1972_4_Fall

Page 1


Fraternity Newsfront ... 34th SUPREME CHAPTER COMMITTEE SHOULD BE CONGRATULATED - Bill Dudley and his team of convention handlers, who made up the 34th Supreme Chapter Committee, deserve a round of applause and on the back from all of us across the country, both from those who did, and those who did not, attend Supreme Chapter. The outstanding way Bill and his committee handled the arrangements and the festivitiesd the convention made each individual member in attendance proud, and did Pi Kappa Phi a great deal of goo far as public relations in the Atlanta area is concerned. Thanks! SUPREME CHAPTER CHOOSES NEW ORLEANS OR SAN FRANCISCO FOR 35th SUPREME CHAPTERTime and Place Committee, at the 34th Supreme Chapter, submitted a list of cities to the Supreme Ch session and, after due deliberation, New Orleans and San Francisco were chosen as the two most li prospects for the 35th Supreme Chapter. If you live in either of these cities and would be interested in serving the 35th Supreme Chapter Committee, please contact Durward Owen at the National Office as quicklY possible. Planning has already begun and to a great degree the decision will be made based upon whether or the National Council can be assured of active alumni to sponsor the convention in whichever city is chosen. National Council will make the final decision later this fall. Please indicate your interest.

THE FRATERNITY SYSTEM -composed of the men's general fraternities- consists of approximately 4,500 c ters of 61 general fraternities located at over 600 campuses in the United States and Canada with a total I membership in excess of 2.4 million. ZONING CLEARED FOR NEW NATIONAL OFFICE - after many months of worry and work, the MecklenbU w County Zoning Board has finally given a ruling in our favor on the land the fraternity has purchased for then~ r office. Now the task of raising the money, completing the plans, and, of course, holding the old place together ~8 another few months can take the forefront of attention. No one will ever try to sell you the idea that the old plahB is falling in around our ears, but if you want to come by to visit, we will be glad to let you judge for yourself t need for a new building to house YOUR fraternity. All help cheerfully received!!! DOLLARS AND CENTS -there are 3,000 fraternity houses owned by the fraternities in the American frate system. A conservative estimate of the value of the chapter houses is $300 million. It is estimated that frate chapters pay in excess of $6 million in property taxes each year. ALEC TO BEGIN IN NOVEMBER - last year a new baby was born to the already large family of Pi Kappa 路s programs. ALEC (Alumni Leadership Education Conference) was, like all new born things, a little slow gettin9 h'8 stuff together. From what we learned last year and what we will learn in the upcoming series of conclaves. ~ can promise you a very interesting new program for this year. Watch your mail for the announcement of t meeting in your area. Then plan to be there and bring a Brother.

8

NEW ERA IN COLLEGE DATING: More than 150 interviews on dozens of campuses across the country wi~: students, faculty members, administrators, physicians, phychiatrists, and sociologists disclose that young peoP 5 generally are rejecting the rituals of dating as artificial, impractical and strained. The young see themselve.r engaged in a search for more meaningful friendships in which men and women celebrate each other tor thai ideas and thoughtfulness instead of their money, family and good looks. BETA ALPHA 25TH ANNIVERSARY- A celebration is planned for the Spring Rose Ball. The Alumni relations committe at Beta Alpha is hard at work planning for the big event.

COVER:

Over 300 delegates take over the Regency Hyatt House in Atlanta for the 34th Supreme Chapter. Photograph by Bennett Smith

2/ THE STAR AND LAMP


MIKE TRULL FIELD SECRETARY Mike Trull, Pi Kappa Phi's newest Field Secretary, is about six feet tall, has long brown hair a mustache, and an ever present grin. A 1971 graduate 'of Penn State, where he .was on the Dean's List for Academic Excellence, Mike is a native of Philadelphia. He was secretary, historian, and Archon of Alpha Mu Chapter and was involved in many intramural sports at Penn State. After picking up his B.S. in marketing at Penn State and a 1-Y from his local draft board, he attended graduate school at Michigan State. During this year, he helped bring about the rebuilding of Alpha Theta Chapter, while serving as the first graduate member of the National Council of Archons. Mike has a lively belief in humanity and a sense of humor that keeps things hopping. If you get the chance ask him where grits come from! '

PI KAPPA PHI'S 30,000th INITIATE

Richard Stephen Malcolm, initiate No. 521 of Kappa Chapter, initiated on September 4, 1972, is the 30,000th initiate in the history of Pi Kappa Phi Fraternity. Brother Malcolm is a native of Charlotte, North Carolina, and will graduate from Chapel Hill in 1975. This milestone in the history <;>f ~i Ka~pa Phi is ~ne that should be duly noted by all members because 1t gtves Pt Kappa Pht an even stronger claim to being a growing fraternity. FALL '72 I 3



~n the past, the national office has tried to find answers

to~ Problems and "put out fires" where nece~sary: I.n bhts new and fast changing world we now belteve It ts Illest . for each chapter to be supplied with decision aktng tools rather than attempted nuts and bolts answers

~? this end all conclaves scheduled have been ~eld, or til b(! held in the next few weeks, followtng the PUblication date of this magazine. lhe first "new" conclave was held in Norman, Oklahoma with excellent attendance and excellent results. We have been very much encouraged by all ~hose held since, and we are delighted with the unergraduate and alumni participation in these con~aves. 路 !he. ~ew tools we speak of are supplie? through a ~actlttator's manual" designed by the offtce staff and tb e staff of The Creative Center for Learning in Greens Oro , North Carolina. This facilitator's book encompasses eleven group dynamics exercises which are

used in several combinations at the conclaves. A typical conclave schedule is designed to run from 9:00a.m. until 6:00 p.m. on a given Saturday. During that time the group exercises, the area governor reports, and general "nuts and bolts" discussions regarding the conduct of a chapter are carried on. Lunch is served at each conclave as is a continental breakfast. In looking to the future of Pi Kappa Phi Fraternity, the national office staff and the National Council are of the firm commitment that it is new and innovative programs, such as the new conclave program, that will see Pi Kappa Phi into the last quarter of the 20th century and will launch us as one of the pre-eminent fraternities in the coming years. If you have not had a chance to attend one of these conclaves, we hope that you will make arrangements to be there next year, or that you will attend the Alumni Leadership Education Conferences to be scheduled later in the year, which will follow somewhat the same format.

FALL '72 I 5


FINANCIAL REPORT Your National Treasurer su~mits thi~ repo_rt of the financial condition of our fraternity for the past biennium, ending June 30, 1972. wh 1.~~- ~: based upon the annual aud1t of our fmanc1al records and statements prepared by Brother William Fuqua, C. P. A., and consistent thereWI comparative breakdown of our resources as of June 30, 1971 and June 30, 1972 follows :

ASSETS

1971

1972

Cash Receivables Investments Other Assets Furniture & Fixtures

$ 16,610 24,158 392,455 9,993 6,257

$

$449,473

$469,862

$

$

TOTAL ASSETS LIABILITIES NET WORTH

(Funds & Capital)

5,822 20,197 420,638 17,159 6,046

8,927

9,222

$440,546

$460,640

$449,473

$469,862

NET INCOME The Net Worth of the Fraternity has grown steadily over the years as follows:

1960 1964 1966

$148,000 206,000 259,000

1968 1970 1971

$305,000 415,662 449,473

1972

$469,862

The above is exclusive of funds held by the Pi Kappa Phi Scholarship Foundation and the Pi Kappa Phi Properties, Inc., both of which are separate non-profit corporations. For your Information, the chart below indicates the approximate disposition of your initiation and pre-initiation fees; and a similar percentage would reflect the disposition of the pre-initiation receipts.

