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PI KAPPA PH I FRATERNITY
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Virginia Building, Richmond 19, Virginia Founded ot The College of Charleston, Charleston, S. C., December 10, 1904
FOUNDERS SIUON FOGARTY, }R.
151 Moultrie St., Charleston, S. C. ANDREW
A.
KnoEG, ]R.
(deceased)
NATIONAL COUNCIL President-Theron A. House r, St. Matthews, S. C. Treasurer-Ralph W. 1'-loreen, Irving Trust Co., One Wall St ., New York, N. Y. Secretary-J . Euge ne Dunaway, Jr., 11070 Lokepointe Rd., Detroit 24, Mich . Historian-Wayne R. Moore, 327 Russe ll, Ames, Iowa Chancellor-Karl M. Gibbon, 713-71 8 Rio Grande Bldg ., Harlingen, Texas
L. HARRY MIXSON, 217 E. Bay Street, Charleston , S. C.
Secr~!J_I_~~~~rn~~AJ~~~~~.TEV~~inio Buildi~
Executive Richmond , Vo . ' ' v;roi~ · Editor-in-Chief, STAR AND LAMP-W. Bernard Jones, Jr., Building, Richmond, Vo. yirgi~ Managing Editor, STAR AND LAMP-Elizabeth H. Smith, Building, Richmond, Vo. . hflld' 1 Tro~enn!1 Counselor-Ramon Sanchez, Virginia Building, RIC V.rg•n•o.
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DISTRICT ARCHONS Dlst. 1-Fred Krupp1. 42 Mogoun Rd., West Islip, L. 1., N. Y. Dist. 11-Hugh F. Hill, Jr., Rocky Mount1 Vo. Dist 111 - A. H. Borland, Ill Corcoran ~t., Durham , N. C. Dist: IV-Jomes M. Wilson, Suite 710, Liberty Life Building, Columbia, S.C. G Dist. V-Wolter F. Doyle, P. 0. Box 158, MoconL a . Dist. VI -W ill iam G. Jennings, 2103 West End, okelond, Flo . Dlst. VII -J. Warre n Williams, Box 95 , Luvern.e, Ala . . Dlst. X-Kenneth A. Bellinger, 538 N . Fronkl1n, Dearborn , M1ch . Dist. XI-Poul Walker, Newton, Ill.
UNDERGRADUATE CHAPTERS Alpha-College of Charleston, Charleston, S. C. Beta-Presbyterian College, Cl1nton, S. C. Gamma-Universi ty of Col•fornio, 2634 Boncroft Way, Be rkeley, Calif. Delta-Furman University, Greenville, S. C. Epsilon- Dav idson College, Davidson, N. C. Zeta-Wofford College, Spartanburg, S. C. Eta- Emory University, Box 273, Emory University, Ga .
Iota-Georgia Institute of Technology, 640 Williams St ., Atlanta, Go. Kappa- Univers ity of North Carolina, 317 W . Rosemary St., Chapel Hill, N . C. Lambda- University of Georgia, 599 Prince Ave., Athe ns, Go. Mu-Duke University, Box 4682, Duke Station , Durham, N . C . Nu- University of Nebraska, 229 N. 17th St., Lincoln, Nebraska . Xi- Roanoke College, 327 High St ., Solem, Vo . Omicron-University of Alabama, 804 Hockbe rry Lone, Tuscaloosa, Alabama Rho-Wa shington & Lee University, Lock Drawer 903, Lexington Vo . Sigma- Univers ity of South Carolina, Tenement 7, Univ. of S. C ., Columbia, S. C. Tau-North Carolina State College, 407 Horne St., Raleigh, N . C. Upsilon-University of Illinois, 1002 South Lincoln, Urbano, Illinois Chi-Stetson University, 165 E. Minnesota Ave., Deland, Flo . Psi-Corne ll University, 722 University Ave. , Ithaca, N. Y. Omega-Pu rdue, 330 N. Grant St., W. La fayette, Indiono Alpha Alpha- Mercer University, Box 524. Me rcer University, Macon, Go . Alpha Delta-University of Washington, 4504 16 th N. E., Seattle, Washington Alpha Epsilon-University of Florida, 1247 W. University Ave., Gainesville, Flo . Alpha Zeta-Oregon State College, 2 1st and Harrison, Corvallis, Ore.
Alpha Theta-Michigan ?tote <;allege, 507 E. Grand River, East Lons1ng, M1ch. Alpha Iota-Alabama Institute of Technology, 255 College St., Auburn, Ala . Alpha Mu-Penn. State College, Fairmount and Garner, State College, Penni!! .
Dist. XII-Kenneth W. Kuhl , 436 Woodlawn, St. Paul 5, Mi~·c Dist. XIII-Adrion C. Taylor, 23 1 Ave. "C" West, Bismarck, Dist. XIV-Horold A. Cowl es, 327 N. Russell, Ames, Iowa. Dist. XV Ill-Paul M. Hupp, 3781 E. 31st St., Denver 5, Co10 • Dist. XIX-Rolph Snider, 27 10 Madison St. N Tacoma, Wash· Dist. XX-Roy J. Heffner, 1091 Brown Ave., Lafayette, Calif. ti~r 1 Dlst. XXI-;-T. Glenwood Stoudt, Wyomissi ng Polyte chniC Ins Wyom1ssmg, Penna.
Alpha Xi-B rooklyn Poly. Institute, 33 Sidney Place, Brooklyn, New York Alpha Omicron- Iowa State College, 407 Welch Ave., Ames, Iowa
Alpha
Sigma-Un iversity of Tennessee
T emple Ave., Knoxv ille, Tenn .
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944
Alpha Tau-Rensselaer Poly. Institute, 49 2nd St ., Troy, New York Alpha Upsi lon-Drexe l lnst. of Technology 3405 Powelton Ave ., Philadelphia , Penna . ' Alpha Phi-Illinois Institute of Technology 3220 S. Michigan Ave., Chicago, Ill . ' Alpha Chi-;-University of Miami, Box 97, Univ. of M1om1 Branch, M1om1 , Flo. Alpha Psi- Uni versity of Indiana, 504 E. Kirkwood Ave .. Bloomington, Ind . Alpha Omega-Un iversity of Oregon 1385 Franklin Blvd., Eugene, Ore. ' Beta Alpha-Newark College of Eng1nee rinll c / o Stude nt /1/•oil, Newark College of Eng 1: n eering, 367 High St., Newark 2, N. J. Beta Beta- Florida Southern College Bldg 1- A, Florida Southern College, Lokelond. Flo . ' Beta Gamma-Un iv. of Louisville, 2216 Confederate Place, Louisville, Ky. Beta Delta-Drake Universi ty, 2916 Cottage Grove Ave ., Des Moines, Iowa.
Beta Epsilon-University of Missouri, 704 Maryland, Columbia, Mo. Beta Zeta-Simpson College, 401 N. "B" St., Indianola, Iowa. Beta Eta-Florida State University, Box 4951, Florida Stote University, Tallahassee, Flo . Bota Theta-Unive rsity of Arizona, 1435 East First, Tucson, Ariz.
ALUMNI CHAPTERS Ames, Iowa-Harold A. Cowles, 327 N. Russe ll, Ames, Iowa. Atlanta, Ga.-Wolter E. Crawford, Rhodes Have rty Building, Atlanta Go. Birmingham, Alabama-Henry Smith, 820 N. 31st St., Birmingham, Ala. Charleston, S. C.-c . A. Weinheimer, 115-A Rutledge St., Charleston, S. C. . Charlotte, North Carolina-Don Davidson, Jr., The Herold Press, Charlotte, N. C. Chattanooga, Tennessee-Lee L. Ryerson, Jr., 30 8 Guild Drive, Chattanooga , Tenn. Chicago, Illinois-William H. O' Donnell, 1952 E. 72nd Pl., Chicago, 111.
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Columbia, South Carolina-Frederick E. QIJ Box 1403, Columbia, S. C. e~ Columbus-Ft. Benning, Georgia-Joe Fr~O· j c / o St rickland Motor Co., ColumbuS, I 51,:' Detroit, Mi. higon- Ronold Sc hec k. 2 14~ic~· Ave., Grotio Township, Detroit 24, ;.rr<i' Florence, South Corolina-Mitchell S C· sm .t h . 419 W. Cheves St .. Florence, Elfll ~ Greenville, S. C.-Cooper White, 103 Greenville, S. C. sefll" Ithaca , New York-H. M. Riggs, 701 1 ~ Bldg., Ithaca, N . Y. Jacksonville, Fla.-Wolter Rivers, Rt. 1 ' 71 A, Joc k•onv ille , Flo . ~elf Lakeland, Florida- Harris G. Sims, LO Ledge r, Lakeland, Flo. ferl" Lansing-East Lan si ng, Mich.- Loren C.MiC~~ 1723 t;2 E. Michigan Ave., Lansing, n "" Lincoln, Nebraska-Winfield M. Elme ' . Federa l Secu rities Bldg ., Lincoln, Neb~ l• Los Angeles, California-Rene Koelble ' 17 th St., Manhattan Beach, Calif. corl· Macon, Georgia-Fay A. Byrd, I 08 Ave., Macon, Go. II l Miami, Florida- William A. Popy, I ' Vi scoyo Ave., Coral Gobles, Florida. ~ Montgomery, Alabama-Lowell J. BloC ' Glendale Ave .. Montgomery, Alobol11°~ ;. New York, N. Y.-Helmut C. Neumo~ ' Pine St ., Howorth, N. J. . ~ Oklahoma City, Okla .-Williom A. RIQQ• N. W . 1st St., Oklahoma City, Oklo . $11' Orlando, Florida-A. T. Corter, Jr., 12 Gre' Main St., Orlando, Florida . Philadelphia, Pa .-Fred M. Kraber, 518 view Lone, Have rtown, Penna.
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Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania- R. Delmar G 627 Vermont, Mt. Lebanon, Penna. 69Portland, Ore. !Cascodel-AI G. RuedY• S. W. Pine Dr., Portland, 19, Ore. y Roonokc, Virginia-J esse M. Rarnse ' Harshbarge r Rd., Roanoke, Vo . tjl Seattle, Washington-Dean Porker, seo Bldg., Seattle, Washington . ol St. Louis, Missouri-Estill E. Ezell, 701 vJtl St., St. Louis I, Missouri. St. Matthews, South Carolina-John L. side, St . Matthews, South Carolina. ; Washington, D. C.-Edward L. Tolso~. Gler<wood Rood, Bethesda, Moryla~d ·
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This Month St~ new feature of this issue of the Read an~, Lamp is "Letters from Our 'Phers on Page 2. Itarn e staff of the magazine welcomes seior 0f Sa~chez as traveling counPage or PI Kappa Phi. Story is on Berna3· On the same page Editor W. attitu rd. Jo~es, . Jr.! discusses an eous ~ m his editonal, "The Right''OI ra~ernal Parasite." vulge d-Tuner" Roy J. Heffner di'Page sS some facts about himself on
tuildilll·l
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and ~ the center spread, Pages 16 7 re~ders will get glimpses of a Lead' ership Conference in action.
Jo.
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lntr1gu1ng · · Quotes
"We should study more closely the histo . Q~itl mad? of America and perceive what :reerfl~~' cease It as good as it is. We should GO· I ;,, sto"l forrn looking to Europe for better y~;ch· tepe:/f government and try to avoid p.rrd' s. C S! cease Ing their mistakes. We should Elrt' italist to think of ourselves as capse~~ hold s, or union members, or stockfunders and return to the very simple II, S: the iamental that the individual is .oKeid' that mhortant unit in our society and fer' talk .a the confusion and needless ·M;ch~· 18 beclouding the issue." en, -Alfred Iddles in Poly Men, '~~. 3; July, 1951 corll
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debili~a~don the most fatuous and
a gen att~g slogan that ever misled idea] e~at10n. Give up security as an is Ill: nyone who promises security and Is-branding his political , social, economic goods." -President Henry M. Wriston, Brown University, in the Winnipeg Free Press
''RObert E. Lee did not want ease or arnu One ~.ce of prestige. He wanted only lie d Ing, to work, to toil , to serve. he w reamed of future progress and '-Pranted . to be a part of it." Wesi~ent Francis P. Gaines, th ashington and Lee University, in e Alumni Magazine, W&L
NUMBER 4
VOLUME XXXVII
1951
NOVEMBER
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letter fe Kraber wntes a reveahng Dr rom Korea. See Page 8. Vir9~~~ 1 hono · Paul S. Dull receives a signal chrt'd' 'flag/ at the University of Oregon. Vlr9~
The STAR and LAMP
Contents Page
Letters from Our Readers ............. .................. .. ................ . Editorial: The Righteous, Fraternal Parasite .. . ....... .. Sanchez Becomes Traveling Counselor for Pi Kappa Phi "Al" Wilson, Engineer, Gourmet, Is Active in Fraternity Former National Officer Reveals Highlights of Varied Career, by Roy f. Heffner ............................................ . Doings at Chi Chapter, Stetson University, by Tom Mahaffey ................. ...................................... . Kraber Tells of Life--and Death- on Korean Front.. ....... Dr. Dull Receives Faculty Member Award, University of Oregon, by Glen Garrett ........... ......... .... .. Alumnus Has Colorful Career in "Frontier" Nebraska ..... . Red Cross Promotes Alumnus of Emory's Eta .... . Newlyweds Make Flying Trip through Europe ...... ... . Leadership Season Opens in District II ................... . In the Chapter Eternal ...... .. ... .. . ..... . . ... . .. .................. .. Society ...... .. .......... .... ................ .... .. ....... . .... .. .............. .... .. Calling the Roll ........ .. Alumni Corner ..... ..
2 3 3 4
5 6
8 9
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12 13 16 18 20 22 28
THE COVER
The District II Leadership Conference at Washingt9n and Lee University concluded Sunday, October 7, in the dining room of the chapter home of Rho as District Archon Hugh F. Hill, Jr. (left), presented the first Leadership Conference Diploma for 1951 -52 to Marvin H. Anderson, Rho, chairman of the conference committee. Those looking on are (left to right) Archon DeWitt Ward, of Roanoke; Ramon Sanchez, a past treasurer of Rho and now traveling counselor for Pi Kappo Phi, and Archon AI Terrill, of Washington and Lee.
Entered as second class matter at the post office at Charlotte, North Carolina, under the Act of March 3, 1879. Acceptance for mailing at special rate of postage provided for in the Act of February 28, 1925, embodied in paragraph 4, section 412, i'. L. and R., authorized January 7, 1932. The Star and Lamp is published quarterly at Charlotte, North Carolina, under the direction of the National Council of the Pi Kappa Phi Fraternity in the months of February, May, September and November. The Life Subscription is $12.50 and is the only form of subscription. Single copies are 50 cents. Changes in address should be reported promptly to Central Office, Virginia Bldg., Richmond 19, Va. All material intended for 'publication should be in the bands of the Managing Editor, Virginia Bldg., Richmond 19, Va., SO days preceding the month of issue. W. BERNARD ]oms, }R., Editor-in-Chief ELIZABETH H. SMITH, Managing Editor
ED
Letters from Our Readers Atlanta,
A 11g11sta, Ga. Dear Editors : The story about "Euch" Reeves proves to have been the proverbial "straw that broke the camel's back." In short, I have never failed yet to read the Star and Lamp from cover to cover, and each time I find myself wondering about the good Brethren of Alpha Epsilon of yesteryears. Naturally, the idea of "priming the pump," so to speak, with a Jetter has often occurred to me, but, for one reason or another. it just hasn't been written. Upon seeing Euch's picture in the latest issue-and recognizing "The Champion Pledger"-before rea·ding either the caption or the article, I decided to undertake the Jetter.
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CROOM PARTRIDGE, Eta
Urbana,
. Dear Ed1tors: I would take this time to tell you swell i.s»ue of the Star and Lamp you put out this Everyone at the house thought it was outstanding. I we have a new traveling counselor. When will we here at Upsilon? Fraternally yours,
One of the things that used to impress me about "Pi Kapps" during my campus days was that, regardless of his particular chapter or his individual personality, he always fit in with all other brothers. For example, although "Euch" Reeves was not of Alpha Epsilon actually, we always regarded him as one of us. Now, since leaving the "ivy covered halls of old Florida," I have found out that Pi Kapps have another attribute in common-wherever they hail from, they always seem to end up as solid citizens in their particular communities. Fraternally yours,
CARL
J.
