experience of an alumnus of another organization on his return to the undergraduate chapter as related in the recent issue of Banta's G1·eel~ Exchange. An author of a current best seller, he was advised that the chapter would welcome a visit and receive him with open arms. He was in the house twenty minutes before an undergraduate approached him and undertook to introduce him to the other members. Evidently the name meant nothing for he insisted in making an error in repeating it. Of more immediate and personal experience, it was rumored, while the writer was an undergraduate, that Newton D. Baker had visited. his underg.raduate chapter without being recogmzed and smtably welcomed. Th~ alm~mus mak!ng the statements had a preconceived 1dea of h1s reception, as probably did the two whose experiences are told. The idea is correct so long as they believe it and do not act in a way to disprove it. It must be realized

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by all alumni that the undergraduate umverse / comparatively small, bounded in the main by tt~ affairs and events of the campus and person~ affairs. It is the unusual undergraduate who:~ familiar with the authors of best sellers or wou 1 recognize on sight men prominent in the politi~­ and business world. Too, the alumnus must re ize that he is the older man and that age usua 11~ creates diffidence in the younger. It can e easily imagined what the reaction of the under· graduate man would be in the presence 0 ~~ celebrity. He would tell himself that the. g1 1 man would not care to meet him, an i~1sign!fica~e being; he would come to the concluswn that ld could not carry on a conversation that wou interest the visitor. · tak· Of course the undergraduate is wrong 111 a ing this attitude, but he does not realize, as 11 usual case, that the line of demarcation betwe~ e the undergraduate and the alumnus, whoever ;d is, is rather tenuous, that the older man wo~at like to remove the barrier, and it is natural t er he assume the position that he does. The ~oun g c· 3 man should realize that if he is hesitant .111 1~ 11e ing himself on the conversational and soc1al Pa i· of the older man, just so is the older man he~­ tant, through unfamiliarity, in attempting to ~e· proach the undergraduate plane. They bot\ r· sire a mutual ground, a point of mutual famt taall ity, which cannot be immediately found by rv individuals. It usually demands introclu~t~;1 conversation, and conversation deman Is at end two parties. The undergraduate should be ?ot~he by the laws of courtesy and hospitality 11~ jrt· treatment of all visitors, meeting them an£ the traducing them to the other members 0 1't is chapter. The alumnus should realize that use diffidence, and not indifference, that maY ca an apparently cool reception. . . you wtll . permit. us, we WI·n devtse 3s Now, 1f 1111 set of rules of action for the returning aluJ11 that will assure an enjoyable visit: 1. Take the initiative in meeting the men. 'liar 1111 2. Steer the conversation into mutually fa grounds. 3. Return to the chapter more often. Reali~e 4. Do not expect too much of them. na''e that they have work to do; that theYrrJ.•v<>,n]; engagements, made prior to your a otttine that you can not upset a very personal r that that is never more important than at e t!fl' stage of life. 5. Pay your own way. Remember tha~ t1~ too dergraduate never finds himself 111 affluent financial situation.

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Omega Wins Efficiency Contest I

( Conli1111ed from Page 4) t n dramatic and glee clubs there were sixtye:v~ representations, Alpha heading the list with 'g t positions. tl A. total of forty-three class offices were held in c'le Fraternity, nineteen of which were president~~s ..Alpha and Pi Chapters split the honors in 1 ~. Instance with three class presidencies each. g 1 Kappa Phi was represented on the student fi overning bodies of seventeen institutions, and /e chapters had presidents of these organizaE~ns: Beta, Delta, Chi, Alpha Zeta and Alpha

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'I'here were thirty-seven presidents of campus

1 路 hcub s In the Fraternity last year. Alpha Theta

e~s the li st with five. b he following is a distribution of the memership of the Fraternity in its relation with the

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better known of the national honorary and professional fraternities: Phi Beta Kappa, 8. Tau Beta Pi, 8. Eta Kappa N u, 6. Blue Key, 15. Omicron Delta Kappa, 4. Scabbard and Blade, 23. Phi Kappa Phi, 3. Sigma Delta Chi, 8. Pi Delta Epsilon, 8. Sigma Upsilon, 9. A lpha Kappa Psi, 20. Delta Sigma Pi, 5. Tau Kappa Alpha, 4. In addition, there were representations in other honorary fraternities, athletic organizations, and professional societies to the number of 422.


