NEWS FROM HQ P. 04
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OUR NEWEST CHAPTER P. 08 | EXECUTIVES ACADEMY RECAP P. 10
THE RECORD VOLUME 138, ISSUE NUMBER 1
RENEW FOCUS BUILDING A LEGACY
ALSO FEATURED:
FIFTY YEARS OF BROTHERHOOD AND FRIENDSHIPRNITY ON Spring 2019
AND:
FROM ZERO TO ZEAL BACK INTO THE CHAPTER HOUSE
INSIDER
UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI (Ohio Epsilon) alumni from the 1940s and 1950s reunited at the chapter house. This was the first time many had seen each other since graduation.
ROGER HARRISON (Westminster '67) was inducted into the Oklahoma Higher Education Hall of Fame for his writings and teachings on chemical and biomedical engineering.
JIM GAINES (Middle Tennessee State '69) reached the $50,000 giving level in lifetime contributions, making him a member of the Rudolph Society.
KEN HODGES (Emory '88) was elected to the Georgia Court of Appeals. He previously served as the district attorney for Dougherty County (Georgia).
RICHARD WALKER (Middle Tennessee State '81) received the 2018 Dr. Kent L. Gardner Award from the Association of Fraternity & Sorority Advisors. This award recognizes a senior college/university administrator who exemplifies commitment to fraternities and sororities through the development of partnerships, creation of positive change, and mentoring of new and seasoned professionals.
The football team at VALDOSTA STATE won the Division II NCAA National Championship. Assistant Coach Darin Winters was a founding father of the chapter at McDaniel College (Maryland Mu).
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THE RECORD
CONTENTS
FEATURES FIFTY YEARS OF BROTHERHOOD AND FRIENDSHIP
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One Miami (Ohio) alumnus single-handedly keeps the flame of friendship burning.
FROM ZERO TO ZEAL
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The undergraduate chapter at California State-San Marcos goes from near closure to model group.
CONTACTS FRATERNITY SERVICE CENTER: www.sae.net, (847) 475-1856 LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: jsao@sae.net ADDRESS CHANGES: tstokesbary@sae.net, ext. 212 CHAPTER SERVICES: jkovalan@sae.net EXPANSION: kshatto@sae.net FOUNDATION: wgrimsley@sae.net CHAPTER BILLING: rpometta@sae.net, ext. 217 CHAPTER CRISIS: jkovalan@sae.net SCHOLARSHIPS & AWARDS: jirwin@sae.net, ext. 232
THE RECORD • SPRING 2019
MEDIA & PUBLIC RELATIONS: jsao@sae.net, ext. 226 TO MAKE A RECRUITMENT RECOMMENDATION: www.sae.net/forms TO SUBMIT A NEWS ITEM: Editor, 1856 Sheridan Road, Evanston, Illinois 60201-3837 or jsao@sae.net FOLLOW US: Facebook Sigma Alpha Epsilon Fraternity
RENEW FOCUS BUILDING A LEGACY
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Snapchat @saefraternity
The chapter at the University of Arkansas rennovates their house and in the process redefines teamwork. 1
CONTENTS
THE RECORD
THE RECORD OF SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON • SPRING 2019
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The Record of Sigma Alpha Epsilon Published Continuously Since 1880 Circulation 10,000 Executive Editor JOHNNY SAO Art Director NEIGERDESIGN Copyright © 2019 Sigma Alpha Epsilon Fraternity
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The Sigma Alpha Epsilon Fraternity Service Center is located at the Levere Memorial Temple in Evanston, IL. For more information, call (847) 475-1856 weekdays between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. CST. Other communications information: (847) 475-2250, fax; jsao@sae.net, e-mail; www.sae.net, https://therecordonline.net, websites.
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CEO & Eminent Supreme Recorder Michael Sophir (Nebraska '85). THE 2017-2019 SUPREME COUNCIL Eminent Supreme Archon Thomas J. Dement II (Middle Tennessee State ’90) Eminent Supreme Deputy Archon Gregory D. Brandt (Drake ’84) Eminent Supreme Warden Michael J. Corelli (Northern Illinois ’01) Eminent Supreme Herald Michael S. Rodgers (William & Mary ’92) Eminent Supreme Chronicler Mark W. McDonough (Youngstown State ’96) Honorary Eminent Supreme Archon Larry D. Shackelford (Texas Christian ’69) Sigma Alpha Epsilon is a proud member of the
ON THE COVER
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Sigma Alpha Epsilon has a storied past, but more importantly a bright future. Our cover reflects the importance of focusing on what lies ahead for the Fraternity.
48 SPECIAL THANKS 3 ������� VOICE OF THE ESA Tom Dement reflects on the state of the Fraternity.
4 ������� NEWS FROM HQ Find out the latest
news from 1856 Sheridan Road and the Fraternity Service Center.
6 ������� NEWS BRIEFS We’ve gathered the best
stories and updates from our Realm over the past year so you can hear about tidbits and accomplishments.
8 ������� CHAPTER INSTALLATIONS The Realm
expanded this past year with a new chapter, and we welcome them to our brotherhood.
10 ����� TRUE GENTLEMAN INITIATIVE A recap of
the inagural Executives Academy and the future of educational programming.
27 ����� FOUNDATION The Foundation looks at some of the most important aspects of what it provides to our members in support of its mission and objectives.
31 ����� DONORS We recognize all who donated to Sigma Alpha Epsilon in 2018.
44 ����� F&H CORPORATION A profile on Wendy
Watson, who has served as House Director for two chapters.
46 ����� IN PROFILE Read about how Joe Anderson stays involved decades after graduating.
48 ����� RANT Jeremy Bellman reflects on his time
at the Executives Academy and how SAE has helped him deal with personal issues.
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The Record’s publication staff thanks the various contributing writers for the articles that form this edition. We are also grateful to the Foundation and SAE Financial & Housing Corporation for providing content that reaffirms the Fraternity's mission and goals to our readers. A heartful appreciation goes to Anna Gath for her proofing efforts. Lastly, a special thank you to the team at NeigerDesign, who continually goes above and beyond with encapsulating our vision.
VOICE OF THE
ESA
GREETINGS BROTHERS Serving as your Eminent Supreme Archon over the past year and a half has been both enlightening and rewarding. Your Supreme Council set forth an aggressive agenda focused on enhanced education, moving the organization ever forward and meeting challenges head-on. I have had the opportunity to meet many great men, our youngest and our oldest, and I am constantly inspired by the spirit, enthusiasm, and, often times, hard work that our Brothers, regardless of age, display as they build on the proud legacy of ΣAE. During the biennium, the professional staff, with guidance from the Supreme Council, has embarked on a number of initiatives to enrich the ΣAE experience for our members and particularly our undergraduates. Eighty-three years have passed since John O. Moseley envisioned an educational experience for our Brothers, the first of its kind in the country. And, as is often said, to be copied is the greatest form of compliment. Today, every major national fraternity and sorority offers education to their members, and now ΣAE is moving the needle again. After significant evaluation, planning and building, we have embarked on the next big step in our journey. While the spirit of the John O. Moseley Leadership School will continue, we are building on that legacy with a vision of reaching more men, more often and in more places. Starting in March 2019, we begin the evolution of the traditional once-a-year school with plans to deliver four District Academies each year by 2020. In 2019, we’ll host the inaugural event at the Levere THE RECORD • SPRING 2019
Memorial Temple and the other dates and locations will be announced this spring. These new geographically distributed programs will focus on emerging leaders and advisors and will allow us to connect with and mentor far more men throughout the Realm. We have spent countless hours in focus groups, town halls, and surveys to learn what our men seek. This process has identified the need for greater personal and professional development, in conjunction with the chapter leadership and operations programming that have been part of the Leadership School for decades. This past January, we convened our first Executives Academy, another program built on the foundation of the original Leadership School model. This program focused on leadership training for our chapter presidents, recruitment chairmen, health and safety officers, and chapter advisors. The inaugural program had more than 350 Brothers in attendance. Next year, we will invite more officers to join us, increasing the impact on all chapters across the Realm. I am very proud of the success that we have had with the DeVotie Ritual Institute. In seven short years, this has become our most in-demand program. The impact has been far-reaching and in order to expand the program, it will be held in July 2019, rather than November. This shift will allow us to move beyond the interior walls of the Temple and utilize the outdoor areas as well. It is so very fulfilling to see our members coming to the Levere Memorial Temple and discovering the beauty and meaning of our home. They arrive with a hunger for knowledge about the ritual and eager to learn how to use its lessons and meanings to enhance their value system and guide them in reaching their greatest potential. Understanding our ritual, history, and creed is what truly separates us from other fraternities. Our programs are vital, yet our education model extends far beyond our events. Also in development are new programs and services designed to create individual and chapter incentives to encourage men to excel and, in return, to be rewarded. We have new online curriculum being developed to better prepare our men for the responsibilities of membership and new experiential programs being designed to enhance the bid-to-initiate (96 hours) experience for every chapter. Communicating all that we are doing is still being featured in our longstanding magazine, “The Record,” and a new model is also taking hold. If you have not taken the time to access “The Record Online,” I urge you to do so at www.therecordonline.net. For many years, we’ve been told you wanted more “good news” about the Fraternity and wanted it more frequently. The Record Online makes that a reality and it’s quickly becoming, as intended, your ΣAE good news channel. 3
Along with the many good things going on, we have also heard your concerns. We have faced challenges and worked diligently to address them. We are not perfect, but the passion and desire to be all we can be, drives us every day. To that end, we created the True Gentleman Task Force in the fall of 2017. We asked that they explore our key messages and brand identity. Armed with that information, and with the support of a professional agency, we met with several focus groups in the summer of 2018, comprised of students, volunteers, staff, and external constituents. We learned a lot about ourselves, our mission, our history, and our passion for the future. That led to an increased understanding and commitment to how we present ΣAE, define ourselves and our brand. Our strengthened identity will infuse our communication and our visual presence and over the next few months, you will begin to see a new look built on a familiar and meaningful story, so that together we can rise above our challenges, seize opportunities, and reach new heights. I am also very excited for our upcoming 163rd Anniversary Convention to be held in Louisville, Kentucky in June. This will be a great opportunity for our members to come together to elect our new leadership and to guide the organization into the future. Many have spoken to us about the purpose and opportunities presented by the gathering of Brothers at the Convention. We are excited to offer a slightly varied approach from the past. This year we will be having one business session devoted to breakouts centered on education. These discussions will be facilitated, open dialogue groups intended to expand understanding around key issues and priorities facing the Fraternity and Greek-life community. In addition to these educational programs, and coupled with the more traditional components of the Convention, I expect we will have a little fun as well. This will be my last opportunity to speak to you as the voice of the ESA within the pages of this magazine. It has been my honor to serve you and I appreciate the support and contribution of so very many of you. I look forward to continuing to serve the Fraternity following my service on the Supreme Council. ΣAE really is about more than one man, one chapter, or one campus. The Fraternity reaches deep into the communities where we live and serve. I believe that together we can achieve when we strive ever higher in the spirit of Phi Alpha! Phi Alpha,
Thomas J. Dement II
NEWS FROM HQ ORDER OF DEVOTIE
DEVOTIE RITUAL INSTITUTE
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Established in 2011, the DeVotie Ritual Institute is to-date the only Ritual-based educational event that any Greek-letter organization offers. Since its inception, the school has been hosted at our headquarters, the historic Levere Memorial Temple. To accommodate for its growth and other educational initiatives, the program is moving to the summer educational window. For more information, please visit www.sae.net/dri.
CONVENTION Designated as the largest chapter meeting, Convention meets every other year to discuss important business for the Fraternity, including law proposals and elections for the Supreme Council. Most importantly, the event will bring together undergraduate and alumni brothers from across the Realm to share ideas and enjoy one another's company. The 163rd Anniversary Convention will take place in Louisville, Kentucky, June 20-22, 2019.
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The Order of DeVotie is the newest addition to Sigma Alpha Epsilon's illustrious recognition program. It is presented to a collegiate or alumni member for recognition of proficiency in the Ritual of Sigma Alpha Epsilon Fraternity. This honor encourages undergraduate participation and excellence in the use of our Ritual at all appropriate occasions as well as to recognize alumni members for their volunteer service and commitment to promote proper usage of our Ritual at the chapter level. For more information visit www.sae.net/awards.
LEADERSHIP SCHOOL Sigma Alpha Epsilon has a rich history in being leaders of education, being the first Greek-letter organization to host a leadership conference. To meet the ever-changing needs and demands of the Fraternity, the John O. Moseley Leadership School will be evolving. The educational programming will be hosted across four District Academies, one in each regional district. This new model opens attendance opportunities for those previously unable to travel for the former yearly event. The inaugural District Academy will take place the last weekend of March 2019. END
BOSTON CONSORTIUM Members of the Boston Consortium (Massachusetts Beta-Alpha) assisted in preparing the Chelsea Community Gardens for the winter season. This is an ongoing service project in which the chapter will also help prepare the gardens for the spring.
CALIFORNIA STATE – NORTHRIDGE
EVANSVILLE The undergraduates raised $5,000 for Chemo Buddies, a program that puts volunteers in the chemotherapy treatment room directly with patients, making the treatment day a more comfortable experience physically, mentally, and spiritually. The chapter began donating time and money to Chemo buddies in honor of Torrin Madden's ('18) mother who had passed away from breast cancer in 2016.
The chapter welcomed 15 members during the fall 2018 recruitment period. One of the initiates, Dillon Porter, is a multi-generational legacy. His father, Ross Porter III (UC-Santa Barbara '86), and his grandfather, Ross Porter, Jr. (Oklahoma '60) attended the ceremony and pinned Dillon with the badge of his great-grandfather, Dillon Porter, Sr. (Carnegie Mellon 1924). Dillon is the 10th member of his family to join the Fraternity. Ross Porter, Sr. (Carnegie Mellon 1924) Ross Porter, Jr. (Oklahoma '60) Peter Porter (Oklahoma '63) John Porter (Oklahoma '67) Ed McCord (Tulane '71) Dr. Ross Porter III (UC-Santa Barbara '86) Todd Porter (Oklahoma State '87) Wes Porter (Occidental '91) Payne Porter (Oklahoma State '19) Dillon Porter (Cal State-Northridge '21)
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NEWS BRIEFS
TEXAS A&M Undergraduate members assist with mentoring local grade school students. Established in 2009 by Sigma Chi, the program now includes the local Chi Phi and Sigma Alpha Epsilon undergraduate chapters. Tutoring services are free of charge and take place twice a week during the academic year.
CENTRAL MICHIGAN The undergraduate members donated $1,250 to Hurley Children's Hospital. Fundraisers were held on campus, including pie-throwing and sorority sponsored events.
Photo by Shakirat Adetunji
WILLIAM & MARY The chapter teamed up with Alpha Chi Omega to fundraise for local survivors of domestic violence. After just one week of tabling, the brothers raised $3,897. All proceeds will go towards supplies, such as toothbrushes, body wash, and bags for the survivor's clinic.
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MISSISSIPPI STATE The chapter hosted the inaugural Bats & BBQ Home Run Derby, a philanthropy event with 100% of the proceeds going to YoungLife. Gathering at the campus softball field, participants included the other Greek-letter organizations and the school’s baseball team. The event raised $7,250—enough to send 20 kids to camp. Last year, the Starkville branch had only $1,400 in the camp fund— enough to send three kids to camp. The chapter plans on making the derby an annual outing. The group also hosted Cheese Fry Night, a fundraiser for the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation; 300 people attended the event and raised $2,000 in only three hours. END
WICHITA STATE Nate Schwiethale ('00) helped develop Wichita Police Department's Homeless Outreach Team, a program that assists homeless in the area. The team works in partnership with homeless service providers and businesses to refer homeless to their resources. They also give assistance in resumé building and job referrals. One gentleman recently earned an associates degree through the team's initiatives. Nate also hosts a leadership training at Province Zeta Leadership School.
WESTERN KENTUCKY The undergraduate members at Western Kentucky continued the long-standing tradition of running a football to an away game. The 100-mile "Run So They Can Ride" took place prior to the football game versus Middle Tennessee State and raised money for the World Bicycle Relief. Relay founder Richard Ziegler ('68) returned to celebrate the 50th Anniversary of the relay, running the opening leg with Eminent Archon Joe Webb. Fifteen other members completed the run in 13 hours. The event raised over $15,000 in 2018.
100-MILE RUN THE RECORD • SPRING 2019
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CHAPTER INSTALLATIONS
WELCOME TO OUR REALM
BUCKNELL UNIVERSITY
Colonization Date: August 31, 2016 Installation Date: April 7, 2018 Location: Lewisburg, PA Institution Founded: 1893 Student Population: 3,700
PENNSYLVANIA ZETA CURRENT CHAPTER SIZE: 56
CAMPUS TIDBIT: IN THEIR WORDS:
Bucknell University is a private liberal arts institution located in Lewisburg, Pennsylvania. The campus sits on the west banks of the Susquehanna River. It features programs in the arts, humanities, sciences, education, management, and engineering. The school has produced a high number of renowned authors including Pulitzer Prize winners and New York Times Best Selling authors. END
The Pennsylvania Zeta chapter chartered on April 7, 2018. During the colonization process, bonds began forming between brothers which continue to strengthen as the chapter evolves and grows. As the presence of the fraternity grows on campus, the brothers of ΣAE have also been dedicated to helping the town of Lewisburg, through countless community service events. All 56 brothers are devoted to embodying what it means to be a True Gentleman.
THE BROTHERS OF ΣAE HAVE ALSO BEEN DEDICATED TO HELPING THE TOWN OF LEWISBURG, THROUGH COUNTLESS COMMUNITY SERVICE EVENTS.
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48 Founding Fathers Ranish Byanjankar Drew Hopkins Doug Thomas Tobias Cozzolino Sam Ritter Benjamin Langley Matthew Mead Jordan Sechler James Hamm Charles Hennessey IV Philip Leblebicioglu Matt O’Donnell Nathan Ortiz Garrett Strunk Benjamin Twigg Gunnar Vorwerk Roland Crystal Minzhi Chen Jack Chambers Bobby Cao Andrew Alvermann Curtis Bliamptis Aleksander Bloschichak Jordan Gelman Owen Kennelly Ryan Martinez Pakawat Pamornsut Justin Pinard Abdul Mateen Qureshi Tyler Strobel Michael Erickson Zachary Feit Zachary Forman Zebulon Gordon III William Kinsella Rafael Orozco Caleb Paasche Harrison Ward Samuel Rosenblatt Gaetano DeSanctis Patric Dempsey James Cobbinah Jordan Beacham
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TGI TRUE GENTLEMAN INITIATIVE
EXECUTIVES ACADEMY When one thinks of visiting Chicago, early January does not seem optimal, unless of course you are a polar bear. Yet, from January 4 through January 6, 377 members and guests of Sigma Alpha Epsilon ignored the weather and filled the Marriott O’Hare for the first-ever ΣAE Executives Academy. While it was chilly outside, this group brought enough enthusiasm, hard work, and brotherhood to warm even Chicago’s coldest winter days. Evolving out of the former Eminent Archon Institute, the inaugural Executives Academy furthered ΣAE’s mission to educate our members, both undergraduate and alumni, by expanding the program to include Eminent Archons, Health and Safety Officers, Recruitment Chairmen, and Chapter Advisors. A great cross-section 10
In another first for ΣAE , every attendee and facilitator took the Birkman Method personality assessment prior to arrival in Chicago. Birkman is a highly regarded program of almost 300 questions that yields results about a person’s personality, motivators, and needs, with a system of four colors to categorize individual traits, communication styles, and stress responses. Throughout the weekend, the results of the assessment were explained and explored so that everyone could learn about themselves and how to work with different personalities in the most productive and harmonious way possible. On Saturday evening, a caravan of buses took everyone to the Levere Memorial Temple to tour our magnificent headquarters while enjoying brotherhood, roundtable discussions, and Chicago-style pizza. During this visit, initiated members recommitted themselves as ΣAE s when the group recited the membership oath in the Chapel in a moving and special moment for all, culminating in “Friends” and the ΣAE yell that could be heard all over Evanston. The Executives Academy was a first, in and of itself, and it also signals the beginning of ΣAE’s renewed commitment to expanding our educational programming and revitalizing our educational efforts. These exciting opportunities lie ahead:
Executives Academy
of brothers included 134 Eminent Archons, 80 Health and Safety Officers, 95 Recruitment Chairmen, and 21 Chapter Advisors—combining to represent 150 chapters. During leadership tracks for each officer and Chapter Advisors, the brothers were able to drill down on issues and solutions for their specific duties. Roundtable discussions were facilitated by alumni, staff, the Supreme Council, and education professionals who helped shape the program. Subsequent general sessions brought everyone together for more global-reaching topics including a “Town Hall” featuring panelists comprised of parents, a paramedic, and attorney and Eminent Supreme Archon Tom Dement. The entire weekend was declared a “safe space and safe place” to encourage conversation and questions that might otherwise be difficult to ask and to promote open, heartfelt discussions. THE RECORD • SPRING 2019
In January 2020, the Executives Academy will move from the Windy City to Phoenix, Arizona. This will allow us the opportunity to add Eminent Deputy Archons, Eminent Treasurers, Member Educators, and more Advisors to the program. It will be held at the Sheraton Grand at Wild Horse Pass on January 3-5, 2020.
District Academies: Programs for Emerging Leaders
In March 2019, we unveil the evolution of the John O. Moseley Leadership School with our new District Academies. For decades, brothers have talked about how valuable it would be if we could reach more students and alumni and do so more frequently. Delivering these programs regionally provides that opportunity and reduces the cost to participate. The first Academy will be held March 29-30, 2019, in Evanston, Illinois with the central experience occurring in the Levere Memorial Temple and on the Northwestern University campus. We will add two more of these programs in the fall of 2019, with those dates and locations 11
150 Chapters 134 Eminent Archons 80 Health and Safety Officers 95 Recruitment Chairmen 21 Chapter Advisors
TGI TRUE GENTLEMAN INITIATIVE
to be announced this spring. By 2020, we will be offering four programs each year with the potential to reach thousands of our men as opposed to only hundreds. As these programs take root, we will be able to offer more opportunities for volunteerism to help support these programs. So, what will make these unique and different? •
OUR FOCUS will be on emerging and growing leaders.
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THE PROGRAM will be an intensive experience occurring over 1.5 days. It will include personal development, leadership development, and more.
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WE’LL OFFER not just ΣAE-based programming,
John O. Moseley had a vision for leadership education and famously said, “We have a schoolhouse, now we need a school.” In the 83 years since, ΣAE has been providing quality educational programming to our members. The world has changed and how we communicate has also changed in both style and speed. Our upcoming programs recognize these facts, so while we celebrate our past, we are taking what we have learned, tailoring it to today’s world, and extending our reach to undergraduates and alumni alike. Why, you ask? Because together we can challenge ourselves to rise to new heights of achievement, seek new opportunities, and strive always to be True Gentlemen.
but opportunities to deliver resources that students have identified as priorities including things like building resumés, writing skills, networking, marketing, and more.
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Undergraduates sit in various sessions at Levere Memorial Temple.
WE’LL DELIVER the programs by district,
but any brother from any chapter throughout the country can attend any program he wants and as often as he likes. And, we can offer these programs at 2/3 less cost to our members than the annual program model used to cost.
DeVotie Ritual Institute
Our most in-demand program to date will expand and move from November to July. Why? Because what better time to focus on our values, mission, and Ritual than just before our brothers head back to their campuses for the new school year. If you have not experienced this program, we invite you to join us! It’s far more than just learning details about the Ritual ceremony. It builds on our history and focuses on the future. It’s a place to learn how our values and our mission provide the impetus for chapter health, leadership, and personal development. This program is open to both students and alumni, so join us on the weekend of July 26-29, 2019 at the Levere Memorial Temple.