$ 15.00 8.00 5.00 4.00 26.06 12.05 9.02

STAR & LAMP Supreme Chapter & Pi Kapp College Housing Chapter Directory of Membership Chapter Relations Salaries National Office Alumni Relations

.....11..ll

$ 90.00

COMPARATIVE STATEMENT OF INCOME AND EXPENSES

INCOME Initiation Fees Pre-initiation Fees Royalties Net income from investments Alumni Dues Other Income

TOTAL INCOME

1970-1971

1971-1972

$ 91,455 24,815 1,668 39,791 42,053 937

$ 92,270 24,300 1,586 26,587 40,551 608

$200,719

$185,902

$ 52,256 47,984 28,067

$ 47,495 53,105 29,482

33,592 8,227

29,905 3,694

$170,126

$163,681

$ 30,593

$ 22,221

EXPENSES Chapter Relations Direct Salaries Maintenance Alumni Relations (includes Star & Lamp) Miscellaneous (taxes, subscriptions, memberships)

TOTAL EXPENSES

TO EDUCATIONAL INVESTMENT TRUST

6/ THE STAR AND LAMP


hiS h. A

A. SYDNEY HERLONG, JR. PI KAPP ON THE S.E.C.

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When President Nixon appointed him to the Securities and Exchange Commission in August, 1969, Syd Herlong, Alpha Epsilon-Univ. of Florida, Could be forgiven for believing that the post might represent a distinct anti-climax- perhaps, even a respite -after two decades of service in the House of Representatives from 1949 to 1969. If he had been fully aware of the enormity of the problems which were then developing and which later rocked the underpinnings of the securities industry, he might have opted for an appointment to a less active post. Instead, he found htmself deeply involved in an agency which was Struggling with problems unseen since it was created in 1934 as an aftermath of the stock market crash and the dismal days of the early 30's. The Securities and Exchange Commission is an agency headed by five Commissioners appointed by the President, only three of whom may be, by statute, of the s~me political party. This means that Syd Herlong, a ltfe-long Democrat, finds himself one of the two "minority" members of the Commission. In the more than three years Syd Herlong has been a Commissioner, he has acquired a reputation for a down-to-earth practical approach to the manifold Problems that the SEC has considered. These include, f?r example, the critical problem of broker-dealer ltquidations and insolvencies, notably in 1970, when many firms were liquidated or absorbed. Although Syd Herlong seldom seeks the spotlight, he has worked with his fellow Commissioners and staff members in the resolution of complex problems that have manifested themselves in today's financial page headlines. His nomination to the Commission raised little controversy; and the industry's attitude was one of watchful waiting occasioned by an inability to gauge his direction, in spite of his ten terms in Congress and his service there on the powerful House Ways and Means Committee. He prefers to be a "quiet man", making few speeches, but carefully listening to and weighing the views of others, to whom his door is always open. However, external appearances are deceiving. In the daily give and take of Commission activity, Syd Herlong indicates a predisposition toward the interest of the small broker-dealer and the small investor and a positive belief that the individual investor is still and must remain the backbone of the nation's economic system, whether he invests directly or through an investment company.

His many years on Capitol Hill, his intimate of the . parliamentar_y procedures, and , equally tmportant, hts understandtng of the various interests of the members of the House and Senate have prov_en invaluable to the Comm_ission in the handling of Its tnternal problems and Its relations with the Congress, since the Commission is the creature of and answerable to the Congress. In essence, Syd Herlong feels that the Commission's main objective is to make the securities market a viable entity where investors of all kinds may trade on as equal a basis as is possible. He recognizes that the C?mmi~s.ion is at a point in history when it is faced with cn~tcal problems and he relishes the opportunity of maktng a worthwhile contribution toward the stability of our capital markets. knowle~ge

FALL '72 /7


MARSHALL PICKENS HONORED PI KAPP

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Hospitals are named for him , he sits on the boards of several major corporations, richly endowed scholarships are given in his honor, but he is at his best helping a little crippled girl across a road . Marshall I. Pickens, 34th initiate of Mu Chapter at Duke University, is one of the outstanding civic leaders in the Carolinas.

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He has had a long and distinguished association with the Duke Endowment. He joined the Duke staff in 1928 as a field representative, was named director of the hospital and child care sections in 1950, and served as Executive Director from 1962 to 1966, when he became its Vice Chairman .

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Brother Pickens has been a trustee of the Duke Endowment since 1951. He is a director of the Duke Power Company, Chairman of the Board of the Metropolitan Savings and Loan Association, a member of the Board of Trustees of Duke University, and serves on the Board of Visitors of Davidson College, St. Andrews College, and Crossnore School. He holds A.B . and M.A. degrees from Duke and an honorary LL.D. from Davidson . This remarkable man holds more honorary memberships in national organizations than the imagination cares to cope with . In recognition of his great contributions to health care, the North Carolina Hospital Association , in 1965, awarded Brother Pickens its first Distinguished Service Award. In 1968 the Greenville, South Carolina General Hospital System named its new mental health center for him. In 1969 the Duke Unviersity Medical Center named its new Rehabilitation Center after him , and in 1970 the Marshall I. and Sarah W. Pickens Scholarship in Hospital Administration was established at Duke University. Mr. and Mrs. Pickens make their home in Charlotte, where he was recently presented his Pi Kappa Phi 50th anniversary, Golden Legion Certificate. 8/ THE STAR AND LAMP

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The Duke Endowment is one of the nation's largest. Established in 1924 by James B. Duke, with. the original sum of $100 million, it has since then gn'e~ more than $325 million to medical, education, churc and child care.


Richard

Viguerie

Election

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Viguerie,

Trustee

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Pi

Kappa

1972

Phi

p~holarship Foundation and the driving force behind 1

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t Kappa Phi's voluntary dues program was recently tatured on the front page of the WALL STREET 0 b l1RNAL. Below are some excerpts from the article ~ennis Farney which appeared on the front page of e Journal, Wednesday, June 14, 1972.

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?he Viguerie operation is typical of what one political t onsultant calls "the old politics in the new sechnology", the growing use of the computer as an int"trument of political campaigning has enormous potenthal for targeting potential supporters and then zonking em With carefully tailored appeals - and politicians and the consultants who serve them are beginning to eh"Pl<;>re it in a big way. Indeed, campaign of '72 is s aping up as the year of the machines." ''What is going on here is the marriage of technology

~.nd politics. This antiseptic looking room of flor.escent

V~hts and tile floors is the nerve center of the R1chard •~uerie Company, consultants on the use of direct tna1( in political campaigns and for other purposes. The Whole apparatus necessary for conducting a ~0 Phisticated political campaign by mail is assembled here: the closely guarded magnetic tape library of t~o ~ndred million names or so, machines that pluck md•vidual names from these tapes, other machines that can rap out letters to the names thus selected."

··v iguerie, whose main Washington business is the conSUltant for conservative Republicans, has been known to labor 8 hours over the opening paragraph of the Computer produced letter. He is very dedicated and Conscientious about what goes into each of his letters." ''The Viguerie Company is generally regarded as one of the best in the business. Mr. Viguerie is now working for Representative John Ashbrook, the. Ohi<? conservative who is opposing Richard NIX on m the Republican primaries. This doesn't mean, howe~er, that Mr. Viguerie didn't try very hard to get the N1xon a~­ Count. 'I made more trips down there to hold their hands than I'd ever like to remember', Viguerie recalled. But the political winds took that account away."

We have always known that Dick Viguerie was an out~tanding man, and that his company was one of the best m the country, but we are glad to pass on to all Pi Kapps these comments of the WALL STREET JOURNAL so that you can see that we are not alone in our high estimation of Brother Viguerie's abilities.

FALL '72/9


OCKFEST Cockfest '71 was probably one of the most significant events in the long successful history of Sigma Chapter. Instigated as a project to publicize the fraternity on campus and give the chapter a worthwhile goal to achieve, it far surpassed all expectations. It not only gave each brother a sense of individual satisfaction, but also a pride in the fraternity and the fraternity system. Cockfest can be described best as a combination pep rally and variety show given during homecoming week to engender school spirit and display some of the many talents of the USC student body. It is hoped that in the years to come it will also be a money making project. The show was held in the beautiful new Carolina Stadium. Sigma Chapter sponsored the event, but if costs were not covered by the one dollar admission charge, the USC Alumni Association and Athletic Department promised to pick up the tab. The program consisted of a pep rally at which the football team members and coaches were introduced, performances by bands from S. C. State College and South Carolina, comical skits done by USC student organizations, a salute to the Homecoming Court and a $1 ,200.00 fireworks display.