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PI KAPPA PHI FRATERNITY Founded at th e College of Ch a rl eston, Charles ton, S. C., December 10, 1904. Incorporated under the la ws of the State of South Carolina, D ecember 23, 1907. FOUNDERS Simon Fogarty, 151 Moultrie Street, Ch arleston, S. C. Andrew Alexand.er J{roeg, Chapter Eternal, February 8, 1922. Lawrence Harry Jlflxson, 217 East B ay Street, Ch a rles ton, S. C.

GENERAL OFFICERS SUPREME COUNCIL Supreme Archon A. Pelzer Wagener College of W illiam and Ma ry P. 0 . Box 426, Station A Willi a m sburg, Va.

Supreme Treasurer Jolm C. Jolmston Experiment Station Morgantown, W. Va.

Supreme SecretarY Elmer N. Turnquist 6121 North Mozart Chicago, Ill.

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Suprem e Editor Richard L. Young 2 Ashland Ave. Ch a rlotte , N. C.

Supreme Historian Leo ll. Pon P. 0. Box 342 Mobile , A la.

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THE CENTRAL OFFICE S uite 319, 636 Church Street Evan s ton, Ill. Howard D. Leake, Executive Secret ary J. W. Cannon, Jr., Assistant Secretary T elephone Greenleaf 7078 A ll Communi cations of a General Nature Should Be Sent to th e Centra l Office, a nd Not to Individuals.

DISTRICT ARCHONS First Dis trict Albert w. JIIelsel 140 Liberty Street N ew York, N . Y.

Fifth Dis trict T. Croom Partridge Atlanta Trus t Co. B ldg. Atlanta, Ga.

Ninth District J. w. Robinson 1300 Buhl B ldg. D etroit, Michigan

Second District Gen e Dunaway 205 Boxley B ldg . Roanoke, V a.

Sixth District 0. Forrest McGill 144 N . Ora n ge Orlando, Fla.

Tenth Di s trict F. B. Sturm 936 Baker B ldg . Minneapoli s, Minn.

Seventh Di strict J. C. Burton 502 1s t Nat!. Bank Bldg. Birmingh am, A la.

Eleventh D is trict ,Jacob B. Naylor Box 572 Rapid City, S. D.

Eighth Di s trict .John R. Gass 3843 Bowen Roa d T oledo, Ohio

Twelfth D is trict E . w. J{Jffln % Frigidaire Sales Corporation Omaha, Neb.

Third Di s trict R. L. Price 9 W. Third St. Charlotte, N. C. F ourth Dis tri ct T. A. Hou ser St. Matthews, S. C.

Thirteenth Di s trict Dr. J. H. Robinson t~l Wesley Memori a l HosPI Oklahoma City, Oklll· Fourteenth Di s trict Clancy A. Latha)ll 2218 Penniston New Orlean s , La.

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E . Edington, Chairman DePauw University Greencastle, Ind.

SCHOLARSHIP COMMITTEE Dr. B. L. Petry University of th e South Sewanee, T enn.

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Fifteenth District U n assig n ed Sixteen t h District Unassign ed Seventeenth Walter R. Oregon S t a t e Corvallis ,

Dl strtct ,Jones ColleS'e, Ore.

Eighteenth Di s trict Unassig n ed ];>·

STANDING COMMITTEES Dr.

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Dr. J. E. Winter ttl Wes t Virginia Unlv~ 5 Morgantown, W. !l·

Advi sory Architect James Fogarty ~ 10 2 Parlt Ave. Richmond, V a. COMMITTEE ON RITUAL AND INSIGNIA Dr. J. Friend Day, Ch airman George E. Sheetz University of British Columbi a 94 Church Street Vancouver, B. C. Canada Ch a rleston, S. C. R. E. Allen, Chairman Central Union T rust Co. 40 E. 42nd St. New York, N. Y. T erm Expires D ec. 31, 1935 Jolm D. Carroll, Chairman L exington, S. C.