Wellness Initiative
A personal health and wellness program is in development and we hope to have more to share with you regarding this program later in 2019. Designed to support our brothers of any age and any generation, we’ll focus on physical, emotional, mental, spiritual and nutritional wellness. Our goal is to bring together our brothers of every generation to learn and support one another in our quest to be healthy True Gentlemen. END 12
THE OFFICIAL STORE OF
SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON F R AT E R N I T Y J E W E L RY - M E M O R A B I L I A - G I F T S
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RENEW
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FO
BUILDING A LEGACY By Julia Johnston, Contributing Writer
CUS
Y
e ancient fathers of our clan, we bow our hearts to thee… These are the words sung by decades of ΣAEs all around the country before we sit down to break bread with one another. It is in the dining room, the place where meals bring more than just nutrition, you hear laughter, build camaraderie, and create memories. But, what happens if the dining room, the heart of the home, is too small to accommodate its family? For the ΣAE chapter at the University of Arkansas, one of ΣAE’s largest, the solution to this challenge brought together brothers from over six decades, pouring their own hearts into transforming the dining room, the entire house and, in fact, the chapter itself. The vision of early generations of ΣAE brothers at the University of Arkansas to have a special place to call home first became reality in the early 1950s when the grand colonial-style house on the hill was built. In the years since, the house served the chapter well; but times change and while there had been some updates, especially in the 2000s when central heat and air conditioning were added and wiring and plumbing were upgraded, it was still a 60-year-old structure with limitations such as the dining room that would only seat about 70 of the 200 plus members. For the men of Arkansas Alpha-Upsilon, the challenge presented by their beloved home became an opportunity to bridge generations, unified in the common goal of working together in the spirit of ΣAE brotherhood to revitalize this very special place. In 2013, plans began to renovate the house to meet the changing needs of today’s students while ensuring that generations of men could return to campus on any given gameday and know they belonged. So, as men of varying ages came together in the name of ΣAE to reinvigorate the place they had each called home, brotherhood took root among men who otherwise may never have known each other.
Behaving in the manner of the True Gentleman
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“ If we just hold our course and build on what we're doing as a Fraternity, we'll get better and better and better. Our mission is scholarship and brotherhood and leadership; we're building leaders for the country.” –Tommy Hodges
As with all projects, first they needed a plan. Enter Tommy Hodges, a 1964 graduate; Ted Gammill, a 1975 graduate; Alex Flemister, class of 2017; Blake Flemister, class of 2019; and a host of other brothers teaming up with the common goal of making their home the best on campus. Each had skills necessary to make this dream become a reality. Tommy Hodges started volunteering with ΣAE in 1990 when he was a member of the alumni commission for the ΣAE chapter at Southern Methodist University. When he moved back to Arkansas in 1994, he immediately joined the house corporation and lent his building expertise to the chapter. Ted Gammill has volunteered for ΣAE for 20 or more years, investing in generations of men as the chapter advisor, driving back and forth between Little Rock and Fayetteville to provide mentoring, coaching, and guidance to the undergraduate brothers. In his opinion, being a chapter in good standing isn’t good enough and to be the best requires each man to understand his unique role in the success of the chapter and, thus, ΣAE. He works hard to champion loyalty
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and positive behaviors and fully supports ΣAE’s no pledging stance. “You don’t need a pledge program to foster loyalty. Having the members work together and learn to support each other by building strong relationships and open communication is what forms deeper, lasting bonds.” Alex and Blake Flemister, real-life brothers as well as ΣAE brothers, were today’s leaders on the project. Alex served as Eminent Deputy Archon and later as Eminent Archon, while Blake took the same path following Alex’s graduation, later becoming Eminent Archon as the house reopened. In 2013, Tommy, Ted, the house corporation, and the alumni advisors all agreed that it was time for a major renovation, but it would cost money. While the University would be supplying a portion of the funding, it was determined that an additional $3 million would be needed to make the necessary changes. Tommy and other alumni soon got to work on the fundraising goal that may have seemed daunting at first. But as time went on, the house corporation learned the true passion of the chapter’s alumni as donations poured in as a result of hundreds of phone calls made by the
Some of the major renovations include a new kitchen, game room, fire sprinkler system, and reception hall. But perhaps the most impressive is the new dining room, or Great Hall, which spans two floors and can seat two hundred people, so everyone can join for dinners, meetings, and events.
“ It’s stunning from the moment you walk in.” –Linda McDougal
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High above the grand staircase that leads from the dining room to the tv/game room hangs a J.O. Buckley (Arkansas ’63) painting, donated to the chapter for their newly dedicated chapter house. It is based on a photo from 1960 and depicts chapter members at that time. Buckley was a longtime professor of drawing, painting, and history at the University of Arkansas and also taught overseas at the American School of Tangier in Morocco. A very accomplished painter, his work has been featured at the United States Capitol Building, the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City, and various institutions across Arkansas.
Fast facts: • T he chapter has produced 5 governors and 2 senators. • T he Alpha-Upsilon Chapter is the largest ΣAE chapter in the nation. • The new ΣAE house at University of Arkansas now has eight columns which were named after the eight founders of the Fraternity.
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A Chat with House Mom, Linda McDougal Linda McDougal celebrated her first anniversary as Sigma Alpha Epsilon’s house mom in January of 2019. After working for sororities around the US for her entire career, Linda accepted a role with her first fraternity, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, in January of 2018. Initially she agreed to come on board for one semester to test the waters, but now she can’t picture working with any other organization. She says, “I can’t say enough nice things about these guys!” Linda believes the alumni, the undergraduate membership, and the house’s staff work together to make the environment supportive and warm. “It’s a good place to be!”
house corporation members. Ultimately, more than 80 men gave selflessly and the $3 million goal was achieved. The house corporation later held a special event to honor the Distinguished Alumni who gave $25,000 or more, and the room was full. While plans were being made to raise the funding, plans were also being made on how to spend it. But, this was no case of “alumni are paying for it, so we’ll be the ones to design it.” From day one, Tommy knew that the current members’ voices were paramount in the renovations. According to Alex, “Tommy was very adamant about getting a student involved, and I was involved through the entire process.” Alex attended housing corporation meetings with the University and contractors. He acted as a student representative and as go-between, voicing the ideas, thoughts, and opinions of the undergraduate membership. After the meetings, he then explained the decisions and plans to ΣAE members and kept them up-to-date.
“ I think the members that are active in the Fraternity come away with a great fraternity experience.” –Ted Gammill
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The teamwork (i.e. the brotherhood) approach paid off and after five years of planning, fundraising, and construction, the ΣAE brothers moved into the house in January 2018, with the official dedication this past October. The renovations include a new kitchen, game room, fire sprinkler system, and reception hall. The most impressive new feature is the dining room, or Great Hall, which spans two floors and can seat 200 people—the heart of the home that allows everyone to join for dinners, meetings, and events. So, drop by the chapter some evening, see the crowd of faces gathered around the tables, and savor the smell of home-cooking in the air. Listen carefully and you’ll hear the conversations of men talking about their classes, offering advice to one another, laughing together and building lasting memories—because that’s what brothers do when they break bread together daily in their home on this hill in Fayetteville, Arkansas. END
D
FIFTY YEARS OF BROTHERHOOD AND FRIENDSHIP
ennis Roarty (Miami Ohio ’67) explains that he was “never NOT an ΣAE.” From the moment he walked no more than a foot into the Tudorstyle house and met a group of affable young men, Roarty knew he’d found his home. Back then, he had no idea that his membership in the Miami University chapter in Oxford, Ohio would go far beyond the badge, the handshake, and the songs. It would create a bond between a collection of diverse men that would last decades, reach across oceans and provide ballast through the worst of times. Let’s flash back to 1963. President Kennedy was still alive. No one had ever heard of The Supremes. Cars were prohibited on the Miami campus. And Roarty was just beginning his ΣAE journey during a time he calls “the golden age” of fraternities. "Fraternity life was a major part of the university experience,” relates the retired real estate broker, now 73. “Intramural sports were organized around fraternities. Fraternities had houses, and sororities did not. Because we had a house, we bonded.” That’s what happens when you eat, sleep, study, and live with your brothers under one roof. Roarty was also attracted by the makeup of the ΣAE house. He vividly remembers a hodgepodge of personalities from across the country. Athletes, academics, guys with thick accents from Boston and the Deep South, Christians, Jews—the Miami University chapter was ahead of its time on the diversity front. And even with this array of backgrounds—and maybe because of them—there was a unity, a thread knitting them all together.
By Molly Worth, Contributing Writer
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So it felt jarring in the spring of 1967 when the University switched from semesters to a trimester system. Some brothers left abruptly after the winter semester, having unexpectedly reached their required credits. Roarty explains that brothers with whom he was particularly close were in a hurry to pursue either graduate school and the draft deferment or the military, like Roarty who served in the Navy. With few returning for a graduation ceremony much later in August, there was little time for goodbyes or making plans to keep in touch. “There was no closure,” remembers Roarty. That unfortunate series of events proved to be the impetus Roarty needed to organize his now legendary reunions. Nelson Vogel, who met Roarty when “Roars” was his new member educator in 1965, relates that he was able to keep in touch with a few brothers post-graduation. “It wasn’t until about 10 to 15 years following graduation that Dennis took it upon himself to track down and collect addresses and phone numbers of the members of ’66, ’67 and ’68, as well as a few from ’64, ’65 and ’69,” says Vogel. This was no easy task in those analog years. Roarty found an old paper directory and made phone calls. He was surprised by the response, and not long after, 15 ΣAE brothers and their wives gathered in Roarty’s hometown of Oceanside, Maryland. “It was terrific,” he reflects. “Really, the land of genuine smiles. You couldn’t draw smiles that big!” With that turnout, Roarty went for broke and invited a larger number of brothers to Oxford, Ohio, to attend homecoming weekend in the mid-80s. “We had about 50 guys show up,”
THE RECORD • SPRING 2019
enthuses Roarty about the reunion, which drew brothers from Washington, Florida, Arizona, New York, D.C., Maryland, and even France and Bermuda. “I had two wives come up and say ‘I’ve never seen my husband like this.’” Roarty continued to arrange similar reunions every four to five years. “During reunions held in Oxford,” says Vogel, “Dennis would make it a point to gather the actives and speak to them about the lifetime benefits of Miami ΣAE brotherhood, the camaraderie of our own group, and end his ‘lecture’ with a few ΣAE songs.” Smaller reunions also ensued, as well as the rekindling of old friendships. Roarty recalls receiving a call from his brothers as they looked out over a bay in Stockholm, Sweden, where they were visiting Bob Givens (’67), who had spent most of his professional life in Europe and been out of touch. They thanked Roarty for connecting them again. In 2004, Roarty had the idea to organize a more intimate gathering of several brothers who were experiencing serious health issues, including lymphoma, prostate cancer, and Parkinson’s disease. The group met in Chicago for mutual support, comfort, and fun. “Obviously, this example of Dennis’s taking care of those of us dealing with medical issues is something I will never forget and always appreciate,” remarks Vogel. Shortly thereafter, Roarty learned of the struggles of his fellow brother, Tim Palmer. The Vietnam veteran was housebound and dealing with PTSD, depression, and Parkinson’slike symptoms. In a eureka moment, Roarty
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remembered that Givens was also battling Parkinson’s. So, he organized weekly Skype calls between Givens and Palmer, adding several other ΣAE friends to raise the spirits of the vet. “The thoughts and efforts to help this brother are typical of the way Dennis feels about the ΣAEs in our group,” explains Vogel. John Balconi, another brother and longtime friend of Roarty’s, refers to him as “the spark plug who inspires and holds us together.” He continues: “ΣAE held a very special place in his heart. He was able to radiate a commitment to ΣAE brotherhood that exemplified the true purpose of fraternity.” Roarty admits to being a people person, driven to connect with his friends year after year. But he’s also realized the unique, indelible bond that is formed between fraternity brothers. “There is only one group of guys who can wear this label—your fraternity brother,” he explains. These are the friends who Roarty now leans on as he manages an incurable bone marrow cancer. “I’ve had a lot of support from the brothers of ΣAE. They called and rallied and visited. I still feel their support. It’s very touching.” Roarty had a chance to delve further into the meaning of fraternity when his son, Danny, became an ΣAE at Towson University in Baltimore, Maryland. “It takes a university of unmanageable size, and makes it manageable,” Roarty relates. “All the sudden, you’re connected.” For Roarty and his ΣAE brothers at Miami, those connections have made all the difference in the world. END
FOCUS Strategic
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FROM ZERO TO
ZEAL
By Austin Evans, Province Chi-Alpha Archon
F
Travis Wilson (L) and Tommy LaVake (R)
THE RECORD • SPRING 2019
or top-notch chapters in the Fraternity’s Realm, the annual gathering that takes place during the John O. Moseley Leadership School has a few moments of anxiety: the official announcement from the Eminent Supreme Archon of which chapter will win the John O. Moseley Award for Fraternity Zeal, awarded to the best chapter in the Realm. The same was true this past August when delegates from the chapter at California State University in San Marcos stood on the stage in the Akimel Ballroom of the Sheraton Grand Resort in Chandler, Arizona, the site for the 83rd Leadership School. These gentlemen joined their counterparts at four other chapters to comprise the final nominees for the 2018 Zeal Award. Nick Brown, the outgoing Eminent Deputy Archon, led the chapter’s delegation to the stage, ready to receive the award should ESA Tom Dement read the chapter’s name. “I remember looking to my right and thinking, ‘Dang, we’re just some small school, and these guys come from a place that looks better than us,’” relived Brown. But size and stature are not the key metrics for the award, and with Brown knowing the chapter’s passion for its brotherhood, “My brain was telling me, ‘No,’ but my heart and gut were telling me, ‘We got this.’”
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Moments later, Dement read off the winning chapter’s designation: California Alpha-Gamma. What took years of effort finally culminated in top-level recognition. “I was speechless, and I had a lot of emotions going through my head,” recalled Tommy LaVake, outgoing Eminent Archon for the chapter, when he found out the chapter won. He was unable to attend the ceremony itself because, in true family-first fashion, his grandfather’s funeral was the next day in Denver. “I remember being so happy and not sleeping much that night, especially with my head all over the place with my grandfather’s passing. It had been years of work, and it took every member doing something.” Getting to be recognized as the top chapter in the country isn’t something that happens overnight, and the chapter already knew the award wasn’t for the guys in the current chapter but rather recognition of the chapter’s years-long effort to get to this level. “I just happened to be at the right place at the right time,” noted Brown, acknowledging he just happened to be an officer during the year that finally captured the Zeal honor. But what many might not know from watching the chapter’s delegates hoist up the beautiful Zeal trophy is how closely a party mindset, tragedy, and a commuter-college campus culture almost brought the chapter to closure.
Unlike many past Zeal winners, the history of the San Marcos chapter is comparatively shorter. Founded on April 17, 1999, the chapter was part of a turn-of-the-century heightened expansion effort that brought ΣAE to many mid-sized universities. The campus history is not much longer itself; originally founded in 1978 as the north-county branch of San Diego State University, CSU-San Marcos had largely functioned as a commuter school, leaving the campus barren of student life from its formal independence in 1989 until recent efforts to boost on-campus housing and student involvement came to fruition. That original commuter-school culture and the lack of a formal chapter house for the chapter to call their own meant chapter members socialized in satellite houses. Chapter members often held house parties on their own, including welcome-home parties typically held in midAugust, a time when students were moving back to San Marcos in preparation for the upcoming academic year. In 2009, newly elected Eminent Archon Travis Wilson already began to see the disconnect between “The True Gentleman” and these frequent house parties. “What ΣAE was about
when I joined was the TG; that’s what grabbed me,” said Wilson. “This is what I want to be about, where we can make a difference but have a good time doing it.” Instead, the chapter’s house parties were antithetical to “The True Gentleman,” laying bare a culture that didn’t care about making a difference and instead focused on risky behavior without fear or repercussion. And sadly, there was a tragic loss. A brother was struck by a car and killed after leaving a house party in 2009, proving what the responsible members knew all along—there must be substantial change or the chapter would be gone. Following the tragedy, the chapter’s future hinged on successful completion of strict sanctions imposed by the University and the Fraternity during a probation period, with strong directives for Wilson and others to change the chapter’s culture. Fresh with these mandates, Wilson and his team set off to improve the chapter. These actions included Wilson saying “No” and often breaking up parties that took place behind his back. Things were looking up, but individual behaviors are a difficult thing to change and a fight at a chapter party held in August 2010, three days before the probation period ended, put the spotlight back on the chapter and its weakest links. This, combined with a sense of betrayal by the chapter of the University’s earlier clemency, triggered swift and harsh actions from the University and the Fraternity, resulting in a loss of University recognition, a Fraternity membership review, and the suspension of Wilson’s own membership in the Fraternity. “I thought we had moved past it, and it caused some second guessing in the decisions I had made,” lamented Wilson. “I felt bad for Wes
Members of California State-San Marcos receiving the John O. Moseley Award for Fraternity Zeal from the Supreme Council.
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[Ryan],” the chapter’s new incoming Eminent Archon at the time; “I felt like I handed him a broken thing.” But from that point of rock bottom, the chapter didn’t just decide to rebuild; it knew it had to. “We didn’t have much of a choice,” remarked Ryan. “We had to comply with the membership review and the school’s sanctions or we were going to collapse.” The chapter’s first steps toward rebuilding focused on its own members, both current and incoming. Down to just seventeen members following the membership review and the cultural attrition that followed, the chapter addressed its past problems head-on, including instilling an understanding of past problems into their minds. “That history was taught to the incoming people,” noted Ryan. Knowing recruitment would be the chapter’s only lifeblood, their recruitment efforts became “finding the guys that were motivated to participate and who wanted to be the best, since that’s the only way we were going to survive,” as Ryan recalled. It was about finding the right men with the values that aligned with the Mission and Ritual of the Fraternity. It meant more than just finding guys they thought were cool, but instead identifying men that wanted to be part of something more substantive, rather than just where to find the next party. After taking a semester away from the recruitment of new members in order to
THE RECORD • SPRING 2019
focus internally, the chapter went from seventeen men to sixty during a recruitment cycle over the next 12 months. Following successful recruitment, the chapter continuously rebuilt itself. They had to move well beyond just increasing numbers; they also had to change how the chapter thought, how they communicated, and how they operated. Shay Stewart, a former member of the Fraternity staff, worked first-hand with the chapter in his role with the Fraternity Service Center, and witnessed the work the chapter put in to rebuild themselves. “It started with their commitment to being open-minded; they accepted the challenge of having no sacred cows, and they invested in time,” recalled Stewart. This investment shifted from recruitment to chapter retreats and strategic thinking, member education, and community investment, including a hard look at the chapter’s budget and how to build a financial model that included everything a chapter needed to succeed. “That meant putting money aside for the Fraternity Convention and for leadership schools, and funding not just one guy to attend, but sending many men who could bring what they learned back home.” It also took maturity, including recognizing that the chapter’s strategic needs would require an increase of dues to a level that could quite possibly push people out. “When they laid it all out, they realized it would triple their dues structure,” Stewart noted. The projected dues increase, while strategically necessary, did price out brothers, including the chapter’s own treasurer, who could no longer afford his dues. Yet, rather than accept mediocrity, some brothers knew the chapter had to continue without them. The men had to look “into the future," and take it upon themselves to understand that the Fraternity and its success was about more than just one individual. While there were
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Travis Wilson (L) and Tommy LaVake (R)
moments of natural frustration, they realized that to be something more would require facing those challenges and rising to new levels in their commitment to ΣAE . Their efforts did not stop with these initial steps and instead snowballed into a culture that permeated the chapter deeply and lastingly. Brothers took extra steps to care for each other, and chapter meetings became a time for troubled brothers to air their concerns and sadness openly and confidentially. The chapter took it as its moral duty to protect their own and keep them healthy. For Alex Zarrabian, the chapter’s current Eminent Archon, winning the Zeal award wasn’t about winning an accolade or a trophy. “It was more getting recognized for the stuff we already knew about ourselves,” he said. And now, the chapter is focused on perpetuating this culture. Even after winning the award, “the first thing we did was we sat down and talked about how this is not a pedestal and not to rest on our laurels, but rather a chance for us to start over on ground zero, to keep hungry and move forward,” Zarrabian stated, noting it wasn’t a particular accomplishment that pushed them over the top. “We didn’t do anything in the past to win this award; we did this because we genuinely care and want what’s best for each other.”
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In true form to a chapter that recognizes this is bigger than itself, they are even looking to build up the chapters around them, especially for an award that hasn’t made its way to the west coast since UCLA won it in 1971. Zarrabian himself set the goal for the chapter: “We really want to take it back to these other chapters and show them that this isn’t a big-school, east-coast or south award; it’s an award that anyone can win, and that it’s really about zeal and who can put in the effort and care about their guys.” That constant investment in membership and strategic focus is how a chapter can go from zero to Zeal. END
FOUNDATION
SUSTAINING GIFTS MAKE A LIFETIME IMPACT By Evy Lipecka, Director of Development
A common fundraising myth is that most organizations operate in large part due to donations from individuals with a high net worth. This is not the case. The majority of annual supporters are everyday people, with families and expenses, who recognize the impact an organization has had on them and now look to pay-it-forward. Sustained giving continues to be an integral part of the ΣAE Foundation’s fundraising efforts. Of our roughly 220,000 living alumni, only 2.5% currently give back to the organization. That’s half the number of alumni at some of our smaller peer organizations. This small but mighty group of leaders invest in us yearly—some have been doing this for decades—to ensure the fraternity experience lives on with the next generation of True Gentlemen. Richard Pardue (South Alabama ’70) first began contributing to ΣAE in 1972, two years after graduating college. Since then, Richard THE RECORD • SPRING 2019
has made a gift to ΣAE 48 consecutive years. Over time, Richard has grown his support from chapter-focused to national-level initiatives. It is humbling to think about the number of men who have been impacted by Richard during this time. His legacy will continue with each of their new achievements as he has a direct hand in supporting their leadership and educational growth. John Andrew Thompson (Pittsburgh ’95) has been contributing for the past 16 years. John gives an annual gift just before the end of each calendar year. At a time when many people are preoccupied with shopping and last-minute holiday preparations, John always keeps ΣAE in mind during the giving season. In doing so, he is shaping the lives of ΣAE men and giving them the tools to make their own mark on the world as leaders of character in their communities, businesses, families, and the world. Giving a sustaining gift is a habit worth fostering. Richard started giving at just $10 a month, John at $118.56. Both gentlemen have grown their support 27
since becoming donors. Making an ongoing contribution over time, no matter the size, has a snowballing impact on our organization. The consistent support allows ΣAE to fund ongoing operations thanks to the security of their yearly gifts. Donors can feel good knowing they give uninterrupted support to ongoing program development and—if preferred—that their automated charges are processed securely without hassle. If every initiated member started giving at just $10, like Richard, or $118.56 like John, think of the endowment we could have and the opportunities we could provide to advance the Fraternity’s leader development and educational opportunities. We would ensure that ΣAE remains the largest and most relevant men’s organization that provides transformational educational experiences for our members throughout life. END
FOUNDATION
“ Pride without arrogance, Confidence without conceit.”
- Lindley F. Bothwell
A LASTING
LEGACY By Anna Gath, Donor Services Coordinator
Legacy. This is a word we have all heard before. But do we really understand what it means? Brothers Lindley Bothwell (University of Southern California, 1922), Warren “Pos” Poslusny (Kettering ‘69), and Stanley Westfall (Marshall ‘66) knew exactly what “legacy” means, and they knew the legacy they wanted to leave behind. Brother Bothwell spent his life among the orange trees of California, running his soil business and enjoying life with his beloved wife, Ann. He remained involved with both USC and ΣAE , giving both his time and money to support the organizations he loved. At the age of 84, Bothwell died in June 1986. Ann, remaining loyal to her husband’s wishes, bequeathed $499,440 to ΣAE upon her death in 2016. Bothwell valued a legacy of taking pride in what you do, and being confident in who you are. He was a True Gentleman.
Lindley Bothwell pictured in the original (L) and current (R) USC Yell Leaders uniforms.