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BLASE, Archon, ~.1110i; University of
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Rocky Mount, ~
Dear Editors: I certainly enjoyed the District II Lea.de~bll Conference at Lexington October 6 and consider it one of \i . most successful meetmgs I have ever attended. E xecuU1~. Secretary W. Bernard Jones, Jr., is certainly to be cong~ Jated on the way he conducted the school. Sincerely Y 0 ~~41
HUGH F. HILL, :XI
WILLIAM B. BELL, Alpha Epsilon '30
Extra Mlnia- StnndCrowft ture ard $16.00 Close set pearl border------------ -· ___ $ 9.50 $12.25 Crown set pearl border __________________ 12.50 16.50 24.00 27.00 Crown set pearl, 4 garnet points __________ 14.50 19.00 Crown s et pearl, 4 ruby or 27.00 19.00 sapphire points -------------~-------- 14.50 30.00 Crown set pearl, 4 emerald points _____ 16.25 21.00 52.00 Crown set pearl, 2 diamond points ______ 27.50 86.00 so.oo Crown set pearl, 4 diamond points ______ 42.50 54.00 Crown ~et pearl and ruby or 30.00 sapph~rte alternating -------------- ___ 16.50 23.00 Crown se pearl and diamond alternating ·----- ·---------- 72.50 108.00 136.00 Crown set all diamond border ---------··- 132.50 198.00 248.00 PLAIN STYLES Minta- Stand- Large . ture ard Plain P!am bobrder -------------------------- $ 4.00 $ 4.50 $10.00 N ugget order -----------------------4.50 6.25 11.00 CWhha.sed border -------------------- __ _ 5.00 6.25 11.00 1te gold additional on jeweled badges $8.00 and on plain $2.00. -- each $ .75 Pledge buttons ·---------------------- _ or per dozen 9.00 Special recognition button with 1.50 white enamel star, 10K _____ -----------------------Special recognition button with1.00 white enamel star, gold filled ·----------------------1.00 Plain coat-of-arms recognition button, geld filled ___ • _ Enameled cont·of-anns recognition button, 1.25 gol•l filled ------------------ -----.. ---------------1.25 Monogram recognition button, gold filled ---------- ___ _ JEWELED STYLES
GUARD PINS
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6.50
Double Letter • 8.110 7.25 11.50
1.00 2.00
1.00 2.00
Single Letter
se-t- pe-;;rT-===============================$ Crown set pearl --------------...<.-------------White Gold Guards, Additional Plain -------------------------------------Close or Crown set jeweled --- ---------------Coat-of-Arms Guards Miniature, yellow gold - - - - -------- ---------Searl size, yellow gold ___ ___! _ ·----- ·------20% Federal Excise Tax must be added to all plus State sales or use tnxes wherever they are
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PI KAPPA PHI JEWELRY PRICE LIST BADGES
2.76 8.26 prices quoted In effect.
BURR, PATTERSON & AULD CO. The Oldest Manufacturing Fraternity Jewelers in America 2301 Sixteenth Street DETROIT 16, MICHIGAN
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Dear .Editor~ : Thank you very much inde~d for t e Sll' flattcnng article about me in the September 1ssue of tb ·~ and Lamp. I was also greatly interested in the excellent artt about "Eucie" Reeves, with whom I was in Eta Chapter. Fraternally yours, '!0 I
EDITORIALG• I
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I The Righteous Fraternal Parasite Josr
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ECENTLY we received from an undera letter which ran something along this eire~ hat kind of a brotherhood is this? Through $8 6 brnsht.ances beyond my control, I happened to get e tnd I~ · my account to my chapter. I told them r Would in t pay It when I could, but they sent my name 'l'od: the National Office for disciplinary action. was ~~ I received a notice that unless the account , c eared up within 90 days, I would be expelled.
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Place ~hems ~o me that a fraternity should be one llrother ere kmdness and charity should rule supreme. to sordf sho.uld h.elp one another, and not resort seern t d t~mgs hke expulsion. Some people don't lllight ~ reahze that expulsion from a man's fraternity ,, e a very serious blow to him.
like~n~ af.ter all, we should not try to run a fraternity brothe husmess for it is not a business but a spiritual r ood."
Wh~~ how righteous doth become our indignation kind fe are challenged for being parasitic. What 0 bill to ba brother is one who would permit his $86 by the e split up among his brothers for payment he so m? s.hould not the same kindness and charity the inJ·a~ctJmoniously mentions, rule supreme within can h !VIdual also? If so, bow, in the name of honor accepte .call upon-rather demand- his brothers t~ lllen rt's word that "I will pay it when I can?" These 1 ' e him, need their money too. l'h'
eipljn~s (~n rebels at the expulsion method of disWho · t Is strange to note that these same 100 men ~ight annually, complain that they cannot pay, pay IIJ l>i the line when they find their membership appa Phi at stake.
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Su~~afraternity is not a business. Well, neither is a by th 'I LSchool picnic or a group fishing trip-but, share e ord Harry, everyone is expected to pay his on gasoline and the deviled eggs!
tio~Y hats are off to those chapters which conscien11>h0? report to the National Office those brothers have ~~e accounts delinquent. After all, those members therns days grace during which they may restore hood elhes to good standing. We stand for a brothertheir bw ere men carry their load without expecting tothers to pay the freight for them.
Editor-in-Chief 0 ~ pI
kAI'PA PHI
Dementi Studio
SANCHEZ BECOMES TRAVELING COUNSELOR FOR PI KAPPA PHI RAMON F . SANCHEZ, of Pensacola, Fla., Sigma '45, University of South Carolina, became traveling counselor for Pi Kappa Phi the middle of September. Mr. Sanchez was born July 5, 1925. He holds the B.S. Degree in Naval Science from the University of South Carolina and the B.S. in Commerce from Washington and Lee University. Part of his college work was done at the University of Miami where he affiliated with Alpha Chi. At Washington and Lee's Rho Mr. Sanchez served for a year as treasurer and housemanager. He was one of the early recipients of the Paxton Trophy Awards given in appreciation of the four Pi Kapps who returned from World War II to reactivate Rho. Those who received the award last Fall, along with Mr. Sanchez, were Hugh F. Hill, Rocky Mount, Va., Roy D. Witt, Roanoke, Va., and Robert E. Glenn, · Radford, Va. After leaving the Navy in August of 1946 he became co~nected with the Post Office in Pensacola. He resigned this position to join the staff of the National Office of Pi Kappa Phi. 3
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Wilson, Engineer, Gourmet, Is Active in Fraternity
WHETHER THERE is a basic connection between chemical engineering and food we do not know. However we know a chemical engineer who is a gourmet. His combination of specialties, of course may be purely accidental. Anyway, here's his story' the story of Alfred ("AI") J. P. Wilson, who hold~ the degrees of B. Sc. in Chemistry and B. Sc. in Chemical Engineering, has served as a chemical engineer for Uncle Sam and now, in civilian life, is a consulting engineer. His writings include dissertations on highly technical phases of his work as well as a book on " 100 of the Best and Most Unusual Places to Eat in New York City." Born in New York 50 years ago, Mr. Wilson spent most of his life there and in its suburbs. Much of his time is spent in traveling. He has been in 43 states.
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Charter Member of Alpha Xi He received his degrees from Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute where he belonged to Psi Sigma, the local fraternity which in 1928 became Alpha Xi Chapter of Pi Kappa Phi. He was active in the nationalization campaign. He has served as a director and as chairman of the Alpha Xi Board of Directors. He was vice-president of the New York Alumni Chapter in 1949-50. lfe was toastmaster when Psi Sigma celebrated its fiftieth anniversary with a dinner and dance in May of this year. In 1926 he married Miss Arnie Billingsley · of Houston, Texas. They have a son, Paul, who attended the University of Texas last year. When this story went to press, he was planning to attend Rennselaer Polytechnic Institute. The senior Mr. Wilson joined the Chemical Warfare Service Reserve of the United States Army as a second lieutenant in 1928. He graduated from the Chemical Corps School and served as an instructor in logistics there during 1944-45. He is a graduate of the Command and General Staff College, and also the Army Industrial College. His present assignment is as a lieutenant colonel in the reserve unit of the New York Chemical Procurement District.
·Serves Overseas During World War II, he served in the Control Division of the General Staff, Hq. SOS, ETOUSA (England). He was acting chief, Chemical Section, Special Staff, Hq. SOS, NATOUSA (North Africa). He was commended by General Larkin for his work in the Sicilian invasion, and received the Army Commendation Ribbon for his work in the Post-War Planning Section of the Office of the Chief, Chemical Corps. Mr. Wilson's professional career started in the chemical field with work in dyes, pharmaceuticals, 4
and. p~troleum . After a few years as a financial ~~ stattstical analyst, he entered the consulting It ., with two associates in 1930. He received his ]ice~\ as a professional engineer from the State of ~ y York In 193 2. He became associated with Cover ~~ and. Colpitts, one of the leading firms of consu!ld; engmeers in Wall Street. His work there inch' analysis and forecasts of industries' position 9 ~, growth, especially in connection with large corp0r3 financing. . He was called to active duty with the ArmY~· 1941 and returned to the consulting manageJ11e 1 engineering field in 1946. He specializes in the cbe;1 ical process industries, and is an expert in mar.('!' research, growth trends of the chemical and all' · industries, and economic research. One of his recef comprehensive industry reports made for a la~t' company has been taken by the National Secur'· and Resources Board. He Is Writer Mr. Wilson 's writings include articles in C/te111 ;~1 Engineering, Barron's, Chemical Welfare Bulte/1 (Continued o1t Page 12) THE STAR AND
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Former National President Reveals Highlights of Varied Career By ROY J. HEFFNER District XX Archon
T~E
MANAGING EDITOR bas asked me for a Whitnory <lbout myself, telling all, concealing nothingdisplasy. and exaggeration permitted, I hope. After CUtnstng calculated reluctance, but under no circonse ances enough to kill the invitation, I have shoul~t~d. At my age, opportunities for publicity instru . e seized and held avidly. But to obey my ct•ons:
Elected Eminent Supreme eputy Archon At s . Pi I< avannah, m December, 1916, I attended the fr 0tn atfa Phi Supreme Chapter meeting as a delegate Wise amma Chapter. I was then young, energetic, ever a~d handsome, ·all to a degree far greater than the sSince. Because I was noisy, it was decided in Supretnoke-filled cloak rooms to make me Eminent b ~e Deputy Archon and keep me quiet. adve~nng the years immediately following, the t of World War I changed many plans of
More Facts about Roy J. Heffner Born S eptember 21, 1890, m . Los Angeles. B ·f S. ~lectrical Engineering, University of Caliorma, 1916. Gr:duate work 1918-19-20, Columbia University i\f nd University of California. Nlltber Pi Kappa Phi, Tau Beta Pi, Eta Kappa Be u. ~I Telephone System, Student Engineer, Chicago I\ ltd New York, 1916-17. C~~y Air Service, Lieutenant to Major, 1917-19. cllj~an, Engineering Extension, University of I\ a Jfornia, 1919-20. t~tnotive Expert, U. S. Government, Hawaiian B 8 ands, 1920-21. 111 1. Telephone System, San Francisco, Trans~•ssion Engineer, 1921-23; General Supervisor, B tnployment and Training, 1924-29. 1 ~elephone Laboratories, New York, 1929-47, ))~SJstant Educational Director, Educational i\t •rector, Personnel Planning Director. etnber American Management Association, ~tnerican Society for Engineering Education, Cl es1dent Morris County (N . .J.) Engineers' i\t ub. ~;ried Hazel Meddaugh, of Stockton, Calif., in 0 18. Ittte son, Jackson Edward. e~red, 1947, to "a California hilltop," so says r. Reffner.
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Roy J. Heffner
mice, men, and fraternities. After the war I took time out from my job at the University to attend the Supreme Chapter Meeting at Charlotte, N. C., in De~ember, 1919. From that gathering I emerged as Emment Supreme Archon (later National President) solely because I then had more hair than my very competent predecessor, John D. Carroll. Just when everything was under control, a zealous Army colonel carried me off to the Hawaiian Islands as an "automotive expert." From that spot of vantage, or disadvantage, as viewpoints may dictate I administered the affairs of my fraternal office amidst the distracting influences of swishing hula skirts okolehau, and raw fish . '
Visits Every Chapter Returning in 1921 , I spent two months visiting every chapter in the fraternity, and installing two new chapters. The trip broadened me and helped the.. c~apters, I am sure. Many improvements in faclltt1es and procedures were effected, and a more (Contimwd on Page 14)
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pI KAPPA PH I
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Seen on the left are the chaperones for the Orchid Ball. They are (left to right) Or. and Mrs. George Hood, Ernest ("Pop") M~'~::, 15 De.lta '.11: and Mr. and Mrs. Bens~n Davis, all o~ Deland. Dr. Hood is Stetson's director of guidance, and Mr. Davis, Chi '48, 0 p un1vers1ty s dean of men. In the picture an the nght the photographer snapped a group of Stetson students enjoying the Pi KoPP Orchid Ball.
Doings at Chi Chapter, Stetson University By TOM MAHAFFEY Historian
Parade of Orchids Is Highlight The annual Parade of Orchids week end, March 28-29, was truly the greatest ever. The festivities started Friday evening with an apache party in the frat house, with brother Fred Conway in charge. Tables and chairs were arranged cabaret style around the dimly candle lit, 路low ceiling room. A four piece jazz combo furnished the music. The outside of the house was lighted with two floodlights, and the veranda was converted into a lounge. Activities continued Saturday when the Pi Kapps took their dates to Burts Park for an afternoon of swimming and boating. Later the hungry crowd was served a fried chicken supper, topped with apple and cherry pies. Picnic bosses were Bruce Wigle and George Frison. Climax of the entire week end was the Orchid Ball. Under the direction of L. M. Thomas a penthouse roof garden was created. As the guests entered the building they walked into a completely furnished living room, and through French doors, entered the
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The ceiling was made of wire mesh stuffed "'~11 about 15,000 white paper napkins. Below the wb~ which represented a cloud, was a blue disc, 30 Y3... in diameter, which revolved slowly. Set into the 路dht路 supposedly the heavens, were small starlike h~~ which blinked on and off. In the center of t~e 1~ was an exact replica of the Pi Kappa Phi pin, ltgb six feet long. Approximately 7S Pi Kapp dates and wives "'~ presented with a flower during the Orchid PM3P and Mrs. Ernest Machen, wife of a prominent DeV alumni, was given a white orchid. The week end concluded when the group atteJI the First Presbyterian Church in a body.
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Committee heads, not already mentioned, incllld~ Neil Nelson, "Steve" Berry, Charles Turner, GeO" c!lli Ossorio, and Wayne Oeffler. ~~ 0~ I
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.llan, n J ~~onors Accrue Pi ~hen the yearly honors were distributed for 1951 tJ appa Phi was definitely not left out. "Bn~?e{v the supervisi~n of Scholarship Chairman eleven 路 re~ .the frat pulled itself from a low, low toppi th POSition scholastically up to third place, thus F ng all fraternities and three sororities on campus. the ~r the sixth consecutive year the Pi Kapps won frat ;terfr~ternity Sing. One more win will give the Itecorids third permanent possession of Sing Cup. Phi s s Were made of the sing and other Pi Kappa 1'h ongs. They are now being sold. lakene Prized intramural All-Sports Trophy was Were for the second consecutive year. Top places dlebalrec~rded. in football, ba~ketball, handball, padJulian 'B admmton, and tenms, each with a trophy. Rou nd ennett was presented the Pi Kapp Best All! Athlete Cup. ~ra;~ividual honors taken included Homecoming Fresh r, Homecoming Chairman, Presidents of the class ~an .and Junior classes, Treasurer of Freshman Outsta re.sidents of Business and Music Schools, Most Year) ndin~ Freshman Male (second consecutive P0Pul路 Outside of school Ray Dunne was voted Most fessio ar Player in the Florida State League (proJasin ~~l class D circuit) for the second time. "Walt" lossess ~ he!d ~he best pitching average ( 16 wins, 4 the p) In his firSt season of pro ball. Both played with l ennant winning DeLand Red Hats. as ~tnbda Alumnus E. B. Crimm has come to Stetson Progr e new director of the Cooperative Education Stets am. This brings the total of Pi Kapps on the on administrative staff to eight.