COMMITTEE ON ENDOWMENT INVESTMENTS L. c. Gould 208 Firs t National Bank Bldg. Ann Arbor, Mich. T erm Expires Dec. 31, 1933 COMMITTEE ON ENDOWMENT FUND Henry Harper A. w. lllelsel, Secretary 13 Providence Rd. 140 Liberty St. Charlotte, N. C. New York City

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l'l· George D. Dtlf~~· 450 Telephone 13~~ Des Moines, ~ 8 s 1 Term ExP931 D ec. 31. 1

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R. J. Jieffnct 178 MillS ~· J Morri s town. ·

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UNDERGRADUATE CHAPTERS

~~~eceive

Notice, Changes in Personnel Must Be Repor ted Immediately to tl~e Executive Secret.ary on Form 6. ~E : The address in every case Is the official address of the chapter. Foll owmg the officers is li s t ed the ch apte r PUblication.

ALA.BA.MA-Omicron, D is trict 7. ft Rappa Phi House, University A la. i T. Jackson, Arch on. ,; A. Watts, Secretary. ~ 11 e Omicronite

IOWA STATE-Alpha -Omicr on , District 12. 204 Welch Ave., Ames, Iowa. A. K. Johnson, Archon. Carl Olson, Jr., Secretary. The A lmicron James R. Sage, '12, Chapter Adviser.

l\.L~~A.MA

POLYTECHNIC-Alph a -Iota, District 7. ..., 9 W. Glenn Ave., Auburn, A la. ~•ex Sikes, Archon. ~h· W. Herren, Secretary. ~ e A lota I<:enneth Daughrity, '25 , Chapt er Adviser.

MERCEH.-Aiph a -Alpha, District 5. 1223 Oglethorpe S.t., Macon , Ga. P . F. Etherid ge, Arch on. W. C. Aslcew, Secretary. Alphalpha Hey Joseph A . McCla in, Jr., '24 , Ch apter Adviser.

l:!R~~RLYN

POLYTECHl:liC-Alph a-Xi, District 1. B: Sidney P lace, Broolcly n , N. Y. F' · E. Weingartner, Arch on . ., red Neuls, Secretary, ~ 11 e Woodblrd Alfred J . W ilson, '22, Chapter Adviser.

MICHIGAN-Alp h a-Kappa, District 9. 1001 E. Huron St., A nn Arbor, M ich . C. C. Foster, At·chon. R. A. Edwards, Secretary, The Moon a nd Cand le F. Bra dley Case, '25, Ch a pter Adviser.

CJ\LIF'ORNIA-Gamma, Distri ct 18. ~10 LeConte Ave. , Berkeley, Calif. ., m. E. Woodward, Archon. ~ 11 e Gammazette

MICHIGAN STATE-Alpha-Th eta, District 9. Pi Kappa Phi Fraternity, E as t Lansing, M ich . R. W. Dearing, Archon . C. E. Dowd, Secretary. The A lpha-Theta Stater Edward D. Cli fford, '22, Chapter Adviser.

ClfA.RLESTON-Alph a, District 4. fi Kappa P hi Fraternity, Ch a rl est on, S. C. · F. Reynold s, Archon . 'W. J . Remi ngton, Secre tary. Ragnar E. Johnson, '21, Chapter Adv iser.

MISSISSIPPI-Alpha-Lambda, Di strict 7. PI Kappa Fraternity, University, Miss. W. R. P hillips, Archon. J. 0. Taylor, Secretary. The Lambdonlan J a m es R . Simms, Jr., '23, Ch apter Adviser .

CORNELL-Psi, Dis trict 1. ~15 Ridgewood Road, Ithaca, N. Y. · P. Donovan, Archon. ~~· E. Brimmer, Secretary. ~ te Corne ll Psiren Paul Work, '07, Chapter Adviser.

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NORTH CAROLINA STATE-Tau, District 3. 1720 H ill sboro St., Rale igh, N. C. C. T. Wilson, Archon. R. E. Noblin, Secretar y. The Tauleg ram

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li'toRIDA-Aipha-Eps ilon , District 6. ~ox 2756, University Station, Gainesville, Fla. ])Obert Sch olze, Arch on. 'l'h. B. Frye, Secretary. e Gatorzette ~tJRh "•AN- Delta, District •J. ~ ~na St., Greenville, S. C. c· · Ward, Jr., Archon. R' C. Saunders, .Jr. , Secr etary. · N. Daniel, '07, Ch a pte r Advise r. Qli)OR 386GI.A,-Lambda, District 5. P ,!ftli St., Athen s , Ga. J. ~· Preston, Arch on . · ""· Colvin, Secretary. QliloR 7 GIA TECH- Iota, District 5. C~4 W. Peachtree , N. E., Atla nta, Ga. R eve A ll en, Archon. J ex Geph art. Secretary. · Lawton E lli s, '09, Chapter Adviser.