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Brother Poslusny was a beloved member of our organization, recognizable to anyone who has attended a Leadership School or received the True Gentleman of the Year Award. He lived many years in Hawaii running his waste management business before moving to Las Vegas, where he continue d to sport Hawaiian shirts and lived life among friends until his recent passing on September 4, 2018. Pos left a legacy of servitude. He was a member of the Foundation Board of Trustees, was named Honorar y Eminent Supreme Archon, and donated over $500,000 to ΣAE during his lifetime, which helped fund the True Gentleman of the Year Award, the Zeal Award, the Warren Paul Poslusny Award for Outstanding Achievement, and other national scholarships from which our undergraduates will benefit for decades to come. Pos included ΣAE in his final estate plans as well, to be settled later in 2019. Brother Westfall attended Marshall University and served as that chapter’s alumni advisor from 2011 to 2013. Westfall passed away in 2015 at the age of 71. A lifetime donor to ΣAE , Westfall wanted to enter Chapter Eternal with a legacy of generosity, leaving real estate and an insurance policy worth $228,073 to the Fraternity that helped shape who he was. “Legacy” in its simplest definition means how you will be remembered—and the impact you will make in this remembrance. Bothwell, Pos, and Westfall had the foresight to know how they wanted their brothers to remember them, and they executed this vision through planned giving as an investment into the future.
Pos with an heirloom from his undergraduate years.
Planned giving keeps this organization alive. In addition to monthly and annual donations from members, planned gifts help fund all of Sigma Alpha Epsilon’s education initiatives. District Academies, DeVotie Ritual Institute, and Executives Academy could not happen without this support. There are currently 180 living alumni who have joined the Heritage Society by indicating they have remembered Sigma Alpha Epsilon in their wills. What kind of legacy do you want to leave behind? END
To learn more about planned giving, contact
EVY LIPECKA elipecka@sae.net
THE RECORD • SPRING 2019
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FOUNDATION
FUTURE LEADERS LEARN TO GIVE BACK By Dawn DeBoard, Manager of Annual Giving
Philanthropy is a core value of Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Without a philanthropic arm of the Fraternity there would be no educational programming and opportunities available to so many collegiate members of ΣAE. The Sigma Alpha Epsilon Foundation invests in all collegiate members. Our investment guides members of ΣAE on a journey of giving, teaching them the impact of being philanthropic and how one small donation can not only change the life of a fellow brother, but their life as well. For years the Foundation has encouraged collegiates to give back to the Fraternity; now, in conjunction with Educational Programing, a select group of ΣAE brothers will start giving back and begin to develop a philanthropic mindset. Believe it or not, philanthropy is simple. Choose to give a monetary gift (fundraising) or donate your time (volunteering) and in return we receive your immeasurable support. Sigma Alpha Epsilon promotes this model of philanthropy through the Phi Alpha Club. The Foundation's annual giving club specifically for collegiate members is designed to create awareness of the mission, purpose, goals, and activity of the Foundation. Lifelong annual giving to the Annual Fund is what aides the Fraternity's leader development, educational opportunities, and scholarships and awards, and joining the Phi Alpha Club is an excellent opportunity for collegiates to do their part in building a bridge for future generations of True Gentlemen. Phi Alpha Club gives collegiate members an opportunity to lead by example and learn how each ΣAE brother can impact our mission. A collegiate member joins Phi Alpha Club by making his first individual gift of $25 to the Annual Fund. Each gift impacts ΣAE's leader development and educational programs such as District Academies, DeVotie Ritual Institute, and Executives Academy.
At every national event, participants unknowingly witness the impact their gift is making. If it weren’t for their gift, other collegiates would not be able to attend those events and the Foundation would not be able to give scholarships to send brothers to national programming. This past November at DeVotie Ritual Institute, 100 collegiate members joined the Phi Alpha Club; some even renewed their support. Think about how big of an impact that was; raising over $2,500 in one weekend can help make sure that another five brothers make it to the next event. A gift to join Phi Alpha Club demonstrates allegiance to our beloved Fraternity and your support for the educational programming that the ΣAE Foundation provides. Investing in your fraternity is important and your first step on your philanthropic journey starts with Phi Alpha Club. END 30
D DONORS
Donor Roll – Spring 2019 Founded in 1927, the Sigma Alpha Epsilon Foundation serves as the philanthropic arm of our Fraternity. It exists solely to support our men from Initiation to Chapter Eternal through providing scholarships and awards, personal and leader development opportunities, maintaining the Levere Memorial Temple and the preservation of our historic archives collections, and managing chapter-level education and housing funds. The Foundation remains committed to providing the highest levels of philanthropic support to our men, present and future, and does so through the deep generosity of donors and strong stewardship of resources. The following donor roll honors all that have given monetary contributions to the Sigma Alpha Epsilon Foundation between 1/1/18 and 12/31/18. ††† Chapter Eternal
THE RECORD • SPRING 2019
Auburn University Alpha-Mu Chapter George B. Clements, '66 Robert N. Freeman, '89 Bill Grainger, '72 James R. Heath, '67 William F. Joseph, Jr., '51 Gary C. Martin, '57 Don J. Newell, Jr., '62 Daniel E. Ponder, Jr., '76 Thomas W. Shows, '52 Craig C. Snellgrove, '79 Stevenson T. Walker, '68 William S. Weeks, '72 David M. Williams, '76
Adelphi University Sigma Chapter Alfred S. Kohart, Jr., '70 Adrian College Alpha Chapter Paul D. Bamford, '65 Roger D. Benson, '51 James A. Blickle, '66 James H. Culbertson, '63 William Grant, '58 Blake Kiekenapp Stephen V. Laske, '62 Charles E. Leutwiler, '71 Gary M. Nelles, '67 Daniel J. Pozdol, '94 David P. Pray, '68 Robert J. Radder, '68 Willard Warren Schultz, Jr., '89 Larry L. Sevitts, '62 Stephen H. Swigart, '70 James D. Swoish, '56 Daniel T. van Blaricom, '69 Benjamin W. VanRiper, '51 Michael W. Walls, '64
Ball State University Zeta Chapter Jackson R. Ammons Jarrett R. Bertsch Alan C. Buck, '69 Steven C. Gilbert, '68 Brian R. Hile, '70 Stephen L. Jones, '69 Thomas R. Land, '78 Larry O. Lovette, '68 David G. Mertens, '82 Brandon J. Monzel Leland L. Nissley, '86 Kevin E. O'Malia, '81 Adam N. Rivellino Philip R. Shafer, '71 Larry S. Wechter††† Jack E. Welter, '86 Ronald L. Wise, '70
Albright College Sigma-Mu Chapter Aaron L. Forker, '15 Paul J. Kanarkowski, '99 Frank Thomas Kobe, '19 John Kornobis Allegheny College Omega Chapter Robert W. Baum, '58 Thomas M. Heiles, '76 Michael A. Iacono, '13 Steven C. Orkis, '08 Hayes C. Stover, '62 Isaac Tripp, IV, '74
Baylor University Theta Chapter Dean Anthony Cione, '88 Reagan R. Parr, '89 Gary L. Van Winkle, '87 Gary E. Walker, '85 Donald E. Westbrook, '90 Jeffrey G. Wigington, '92
Alma College Delta-Tau Chapter Heber M.G. Migliore, '88 Timothy C. McCloskey, '84
Beloit College Phi Chapter Donald G. Brandeau, DDS, '51 Joseph C. Di Raimondo, '61 Benjamin F. Flegel, '88 Frank J. Johnson, '60 Allan Kieckhafer, '45 William C. Putnam, Jr., '65 Richard W. Star, '56
Appalachian State University Epsilon Chapter Tyler Thomas Cook Arizona State University Beta Chapter Ray J. Artigue, '76 Reg Bacon, '76 Thomas G. Bates, '65 Robert B. Bulla, '62 Brian J. Carlin, '88 Christopher J. Cooke, '88 Curtis R. Frasier, '77 Michael L. Gallagher, '66 Scott Harder, '08 John W. Lee, II, '63 James N. Miller, '90 Joshua J. Morgenstern, '04 Gregory M. Pafford, '81 Paul A. Pedersen, '67 Brandon C. Pike, '19
Bethany College Beta Chapter Paul J. Leichter, '70 William H. Rutter, '76 Binghamton University Omega Chapter Gary M. Kolinsky, '86 Christopher Miller, '87 Renato C. Stabile, '92 Fess R. Wofse, '91
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Birmingham-Southern College Iota Chapter David R. Baker, '51 Timothy A.R. Callahan, '70 Charles B. Carlton, '80 Pat M. Courington, Jr., '63 Alan R. Dimick, MD, '53 William A.B. Dowell, '78 James G. Fuqua, Jr., '73 Edward L. Hardin, Jr., '62 Hugh J. Hughes, Jr., '49 James M. Jordan, '83 Joseph W. Mathews, Jr., '64 Freddie Maulden, Jr., '66 William F. Orr, '73 J. Thomas Rosdick, II, '67 Richard L H Stanford, '70 Boston University Beta-Upsilon Chapter Stephen J. Condakes, '80 Stuart S. Corning, Jr., '50 Frank S. Forbes, II, '51 Edwin D. Fuller, '68 J. C. McKnight, '94 John T. Nix, Jr., '69 Charles E. Page, '59 Robert W. Paglierani, '66 Erik J. Pigmans, '00 Robert H. Watts, '68 James Whitehead, II, '60 Byron E. Woodman, Jr., '66 Bowling Green State University Kappa Chapter Richard B. Adams, Jr., '63 Scott Thomas Barr, '87 James P. Callahan, Jr., '09 Charles J. Conklin, '52 David P. Crawford, '63 David H. Crowl, '76 Judson W. Divincenzo, '82 Robert G. Drothler, '67 Jacob P. Eberly Keith D. Everiss, '88 Robert B. Finley, '60 Tyler S. Hopper John T. Horney, '72 Frederick N. Indermaur, '60 LTC Benson D. Jackson, Jr., '54 Alan Martin, '78 Alan R. McBane, '60 Steven Anthony Mincica, '93 Jason L. Nelson David R. Norwine, '68 Ronald E. Panning, '60 John J. Pierzchala, '95 Emil J. Ragones, '68 Gary L. Reed, '70 Richard J. Samuhel, '67 Donald R. Schrom, '54 Neil E. Seufert, '65 Thomas J. Wyant, '62 Bradley University Epsilon Chapter Kevin A. Agnos, '92 David W. Berkow, '79
Ronald D. Bonadurer, '88 Eric D. Carlson, '96 James J. Chodzko, '84 Daniel F. Dahlke, '76 Peter A. Drey, '84 Ralph P. Forsberg, '70 Daniel B. Gallant, '85 Randy G. Gallick, '80 Gregory A. Gilbert, '86 David A. Hardenbrook, '72 Robert J. Kelderhouse, '78 Paul Jung Yoon Kim, '89 Joseph R. Musso, '85 Eric B. Ratts, '85 Jeffrey W. Siegrist, '89 David Spayer David S. Van Hove, '77 Bucknell University Zeta Chapter Robert H. Burnett, Sr, '58 Robert Anthony Campagna, Jr., '92 Michael P. Catanzaro, '87 Harold P. Dillon, '55 Richard G. Eshelman, '52 Zachary A. Feit Richard J. Fleece, '66 Zachary A. Forman Michael K. Golub, '77 James G. Hendrickson, '71 Mark W. Jones, USA, '87 Benjamin C.B. Langley Ryan Martinez Colin A. McConnell, '91 Lawrence J. Papagni, '86 Frederick H. Patterson, '53 Frank M. Perazzini, Jr., '82 Donald J. Raphael, '53 Sam J. Ritter Joseph R. Scarpa, '87 Penn P. Shelley, '53 Barrett K. Sides, '87 Jeffrey L. Wade, '84 California Polytechnic State University Tau Chapter Glenn M. Ritter, '86 California State Polytechnic University-Pomona Alpha-Beta Chapter Brian S. Clausen, '07 George M. Danciu, '64 Christopher N. Delfs, '13 California State University-Fresno Iota Chapter Donald E. Bush, '60 Paul J. Catuna, '87 William S. Coats, Jr., '49
DONORS
Gregory J. Coleman, '81 Christopher Curry, '09 Kalhiel Dillard James D. Hallowell, '55 G. Dale Hammel, '63 Bradley A. Hirst, '59 Herbert M. Johnson, III, '64 Robert P. Krum, '64 Patrick J. MacDonald Loren H. McFarland, Jr., '54††† Mathias F. Matoian, '64 Monty W. McCall, '63 Keith G. Miller, '63 Aaron Moccardini Scott W. Neyman, '07 Graydon E. Nichols, '50 Gerald M. Palladino, '66 Basil J. Perch, '64 Dean R. See, '60 Robert D. Sharp, '89 Bill J. Sheffield, '55 Dennis C. Speer, '72 Roy D. Spina, Jr., '58 Thomas Vazquez, '12 William E. Wattenbarger, Jr., '58 California State University-Fullerton Pi Chapter Tom A. Chadwell, '86 Bradley K. Forbes, '80 Robert P. Husban, '79 Todd J. Nelson, '85 Terry L. Pastian, '94 Robert D. Wullenwaber, '78 California State University-Long Beach Lambda Chapter David A. Abbott, '77 Treven E. Baker, '80 Bobby J. Barnes, '55 Donald A. Black, '61 Gary R. Chrisman, '68 Christopher S. Dalton, '92 Joe W. Dobbs, '56 Chesley M. Douglas, III, '82 Richard L. Eversole, '61 Dale J. Fairbanks, '57 Casey H. Fierce, '94 Daniel P. Gooch, '72 Joel A. Hackett, '69 Jerry L. Hill, '63 Ted R. Hulsey, '73 Myles I. Karpman, '71 George M. Medak, '65 Russell D. Miller, '64 Christopher D. Ramirez, '95 Garott A. Reents, '92 Charles G. Robinson, '58 Ronald P. Schwandt, '58 Ivan F. Seaton, '58 Ronald G. Sherwin, '65 Donald R. Smith, '68 David K. Sontag, '66 Lloyd K. Stockwell, '60 Thomas H. Tracy, '59 Richard L. Wennekamp, '65 William G. Westling, '83
California State University-Los Angeles Mu Chapter John C. Evanilla, '80 Jose R. Gonzalez, '13 Eugene Hernandez, '79 Stewart Hsieh, '74 William A. Lewis, '81 Ninion S. Riley, '71 Richard Schwien, '68 J. Morgan Shuster, '67 Christopher B. Takeshita, '94 Gary N. Tolley, '75 Gene J. Torncello, '66 Joseph C. Volpe, '72 California State University-Northridge Nu Chapter Gary M. Blumenthal, '80 Anthony D. Brosamle, '91 John L. Hopkins, Jr., '85 Shawn A. Nelson, '89 Brian E. Sieroty, '95 Larry P. West, '91 California State University-Sacramento Xi Chapter Marco B. Bonanni, '18 Terence S. Hunter, '69 Emmanuel Alfred Jogwe Dale W. Kimball, '68 Karl D. Pape, '68 David L. Perrault, '66 William R. Pickering, '73 Ronald J. Vance, '78 California State University-San Marcos Alpha-Gamma Chapter Christopher P. Compton, '02 Tyrell A. Fiduccia, '04 Carnegie Mellon University Phi Chapter Jeffrey J. Ball, '79 William R. Benthall, II, '69 Marvin L. Cadwell, '65 Charles L. Coulson, Jr., '85 Douglas J. Cranwell, '66 Andrew J. Eggenberger, '61 Ronald W. Fahle, '57 Robert A. Gebbia, '69 Robert M. Hrovath, '74 John W. Kwiecinski, '77 Lukas Manomaitis, '93 David B. Messersmith, '77 James C. Moran, '67 John W. Mowrey, '62 Thomas J. Mueller, '59 Robert E. Murray, III, '68 Arne R. Oberg, '52 Frederick R. Parsons, '52 Edward M. Puchy, '55 Robert L. Reber, '60 Thomas E. Shirley, '80 Donald Van Ollefen, '76 Richard W. Whitmore, '52
Chapman University Alpha-Delta Chapter Brandon V. Pankey, '99
Case Western Reserve University Rho Chapter Richard Abelson, '81 Benjamin I. Altose, '07 Kenneth A. Barker, '70 David D. Beal, '78 Eliot M. Bourk, '03 Thomas A. Brandes, '68 Peter M. Burk, '79 Cody R. Calhoun, '18 James E. Caminis, '00 Peter L. Castro, '96 Robert Cohen, '84 Shane M. Cooley John P. Crain, '67 Aaron P. Delong, '97 J. Frederick Doering, Sr, '52 Brian Thomas Drummond, '07 Andrew J. Engelmeyer Robert W. Frischmuth, Jr., '62 Rick G. Gaborick, '54 Bernard J. Gallagher, '59 Thomas A. Gauthey, '79 Robert E. Gestner, '73 Richard R. Greene, '65 Joseph M. Hendrie, '50 Charles E. Henry, '54 Paul D. Hicks, '66 Daniel J. Hirsch, '62 James E. Lasch, '79 John P. Linhart, '69 Robert J. Martin, '66 Jack D. McKinney, '64 Stanley McMillen, '68 Edward G. Morgan, Jr., '63 Louis J. Petrovic, '62 Oliver L. Poppenberg, Sr, '59 Charles W. Rainger, '55 Charles E. Sax, '54 Harris Schiller, '60 Keith L. Sechler, '77 Marc L. Vitantonio, '81 Gary Thomas Warzynski, '91 Jonathan Allen Wehrli, '84 Bruce L. Weinman, '67
Christian Brothers University Rho Chapter Ian S. Strelsin, '04 Eric B. Anderson, '77 George W. Boozer, III, '66 Michael J. Maxwell, '67 Jesse W. Myers, Jr., '71 College of Charleston Upsilon Chapter Paul M. Bergstrand, '81 John Alston Deas, '80 Craig Eney Brian M. Frank Brian M. Frank Robert J. Rosencrans Douglas Weeks Stokes, Jr., '84 College of William and Mary Kappa Chapter Oscar J. Berlanga Sean C. Bilby, '93 Edward J. T. Cook, '86 Clyde E. Culp, III, '65 Alexander V. Fakadej, '57 T.J. Holland, '87 Kirk M. Kirssin, '90 Jeffrey L. Kirssin, '68 David Arthur Marshall, '94 Brian Meyer, '17 Scott Oppenheim, '02 Claude D. Perkins, Jr., '57 Joseph B. Petro, '69 Michael S. Rodgers, '92 Colorado School of Mines Lambda Chapter Joseph L. Anjier, '60 Owen M. Barnhill, '74 Dylon A. Becker Charles F. Deuel, III, '49 Hugh W. Evans, '49 James R. Heath, '03 James R. Howell, '66 Steven A. Lambert, '75 Jonathan R. Lang, '75 George W. Mitchell, Jr., '53 Gail E. Penfield, '56 Kenneth L. Spalding, '60 John A. Yackey, '68
Central Michigan University Delta-Omega Chapter Patrick T. Fredricks, '10 Kraig J. Haubenstricker, '11 Brian M. Hilger, '06 Spencer A. Long, '08 Patrick A. Murray Jeff M. Simms, '07 Jason R. Taylor, '03 Erik P. Yettaw, '06
Colorado State University Delta Chapter F. Thomas Barnhart, '65 George M. Beeman, '57 Tom G. Cox, '60 Kenneth R. Cressman, '74 George A. Dubois, II, '59 Thomas R. Eaton, Jr., '93 Robert B. Erickson, '60 John E. Hawkinson, '60
Centre College Kappa Chapter Robel Z. Abate Richard C. Berg, '68 Troy M. Edelen, '89 Michael W. Hail, '89 John M. Schanz, Jr., '53 Louis Seelbach, III, '72 Matthew L. Sinex, '97 Donald R. Stephens, Jr., '82 Martin D. Wiglesworth, '84 32
Clarke Houston, III, '66 John F. Krebs, '57 Ronald B. Moucka, '74 Mark A. Olsen, '87 Robert M. Pacheco, '67 Brenden J. Royere Patrick B. Ruster, '71 William F. Schmausser, '59 Ralph R. Schneider, '58 Armand L. Smith, '63 George N. Smith, '50 Wade J. Sousa John B Thompson, '79 Charles D. Vail, '58 Nick J. Walseth William T. Welch, '81 Scott Allen Wolf, '82 Gregory W. Woods, '85 William B. Woods, '58 Columbia University Mu Chapter John A. Cervieri, Jr., '51 Barrie R. Owen, '58 Cornell University Alpha Chapter W. Dean Ferres, '50 David R. Gilkeson, '76 James Glenn, '60 Robert A. Hutchins, '56 Jonathan S. Kloos, '96 Michael B. Kraskow, '86 Charles M. Morris, '56 Augustus Y. Noojin, III, '69 Ronald M. Skalko, '73 Eric M. Stevens, '97 Creighton University Iota Chapter Travis S. Buchanan, '14 Michael C. Donner, MBA, '04 Ted R. Grennan, '78 Joshua A. Kendrick, '08 Dan T. Osborn, '73 Daniel L. Surdell, '70 Jesse J. Zien, '04 Dartmouth College Alpha Chapter Charles S. Allen, '62 Evan B. Azriliant, '87 Richard D. Barker, '54 Mark S. Carlie, '76 Jeremy L. Katz, '95 Harris B. McKee, '61 Jeremy J. Sawyer, '55 James W. Venman, '55 Davidson College Theta Chapter John E. Futch, '68 William F. Grimsley, '80 William F. Grimsley, '80 Richard S. Groat, '02 J. Daniel Hanks, Jr., '65 Lewis G. Norman, III, '65 John L. Ward, '55
Delta State University Delta-Sigma Chapter Justin C. Prestage Denison University Mu Chapter Jerry R. Armbrecht, '57 Robert Anthony Brice, '82 Daniel K. Buck, '54 Thomas L. Cates, '78 Dennis T. Fujka, '69 John B. Hebard, '56 Daniel J. Lewis, '69 Richard McCulloch Jones, '56 Eric N. Peterson, '78 Charles E. Rice, '52 J. Paul Rowe, '68 Donald E. Sharp, '52 Scot M. Small, '85 Edward P. Wish, Jr., '58 DePaul University Delta-Pi Chapter Eric D. Bratt, '99 Kevin J. Newhouse, '14 Ryan Urbanowski, '13 DePauw University Delta Chapter William A. Baum, '71 Jeffrey J. Bowe, DBA, '85 James H. Boyd, PhD, '58 Joel M. Burrow, '74 Ronald R. Clark, '62 Allan D. Fink, '64 Frederick C. Fritz, '81 Andrew J. Lane, '88 Charles J. Nelson, '85 Scott W. Rencher, '97 Brent R. Thompson, '89 Dickinson College Sigma-Phi Chapter John D. Allemang, Jr., '73 Lyle W. Bliss, '63 Bruce Mitchell Cross, '81 Craig E. Evans, '79 Kingsley W. Greene, '71 Roger E. Nelson, Jr., '54 Joseph H. Newby, '63 David R. Short, '72 C. R. Stafford, Jr., '67 Drake University Delta Chapter John C. Agnew, Jr., '60 James P. Avgeris, '65 Philip W. Berger, '75 Todd Bolen, '62 Sherwood M. Boudeman, '62 Greg D. Brandt, '84 Blaine A. Briggs, '45 Michael J. Broggi, '65 Russell S. Cross, Jr., '52 Warren L. DeVries††† Mitch Donohue Paul J. Finney, Sr, '58 Stephen R. Fitzsimonds, '86