Su~n
tiler Brings Five Pledges Chi'
recent s 1951 Summer chapter was the smallest in Was S Years, approximately ten brothers, however it Sum tetson's only frat to remain active for the isn't ~er session. These ten men discovered that it As a ow many rush, but how they rush, that counts. a gretesu]t of a beach party, a watermelon party, and a lot'~t. deal of personal rushing and "paling around buri five excellent pledges were added to the group. cleann~ their three weeks of pledgeship the new men on a e the yard, painted the downstairs bath, put illosu floorshow in a downtown restaurant patronized "'ith Y by Stetson students, presented the fraternity broth an album of records, and entertained the S ers with a card party. tle 11 ~~~~r pledges were " Ben" Martin, Winter GarItoy li Bill" Rogers, Jacksonville; "Jimmy" Dator, SPtin ostetter, and Blair McGarvey, all of DeLand. tona gBquarter pledges included Frank Warren, Dayeach, and " Jimmie" Gerretson, DeLand.
Ch路
r Boasts of Baseball Stars
Pt~hi
.Chapter claims two of the biggest names in Jl)ess~onal baseball in Central Florida. clas aYing for the DeLand Red Hats, who won the 8 D Florida State League pennant playoffs and KAPPA PHI
This is the "Pi Kopp Battery" at Chi, Stetson University. They ore Pitcher "Walt" Joskinski (left) and Catcher Roy Dunne.
All-Star game, were brothers Ray Dunne and Walt Jasinski. In 1950 Dunne was selected as. All-Star catcher, and for the last two years he has been awarded the league's giant Most Popular Player Trophy. Ray is good enough to let the chapter display them on the mantle with its 21 intramural trophies. A junior in Stetson, Ray 's major is physical education. He is married. Tabbed by newspapermen as "Big Walt Jasinski," "Jazbo," as he is known at the Pi Kapp house, completed his first season of pro baseball with 16 wins, four losses in regular season play, as well as four wins of the eleven playoff games. Jasinski was not only the league's leading pitcher, with a percentage of .BOO, but was also tops with five shutouts. Jazbo had the lowest earned run average against him, 1. 7 runs per game. Jasinski, a junior, lettered in baseball at Stetson for two years. Dunne and Jasinski were known to Central Florida radio audiences as the "Pi Kapp battery." Two more brothers from Chi playing in the State League were Merrill Smith, for Palatka and Lou Treen, for Cocoa. Batting averages were: D~nne, .32 1; Smith, .309, and Treen, .245.
ATLANTA ALUMNI PLAN CELEBRATION, NAME OFFICERS John K. Snellings, Colleg~ Park, Ga., Chi '42, Stetson University, newly elected vice-president of the Atlanta Alumni Chapter, has been named chairman of the Founders' Day Dinner committee which will be held December 10 at the Henry Grady Hotel, Atlanta. Other officers elected with Mr. Snellings include Joseph C. Shearer, Atlanta, Eta '27, Emory University, president, succeeding "Walt" Crawford Atlanta Iota '4 7, Georgia Institute of Technology'; Charl~s M. Thompson, Rex, Ga., Iota '27, treasurer, and Henry M. Henderson, Atlanta, Eta '30, secretary. 7
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Kraber Tells of Life - and Death - On Korean Front . "Much to my surprise the Regimental Cornman~: mg Officer said, 'I am sending you to Service Co~~ pany: ' . I was .given the job of understudying \P Mumt10ns Offtcer. Just as I was almost broken . a ':"arran~ ~fficer, Junior Grade (Table of Org~': zat10n posttJOn for Munitions Officer) arrived an . was given a new job or I should say jobs. I 111-a, assigned as Graves Registration Officer Regime 0.a; Labor Officer (Korean Laborers) a~d Execull' Officer of Service Company. '
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Many Casualties "Even though the peace talks are bogged dow.; and the papers are reporting light activity we ba.' had about 125 killed and more than 300 casualllr. in the past month. "We are living in tents because there are no to\1'11' Quite ~ cha~ge from Europe. We are comfortable P, cots With atr mattresses which are issue now. 1 most ama~ing thing is the food. This week we've )l:~ hii steak (fned to order on a homemade grill) tll .ct of times, fried chicken once, and turkey once ; als0,~ 0 th 1 cream three times. The boys on line get ice cr te< and this wonderful chow also. There are no 01~ 'K' rations, only new 'C's' that are really go t This is one place where the Infantry eats better t~(; the rear echelon, thanks to General RidgewaY路 1. in get free cigarettes, candy, and toilet articles, a_~ le~ fr~e Air Mail and we pay no income tax. :Howe' . 路 ":~~. all these rewards, I would still rather be~3 ~ CJvthan. The only things I hate are the boredot11 endless mountains. The roads are non-existent, ~~ ~~~ the engineers have had to build them from noth'r They have actually hacked roads out of the side 0 mountain. They are doing a teriffic job.
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FIRST LT. ROY E. KRABER, Alpha Upsilon '43, Drexel , former traveling counselor, is back in the service. He wrote from Chip'o-ri, Korea, just as this issue of the magazine was going to press, and said .m ' part : "After I finished my one month refresher course at Benning, I was home until July 25 when I flew to Camp Stoneman, Calif. I spent two lovely weeks there, then flew to Schofield Barracks, Hawaii, where I spent five duty-less days waiting to pick up troops. I left Hawaii on the USS Anderson and after eight lovely sailing days arrived in Japan . Three days later I landed in Pusan after a train ride through Japan and an over-night boat ride from Sasbo, Japan, to Pusan. From Pusan I went to Taegu for a classification interview which consisted of submitting my 66 to the adjutant. Since my primary MOS was 0806Cargo Operations Officer (A.T.C. MOS) and my branch Infantry, I presented quite a problem which they untangled four days later by sending me to the 7th Division instead of a port as I had been hoping. 8
Spirit Is High
\\1; "The 17th Infantry is known as the 'Buffalo' Jte~ Pe, ment. Everything is Buffalo. We were even give~b te]
buffalo calf, but the State Department and ~ Department of Agriculture wouldn 't clear it-th81 God. The morale i.n this outfit is amazing. It is rn掳5 Regular Army and is full of esprit de corp. "We are going off line soon after spending 55 da) on line. The group really needs a rest. " I don't see how we can ever get pushed off tb, peninsula. There are so many prepared positions.; fall back to that they'll never get through. TheY laid enough barbed wire to enclose the United stall' It's up to the politicians now." 1~ Lt. Kraber's address is Service Co. 17th Infall 路 7th Division, APO 7 Cj o Postmaster' San Francis' Calif. His serial nu~ber is 02016905 .'
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Dr. Dull Receives Faculty AleTJnber Award, U. of Oregon By GLEN GARRETT, Historian Alpha Omega
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PAUL S. DULL, Alpha Delta '34, University
Cha~t Wa~hington, faculty adviser for Alpha Omega
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Drores er smce its founding in 1946 and associate llniv so.r of Political Science and History at the Facuf:sity of Oregon, has received the "Outstanding l'h· Y Member award for 1951." honor's award is presented by Friars, senior men's tnernbary, composed of senior men and active faculty tnernb ers at the University of Oregon, to "the faculty or ed er ~ho has contributed the most to the field such ucahon throughout the year." This is the first award to be presented. . . Friarhe dec1s1on on t h e award rests upon a vote by racu]:' based on a cross-section poll of students and b Y members. his:· bull was presented an engraved diploma, noting or thCcomplisbment. His name will appear at the top the ne large bronze scroll which is being installed in tecordew Student Union. This will be a permanent of the award presented each year.
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Is Nationally Known
in~· bull is noted as one of the outstanding experts lerns e nation on the Far East situation and the prohlurn fof these countries. He is coordinator of curricu1'he {/.Far East Studies at the University of Oregon. the Diversity of Oregon is noted as having one of or sto~tstanding undergraduate schools in this field 1' u Y on the Pacific Coast. br }ir points were instrumental in Friars' choice of . un for this year's award: br b . \Vash·. ull gave 3 7 public addresses over Oregon and PeopJ'ngton. In doing this he supplied hundreds of tela/ with a picture of Orient-United States Ion ship th;~e seco~d point on which he was selected was elec/ct that his classes, which for most people are With Ive courses, are "among the most heavily enrolled a to People with an earnest desire to get in." He has are ita! ?f 360 students in three classes, of which 220 h1s "Far East of Modern Times" class. . teiar e third point was based on his non-academic lllern'ons with students. One of the most well-liked or tbers of the faculty, Dr. Dull served on a number Stu~ Udent-faculty committees, the largest being ~.e lies ent Union Board. This group decides the actJVJconc and policies of the Student Union, sponsors trlli erts and speakers, and fosters dances and Student and on~ Intermural Sports, such as bowling, billiards, Ping pong. · ~ 0~ pI
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Dr. Paul S. Dull, right, Alpha Delta '34, associate professor of Political Science and History, University of Oregon, receives from Barry Mountain, associate student body president, the "Outstanding Faculty Member Award" for 1951.
The fourth point instrumental in his selection was that he set up and controlled Far Eastern Week, a full week providing accurate information on the Far East problems of the present. It was open to all . students. This year it was tagged as "one of the most successful conferences ever held at this university." One of the speakers was H. J. Van Mook, who was Governor-General of the Dutch East Indies in 1941 when the Japanese invaded the country. He later served as Minister for the Colonies of the Dutch Government in Exile, in London. Also on the program were Julian Towster, an expert on Russia, and Nobutaka Ike and Robert C. North, both from the Hoover Memorial Institute and Library, Stanford, Calif.
Has Studied Extensively Dr. Dull was graduated from the University of Washington in 1935. He then proceeded with his graduate work. He spent a year in the Orient in 1938. In 1940 he received his Doctor's Degree from the University of Washington. He then continued his studies at Harvard in 1940-41 on a Post-Doctorate Rockefeller Scholarship. Soon afterwards be went into the Marine Corps and was sent to Pearl Harbor where he was stationed when the Japanese attack came on December 7, 1941. He served as a language officer in the Marines for the duration of the war. Dr. Dull has been on the University of Oregon campus for five years. Dr. Dull's favorite hobby is fishing, but he also does a bit of gardening. The spacious yard about his home is alive with the color of his beautiful roses. In his spare time he likes to do research in Japanese language.
Officials of the Strategic Air Comrn:~~ and the Omaha Chamber of Co~rnr~iO look on as Charles S. Reed, Nu, Unrve aha of Nebraska, president of the Od do· Chamber of Commerce, signs o dee itel noting 47.86 acres of land to the ~n (al States government for use as o. srte d~ construction of family housing unrts J"11a~ terms of the Wherry Bill. The ion in! donated to help SAC ease its housnd· problem at Offutt Air Force Bose. FStonci! ing from left to right ore J. 10 r's McDermott, chairman of the Ch 0111 Armed Services Committee; Ken"(/ all Harvey, vice-president of the I ~er· Chamber of Commerce, and Lt. Co· 01 old G. Robinson, deputy commonddr ~~ I Offutt Air Force Bose, who a~te oif>· Colonel C. T. Edwinson, commondrnQ d ~ cer of Offutt. Seated by Mr. Ree dill! Lieut. Gen. Curtis E. LeMay, common d general of the Stroteg ic Air Common
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C. S. Reed lias Colorful Careef In ''Frontier'' Nebraska CHARLES S. REED was born in a sod house in Western Nebraska on June 4, 1896. His birthplace was his father 's homestead 30 miles to and from a "soddy" school house, where annual school terms . varied from five to seven months, depending on how much money was available to the rural school district. In the early 1900's, drought and a grasshopper plague forced the Reed family to move to the nearby town of Arnold, from where his father operated a stage coach to the nearest railroad town, making a round trip of 46 miles each way, exclusive of Sunday. In this "cow town," one teacher taught a ninegrade school, all housed in one large frame room. School discipline was a fiction . One year, the bad boys ran three teachers out of town, and there were no candidates left to teach the last three months of the school term. Their favorite prank was to throw a loaded shotgun shell in the pot-bellied stove and slam the door shut before it blew up, throwing soot and the top stove plate around the room. The next year, the school board hired a heavyweight and equipped him with a loaded quirt. After the new " prof" had whipped the two town bullies, he stayed on for several years.
Goes In Business For Himself Even before he was in high school, Charlie went into business for himself. In those days almost every 10
a h to":'n famil;y bad its own milk cow which they would h lanat out m a vacant lot or take it to some nearbl a pastu~e during the daytime. The future Pi J{aPP
c?nc.eJVed the idea of renting a pasture near to~· p1ckmg up all of the cows in town each morJ1 1 ~E driving them to the rented pasture, and then brin~1111 i them. back to their own corrals for the night milk 111g; s He fmally built up a handling of the town herd 0 nearly forty cows at $2 per cow a month. Previously, he had bought tbe necessary bor~ and saddle with a nest egg of $65 which he b8 earned selling "boiler-plate" publications like tbl Pennsylvania Grit and the Toledo Blade. These paPet: were peddled on Saturdays which was the big dal in Arnold. The local barber, who was a rancbrP~j during the rest of the week, did all of his tonsof131 work on Saturday. Brother Reed recalls that his beS. paper customers had their own handsomely decorat& shaving mugs and bone-handled razors.
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Is Valedictorian At the age of fifteen, Charles Reed was the v~l~ dictorian of the first graduating class of Arnold B1g1 School. The next two years, he attended a stat teache~s c.ollege where he wholly supported himself .b~ doing Jamtor work for 20 cents an hour while tak 10• Pa care of the fancy driving horses of two local merchall1' in his spare time. THE STAR AND
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in ~f~~r teaching one year in a small high school, he, vers路 6, enrolled in the College of Law at the Unithe lty o~ Nebraska. He arranged all his classes in Satu~orDI_ng so he could work each afternoon and In ay .'n a Lincoln shoe store. for A~nl of 1917, he enlisted as an infantry private the servtce in World War I. He spent 30 months in a coArrny,, including 10 months in France, becoming tJ tnrmss.1oned officer while in service. the ~0 ~ h1s return to the University of Nebraska in form a I of 1919, he became a member of the newly he wed Nu Chapter of Pi Kappa Phi. While in school, or S as officially appointed bookkeeper in the office all 0~c~~tary of State of Nebraska. Again he arranged Work IS law classes in the morning so that he could Gast every afternoon. His Pi Kapp deputy, Orvin the bn, now a California newspaper publisher, did class 0 ?kkeeping in the morning and went to his es ltl the afternoon. They alternated on Saturdays.
Elected to Legislature
he~ the age of 23, while a student at the University, latu as elected as a member of the Nebraska Legis'Nebre, representing eight "short grass" Western to hraska counties. He is the youngest member ever lnave served in the Nebraska Legislature. 'Neb 1921, he graduated from the University of illlrnra~ka with L.L.B. and A.B . degrees, and was . 'Neb ed,ately appointed assistant attorney general of he hraska. Two years later, he moved to Omaha where or 1 as been engaged ever since in the general practice 'Nebaw. lie has served on important committees of the raska and American Bar Associations. Active GOP
a ~Ver since young Reed, at the age of 22, served as he helegate to the Nebraska Republican convention, he has been actively engaged in GOP activities. Twice at 1as been elected, state-wide, as Nebraska delegate large to National Republican conventions. then .1948, in a large field of candidates, he received lie highest state-wide vote given any of the candidates. in served as a member of the platform committee Sta~e last national GOP convention. Of him, United Comes . Senator Lodge, chairman of the Platform ,, ltl1ttee, said: t Charles S. Reed made a substantial contribution so the Republican platform. His imagination, his /'re grasp of national problems, his understands~g and his constructive spirit made him an out'll! anding member of the Platform Committee. It ~as a Pleasure to work with him." lie r. Reed has always been active in civic affairs. !~08 ~as one of the organizers of the American Legion tau at the University of Nebraska. For years, he the &ht a class of high-school-age boys and handled a athletic program of a large Omaha church. As or~oung man, he served for two years as president lie ~e Nebraska Baptist Young People's Convention: agSoI~ a past president of his university class alumm Ciation.
Playground Pioneer
Pal~r. Reed is a pioneer in the development of municiPlaygrounds in Omaha, having served many years (Continued on Page Jf)) .I
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"Pi" Is Missing By GLEN GARRETT, Historian Alpha Omega
ALPHA OMEGA'S little black cocker spaniel mascot, "Pi," is missing. He disappeared on the last day of Summer session at the University of Oregon, according to the three men who were living here at the time. He has not been seen or heard from since. We have an idea that someone liked our little buddy too much to share him with us, and decided to take him home, although we have no proof. Pi would have been a senior this year. Given to the house by William Adams, Alpha Omega '48, in 1948, he was just a small puppy. He grew up in the house, and was fraternally-minded from the start. At an early age he acquired the habit of going to classes regularly with the members in the house. His usual procedure was to make the rounds of the classroom to see if he knew anyone else there, then come back to sprawl out at the foot of his fraternity brother and sleep for the remainder of the 50-minute period. He would become very impatient if the professor ran over the designated time.