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NORTH CAROLINA-Kappa, Dis trict 3. Pittsboro Road , Chapel H ill, N. C. J. G. Slater, Archon. J . G. Kurfees, Secretary. Charles E . Stroud, '19 , Ch apter Adviser.

liltroRY-Eta, District 5. ~90 S. Oxford Road, Atlanta, Ga. T. Edwards, Arch on . 'l'h. M. Henderson, Secretary. e Eta Scroll Raymond B. Nixon, '25, Chapter Adviser.

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D istrict '3. ,ox 276, Davidson, N. C. ~... S. Hall, Archon ~h E. Boyd, Secretar y . e Eps ilonian

btJl<E-M:u, District 3. ~I Rappa P hi Fraternity, Durham, N. C. :s' R . Kirkpa trick, Archon. en Miller, Secretary. A.. H. Borland, '27, Ch apter Adviser.

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NEBRASKA-Nu, District 12. 1820 B. St. , Lincoln, Nebr. H. W. Pumphrey, Arch on . V. H. Schmidt, Secretary. Th e N ebraslca Nu's

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13A.RD COLLEGE-Alph a-Eta, District 7. l:!:o\ 117, East Lake , Birmingham, A la. McDanal, Archon. A.0111ier Crow, Secretary. Pha-Eta Grams lt, Albert Lee Smith, '05, Ch apter Adviser. tifOIS-Upsl!on, District 9. C 6 ,..1@· Green St. , Champaign, Ill. p ' •• · Wells, Arch on. · L e ppl a , Secretar y. \1' s 1on Ups · R. Fleming, '0 5, Chapter Adviser.

OGLETHORPE-Pi, District 5. Pi Kappa Phi Fraternity, Oglethorpe University, Ga. Earl B laclcwell , Arch on. R. K. Jordan, Secretary. Edgar Watkins, Jr., '23, Chapter Advise!. OHIO STATE-Alpha-Nu, Di s trict 8. 118 14th Ave., Columbus, Oh io. F. E. Rector, Archon. W. E. Fuchs, Secretary. The A lpha-Nu's A lex Laurie, '14, Chapter Adviser. OKLAHOMA-Alp h a -Ga mma, Di strict 13. 439 W. Boyd, Norman, Okla. R. E. Gilch rist, Archon. R. S . John s ton, Secretary. The A lp ha-Gamm!t Star

OREGON STATE-Alpha-Zeta , District 17. Pi Kappa P hi Fraternity, Corvalli s, OregiJn, Howard Davis, Archon. R. B. Montgomery, Jr., Secretary. The A lph a-Ze ta News T. J. Starker , '10, Ch apt er Adviser.

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PENN STATE-Alph a-Mu, Di strict 1. Pi Kappa P hi Fraternity, State Coll ege, Pa. R. C. Kieffer, Arch on. J. F. Kieser, Secretar y. The Alpha-Mu N ews Eldo Frey, '29, Ch a pter Adviser.

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PRESBYTERIAN COLLEGE-Beta, District 4. Pi Kappa Phi Fra t ernity, Clinton , S . C. B. R. Young, Arch on. G. C. Adams, Secretary.

[ 43]


PURDUE-Omega, District 9. 330 N. Gram: St., West LaFayette, Ind. L . M. Condrey, Archon. G. W. Fortune, Jr., Secretary. The Omegalite Prof. G. W. Munro, '97, Ch a pter Adviser.

TULANE-Alpha-Bet a , Di s trict 14. 830 Audubon St., New Orlean s , L a . E. B. Robichaux, Archon. T. L. L. Sonlat, Secretary, Th e A lphabet WASHINGTON-Alph a -D elta, District 17. 4532 19th St., N. E., Seattle, Wash. J. D. Freeman, Archon. P. D. McFarland, Secretary, The A lpha-Deltan Victorian Slvertz, '22, Chapter Adviser. WASHINGTON AND LEE-Rh o, District 2. 85 S. Main St. , L exington, V a . Donald Hostetter, Archon . Karl Smith, Secretary. Th e Rhodla n Earl K. Paxton, '10, Chapter Adviser. WEST VIRGINIA-Alpha Rho, District 8. 65 High St.; Morgantown, ,West Va. L . F. Oneacre, Archon. C. C. Hall, Secretary, The Alpha Rhose Edwin C. J on es, '29, Ch a pter Adviser. WOFFORD- Ze ta, District 4. PI Kappa Phi Fraternity, Spartanburg, S. C. M. A. Owings, Archon. P. A. King, Secretary. J . Ch am Freeman, ' 24 , Ch ap t er Adviser. Tota l Active Undergraduate Chapters 39.