DONORS
Bruce A. Foster, '78 Kent J. Foster, '83 Howard D. Genrich, '49 Jeremy J. Glenn, '94 John W. Green, '72 Manuel Gutierrez Manuel Gutierrez Thomas A. Hamilton, Jr., '83 Leslie C. Hill, '58 Robert L. Hopson, Jr., '63 Kenneth K. Kauffman, '60 William E. Kearney, '66 Travis L. Kerr Robert G. Lady, '62 Grant Thomas Lander, '02 Tom J. Logan, '73 Duane Thomas Magee, '92 Alec S. McGlasson David B. Meier, '72 James T. Murphy, '54 Zachary K. Nachtigal Kim Niederman, '73 Mark A. Oppedal, '71 Roger P. Penrod, '78 Robert M. Perrye, '85 C. G. Peters, '88 H. Steven Pojman, '63 Robert M. Pomerantz, '77 Robert A. Rosulek, '70 Todd Austin Sandrock, '81 Richard E. Scott, '50 Richard A. Shepherd, '58 Kendall B. Smith, '72 Stephen Thomas Tranter, '79 Kenneth J. Vegors, '71 Calvin P. Wise, '60 Drexel University Epsilon Chapter Richard W. Choromanski, '79 Peter V.S. Cochran, '72 Clarence G. Hoop, '71 Gus J. Karayinopulos, '75 Curtis G. Kramer, Jr., '75 Joseph A. Mandato, Jr., '81 Dennis L. Neider, '70 Duke University Nu Chapter Claude W. Bogley, '47††† Dempsey S. Brown, Jr., '64 Mark W. Carrabine, '14 James W. Eaton, Jr., '57 Donald W. Gould, Sr, '53 Michael H. Harrington, '55 Henry Linsert, Jr., '63 George W. Martin, '49 Kenneth D. Mindell, '74 Peter Moller, '61 Clayton O. Pruitt, Jr., '62 Markham L. Ray, '79 Max L. Schmitz, '91 William P. Simmons, Jr., '61 Duquesne University Xi Chapter Matthew C. Irving, '15 THE RECORD • SPRING 2019
East Tennessee State University Alpha Chapter Randolph B. Cardoza, '67 David B. Costner, '75 James C. Ebersole, '68 Nicholas Frank, '16 Frank B. Iodice, '64 Ronald T. Moore Armando F. Morrell, '71 Eastern Illinois University Delta-Lambda Chapter Justin J. Chang, '17 Ryan N. McCain, '13 George E. Piper, III Jarrod T. Scherle, '11 Aaron T. Wiessing, '12 Eastern Kentucky University Delta Chapter Tim M. Bohanan, '06 James R. Chance Jonathan Thomas Grossmann, '03 Michael A. Hughes, '73 Jefferson B. Patrick Tyler Klarer Payne, '88 Roy G. Peach, '85 James L. Phillips, '86 David N. Rodgers, '75 Ron E. Volmering, '78 Jacob C.L. Watson Cole Zink Eastern New Mexico University Alpha Chapter Johnny D. Cope, '71 David R. Fleming, '69 William G. Hicks, '71 Fred D. Phelps, '64 Lloyd Phillips, Jr., '92 David R. Pia, '65 Embry-Riddle Aeronautical UniversityDaytona Beach Rho Chapter James P. Baldwin, '71 Jim V. Celani, Jr.††† Joseph B. Fullwood-White, '10 Kenneth D. Norris, II, '20 Harsh M. Sachdev Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University-Prescott Delta Chapter Wesley R. Blum David L. Bowker, '10 James P. Harvey, '07 Devin P. Hennes Jeffrey D. Middleton-Garces Yoohyun G. Song Greyson G. Woodard
Emory University Epsilon Chapter Mark W. Bates, '73 Forney S. Brice, Jr., '68 W. Lawrence Brown, '68 Thomas W. Brown, '62 P. Andrew Coley, Jr., '67 John C. Edwards, '68 William E. Elmore, Jr., '71 Robert C. Ferguson, '68 R. Carter Freeman, Jr., '60 M. Felton Hagood, '63 Frank A. Hall, '70 John H. Harper, '60 P. Harris Hines, '65††† Alexander L. Hinson, '64 Douglas C. Huber, '61 James B. Johnson, Jr., '54 Hubert C. Lovein, Jr., '68 H. Arthur McLane, '61 Robert R. Morgan, Jr., '94 Claude F. Perry, Sr, '59 Hal S. Raper, Jr., '61 Samuel D. Rauch, '61 Albert P. Reichert, Jr., '61 Stephen A. Reichert, '65 Robinson W. Schilling, Jr., '62 Charles S. Simmons, '70
Charles A. Ross, '69 James H. Sims, Jr., '63 Robert W. Swoszowski, '61 Howard S. Treadway, '61 James W. Westbrook, '68 Ruben A. Whitehead, '61 Justin R. Whitfield, '97 Fort Hays State University Delta Chapter Joshua Gale, '14 John M. Kimberlin, '01 Richard B. Shanahan, '03 Franklin College of Indiana Alpha Chapter Jon S. Almeras, '92 Leonard L. Bissonnette, '62 Jim E. Connell, '77 Dana P. Deer, '58 James V. Due, '82 Kenneth O. Dunn, '51 William R. Fisher, '55 Max R. Fitzpatrick, '56 Robert D. Heuchan, '76 Keven L. Jennings, '87 Frederick B. May, '70 Jordan McMorris Donald L. Mendenhall, '55 Ronald W. Nichols, '66 Stephen P. Peck, '66 Jimmy J. Plummer, '60 Robert C. Shook, '71 Stephen A. Smith, '69 Arthur H. Turner, '57
Ferris State University Zeta Chapter Clayton L. Bensinger, '72 Mark G. Fritsch, '75 Jacob A. Horsley, '04 Jason C. Keith, '93 James T. Murphy, '73
Frostburg State University Delta Chapter Jeffrey P. Bahen, '00 Thomas W. Carey, Jr., '95 David M. Galloway, '91 Timothy J. Owens Lucas C. Stahl
Florida Southern College Gamma Chapter Jonas Thomas Concklin, '55 Noel M. Engler, '58 Khalid Amir deven Glover Nick T. Houle Benjamin N. Kamberg John A. Kleiner, '64 Terry L. Krick, '76 Dylan W. Oliver Edward R. Powell, '59 William T. Sailor
Furman University Phi Chapter Gavin W. Boone, '91 Bill B. Bozeman, '50 William F. Cave††† William A. Cofer, '70 J. Bennett Glass, '63 Robert C. Nast, '63 Harry P. Stephens, '62
Florida State University Beta Chapter Michael P. Ayotte, '79 Carmelo L. Battaglia, '68 A. Hadley Benton, '93 Charles H. Bremer, '62 William A. Bryan, '60 David R. Campbell, '84 Timothy J. Daly, '87 David M. Dunbar, '68 Stephen Austin Emerson, '79 Charles K. Fleming, '91 Davy H. Foster, II, '67 Claude H. Grizzard, '60 John M. Holland, Jr., '59 William L. Kimber, '58 Harry E. LaVigne, Jr., '60 Fred J. Pyland, '75 John P. Roberts, Jr., '68 Howard D. Rogers, '70
Georgia College and State University Mu Chapter Thomas Davis Jacob Strobel Georgia Institute of Technology Phi Chapter Kenneth W. Best, '67 Fred P. Bowen, II, '80 Thomas C. Broome, '66 Kyle M. Brumby, '08 David C. Burns, '80 33
Lawrence E. Butts, '85 Marc Anthony Corsini, '80 James N. Cox, '58 William C. Daniel, '64 Richard L. Frame, Sr, '62 Samuel O. Franklin, III, '65 Logan T. Gay, Jr., '66 Jay K. Githens, '62 William S. Harris, '59 Morris E. Harrison, Jr., '74 Neil H. Hightower, Sr, '63 Howard Hoffman, '80 W. Deck Hull, Jr., '54 James R. Jolly, Jr., '64 Brooks S. Lide, Jr., '55††† Will D. Magruder, '56 James M. McCormick, II, '85 Dudley L. Moore, Jr., '57 Joseph J. Perry, III, '61 Daren B. Pietsch, '91 Daniel B. Rather, '57 John W. Rourk, Jr., '56 George W. Ruth, III, '78 Edward F. Vickers, '63 Georgia Southern University Alpha Chapter Donald T. McDaniel, Jr., '01 Georgia Southern University-Armstrong Rho Chapter Matthew R. Scully, '18 Gettysburg College Delta Chapter Keith B. Adams, '77 Harrie G. Burdan, '55 Robert E. Crawford, '76 William M. Hinde, '74 Charles F. Johnson, II, '62 John Thomas Mastovich, '79 Christopher J. Nigrel, '75 Gustavus Adolphus College Gamma Chapter Martin J. Barnard, '11 Brandon Raghu Brandon Raghu John R. Rasmussen, '11 Robert D. Schreck Matthew J. Schueffner, '10 Sean W. Tessmer, '11 Hampden-Sydney College Upsilon Chapter Julien B. Booth, '95 Irving H. Pritchett, III, '73 Jackson C Steele Harvard University Gamma Chapter Kent Campbell, '59 Richard F. Concannon, '51 Bernard L. Gladieux, Jr., '59 Eric C. Hanson, '70
DONORS
Walter P. Hinchman, '59 Warren D. Huff, '59 Michael A. Leahy, II, '65 William G. Lee, '66 Lyle J. Micheli, '62 Edward B. Rasmuson, '62 William A. Thayer, '58 Thomas C. Thetford, '70 Hofstra University Chi Chapter Steven R. Tricarico, '06 Indiana State University Sigma Chapter James A. Coleman, '73 Stephen G. Cunningham, '72 Michael D. Fouts, '96 Michael D. Fouts, '96 Daniel J. Fulford, '75 Stacey A. Gentry, '89 Christopher W. Hancock, '96 Steven W. Hollar, '72 Joseph G. Koval, '75 Raymond L. Motz, '70 Anthony J. Pyatt, '97 Lawrence W. Schott, '85 Kent E. Schwarz, '72 Paul S. Siebenmorgen, '71 Joe D. Smith, '71 Garrett J. Smith, '15 Stevan C. Uhl, '74 John C. Wilber, '71 Indiana University Bloomington Gamma Chapter Patrick Gallagher Adams, '02 Thomas H. Alt, Sr., '58 Thomas E. Armbrust, '83 John G. Baker, '68 Edwin D. Baker, '54 Ideal F. Baldoni, II, '62 David W. Barrick, '79 Kelley Thomas Beach, '84 William D. Bennison, '66 Thomas E. Bolyard, '63 David J. Cousino, MD, '64 Peter D. Cullen, '60 Robert J. Deputy, '60 Stanley J. Dittmer, '64 D. Peter Dunbar, '85 Charles D. Farmer, '55 James C Fissinger, '83 Stephen R. Fleming, '74 William D. Gambill, II, '68 Thomas J. Garling, '64 William E. Graham, Jr., '55 David M. Gunn, '63 Gerald J. Hardy, '76 J. Michael Hartigan, '59 Joseph C. Innes, '64 Jason L. Kennedy, '92 Roy W. Kern, '57 John L. Kitzmiller, '61 Robert J. Kleymeyer, '69 Philip H. Larmore, '62 Larry M. Leach, '67
Jerry O. Lentz, '55 James D. Marks, '53 Joseph C. Maroon, '61 Nicholas Martell, '16 Gene B. Maudlin, '65 Michael W. Mezey, '79 Steve D. Mitchell, '83 Lou Moneymaker, '67 John J. Moran, '73 Ted O'Donnell, '00 Herbert E. Osmon, Jr., '58 Dan L. Parker, '55 David B. Pearson, '64 Jeffrey B. Poland, '86 Philip C. Potts, '52 Earl B. Pulse, '65 George W. Rauch, III, '68 Brian D. Redman, '79 Robert T. Shircliff, '50 Hugh K. Sinnock, '67 Blair H. Snead, '67 Nicholas J. Spencer, '57 Louis E. Stanczak, '89 Mark R. Stetzel, '80 W. Charles Thomson, III, '72 James R. Williams, '68 Indiana UniversityPurdue University Iota-Pi Chapter Trenton Bien Joshua M. Black, '13 Francesco Cardelli, '09 Joseph Thomas Dougherty Jonathan W. Egger, '08 Gabriel A. Hodge Kyle M. Mills Stephen M. Oetting, '09 Dakota R. Tiede Iowa State University Gamma Chapter C. Matthew Andersen, '71 Clarence R. Anderson, '57 Robert E. Anderson, '69 Richard P. Baxter, Sr., '60 Michael Allison Beeler, '82 David D. Bishop, '62 Loran R. Braught, '56 Gregory P. Brenny, '88 Craig E. Callies, '53 Steve W. Churchill, '85 Richard Devereaux, Jr., '61 M. Irwin Gould, Jr., '55 Larry R. Gradisher, '82 James P. Howalt, '62 Dale A. Johnson, '60 Gary L. Kleven, '63 Scott A. Koppelman, '91 Robert A. Latta, '55 Christopher E. Milner, '06 Richard J. Neiman, '65 Jaime E. Pollitt, '87 Jon M. Radabaugh, '61 Steven J. Rindsig, '82 John D. Rustwick, '71 Ted O. Tostlebe, '48 Tony J. Trease, '85 John W. Wilson, '08
Kansas State University Beta Chapter James Albert, '16 T. Mark Anwander, '72 Jarold W. Boettcher, '63 Charles H. Butler, '60 John D. Costello, '52 Roger W. Coulter, '61 Steven B. Deck, '79 Daniel E. Fankhauser, '67 Terry J. Garvert, '77 Thomas P. Hoover, '85 Hunter E. Hoss, '95 Kollin W. Knox, '92 Paul J. Lacy, '81 Thomas E. Mistler, '63 John C. Moser, '82 Spencer A. Puls, '64 Robert G. Reid, '60 John G. Serafin, Jr., '90 Don K. Tomlinson, '71 Lawrence H. Wagner, '61 Chester C. Wilcox, '62
Richard A. Cole, '67 Steve Collins, '77 Brian P. Collins, '75 Timothy M. Corbett, '74 Robert S. Cory, '90 Gary L. Cowger, '70 John A. Dunn, '89 Jerry L. Hotujac, '71 Richard A. Jester, '79 Warren P. Poslusny, '69††† Terry J. Moore, '68 William T. Morgan, '75 William E. Sherman, '70 Jared M. Torrey Gregory L. Vaughn, '76 Mark W. Zuzelski, '68 Kutztown University of Pennsylvania Kappa Chapter Omar Moreno Kameron Weinberg Lafayette College Gamma Chapter Leonard H. Habas, '66 David Hammer, '92 Kenneth W. Howland, '74 Brian D. Mansfield, '91 James F. Reeve, '62 Eric P. Reumann, '88 David E. Schwager, '84 Joseph Z. Sherk, II, '67 Michael S. Sherrill, '88
Kennesaw State University Omega Chapter Jonathan Bruhn Andrew M. Cosey, '11 Matthew E. Gosa, '12 Dillan Humbard Adam L. Lowe, '16 Luis J. Velasquez, '12 Michael Zwach Kent State University Lambda Chapter Zachary P.Anderson, '16 Michael J. Argyros, '16 James E. Behling, '60 Donald W. Booth, Jr., '63 George H. Brundage, '60 Don E. Butler, '61 Dennis M. Butts, '93 Logan M. Evans Jack R. Forshey, '65 Bruce P. Kelso, '70 Kenneth D. Kirk, '71 Richard A. Krieger, '63 Donald S. Miller, '71 Stuart S. Myers, '58 Kevin Otubu, '16 Colin O. Otubu, '16 Glenn L. Peterson, '84 John B. Rank, III, '80 Joseph H. Reed, '60 Robert E. Ross, '70 Steve E. Rossa, '76 Donald P. Winter, '57 Kent E. Wolcott, '66 Robert W. Woolf, '65
Lewis & Clark College Delta Chapter Tod M. Corrin, '72 Alan Knox Lamb, '72 Byung Min Lee, '88 David A. Stumpf, '66 Long Island University Beta Chapter Thomas J. Clark, '73 John P. Giles, '74 Louisiana State University Epsilon Chapter William H. Bassett, Jr., '59 Johnston Harman Chandler, '58 Frank K. Chandler, Jr., '61 N. Peter Davis, '78 Lawrence G. Freeman, '69 George C. Fugler, '48 Robert D. Jolly, '62 Robert G. Jones, '60 Charles B. Maginnis, '70 Robert J. Merkle, '60 William T. Odom, Jr., '71 Joe A. Simon, '60 Hunter C. Thom, '72 Audis H. Thornton, Jr., '58 Heinke E. Trapp, '85 Edward W. Veillon, '62 Mark M. Walker, '75 James S. Whittle, '63
Kettering University Epsilon - Section A Chapter Jones R. Barton, '16 Tracy E. Basing, '75 William G. Bechtel, II, '84 Gregory P. Buschmann, '77 Robert J. Campbell, '73 Caleb J. Carter 34
Louisiana Tech University Rho Chapter Michael S. Brickey, '96 Salvador M. Calcagno, Jr., '87 Martin W. Wilson, '88 Loyola University of Chicago Alpha-Omega Chapter Matthew D. Brooks, '06 James E. Dahl, '92 Jeffrey J. Kinzler, '83 Nicholas E. Kreifels, '11 David J. Kupiec, '86 Erik E. Lindholm, '02 Ross Anthony Pometta, '07 Daniel C. Stanczak, '03 Patrick J. Stiff, Jr., '04 Lynn University Lambda Chapter Brandon Elyakim Andy E. Elyakim Kyle Van Pelt M.illikin University Delta Chapter Brian M. Carney, '93 Mankato State University Beta Chapter John M. Ryan, '70 John A. Shepard, '69 Marshall University Alpha Chapter Robert L. Bledsoe, '61 Willard H. Catlett, Jr., '74 William R. De Silva, '59 Joseph B. Feaganes, '66 Donald D. Ferguson, '59 Vernon P. Ferrell, '57 Emmett J. Foster, '57 Steven R. Headley, '68 Lawrence E. Hite, '56 Russell F. Hodges, '71 John P. Hoover, '65 Joe K. Kessler, '64 William E. Korstanje, '57 Ryan W. Lilly Marion A. McCoy, '61 Austin L. Stewart David E. Taylor, '73 Stanley C. Westfall††† Daniel R. Westfall, '02 John C. Williamson, '63 Massachusetts Institute of Technology Iota-Tau Chapter Louis H. Bangert, '58 Ryan L. Blanchette, '94 Lawrence M. Butkus, '85 Walter L. Colby, III, '62 Thomas L. Geers, '61 John J. Golden, Jr., '65 George M. Haney, '62
William B. Maley, '46 Timothy J. Reckart, '78 Richard G. Rorschach, '50 William A. Steves, '68 James R. Yankaskas, '69 Robert J. Zalucki, '82 McDaniel College Mu Chapter William Bower Evan J. Callahan, '17 Zach O. Doherty Grant Ashtin Duffield, '16 Brian J. Everitt, '16 Edward A. Hedstrom Travis E. Hise, '16 Jose L. Osorio Darin E. Winters, '17 Mercer University Psi Chapter Joel H. Bickerstaff, '74 James H. Bray, '72 George T. Brown, '51 Perry B. Buck, '75 Gary S. Buhler, '87 James L. Clegg, Jr., '48 William B. Cook, '87 Malcolm C. Davis, '51 Thomas S. Duncan, '77 John Feininger, '73 John F. Howard, '74 Galen B. Jones, '73 William T. King, '57 George W. Lumpkin, '54 James G. Lyerly, III, '84 Bruce D. McAllister, '73 Ted Musial, '65 Robert Allen Scherer, '83 Richard A. Smith, '66 Miami University Tau Chapter Ben L. Allen, '60 John R. Balconi, '67 Gregor K. Emmert, Sr, '56 Stephen D. Fisher, '79 Larry A. Freedman, '66 Mark A. Goodman, '68 Richard K. Green, '56 Joseph B. Greene, '68 Walter L. Gross, III, '75 Douglas C. Hodge, '91 Robert J. Kamerschen, '57 John D. Laird, '65 Andrew P. Laplante, '87 John F. Luthy, '52 Jeffrey B. Marchand, '66 Randall B. McGruther, '72 Thomas W. Mears, Jr., '58 Rodney M. Miller, '53 Bruce E. Murphy, '78 Tom C. Nasby, '80 Ernest R. Porter, '47 Glen T. Roberts, '78 Robert L. Roll, '58 Eric K. M. Schaumloffel, '65
DONORS
Jerome B. Schildmeyer, '85 Richard L. Schroeder, '58 Kelsey S. Stewart, '60 Richard A. Termuhlen, II, '80 Richard H. Thompson, '56 G. Sheldon Veil, '50 Nelson J. Vogel, '68 John W. Weaner, '56 James A. Wespiser, '58††† Howard T. Welser, Jr., '65 Michigan State University Gamma Chapter Louis M. Baldori, '67 Dennis M. Becklin, '63 Daniel J. Berkenfield, '96 Robert P. Bernecker, '60 Richard L. Black, '67 William Anthony Borre, '86 Frederick J. Brodeur, '88 Dennis J. Brodeur, '89 Stephen W. Colovas, '79 Richard Thomas Cummings, '90 Robert F. DesMarais, '93 William A. Despo, '72 W. Roderick Fischer, '82 Robert C. Gasser, '57 George A. Gonzalez, '71 William P. Hampton, '60 Robert D. Harmon, Jr., '60 Rodman E. Harris, '57 Mark A. Harris, '78 Stephen L. Hickman, '64 Stephen R. Howard, '71 Gordon C. Johnson, '60 Michael S. Jolly, '66 Frederick J. Kleisner, '66 Dale H. Koch, '60 Christopher E. Lane, '95 Freeman R. Lehman, '50 John A. Lucas, '60 Franklin E. Maxwell, '65 Mark Andrew McManus, Jr., '90 Jason W. Naber, '15 Anthony Andrew Nader, '87 George S. Nugent, '56 Peter J. Palmer, '63 David D. Rathbun, '57 Ron D. Reame, '67 David S. Rembiesa, '98 Bruce M. Rothschild, '98 Gerald D. Roueche, Jr., '61 David J. Runyon, '01 J. Donald Schafer, '64 Richard J. Schiesel, '58 David W. Senatore, '91 Douglas A. Shankwiler, '68 Robert O. Sherwood, '66 Gregory P. Somers, '98 Edward R. Swiderski, III, '01 Henry B. Tollette, '62 Ralph C. Wieleba, '71 Louis C. Winsman, IV, '00 Shane G. Wummel, '07
THE RECORD • SPRING 2019
Middle Tennessee State University Beta Chapter Jerry W. Boyd, '70 Thomas J. Dement, II, '90 Emery J. Gaines, '69 Daryl A. Massengill, '76 Bobby W. Sands, '72 Sidney W. Taylor, '84 James R. Walker, '81 Midwestern State University Omega Chapter Blake A. Gray Taylor P. Ledford, '13 Luke H. White Millikin University Delta Chapter Robert E. Anderson, '54 Jeff S. Arnold, '76 Randy S. Blackburn, '74 Leonardo Briseno David M. Bruining, '69 James M. Butts, '51 David A. Camerer, '60 Edward E. Cave, III, '68 Lucas Chatterton Robert A. Christensen, '55 Donald L. Eberhardt, '58 Thomas W. Ewing, '57 C. Steve Ferguson, '79 William J. Fuson, '60 David T. Gendry, '59 Jerome C. Imming, '64 Ronald M. Lofgren, '54 Craig W. Logan, '80 Donald L. McCann, '56 John E. McCoy, '59 Roy A. Osth, '60 Lee W. Schaller, '61 Donnell J. Schwarz, '61 William F. Sill, '66 Nicholas W. Smith, '83 Derrick M. Sosinski, '14 W. B. Taylor, '56 Seth W. Wheeler, '14 Millsaps College Delta Chapter Carson J. Doles Mississippi State University Theta Chapter Hayden T. Alford, '57 Stewart F. Alford, III, '71 Bobby L. Baker, Jr., '61 Harris H. Barnes, III, '68 David C. Barton, '64 Fred W. Beaufait, '58 Charles P. Boyd, '65 James T. Bridges, Jr., '66 George F. Bryant, III, '63 Campbell P. Cantelou, '84 Gerald D. Davis, '73 James L. Forrest, '61 Royall H. Frazier, '58 James O. Harris, Jr., '63 Robert L. Hart, Jr., '67
Nicholls State University Chi Chapter James P. Irwin, '05 Ethan R. Naquin Landon Wooldridge
Lawrence C. Long, '77 Ellington F. Massey, '61 Ben W. Pentecost, '79 Kenneth B. Puryear, '61 James B. Puryear, '60 Thomas B. Seitz, '63 Robert P. Shannon, Jr., '70 Robert B. Smith, '73 Robert D. Sultan, '86 William E. Thurmond, Jr., '63 John M. VanHorn, '10 Robert C. Weston, Jr., '74 Hugh H. Wilson, Jr., '64 Bennett E. Zinn, '61
North Carolina State University Alpha Chapter Robert C. Atkinson, '80 Richard J. Barney, '58 Charles G. Biddix, '81 Arthur S. Deberry, Jr., '51 John W. Hopkins, '74 Charles L. Jordan, III, '61 Edward O. Potts, Jr., '53 Richard W. Reed, '55
Monmouth College Alpha Chapter Robert C. Hudson, III, '74 Earl K. Paasch, '66 Paul D. Rickey, '78 Fred H. Rumney, III, '64 Bruce B. Wilson, '68†††