Changes Major Course As a freshman, Pi started his major .in Art and Architecture, but changed to Business Administration the following year. During his junior year he continued his academic courses, but took up Music on the side. It took him a while to become accustomed to this, and in fact, he almost flunked out because his watch had always been set for a 50-minute class. He had the utmost trouble in devoting his complete attention to the full two-hour rehearsals. Nevertheless, he managed to get through the year all right. Pi has the distinction of being the only dog ever allowed in the Music School. It was his studious personality that did it.
Extra-Curricular Activities On the campus proper, he was most famous for his begging of donuts in the student union. His deep brown eyes charmed and m~lted even the coldest and most stern opposition of the young co-eds. He was undisputedly the most popular Pi Kapp on campus with the women. Pi almost caused a scandal last Spring when be was discovered in Hendricks Hall, one of the women's dormitories, a full four hours after the doors had been locked for the night. Off the record, he claims to have spent the night there on several occasions, unknown to the housemother. A great deal of time has lapsed now, since Pi has left us, and although we are wishing for his return, we have practically given up hope that he will be back. However, we will never forget the many happy days that be spent with us, and the color and life that "our little black devil" provided us during that time. 11
Red Cross · Promotes Alumnus Of Emory's Eta JOHN C. WILSON, Eta '26, Emory University, became assistant manager of the American National Red Cross April 1. A veteran of nearly 20 years of service with the organization , Mr. Wilson is now responsible for services to areas and chapters, Disaster Services, and Red Cross civil defense and fund raising activities. Since October 1, 1946, he had been vicepresident and manager of the Midwestern Area office in St. J,ouis, Mo., and before that he held a similar position at the Southeastern Area offiee in Atlanta, Ga. After attending Emory, Mr. Wilson received his B.S. Degree from Peabody College, Nashville, Tenn ., where he did graduate work also.
Starts in Tennessee Beginning his Red Cross career as executive secretary of the Tipton County (Tenn.) Chapter in 1932, he became field representative in the administration of emergency relief a year later. In 1934 he was assigned by the Midwestern Area as a general field representative, covering Missouri c~apters. ~fter a period as a member of the area's disaster rehef and preparedness staff, he was named assistant area director of Disaster Service. Mr. Wilson participated in an administrative capacity in almost all the major disasters covered by the Red Cross from 193 5 to 1940. His experiences during that period include service in the Republic River Valley flood of 1935, the Tupelo, Miss., tornado of the following year, the Ohio-Mississippi floods of 193 7, and the southwestern Arkansas tornadoes and the west Texas floods of f938 .
Moves Up Again In late 1941, Mr. Wi,lson was appointed a regional director, with responsibility for chapter activities in Texas, New Mexico, and Oklahoma. Early in 1942 he was named assistant manager of the Midwestern Area, with administrative responsibility for disaster relief and preparedness and chapter service. A native of Covington, Tenn., Mr. Wilson was both teacher and principal in schools there. He is married to the former Lyda Lane Walker of Shelbyville, Tenn. They have two children, John C., Jr., and Patricia Lee Wilson. 12
STONE COMPLIMENTS CORN ELL'S PSI . John A. Stone, Psi '49, who graduated from Cor~~; m February, is working in New York City and takill~ o graduate work at Columbia. His address is 42-16 _7 6er Street, Jackson Heights, New York, N . Y. Last W111 ~ 11 he returned to Ithaca and visited Psi Chapter >"~ 1 the brothers were in the midst of an intensive rusbtDd1 program. " Not mentioning the immense pleasure a~ . benefit derived from my association with the fraternt )I during my years at Cornell," Mr. Stone wrote Natio~ ~ffice, " I would just like to say that the recept1f1• gtven me upon my return to the house was worth ill d self the entire fraternal experience. It was as if I ba a second home."
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Military R eview of the Command and General Staft College, Canadian Army Training Memo . He is ~ author of "Wilson 's Index of Annual BusinC? Activity. " He is a registered investment adviser and a me!l'l!Jtf of the board of directors of Institutional Shares, r,td· a prominent investment trust. 1 Mr. Wilson is a member of the Chemists' CJ11b' 0'i American Chemical Society, Chemical Market ~~ ::~ search Association, Reserve Officers Associatl~l o,e National Sojol)rners, Heroes of ' 76, Sons of ~i American Revolution, and Ancient Scottish Rite. •o, THE STAR AND
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Newlyweds Make Flying Trip Through Europe J\ FLYING TRIP to Europe is exactly what newly-
liver~eds Mr. and Mrs. Harry M. Anderson, of
becern ore, Calif., took last Winter. They left the \Viber 19 and returned January 12. They selected Plain nt~r season for a number of reasons, they ex- 路 trave~d, Including the economies offered by Winter tourist and the avoidance of the hordes of American s.
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Alpha Phi '42, said the trip started to n, he separate flights of himself and his fiance l'hen掳~h ester, Minn., where the wedding took place. IYay fey flew to New York and went to Paris by attic! 0 Shannon, Ireland. Among the most useful and cesl they took with them were a 35 mm. camera 0 or films.
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tngs ~ craned, stramed, and ogled at the old buildAnd~ 1 lttle cars, cobble-stone streets, and people," Mr. ourse~son related. "We toured Paris on foot, limiting club Ves to seeing the famous landmarks, a night . IYho ~路~so, and getting used to dealing with people \lie w 1 n't speak our language. Here we decided that Of th ou]d stay in hotels which seemed representative cessr el country we were visiting. We did this so suctouriut ly that we completely avoided other American Of th s and were able to meet a number of nationals it Wo el various countries. Paris has everything, and ''\; d be very easy to live there. Some e fo~nd Geneva, Switzerland, to be quiet, with quamt old streets, honest, helpful people, and 0
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Peno Palace. Although rebuilt in 1400 and 1848, its lto1y . 90es bock to a monastery founded about 500 A. D. The tliff ~s that a vision of Christ kept a baron from riding over the 0 Y~rlooke a.nd he founded the monastery. ~s a result. The palace IQ,d b s ~mtra, founded by the Phoenrcrans before Christ and ~Orld ~ ~1chard Strauss to be the most beautiful place in the 路 t rs about 15 miles north of Lisbon, Portugal
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Mr. and Mrs. Harry M. Anderson
prices comparable to those in the United States. We spent a night a Wengen, a ski resort, and walked in on the very unexpected English formality. The scenery was wonderful, lots of snow,. skiing, skating, and games, and we forgot our embarrassment at lack of correct attire."
New Construction in Milan The travelers described Zurich as a typical German city, modern, bustling, lots of American cars, nice shops, but not much in the line of historical interest or scenic beauty. The Andersons reported that in Milan they found more signs of new construction than in any other city. Scaffolding here was steel instead of wood. "We met a German who had served in the German Army during the last war," Mr. Anderson said, "and his theory of a great Germany rising again from the struggle between Russia and the United States indicates a lessor unlearned." In going to Venice the couple traveled through the Po River Valley where they saw people using mules, horses, plows, and hardly any modern equipment women getting water at public watering places, scrub~ bing their clothes at community stalls, and clothes on the line everywhere. "Venice was really different," Mrs. Anderson r~calls. "Tourists that we were, we took a gondola nde through the Grand Canal, visited the Doge's Palace, Bridge of Sighs, the prison . St. Marks Church , and the centuries-old glass factory. We also saw the opera, 'Lohengrin,' there, finding ourselves in the midst of formals even more dressy than in Wengen ." '<"From Venice we took the train to Florence and saw Florence's famous churches and museums as well as her suburbs where many rich people from other countries own homes," Mr. Anderson said. "There we also watched the silversmiths at work and saw the exquisite handiwork of the orphan boys in their leather-work shops."
Scenes Vary in Italy Pisa and .~orne came next in their itinerary. In Rome they vistted many of the usual places of interest such as the Coliseum, the Appian Way walls of Rome' Quo Vidas, the Catacombs, and St. P~ters. Then they (Continued on Page 19)
TIME, METHODS -ENGINEER SUPERVISES FROM MINNEAPOLIS TO LOUISVILLE ROBERT L. THOMAS, Omega '33, Purdue, is manager of time standards and methods of the Minneapolis-Moline Company, Minneapolis, Minn. ' manufacturers of machinery and tractors. "During college days, " he explained in an interview, " my fraternity activities seemed to center on being chairman of the probation committee, and apparently that experience of dealing with recalcitrant pledges has stood me in good stead in my present capacity of dealing with union representatives and grievance committee members." A registered profe::;sional engineer, Mr. Thomas insisted that he is a "strictly amateur" wall-eyed pike fisherp1an. "Since my company has five plants, three here in the Twin Cities, one in Moline, Ill., and one in Louisville, Ky., I find it quite a job to spread my activities over such an area," he said. "It is an interesting problem, keeping on top of the methods and time standards in all plants." Also Mr. Thomas has two sons, Robert, Jr ., 6, and P~ul , 212, who keep him from experiencing dull moments. Vice-chairman of the Minnesota Section, the Ameri!=an Society of Mechanical Engine~rs, Mr. Thomas was active in the national Fall meetmg of the ASME which was held in Minneapolis in September. Last May the society sponsored a conference of the American Standards Association for which he acted as arrangements chairman. He says that some of the members jokingly claim this was one of the first ASA meetings to be held west of the Hudson River.
HEFF~ NER
SKETCHES CAREER (Continued from Pngc 5)
closely knit organization resulted. My own broadening was physically aided by copious amounts of fried chicken and grits at banquets enroute. The next event of importance was the Supreme Chapter meeting in Berkeley in December, 1921. With this meeting national unity really began to develop. During the next two years, with the cooperation of a fine group of national officers, the constitution and by-laws were revised, the ritual improved, the Star and Lamp revitalized, finances strengthened, and a district type of organization established. This work, and much more, has been carried forward through the years until we now have a fraternity of which we can be truly proud. In December, 1923, at the Supreme Chapter meeting in Atlanta, I was succeeded by George D. 14
"My two boys ore a major activity in themselves andt everything from firemen to cowboys," Robert L. Thomas, p;l neapolis, Minn., said of his youngsters. Robert, Jr., is 6, and is lV2.
Driver, the first of a series of later officers to wb~~1 much credit is due for the condition of the frater~ .', today. My wife and I .>till cherish the fraternt l~. parting gift, a silver tea service which, though ~$r constantly, shows no more signs of obsolescence lou do the cardinal principles of Pi Kappa Phi. is :
Q:
or
Is Now Archon for District XX )if路
Just when I expected to spend the rest of rn:Y..1: sitting and drinking- tea, that is, from the st1\0 service-! was asked to take the job of Arcb District XX. I have agreed, for the present, bee311it many younger men, though better qualified, ~~ mighty busy today with national and world-~1 problems that we older ones failed to solve. , e3'' Never was there a greater need for men to l ~ to live peaceably together as brothers. Pi Kappa fffi. can and must aid in this training. In such an ef I am proud to have a part again. THE STAR
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Milbourne Takes Top Post In Radio Company By MARVIN H. ANDERSON, Alumni Secretary ' Rho, Washington and Lee
the Dutch Inn in Lexington. He had spent his freshman year at Johns Hopkins University in 1918-1919 and had transferred to W. and L. the next Fall. Boarding at "Castle Hill," an old rooming house in Lexington which has since been destroyed by fire, he met Arcy Ben Powell, Jr., a Pi Kapp from Emory University, Eta '18, now deceased , who had come to W. and L. after spending some time with an Army reserve unit encamped in Virginia. Powell and Milbourne, along with James R. Sims, Jr., another Pi Kapp transfer, Eta '20, and two other W. and L. students rooming at Castle Hill formed the colony.
"Good Sized" Group of 18 "W. and L. fraternities were small then," Jim observed, "and when I left in 192 2, we had 18 men, which we thought was a good-sized group." The chapter moved from one-room chapter quarters to a house on Main Street, to West Washington Street, and then back to Main Street, which was "fraternity row" in those days. By the time he graduated with a B.A. Degree and a certificate from the School of Commerce and Business Administration in 1922, Jim had advanced with Pi Kappa Phi on the Washington and Lee campus, and in his senior year, he served as archon after fulfilling other duties before that. While in Lexington, he ran on the cross-country team, pitched for the baseball team, and rowed number three on the crew.
Real Estate Salesman
O~E OF THE SIX NAMES scrawled in ink now lou aded on the Rho Charter which hangs in the is Lge. of the chapter house at Washington and ~ee or th~s Waters Milbourne, of Baltimore, the subject Is story. c0J he story of "Jim" Milbourne during and after his \Vj~ge days is one of success. The climax came last elec ter when, upon his father's retirement, he was Of ~ed president of The Monumental. Radio Com~~ny l,r0i alhmore, operator of Radio Stat10n WCAO, the tas~e of Baltimore," outlet of the Columbia Broadold Ing System in Baltimore since 192 7 and now the tit;~t radio broadcasting station in the monumental ter~r. Milbourne was "number two'' when
Rho ChapWas installed February 21, 1920, at a banquet in
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KAPPA PHI
Although born on the Eastern Shore of Maryland, Milbourne, with his family, had been living in Baltimore for a number of years, and he returned there as a real estate salesman. During the "roaring twenties," Florida had earned a reputation as a "boom state" and along with many other young men Milbourne treked South in 192 5 to engage in the real estate business in Florida. He was not the only Rho alumnus there, as his Pi Kapp brothers were there in force, including Walton Rex, '22, Forrest McGill, '21, and "Bill" Graves, '22. A year later, he returned to his native Baltimore to become associated for seven years with Stein Brothers and Boyce, an old and established investment banking concern. Following this, Brother Milbourne engaged privately in the investment field. In 1931, Milbourne's father became president of !he Monumental Radio Company. With a financial n~terest in the company and holding the position of d1rector as early as 1931, Jim became vice-president (Continued on Page 31) 15
''Leader
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Robert E. Glenn (left), Rho, Washington and Lee University is receiving congratulatious from Executive Secretary w' Bernard Jones, Jr., for taking top honors over Henry Hahn· from Xi, Roanoke College, in the Rushing Contest which was part of the program of the District II Leadership Conference conducted October 6 and 7 at Rho Chapter home by Mr. Jones. A past archon treasurer, and secretary of Rho, Mr. Glenn served as the chapte; delegate to the Pi Kappa Phi Convention in Portland, Ore., in 1950.
Traveling Counselor Ramon Sanchez is addressing the conference in the dining room· of Rho, the chapter which he served for three years as treasurer, house manager, rush chairman, and pledge master. Sitting on the left, next to Mr. Sanchez, are District Archon Hugh F. Hill, Jr., and Mr. Jones.
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Social festiv1t1e 5 1 0 Saturday evening dLtl of Washington an 11 in the dining ro 01111h1 not so subdued as from surrounding Counselor Ramon Chapter, Mrs. H.
Season II Most of the more than 60 delegates attending the District II Leadership Conference at Rho, Washington and Lee, were sufficiently awoke after the party Saturday night to participate in o lively final session Sunday morning, October 7.
Pledge masters, Ted R. Noll, Jr., of Xi, and "Bill" Stewart, of Rho, battle it aut for top honors by solving ticklish pledge problems in their respective groups. The questions were fired at them by Executive Secretory W. Bernard Jones, Jr., who conducted the conference. Xi won in this event. Looking on ore (left to right ) District Archon Hugh F. Hill, Jr., Traveling Coun selor Sanche%, Rho's Archon AI Terrill, and Rho Chapter Adviser Herbert N. Hamric, Jr.
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IN THE CHAPTER ETER.NAL
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following World War I, he practiced internal medicine in Chipley, Ga. Active in civic affairs, Dr. Parham was a Shriner and a member of the Peachtree Road Methodist Church, the Elks Club in Buckhead, and the Brookhaven Kiwanis Club. Dr. Parham is survived by his wife; a daughter, Mrs. Tom G. Sanford, Tampa; a son, L. G. Parham, Jr., Atlanta, Eta '3 6, and a brother, Virgil S. Parham, Miami, Fla., Lambda '16, University of Georgia.