ROANOKE-XI, District 2. P i Kappa Phi Fraternity, Salem , Va. Fred Cox, Archon. John Fisher, Secretary. Th e XI Bulletin Leon A . Denlt, '15, Chapter Adviser. SEWANEE-Alpha-Pi, District 5. T. D . Byrne, Archon. R ich a r d Taylor, Jr., Secretary. Robert L. Petry, '27 , Ch a pter Adviser. SOUTH CAROLINA-Sigma, District 4. 1516 Divine S t., Columbia, S. C. R. B. Hildebrand, Archon. R. 0. Bowden, Jr.. Secretary. T. Meade Baker, '25 , Chapter Adiser. STETSON-Chi , District 6. East Minnesota Ave., DeLand, Fla. Earl Jinldn son, Archon. E. Ferguson, Secretary. The Chi -Cry Prof. Wm. E. Duckwitz, Ch apter A dvi ser . L ast Chapter Installed, West Virginia, 1930.

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ALUMNI CHAPTERS A lumni officers arc r equested to Inform the Executive Secr etar y promptly of a ny changes In personnel and add r esses, o r of agr eem ent as to time a nd place of meetings. ATLANTA, GEORGIA. (Ansley Hote l, third Thursday, 7 P. M.) Dr. N a tha n T . T eagu e, Archon 1206 Medical Arts Building J. W. Whitaker, Secretary 904 Grant Building. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA. (2016 4th Ave., a ltern ate Wednesdays, 7:45 P. M. CHARLESTON, SOUTH CAROLINA. (Second Mond ay) D. Coul son Barfield, Archon 20 E. Simmons Street. Alb&rt P. T aylor , Secretary 6 Halsey Street. CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA . (Second Tu esday, Manufacturers' Club) R. L. Youn g, Archon Care Th e Ch arlotte News. R. L. Price, Secretary 30 Wes t Fifth Street. CHATTANOOGA, TENNESSEE. Aubrey F. Folts, Archon 609 J ames B uilding. J . R. William s , Secretary CHICAGO, ILJ..IONIS. (Interfr aternity Club) Lewi s E . Miller, A r ch on 238 N . Pine A venue. E. H. Olsen , Secr e t a ry 743 Brummell S treet, Evanston. CLEVELA'ND, OHIO. (Allerton Club , Second Tu esd ay) C. D . Meyers, Arch on E. D. Kllnzler, Secretary 1207 Cook Avenue , Lakewood, Ohio. COLUMBIA, SOUT H CAROLINA. (Green Parrot T ea Room, Second Monday) D r . G lenn B. Carrigan, Archon State Hospital. T . Meade Baker, Secretary Care F ederal Land Bank. DETROIT, MICHIGAN. (CadllJac Athl etic Club, First Monday) G. R. Helmrich, Arch on Care Detroit Edison Co .. 200 Second avenue. Fra nz L. Rooney, Secretary 54 Hubbard Avenue, Mt. Clem en s, Mich . LINC OLN, NEBRASKA. Chas. F. Adams , Archon National Bank of Commerce Building. Knox F. Burnett, Secretary 525 South 13th Street.

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA. (Figueroa Hotel Coffee Shop, lOth & Figueroa) Marvin G. Osburn, Archon Petrole um Securities Building. C. L. T aylor, Secretary 6311 Linden hurs t Avenue. MIAMI, FLORIDA. Ch as. B. Cos ta r , Archon 128 N. E. 25th Street. Wm. C. Ritch, Secretary 140 East Flagler Street. MONTQOMERY, ALABAMA. Clyde C. Pearson, Archon 21 Woodley Road. NEW YORK, NEW yORK. George E. F e r g u son, Archon 79 Worth Street. Wm . W. Nash, Secret a r y 7401 Ridge Boulevard, Brooklyn, N. Y. L awr en ce J . Bolvig, Treasurer. 610 Ovlngton Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. OMAHA, NEBRASKA. (1st Tu esday, E llcs' Club) Floyd S. Pegler, Archon 2315 North 60th Avenue. Don W. McCormack, Secretary 23 06 Avenue B, Council B luffs, Iowa. ROANOKE, VIRGINIA. E. E. Dobbins, Arch on 512 Boxley Bldg. J . E. Comer, Secret ary First Nat '! Banlc Bldg. ST. PETERSBURG, FLORIDA. (Hom es tead Tea Room, Wednesday, 12 :15 P.M. ) Virgil S. Parham, Archon 317 First National Bank Building. J ason A. Halley, Secretary P. 0. B ox 3831. SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA. John F. Counnolly, Archon 1125 T aylor Street. Francis H. Bola nd, Jr., Secretary, 2843 Green Street. SPARTANBURG, SOUTH CAROLINA. (S econd Mond ay) Paul C. Thom as, Archon S!lartan MllJs. .J. Ch am Freeman, Secretary Car e E lfo rd Agency.