North Dakota State University Beta Chapter Al Arneson, '67 John S. Ashley Paul J. Barstad, '81 Kenneth A. Bartsch, '64 William M. Bateman, '85 Harold D. Crosby, Jr.††† Robert J. DuBord, '68 Trenton J. Eliason Jerre Fercho, '67 George Thomas Garrison William L. Guy, III, '68 Ross Arthur Haugeberg, '89 Allen J. Henderson, '61 Casey D. Hennessy Donald I. Indvik, '64 E. Curtis Johnson, '59 Roger G. Johnson, '56 Wayne E. Lee, '66 David S. Maring, '71 John B. Mark, '68 Adam S. McLane, '06 Kenneth S. Nicola, '59 Stephen P. Olson, '63 Timothy J. Pyle, '82 Larry E. Sack, '59 Gene W. Stockman, '58 Curtis W. Stofferahn, PhD, '75 Lyle J. Swenson, '72 Mark L. Tabbut, '79 Darryl L. Willison, '59 Hunter A.P. Mathias Richard R. Wilson, '58
Montana State University Alpha Chapter David F. Delap, Jr., '54 Donald L. Henderson, '62 Arthur Kier Neill, '59 James L. Nies, '94 Morehead State University Gamma Chapter Trevor S. Allen Roy J. Downey, '84 Nathaniel T. Gardner Matthew H. Johnson, '97 Lawrence P. Whelan New Jersey Institute Of Technology Iota-Tau Chapter Antonio L. Maneira New Mexico State University Phi Chapter Timothy M. Boswell, '75 William M. Bullock, '01 Patrick L. Carroll, '94 Roger E. Cundiff, '68 John P. Cusack, '74 Paul J. Dougherty, '61 Reynold R. Durden, '14 Matt Ellis, '11 Andrew W. Giraldi, '10 Samuel H. Henry, '77 John H. Hopson, '55 Jerry L. Jackson, '71 Robert P. MacDonald, II, '76 Thomas Kirk McCarter, '55 Norman E. Murray, '73 Steven L. Nelson, '76 Michael E. Packard, '64 Robert E. Paxson, '70 James W. Pinkston, '68 Cecil B. Smiley, '63 Douglas L. Turnage, '69 Alexander L. Wright, '93
Northern Arizona University Gamma Chapter Matthew J. Fuller, '88 Gary N. Lamp, '85 Thomas O. McCarthy, '82 Northern Illinois University Gamma Chapter Dennis L. Barsema, '77††† Michael J. Corelli, '01 Steven Gibson, '68 James L. Hersma, '70
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Thomas M. Lally, '84 Duncan W. McDuffee Thomas W. Neubert, '74 Anthony H. Ordoqui, '02 George E Smith, '97††† John F. Tierney, '75 Erik R. Vargas, Jr. Northwestern University Psi-Omega Chapter Charles W. Beck, '54 Robert E. Bodager, '50 Edward H. Bruske, III, '51 John R. Cheadle, Jr., '75 Larry H. Dellefield, '53 Roger F. Dickinson, '54 Walter W. Doren, '57 Andre L. Engel, '66 John W. Hayden, '79 Thomas Z. Hayward, Jr., '62 Paul B. Hiemenz, Jr., '75 Richard M. Johnson, '69 John B. Kilborne, '52 Richard L. Lies, '67 Derek J. Linkous, '08 Stanley N. Logan, '77 Jerry L. Macha, '65 William B. Nelson, '73 Philip H. Nye, Jr., '58 Arthur G. Platt, '57 Timothy C. Regan, '83 Mark E. Ruff, '75 John R. Strieter, '53 Walter A. Suhre, Jr., '56 C. Scott Thiss, '69 Joseph Verzino, '75 Lynn R. Wardour, '64 Gary C. Wendel, '56 Norwich University Alpha-Sigma-Pi Chapter Paul C. Bucknam, Jr., '52 Oakland University Sigma-Sigma Chapter Owen P. Ross Occidental College Epsilon Chapter Adam R. Angelino, '16 Jack J. Augsburger, '49 Matthew J. Axeen, '93 Merle V. Bailey, '55 Robert W. Bergstrom, '62 Jeremy S. Bloom, '18 James N. Danziger, '66 Andrew L. Hanson, '11 Jeremy D. Helstrom, '02 George D. Lessley, '55 Jesus M. Maldonado, '00 Reynaldo R. Montero, '85 Timothy C. Moore, '63 Stefan Pastor, '11 Richard A. Porter, '63 John B. Power, '58 David J. Shostac, '63 James J. Sullos, Jr., '60
DONORS
Oglethorpe University Eta Chapter Gabriel W. Benner, '16 Myers E. Brown, II, '93 Jonathan P. Carden Jordan A. Johnson, '07 Anthony R. R. Melillo Clyde A. Tallent, '72 Ohio University Gamma Chapter Alfred E. Banholzer, '57 Richard W. Benfer, '64 Glenn W. Frohring, '86 Richard T. Gillam, '58 Dale J. Hanslik, '63 Tom P. Healy, '06 David K. Holmquist, '58 William F. Lohrer, '61 Lloyd W. Miller, Jr., '76 LT Gary N. Roeseler, '62 Raymond F. Sole, '73 Joel H. Stile, '68 Richard T. Stultz, '68 Paul A. Taylor, '70 Edward S. Walters, '94 Ohio Wesleyan University Delta Chapter Gregory G. Boren, '64 Reid J. Calcott, III, '64 Robert J. Eakin, '63 Dale E. Hill, '59 Frederick B. Lemay, '62 Garret H. Moore, '66 Frederick R. Mueller, '57 Donald L. Poe, '53 George L. Romine, Jr., '67 Donald F. Wagner, '62 Oklahoma City University Tau Chapter Steven A. Graham, '74 Philip S. Ramey, '76 Ray M. Taylor, Jr., '72 Oklahoma State University Mu Chapter Darrell T. Bains, '55 Stephen L. Baker, '69 Enloe Baumert, '54 Thomas J. Beckman, '84 Robert W. Clark, '75 C. Jack Corgan Byron P. Corwin, '89 Rodney B. Coulter, '89 Donald D. Doty, '50 William D. Farr, '69 Bradley W. Fielding, '81 Charles G. Foreman, '55 Robert P. Gephardt, '75 Gilbert C. Gibson, '56 Jerry L. Gill, '67 Warren C. Hammert, '89 Raymond W. Harris, '62 Arthur G. Hays, Jr., '67 Daryl G. Hubbard, '58
Clifton Y. Hughes, IV, '94 Vernon W. Hurst, Jr., '89 Russell W. Jones, '55 Gerald L. Mayfield, Jr., '58 Wallace D. McMillin, '42 Michael S. Moore, '00 Robert D. Nash, '61 Christopher K. Norris, '85 Ralph J. Oliver, '50 Neal A. Onstot, '52 Alan C. Routh, '69 Harry D. Saunders, '67 Michael D. Schultz, '07 Mark P. Snell, '73 James L. Vining, '64 Richard A. Wagner, II, '69 Myron H. Watkins, '85 Scott W. Weirich, '76 Richard W. Woodman, '67 John M. Yeaman, '62 Kent C. Yoesting, '74 Oregon State University Alpha Chapter Charles R. Abbey, '53 Charles F. Adams, '69 Danford Scott Afong, '81 William J. Brennan, '62 John E. Burks, III, '56 Jaime T. Burnap, '05 Robert C. Churchill, '48 Raymond E. Clarno, '51 Michael L. Cutting, '65 Ronald E. Emmerson, '66 Louis J. Fasano, '64 Ryan K. Gilkerson, '10 Jeffrey S. Haller, '72 Frank C. Hametner, Jr., '63 Carter E. Harrington, '06 John F. Helms, '55 William Arnold Hughes, '69 Gary D. Lundgren, '76 Jon A. Masterson, '61 Craig W. McMicken, '50 Gerald E. Morgan, '49 Alexander J. Paul, '70 Thomas W. Roe, '58 John A. Rogers, '48 Michael E. Schaeffer, '85 Conrad E. Schray, '59 Scott F. Spiegelberg, '76 John E. Thompson, '76 M. Douglas Todd, '74 Jon R. Wissler, '79 George J. Zeagas, '49 Penn State-Harrisburg Psi-Eta Chapter Joshua S. George Justin J. Kim Pedro Lagunas Pennsylvania State University Alpha-Zeta Chapter Richard G. Angell, Jr., '58 Robert F. Carson, II, '63 Peter H. Craig, '66 Robert O. Greenawalt, '54 H. Richard Ishler, Jr., '63
James L. Lovejoy, '63 Gerald Z. Moyer, '59 Joseph B. Richey, '09
Leonidas Tsapatsaris Salvatore J. Vitale, Jr., '60 Michael K. Weiner, '89 Robert A. Whitby, '68 Jonathan K. Witter, '82
Purdue University Beta Chapter Charles W. Ashing, III, '59 David A. Bigler, '58 Leonard W. Busse, '60 Scott Campbell, '17 John S. Castell, '56 Michael C. Conner, '91 John C. Coulson, '61 Bruce T. Cundiff, Jr., '65 John B. Fillion, '71 Robert M. Freeman, '77 Maurice D. Galey, Jr., '85 Robert E. Gotschall, '59 Lewis G. Green, Jr., '60 John H. Hager, '58 Charles W. Kehrt, '59 John P. Kester, '60 James H. Lowe, '53 Grant Thomas McBee, '80 Russell A. Nippert, '59 Armand O. Norehad, '56 Landan D. Perry A. Russell Quilhot, '55 William D. Schmicker, '65 Steven E. Short, '68 Nick F. Stein, '82 Homer B. Terry, Jr., '58 William A. Van Deman, '95 Keith L. Welcker, '80
Rhodes College Zeta Chapter Robert B. Blumer, '59 Frank G. Broyles, Jr., '74 William M. Callicott, '55 Robert L. Echols, '62 Frank F. Farmer, '97 John C. Frist, Jr., '63 Andrew E. Gaston, '70 Bruce E. Herron, '65 Robert A. Jetmundsen, '77 Joe H. Parker, '56 William H. Smythe, III, '52 Walker L. Wellford, III, '59 David E. Wheat, '69 William M. Yandell, III, '77 Ripon College Beta Chapter William L. Rogers, '62 Harry G. Snyder, '60 Rochester Institute of Technology Tau-Gamma Chapter Andy M. Bohne, '06 Rockhurst University Delta Chapter Dan J. Brunnert, '00 Terrence P. Dunn, '71 Robert G. Pape, '73
Randolph-Macon College Alpha Chapter Paul Archambeault, '90 Harry E. Kenney, '81 Donald S. Parsons, '75 Daniel O. Worthington, Jr., '70
Rollins College Omicron Chapter Bradford M. Johnson, Jr. Saint Leo University Alpha-Mu Chapter Jake Alten Edwin A. Colon, '05
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Epsilon Chapter Robert B. Athanasiou, '62 James C. Bischoff, '75 Leonard E. Bower, '69 John C. Busse, '62 Ronald C. Byer, '55 Garry J. Cap, '75††† Robert Clagett, '74 David J. Colten, '72 John C. Daidola, '69 Rainer P. Ellis, '66 Richard R. Enwright, '76 David A. Gutmann, '90 Robert H. Hammer, III, '77 Frederick W. Herpel, Jr., '69 Peter A. Hutchins, '79 Paul F. Kondrath, '63 Charles H. Learoyd, '67 David S. Lowe, '90 Nicholas Mesibov Carl E. Meyer, '69 Christos G. Pantos, '67 Donald J. Parker, '78 Michael Quan, '70 Antonio Rogliano
Saint Louis University Zeta Chapter Douglas M. Squires Salem State University Tau-Gamma Chapter David Z. Finestone Salisbury University Sigma Chapter Peri A. Anest, USA, '82 Kyle S. Brennan, '01 Joseph E. Cheseldine, Jr., '78 Robert F. Clark Kenneth A. Film, '81 Daniel H. Gladding, '78 Joseph M. Knecht, Jr., '79 Charles W. Lindbeck, Jr., '81 Dwight W. Marshall, Jr., '88 Roger N. Sexauer, III, '07 Tim R. Wright, '89 36
San Diego State University Theta Chapter Patrick L. Abbott, '63 Earl E. Alexander, Jr., '64 Robert G. Altman, '67 Daniel F. Bamberg, '67 H. L. Banaga, '73 Ronald Arthur Bartleet, '85 Christopher J. Barton, '87 Benjamin H. Berry, Jr., '72 Addison Brady Gary A. Cringan, '70 Tom P. Gable, Jr., '67 Raymond M. Garding, '52 George F. Kerth, '59 Gregory A. Lough, '71 John W. McMullen, '70 Craig R. Renfro, '90 Ronald D. Roberts, '65 Gregory J. Seda, '70 Glenn D. Southard, '74 Richard A. Troncone, '65 Justin P. Venckus John L. Willis, '65 James M. Young, '62 San Jose State University Zeta Chapter Donald R. Beall, '60 Neil L. Bianchini, '55 Lawrence T. Cowper, '50 Chesley M. Douglas, Jr., '52 Robert J. Faleska, '59 Garrett P. Graham, '57 Richard L. Heideman, '64 Leland P. James, '63 Clayton A. MaCauley, '09 Brooks T. Mancini, Sr., '64 A. Bernard McCarthy, '56 Frank E. McFadden, II, '85 Torrie C. Nute, '92 John J. Shanafelt, '61 Randall M. Tatum, '86 Franklin Thomas, '57 William M. Thompson, '65 John S. Thompson, '59 Eugene R. Toschi, '59 William W. White, '48 Sewanee: The University of The South Omega Chapter David P. Arnold, '60 Bernie W. Ellis, '82 Frederick R. Freyer, Jr., '61 William Fuller, Jr., '69 Philip Hicky, II, '64 Charles F. James, III, '66 Edward W. Laney, IV, '82 Daniel W. Randle, '71 Jerry A. Snow, '61 John B. Thomas, IV, '97 David A. VanLandingham, '66 Simpson College Sigma Chapter Jacob D. Austin Alexander R. Austin Noah D. Bruns
Stan R. Campbell, '74 Elijah L. Clutter Lewis A. Cox Kerry P.J. Doran, '64 Andrew C. English, '05 Chase Erickson Daniel M. Estrada Charles E. Fiedler, Jr., '86 Zachary S. Goodrich, '17 Tyler B. Hungate John W. Iles, '69 Konner M. Johnson Zachary D. Lancaster, '13 Mark J. Lemko, '78 Robert L. Lester, '64 Brett A. Martin, '03 David Anthony Metz, '82 Paul B. Nelson, '61 Jerry J. Nelson, '67 Colin M. Robinson, '18 Scott M. Sams, '94 Cort I. Singleton, '17 Scott A. Slechta, '80 Roger W. Spahr, '62 James Thorius, '73 John P. Viner, '71 Seth T. Vredenburg, '01 Robert E. Wagner, III, '86 Donnie R. Walker, '74 Chadwick M. Warfield, '10 David W. Whalen, '85 Lucas A. Wilber Christopher C. Willeman, '96 Sonoma State University Alpha-Alpha Chapter Kyle Barnes, '14 Will F. Beaubien, '95 Jack Benedict, '14 Kevin J. Burdick, '14 Mitchell L. Cappa, '15 Scott Cecil, '14 David M. Cross, '05 Toby G. D'Elia, '93 Anthony P. Duncan, '01 James Fanti, '13 Shawn M. Farrell, '92 Martin Folan, '14 Trevor D. Frampton, '94 Nickalos Hemmen, '13 Damon B. Hirschensohn, '98 Samuel Marx, '13 Justin Moscoso, '92 Travis B. Powers, '92 Mark S. Ramsey, '97 Jonathan P. Rei, '91 Daniel Reilly, '15 Chris Roberts, '13 Kyle Stahl, '13 Shay M. Stewart, '96 Tyler Theobald Martin R. Vindiola, '13
DONORS
South Dakota State University Theta Chapter Loren J. Boone, '72 Chad L. Christopherson, '91 Matthew L. Cole Michael L Evink, '90 Robert S. Fisher, '08 Edmund J. Giefer, '21 Thomas E. Graslie, '73 Monte R. Koenig, '79 Duane R. Larson, '71 Jeffrey L. Nelson, '71 Allan M. Schreier, '85 Thomas P. Staebell, '73 Southern Methodist University Delta Chapter Gary L. Appelt, '70 Leonard H. Armistead, III, '73 David A. Beach, '67 James C. Boyd, '77 William M. Conner, '88 Gary T. Crum, '69 Jason Dallas Fraser, '93 Robert Gotovac, Jr., '86 Troy A. Grande, '85 Kurt A. Haab, '86 Gary D. Huselton, '68 Grant E. Mashek, '02 David M. McClendon, '78 Don L. McNeil, '67 Lee W. McNutt, III, '77 Thomas G. Pappas, '81 Daniel C. Peavy, '60 Donald K. Riffe, '54 Michael M. Sale, '79 Shelby L. Smith, '54 Lowell N. Smith, Jr., '54 H. Leighton Steward, '57 James H. Verschoyle, '63 Patrick S. Wallace, '71 Richard C. Ware, II, '68 Welcome W. Wilson, III St. Lawrence University Rho Chapter Christopher C. Abbott, '80 Patrick W. Bentley, '64 David V. Boyer, '62 Robert R. Edmiston, '59 James J. Finke, '61 John E. Houx, '56 Robert W. Rust, '50 Stanford University Alpha Chapter Robert A. Beeley, '60 Edgar Berkey, '61 Roger S. Bounds, '64 Charles G. Cale, '64 John R. Connelly, Jr., '78 Robert J. Finger, '70 Robert B. Gowin, '80 John L. Gregg, II, '55 Olaf M. Halvorson, Jr., '62 G. Robert Hamrdla, '60 Thomas P. Haverty, '76 THE RECORD • SPRING 2019
Robert V. Heldman, '58 William C. Ingram, Jr., '50 N. Kermit Olson, '58 William Souveroff, Jr., '56 Alan B. Steiner, '63 Robert B. Thompson, '70 Philip L. Waters, '55 Frank B. Williams, '63
Texas A&M University Tau Chapter Ronald H. Golub, '86 Michael C. Latimer, '97 W. Olynn Marshall, '83 Michael E. Pflueger, '87 Joel Alfred Prellop, '94 Bret A. Smart, '04
State University of New York-Oswego Zeta Chapter Jason A. Beim, '10 Alan Chargin, '12 Eric L. Cohen, '10 Christopher R. Donnelly, '98 Ian M. Donovan, '11 James S. Fanning, '05 Edwin Andres Gonzalez, Jr., '12 Zachary Griggs, '12 Stephen J. Henderson, '12 Kyle Hollander, '14 Justin Howard, '11 John E. McCabe, V, '15 Joseph McPartlin, '11 Bryan R. Mendoza, '12 Kenneth Andre Morris, '10 Jesse D. Mosier, '03 Sean M. Murphy, '09 Zachary O'Neill, '13 Elijah Olinsky, '10 Kenneth J. Pattridge, '15 Jason Rozenberg, '10 Adam Ryan, '13 Stephen Schwarz, '10 John C. Sebalos, '05 Joseph Spero, '16 Furkan Tekin, '11 Trevor C. Vachris, '13 Andrew J. Winter, '11 John P. Woodburn, '13
Texas Christian University Beta Chapter Michael C. Blackburn, '73 John A. Bonnet, '60 Bobby J. Cochran, '56 Robert N. Corrigan, Jr., '68 David N. Dike, '81 Rayford B. High, Jr., '63 John F. Hill, Jr., '79 Alfonso Martinez David R. McDaniel, '70 James W. Phipps, '59 David C. Redford, '62 Larry D. Shackelford, '69 Noble Smith, '15 Richard B. Vance, '68 Owen R. Worley, Jr., '70
Stephen F. Austin State University Phi Chapter Joshua D. Smith, '13 Syracuse University Delta Chapter Robert N. Colvin, '65 Gregg W. Doherty, '55 Richard M. Gray, '62 Legrand F. Kirk, Jr., '60 Kenneth R. Latham, '52 Daniel M. Maxwell, '86 Leslie H. Read, '57††† Richard W. Stoddard, '58 Douglas H. Wassmer, '65 Tennessee Technological University Delta Chapter Brandon C. Boyd, '07 Jackson R. Crabtree, '12 Robert B. Fleming, '81 John A. Howington, '85 Richard L. Schultz, '70 Richard G. Smith, '63
George Prochaska, Jr., '68 Wade R. Quinn, '84 Dean R. Quinn, '82 Richard W. Salmon, '66 Richard Slaven, '68 Gregory L. Thomas, '74 Mark R. Turner, '83 John M. Tye, III, '67 James H. Waller, '80 Edward P. Waller, Jr., '66 Bill R. Wienke, '60 David G. Wight, '64 Clark S. Willingham, '67 Daniel N. Wood, '71 The George Washington University City Rho Chapter Chad J. Antonini, III, '00 Terence L. Babcock, '67 Herman E. Cox, '50 Edmund P. Crump, '60 Henry H. Frain, '61 Ray A. Gibbs, Jr., '50 H. Lindley Grubbs, '65 R. Gerald Heinze, '65 Byron Kline, '65 Leon S. Mapes, Jr., '70 Steven R. Mitchell, '80 Nathan J. Naddeo, '56 John W. Purvis, Sr, '71 Thomas M. Raybould, '62 Samuel Vercellotti
Texas State UniversitySan Marcos Sigma Chapter Hunter C. Barnes Joshua P. Brown Dakota Chappell Cole Contreras Gavin D. Crosby Tyler M. Ellis Esteban Garza Joey A. Gutierrez, '97 Jake Thomas Holland Khan Le Connor Parker Matthew Allen Stubblefield, '04 Zachary S. Watson Parker J. Wiltz Jordan T. Wood
The Ohio State University Theta Chapter Richard D. Davis, '47 Robert G. Ganzmiller, '61 William D. Kerns, '66 John S. Mason, '66 Antonio L. Massenelli, '00 Roger E. McClure, '55 Bruce I. Nicholson, '70 Merrill D. Phelan, '70 George S. Place, '69 James T. Ramer, '68 Norbert J. Ranz, '48 Paul C. Smith, '54 Michael B. Weingard, '71
Texas Tech University Alpha Chapter Fred S. Alexander, III, '67 Christopher M. Barteau, '05 Hal B. Buchanan, '60 John D. Burnett, '81 W. Brant Chandler, '79 James C. Chittim, '65 Will A. Courtney, Sr., '58 Guy A. Davis, Jr., '64 Giles M. Forbess, '61 Donald R. Furgeson, '55 Thomas H. Gardner, '81 Gordon R. Harmon, '55 Loye Y. Hollis, '54 John P. Joseph, '62††† Andrew L. Kerr, '71 William D. Leachman, '55 Stanley B. Lucas, '74 Alton R. Marricle, '61 Robert M. Moore, '68 James M. Moudy, '63
The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Xi Chapter James E. Lebow, '80 Lansing B. Lee, III, '69 William O. Leonard, III, '69 Charles K. Massey, III, '85 Towson University Alpha Chapter David Francis Ahearn, '87 Michael L. Bankert, '83 Denis M. Brilliant, '85 Les H Ireland, '86 Jeffrey P. Jacobs, '91 Mark C. Livingstone, '91 Daniel Suissa, '84
37
Troy University Epsilon Chapter James L. Martin, '82 Robert M. Moore, IV, '92 Joseph E. Parish, Jr., '87 Jason A. Williamson, '98 Tulane University Tau-Upsilon Chapter Robert N. Arrol, III, '61 John E.W. Baay, II, '84 Edwin N. Beckman, MD, '65 Michael W. Biggs, '72 C.T. Blenvenu, Jr., '59 Neil D. Blue, Jr., '54 Wade W. Burnside, Jr., '51 Charles R. Coneway, '68 Robert E. Dilworth, '66 Charles J. Fechtel, '73 Joseph L. Fitzgibbons, '76 Miguel M. Flechas, III, '59 W. Gedge Gayle, Jr., '60 C. Joseph Giroir, Jr., '60 Bruce A. Harrison, '84 John D. Kenney, III, '66 Lester G. Nash, '58 Charles T. Orihel, '78 J. D. Painter, '59 Prentiss E. Smith, Jr., '56 Richard W. Stephens, '66 Henry S. Teaford, Jr., '66 Charles D. Viccellio, '55 Vincent Vincent, III, '61 Foster Walker, III, '66 George H. Ward, '79 Eugene C. Wasson, III, '64 James A. White, III, '61 Robert Wiegand, II, '70 Union University Eta Chapter Mason Cagle Kinnie A. Dismuke, '63 Donald L. Hickman, '86 Jason A. Kriaski, '13 William J. Rogers, '55 Kristopher N. Ross Robert G. Wood, Jr., '82 University at Albany Pi Chapter Jarod M. Hahn, '05 Joseph N. Lapine, '94 University of Akron Phi Chapter Greg Baker, '14 Jarod J. Bronstrup Christian L. Lisle, '97 University of Alabama Mu Chapter Bestor W. Coleman, III, '58 Jerry A. Davis, '57 Lucius S. Evins, III, '68 James C. Laslie, Jr., '61 C. Richard Moore, Jr., '73 Allen D. Rushton, '52 Taliaferro L. Samuel, III, '70 Luther D. Stacy, Jr., '61 Charles S.Treadwell, Jr., '72
DONORS
University of Alaska-Anchorage Alpha Chapter Karl R. Wing, '11 University of Arizona Alpha Chapter Joseph F. Abrutz, Jr., '75 Brent C. Berge, '62 Paul R. Burns, '76 Christian P. Burns, '15 Calvin J. Burns, '12 Donald Butler, '51 Bradley M. Cohen, '85 Stanley L. Cook, '54 Stephen D. Cummings, Jr., '90 Alan D. Dineff, '74 Mark S. Grotefeld, '78 John A. Hagenah, '76 Thomas C. LaMantia, '87 Walter J. Maykulsky, '73 Randy R. Mehringer, '89 James M. Moore, '74 Edward C. Price, II, '65 Paul W. Rihs, '71 Kevin S. Taylor, '91 Mike R. Tenney, '01 Howard Wakefield, Jr., '56 BG Terrence P. Woods, '66 University of Arkansas-Fayetteville Alpha-Upsilon Chapter Robert A. Blanshard, '69 William P. Bowden, '54 A. Sid Bray, Jr., '73 J. Walter Buchanan, '67 Charles C. Burrow, III, '67 Gene Cogbill, '69 Stephen W. Creekmore, III, '72 Martin C. Davis, '70 Floyd H. Fincher, Jr., '68 RADM George M. Furlong, Jr., '53 Richard D. Gillham, '50 Richard D. Gladden, '56 David M. Hampton, '73 Matt Holman, '10 Fred W. Hunt, '49 Thomas L. Jameson, Jr., '76 Ronald Justiss, '67 Cloud N. Keyes, '68 Charles G. Keyes, '66 Daniel S. Massanelli, '12 Phillip W. Moery, '70 Tim H. Nash, '75 Jerry D. Pinson, '64 William L. Powell, '50 Connor Reddick, '17 George A. Rose, '64 William C. Southmayd, '47††† Thomas E. Stanley, IV, '65 Warren A. Theis††† Richard J. Udouj, '56 Jesse P. Walt, '50 Sanford M. Wilbourn, '47