A. B. Swaidmark
Dr. L. G. Parham Dr. Leroy G. Parham, Eta '12, Emory University, a practicing physician in Atlanta for 22 years, died at his home July 12. He was born in Hogansville, Ga·., attended schools in Odessa, Ga., and graduated from Emory, with the A B. Degree, in 1909. He was the fifth initiate of Eta Chapter, of which he was a charter member. He received his medical degree from the Atlanta Medical College in 1915. Part of 1910 was spent at the University of Chicago. For the next year or so. he taught school at the Florida Medical Academy, Green Cove Sp:ings. He was active in most sports m college and was a sports enthusiast until the last. After serving with the Medical Corps in the Army of Occupation 18
Albin B. Swaidmark, of Orlando, Fla., Alpha Epsilon '48, was killed instantly in an automobile accident July 10, 1950. Mr. Swaidmark was born June 23, 1922 in Manchester, N. H. Most of his life, however, was lived in Orlando where he graduated from high school. He attended Bob Jones University, Wheaton College, and the University of Florida. During World War II he served his country for three and a half years in the Coast Guard, Sonarman 2/ C. Most of this time was spent on convoy duty in both the Atlantic and Pacific Theatres of War on the D. E. Hurst 250.
W. H. Brewton Wade Hampton Brewton, Jr., Tampa, Fla., Alpha Epsil~n '4_7, University of Florida, was killed m an automobile accident near Tampa August 10, 1950.
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Mr. Brewton was the son of W~e'l Brewton, Dade City, Fla., attorj!;ti t) who was a charter member of cJ1ol t Emory University, and first ar e of the chapter. Young Brewton was born at ~:1 Port Richey, Fla., August 20, .: t• Later he moved with his fam 1~ 0~ Dade City, where he graduated ~ r1 high school. He played footba ~· the varsity team and, duri?g ltv' senior year, was president of b1S ~~~ and captain of the football 1~ Upon graduation in 1945 he en 15e. in the U. S. Navy, serving t~er d year and entering the Univers1tY1~ Florida in 1946. He attended ~ university for three years, andb!V the Spring of 1950 be entered iness in Tampa. . ~r Mr. Brewton is survived bY rtl~ parents, one sister, Mrs. Sarah ;JiB ces Goff, and one brother, WI , F. Brewton, who is a student Emory.
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THE STAR AND
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OF
REED'S CAREER IS REVIEWED (Continued from Page 11)
Dunaway Wins Again
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HE 'S DONE IT AGAIN! National Secretary J. Eugene L>unaway, Jr. , Alpha Eta, Howard Coll~ge, repeated last year's achievement of winning top place in the national sales contest of the Tappan Stove Company.
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Mr. Dunaway, who is in charge .of the Detroit territory, which is the com!Jany's No. 1 area in sales, came with the firm in 1936 as a salesman out of the Detroit office.
Chin 1949 and 1950, he was president of the Omaha amber of Commerce of which he is still a director.
Mr. Dunaway is quite active in Pi Kappa Phi. At a time prior to his becoming national secretary, he served as District II Archon. He was one of four alumni at the Detroit Convention to pledge $1,000 to start the Devereux D. Rice Memorial Fund.
a member of Omaha Recreation Board. He is a Iiast. President of the Omaha Executives Association. Ce 15 a director of and an officer of Omaha Crockery ompany and Dri!jcoll Leather Company. He is Pre51'd ent of a newly organized Bank of Bellevue, 1 ~cated in a suburb of Omaha, immediately adjoining Ce national headquarters of the Strategic Air om man d.
1 ln 1926, he married Frances Wahl, an Alpha Phi, ~orn Nebraska. She died in 1940. He married Lydia ehrner in 19 SO. The Reeds live in the country a f ew m'J1 es f rom Omaha. Mr. Reed ·s law off'Ice IS · m · 0 lllaha.
Mr. Dunaway graduated from Howard in 1917, with the distinction of having been the youngest graduate and of having the highest academic record, 97.4 per cent, over a period of four years.
Hobby Is Out-of-Doors birl\1r. Reed's hobby is the out-of-doors, particularly thed hunting and fresh water fi.~:.ting. Every week end can get away, the Reeds spend in a Platte River 1 Plu ~:Vithout a telephone, electric lights and inside fre rn Ing. Once a year he tries to find a new unaft~uent~~ spot for fresh water fishing. Last Summer. go r . dnvmg as far into Saskatchewan as he could lak·With a car, he flew North in a pontoon plane, Ar 1 ~g supplies to a uranium mining camp near the CtJc Circle.
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It In 1949, while on a pack trip into the Wind River
sa~dnge of Western Wyoming, Charlie lauded what is 1 to be a world's record golden trout.
th For several years, Mr. Reed served as president of tee alumni association of Nu Chapter which has e cently been reactivated. He reports that "we have r:ery reason to be proud of the active Pi Kappa Phi Presentation at the University of Nebraska."
·NEWLYWEDS GO TO EUROPE (Continued from Page 13)
proceeded to Pompeii, Naples, Sorrento, and the Amalfi Drive. "South of Rome we ran into real poverty," Mrs. Anderson relater!. "Tiny plots of land were terraced on hillsides. Women struggled under loads :Jf wood. Bare feet. feet wrapped in rags, fishermen repairing nets, people who bad never been away fr,:•n home because it cost too much money ($5 to Rome and back). Here we also saw real beauty in the Amalfi Drive, winding along the sea, and in the placid town of Sorrento." The tour continued through Madrid, also Toledo, home of Moorish architecture and of Greco, the famous Spanish painter. Another day's travel brou!!'ht them to Escorial, seat of a tramendous monastery where the royalty is buried.
Prices Reasonable in Spain Kraber Tells about Korea (Continued from Page 8)
''GLt Kraber, who is known among his friends as at tie,'' joined the Army soon after his matriculation 406 rexel. He served as a First Lieutenant with the Ar th Infantry of the 102nd Division in Europ~. a! ter his discharge from the Army he returned to h1s Stllla mater where he served Alpha Upsilon and ~e t Udent body of Drexel in many ways. In 1948 m ceco?nition of his outstanding participation in extractricular activities Drexel awarded him one of the 19 aries Etting Scholarships. H~ was listed in the a 48-49 edition of "Who's Who m American Colleges ~lld tJ niversities." During the first half of 1949 be as traveling counselor for Pi Kappa Phi. 0~
PI KAPPA PHI
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"Price-wise we found Spain to be very cheap," 1\fr. Anderson said. "Excellent hotel rooms and breakfast cost $4.50 a day, gu:des 6'5c for half a day, and haircuts 15c.'' In Portugal the Anr.lersons visited show places in Lisbon, Sintra, and Estoril, home of the ca::.ino. January 11 the travelers turned toward home from Lisbon, stopping in the Azores, at Gander in Newfoundland, and at Boston. They were back in San Francisco the next afternoon . "With the time change in our favor we covered more than 6.000 miles in one day plus the hours gained," Mr. Anderson stated. "Our souvenirs are few. However we took some 500 pictures, mostly in color, to have on hand to refresh our memory." 19
Moyer-Riley
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Miss Lora Lynn Riley, of ~elt town, Pa., and a member of t 11 Delta Delta sorority at Penn 5 ~er.. became the bride of Lt. Ralph MO}sor Alpha Mu '49 Wright-Patter Field, Dayton, Ohio, in a cerern~:; performed at the First Presbyter 1 ~, Church in Pottstown September j1 Mrs. Moyer was the Rose }ls Queen at Alpha Mu last Spring. h Lt. Moyer was archon of AlP Mu during the Spring.
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also of McKeesport, who is a stud~ at the Radford branch of Virginia po · technic Institute. The marriage to<. 11 place in Radford in June. The bride Rho's first "Rose." ALPHA DELTA '47-Duane D . ?Jcllsfi' p Box 2156, Seattle 11 , Wash ., to 1• Mabel Rhoden, of Seattle, August ·' in the University Lutheran ChUI' Seattle. ~·
ALPHA OMICRON '47- J ohn W. Co~ of Maquoketa, Iowa, to Miss caro li Ann Baron, of Grand Island, Nebr~·itt June. Mr. Coons is associated lJf Central Life I nsurance CompanY• Moines, Iowa.
Curtis Studios, Los Angeles
Mr. and Mrs. James Pottenger, of 1006 Good Hope, San Pedro, Calif., who were married June 16 in a ceremony performed at St. Luke's Episcopal Church, Long Beach, Calif., are cutting their reception cake with a gold-inlaid Turkiston sword belong ing to a friend of the family. Mrs. Pott.enger, the former Miss Patricia Florence McCaffrey, of Palos Verdes Estates Calif., is a graduate of Chadwick School. She attended the University of Arizona and pledged Kappa Kappa Gamma. Mr. Pottenger attended the University af Illinois ond the University of Arizona . He wos founding archon of Pi Kappa Phi at the University of Arizona in April and founding Commander of Pershing Rifles. Also, he was a member of Scabbard ond Blade.
MARRIAGES MU '47-Grier Hudson, of Spartanburg, S. C., to Miss Nancy Watts, of Gaffney, S. C., in Cheyenne, Wyo ., in August. The bridegroom is now in tlie Air Force. MU '49-Charles J ackson Hunt, of Pleasant Garden, N. C., to Miss Sarah Kornegay, of Greensboro, N . C., September 5 at the West Market Street Methodist Church, in Greensboro. NU 'SO-Charles Sheffield, of Lincoln, Nebr., to Miss ·P atricia Lee Nelson in August. XI '47- Lt. Benjamin B. Albert, of Roanoke, Va., to Miss Argie Wilson July 21. Soon after his marriage, Lt. Albert was sent to Korea.
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RHO '41-William R . Krausmann, of N iagara Falls, N. Y., to . Miss Joy Rodgerson, also of Niagara Falls, in May. Mr. Krausmann was one of the four or five men who returned from World War II to reopen Rho Chapter house. RHO '48-Philip C. Braunschweig, of 1210 Culver Road, Rochester 9, N. Y., to Miss Audrey Askew, of Briarcliff Manor, N. Y., October 13 at All Saints Episcopal Church, Briarcliff Manor, N. Y. Mr. Braunschweig is assistant purch asing agent at the Schlegel Manufacturing Company. He is a former archon of Rho Chapter. RHO '49- Harold R. ("Pinky") Gillespie, of McKeesport, Pa., to Miss Mary Bast,
ALPHA UPSILON '47-John K . Sto~~l to Miss Ellen Smith, of Wilrningt~- nt't' DeJa., July 28. The bridegroom's add~ !) is 2nd Officer Student Battery, ASAll b< !) # 30, Ft. Sill, Okla. His serial nuf11 1 is 064590. ,t( &~ ALPHA UPSILON '47-Jack W. Stre.d ~ 0 to Miss Ruth Haabestad, of Sprinll:~ ~ I A. Pa., July 21. The Streaters are I -~I at Apt. E-204, 246 W . •Upsal St., P~' delphia, Pa.
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ALPHA UPSILON '48-Richard J{. G~ bert, 509 Gainesboro Road, Drexel fli Pa., to Miss Lois Thompson, of CoiJinP wood, N. J ., September 15. ALPHA UPSILON '48-Mark R. Bla~ 1 of Millersburg, Pa., to Miss Mar:Y £ ': beth Matter, also of Millersburg, octo
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6. l'h ALPHA UPSILON '49-Percy Brewingll1 Jr., to Miss Pauline R aski, Septef11.1 ~~t 1 15. Mr. and Mrs. Brewington are rn 3 ~ an their home in Philadelphia. n~l'
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ALPHA PSI '47- David A. Bibler, ,~ Indianapolis, Ind ., to Miss Rosef11 1 Moeller, of Greensburg, Ind ., April ALPHA OMEGA '47-Alfred G. RU~ of Portland, Ore., to Miss ShirleY ~ ~ 1 Duncan, of Portland, April 22 in
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First C R. ongregational Church, Portland. Pac.·r· Uedy is employed by the Southern 11c R . lie is p a~ 1road Company in Portland . Ch resident of the Cascade Alumni apter of Pi Kappa Phi, Portland. ~t
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state ·'L~'aA lo)fr Eug OMEGA '49-Don E . Blythe, tersor Lak en~, Ore., to Miss Norma Allen, ~01°0~
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or S OMEGA 'SO-John D. Musgrove, ll.ush Uth er]'tn, Ore., to Miss Nancy er, of Tillamook, Ore., June 17.
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or MOMEGA '51-Donald L. Hibbard, Mil! edford, Ore., to Miss Ramona er, of Swiss Home, Ore., June 10.
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'48-Robert
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Can Ins, Delta Zeta, Florida Southern
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Me~ge~ of Jacksonville, Fla., at Wesley ~r. ~tlal ~ethodist Church, Lakeland.
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the G ruce 1s employed in Lakeland by Oodyear Tire Company.
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&el'A Lak BETA '49-Lynn E . Maxwell, of 1 coor. Of ~and, Fla., to Miss Doris McTeer, ;aroh. Dapr agJe Lake, Fla., at Eagle Lake ·bl·• 1 lst Church I "itt nel'A . y, ll>'l Garn DELTA 'SO-LeRoy Olsen, of or Ger, Iowa, to Joanne Kinsbury, also I sto~ \\lith arner, in June. Mr. Olsen is serving ~ngtot Q the Army in Wisconsin. dd!f.
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E'!'l\ DE Oeg LTA '50-Eugene Samuelson, of Oes ~o~nes, to Beverley Anne Stuart, of atte . 0 tnes, in April. Mr. Samuelson is nctlng the University of Michigan .
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8 •tre31' I El'l\ gfitl llort DELTA '49- Rodger J . Brown, of Ji1111' A.nn Dodge, Iowa, to Miss Beverley phi~ in 1\ Isbrands, of Rock Rapids, Jowa, ~er .u&ust. Mr. Brown is attending uniSity · ,.,. G~ • tn Chicago. ;> 1 ·~l'A. Ili Otta DELTA 'SO-Harold J . Smith, of ~&I Wa, IU., to Miss Jacqueline Ann 0Jiinf a1:• of Des Moines, Iowa, in the Little sial> lowwn Church in the Vale, Nashua, ,,. "u a, in April. Mr. Smith is now on , E~" "am. )ctoll • ·~l'A. l'b DELTA '50-Marvin R . Nelson, of ingtD 8r:rnton, Iowa, to Miss Juanita Mae 1 tef1l~ ~tr wn, of Des Moines, Iowa, in May. rna~i~ an · llrelson is associated with an insurQ ce company in Lincoln, Nebr.
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~ 0 ZETA ' '50-Sgt. J . L. Lane, of or ~alk, Iowa, to Miss Louise Lucas, liVi 0 TWalk. Sgt. and Mrs. Lane are now Lang in Bangor, Maine, where Sgt. A.· ne is stationed with the United States It Force.
KAPPA PHI
Archon Donald C. McClay, of Alpha Zeta, Oregon State College, presents the loving cup to their "Rose," Miss Virginia Knox. Miss Ann Carter (left) and Miss Marion Hill (right) w~re the runners-up in the contest for Rose. Richard Shaffer is seen on the extreme left.
BETA THETA 'St-James R. Hambacher, of 2647 Linda Lane, Costa Mesa, Calif., to Miss Mary Aileen Potter at Trinity Episcopal Church, Rock Island, Ill., August 25.
ENGAGEMENTS XI '4Q- DeWitt War-:! to Miss Barbara Turner. XI 'S~R . J. Newton, of Yonkers, N. Y., to Miss Joyce Halliwell. XI '50-C. M . Conner, Jr., to Miss Betty Jean Slate. BELTA DELTA 'SO-Harley G. Hoyt, of Belle Plaine, Iowa, to Miss Marilyn Wolfe, of Des Moines, Iowa. The marriage will take place in St. Johns, in Des Moines, November 17.
BIRTHS CHI '42-To Mr. and Mrs. William S. Mathis, of 115 N. Franklin Blvd ., Tallahassee, Fla., a. son, William Stephan, Jr., August 21. Mr. Mathis is completing work on his Ph . D . in Music at Florida State University.
ALPHA ZETA '33- To Mr. and Mrs. Marvin C. Wilbur, New York City, a so n, George Marvin, born April 15. Mr. Wilbur is assistant secretary of promotion , The General Council of the General A!'sembly, The Presbyterian Church in th e U. S. A., 156 Fifth Ave., New York 10, N.Y. ALPHA' ETA '46-To Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Rayburn Neely, of Carlisle Park, GuntersvilJe, Ala., a son, Michael Orion, May I . ALPHA THETA '38-To Mr. and Mrs. Norman R. Smith, 429 N. lOth St., Lebanon, Pa ., a son, Stephen Patrick, July 1. ALPHA MU '38--<To Mr. and Mrs. Albert H . Bowers, 5905 Fairview Ave., Downers Grove, III., a son, John Holbrook, May 11. Mr. Bowers is agronomist for Swift and Company, Chicago . AL'PHA PSI '49- To Mr. and Mrs. James 0. Keller, Jr., of Bloomington, Ind ., a son, Robert.