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71

Ed Craig (second from right) and members of Sigma Chapter were the driving force behind Cockfest.

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South Carolina State Marching Bank at Cockfest

10/ THE STAR AND LAMP


The 5,000 people attending seemed to enj,oy the Show very much, especially the S.. c. ~tate Band~ Issac liayes rendition and the fantastic fueworks d1splay. l'he skits revolved around the theme of "The Birth of the Gamecocks". A grand prize of $300.00 was given for the best skit. Cockfest was the culmination of almost nine months of ~Ianning and hard work. It was all s~arted by Ed Cra1g who was given the idea after seemg Clemson University's Tigerama, a similar production. Eventu.ally during the process of implimentation of the l?ro~ucuon, Cockfest would involve every student orgamzauon, the Alumni Association, The Athletic Department, Student Affairs, Maintenance, Security, the Downtown Businessmen's Association, The Columbia Chamber of Commerce, University Union, Information Services, the State broadcasting media, and others. The response was tremendous.

Aside from the individual and collective satisfaction received, Cockfest offered several other advantages. It g.ave the chapter the max!mum publicity at the best ume -- w~en all alumni are in town for the hon:tecommg game. It was a very strong selling point dunng. rush. It bet~ered. relationships between the fraternity ~nd t~e u~1vers.1ty路 administration. It gave Pi Kappa Ph1 a.n 1denuty. w1thm. ~he fraternity system at South Carolina, and It publlc1zed the fraternity not only at USC but all over the state. It showed many faculty members and administrators that a well organized social fraternity could accomplish more than n:tost student organizations three times a fraternity's stze. Editors' Note: At press time, Kit Jennings and the men of Sigma e preparing the 1972 edition of Cock fest, which was held on "b:~

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FALL 72 I 11


ALUMNI BRIEFS

*'-'

ROY OLSEN - Alpha Epsilon - Roy has just been promoted to Controller of Tanco Development Corporation !11 Santa Ana, California. Tanco (a new name for the 17 year old company previously known as Surburbia Homes) 1~ currently involved in a great number of land development projects in California, New Mexico, Colorado an Oklahoma. Roy is a graduate of the University of Florida, Alpha Epsilon Chapter, and was previously accounting manager tor Kraft Foods.

DR. THOMAS A.FRYE- Iota Chapter at Georgia Tech, has accepted a position as Associate Pastor of the Second Presbyterian Church in Memphis, Tennessee, the second largest church in the demonination. Brother Frye has been pastor of the First Presbyterian Church of Dallas for 14 years and will serve as associate pastor along with Dr. Henry Russell, brother of the late Senator of Georgia.

ERNEST MILLER (Ernie), an alumnus of Alpha Mu Chapter at Penn State and President of West Penn Oil corn路 pany, recently received his Doctor of Law degree from the University of Wyoming. Brother Miller, one of the best known historians of the petroleum industry, through the William Coe Library of Petroleum and History Research Center, was the official historian of the Oil Centennial, Inc. in 1958 and 1959 and is the author of several books on the history of the petroluem industry. Brother Miller also holds a Bachelor of Arts Degree from Penn State and a Master of Arts from AlleghenY College.

HECTOR A. NEGRONI, Major U.S. Air Force, and an initiate of Alpha Upsilon Chapter at Drexel, has been named Chief of the Support Section, U. S. Military Group, attached to the U. S. Embassy in Bolivia. Brother Negroni has served as Assistant Professor at the Air Force Academy and has served in the Philippines. Thialand, and has flown more than 70 combat missions over Laos, Cambodia,and Vietnam. He has received two air medals, a Vietnamese Service medal. and the Vietnam Campaign medal.

CLARK W. FISHEL, an initiate of Upsilon Chapter at the University of Illinois, is the General Manager of Texin.s Association, a recreation and self-improvement service for the 22,000 employees of Texas Instruments, Inc. 1n Dallas. In June of 1972 he was awarded the United Savings- Helms Athletic Foundation Award for recreational programs. Trained in the field of journalism, in 1966 officially moved into the field of recreational and entertain路 ment management for his company. He and his family of seven live outside Dallas and as a hobby have a large herd of horses. The main recreational facility for the company contains gymnasiums, exercise and game rooms, and offers as many as 40 programs a day for recreation. Brother Fishel also oversees a farm, and has a camp on the shore of the Red River Reservoir. Brother Fishel's unusual and far advanced program was featured in the September 3, 1971 edition of Life Magazine. 12/THE STAR AND LAMP



HJl

SUPREM

ma~Y w~Y~e~~~~

Pride in Pi Kappa Phi is measurable in in the E the most tangible of measuring sticks IS th8~aytt type ca Chapter. When you can bring together rnorni frOII\th or a neVI three-hundred (300) undergraduates and alurTl ethB\rltl e Univer ~II across the nation and have them functio~ toQKind,is er Archo1 1n a four day convention, with understandln9t{at yo~1 9et-acqu ness, and most of all, brotherhood, it is the.n \not6e everyone understand pride in a very personal fraternitY 111 rner conventic regional possession, but the possession. of a Ill .. who wear the emblems of Pi Kappa Phi. 'l Odet 1n1 • oach J pa Ph ic ' r· On August 27, 1972, 342 members of Pi KaP HYa~ ago. Fraternity converged on the beautiful RegencYust30 House in Atlanta, Georgia. On Wednesday, AU9KaPPsonctay br th~y departed with a better understanding of P~rother'1 Prerne Coh~ Ph1, a better grasp of the fundamentals ?f last tollences c hood, and some new friendships that will ~bda ' ~~; many years. :Sistant t hee o t 'bin9 · on spe 1 One could go on for quite some time in des~n ride 10lewhere .a excitement and activity that grew from thiS Pble to In brotherhood, but for those who were not 8h8 ac; attend, let us give you a brief run-down on t 1uiuesday, tivities. ' Pn~ers Bn z7m·~ enences ~ Registration began early on the morning of thBil na~hst rnoving Preceding this, on the 26th, the National coun~untrY isnson, ch< met with the Area Governors from across the c rri~ed th State. H as well as some undergraduates who had a rflain. the cha~ early, including the Council of Archons. Th~·cK~If~er been i 1 event got underway Sunday night with the ~ one eve banquet. , lett Men ntion .s strange~ To their great delight, the Atlanta Alumni con~~dleY• ~ made all Committee, headed very ably by Brother Bill odate ery perso had to expand seating arrangements to accornrnuestS·\e . almost 50 unexpected drop-in dinner g rfleof ap P1 Kap~ N~edless to say this P.ut everyone in a good f~ 8 wa~ QPa Phi Pr mmd for the entertainment of Miss LucY fltJKer,es~lected 1 (daughter of National Scholarship Chairman. tha 0· ivlde~t of I Stewart) and a speech given by Brother car p.e.l·~u ers1ty o1 (Deke) DeLoach, former Deputy Director of the Chrned to tt and presently vice president of Pepsico, InC· Olarship

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The presentation of the National Rose Queen.f thiS eU.esday lu 0 Patricia Herford, brought the first experience 1 ~ 1 dent, M1 convention to a close. or and r


Nays. bUI•t~er i suprei11~rent n the ev~ning a get-acquainted party of a difore t~anay 1/Pe earned on the convention theme of "a new 10 rnni troi1'1the a ~ew day." Charles Sutton, graduate student get~d~rrner ~n1versity of North Carolina at Charlotte and ,g Kin 1is Qe rchon of Gamma Epsilon Chapter, conducted th'at yo4)t ev~-acquainted session which broke the ice and iS not 3e ryon~ to talking and enjoying the company of 1all rner 00 nvent1on .