Blake Wilkerson, '08 Jan M. Williams, '92 Walter E. Williamson, '65 University of ArkansasLittle Rock Beta Chapter Joe D. Drompp, '72 Raymond A. Weber, '70 Ken L. Wilkerson, '78 University of California-Berkeley Beta Chapter David M. Barnes, '97 Gregory D. Beltran, '78 Beamer Breiling, MD, '58 Ronald N. Clazie, '60 William T. Cunningham, '57 Thomas J. Fitzgerald, Jr., '60 Daniel C. Funderburk, '50 Gilbert R. Guerin, '53 Harold B. Hoppe, '80 James R. Kidder, '57 James W. Moor, '52 Scott M. Nittler, '80 Mark L. Nittler, '78 Dean L. Rider, MD, '74 James R. Stedman, '61 William L. Woolley, '50 University of California-Davis Kappa Chapter Robert E. Faulkner, '55 John K. Frazier, '71 William C. Hosie, '60 Lawrence Y. Kanagaki, '71 Robert B. McGregor, '62 Terry N. Oldershaw, '63 Dennis R. Peterson, '71 Douglas G. Saladino, '73 Donald C. Wood, '57 University of California-Irvine Psi Chapter Tony M. Crisp, '92 Ben Johnson, II, '87 Kent E. Katnik, '91 University of CaliforniaLos Angeles Delta Chapter Sydney J. Albright, '53 Robert G. Allison, '71 William J. Alser, '59 Kenneth M. Arndt, '64 James L. Bechter, '82 Robert B. Carusi, '62 Ronald L. Clark, '74 Michael A. Clarke, '58 David B. Dollinger, '86 Peter G. Eden, '65 Gabriel A. Garzo, '02 Robert A. Gershon, '60 Lee D. Groza, '89 Edwin R. Hayek, '85 Brian D. Holmes, '83 William C. Houghton, '55
Mark S. Peters, '78 S. Michael Pinn, '83 Stephen D. Purifoy, '73 Mathius F. Rosenberger Harrison Spellman Timothy W. Tracy, '94 Gordon L. Wheeler, '76
Brian L. Hughes, '74 Dwight B. Hunt, '66 Roy H. Jones, '59 James E. Kauffman, '70 Jeffrey L. Mansoor, '73 Robert M. Nostrand, '65 David H. Olson, '55 Michael M. Ozawa, '83 Kent Parsons, '64 Bruce W. Rognlien, '60 Scott S. Thompson, '83 Christian R. Wehrly, '17
University of Central Oklahoma Sigma Chapter Connor J. Garrett Jake M. Harris
University of California-Riverside Omicron Chapter Kevin Allen Corona, '16 Roger J. Gallego, '91 Shiloh E. Hall, '97 Angelo Z. Perillo, '12 Timothy J. Siegel, '91
University of Cincinnati Epsilon Chapter Dennis L. Barger, '80 John F. Barrett, '71 Alton B. Barton, Jr., '70 Hugh K. Baude, '51 Barry J. Bebart, '86 William F. Bentz, '62 Neal R. Berte, '62 Russell W. Best, '09 Richard J. Beyersdorfer, '79 John C. Bools, '75 G. Bradley Brown, '72 Edward I. Brune, '59 Jack O. Bull, '57 Robert E. Carroll, '81 L. Barry Cors, '54 Ronald I. Cosler, '64 David V. Crockett, '71 Douglas E. Earhart, '77 Kenneth R. Elder, '64 Christopher C. Fehring, '95 J. Howard Frazer, '49 Dean R. Gaudin, '56 Theodore C. Geier, '52 Joseph A. Havlovic, '48 Warren S. Hensel, Jr., '64 Theron A. Hopkins, '94 Thomas J. Howison, '77 Thomas E. Huber, '80 Daniel S. Jones, '61 James C. Kennedy, '73 James F. Koenig, '73 Elmer J. Krabacher, '49 Wesley M. Lampe, Jr., '57 David M. Lance, '56 Paul S. Meyer, '62 Jerome W. Momper, '64 Matthew W. Moreland, '00 R. Bradley Motz, '83 Roger A. Nadler, '68 Robert H. O'Connor, '81 Joseph Ottaviani, '66 Dale T. Peters, '58 Donald H. Rahn, '58 William J. Seitz, III, '75 Mark E. Sims, '77 Robert A. Suddendorf, '49 Jim W. Sunderland, '49 Christopher J. Tallman, '02 Robert E. Tiemeyer, '56 Nicholas A. Trelka, '05 Tom F. Walther, '81 J. Lawrence Willey, '62 Mark L. Willey, '93
University of CaliforniaSan Diego Chi Chapter Trevor J. Gerard, '14 David T. Robinson, '94 Travis Zuroske, '17 University of CaliforniaSanta Barbara Eta Chapter C. Lance Barnett, '68 Brian J. Bosse, '92 Bradley J. Bowen, '82 Robert L. Bowen, '60 Paul F. Brinkman, Jr., '69 Bennett A. Duval, '11 Harold T. Hamm, '59 Michael J. McKenzie, '78 Jack D. McMurry, III, '84 Steven C. Mendell, '63 Steven A. Micheli, '76 Arnold O. Overoye, '62 George A Porter, '60 Ross U. Porter, III, '86 Lawrence M. Schwab, '75 Joseph H. Wadsworth, III, '65 James W. Woodworth, '62 University of CaliforniaSanta Cruz Omega Chapter Richard Cao, '95 University of Central Florida Epsilon Chapter Gary J. Boynton, '76 James C. Daly, '88 Cam J. Dungey Cam J. Dungey Filip H. Edstrom, '88 Christopher R Gonzalez, '98 John D. Kelley, '77 Jacob I. Levine Sebastian Montes Aakash Patel, '17
38
University of Colorado Boulder Chi Chapter Steven M. Coyne, '91 Laurence W. Demuth, Jr., '51 Peter W. Dillon, '58 William K. Fisher, '83 Robert S. Heim, '52 Neil H. Johnson, '50 William E. Kugler, '58 Phillip E. Lantz, '60 Charles W. Larson, '65 Douglas W. Schantz, '86 D.C. Andrew Smith, Jr., '61 William F. Turner Michael E. Vance, '62 David G. Williams, '56 Boyce W. Wiltrout, '63 Carl H. Zietz, Jr., '55 University of ColoradoColorado Springs Phi Chapter Aaron Barker Kyle R. Larsen Jake Levine Garrett M. Pugh University of Connecticut Beta Chapter Richard C. Barrett, '64 David I. Barton, '60 James E. Blozie, '50 Noel F J Castiglia, '59 Fred D. Clark, III, '60 William R. Denton, '60 William T. Derech, Jr., '93 Michael S. Heller, '93 Warren J. Hughes, Jr., '54 David J. Shaw, '57 Kirk R. Thornton, '71 University of Dayton Chi-Sigma Chapter Kevin D. Truong University of Delaware Alpha Chapter Scott R. Hansen, '01 University of Denver Zeta Chapter Robert L. Adamson, '65 Tyler J. Bishop, '09 Charlton H. Chatfield, '69 Joseph T. Fairbanks, '62 Richard F. Gilman, '62 Douglas C. Hancock, '60 Peter H. Hoopis, '99 Brian L. Kitts, '83 Timothy J. Monk, Jr., '93 Thomas D. Wilcox, '60 Welcome W. Wilson, Jr., '73
University of Evansville Epsilon Chapter Thomas E. Blackburn, II, '91 Dean A. Bosse, '65 Eric L. DeVries, '96 Jerry W. Eagleson, '70 Robert E. East, '51 Ronald M. Faust, '72 Ryan M. Freeman Josh D. Goode, '01 Sam A.T. Guertin Dennis H. W. Haire, '77 Ennis V. Heathcock, '59 Carl D. Hehemann James E. Kissling, '67 Ronald J. Magness, '63 James W. Meyer, '66 Ryan M. Priest, '95 Michael C. Rogers, '72 Richard L. Shipley, '79 James E. Stowers, '83 L. Steve Tuley, '69 University of Florida Upsilon Chapter Ricardo Alvarez, '73 William C. Andrews, '55 Elmer S. Atkins, '50 Wayne C. Bailey, '72 Thomas R. Barber, Jr., '61 Thomas V. Clayton, '78 Peter J. Dichiara, '88 Peyton B. Ellis, '60 Thomas L. Fleming, '67 Stephen G. Franklin, Sr, '69 Charles R. Freeman, '89 Robert E. Lewis, '82 Charles G. Long, '67 Daniel I. McCranie, '65 Leon R. McGowan, '59 William R. Meide, '74 Robert A. Mills, Jr., '48 Charles T. Montgomery, '56 John F. Neller, '52 James W. O'Kelley, Jr., '52 Angel Oliva, III, '90 Ronald E. Patrick, '58 Robert L. Reed, Sr, '58 Kevin M. Robbins, '84 N. Lee Sasser, Jr., '72 Robert C. Sorgini, '78 Richard B. Streeter, '62 Jeffrey J. Suarez, '79 William L. Sutton, '61 Samuel S. Tucker, '57 Jeffrey J. Weibel, '86 University of Georgia Beta Chapter Marvin B. Avery, '72 Braye C. Boardman, '90 John W. Brim, Jr., '61 John D. Comer, '49 A. Thomas Dudley, '68 James P. Evans, '48 Frank S. Hale, '82 J. Kel Harper, MD, '79 Jack N. Hattaway, '66 Andrew M. Head, '75
DONORS
Alfred Kalahati Stiles A. Kellett, Jr., '66 Chiel W. Marlow, Jr., '55 Hugh M. McCutcheon, '75 Scott G. McGregor, '82 George E. McGriff, Jr., '60 Powell A. Moore, '59 William S. Morris, III, '56 David C. Reddick, '68 Williamson S. Stuckey, Jr., '56 Henry W. Swift, Jr., '64 William J. Tribble, '76 Wright B. Waddell, '84 James T. Wilson, III, '91 Presley D. Yates, III, '72 University of Hartford Lambda Chapter Darren Deoraj, '12 Alexander L. Fusaro, '16 Patrick C. Mckeon Oliver L. Bernal William C. Booher, '71 David M. Doll, '88 Bruce Gaylor Jr. James R. Hill, '60 Steven R. McClellan, '77 Joseph T. Ruland, '70 James Arthur Worm, '84 University of Idaho Alpha Chapter William E. Egen, '65 James H. Karlen, '55 Ralph J. Longfellow, '60 Warren L. Martin, '57 Melvin M. Marvel, '60 William V. McCann, Jr., '66 University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Beta Chapter Richard L. Bergstrom, '71 Christopher G. Bradley, '92 M. Christopher Brown, II, '01 Michael H. Charpentier, '89 David L. Coit, '86 Michael Cordaro, '05 Thomas M. Donlan, '79 W. Richard Ellis, III, '70 John E. Enderle, '89 Brad J. Fischbach, '88 William R. Goodheart, Sr, '53 Trey D. Hancock, III, '88 David G. Harris, '83 William J. Howard, '56 James D. James, '59 William E. Johnson, '55 Louis J. Jumonville, '81 Raymond J. Keeler, '79 Clifford A. Kleymeyer, Jr., '65 Philip L. Mattison, Jr., '57 Robert E. McClary, '60 Gregory K. McClintock, '72 William M. Ozburn, '57 Marc J. Poskin, '87 THE RECORD • SPRING 2019
Michael A. Prah, '87 Brett Hunter Pyrdek, '96 Andrew W. Ratts, '84 Kenneth J. Rosinski, '72 John Shimkus, '82 Don M. Smart, '50 Michael J. Sparacino, '83 Robert J. Vlk, '87 University of Iowa Beta Chapter Lawrence C. Halpin, '62 Frank M. James, '61 George N. Kirk, '43 Stephen R. Langlas, '69 Michael H. Lyman, '69 Donne P. Moen, '58 David G. Moss, '66 Robert C. Newton, '49 Price S. Slechta Robert J. Vipond, '87 Joseph R. Williams, '54 James V. Young, '58 University of Kansas Alpha Chapter William F. Cronin, '60 Gary A. Foote, '79 Zachary Dalton Holland, '96 John J. McCabe, '61 H. Dumont Reed, '48 Edward F. Reilly, Jr., '60 Craig A. Smith, MD, '56 Phillip H. Stratemeier, '68 University of Kentucky Epsilon Chapter Joe E. Anderson, '81 Neil N. Ashworth, '70 Blaine K Ayers, '01 Robert H. Bolton, '79 Jerome G. Bressler, '70 William L. Bryan, '67 Dennis A. Cain, '66 Earl L. Calhoun, '74 R. Scott Coleman, '95 Lon W. Deckard, '69 Franklin H. Farris, Jr., '72 Robert H. Frank, II, '95 Donald W. Giffen, Jr., '74 James H. Graft, '77 F. Joseph Halcomb, III, MD, '74 Olaf M. Haugen, Jr., '59 Richard Hopgood Ronald F. Huffman, Jr., '94 Hal T. Hughes, '51 Phillip T. Johnson, '72 John S. Keebler, '69 Landon T. King, '59 John P. Koch, '87 Gary A. Koch, '64 David Andrew Koch, '84 Robert S. Lipman, '74 Edward A. Mayer, '70 John W. McCord, Jr., '49 Charles V. Meyer, '56 Micheal B. Minix, Jr., '91 Donald L. Mitts, MD, '67 James B. Morse, '71
Michael B. Mountjoy, '72 Jeff D. Neal, '93 Ronald D. Parham, '62 Micah S. Parish, '00 Frank V. Ramsey, Jr., '53 Roland J. Ratliff, III, '03 James A. Richardson, '70 David Allen Scinta, '81 Robert S. Sheehan, Jr., '81 John J. Shunnarah, '91 Phillip T. Smith, '81 Jerrold D. White, '61 Gregory J. Witbeck, '64
William D. Charlton, '54 Kenneth R. Cooper, Jr., '56 Raymond M.Davids, '77 Edwin B. Davis, '68 Timothy J. Davisson, '82 Antony J. DiDonato Carl L. Frederick, Jr., '54 Chris P. Gaylor, '72 Paul T. Hodiak, '62 Gaetano A. Incontrera, '70 Kurt E. Johnson, '71 Owen C. Kadow Adam L. Kaplan, '88 John P. Knox, '76 William H. Korab, '64 Brandon T. Kwintner Gregory E. Lomax, '76 Collin J. Morgan Robert M. Parks, '68 John E. Roberts, '63 James G. Sakers, '69 Michael E. Scott, '76 William S. Sims, '87 Harry Sinclair, Jr., '69 John K. Stitt, '60 Slaton L. White, '73
University of La Verne Upsilon Chapter Luke P. Blasi, '16 Edwin E. Gibson, '90 Jeremy C. Hinthorne Nicolas Antonio Rodriguez University of Louisiana-Lafayette Alpha Chapter Nicholas P. Cahanin, '05 Scott S. Carpenter, '88 John D. Colley, '73 Brandt J. Dufrene, '66 James H. Larke, Sr, '70 George J. Larke, Jr., '70 Charles D. Penney, '68 Jerry L. Ritchie, '69 R. Lewis Ropp, '80 Randy D. Rossi, '84 Charles H. Trent, '69
University of Massachusetts-Amherst Kappa Chapter Gregory C. Hamilton, '72 L. Paul Murray, '57 University of Memphis Sigma Chapter Jere M. Ervin, '58 E. Taylor Richardson, '62
University of Louisville Sigma Chapter Randall J. Campbell, '07 David D. Deyer, Jr., '13 John P. Docter, '11 Austin T. Dunn, '15 Charles Mechas, '15
University of Miami Alpha Chapter Ronald J. Bell, '90 Adam P. Bofill, '13 Arthur B. Choate, '70 Peter J. Clancy, '62 Jerome L. Cleveland, '53 Thomas M. Cook, '65 Paul A. Cruger, '64 Thomas F. Gannon, '63 Tipton D. Jennings, IV, '54 Matthias P. Meehan, Jr., '63 Todd P. Misemer, '91 Charles F. Overstreet, Jr., '59 Shawn M. Potter, '07 Paul F. Principino, '71 Martin C. Ross, '76 Martin L. Shaw, III, '65 John W. Shields, '57 Frank W. Simons, III, '60 Donald F. Slocum, '70
University of Maine-Orono Alpha Chapter John H. Burnham, '60 Porter D. Leighton, '58 William B. Mann, '49 William T. Melanson††† John P. Petzold, '60 John B. Peverada, III, '81 University of MarylandBaltimore County Omicron-Pi Chapter Brian A. Baum, '94 Kevin D. Heilman, '89 Bryan K. McMahon, '94 Matt S. Schlegel, '04
University of Michigan Iota-Beta Chapter Michael Joseph Acho, '89 William Owens Ahonen, '84 Frank J. Ascione, '69 Christian L. Brix, '54 Sanford B. Carton, '12 Robert A. Everett, '74 David C. Faul, '58 Donovan J. Golich, '15
University of MarylandCollege Park Beta Chapter Bruce Bensetler, '63 Kevin R. Berry, '77 Robert A. Blase, '64 Ryland G. Bristow, Jr., '62 39
Malcolm E. Martin, '57 David L. Nelson, '60 Edward J. Nykiel, '81 Barry R. Patron, '55 Robert B. Ravenscroft, '62 Kenneth M. Reichle, Jr., '64 Waldomar M. Roeser, '57 William B. Smith, Jr., '47 Andres Villareal, '87 Geoff Voss, '82 University of Minnesota Alpha Chapter James H. Aarestad, '49 James R. Bogard, '58 Thomas M. Canfield, '61 John P. Carlson, '52 George B. Chesley, '63 Debashis Chowdhury, '98 Donald A. Dibbern, '57 Thomas Anthony Durda, '80 James L. Ekstrom, '60 Richard P. Getchell, '55 Howard E. Grodnick, '84 Bruce R. Halgren, '59 James B. Hancock, '53 William E. Hill, '66 William B. Horn, '52††† Robert J. Johnson, '66 Bradley A. Kindem, '69 Jed D. Larkin, '92 David L. Meyer, '57 George L. Meyers, '57 Thomas I. Mueller, '63 Paul T. Nelson, '69 Thomas R. Pirsch, '51 Stephen O. Plunkett, '85 Walter G. Roberts, '56 Jeffrey F. Shaw, '69 Douglas E. Sinclair, '60 Scott A. Sundet, '78 Steven C. Tempelman, '90 William F. Vosbeck, Jr., '47 R. Randall Vosbeck, '54 Allen W. Wehr, '63 Kevin L. Weist, '79 Richard A. Willson, '59 University of Mississippi Gamma Chapter Gov Haley R. Barbour, '69 Robert Arthur Ellis, III Lyttleton T. Harris, IV, '62 Miller P. Holmes, Jr., '65 Clyde D. Kelso, III, '68 Frank M. Patty, Jr., '59 Ike S. Trotter, '74 University of Missouri Alpha Chapter Donald H. Altvater, '44 William H. Cloud, '71 Trent R. Felton David E. Frimel, '87 William R. Gilpin, '59 Charles J. Hasser, '62 Walter L. Hatcher, '54 Joseph W. Hoffmann, '58 Edward B. Minning, '57 Stephen Mosier, '65
DONORS
University of MissouriKansas City Kappa-Chi Chapter Alad A. Aguirre, '18 Matthew R. Combs Brandon X. Henderson, '21 University of Montana Beta Chapter Michael C. Baker, '64 William J. Beecher, '63 Timothy K. Borchers, '84 Alan R. Bradley, Jr., '85 Edward B. Cogswell, Jr., '55 Donald C. Cowles, III, '66 Michael J. Doyle, '67 Thomas W. Durant, '54 Larry C. Eichhorn, '60 John O. Ferro, '58 Gary G. Fish, '62 Richard L. Ford Harold B. Gilkey, '62 Lyle M. Glascock, '62 William R. Griffiths, '80 Edward R. Hale, '63 Howard E. Hansen, '60 SPec 5 Wayne A. Hinrichs, '62 Kurt F. Ingold, '67 Robert S. Jackson, '68 Andrew J. King, '85 Jon N. King, '67 Donald M. Krumm, '64 Donald A. Labar, '65 Dennis J. Labonty, '71 Ray D. Lampi, '63 Kenneth R. Lawrence, '63 Gerald G. Livesey, '59 David J. Morris, '63 James R Mountain, '81 Zane G. Murfitt, '50 Arne R. Mysse, '65 David H. Nelson, '58 David E. Norlander, '85 John L. Olson, '62 Leonard H. Sargent, '60††† Robert R. Romek, '59 James R. Thompson, II, '65 William B. Thompson, '68 Garfield M. Thorsrud, '49 Gregory L. Ulmer, '66 David K. Voight, '63 University of Mount Union Sigma Chapter Douglas James Ackerman, '82 Joseph C. Biscotti, '81 Robert L. Buchs, '54 Richard L. Button, '72 William Clay Craig A. Comstock, '65 Sean M. Cook, '11 Brandon J. Dare Timothy M. Hodgkinson Jacob R. Labonte Harold E. Mains, '59
Paul R. Maurer, II, '72 Lee A. Miller, '62 Brook B. Miller, '87 Rick B. North, '71 University of Nebraska-Lincoln Lambda-Pi Chapter Kenneth E. Anderson, '66 Theodore W. Armbruster, '74 Everett A. Bailey, '71 Lynn C. Beebe, '76 Richard L. Berkheimer, Jr., '75 Michael R. Bruce, '80 Don E. Bush, '71 Keith N. Bystrom, '72 Jack D. Campbell, '50 Eric K. Chapman, '77 Robert L. Cummings, '83 Greg P. Gillis, '82 Keith J. Gredys, '77 Clif S. Hamilton, Jr., '54 Robert J. Harberg, '78 Alex M. Haynes John R. Heineman, '82 Jerry D. Henderson, '52 Stuart G. Hickerson, '85 John L. Hoppe, Jr., '70 Tom S. Howes, '89 William D. Jackman, '86 LCDR Grey R. Jewett, '57 Cyrus A. Johnson, '50 Van E. Korell, '67 Roger C. Krhounek, '90 Steven J. Kutilek, '85 John E. Martin, '69 George W. McEachen, '64 Scott E. Smith, '90 Kurt W. Sonderegger, '71 F. Michael Sophir, '85 John C. Williams, '83 Jackson C. vlach Yaw University of Nevada-Las Vegas Beta Chapter Michael BenShimon, '09 Aric C. Bonner, '13 Adrian M. Charbonnet, '12 Joshua J. Clevenger, '02 Nicholas J. Devitte, '11 Vincent H. Garth, III, '94 Brian T. Glickman, '93 Brian W. Green, '00 Dennis R. Gushue, '03 Anthony A. Hernandez, '12 John B. Holder, '89 Edward A. Horwitz, '91 Samuel J. Jacobson, '12 Michael R. Korczynski, '12 Brent G. Martelli, '15 Alexander M. Mavros, '98 James D. McDaniel, Jr., '94 Steven M. Minino, '05 Sione Kvan Norsingle, '12 Christopher S. Overlay, '12 Steven G. Pieri, '91 Zaccary A. Poots, '09 Donald C. Romero, '14
University of North Alabama Nu Chapter James T. Garner, '88 Phillip S. Prince, '01
Joseph Rozich, '13 Jeff Ruziecki, '14 Colby J. Ryan, '16 Zachary D.L. Semenza, '04 Jeffrey D. Simons, '87 Joseph B. Stefan, '04 Eric R. Woodson, '02
University of North Dakota Alpha Chapter William H. Behrbaum, '54 John A. Berg, '67 James W. Blakeway, '83 David R. Bossart, '63 Rex R. Carlson, '83 Mike W. Crosby, '68 Robert J. Daggett, '85 David E. DeMers, '65 Lloyd K. Everson, Jr., '65 F. Gene Gruber, '66 Daniel G. Hinnenkamp, '72 David J. Hinrichs, '72 Curtis E. Hogfoss, '60 Thomas E. Kenville, '63 Don R. Knutson,, '56 Marvin G. Larson, '68 Steve Thomas Leidholm, '86 Richard W. Lindgren, '66 Paul H. Madsen, '67 Brian P. McDonough, '00 James E. Messmer, '67 Raymond J. Milner, '52 James R. Odenbach, '93 Gaylord A. Saetre, '66 Leif H. Schonteich, '99 James F. Weigum, '59 Miles C. Wiley, III, '75 Jerry D. Wolf, '58
University of Nevada-Reno Alpha Chapter Curtis W. Brown, '79 Darrin S. Bush, '70 Dean R. Heidrich, '74 Brian A. Holt, '05 Marc H. Ratner, '66 Fred L. Shaft, '58 Robert J. Werner, '62 University of New Hampshire Beta Chapter Douglas P. Blake, '52 George Chalmers, '61 Kenneth R. Clark, '68 Peter J. Coleman, '87 Ronald P. Courtney, '57 Charles A. Daunt, Jr., '52 Eugene J. Garceau, '67 Peter R. Greer, '62 Jeffrey Thomas Growney, '82 David B. Gustafson, '59 Jeffrey F. Hatch, '68 Robert W. Hicks, '55 Alan J. Hollander, '90 Milton R. Kirste, '55 H. Thacher Linke, '67 Maynard A. Plamondon, '62 Lee F. Richmond, '67 George B. Roberts, Jr., '63 Frederick A. Rothe, '70 Robert H. Walther, '65 Steven P. Wentzell, '69
University of North Florida Nu Chapter Jeffrey Kyle Carpp, '11 Christopher A. Slott, '08 University of North Georgia Delta Chapter Terrell A. Moore, Jr., '12
University of New Haven Nu-Eta Chapter Jonathan Thomas Cimino, '20 Thomas Criscione Christopher M. Fernicola Stephen Anthony LaLuna, '14 Kyle Lipka