SIGMA '39-To Mr. and Mrs. A. Roberson, of 29 Peach Grove West Hempstead, L. I., N . Y ., David A., Jr., August 9.
ALPHA OMEGA '47- To Mr. and Mrs. Paul L . Lansdowne, of 1935 Haye11 St., Eugene, Ore., a daughter, Michele Lynn, April 17.
BETA DELTA '49-To Mr. and Mrs. D . R. Dunham, ~f Sioux Falls, S. D., a daughter in May.
BETA DELTA '49-To Mr. and Mrs. Vern Sodawasser, of Dubuque, Iowa, a daughter, Cheri Kay, November 27, 1950.
ALPHA David Drive, a son,
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CALLING THE University of California
Gamma
Before the close of school last June we held our annual elections whi ch gave us the following officers: Archon, Paul Petruzzelli, Berkeley, Calif.; treasurer, Richard Houston, Burlingame, Calif.; assistant treasurer, Bressee Warner; secretary, Maurice Wood; "Bi!l" Parker, "maitre d'hotel," who works for the fabulous - Clairemont Hotel and will serve as Gamma's housemanager and steward; warden, "Bob" Badger; chaplain, "Bobby" Witbeck, and historian and editor of the Gammazette, Peter Tennyson. Along the fin ancial lines, we completed the year with a comfortable margin on the black side of the ledger and also managed to add a substantial amount to our Building Fund. The undergraduates, with the help of some alumni, are already ~asting an eye about for a new location for the chapter house. So far, international . conditions and Selective Service have not made too many dents in our roll. Loren Baker has departed temporarily for the Army, and "Lin" Sackrison and "Bob" Beavers, after graduation, enlisted in the Army and Air Force, respectively. Then there is our Mather Field contingent of th e Air Force Active Reserve of "Bill" Berry, who is on leave to finish school, "Chuck" Merrell, "Tom" Orr, "Bud" Oakes, and Warren Carson, recently transferred to Lakeland. This coming semester we Pi Kapps will be in the thick of things as far as student body activities are concerned. Among the more notable are "Doug" Higgins, elect&:! as gradu ate repreEentative at large to the A.S.U .C. Council. Harvey Laird is Senior Class yell leader. We also have several men representing us on the Senior and other Class Councils, guiding the destinies of committees such as CAL Frolics Dance Committee. "Nick" Nicolai spent a busy Summer, preparing our Rushing schedule for this Fall, and as the results show, he has done R "terrific" job. Paul Petruzzelli extends an invitation to all Pi Kapps to Rttend our Open Houses after the football games this year. Until our next scoops from the world's largest University ... -Peter R . Tennyson, Historian
Davidson
Epsilon
Officers for the Fall semester are "Sib" Dorton, archon; Hooper Alexander, treasurer; "Bob" Murray, secretary; "Bob"· Erwin, historian; Winston Wright, chaplain; Cecil Rhodes, warden; "Jim" Carr, Pan-Hellenic Council representative. and Claude Booker, alumni secretary. Epsilon had its annual beach party near Myrtle Beach, S. C., at the close of the past school year. Jerry Kiser, a husky guard, has been selected as alternate captain of the Davidson football team. "Big Jerry" is Davidson's outstanding candidate for All-Southern honors this year. It looks as if Epsilon will be well represented on the grid-iron this Fall. Arnold Whisnant, "Bill" Reynolds, and David Peeler, along with Pledges Walter Oakes and "Phil" McGill, will also be fighting for the glory of dear "Ole" Davidson. During the Summer a change took place in Epsilon's backyard. There is now another patio in fraternity court. The fraternity owes much to Cecil Rhodes for his untiring efforts on behalf of the patio. We would also like to thank our loyal 22
ROLL
alumni for their help in building the patio. We wish that the1 would drop by and see this new addition to the bouse. -Bob Erwin, Historian
Wofford
Z~
Zeta's annua l Rose Ball, April 21 was a huge success. At _ . Brother Ralph Lowrimore made ' the "Best Pledge"pre' time entations to Pledges Harry Parker and Joe Kirby. Jllber We are glad to receive Brother "Zeb" Williams as a me d During the first week of vacation most of the members ~n pledges enjoyed a bouse party at Ocean Drive. The occaSloo date· was made much brighter by the fact that we ba'.l ·o1 Several of our alumni also attended this outing. We have the backing of our alumni members here 1 Spartanburg who have promised to be of assistance when ~ feel the need for them. .~ The way the situation shapes up it seems that we are gotP:. ' v to have a good year here at Zeta. The thing we need noW 11 to get down to work and give dear old Pi Kapp all th we have. •n -Andrew Ficken, Acting Histona
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Emory University
flO
Between Winter and Spring Quarters last year, five of ~: members of Eta Chapter took off on a visit to the F]or~ Chapters. They were "Dan" McDuff, Box 23 1, Rt. 2, ;\ust ; Ga. i "Bob" Chapman, 3830 Peachtree Rd., Atlanta, Ga.; Jo:< Bridges, 1489 Lanier Place N E Atlanta Ga · "Don" Broo : • . .• • .• ·bli' 212 Mead Rd., Atlanta, Ga., and Kenneth Kiehl, 375 l'[t , 00 Ave., Orlando, Fla. We spent one evening with Beta Eta, . evening with Alpha Epsilon an afternoon with Chi, one daY. · h B eta Beta, and one day ' at Alpha Chi. During our stal' wit de'l at the various chapters, we were able to pick up a great ) of information relatively new to us and which we carried ~~~Ito the chapter. Needless to say, hospitality was at its hetg , and we can only say "thanks" to many swell brothers. 0 Officers elected at the last meeting in May were arcb~. Dan McDuff; treasurer, Don Brooks; secretary, Albert Ead ; 0 Bushnell, Fla.; historian, Kenneth IGehl; chaplain, Jo 1 Bridges, and warden, Fred Mylius, 843 Ponce de Leon 1 Atl~nta~ Ga. Brother Eaddy has since transferred to . ~~ Umvemty of Florida . His position as secretary has been fi by "Bob" Hoover, 3077 East Shadowlawn, Atlanta, Ga. ·pi During Fall Rush Week the chapter was honored by baVI J the new traveling counselor, Ramon Sanchez, visit us aP 1 1 help us along with our rushing. Turnout was small, but (1 ·etl · did pledge two fine men, Brooke Johnson, Box 74, :Marl Ga., arid Ralph Newsome, Rt. 1, Talladega, Ala. j~ Dr. E. Byron Hilley has retir&:! as chapter adviser, and his place we have Dr. Boone M. Bowen . -Kenneth Kiehl, Historian
A\ 1
Duke University
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The brothers returned this year to find that practicaiiY.~ of last June's graduating class are in the various servt ~: including the Army, Navy, Marines, Coast Guard, and rtl' Force. Les Mack, our Archon last semester, has been co ' missioned in the Navy and is in Korea.
THE STAR AND 1.;.
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l'h~u. installed new officers at the last meeting last Spring. Include: "Dick" Rucker archon· "Bill" Cross treasurer,· Lukye II ' ' ' liuSSc Ytnan, secretary; "Dick" Bedell, historian, and George by a ~; Warden. After a fine social season last year, climaxed looki ter ri'f'Ic " week end at Myrtle Beach, the brothers are and ng forward to fabulous cabin parties, sorority exchanges, our a "n nnual colorful Ro•e Ball uob" . · Sever Sp!V.ey, "AI" Erwin, and Dick Rucker are pinned. 1 M a others regained their pins during the Summer. Denu boasts a number of "wheels" on campus this year. ny R . ' Paper ~ssmow is editor of the Chronicle, the Duke news''lluck"WhiJe Dick Rucker is Senior Intramural Manager, and i a~;s· Roberts is president of Duke Players. Nick Hennessee edito:stant editor of the Chronicle, and Bob Spivey is assistant class t of the Chanticleer, the annual. Dick Bedell is junior Coun .reasurer and vice-president of the Freshman Advisory quit Ctl, Which has eight Pi Kapps in it this year. We are also liig~ ~roud of Brother Bob Spivey who won the Intramural oint trophy as well as the Senhauser Award last year. -Dick Bedell, Historian Unive · It rsrty of Nebraska
Nu
is t~shb Week is over, and we feel that our new pledge class Clark S es.t. The men who have pledged are Gene Scranton, lame Prmgman, Frank Wright, Bob Parker, Dick Husmann, Off's ("Bill") Walton, Don W. Flannoutat, and Paul Steube. ~fort leers elected for first semester are Curtis Venell, archon; lioff Novak, treasurer; Wallace Loerch, secretary; Frank Proc:an, histo.rian; Donald B. Warnke, chaplain, and George So aska, warden. on B Pted rothers George Prochaska and Ed Husmann and th ge William Schabacker are to be welcomed back from Ce .Nebraska football team's Summer training camp at Urhs, Nebr. -Frank Hoffman, Historian
Roan k
l'heo ~ College Xi term· final days of the old school year were successfully '~'hisi~ate~ with the annual Pi Kapp Spring Formal May 12. Va. ~fair was held at the Hotel Governor Tyler in Radford, ' With th e past archon, Jim · CharIton, pres!'eli ng. A.p s"'eet~roximately 70 couples were in attendance, including Xi's tlect deart of '47-'48, Mrs. Mary Gardner Mann. The newlylle\V~tt officers for the coming year were presented. They are ~ing Ward, archon; C. M. Conner, Jr., treasurer; J . Peter ChapJaiSecretary; Macon S. Couk, historian; James Stevenson, A. b n, and George Naff, warden. Sll;eetb ouquet of red roses was presented to our perennial ~!iss cart, "Mom" McCracken, and to our present .sweetheart, ''Cle Georgiana Lindberg, who is now Mrs. James Little. . d . org-e" In M and "Jimmy," Pi Kapp alumnus of 'SO, were marne SalelllRdison, N. J., in September. They are now Jiving in l' • Va. lllee~eIngnew archon appointed committee heads at the final . as sooal . ch airman . . werner Newbauer; as ftlsh· · servmg IS lli!t ~g chairman, Lee Hughes; as goat captain, Ted Nail, and l'b· 0 Yie is acting as scholarship chairman. Irty r . llleer - Ive brothers and pledges were present for the fust Ing this Fall. -Macon S. Couk, Historian
0~ pI kAPPA PHI
University of Alabama
Omicron
At the close of the semester last Spring, Omicron decided that every man should return to the campus three days prior to freshman registration in order to prepare for rush week. Everyone co-operated and as a result, we had three extra days in which to prepare for rush. During these three days we cleaned the house, painted, and got the yards in good condition. Because of this and the pre-planning of our rush chairman, Bro. Clarence Meadows, we were very successful with our rushing program. Thus far, we have pledged 20 men. This year we are planning to do our chapter business by committees as suggested by the diagram furni shed by National. -Charles Money, Historian
Washington and Lee
Rho
In June the chapter was awarded a Master Chapter rating in Pi Kappa Phi for 1950-1951 from the National Office. House Overflows With 23 brothers living in the house, many members have found it necessary to look for quarters elsewhere for the first time in many years. Two brothers, Tom Warfield and Marvin Anderson, are serving as counselors in the Freshman Dormitory . The chapter has a new housemother, Mrs. H. W . McConnell, of Bristol, Va. Selected over many other applicants by a committee composed of James W . H . Stewart, '51, of Lexington, Va., chairman, Past Chapter Adviser Earle K. Paxton, '22, of Lexington, and Chapter Adviser Herbert N. Hamric, Jr., '43, of Lexington, Mrs. McConnell succeeds Mrs. Ethel Kerr, who has been with the chapter since 1947. Mrs. McConnell was highly recommended, having served as a housemother on the University of Tennessee campus for four years. Rho Wins Scholarship Bowl The biggest surprise to emerge from the Summer vacation was an announcement that Rho had led the 17 social fraternities and the Campus Club academically during the second semester of last year to win the Scholarship Bowl presented each semester to the top group by the faculty of Washington and Lee University. Dean James G. Leyburn will present the Bowl to the house formally at Homecoming October 27. This marks the first time that the chapter has led the campus scholastically since the early 1920's. Pacing the chapter in this accomplishment were three students with straight "A" averages, "Bill" Bailey, "Bill" Stewart, and "Jim" Turk, followed by a host of others on the dean's Jist. Although the group to return this Fall was the largest in the history of the chapter since the war, one brother initiated here in 1950 returned after a year at Wofford College in Spartanburg, S. C. Bill Glenn, '53, transferred back to W. and L. Bob Glenn, of Radford, Va., one of six seniors in the Commerce School initiated into Beta Gamma Sigma, commerce honorary, graduated but will continue his stay with us in Law School. John 0. Martin, of Falls Church, Va., received his B.A. Degree and is furthering his medical career this Fall at George Washington University in Washington. He returned for part of rush week this year. Edmund C. Robbins, of New York, received his B.A. Degree with a certificate in journalism. Dean B. Stewart, Jr., of Oil City, Pa., added an L.L.B. from the Law School and is currently with an insurance company in Providence, R. I. Numerous Posts Held By Members Jim Turk, of Roanoke, was elected by the rising senior class in the Law School to represent it in the Executive Committee
23
of the Student Body, the highest governing body on the campus as well as the honor court at Washington and Lee. Jim's campaign in Tucker Hall was managed by "Bill" Stewart, of Tuscaloosa, Ala. Five brothers received promotions on campus publication staffs last Spring. Marvin Anderson, of Annapolis, Md., and Dick Carden, of Victoria, Va., were named as managing editor and associate editor, respectively, on Tile Ring-tum Phi, student body semi-weekly newspaper. The Turk brothers of Roanoke, Jim and Maynard, will serve as associate editors of the Washington and Lee Law Review, membership on which is based upon academic achievement.
Chapter Pleased With Sanchez Appointment The chapter was pleased to hear of the appointment of Brother Ramon F. Sanchez, Sigma '45, of Pensacola, Fla., as the new traveling counselor for Pi Kappa Phi. While be is not an initiate of Rho, be graduated from Washington and Lee and served as its house manager, treasurer, and rush chairman in his two and one-half years in Lexington. He is the winner of the Earle K. Paxton Trophy for 1948-1949. Milton J. ("Doc") Elliott, of Portsmouth, Va., was initiate-:} .into the fraternity September 16, marking the successful initiation of all of the chapter's pledges from last year. -Christopher Collins, Historian
University of South Carolina
Sigma
Sigma started the new school year with a party at a brother's house on Lake Murray. The entire chapter was there, along with some of the alumni. Dan Cupid was very active in the chapter this year. Five of the brothers have been married and one more is to be married in December. This took more of the brothers than graduation. We have members in almost every activity on the campus and are rated one of the best fraternities on the campus. -John Mcinnes, Historian
North Carolina State
Tau
Vast improvements have been made around the house since the house opened in September. The interior has been painted. We have two new sofas, covered in rose and gray le{ltherette, for the living room and chapter room. Portions of the game room have been pine paneled, and the sandwich counter has been refaced in plush leatherette. The outside of the house took on a new face during the Summer months. This Fall Tau put on its most extensive Rush Week in years. The week consisted of three visiting days and four days of actual rushing during which we had three smokers and a party at Cabin-by-the-Lake, which was a highly successful climax to Tau's best Rush Week . Tau's new spirit is extending also into our sports activity. In our first football game, we beat the defending champions of the Fraternity Leagtie. We are happy to see many of our alumni returning each week to see how we are getting along. "Jim" Hemphill, of nearby Burlington, "Ed" Moon, of Charlotte, "Gert" Boyette, of Scotland Neck, and "Billy" Henry, of Jacksonville, N. C., were around after the State-Carolina football game. Brothers who visited us during the week end of the Wake Forest game were Ray Lane, of Marion, "Jim" McConnell, now working in Winston-Salem, Harold Saunders, of Laurinburg, and John Ross, of Greensboro. Down for the Clemson game were Lewis Reep, who is working in Florence, S. C., "Fred" Kendall, of
24
L aurm · b urg, R u fus H errmg, · of Lenoir, and Tony Tbornason· . 11 of Hickory . We have had visits this term from Hazel rJo~ . · · · a L•eu~ o f Greens boro, "F re d" Mornson, of Rale•gh, who IS tenant in the Air Force, and Gene Harrill, who 1 3 planning to accept a position in the Textile School here State, starting to work in November. d 1 1 This term Tau plans to take in initiates who pledged :~ Spring. Those eligible are Robert Hardy, of LaGrange; ~ Heafner, of Statesville; John Moore, of Massachusetts; Cha\n Ribelien, of Salisbury; Steve Seymore, of Sanford, and Jo Story, of Raleigh . - Maurice Atwell, Historian
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Cornell University
c<
Psi returned "en masse" September 10 a week in advan., 0 · t a t'IOn, m · order to renovate ' o f f res hman onen our house bef ''a school commenced. By the end of the week the Psi house ~~ acquired new glamour for the oncoming year. . The new furniture for the alumni room has arrived, a beaUi tiful wine red leather sofa and matching chair. Our alulll" responded generously for this. Officers for this semester are Archon Fred Leonard; tr~o~ urer, Orie Rothfuss; secretary, Ed Sayre; historian, Reichert; warden, Jim Storey, and chaplain, Tom Keeton· -Bob Reichert, Historian
bro boa
Cho
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Purdue University
·· · I mbated mto Omega May 4 were Ronald Everts, Cb~~ ~~r.