10

model .lnl·t·1at1on . lloa followed later with Cartha D. ppa P~ icagch, Jr. being initiated, along with Tom Dorris of

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t~er·IPre~ brought a round of committee meetings, two brot torlenc e Chapter sessions, Student and Alumni conlas lrnbdes, and an awards luncheon. Pat Swindall, ~ist a Chapter at the University of Georgia, . gt~Beonant to Senator David Gambrell, was the lunb1~de iOlewh spe.aker. A summary of awards appears prb1 to ere In the magazine. a 18 8c~ thB 'J' lun~esday , thirty early rising alumni attended the ' Per"ers Breakfast and passed the hour telling of hB z7t~ost lenc~s shared during the years as Pi Kapps. The neil h8"lhns rnovmg memories came from Brother Howard countrY is on, chapter advisor to Gamma Delta at Memarrived th ~tate. He told of how he had become involved ,e r11a1°1ver e chapter when his son was in school. He had kicK.o 11 ~ been in a fraternity, so the chapter surprised 'lw 0 n( evening with a special initiation. His son has 's 1e t Memphis State, but Dad is one of the chap1vention i strongest supporters. His dedication to Pi Kappa oudleY•ve~ade all present more aware that Brotherhood is rn 0 date Y Personal thing. 1 uestS·\e . . . . ~arTleo 1 ap P1 K.appa Phi Scholars~1p Foundation and P1 wart ~la Ph1 Properties met dunng the day on Tuesday fiUker,es~lected Officers. Elmer Jost , Stetson, is the new ;rtha D·~ivlde~t of Pi Kappa Phi Properties. Otis McCollum, e f'.e.t.~urerslty of North Caroli~a, Kappa C~apter, wa~ 1 ~ho~ed to the office of Chairman of the P1 Kappa Ph1 · arship Foundation. 'I

1

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,n,of th1·s'Uesd 1es· ay

· · I luncheon was enterta1ned by Past N at1ona 1mldent, Mel Metcalfe, with some of his well known or and magic.


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ETA 50th Celebrated -One highlight of the 34th Supreme Chapter was the gathering of eight alumni from Emory's old Eta chapter. Although the chapter has been dormant for several years, the spirit and brotherhood of this gathering was something to be proud of. Raymond Nixon of St. Paul , Minn . and E. B. Powell of Atlanta were the organizers. Most of the men in attendance were initiated in

G MRS. DURWARD OWEN (CONNIE) RECEIVED THE "NATION;~ OFFICE HOUSEMOTHER AND ROSE QUEEN" CITATION FA THE STAFF.

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GEORGIA GOVERNOR JIMMY CARTER ADDRESSED THE SUPREME CHAPTER SESSION ON MONDAY. "THE HAT" ApfE~· COURTESY OF ALPHA cH

CHARLIE SUTTON (L) AND BILL FUQUA CONGRATULATE EACH OTHER AFTER RECEIVING RESOLUTIONS OF APPRECIATION FROM THE NATIONAL COUNCIL FOR OUTSTANDING SERVICE.

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After many hours of fun, work, and a few sleepless nights, the final session of the Supreme Chapter was held at 9:30 a.m. on Wednesday, and all departed that afternoon with new friendships and a better understanding of how Pi Kappa Phi works.


GLENN McCONNELL AREA GOVERNOR OF THE YEAR - 1972 Grnn McConnell, former Area Governor for the state ~ou.th Carolina and now Chairman of the Ritual & nstgnta Committee, was named National Area Governor of the Year at the 34th Supreme Chapter in Atlanta.

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Glenn, an Alpha Chapter initiate at the College of Charleston , has recently graduated from the University ?f South Carolina Law School and is setting up practice tnf the Charleston area. He took over the responsibility 0 Area Governor when Dr. Zinkowski, the then Area Governor, was transferred to the West Coast for two Years. Glenn held the position for two years and did a remarkable job during this time. His contact with the chapters and his willingness to Work with them prompted the National Council to ~e~tow this honor upon Glenn, even though he had offtc.tally left the office of Area Governor two weeks Prtor to the convention. ~lenn comes from a long line of Pi Kapps, including a

rather, a prospective brother-in-law, both Alpha ~hapter initiates, and two Rose Queens (mother and ~tster). He lives with his family at Live Oak Plantation tn Ravenel , South Carolina.

PHIL TAPPY (L) PRESENTS CUP TO McCONNELL

EMMETT DENDY CHAPTER ADVISOR OF THE YEAR - 1972 Emmett Dendy, Chapter Advisor to Omicro~ Chapter- University of Alabama, has been named Pt Kappa Phi's 1972 Chapter Advisor of the Year. Emmett, an active chapter advisor with Omicron Chapter for many years, is also very active in civic and CUltural events in Tuscaloosa, Alabama. He was recently named the Tuscaloosa Citizen of the Year (see Spring edition of the Star & Lamp). Emmett is in the lumber business in Tuscaloosa and spends a great deal of time counseling with Omicron Chapter. It is under his direction and guidance that the chapter has built and maintained one of the finest houses on campus. It is also under hi~ guidance t.h~t our new national treasurer, Lonnie Stnckland, ongmally became involved with Omicron Chapter and thus eventually involved with the National Council. l t was because of these, and many other fine deeds over th e past years, that Emmett Dendy w~s selected by the National Council as the chapter advtsor of the year. FALL '72/ 17


lreasur nie is tt an alum v.ed the ttcipate• Pi KapJ nation a Manage Admini l'uscalo lie has Univers ~Ustrial •n Busi

The National Council

lie is a Southet Manage Young 1 lie en} skiiing "tinkeri lie and Old, an

Secreta to the I' timer .

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Atlanta Ron, f, Preside firm in the alu from B lie is ~ deal 0 Secreta lie anc Scott 2 Safety the Sc, National President. Theodore A. Scharfenstein, Jr.Ted comes to the National Presidency by virture of a long line of hard work and continuous service to the fraternity since his initiation at Beta Beta Florida Southern . After graduation in 1961 he joined the national office staff as a traveling secretary. He was assistant executive director when he left in 1965 to do graduate study at George Washington University where he earned his M .B.A. in 1968. During this period he was an Area Governor and when his career as a hospital administrator took him to Miami, he became chapter advisor to Alpha Chi Chapter. Later he moved to Birmingham, Alabama, to become Assistant Administrator for the Baptist Medical Center Hospital , and he became chapter advisor for Alpha Eta Chapter and a leader in the founding of Gamma Omega Chapter at Montevallo . Ted has served on a number of committees, chartering teams, and has always been in the forefront of Pi Kappa Phi activities. He is a member of the American College of Hospital 18/ THE STAR AND LAMP

Administrators and the Episcopal church. He and ~i~ lovely wife, Mandy, have two children, Thomas Jo and Mary.

Chaph at the Chap Ia and fi" an exc, of serv nor fo chapte Phil n Brevar Sity o Pledge ter. H 1

Vice President • John c. Wilson, Eta- Emory Univer sity, has served two terms as National Treasurer (19\e 1972). Prior to his election as National Treasurer, served nine years as an advisor to the Executive Direc: tor and was chairman of the voluntary dues drive cattle paign. He has also served as chairman of the ad ~ 0 financial committee which developed new structurtn~ to permit all elements of the fraternity to make thebeS use of its funds. John is the retired executive vice president of t~~ American Red Cross, and continues to reside 1 Washington, D. C. He is a native of Covington, Te~~ nessee, and has been a teacher and principal ~d Covington schools. He received his B.S. degree and .d• graduate work at George Peabody College in Nashvtlle· He and his wife, Lane, enjoy traveling and are botr. known for their beautiful sense of humor and e fervescent excitement about all aspects of life.

196s I

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the Ye lie is 1 divisio Nation Manag a Sun People active


~.re~surer- Dr. A. J. Strickland, III -(Lonnie), Lona'e IS the I ,0 II th initiate of Omicron Chapter. He was vndalumnus initiate in 1970 . Since that time he has ser/ . the chapter as financial advisor and has parp~'Pated in national projects , including instruction at n' ~app College, Southeastern IFC Conferences, and MltJonaJ office retreats. He is Assistant Professor of AJn~g~ment at the School of Commerce and Business nunJstration at the University of Alabama at 1uscaloosa.