[ 44]

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KnowYo01• Greek Neighbot•s It is well to know the comparative strength of your fellow Greeks when rushing time comes around. The only way to be absolutely certain is to refer to the latest copy of Baird's M anual of A merican College Fraternities. The 1930 issue, d1e twelfth edition of this directory, has just been published. It has been d1oroughly revised by Dr. Francis W. Shepardson. Many new improvements h ave been add ed including a four color pledge button insert. The book sells for $4 postpaid. Enter your order today through this publication.

Twelfth .. 1930 I• Edition

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Fraternity Supplies THE STAR AND LAMP of Pi Kappa Phi, for life ...... ... .... . ..... $10.00 Single copies, SOc each Apply to Central Office for prices on bound volumes.

HISTORY AND DIRECTORY 1929, Anniversary Edition. . . . . . . . . . . . 2.00 Membership listed alphabetically, geographically, and by chapters.

CONSTITUTION AND SUPREME LAWS, 1929 Edition, per copy. . . .

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BAIRD'S MANUAL OF COLLEGE FRATERNITIES, Eleventh Edition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

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BANTA'S GREEK EXCHANGE, per year........ ...... . .... .......

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News and comment from the college fraternity world.

COLLEGE FRATERNITIES, per copy.............................

2.25

An exposition of the fraternity system published by the Interfraternity Conference.

INTERFRATERNITY CONFERENCE YEARBOOK, per copy. . . . . .

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Min utes of the last Interfraternity Conference.

ROBERT'S RULES OF ORDER (Revised), per copy. ........ .......

1.50

The official parliamentary guide of Pi Kappa Phi, based upon the rules and practice of Congress.

MEMBERSHIP CERTIFICATES, each . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

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PLAQUES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6.50 BOOI< ENDS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7.50 'I'HE SHORT HISTORY, a reprint from the current edition of Baird's Manual, is sent on request. PRICES OR REFERENCE•S ON SUPPLIES NOT LISTED ABOVE WILL BE FURNISHED ON APPLICATION. THESE INCLUDE: RITUALISTIC PARAPHERNALIA ACCOUNTING SUPPLIES PHOTOGRAPHS OF FOUNDERS, STATIONERY 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 tableware with Pi Kappa Phi coat of arms should be placed only with Mr. C. L. Scripps, Albert Pick-Barth Co., Inc., Chicago, III. Price list on request. Orders for regalia and ritualistic paraphernalia should be placed only with our official Costumers, the lhling Bros. Everard Company, Kalamazoo, Mich. 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 PAYABt.E TO

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636 CHURCH STREET [ 47]

EVANSTON, ILLINOIS


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