University of North Texas Kappa Chapter Jeffrey S. Hicks, '91 University of Northern Colorado Alpha Chapter Emil D. Hoffarth, Jr., '77 Brad A. Milley, '99 Keith R. Molholm, '73 Randy E. Schamberger, '86
University of New Mexico Tau Chapter Armand T. Carian, '73 John N. Conniff, Jr., '69 Randall W. Eakin, '66 James G. Ellis, '68 David M.B. Griego, '83 Steven A. Kmat, '98 Perry W. MaGill, '53 David W. Matthews, '54 Gary L. Pierson, '61 Gary M. Ross, '76 James P. Singer, '69
University of Northern Iowa Chi Chapter Andrew Carl Abbott, '97 Curt M. Baker, '93 Jon C. Best, '88 Jeff C. Breeding Craig L. Crossland, '04 40
Gary C. Daters, '71 Thomas A. Egan, '70 Craig K. Goos, '92 A. Andrew Hyde, '06 Richard D. James, '69 Nicholas P. Jones, '03 Joseph M. Kint, '67 Christopher J. Koch, '07 Ian G. Kubbe Larry R. Lyon, '84 Mark A. Mazzie, '95 Scott T. McAdam, '73 P. Kelly Noll, '78 Ben J. Osterhaus, '17 Matt T. Timmerman, '07 Todd Allen Ulrich, '86 Gregory A. Warren, '99 Matthew P. Weinstein, '94 Randall D. Wolff, '84 University of Oklahoma Kappa Chapter Brian Joseph Adams, '98 Brian W. Allen, '02 Jonathan S. Baxt, '77 Bryan C. Beavers, '07 Basil R. Bigbie, '71 Bradd B. Bingman, '73 Joshua R. L. Bishop, '06 Jerry B. Blankenship, '59 Barth W. Bracken, '54 Rhett M. Bredy, '00 Richard J. Brezny, '81 Terry L. Carter, '71 Edward K. Cashion, '70 Harold H. Clifford, III, '69 William J. Cloud, '83 John J. Coates, Jr., '61 Thomas F. Collins, Jr., '71 Ryan Kyle Conley, '06 Paul D. Costilow, '68 Patrick R. Dailey, '72 Justin Dick, '09 Clifford C. Dougherty, III, '82 Michael G. Dowling, '80 Che Kyle Downs, '03 Carl E. Edwards, Jr., '70 Edward J. Edwards, '07 David P. Folks, '79 Eric A. Fritz, '98 Doug S. Fuller, '79 John P. Gilbert, '77 James W. Hatcher, '79 Steven Kent Hetherington, '71 Andrew W. Hood, '80 Thomas H. Hull, '09 Robert Hunt, '52 Russell V. Johnson, III, '72 Jay C. Johnston, '85 Jack E. Killough, '74 Joseph T. Kimbell, '58 David Lawrence, '11 James M. Little, '56 Alan B. Long, '77 John R. March, III, '75 Michael C. Mayhall, '70 Greg A. McKenzie, '69
Stephen K. McLennan, '77 Harry T. McWilliams, '55 Michael E. Merrill, '84 Jim A. Merrill, '90 J. Charles Monnet, '54 David W. Mooney, '84 Alan K. Munson, '76 Larry D. Neal, '70 Lane R. Neal, '04 Richard M. Oakley, '85 Frank X. Olney, Jr., '67 William Payne, '08 Michael L. Peck, '79 Collins M. Peck, '10 Orville D. Pope, '70 Robert L. Pourchot, '71 William C. Pratt, Jr., '49 William R. Pyeatt, '74 Adam D. Rainbolt, '07 Palmer R. Ramey, Jr., '69 Newton C. Roe, '54 John H. Roe, '71 Philip Ross, '09 Kenneth R. Ross, '73 Stuart D. Rowlan, '11 Van G. Russell, '73 Joe H. Schmidt, '86 Jeffrey A. Scoggins, '71 DDS Scott Sheppard, '11 Frank P. Sims, '79 Stanley S. Smith, '51 Bruce H. Stover, '71 David H. Street, '65 Henry B. Taliaferro, III, '83 Robert L. Talley, '69 Charles E. Tankersley, '06 Gary S. Thompson, '80 George R. Tippens, '76 Daniel R Tippens, '10 Charles A. Turney, '76 Stephen E. Walker, '72 William H. Warren, Jr., '63 Steven Watts, '09 Bruce W. Wilkinson, '66 Robert M. Winchester, '79 University of Oregon Beta Chapter Stanton R. Box, '86 Gerry B. Cameron, '62 Brent J. Dowty, '74 Robert A. Giere, '64 James P. Herr, '03 Macy M. Lawrence, '82 Kenneth D. Leash, '62 W. C. Long, '64 Donald W. Magnusen, '66 Richard S. Martin, '87 Dean K. Morell, '79 Donald M. Sharpe, '50 Robert K. Spicker, '67 Judson H. Taylor, '60 Charles J. Temple, '74 Parker Ashton Wellman Robert D. White, '53 Richard C. Yetter, '59 Gordon I. Zimmerman, '65
DONORS
University of Pennsylvania Theta Chapter William D. Bain, Jr., '47††† Ronald M. Bond, '59 Leslie G. Callahan, III, '72 Erich G. Holzapfel, '58 Jeffrey M. Karp, '88 R. Drew Kistler, '54 Stanley P. Mayers, Jr., '49 R. Theodore Moock, Jr., '56 LCDR Raymond L. Mossing, '46 Jack D. Neal, Jr., '62 Gilbert E. Paradies, '58 Richard C. Pisano, '56 B. Franklin Reinauer, III, '65 James C. Warner, '59 University of Pittsburgh Chi-Omicron Chapter Charles W Anchors, '59 Aaron J. Balch, '02 James H. Bregenser, '62 Paul R. Bridges, '59 Louis W. Catalano, Jr., '64 David W. Dawson, '77 Kenneth C. Denardo, '73 Joseph B. Depelheuer, '54 David J. Down, '85 George R. Enyeart, '67 Kenneth C. Frederick, '67 Theodore R. Helmbold††† Jeffrey J. Leech, '68 Robert A. Linden, '75 Edward K. Lyons, '59 George F. MacDonald, '48 Anthony G. Massoud, '63 Douglas F. Mundrick, '75 Harold D. Thomas, Jr., '50 John A. Thompson, '97 Franklin E. Urbany, '54 William F. Woods, '59 University of Puget Sound Gamma Chapter Brendan Amend Timothy C. Beals, '86 Robert W. Bolton, '82 Richard M. Brooks, '82 Alan H. Cottle, '74 Walter W. Emery, '65 Yuuki Mitsuo Yoshi Hashimoto Dean J. Hutter, '79 Fredric T. Langton, '61 Craig B. Mendenhall, '72 Thomas S. Morton, '86 Carl C. Olsen, '56 Kavan Ossentjuk Gerald F. Reilly, '66 Donald R. Rogers, MD, '54 Steven E. Roll, '75 Kevin C. Staehly, '14 Edward L. Strother, '61 Aldrin M. Villahermosa, II Larry J. Wetterhus, '54 Lloyd G. Whiton, III, '68 THE RECORD • SPRING 2019
University of Rhode Island Alpha Chapter Brent B. Bodick, '96 Mitchell D. Cantor, '72 Albert V. Fratini, '60 Daniel E. Granfield, '16 Ira E. Murphy, '51 University of Richmond Tau Chapter David Evan Adams, '82 Benjamin R. Bates, '98 Ryan Bertram, '99 Ted B. Clark, '97 Harry B. Fentress, '57 Frederick P. Hildebrand, '76 Robert S. Lawrence, '43 Robert W. Montgomery, '69 J. Ken Morgan, Jr., '71 M. Patrick Reed, '00 Raymond M. Richeson, '49 Leslie W. Roark, '55 Clifford L. Yee, '97 University of San Francisco Sigma Chapter Steven J. Brattesani, '82 William C. Godward, '77 Jeff Hersh, '92 Kevin M. Leong, '70 Michael F. O'Connell, '95 University of South Alabama Chi Chapter Joseph D. Barlar, Jr., '75 Hunter C. Commander Michael H. Diehl, '73 Robert D. Jenkins, III, '73 Bryan T. Op't Holt, '01 Richard M. Pardue, '70 Alan G. Stabler, '80 Fletcher Thomas Williams University of South Carolina Delta Chapter Ronald S. Banks, '58 Michael King Bell, '75 Stephen A. Burnett, '73 L. Russell Burress, '70 Ted B. Camp, '82 William S. Cowan, '64 James E. Dyer, '75 Robert O. Elrod, '85 John S. Graybill, '49 H. Montague Osteen, Jr., '63 Hudnall W. Paschal, '81 Edward M. Royall, '51 W. M. Simons, '82 Ronald W. Smith, '64 Henry S. Sullivan, II, '63 Richard M. Toohey, '68 Robert G. Vassy, Jr., '75 Byron C. Yahnis, '83
University of South Dakota Sigma Chapter Dalton W. Barse Ryan A. Boyd, '15 Kenneth C. Deboer, '86 Paul Doran, '50 David J. Doss Jeffrey J. Edman, '86 Michael D. Eggers, '79 Francis G. Homan, '85 Jay W. Hubner, '64 Doyle L. Knudson, '74 Donald D. Koenig, '52 James F. Leach, '61 Gregori Lebedev, '66 William S. Lenker, '90 Stephen C. Nord, '66 Carson J. Park Richard D. Rogers, '81 Jerry R. Roland, '58 Charles D. Ross, '86 Robert W. Schuneman, '09 Steven D. Sikorski, '64 Scott C. Sletten, '87 Vance M. Thompson, '82 Matthew S. Thornton, '97 Joel R. Trammell, '79 Michael W. Vehle, '72
University of Southern Mississippi Sigma Chapter Randal P. Alford, '72 Clayton M. Beard, '82 M Todd Buchanan, '90 Von Burt, '78 Dalton A. Colee M. Ronald Doleac, '70 James T. Garrett, III, '79 Kevin H. Giddis, '84 Clayton E. Johnson, '73 William C. Leslie, '65 John S. Lewis, '70 Phillip M. Minyard, '66 John S. Pardee, '69 Michael W. Parker, '68 Jonathan M. Richard, '90
University of Texas at Dallas Chi Chapter James X. Balandran, '10 Jason J. Didier, '13 Chase A. Johnson John Kelbe, '03 Michael McLean, '08 Craig H. Ostriyznick, '06 Michael P. Parmerlee, '06 Peyton T. Poer, '08
University of Tennessee at Martin Tau Chapter Lyle G. Evans, '74 William C. Hill, Jr., '80 W. Keith Hurt, '81 Robert A. Phelps, '91 Steven W. Wyatt, '94
University of Texas-El Paso Gamma Chapter Jimmy T. Angelos, '53 Kevin M. Coleman, '80 George T. Doolittle, '64 Richard A. Eason, '69 Thomas M. Fullerton, Jr., '81 Alan L. Jeffcoat, '69 Glenn M. Johnson, '58 Mallory L. Miller, Jr., '59 Richard A.D. Morton, Jr., '54 Brainerd S. Parrish, '64 Thomas M. Puffer, '71 Donald R. Vollintine, '61
University of Tennessee-Knoxville Kappa Chapter Christopher W. Bird, Sr, '84 Carter M. Cox, '60 Michael Demere, '88 Kimbrough L. Dunlap, III, '85 Pete Gaynor, '69 John D. Glass, '96 William A. Grant, III, '70 Jeffrey N. Jones, MD, '89 Tillman J. Keller, III, '63 Joshua D. Little Craig H. Metz, '77 Brett D. Patterson, '90 James K. Porter, '57 Donald B. Preston, '59 H. Baxter Ragsdale, Jr., '51 John L. Summitt, '51††† Jerome G. Taylor, Jr., '64 James S. Thomas, Jr., '71 William E. Timberlake, '59 John T. Vookles, '59 Thomas L. West, Jr., '59 John R. Willis, III, '65 Garron H. Wright, III, '90
University of South Florida Delta Chapter John P. Calfee, '73 Frank D. Capitano, '91 Robert H. Dick, '66 Harrison P. Fail, Jr., '64 John M. Fantone, '69 Douglas G. Heykens, '69 Matthew P. Livernois, '11 Joseph J. Parrino, '92 Kenneth R. Picha, '96 Joel H. Sousa, '82 Luis R. Visot, '88 Richard A. White, '71 University of Southern California Gamma Chapter Lindley F. Bothwell††† Leo A. Buckley, '57 Dan Clark, '68 Mark P. Esbensen, '79 Bruce R. Galey, '59 Garrison R. Gershon, '90 Glenn A. Haldan, '66 David N. Hepburn, Jr., '64 Guy Keven Johnson, '81 Alan Johnson, '95 Richard E. Lawrence, '61 Warren H. Lortie, '67 Stephen B. Love, III, '69 Laureston H. McLellan, '61 Kim H. Pearman, '61 Brian G. Rados, '01 Greg L. Rawlings, '81 Donald P. Shennum, '57 James G. Smith, '40
University of Texas at Austin Rho Chapter Leon O. Lewis, Jr.††† Jules Lund, '69
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University of Texas at Tyler Zeta Chapter William D.Carson Joao Pedro Correia Kuster Maia
University of the Pacific Rho Chapter Stanley B. Smith, '89 University of Toledo Nu Chapter Bruce E. A., '64 Richard J. Baker, '61 Jacob H. Beckhusen Connor R. Bringman David N. Brown, '63 Hunter W. Burtt Richard Camp, '59 Hunter M. Eby Richard L. Everett, '73 Mark D. Everhart, '75 Vincent Fiori Kent R. Folgate, '58 Stephen L. Gepford, '64 Mike Q. Gerber, '57 Harold J. Gerber, Jr., '68 James V. Gochenauer, '94 Ramon E. Gonzalez, III, '60 Charles E. Hodge, '64 Robert C. Hunt, '70 James D. Jaggers, '66 Roger W. Johnson, '55 Donald J. Kettinger, '75 Grayling F. Keune Robert D. Kraft, '63 J. Kevin Maney, '75 Kent R. Matthews, '63 David F. Mone, '66
DONORS
Richard P. Nagy, '70 Henry P. Philipps, '55 Victor G. Plumbo, '57 Ronald J. Quine, '71 Benjamin A. Ripps, '97 Andrew Roman, '63 Joaquin M. Ruiz Thomas J. Scampini, '74 Curtis G. Shaw William S. Stigall, '99 H. Murray Todd, '63 Garrett S. Vickers Jerrold A. Vincent, '67 Ronald Thomas Welty, Jr., '85 John A. Wettstone, '58 David C. Whitaker, '70 F. Thomas Winder, '51 University of Utah Phi Chapter T. Robert Delker, '89 Theodore A. Domino, '73 Robert M. Miller, III, '78 Richard R. Newcomb, '61 Roger G. Segal, '68 Horace W. Sullivan, '63 David R. Voda, '64 Gerould Knapp Young, '82 University of Vermont Beta Chapter Dennis R. Bender, '65 Edmund M. Healy, '64 Louis Hronek, '60 Michael D. Leonard, '69 Terence D. MacAig, '60 Harry S. Nesbitt, '73 James E. Poole, '55 William A. Straitiff, Jr., '53 Allan M. Strong, '83 Matt R. Upton, '85 University of Virginia Omicron Chapter Merrel R. Dunn, Jr., '66 Kemper Goffigon, III, '41 Walter A. Meanwell, '53 James B. Neligan, '78 Timothy W. Oakes, '61 Thomas L. Schildwachter, '71 John N. Suhr, Jr., '88 Halcott M. Turner, '53 Frank O. Walsh, III, '66 University of Washington Alpha Chapter Richard E. Amen, '65 Joseph H. Delaney, '70 Brett Frank-Looney, '16 Peter J. Hayes, '48 Gary R. Keehner, '62 Gunnye Pak, '11 R. Kirk Putnam, '75 William L. Scott, '65 George A. Swendiman, '67 Jon M. Wamba, '58
University of West Florida Sigma Chapter Bradley J. Bean, '75 Gregory V. Brock, '73 Mitchell E. Brooks Richard Freeman, '70 Thomas A. Gunter, '70 Buford F. Harmon, Jr., '74 Mark Andrew Redig, '80 Jeremy T. Sockwell, '93 Stephen R. Struck, '83 Michael D. Young, '80 University of Wisconsin-Madison Alpha Chapter Robert G. Binkley, '73 Fred C. Brand, '58 Scott N. Christensen, '77 Thomas P. Damm, '59 Ralph D. Ebbott, '48 Austin J. Evans, '05 Richard R. Gilbert, '63 John C. Hoppin, '67 Robert M. Koenig, '53 Ronald D. Kruchten, '58 Peter A. McCoy, '67 Mac A. McKichan, Jr., '60 George G. Meier, '57 G. W. Meyer, '57 Matthew R. Muller, '93 Alexander Murray, '16 Flemming H. Smitsdorff, '67 Brad R. Whitney, '79 University of Wisconsin-Stout Sigma Chapter Ariel Ben-Ami Kyle W. Erickson Elijah J. Trochmann, '16 University of Wyoming Alpha Chapter Matthew T. Bailey Mark A. Bell, '79 David E. Bitner, '69 Thomas M. Clikeman, '68 Frederick M. Emerich, '68 A. Rodgers Everett, '70 Joseph D. Gebele John R. Griffith, '69 Christian M. Keller, '00 William C. Lagos, '49 Phillip D. Laue, '71 Levi J. Lopez Marcus A. Manzanares Frank Mendicino, II, '61 Raj M. Patel, '16 Brandon J. Riedemann W. R. Scarlett, III, '64 Richard C. Titus, '63 Nicholas G. Vaughn, '12
Utah State University Upsilon Chapter Lewis R. Andersen, '63 William G. Bean, '70 Larry F. Clyde, '63 Blair E. Doane, '69 Garth N. Jones, '47 William A. Molini, '68 Steven C. Nelson, '69 Todd D. Sudick, '71 Brent G. Tregaskis, '84
John B. Gettles, '61 Lane A. Griffin, '72 James K. Hayner, '72 Hollis L. Jamison, '59 Stephen W. Lamp, '76 Daniel R. Lust, '71 James M. Martin, '76 Steven E. Mayeda, '85 Alexander W. McLean, '57 Timothy S. McMenamin, '96 John L. Meyers, '57 Robert M. Meyers, '76 Dan D. Oliver, '74 James L. Osgard, '70 Ried L. Peckham, '08 Ried L. Peckham, '08 Edward C. Reinhart, III, '93 Douglas K. Rickerson, '55 James A. Singleterry, '00 Gary L. Smick, '70 Peter T. Smith, '72 Richard W. Stephan, '60 Gary O. Tapert, '65 Patrick J. Tucker, '72 Thomas V. Van Halm, '83 Theodore Thomas Van Well, '57 James C. Wright, '74
Valdosta State University Sigma Chapter C. Scott Edenfield, '79 Robert Andrew Greenway, '80 Alan E. Ridge, '00 John T. Rivers, '88 C. Byrd Simmons, Jr., '77 Paul E. Towle, Jr., '82 Vanderbilt University Nu Chapter Paul H. Anderson, Jr., '70 Henry L. Barfield, II,, '68 Seawell J. Brandau, '58 C. York Craig, Jr., '68 William H. Ferguson, '70 George K. Gill, '61 Robert R. Hightower, '67 Lloyd E. King, Jr., '61 Sam G. Nicholson, '74 H. Ross Perot, Jr., '81 W. C. Rasberry, Jr., '63 Randolph W. Robinson, '68 Shea O. Ross, '89 Tom R. Steele, '76 Jack W. Straton, Jr., '80 Peter W. Sullivan, '65 John M. Warren, Jr., '72 Walter H. Whitley, '61 Y. Clinton Yandell, '78
Washington University (Missouri) Beta Chapter Richard C. Bailey, '61 Robert J. Baker, '71 Daniel W. Cadigan, '62 Joseph R. Davis, '52 Erwin C. Fischer, '58 James G. Hascall, '60 Larry K. Livingston, '64 Robert A. Mills, '57 Joel D. Monson, '54 John P. Morris, '86 Jeffrey S. Rumbyrt, '85 Donald W. Smith, '58 L. Michael Sutter, '54 John O. Sutter, '45
Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University Zeta Chapter Charles L. Bonneville, Jr., '77 Frank Michael Pieruccini, '84 Garrett D. Smith, '04 Frank D. Straus, DDS, '76
West Chester University Tau-Gamma Chapter Patrick J. Ward, Jr. West Virginia University Gamma Chapter Nathan A. Hamer, '15 Western Carolina University Omega Chapter Cody E. Dunlap, '15 Kevin N. Gath, '14 Khadim E. Jones Griffin C. Kennedy Joseph M. Long Josh A. Norris Ian P. Rushton Matthew Smart Jacob D. Viers H. Lincoln Walburn, '04 Joshua L. Welch, '06
Washington and Lee University Sigma Chapter Robert H. Moore, Jr., '44 Washington State University Beta Chapter Gordon K. Bartol, '59 Michael B. Bauer, '69 George L. Berry, '72 David R. Black, '80 Norman C. Brown, '79 Jeff J. Christianson, '03 D. Gray Clark, '60 42
Western Illinois University Sigma-Sigma Chapter Christian R. Cruz, '16 Western Kentucky University Beta Chapter Rickey E. Ambrose, '73 James G Bale, '69 G. Mike Bale, '72 William R. Buckberry, '82 Neal I. Bulla, '79 Michael L. Calderaro, '70 Jordan M. Carter, '09 Ted M. Cudnick, '67 Jason Scott Embry, '94 Michael P. McDaniel, '70 S. Lee Sharon Miller, '65 Ronnie L. Miller, '66 Robert A. Norvell, '83 John C. Perkins, Jr., '81 Gregory W. Pryor, '87 William D. Rector, '80 Sen. J. Dorsey Ridley, '75 Richard C. Rink, '74 Austin Z. Schneller SGT Randall W. Schocke, '78 Conner A. Schultz Reese Slone Western Michigan University Delta Chapter Jack B. Anderson, '66 Richard L. Butout, '67 Tony Dimaria, Jr., '68 Roger L. Gansauer, '68 Jeremy J. Howard, '96 Michael F. Irvine, '67 Robert S. Kaiser, '79 Robert M. Kelly, '71 Robert E. Kosch, '04 Daniel J. Lynch, '69 George F. Martin, '62††† John R. Musch, '66 Richard D. Rathburn, '62 Earl F. Rice, Jr., '67 Robert H. Slemmons, '66 James M. Smith, '63 Kevin L. Williams, '78 Westminster College Gamma Chapter Richard K. Carlin, '61 Jack E. Counts, Jr., '68 Brent H.Gasper, '97 James W. Hafer, '63 Roger G. Harrison, Jr., '67 Devinn R. Heuermann, '15 Richard E. Marshall, '62 Kent C. Mueller, '62 James E. Musgrave, '61 Lee C. Peterson, '77 Larry H. Ross, '60 John F. Sullivan, Jr., '70 Lewis W. Taggart, '75 Samuel J. Veazey, '67 Gus S. Wetzel, II, '63 John M. Willock, '00 Robert H. Wilson, '88
Wichita State University Gamma Chapter Ronald L. Barnum, '68 John Anthony Bulcock, '02 James F. Cox, '73 Nicholus A. Cox, '16 Robert D. Fulks, '68 Bryon C. Hamilton, '72 Larry L. Kennedy, '69 Ryan T. Martin, '01 Kent J. Miracle Isaac S. Roehm, '15 Ben Spainhour Shawn C. Stoner, '89 Stephen R. Swanston, '80 John J. Turner, '69 Edward J. Vega, '71 Willamette University Gamma Chapter Lewis D. Beatty, '57 George E. Chandler, '61 John N. Fax, Jr., '62 Ronald C. Gustafson, '64 Milton W. Huff, '55 Hugh B. Nelson, '54 Terry N. Shuchat, '62 Justin P. Sliter, '97 Greg Topping, '63 Gerrald G. White, '60 Ronald E. Williams, '62 Vernon E. Zeuske, '54 Winthrop University Sigma Chapter Mark W. Biesecker, '89 Mark A. Rodman, '87 Charles V. Stricklin, Jr., '91 EWell G. Sturgis, III, '92 Jeff T. Woodall, MBA, '86 Wofford College Gamma Chapter Harold C. Arnold, '68 Carter Atchison Gary N. Babcock, '72 Michael R. Bell, '86 Robert P. Bethea, Sr, '65 Miles A. Bidwell Austin Ciuffo Wells G Ducas Robert E. Gregory, Jr., '64 Marion P. Hamilton, Jr., '58 Nathan S. Heinlein William F. James, Jr., '72 Boyce M. Lawton, III James E. Martin, '57 Jackson Mizell, Jr., '69 Dwight F. Patterson, Jr., '61 Carroll B. Sears, Jr., '72 Robert S. Terreni, '21 Lemuel E. Wiggins, III, '60
DONORS
Worcester Polytechnic Institute Delta Chapter Donald D. Abraham, '58 Raymond P. Abraham, '60 Mohammad Amin, '59 Ernest W. Arnold, Jr., '56 Michael Bloom, '77 Jacob M. Boles James E. Breed, '45 Joseph A. Calzone, Jr., '61 Robert C. Cournoyer, '70 Lawrence F. Dennis, '55 John F. Downes, Jr., '67 John G. Dyckman, '66 Joseph L. Ferrantino, '67 Louis A. Ferraresi, Jr., '72 Edward L. Galavotti, '58 Andrew C. Gilday, '09 Peter E. Hicks, '81 Daniel Hurley, '80 Edward S. Jamro, '73 John A. McManus, Jr., '59 Ronald L. Merrill, '59 Paul M. Nowak, '84 Donald K. Peterson, '71 Paul J. Sartori, '71 Kenneth G. Schurzky, '67 Seth E. Sienkiewicz, '00 Robert C. Sykes, '73 Scott W. Tougas, '87 Bruce A. Weinwurm, '61 James V. Works, '88 Jonathan P. Worthley, '67 Yale University Omega Chapter Cory Gottfried Gaffney, '99 Steven Goulas, III, '16 Youngstown State University Alpha Chapter John Brkic, '09 Tyler Carver Joseph M. Costello, Jr., '03 Joseph C. Danile, '69 Marc M. Drummond, '07 Thomas P. Feret, '76 Nicholas Anthony Koupiaris James R. Lafferty, Jr., '67 Thomas C. Lance, '64 Donald E. Lewis, Jr., '83 Ernest Mastorides, Jr., '92 Mark W. McDonough, '98 Matt J. McDonough, '93 Zack A. Mettler John A. Mills, III, '67 Robert A. Pastoria, '68 Albert P. Pompeo, '87 Tyler J. Richter, '18 Adam C. Stryffeler, '02 Everet C. Thompson, '14 Nicholas A. Torres, '17 Chad R. Torres Kurt M. Weber, '07 John E. Yuhaschek, '69