~e. has .his B.S. degree in math and physics from the dun'v7rsny of Georgia, a Master of Science and Inin s~na.l Management from Georgia Tech , and a Ph. D . usmess Management from Georgia State.

~e

is a member of Alpha Kappa Psi, Beta Alpha Psi , MUthern Management Association, Academy of Yoanagement, and was chosen as one of the outstanding ung men in America.

~~ .. enjoys

all sorts of outdoor activities , including "/ling and camping, but says that his main hobby is 1nkering".

~~~and

his wife Kitty have one son, Matthew, two years , and are expecting a second child in November.

Secretary -Ron Krebs, University of Louisville, came ~ the National Council in December of 1971 to ~ill out ' lmer Jost's unexpired term as National Chaplatn. ~e ~as elected to a full term as National Secretary tn "tlanta. Ron, former Area Governor of Area XVII, is vice-

hresi~ent of Standard Underwriters, Inc., an ins~~an~e

t' rm tn St. Louis. He has served in many capac1ttes tn he alumni structure of Pi Kappa Phi since graduating from Beta Gamma Chapter in 1959. lie is a young, dynamic executive who brings ~ great dea) of vitality and experience to the offtce of Secretary.

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lie and his wife, Jeannette, have three children, Lis~, Scott and Laura. Ron is a member of the St.. Louts Safety Council, the Insurance Board of St. Louts, and the Scottish Rite .

movies, antiques and is a student of the His tory of Savannah . Phil and Lisa Tappy are the proud parents of a young son. National Chancellor - Robert L. Bennett, Alpha Alpha Ch apter at Mercer, is serving an unprecedented third term as Chancellor of Pi Kappa Phi. A native of Jessup , Georgia, Bob was the 26th initiate of Alpha Alpha Chapter. He received an LL.B . degree from Mercer Law School and practiced Jaw in Florida for a time. In 1933 he was admitted to the Pennsylvania State Bar and is now Senior partner of the Jaw firm of Bennett, Davis and Murphy in Towanda, Pa. Bob was instrumental in the reactivation of Alpha Alpha Chapter and has continually supported the chapter with generous counsel and financial aid . He and his delightfully lively wife, Annabelle, devote a great deal of time to fishing and traveling. Bob is Chairman and General Counsel of the Citizens Bank and Trust Company in Towanda, a director of the Commonwealth Telephone Company of Dallas, Pa. and of the Businessmen's Insurance Co . of Harrisburg.

Past National President- Jack Steward, Alpha Zeta at Oregon State, has a long history of service to Pi Kappa Phi. After graduation from Oregon State he spent several years as a traveling counselor. He was Area Governor for the Oregon area in the 1950's. He was first elected to the National Council in 1964 as National Historian. In 1966 he was National Secretary and in 1968 he became the first National Vice President. Jack is the Director of Personnel for the University of Oregon and is a member of the College and University Personnel Officers Association. Jack's wife, Carolyn , and children , Scott and Karen, join him in his enthusiasm for camping and fishing. They make their home in Eugene, Oregon. NEW PRESIDENT TED SCHARFENSTIEN ACCEPTS GAVEL FROM JACK STEWARD.

Chaplain • Thomas Phillip Tappy, Lambda C~apter at the University of Georgia, comes t<? the offtce of Chaplain having served one term as Natwn~l Sec~eta~y and five years as Area Governor f~r Georg~a. Pht~ ?td an excellent job as secretary, carrytng on hts tradttton Of service to the fraternity . While he. was .Area <?overnor for the state of Georgia, Georgta gamed stx new chapters. Phil received an A.A. degree from Brevard Col~ege, Brevard North Carolina and then went to the UntverSity of' Georgia whe;e he was rush chairman, Pledgemaster, warden and historian for Lambda Chapter. He graduated in 1962 with a B.F.A. degree. In l965 Phil was named Pi Kappa Phi's Area Governor of the Year. Ii.e is the regional sales coordinator for the microfilm , dtvision of Eastman Kodak Company, a m.ember of the National Microfilm Association, the Amencan Records Management Association, and is a Mason. Phil teaches a Sunday School class, is tre~surer of the Y<:>Ung People's club of Trinity Presbytenan Churc.h, and ts an active political worker. He enjoys tennts, softball, FALL '72 I 19


~~34th Supreme Chapter~~

Awards • HOUSER AWARD Most Improved Chapter In All Areas

Upsilon -University of Illinois First Runner Up- Alpha Sigma- Univ. of Tennessee Second Runner Up - Beta Lambda -Tampa

c s

The Edington Award and The Gibbon Award were not given this year. These are both scholarship awards, and because of the difficulty in obtaining grades from many institutions, it was felt that there was no fair way to judge these awards.

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Gamma Zeta- West Virginia Tech. 1st runner up - Alpha Eta - Samford 2nd runner up - Beta Omega - East Tennessee

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CHAMPION MASTER CHAPTERS

Alpha - Charleston Beta - Presbyterian Alpha Zeta - Oregon State Alpha Mu -Penn. State

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Gamma Zeta- West Va. Tech . Gamma Theta- U.N. C. Wilmington Delta Beta - North Georgia

MASTER CHAPTERS Alpha Upsilon-Drexel Gamma Gamma-Troy State Xi-Roanoke Beta Xi-East Texas Upsilon-Ill. Tau-N. C. State Beta Omicron-N. W . State-La. Rho-Washington & Lee

Sigma-South Carolina Gamma Omega-Montevallo Gamma-California Psi-Cornell Omega-Purdue Gamma Beta-Old Dominion Beta Delta-Drake Beta Phi-E. Carolina

Alpha Delta-Wash. Beta Upsilon-Virginia Alpha Gamma-Okla. Alpha Eta-Samford Beta Omega-E. Tenn. Kappa-North Carolina Alpha Sigma-Tenn. Gamma Epsilon-W. Carolina FIRS Colle

Gam·

20/ THE STAR AND LAMP


One highlite of the kick-off banquet of the 34th Supreme Chapter was the announcement that pretty Patricia Odum Herford, recent bride of former Valdosta State Archon Bob Herford, is the Pi Kappa Phi National Rose Queen for 1972.

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Blue eyed, brown haired Phi Mu beauty, was born in Savannah, Ga. She received her degree in Music Education from Valdosta State College this Spring. She plans to teach music in an elementary school and enjoys working with youth choirs in her church. She is a Dean's list student, was Miss Waycross, Ga. in 1971 , and has stared in two campus musicals. After National President Jack Steward presented her with the traditional roses and silver bowl , Patricia did something a little different. Instead of the traditional "Rose Song" being sung by the not so well practiced assembled brothers, she sang a beautiful love song to the members. Needless to say, she got a standing ovation.

FIRST RUNNER UP Colleen McDaniel (Alpha Delta Pi) Gamma Iota-LSU

SECOND RUNNER UP Diane DeVoll Rho-Washington and Lee

THIRD RUNNER UP Pamela Wester (Sigma Sigma Sigma) Beta Phi-East Carolina

FALL '72 /21


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22/ THE STAR AND LAMP


Report to the Fraternity PI KAPPA PHI PROPERTIES, INC. Pi Kappa Phi Properties, Inc., is a non-profit corPoration which was founded in 1967 for the main purPose of providing necessary houses and lodges for ~hapters of our Fraternity. When the financial interest eld by the local housing corporation is sufficient, and When the various requirements are met, Pi Kappa Phi Properties, Inc., acquires the title to the property, finances a portion of the purchase price or of the conStruction cost and leases the property to the housing ~orporation for use by the undergraduate chapter. ((here has been a rapid growth in assets held by Pi appa Phi Properties, Inc., but in financing the acquisition of properties there has been an almost Corresponding increase in liabilities. This corporation has been responsible for enabling 15 Undergraduate chapters to have the use of a fraternity house or lodge. Applications from other qualified Chapters for such assistance have been given various d~~rees of priority, subject to future changing conditions. The only direct source of funds this corporation has ~except from borrowing and from lease payments which In turn are paid to mortgage companies) is $5.00 of each initiation fee. Had it not been for the brothers having authorized that one-time nominal amount, Pi Kappa Phi Properties, Inc., probably could not exist. The sums received each year from that source are not enough to accomplish what needs to be done in Providing housing and lodges, but we of Pi Kappa Phi Properties, Inc. are most grateful.