McConnell, · Richard Daniels, and David Peggs. The fat of Charles and Richard are Omega alumni. . May also brought the elections for the Fall semester's off•ctfo with the following results : "Bob" Rust archpn · John ]!:vJII' ' ' • riaP· trea~urer; Jack Powers, secretary; Omar Hansen, Jr., hrsto re~t Dav1d Peggs, chaplain; "Bob" Whitford, warden, and P ~ Scott, house manager. Seeing the necessity of a more vigorous rushing progra,_, ~rexel Scott initiated a new committee system which ; ~ d1fferent, in most respects, from any rushing system hereto/~~ used: Briefly, the house was divided into committees ~f 'u r or srx members and a chairman. The personalities makillg ·r. ·each committee were varied to constitute the most var~ . . . t o t~'' vrewpomts of the house. Rush ee names were grven 1 committees, and then the committees arranged for tra?sP~~· 1 tation of the rushee to and from the house, signing n ·r, meals, and entertainment. The committees, because of speC!~ rushee responsibility, sold more of the house to the rush~ ill well as found out more about the individual rushee. Practlell eliminated was this " ... my name is . . ." Shake hands · "Nice to meet you, be seeing you" type of judgment u~ which about 10 per cent always relied to iudge future broth~ ·. • I'IP' The system worked well, and Omega closed the rush pe ~~ with $ pledge class of 17. Most agree that it is one of tb best groups which we have had in a long .time. Using f 1 1 committees this Spring, we have already gotten into the , rush program, and by the time this letter is published ~ should have doubled the size of the pledge class. Jl The seniors, the Mothers' Club, and the Dads' Club "' co111bined their efforts to buy the house a complete ne\\' • of silverware. -Omar Hansen, Jr., Historian
THE STAR AND
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"Bob'• B Pledge ,rachtenbach and "Dick" Priest, sity ofs Alpha Delta Chapter, Univer tionol h as.hington, made local and naVersity' eadl1nes by breaking Seattle Uni ~Opp 1 teeter-tottering record. The Pi secuti~e1e~ges teeter-tottered for 52 conlngton S ours. Two students from Wash by teet tate Col.lege began the marathon the Se er-tottenng for 49 hours. Then lllork ot~e University boys bettered tho t brok; Sn a few hours later Bob and Dick boosts ~httle:s record. Now Alpha Delta Chornp· at 1t has the Teeter-Totter:ng IOns of the World.
I
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Uniye . lJ . rstty of Washington
Alpha Delta
· matrimony recently were D onald Keeton an d lor n1ted . 1n ra1ne ~ ... lutz '"au~han, Ray Riese and Margaret Jameson, Paul Clark and Mary Anderson, Bob Brachtenbach and Nancy l\la ~ an<j Duane McBain and Mabel Rhoden. Duane, by the ts the new president of our alumni chapter. the hat venerable fowl, Mr. Stork, made his appearance at Wiiliaomes of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Craven, Mr. and Mrs. lt .m T. Lowe, and Mr. and Mrs. Vern Getz recently. hel IS great to be back at the house this year but one cannot arep feeling sad at the loss of eleven graduating seniors. They IV Don Keeton, Glenn Berry, Hobie Brown, Jim Johnson , ~a~11 Y .Iied~es, Ray Isaacson, Chayne Stinemetz, Vern Getz, 1\l 'Riese, Pat Nelson, and Bob Rickstad. . Joh Pha Delta's in the service department includes Jim l\lh n~n, now in the Air Force in Texas, Chayne Stinemetz anqo IS to go on active duty as an officer in the Marine Corps, th Glenn Berry who has been commissioned an Ensign in th: :avy, Duane Kinka-:le and Dave Kingery spent most of \\7 Ummer on NROTC cruises. anq e here at Washington are lookin(l forward to an eventful fou successful year with the return of 17 active members and t or last yea r's pled~e class. -Rex Crase, Historian
;h
~ 9on State College 0
Alpha
z·eta
"-ithur newly organized Dads' Club has recently presented .us 0u a combination pool and billiard table with sets of ra1ls. nr ~Mothers' Club is working for us all the time. Their current 0 · procuring a sink for our par t Y room b ar. 1\Ject ss th· 1Pha Zeta plans to field strong teams in intramural sport:; Is Year. af Our social schedule includes three fireside , an open house niter Iiomecoming, and our annual Fall Term Pledge Dance, thus numerous exchange dinners. During the term we have ~ Small get-togethers planned in P ort Iand .
0F p I
KAPPA PHI
Lt. Gordon L. Butcher, Alpha Zeta '48, is now stationed at Scott Air Base, Bellville, Ill. -Dale E. Stockton, Historian
Penn State
Alpha Mu
This is the first time since the war that we did not Jose anyone during the Summer. We at Penn State would like to hear more from our alumni. Whenever any of you are in the vicinity of Central Pennsyl vania, be sure to stop and sec us. Dick Gundrum, '42, spent a night with us and told us a lot of tales about life in this house in the early '40's. Jake Dilling, '40, and Ed Werle of the class of 1928 always stop and see us when they are in this vicinity. -Donald Wood, Historian
Iowa State College
Alpha Omicron
Spring elections brought the following slate of officers for the Fall quarter:. Kenneth Hook, archon; Don Blue, treasurer; Russ Bryant, secretary; Gib Stanek, historian; AI Kuester, chaplain, and Don Brandt, warden . Miss Nancy Fisher, a sophomore from Fort Dodge, Iowa, received the honors of the queen for the Rose BaJJ, which was attended by more than 60 couples. An evening of fantasy revealed many suppressed desires of the Pi Kapps at one of the Spring parties. Besides drawing pictures, the brothers and their dates also dressed as their hidden desires. Even Mother McCannon added her part to the party by serving a creation called "Fantasy Foam." (This is strict ly original.) Eight men pinned members of the fair sex last Spring. Many mouths watered and many happy memories linger from the evening our pledges prepared a pit barbecue feed for the members and their dates. -Gib Stanek, Historian
25
Ill
From Pi Kapp to Pi Kopp. Interfroternity Council Presid~~ John Margenot, Alpha Tau, Rensselaer, presents the lnterfrater01 o Swimming trophy to Archon William Zabriskie, Alpha Tau, re路 recent RPI school assembly. Shortly thereafter Mr. Margen~ ~ 0rt sented Mr. Zabriskie another trophy this one for the Bas e Championship. '
Leadership Conference Calendar 1951-52
District
Interfraternity Council President John Margenot, Alpha Tau, Rensselaer, addresses the student body of RPI on "The Value of Interfraternity Athletics."
Rensselaer
Alpha Tau
The first house function was a huge clean-up detail which has whipped the mansion into top shape once again. House Manager Bob Hall has done an excellent job. An energetic slate of new house officers is hard at work on plans to keep Alpa Tau on top as a campus leader. The kitchen department has purchased a deep freeze which promises to lower future hoard hiils considerably.
1-Cornell, Rennselaer, Brooklyn, Newark
Cornell
11-Roanoke, Washington and Lee
Roanoke
The social committee is planning a big social season, highlighting the Inter-fraternity Ball on November 10. Last Spring Ren~elaer Interfraternity Conference unanimously elected Brother John Margenot as president. Hats off also to Brother George Turd, Honorable Mention, AU-American Lacrosse Team. Fall house officers are archon, William Zabriskie; treasurer, David Dobson; secretary, John Margenot; historian, Cliff Werther; chaplain, Joseph Kane, and warden, Walter Rapetski. -Cliff Werther, Historian
26
April 12-13, 1953
'lie
(Unscheduled)
Wofford
December 1路 2
V-Georgia, Georgia Tech, Mercer, Emory, Tennessee
Tennessee
January 19-2掳
(Unscheduled)
VI-Florida, Stetson, Florida State, Miami, Florida Southern
XI-Purdue, Indiana, Illinois, Louisville, Illinois Ted1 XIV-Drake, Simp:'On, Nebraska, Iowa U., Missouri, Iowa State
Pte in '~~it
IV-south Carolina, Charleston, Presbyterian, Wafford, Furman
X-Michigan State, Toledo University
Un
1
III-North Carolina, Duke, N. C. State, Davidson
VII-Alabama, Auburn The Fall Intramural sports calendar is a busy one with Alpha Tau fielding teams in football, horseshoes, tennis, and voiJeybaiJ. At the Fall sports assembly, we received trophies for the Basketball and Swimming Championships in last year's competition.
Date
Host
Auburn
April 5-6
Michigan State
January 5-6
Illinois Tech
March 1-2
Nebraska
Feb. 23-24
(Unscheduled)
XIX-Oregon State, Oregon U., Washington XX-California, Arizona
Los Angeles Alumni
December 15路 10
XXI-Drexel, Penn State
Penn State
March 8-9
THE STAR AND
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Illinois T h
. ''lien ~~k"
d
Alpha Phi
Item an a rejuvenation of the house was the first Put inon. our agenda this Fall. Two pledges and 13 active.c ~allo CJght days, 16 hours per day, of hard work; and 17% out of Paint later, our chapter house looked like something 0 ager !( ~etter Homes and Gardens, thanks to our bouse mancook eith Clark. Much to our delight, Mrs. Hil-:!a Mand, our 1 nod t ast semester, returned for another year. With a special 0 bright the kitchen, she was very happy to see the house ened up Rush ended e~k .o tarted September 20, the same day Hell Week and ,;B D~~mg the Summer, "Bill" Kolacki, "Dick" Szostak, stud ud Lamb got in touch with more than 150 incoming the ents through the mail. An Open House party was held for rushe SOcia] ~s, and 65 men signed our guest book. Jay Foster, Prep :hairman, and his wife, Betty, did a wonderful job of 'I'h:n;~ all the details for the party. 1 sp0 rt K.apps of I. I. T. will be at full strength in every 1'h except ping pong and tennis. Pinn ~ee Alpha Phi's have taken the plunge. John DiFrancesco gave\路 Fe~n Schalund, Chicago, Delta Zeta, '50; Keith Clark Sand Is Pin to Marilyn Hager, Chicago; and Walter ("Skip") 5 G!act Went one step further and gave an engagement ring to cust Ys Siegel, Louisville, Ky . It's been a long standing gets om at Alpha Phi that any brother who hangs his pin or barr ~ngaged buys a barrel of beer for the chapter. Three e 5 of beer for fifteen men! Wow I! -John A. DiFrancesco, Historian
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Unive 路 'I'b rs1ty of Oregon
Alpha Omega
~e e Present chapter house was much in need of repair when
Pressmoved into it last Spring, but because of many outside in thure~ at that time, we were unable to accomplish much ~ith e line of those needed improvements. This Fall, however, betw the fraternal spirit running high, and fine cooperation bas een the men, the job of cleaning the bouse and property Proceeded by leaps and bounds.
rl
CHAPTER CALENDAR
l)
l!:ach Month Secretary submits GREEN REPORT (Form No. 2) to National Office on first day of the month . Quarterly Chapter Historian submits chapter letter and Star and Lamp copy to National Office not later than: June 15th for September issue (no chapter letters this issue) . September 15th for November issue. December 15th for February issue. March 15th for May issue.
Annually May 15th-Secretary supplies National Office with Summer addresses of their chapters and addresses of graduating brothers.
Always 10
Secretary submits Membership Record Card (Form ~o. 9A) to National Office within three days foJlowmg actual day of initiation. Treasurer submits a bond application form to National Office immediately upon being sworn into office.
v .~
,.
(Alpha Eta '25)
The first floor bas bad a face lifting. The living room bas been refinished with dark green walls, set off by whitetrimmed woodwork and an ivory-toned ceiling. This presents a beautiful background for our black enameled radio and the pictures on the walls. The white mantel above our brick fireplace is a fitting stage for the members' mugs and the house trophies, which stand out against the green walls. We purchased a plastic-covered daveno and chair this Fall, and this set really compliments the color scheme of the living room . New indirect lighting fixtures on the ceiling have replaced the old brass chandeliers. All of this combined helps to make our living room one of the most impressive of any of the fraternity houses on campus.
Basement Serves Many Purposes The basement bas been cleaned out, and the chapter room completed. Once again Alpha Omega will be able to bold formal meetings. This fact alone has contributed greatly to the higher morale of the members. One comer of the basement bas been transformed into a ping pong lounge. The old furniture which was replaced in the living room was moved to this lounge, and it provides an extremely comfortable spot for our leisure time. The store room, which occupies one corner of the basement, bas been partially refilled at what we consider a great saving. Forty cases of dented canned goods were purchased directly from the canneries at Salem, Ore., through contacts which were made last Summer. We have a large fish pond at one en>i of our lot. Several members spent a great deal of time dragging out the overgrown
(Contim1ed on Page 32) OF P]
kAPPA PHI
27
ALUMNI CORNER
G
T Chiel Major General Rex W. Beasley, loP of the Fort Monroe Research and oeve Vi ment Section, congratulates Joho h~ Oswalt (left ) of Lafayette, I~d., 0 jief· promotion from· the rank of maJOr to tenant colonel.
Alumnus of Omega, Purdue, Is Promoted to Lt. Colonel JOHN W. OSWALT, 1723 North 17th Street, Lafayette, Ind., Omega '38, Purdue University, has been promoted from the rank of Major to Lieutenant Colonel by the Department of Army. The colonel, whose wife is the former Barbara Ann Black of Lawton, Okla., is assigned to the Research and Development Section of the Army Field Forces, the organization which insures that individuals and units of the. Army are trained for combat.
Has B.S. from Purdue · Colonel Oswalt was graduated from Lafayette High School in 193 7. He graduated from Purdue University in 1941 with a Bachelor of Science Degree. Prior to being assigned to the Army Field Forces in April 1951, Colonel Oswalt was a liaison offi.cer at .Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Dayton, Oh10, for the Department of Army. He entered the Army in 1941 , receiving his commission as a second lieutenant following completion of ROTC training at Purdue.
Has Combat Service
six campaigns, including the fighting at Casino. ~n;; the war's end, Colonel Oswalt was General 1\ 311 Clark's personal pilot for two years until 1947. 31 addition to service ribbons, he is entitled to w~~~ the Silver Star, the Air Medal with 11 clusters, 0, Purple Heart with one cluster, and the Army Co mendation Ribbon. ·J o' Colonel Oswalt has attended the Liaison P',, School at Fort Sill, Oklahoma, and is a Senior ~rt~ Aviator. He has also completed the battery offtce: course and the advanced field artillery officers' cotlr· at Fort Sill.
Send New Address When you move, be sure to send your ne~v address to the National Office, Pi Kappa Phl, Virginia Building, Richmond, Va., so you rna)' continue to receive the Star and Lamp and other communications from the National Office with· out delay. Send information about yourself alsO· ! Your friends want to know what you are doing·
During World War II, he served in the North African and European theaters and participated in
28
THE STAR AND
L ;.~
Ot I
Alumni Corner
I GOODYEAR NAMES HARPER 10 VICE-PRESIDENCY l{ENRy G. HARPER, Kappa '15, University of in
~orth
Carolina, has been appointed vice-president
Co~ arge of sales for The Goodyear Tire & Rubber ~ Pany of Canada, Ltd.