THE RECORD • SPRING 2019
Friends of SAE Sandra Abraham Bachar Adjan Phil Aiello Rajasree Ajay Tom Anderson Jen Angel Lynn E. Ashley Penny Ask Francine Avena Holly Ayres Ross Baker Janet Baldessari Robin Ballinger James E. Barta Dawn Bartels Karen Bash John Behlke Douglas & LaVerne Benham Michelle M. Bentler Beth Bergman Maria Betania De Almeida Ray Betz Christopher Boe Tonya Bolden Misty Bonds Amber Boyd-Lutheran Jacqueline Boye Duanne Boyle C. Jeffery Braddy Barb Brandt Jon P. Brockwell, Sr Nancy Brundage Mark Burr Jenifer L. Busey Nicholas Candela Dixie Carlton Jayson Carr Ray Celona Spiro Chaconas Sridevi Challapalli Mary E Chase Gloria Chun Sharon Cicconi Laura Cisar Carter Clark Tim Cole Margaret Esser Connors Philip Cook Brad Core Kathryn Corrigan Jeffrey R. Daniel Mariano Davila, Jr Dorothy Day Mary Ann DeBiase Kilb Patricia DeFelice Frank DeLeo Amie Delworth Carol DeMario Scott DeMatteis Eva DeNoma James F. Diehl Lori Dinnis Julie Dodson Dixon Doll, Jr Albert E Donor, III Rob Doss
Dorothea Dougherty Marsha Dowell Lorna Drummond Thomas Druse Jerry Eischens Kathleen Engelmeyer Chris Esparza Kathleen Fennell Diane Field Jim Filarski Karen Fitzpatrick Staci Flanagan Margaret Flick Mozella Flucht James Ford Lianne R. Forsey Lola Franco Todd Frankenhoff David Fusik George Gardner Karen Gath Mary Jo Gormley Kay Gorsuch Diane Gray Kevin Gregory JoAnn Grewe Mark R. Hammond Michelle Hand-Arevalo Elizabeth Hanlon Karen Harris Charles Hastey, MD Sue Hawkins Henry Hay Donna Hayden Kathy Hayes William Hecht Eva Hepper Leslie Herington Tony Hoang Kathleen Hokemeir-Seim Leslie Hock Michael Anthony Hoffmann Margaret Holl Lea Holubec Laura L. Hood Stephanie Hoover Jennifer E. Howard Dieter M. Hugel Leslie Huggins Roe Sharon Hughes Laurie Irwin Stephanie Jacobs Mary Janicki Yvette Jenkins Brian Johnson Catherine Johnson Charlotte Johnson Judith Karty Stella Kasser Sheryl Kennedy Kari Kersch John Killeen Carolyn Kimberlin Kym Kirchick I. Monica Kittock-Sargent Catherine Kleemeyer James Koenig Peter Kovalszki Sharon Krauss
Saravan Kumar Joanne Kveton Mike Lawrence Debbie Laytart Brian M. Leiferman, Sr. Sally J. Larson Edith Lauer Lawson Family Charitable Foundation Mary Leppo Melissa Linkous Evelina M. Lipecka Stephen Lisle Megan Logue Laura Losee Nelda Lozano Steve Lynes Mary Macatee Catherine C Madaffari Richard B Mallinger Margery Lomax Mallory Amy H. Marconi Claudia Marmaros Darlene Mashman Amy Mathias Carrie Mathews Pamela Mattingly William McCarty, III Lois McFarland Kimberly McLeer Stacey McLemore Elmer Meszaros Leslie Metten Gabrielle Meyer Thomas Micheli Ed Miller Zsolt Molnar Beverly Montgomery Mary Ann Morey Kathy Morgan Neil Morrison Celeste Mosby Susan Munne Matthew I. Musikars Gigi Myers Michael NeCamp Michelle Nelson Cheryl Newbrough Jimmy Nicholas Pearl C. Nicholas Kelly O'Neill Edgar Ortiz Stephanie Owens Burcu Ozdemir Heather Palmisano Julie J. Pankey Tammie Parnell Cheryl Patterson Dana Payne Sara Perrini Jason Pike Maureen J. Policano Kathy Porcelli Rhonda Potts Marie Appling Powell Patrick Preston Derek J. Prince Elizabeth Rabel Kelly Ramanauskas Laura Randall 43
Michelle Randall Denita J. Ray Carleen M. Redd Lea Regan Laurie Reser Sandra Restrepo Pamela Rickert Stephanie Roberts Aimee Roden Belinda Rodriguez Lisa Rogers Sam Ross Edward Ruby Kerry Sabella Diane Salcido George Sammut Jose M. Sanchez Virtudes Sanchez Joseph Sanders Ethel Sanford Juan Santamaria Sharon Saravia Judith Scherle Robert E. Schlegel, IV Jerome Schmidt Lisa Schrimsher Carmelo Sciandra Tracey Scott Bill Sewell Jamine Shechter Brent Siegel Julie Smith Kevin Smith Faye Soderberg Joy Spohn Marlene Stachowski Daniel Sterman Kathryn Stevenson Nola Stull Barkley Sturgill Kim Sperry Elizabeth Spivey Deb Springer Annie Sprinkle Young Suh Eva Szabo James Tennant Cliff Thomas Dawn Thompson Lucy Thorme JoAnn Thorson Jane Tingley Kurt L. Titchenell Steve Tomhave Beverly Tomlinson Brian Traudt Shirley Tyndall Michelle VanNorman Ellen Vautrot Kevin Von Luehrte Thomas Wagner, Sr. Deborah Ward Megan L. Walker Lynn Watson Kimberly Weatherly William I Weeks, Sr Cherish Wellman Kimberly Weigel Sharon Wells Stephen Welsh
Deena Werlech-Parker Robert West Karen Williams Bill Wilsie Jan Woods Ryan Woroniecki Richard D. Wylie Annette Yoder Rick Volpo Amy Zimmer Kristi Zwach END
FINANCIAL&HOUSING CORPORATION
SECOND SERVINGS by Johnny Sao, Director of Communications
At the core, a chapter house is the physical structure where members of a Greek-letter organization live. Aside from Ritual, they are the one constant that binds multiple generations of chapter brothers together. Take the chapter house at the University of Oregon (Oregon Beta). Picturesque lions guard the front door. The smell of home-cooked meals and the presence of brothers greet you upon entrance. ΣAE symbolism is found throughout the entire property. Sound familiar? Members of Oregon Beta will attest their chapter house is anything but ordinary, all thanks to their current House Director. House Directors play a multifaceted role for chapters fortunate enough to have a house to call their own. While primary responsibilities fall into upkeep and maintenance, there is much more substance to the position. Their unprecedented access to the members turns them into surrogate parents, shepherds of men. More than anything, they serve as role models for the young men of the chapter. A graduate of the University of WisconsinGreen Bay, Watson was one of those students who had no perception at all of Greek-life during her undergraduate tenure. “I wasn’t aware of it so didn’t care about it,” she recalls, “and it wasn’t until later when I realized the importance of being part of something bigger than yourself, a team.” Teamwork was something she was well versed in. With a background
The University of Oregon chapter house (above) and Indiana University chapter house (right).
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in theater, Wendy was constantly working in tandem with multiple teams. This later turned useful for her transition into owning her own company. Unable to recover from the August 2011 stock market crash, the Wisconsin native liquidated her company’s assets and moved into a camper on land owned by a friend. Seven years later, the House Director proudly calls the chapter house at the University of Oregon something many of us can resonate with—home. Many would believe her buy-in to the fraternity experience was only because of employment, but it started long before that. Although country living is peaceful, sustaining life requires money—"off-the-grid" in the United States requires some cash flow. Even with two jobs, Wendy had no other choice but to look for new employment. She knew it would be a difficult journey, especially with her 60th birthday coming up. Thankfully, Wendy stumbled upon an ad for the ΣAE House Director position at Indiana University (Indiana Gamma). Drawing her in was the required background in cooking, but it was another line that made her apply. The True Gentleman. Growing up with all brothers and a strict father, Wendy learned from an early age the expectations of being a man and what it meant to live with men. Her father always preached being a gentleman: manners, respect, and humbleness. John Walter Wayland would have been proud to hear those words coming from a non-member. The job seemed almost too
House Directors and House Managers learn together at Levere Memorial Temple.
perfect. In her mind, "it combined all the aspects I loved about catering with the values I grew up with. Truly it didn't seem like a real job at first." Wendy applied for the job and a few weeks later, she was moving into the Indiana Gamma chapter house. The first year of any job is always the toughest. Not only do you have to learn the lay of the land, but how to operate the land. Now, imagine transitioning from living alone in a camper to a chapter house—with no onboarding. While she had the full support of the SAE Financial & Housing Corporation (F&H), Wendy's predecessor vacated the property long before Wendy arrived on campus. She had no expectations going in, but realized quickly that she would have to take ownership of being a part of Indiana Gamma. "I had no expectations other than overseeing the property. I quickly realized this was as much my house as it was the boys'. That really helped me buy into the fraternity system and truly understand the positive outcomes that come with it." Wendy spent three years with the gentlemen at Indiana University. To her, it served as a training ground for her current position at the University of Oregon. More than anything, she learned to accept her role as an adult figurehead and role model for the chapter. "There is a fine line of knowing when to intervene in a situation or let it figure itself out. These are young men still figuring out how to live life. I'll let them run the house as they see fit, and jump in when necessary." Push too hard and you'll have a rebellion. Don't push enough and it'll be the Wild West. Wendy's balanced approach resonated across all the F&H properties, making her the de facto example of how a House Director should operate. THE RECORD • SPRING 2019
SAE Financial & Housing Corporation undertook major renovations to the University of Oregon chapter house and opened the newly furnished house in the 2016-17 academic year. Their first year was tumultuous with a new House Director, who was later let go at the end of the year. Faced with hiring someone new, F&H proposed moving one of their most valued assets to the west coast and placing a new person at Indiana, where the standards were already established. Wendy was shocked at first. She didn't want Indiana Gamma to feel like she was abandoning them, especially with several maintenance projects underway. But it was the gentlemen that ultimately gave her the confidence in moving to Oregon. "There was a great group of men there, and if I wasn't confident enough in them to finish what we had started, I would have not accepted the transfer." Although she will never credit herself for it, her steady position as the keeper of the house helped establish consistency in the chapter. Wendy also reiterated that she felt it was her duty to ΣAE to help be a guiding light for another group of men who needed it more than her previous group. Few people get involved with Greek-life after college—even less so once they pass 60 years of age. On her second tour of duty, Wendy is breaking those assumptions and along the way molding the Oregon Beta members to be the best. "In one short year we've become the model fraternity on campus. We had our growing pains, but who doesn't? I'm extremely proud of the members here, what they represent, and what they are trying to accomplish. After all, aren't ΣAEs supposed to be True Gentlemen?" END 45
SAE Financial & Housing Corporation knows the importance of chapter houses and focuses its business on providing great housing to help build strong chapters. It wants to provide every brother with the opportunity to enhance brotherhood by giving it a place to do so. Currently, F&H operates nine properties across the nation, each with its own House Director. In an effort to bring consistency in the standards and operations of each house, the staff hosts a yearly House Director & House Manager Conference that focuses on institutional knowledge, property upkeep, and communication methods. The 2018 conference was held at the University of Oregon (Oregon Beta). The 2019 conference is scheduled to be hosted at Michigan State (Michigan Gamma).
IN PROFILE
IN PROFILE:
JOE ANDERSON
A volunteer: A person who freely offers to take part in an enterprise or undertake a task. By Ryan Gibbons, Coordinator of Alumni Engagement As an organization run mainly by volunteers, Sigma Alpha Epsilon has countless men who dedicate their time to give back to making the organization and the ΣAE experience better for all. Some, however, go above and beyond the call of duty for a volunteer. When Joe Anderson volunteered to take over as the Province Xi Archon, he didn’t realize how heavily involved he would eventually be. Whether it has been DeVotie Ritual Institute, the Law Enforcement Memorial Dedication, or the new Executives Academy, the Kentucky native has become very familiar with Chicago over the past year. Not only did Joe volunteer to spend those weekends 46
away from his old Kentuck y home, he a lso volunteered to drive as many of his undergraduates as possible six hours each way in a large 15passenger van so they could attend these valuable programs while saving money on transportation. Anderson says he decided to get involved and give back to ΣAE because of some of his chapter’s alumni that left a lasting impression on him as an undergraduate at the University of Kentucky. “As a 20-year old student sitting with an 80-year-old Grady Sellards in his home hearing his stories of ΣAE , then seeing the light in his eyes and the pride he had for his chapter and fraternity, it really made me want to keep his legacy alive,” Anderson reminisced. “I also had some amazing chapter advisors when I was in school that inspired me. One in particular, Jim May, was like a mentor to me. He guided me in dealing with alumni and taught me how to relate to the undergraduates much the same way he did. He was able to identify that ‘spark’ in every single undergraduate he dealt with—I guess you can say that’s what helped me be so involved and successful in the role that I am in now,” Anderson continued. “I’ve been so blessed by ΣAE—whether it’s been meeting diverse people from all over the country, helping to mentor undergraduates, making lifelong friends, and even meeting my wife. If my wife and I hadn’t randomly met at a party at the ΣAE house, it’s impossible to know how my life would have turned out,” Anderson stated. “When I meet alumni and work to encourage their involvement, I get responses that range from not interested to full cooperation. In many of the conversations, I get that ΣAE was important to them while they were in school, but that they have moved away from that part of their life. However, I see those same brothers sharing time with their closest friends that were brothers they met in school. I hope that I can help even a few brothers be blessed more by this organization,” Anderson proclaimed. Volunteers for ΣAE work hard all across the Realm, and Joe Anderson is one of many who mentor our undergraduates. Each volunteer chooses how he makes an impact—it just so happens that Anderson decided the national programs and the experiences they provide are worth those many miles behind the steering wheel of that large, white passenger van. Joe is doing more than just transporting undergraduates, however. He is guiding them on their ΣAE journey and making sure they are on the right road for the rest of their lives. END
THE RECORD • SPRING 2019
47
RANT
WHAT IS A FRATERNITY?
This past semester, I took a history course in which we discussed the values of liberty, equality, fraternity, and how all contributed to significant events. Above all, fraternity was a major topic, specifically how it united BY JEREMY BELLMAN, NEW HAVEN ’19 citizens towards accomplishing a goal to bring major change to their lives. By definition, a fraternity is “a group of people sharing a common profession or interests” or “the state or feeling of friendship and mutual support within a group.” Similar to those times, groups of men today have united together to accomplish a major, significant mission. Sigma Alpha Epsilon was created for men across the continent to achieve the highest standards of friendship, scholarship, leadership, and service for members throughout life. With every mission, however, there are obstacles that get in the way of achieving that mission. Recently, Harvard University implemented a new policy that restricted members of single-sex organizations, including fraternities and sororities, from holding leadership positions in Harvard organizations and athletics teams. This policy was created to counter “privilege and exclusion,” accusing same-sex organizations of promoting values that undermine those of Harvard. The University’s Statement of Values claims “respect for the rights, differences, and dignity of others, honesty and integrity in all dealings, conscientious pursuit of excellence in one’s work, accountability for actions and conduct in the workplace.” Sound familiar? There are many parallels between those values and our creed, The True Gentleman. Furthermore, most Greek and non-Greek organizations today
strive for goals that uphold only the best values that improve themselves and their communities. It is crucial for members to stay united and not let transgressions obstruct the path of their mission. It is important for members to invest all the time, passion, dedication, and work they can muster into their chapters so that their mission is not forgotten or obstructed. Challenges are inevitable, that is a fact. But a challenge can also present an opportunity for change. One of the many things I learned at the Executives Academy is that if there is a challenge, it is crucial to plan every step accordingly. Positive results do not come without possible negative ones along the way, and one must always be prepared. I personally have had my share of challenges in life. I was not in a good mental state for the first couple years of college, overcome with constantly being anxious. I had a difficult time discussing the issues with my chapter—I did not know how to open up to them. I secluded myself and hardly showed up for anything. It was not until I finally expressed myself during a chapter meeting that I overcame the obstacle that was hindering my life. Since that day, my confidence and self-esteem have risen higher than ever before. From this, I also gained courage to apply for leadership positions within my chapter and have successfully held an Executive Board position. This newfound confidence also led me to a position volunteering for our headquarters, which was something I never thought possible. From the day I came forward with my issues, more brothers in my chapter have felt comfortable stepping forward with their issues. Our chapter has never been more united and now more brothers happily show up to events and community service because they know that they are surrounded by strangers they now call family. Fraternity. Unity. Togetherness. Family. All created by members who choose to invest themselves in the ideals that will not only improve their lives, but the lives of their brothers. END ILLUSTRATION BY SOFIA RIBADENEIRA
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EXIT STRATEGY
E XIT STRA TEGY
Margaret Durward, pictured at her desk in 1919, was the first female dean of the School of Agriculture at Colorado Agricultural College (Colorado State University). She was also the first house mother of the ΣAE chapter. A dormitory, Durward Hall, is named after her.
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