PI KAPPA PHI SCHOLARSHIP FOUNDATION

During the last two years, the Foundation has made significant strides in expanding its ability to offer both scholarships and loans to members of Pi Kappa Phi. At the close of business on July 30, 1972, the assets of the Foundation at book value were about $85,000.00, which includes the real estate occupied under lease as the National Office of the Fraternity. The Trustees expect the assets of the Foundation to exceed $1 00,000.00 during the next two years. A fund raising program initiated since the 33rd Supreme Chapter meeting in Chicago and spearheaded by the efforts of Trustee Richard Viguerie has resulted in cash contributions exceeding $16,000.00. This is a major step, and the Trustees are proud of the membership of Pi Kappa Phi for their wonderful support. The Foundation is attempting to assume a more active role in promoting scholarship among the membership of the Fraternity. It has financed certain efforts of the Fraternity Scholarship Committee, it finances the Eddington and Gibbon awards, and a token cash award is made annually to each new Pi Kapp Scholar.

As each year passes our equities should continue to increase, resulting in strengthening the financial status of Properties and enabling it more promptly to do more and more for the undergraduate chapters.

As the Foundation grows, the greater its efforts can be in the field of loans and scholarships for deserving students. In this respect there are significant efforts being made to channel aid to as many students as possible, and all Pi Kapps are being urged to direct deserving students who need financial assistance to the Foundation.

The Executive Committee

Otis R. McCollum, Chairman

FALL '72/23


BLACK FRATERNITIES:

Thet the< rem< char

A Committed Elite

The' 3,06

and 102

By Jon Nordheimer, New York Times (May 26, 1972) Reprinted by permission.

ItA Black college fraternities are making gains on the campuses of the nation at a time when many white fraternities have slipped badly in membership and prestige.

Al11 last 100

At large Northern institutions outside urban areas, the fraternity has become a refuge for black students who feel alienated and remote from a prevailing campus culture dominated by whites.

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Paradoxically, some blacks have joined fraternities, the singular symbol for decades of white middle-class elitism on campus, to escape a white value system that they condem.

Man resu reac of s1 that

On a superficial level, many black fraternities resemble in style the Greek system of 20 years ago that placed a premium on conformity and submission of the individual to the group.

"ln Whi1 Stro1

There has also developed a uniform emphasis on discipline, indoctrination, and a physical harassment of pledges, an element that has been discouraged in recent years by the leading national fraternities. But the bonds of brotherhood among college blacks, incubated in the ghetto and politicized prior to college life, run deeper than in most white fraternities. Moreover, black fraternities at prestige Northern schools stress a brand of social activism that extends beyond the campus and graduation.

FORCE IN POWER STRUCTURE "Outside of the Baptist Church, the strongest black power structure in Detroit today is the black fraternity", remarked Reg Armstrong, who has just turned the presidency of the all black chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha at the sprawling University of Michigan here over to Bruce Evans. Graduate chapters of black fraternities have traditionally assumed the economic leadership role of civic clubs in large black communities, he observed. "In five years, the cats in this chapter house will be running the graduate chapters back home and that's where the action is", said Mr. Armstrong, son of a Detroit auto assembly plant worker. "Our job is to make these graduate chapters more relevant to the black struggle." A sharp division of motivation appears to exist between blacks who join fraternities in the North and those who join fraternities at Southern schools. In the first instance, blacks enrolled in Northern institutions situated outside of metropolitan areas expressed the need for an organization to act as a buffer against what they perceive as a hostile white environment. In such a situation, the fraternity attracts militants as well as moderates. 24/ THE STAR AND LAMP

lie! the grot Tony Smith of Alpha Phi Alpha at the University of Michig!!n visits elementary school class taught by a friend. (New York Times Photo)

TARGETS OF MILITANTS In the South, however, the great number of black college students continue to attend predomina~tlY black institutions where anxieties over racial isolauon are not as intense. On these campuses, fraternities are usually considered as conventional forms of social outlets and therefore are frequently the targets of militants who depolore their elitism and lack of relevance to the black struggle. Among other findings were the following: Liberal admission policies at Northern universities have broken the grip of socially affluent students on black fraternity membership. Social projects of black fraternity members in black causes generally surpass the standard cornf munity services (carwashs - charity drives) o white fraternities. The clan of black on white campuses has Jed to friction and tension in rare mutual activities such as interfraternity sports. Exclusion of whites from black fraternities tends to be justified in terms of race struggle and, in some instances, open hostitity to whites.

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~here are four national fraternities that started out in e early part of the century as all-black organizations r~main almost exclusively black today, although some c apters accept white members. t

They are: Alpha Phi Alpha, 179 chapters with about 3,000 active members; Kappa Alpha Psi, 145 chapters ~nd I 0,000 members; Omega Psi Phi and Beta Sigma, 02 chapters with I ,820 active members.

RAPID GROWTH TREND

Moreover, he said, "brothers are discouraged from dating white girls and they are expressly prohibited from bringing white girls to fraternity functions." "You're in social disgrace if word gets out you're seeing a white girl," commented Ron Clark, another Alpha member whose father is a Detroit postal worker. Formal dress - something almost absent now from white social gatherings - has currency among the Alpha brothers, in addition to coats and ties for other fraternity functions, according to Mr. Armstrong.

~11 four report dramatic membership upswings over the ast decade, with growth ranging from 50 per cent to IOO per cent since 1960.

"If you look sharp, you can act sharp," he said echoing a theme that was prevalent among white fraternity brothers a decade or more ago . "It's a matter of respect for yourself and your organization."

Furthermore, most of the .expansion came within the la~t five years as blacks in greater numbers were admh ttted to universities where the black profile in the past ad been low or nonexistent.

Pledges at Alpha spend at least 20 hours a week on projects in Ann Arbor's black community, including a Black Panther-style breakfast program for children.