:\i~ former national treasurer of Pi Kappa Phi, sta;/:Iarper has been with Goodyear for 34 years, tow 10 ~ as chief clerk in Charlotte, N. C., his home llni~' ~~mediately after graduation in 1917 from the li ers1ty of North Carolina. dist I! held various sales positions in the Charlotte rno;~ct until 1928, when he was transferred to RicbCha ' Va., as branch manager. He returned to Yea tlotte as branch manager in 1934 and the next t~i r Was appointed manager of the company's adver19J~g department at Akron, where he remained until rna ' When he was appointed Western division ~ager at Los Angeles. mer r. liarper returned to Akron again in 1942 as he chanctise manager of retail stores. The next year ret ~~as appointed assistant general manager of the na~1 stores division and, in the same year, was ect manager of associated merchandise.
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UNDERHILL MOVES UP AGAIN IN GOVERNMENT EMPLOY APPOINTMENT of WiJiiam Amory Underhill , Chi '27, Stetson University, as assistant attorney general has been announced by President Truman. Mr. Underhill has been first assistant to Peyton Ford, deputy attorney general, who resigned recently. A native of Bassenger, Fla., he graduated from Okeechobee High School before moving to DeLand, Fla. After graduating from the Stetson University Law School in 1936, Mr. Underhill practiced law in ~~Land , served as prosecuting attorney, and then JOmed the Navy from which he was discharged in 1945 with the rank of lieutenant commander. Besides being active in Chi in his undergraduate
ye~rs , Mr. Underhil l was a member of Theta Alpha
P~1, drama fraternity; Mystic Krewe, local leadership fraternity, and served as Homecoming Mayor. Pt KAPPA PHI
29
_______________________________________________________________ __-/ ' Alumni Corner Drexel RAY J , CANNON, JR., Alpha Upsilon '36, is affiliated with th e M arinette Paper Co ., Marinette, Wis. JOHN K . RICHTOR, Alpha Upsilon '39, is working for Supplee-Wills-Jones Milk Co ., Phila. He lives on Sugartown Road , Malvern, Penna. HENRY T . PRICE, Alpha Upsilon '38, is with Townsend Price and Co., Philadelphia, which is a manufacturer's agent in furniture and toys. RAYMON D L. DAVIS, Alpha Upsilon '40, is with the Robinson M ercantile Co ., Centerville, Miss. GEORGE B. FRANCIS, Alpha Upsilon '40, and GEORGE M. JAMES, Al pha Upsilon '41, are operating law offices in Wildwood, N . J , GEORGE W . THOMPSON, Alpha Upsilon '39, is also practicing law. His office is at 69th Street, Upper Darby, Penna. HENRY B. COLEMAN, JR., Alpha Upsilon '34, is with General Electric's District Office in Chicago, Ill. JOHN B. PALMER, JR., Alpha Upsilon '38, is affiliated with the Wing Engineering Corp., 1714 Walnut Street, Phila- · delphia . RICHARD D. OBERHOLTZER, Alpha Upsilon '33, is a ca rpet wool buyer for James Lees and Sons Co., Bridgeport, Penna. EDWARD M . SIMON, JR., Alpha Upsilon '40, is a reseatch chemist with the American Viscose Corp., Marcus Hook, Penna. He lives in Media.
JOB OPPORTUNITIES IN THE F.B.I. Openings for Special Agents Qualifications CITIZENSHIP: Must be a male citizen of the United States. AGE: 2 5 to 40, inclusive. PHYSICAL ABILITY: 5 ft. 7 in., m1mmum, 20/ 20 vision (normal or corrected) in both eyes, normal hearing, in generally top physical condition. EDUCATION: Graduate of an accredited cpllege or university.
Salary
Write telephone, or call in person at the nearest field office of the F.B.I. for application form and additional information, or · Write to the National Office, Pi Kappa Phi, 507 Virginia Building, Richmond, Va.
30
In.,
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RICHA~
A
Oil!
~artn~r; I :~:
E. FERGUSON, JR., Mu '37, is a the Industnal Supply Company, Clinton, S. C. H1s ad is 202 South Jones St . j C Unitcl Oil! JAMES B. DAVIS, Mu '37, is assistant manager of the . f Cor Dairy Company, Wheeling, W. Va. His Post Office bolC IS . ~ CHARLES H. INGRAM, Mu '38, 1105 Rotary Drive, IIi~ lU., Point, N. C., is practicing medicine and specializing in suJ1ll
,.,.,., liis
CHARLES H.' TAYLOR, Mu '38, 3429 Westminster. sJl; Dallas, Texas, 1s an accountant with Sears, Roebuck Company.
I
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Chj1
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Emory University
JOSEPH C. JACKSON, Eta '46, has opened his office ¢· the general practice of law in the La Grange Banking c~ II 001 pany Building, La Grange, Ga. Formerly he was aSS editor for the Harrison Company, Atlanta.
Illinois Tech 01·nt~ DALE E. WILLMAN, Alpha Phi '40, has been aPP sbir·l state agent in western Ohio for the London and Lanca . ,,1·1 Insurance Company, Ltd., and affiliated compames, ~P headquarters at 905 Commercial Bldg., Dayton, Ohio. Jle{ou· been a special agent of the company in Michigan for years. ·nt~
H~RRY F. PERLET, Alpha Phi '35, was recently aPP 0~ .'
assoc~ate general counsel of Associated Factory Mutuat).• ProVIdence. Formerly he was assistant manager of the Ill' Chamber of Commerce insurance department. Mr. perlet bt a degree from the John Marshall Law School and is a.llleJI'Bl of the committee on fire Insurance law of the Amencan Association .
Oregon State College ~ DEAN J. J. RITTER, Alpha Zeta 146, who has been v;or .~~ 51 on atomic research at the University of California 05 graduation in 1949, is back on the Oregon State caJllP the graduate school, working for a Master's Degree Chemical Engineering.
Purdue University . 1 ~· CARL F . SHEDRICK, 3906-A Lancaster Pike, Wilrn 10yo g I•. Dela., Omega '39, is a research project engineer for th e ~lr chemicals Department of the DuPont Company. He and Shedrick have a 3-year-old daughter . E. MILES SWARTS, 253 Fifth Ave., New Kensingt' Penna., Omega '41, has been transferred from the :MaS: works of ALCOA to those at New Kensington . T H E STAR AN D
Si
Ca.b llec, . i•r
$5,500, entrance salary.
How to Apply
J
Duke University na£1'' EDGAR R. STALLINGS, Mu '34, is county !II~ of Charleston County, South Carolina. His address 15 The Center, Charleston, S. C. .
~~
J.
'18, ~ich
Alumni Corner JOliN
lU ., OlllegM.• MERRIELL, RFD 2, S. Burchard Ave., Freeport, ALLE a 39, has built a house. He has a son two years old. Ollleg ,N B. CRAVEN, 116 W. Main, Knightstown, Ind., !l!laiJ an 43, started a new business in July, 1950. He owns a ftorn !( e~t of trucks and distributes Miller Dairy products GR.A nightstown. Ollleg F('ON HOUSTON, 1500 W. Sixth St., Topeka, Kan., Campa 42 • is a seismograph operator for the Carter Oil MA~Y. lie has a daughter a year old. lU O VIN E. RUSSELL, 855 E. Grant Drive, Des Plaines, ~is·• 5 lllega •43, bas been in Korea and Japan for •the past year. on R LEst andolph Marvin, was born March 17. \>ood M. MILLHOLIN, JR., 1919 S. 23rd Ave., MayChic ' II., Omega '42, is working for Westinghouse in ago as an I. . . S!>EN app •cation engmeer. Iii., O CER GULLICKSEN, 1620 Prospect Ave., Des Plaines, Cabin ~ega '43, is working as wood products engineer for llece~b Manufacturing. He has a daughter who was born [ice jc! 1. E er 20, 1950. r co¢· '28, is ·D~ICiiOLS, 200 Sunset Drive, Richmond, Va., Omega r odlfl ~ich, •rector of Safety for the Reynolds Metals Company, ..,ond.
:E
I~Otce ~asJ!i~ ll~"e.
WAR.
University of California
REN B. CARSON, Gamma '49, is now in the Air lie asks that his mail be sent to him at 2317 Bywood ' Oakland 2, Calif.
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University of Miami
<t the ~RD. DOUGHERTY, JR., Alph.a Chi '4_7, is back" ua!S ; h n~vers1ty after graduating from Chicago Optical School. v.·. , e IS Working with a Coral Gables eye doctor. let~
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[~e!ll
, .\iso
Milbourne Heads Radio Firm (Continued from Page 15)
and general manager in 1938, and upon his father 's retirement this year, he succeeded to the top position.
President of Baltimore W&L Alumni Actively participating in such activities of public interest as the Red Cross, the Community Chest, and polio drives, he has served on a number of wartime and mobilization agencies in Baltimore, including the defense bond drives by the Treasury Department. He has never completely allowed Washington and Lee or Pi Kappa Phi to escape him, and in recent years he has held the offices of secretary and president of the Washington and Lee Alumni Association of Baltimore. In June, 1950, Jim visited his alma mater during Rho's 30th Anniversary Celebration. A number of years agci, he attempted some colonization efforts at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore. He is currently aiding the fraternity to organize a Baltimore alumni chapter . In addition to his other activities, Brother Milbourne is a member of the Protestant Episcopal Church, the Maryland Historical Society, the Hillendale Golf and Country Club, the Eastern Shore Society of Baltimore City, and the Fox Island Gunning Club. Still a bachelor, Milbourne states he has "never been able to get the right time, the right place, and the right girl to coincide." Remarking that while the physical setting at Rho had changed a great deal over the years, Jim added that life seemed to be the same in Lexington and that the problems which fraternities face today are basically the same ones that he and five other enthusiastic adventurers faced in 1919 and 1920.
!JC
Ln Bl
IS YOUR FRATERNITY LIBRARY COMPLETE? !!as your family ever had an opportunity to hear the famous "THE ROSE OF PI KAPPA rill?"
~o You have any concrete information you could give your neighbor's son if you wanted LU
have him go Pi Kappa Phi? Do you have any pictures of the homes of the various
Phh~Pter houses you might want to show him? Would you Jike to be "Inside Pi Kappa I?" Then, your library should include the following: A copy of "SONGS OF PI KAPPA PHI" (1950 edition) ___ __:_ ________ $1.50 A hundred Brochures, "Pi Kappa Phi, A Thumbnail Sketch"-------- 2.50 A hundred "Pictures of Some Pi Kappa Phi Homes"---------------- 2.50 A year's subscription to "Inside Pi Kappa Phi" (All monthly publications to aJJ officials and chapters)----------- - - 5.00
O.rder through Pi Kappa Phi Fraternity, Virginia Building, Richmond, Virginia. Don't let the undergraduates say their Alumni are living in another era. Know today's Pi Kappa Phi! 31
Many Attractions Await Visitors to Virginia's Historic Garden Week Members of Pi Kappa Phi who visit Virginia during Historic Garden Week, April 26-May 3, will have an opportunity to visit the fraternity's National Headquarters in Richmond as well as Virginia's two Pi Kappa Phi chapters, Xi at Roanoke College, Salem and Rho at Washington and Lee, Lexington. ' At Washington and Lee may be seen the memorial garden at the Lee Chapel, a garden restored by the Garden Club of Virginia. Entombed in the chapel are the remains of General Robert E. Lee and his family . Behind the pulpit in the chapel is the famous recumbent statue of Lee, by Valentine. It will be recalled that after his return to civilian life at the end of the War Between the States General Lee was called to the presidency of Washington College, the institution whose name was changed later to Washington and Lee University, to include honor for the Confederate hero. Scores of other places are open to visitors during the week. Persons who would like additional information may write to Historic Garden Week, Room 3, Mezzanine ' Jefferson Hotel, Richmond 19, Va.
This year we decided to renovate the entire house- ~~ painted the house and each member improved his room Wit new draperies and other incidentals. Our officers this year are as follows: Archon, Jan Pi Bloempoort, a senior from Babylon, N. Y.; treasurer, R.~~: Tison, senior from Frostproof, Fla.; secretary, Howard J{l II' senior from Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.; historian, Romeo Ren .,., junior from Greenwich, Conn . ,· chaplain , James Stepp, sen' ·unl , from Tampa, Fla., and warden, Earling Thonneson, a 1 from St. Petersburg, Fla. -Romeo Renna, Historian
Drake
I I
Beta Delle d Jt
All the brothers welcome our new housemother, ".,rs. West, who came • to us from Ames ' Iowa . tr . jtia Joseph A. Weber, of Chicago, Ill., was recently 1n ~ into the chapter by our brothers at Alpha Omicron, Jo State College, Ames. Officers for this semester are archon, John Carroll; ~~~·, urer, George Puff<:tt; secretary, Dale Jensen; historian, \r Alexander; chaplam, Harry Whitmore, and warden, GaY Helm . ~~ Edmund Doles was recently appointed editor of the V b, Times Del.phic, newspaper. Pledge Claude W. WiJliford)J{I'l' been appomted associate editor of the Qua..x-Drake year Gene Young has pinned Miss Nancy Smith, Chi Omega~cl Our newly formed Mothers' and Wives' Club has e • the following officers for this semester: President, Mrs. FU·. Stuart; vice-president, Mrs. S. Denhart; secretary-treasU~ Mrs. C. Coons; chaplain, Mrs. C. Wisdom, and social chairfll Mrs. J. Carroll. James Jervis and "Jack" Proffit have transferred fr< Simpson College to Drake University. At Simpson theY ~r. members of Beta Zeta of Pi Kappa Phi. -Albin Alexander, Historian
I
I
Calling The Roll (Contim1ed from Page 27)
weeds and the excess lilies. It is now a valuable asset to the appearance of the lot.
Alumni Return For Game The University of Oregon-Stanford University football game September 22 provided many surprises for all. Several alumni who are now in the armed services appeared at the game unexpectedly, their stations ranging from Seattle, Wash ., to San Diego, Calif. A party after the game given by one of our alumni, Joe Cartasegna, Alpha Omega '49, at his home, 3305 Lake Rd., Milwaukie, Ore., was a fitting climax to the week end. -Glen Garrett, Historian
Florida Southern
Beta Beta
One of the new additions on Florida Southern's campus was the beginning of ROTC in which such prominent Pi Kapps as Captains "Bob" Tison and "Jim" Noble an'.l Lt. Noel C. J ohna will lead the school in military science. Our committee on the Kampus Kapers is composed of "Bill" Fraser, "Russ" Pellitier, Bob Tison, "Joe" Campbell, and "Dave" Wallam. The Kapers is a show at Florida Southern in which nine fraternities and five sororities compete for awards. The 'Pi Kapps have been lauded throughout the campus for sponsoring this most unique show. We are in a period of progress and growth in our "garden of Eden" where brothers "Ed" Judson, Bob Tison, and Howard Kidder planted trees, shrubs, and flowers t\lis summer. Our only cry now is for 28 "Eves." 32
Simpson
Beta
t~
. Cheers for our team! This is the first time since those~,, httle red-bordered letters started coming out that we 11 b~en out of the "red" as far as scholarship is concer~ed·(Jl' mtssed getting the grade cup by one-tenth of a pomt Edington, please note) . Will someone please take 115 one list and put us on another one? Thank you. J• Anyone who is passing through Iowa on U. S. 65-69, · by and see us. The welcome mat is always out. See Y8 · -John De Maris, Historian
fl· Beta . Our new housemother, Mrs. Swift, has arrived, and ~
Florida State University
leaves nothing to be desired as a housemother. Everyone 1 been working on the house, and it should be ready before letter goes to press. Frank Bean, a transfer from Alpha Sigma, is social ell man, directing Rush Week activities. 1 We are still walking the financial tight-rope, but th 0 ~ with the. grace of God, and the help of the local alurnn'· have managed to keep going. -Ben Gillis, SecretaO T H E ST A R A N D
~}
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11
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~ VI~ RobCi
Buy Ehco Badges- For Quality And
l{iddt=
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Standard
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1.00 1.26 .76
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All Prices Subject to 20% Federul 'l'ax
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etro1t 26, Michigan Send free copy of the BOOK OF TREASURES to
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The 1952 BALFOUR BLUE BOOK Just off the press! -PRESENTINGthe newest in fraternity and sorority jewelry, gay favors, gifts, knitwear, and paper products. Mail a post card NOW for YOUR FREE COPY. CUFF LINKS TIE HOLDERS KEY CHAINS MING CHINA BILLFOLDS
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