Many chapters that had folded on some campuses as the result of apathy or the thin enrollment of blacks, were reactivated to provide an outlet for the new generation of students that swept through the doors of institutions that actively recruited black scholars. "In the past you had to be 'light, bright, and almost White' to be a member of Alpha here," said Mr. Armstrong, the Michigan chapter president. He sat in the chapter room of the small Alpha house on the edge of the Ann Arbor campus and pointed at a group portrait of Alpha brothers, Class of '52 . "Look at them," he urged a visitor. "All those folks Were high yellow sons of doctors - real bourgeois types Who came here with a sports car and carried around a brief case and a white girl friend. Now 90 per cent of ~ur guys come from the inner city of Detroit and are on ftnancial assistance of some kind."

"There's no more pledge servitude crap anymore," Mr. Armstrong explained, "no more shining shoes or cleaning toilets. Everybody works here. Down in the South, I hear, it's different because the atmosphere is different. There the pledges still put on song and dance shows, stuff like that, but our heads have no time for that anymore." However, the indoctrination of the pledge class resembles the techniques that have fallen into disrepute in the old-line fraternity. "You got to want to belong to this fraternity," Mr. Armstrong smiled, "so it's rough getting in here. We have one of the toughest pledge periods I've heard about, and the pledges come under a lot of mental and physical pressure. At Pennsylvania State University, the Omega Phi Psi's take a similar activist interpretation of their role on campus, according to Errol Shorter, the chapter president and a powerful voice in the university.

WHITE GROUPS HELD IRRELEVANT Mr. Armstrong dismissed the remaining white fraternities on the Michigan campus as irrelevant social clubs that have no specific goals. This opinion is apparently shared by a majority of students on this campus, which has spawned radical communes, cooperatives, and a violent Weatherman arm of the Students for a Democratic Society. That is why, he went on, no white students would be admitted as members of the Michigan chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha, the fraternity to which the late Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and the late Whitney M. Young, Jr. belonged to at other institutions. "Any white who tried to get in this chapter would just be curious", Mr. Armstrong said. "There was a time when drinking beer was all the white boys could do. Now it's drugs, and they can get high by themselves, so they don't need an organization."

CAMPUS POWER POLITICS "Our problem here was that we grew too fast," Mr. Shorter explained. The chapter has about 80 brothers and 40 pledges, making it one of the largest houses on campus. But there are advantages in size, and Mr. Shorter includes the other black fraternity chapters when he alludes to power politics on campus. "We are the strongest group at Penn State," he said. "We work with the Black Caucus, and we have members on all the committees. We plant our boys where we want theiTL We get position." He also talked about blacks banding together on campus for mutual protection. "We feel you're black first then in a fraternity. When the Man comes, he don't car~ what group you belong to; it becomes a skin game."

"We can't afford to lie around high all day because we have too many other things to do," he said, adding that all drugs, including marijuana, were banned at the chapter house. FALL '72/25


PI KAPPA PHI ALUMNI TOUR

MADRID-COSTA DEL SOL OCT. 5-12, 1973

NATII Presld

1837

Vi~a ~

51 24 Was

• •

• • • • • • • •

Pan American World Airways 707 or World Airways Jet 707. Atlanta/ Madrid, Spain. Return: Malaga/ Atlanta. (Charter based on 179 or 219 passengers.)

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Secret Writt St. I

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Meals and Beverages Served In Flight. Beautiful Plaza Hotel or new Mella Castilla Hotel.

40t Past 1

All Transfers and Baggage - Madrid.

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Cocktail Party, Plaza Hotel, wlth hot and cold hors d'oeuvre&.

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Full Amerlc~n Sreakfast eac

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11 4! Nart

• •

Air Tickets, Ma rjd/

• • • • • • •

4 Days and 3 Nlgfit , Playamar Resort Hotel, Torr

• •

Full American Breakfast

All Limousine Tran fers, all airports/ hotels.

All Luggage Handling.

Pre-Registration at both hotels.

Gala Farewell Bal)quet,

Treatl P. C

Scholl 11 5 Vale

alaga, Iberia Airline •

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TOTAL COST ALL ABOYE ITEMS - PE

ARE .II Area

PERSON - ONE WEEK ••.•••.•••• $397.00

All prices subject to change due to fluctuation o foreign currency and American currenc and to final contracts wit a·r ines and hotels. Return to:

American Travel Corporation Att'n: Ralph Breshears, Presiden P. 0. Box 25399 Raleigh, N. C. 27611

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Yes. We are interested in

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Yes. Please send me a complete- col r" brochure on the Pi

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trip.

Enclosed is our deposit ($50.00 per person)

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Price is $397. Amount enclosed

X

XIX)

CHAPTER -----------------------

X

ADDRESS ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Pi Ka

Otis I 4825

CITY_______________________ STATE------------ ZIP---------------Make check payable to Pi Kappa Phi, c/o American Travel Corporation at the above address.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------26/ THE STAR AND LAMP

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PI KAPPA PHI

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~ I>IATIONAL COUNCIL President-Ted Scharfenstein l~37 Laurel Rd ., Birmingham , a. 35216 • • President- John Wilson 5124 Scarsdale Rd .. N. W. TrWashington , D. C . 20016 easurer-A. J . Strickland , Ill P. 0. Box 4555, Seun,versity, AI. 35466 cr~tary-Aon Krebs, Standard Under~nters, Inc ., 7730 Carondelet Ave . C t. Louis , Mo . 63105 heplaln-Phil Tappy , 556 Timberland CDr., N. E., Atlanta, Ga. 30342 hancellor- Robert L. Bennett P 401 Main St .. Towanda, Pa . 16646 •~t President- Jack Steward . 4375 earl St .. Eugene, Ore . 97405 VI

NATIONAL HEADQUARTERS ~X&cutive Director-Durward W . Owen

lrector of Alumni Affairs-Jerry Gallups Field Secretaries-Joe Mclean, Mike Trull

NATIONAL COMMITTEES Trust Investment-John Daimler 1149 Green Tree Ln . Narbeth, Pa ., 19072 Scholarship-Fluker Stewart 115 W. Brookwood Dr . Valdosta, Ga . 31601 Rit~al and Insignia-Glenn McConnell L1ve Oak Plantation Ravenel, S. C. 29460 Advisory-Mel Metcalfe 411 World Trade Bldg . Port Arthur , Tex . 77640 Alumni-William Dudley 4563 Bexley Dr. Stone Mountain, Ga. 30063 Endowment-Richard Viguerie 1625 Conn. Ave ., N. w .. Suite 216, Washington , D. C. 20009 Nominating Committee-Mel Metcalf 411 World Trade Bldg . Port Arthur, Tex . 77640 Expansion Committee-Jerry Matthews P. 0 . Box 7326 Dallas, Tex . 75209

AREA GOVERNORS Area

Ill IV V VI VII VIII IX X XI XII XII XIV XV XVI XVII XVII XIX-XX XXI XXII

AI P. Brown, 522 Devon St. Kearn ey, N. J. 07032 Dave Dunn, 1137 Jefferson St. Allentown, Pa . 16103 Ken Forti, 3519 Raymoor Rd . Kensington , Md. 20795 Ernie Zinkowski. Quail Run Apts.-2142 Columbia, S. C . 29206 Larry E. McDaniel, 666 Hardwood Ct. Stone Mtn .. Ga . 30063 Jeff Everhart , 3303 Third Ave . N. St. Petersburg , Fla. 33713 Larry Gracie, 4523 Metropolitan New Orleans, La . 70126 Jim Daley, P. 0 . Box 651 Bloomington, Ind . 47401 William McKenzie, 9669 Sterling Allen Park , Mich . 46101 Martin R. Radtke, 126 1/2 W. Second Muscatine, Ia. 52761 Earl Layman, 2409 117th Ave .. W . Seattle, wash . 96119 Don Fletcher. 36 C lemson Ct . Walnut Creek, Ca . 94596 David McAllister, 5006-B Brompton Dr. Greensboro, N. C . 27407 John E. Baber, 4541 Glenbrook Dr. Kingsport, Tenn. 37664 Fox H. Brunson, 2751 Ralston Rd . Mobile , Ala. 36606 Jack Edmonds, 9 Danbury Cir. Amhurst. N. H. 03031 Dennis Hetzel, 12245 Corrida Ct. Maryland. Heights, Mo . 63042 Moyer D. Harris, 4615 Williams Ave. , N. W. Lawton, Ok . 73501 Vacant Richard Folger, 69 Berkley Rd. Avondale Est .. Ga. 30002 Bill Ford, 2901-A Rhodes Cir. Birmingham. Ala . 35205

PI Kappa Phi Scholarship Foundation Otis McCollum, Chairman 4825 Rodman St., N. W. Washington, 0 . C. 20016 Pi Kappa Phi Properties, Inc. Elmer Jost Rt. 2, Box 669 Deland, Fla. 21720

1924 Vail Avenue, Charlotte, North Carolina Founded at The College of Charleston, s. C.-December 10, 1904

-FOUNDERSSIMON FOGARTY, JR.

ANDREW A. KROEG, JR.

L.

HARRY MIXSON

CHAPTERS INSTITUTION

CHAPTER

Alabama Armstrong State Athens Auburn Augusta Belmont Abbey Bethel Brooklyn Poly California Central Michigan Charleston Cornell Drake Drexel East Carolina East Tennessee East Texas Florida Florida southern Florida State Georgia Georgia Southern Georgia Southwestern Georgia State ft~~~~~ Tech Illinois Tech Indiana Iowa State Jacksonville State Jacksonville LaGrange Lander

t~vJrs~~~oan state McNeese Mercer Memphis State Mich1gan State Missouri-Rolla Montevallo

Nebraska Nebraska-Omaha Newark North Carolina North North N. E. North

carolina-W Carolina State Missouri Georgia

North Texas State N. w. State-La. N. w. state-Dkla. Oklahoma Oklahoma State Old Dominion Oregon Oregon State Penn State Presbyterian Purdue Rensselaer Roanoke Samford Stetson south Alabama South Carolina Tampa Tennessee Tennessee Wesleyan Toledo Troy State Valdosta State Virginia VPI Washington washington & Lee Western Carolina West Virginia Tech Wofford

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AREA

ADDRESS

XV 312 University Ave., Tuscaloosa, Ala. 35407 XXI Box 102, 11935 Abercorn St., Savannah, Ga. 31406 XXII Athens College, P. 0. Box 232, Athens, Ala. 35611 XV 255 S. College St., Auburn, Ala . 36830 v 2500 Walton Way, Augusta, Ga. 30904 XIII Belmont Abbey, Belmont, N. C. 28012 XIV Bethel College, McKenzie, Tenn. 38201 I 33 Sidney Place, Brooklyn, N. Y. 11201 XII 2395 Piedmont Ave .. Berkeley, Calif. 94704 IX 1809 Demmg Apt. 5, Mt. Pleasant , Mi. 48858 IV 19 Green St., Charleston, s. c. 29401 I 722 University Ave., Ithaca, N. Y. 14851 X 3420 Kingman Blvd ., Des Moines, Iowa 50311 II 3405 Powelton Ave., Philadelphia, Pa . 19104 XIII 803 Hooker Rd., Greenville, N. C. 27834 XIV 519 W. Pine, Johnson City, Tenn. 37601 XVIII East Commerce Sta., Box W, Commerce, Tex. 75428 VI 11 Fraternity Row, Gainesville, Fla. 32601 VI Box 416, Lakeland, Fla. 33802 VI 536 W. College, Tallahassee, Fla. 32306 v 930 S. Milledge Ave., Athens, Ga. 30601 XXI Landrum Center, Box 8061, Statesboro, Ga. 30548 XXI 145 Taylor St., Americus, Ga. 31709 33 Gilmer St., S.E., Atlanta, Ga. 30303 v Ga. Tech Box 32715, N.W., Atlanta, Ga. 30313 v VIII 306 E. Gregory, Champaij!n. Ill. 61820 3333 S. Wabash Ave., Ch1cago, Ill. 60616 VIII VIII 408 North Indiana, Bloomington, Ind. 47403 407 Welch Ave., Ames, Iowa 50012 X XXII P. 0. Box 602, Jacksonville, Ala. 36265 Jacksonville University, Jacksonville, Fla. 32211 VI College, LaGrange, Ga. 30240 v LaGrange Box 189, Lander College, Greenwood, S. C. 29646 IV XV Box T, Livingston, Ala. 35470 Univ. Sta., Box 18640·A, Baton Rouge, La . 70803 VII VII McNeese Univ. Box 708, Lake Charles, La. 70601 XXI Box 112, Mercer Univ., Macon, Ga. 31207 XIV 3841 Spottswood Ave., Memphis, Tenn. 38111 IX 121 Whitehills Dr ., East Lansing, Mich. 48823 XVII 1704 Pine, Rolla, Mo. 65401 XXII Drawer K. Univ. of Montevallo. Montevallo, Alabama 35115 X 229 N. 17th St., Lincoln, Nebr. 68508 X 8770 Grand Avenue, Omaha, Nebraska 68134 I 249 High St., Newark, N. J. 07102 XIII 216 Finley Golf Course Rd., Chapel Hill, N. C. 27514 XIII 4612 Market St. 1 Wilmington, N. C. 28401 XIII 2401 W. Fratern1ty Ct., Raleigh, N. C. 27607 XVII 104 N. Baltimore, Kirksville. Missouri 63501 v Student Box 5125, North Georgia College, Dahlonega, Ga . 30533 XVIII 610 West Oak, Denton, Texas 76203 VII Box 3684, Natchitoches, La. 71457 XVIII N. W. State College, Alva, Okla. 73717 XVIII 930 Chautauqua, Norman, Ok. 73069 XVIII 1224 Univers1ty Ave., Stillwater, Okla. 74074 Ill 1516 Colonial Ave., Norfolk, Va. 23517 XI 1790 Alder St., Eugene, Ore. 97401 XI 2111 Harrison, Corvallis, Ore, 97330 II Box 197, State College, Pa. 16801 IV Presbyterian College, Clinton, s. C. 29325 VIII 330 N. Grant St., w. Lafayette, Ind. 47906 I 49 2nd St., Troy, N. Y. 12180 Ill 219 Market St., Salem, Va. 24153 XXII Samford Univ., Box 1032, Birmingham. Ala. 35209 VI 1241 Stetson, Deland, Fla. 32720 XV 287 Bay Front Road, Mobile, Ala. 36605 IV USC, Box 4711, Columbia, S. C. 29204 VI 304 Plant Ave., Tampa, Fla. 32606 XIV 1828 Fraternity Park, Knoxville, Tenn. 37916 XIV 344 Lynn Ave., Athens, Tenn . 37303 IX 1702 W. Bancroft St., Toledo, Ohio 43606 XV 712 N. Three Notch St .. Troy, Ala. 36081 XXI Box 89, Valdosta. Ga. 31605 Ill 510 Rugby Rd ., Charlottesville, Va. 22903 Ill Rt. 3. Box 20, Blacksburg. Va. 24860 XI 4520 21st, N.E., Seattle, Wash. 98105 Ill Lock Drawer 903, Lexington, Va. 24450 XIII P. 0. Box 1173, Cullowhee, N. C. 28723 Ill 641 Fayette Pike, Montgomery, W. Va. 25136 IV Wofford College, Spartanburg, S. c. 29301

COLONIES Morehead Mars Hill

XIV XIII

va. wesleyan Appalachian State Middle Tennessee State LSU-New Orleans Pembroke Western Kentucky North carolina-C U. of S. Flo rida Florence State U.

Ill X Iii XIV VII XIII XIV XIII VI XXII

Box 1247, Univ. P. 0., Morehead, Ky. 40351 c ; o William E. Newton Jr., P. 0. Box 607-T Mars Hill, N. C. 28754 ' Campus Box A-117. Norfolk. Va. 23502 Box 3985, Boone, N. C. 28607 MTSU Box 558, Murfreesboro, Tn. 37130 Box 787 LSUNO, New Orleans, La. 70122 311 South Main Street, Red Springs, N. C. 28377 Box 30, Western Kentucky Univ., Bowling Green, Ky. 42101 Box 621 Moore Hall, UNCC Station, Charlotte,N.C. 28212 Box 432, University Center. Tampa, Florida 33620 Box 1095, Florence. AI. 35630

FALL '12/27


Second Class Postage Paid at Charlotte, N. c.

NATIONAL HEADQUARTERS

PI KAPPA PHI FRATERNITY P. 0. Box 4608 CHARLOTIE, N. C. 28204

p EMF

To

SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON FRATERNITY P.

0.

BOX

EVANSTON,

18S6

IL.

60204

Many Pi Kapp undergraduates find it hard to secure summer employment. Under the Employment Coordination Program, you can help. Help your firm find young talent, help a young Pi Kapp earn money for school, and help yourself by making a fine new friend. Please complete the form below and mail it today to:

PLEASE COMPLETE FORM AND MAIL NOWI This information will be forwarded to all undergraduate chapters on March 1, 1973

,.....

___________________________________ ------------------------------------- -路-- ------ .... ______,_______ _.

MAIL

TO~

...............

Employment Coordination Program Pi Kappa Phi Fraternity P. 0. Box 4608 Charlotte, N. C. 28204

From: ------------------------------------

Title: - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Name of Organization: ___________________________ Phone No: _________ Address: ------------------------L--------------------------------Job Description or Ski lis required: - - - - - - - - -------------------------------- -Location (if different from above): -----------------------------------------Contact (Name and Title): ---------------------------------------------- Remarks:

(Date)

(Signature)

路------ .. ------------------------.------------- --------------------- .. ---- .. ------------------- ----~------ ------- .. ------------- ...

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