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IIIII II

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IIIII II

REV. C. D. SPOTTS

National Chaplain's Message

THE CHALLENGE OF CHANGE-

0 ne of the glorious facts of being human is the Capacity for Change. History , whether of a nation or of an indi­

vidual, does not repeat itself. Each day brings fresh opportu­nities for change and growth.

Change also takes place on the college and university campus. I t is fortunate that it has always been so. The most significant revolutions in history had their roots in the academic world. Far reaching scientific and technological advances were born in the laboratories of the world's universities . Changes in political thought and action are frequently nurtured in academ e.

What has always been tru e has, during recent years, been accentuated by a prevailing philosophy of materialism and opu­lence among middle class Americans indicated by a growing weariness as a result of our long and costly involvem ent in the morass which is South Vietnam, by the long over-due "demands" of black students, and by the insensitive dictatorial policy of the administrative powers of a number of institution~. As a result, the radical "left" and the black student organizations are impatient, an_d, therefore are prepared to force change.

You may not agree with their aims or their m ethods, but you must listen to them. They are, in many cases, a voice for change, for change that is long over-due. Higher education in America is in need of many changes. Students come better pre­pared, not only because of improvem ents in secondary duca­tion, but because of the terrific impact of tra el, t l znon radio, and other mass m edia.

It is a wonderful time during z. hich to b a cz tz_ n f th " Land of th Fre . It is a ar at p riod durin a hi h t a coll g or uni r ity stud nt a tint . in hi h th trn -ph r 2 ur hara d z ith th .hall n f han

The Editor's Notebook . . . • In one of his reports to the Fra­

ternity as National Scholarship Direc­tor, Dr. E. E. Brandon declared: "We point with pride to the outstanding alumni in our organization, men who have made and are making an hon­orable career in the world of busine s, in society, in politics, and in the pro­fessions. I have taken pains to investi­ga te the scholastic history of these out­standing alumni and I am ye t to find one who did not make good use of his college opportunitie and left behind him a record of at leas t respectable scholarship."

• Because emphasis on good scholar­ship is just as important now among

Thomas Stennis II

Phi Kappa T au undergraduates as it was forty years ago, the follow­ing current state­ment concerning Phi Kappa Tau scholarship, pre­pared by the N a­tiona! Scholarship Director, Thomas L. Stennis II, is

tirnel·f and appropriate:

• The National Council, concerned about academic attitudes and needs, about the increasing number of schol­astic difficulties, and desirous of im­plementing academic programs and policies to improve each individual's academic performance, has, through the N ational Educational Director, conducted during the spring of 1969 a scholarship survey of the undergrad­uate desires as well as needs in this area.

• Phi K appa Tau and wholesome scholarship are firmly bound in the deepest of traditions and principles. Over the years our scholarship efforts have drifted without certain direction or specific purpose. While the efforts of the Educational Director have de­veloped to be merely administrative in compiling chapter averages and ceremonial in awarding trophies, Phi Kappa Tau has many that each year excel in scholarship. While the Fra­ternity is proud of those excelling chapters, it is more concerned with individual progress. The Fraternity is no stronger than each individual

brother. * * * SUMMER • 1969

THE LAUREL of Phi KajJjJa Tau

Contents

VoLUME LVII

SuMMER, 1969 UMBER 4

Jack W. Jareo Editor

National Chaplain's Message . .. ...... Inside Front Cover

Bryant - Phi K appa T au 's 100th Charter. . . . . . . . . . . 2

Delta Epsilon Installed a t St. Cloud Sta te ... .. ....... 5

ew House Addition Dedication a t Delaware . ....... 7

Beta Sponsors Miss Ohio U Beauty Pageant . . . . . . . . . . 13

Interesting Things That Phi Taus Do . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9

psilon Chapter - A R ecord of Excellence .... . .. .. . 12

Beta Alpha - Involved at Texas ..... .. ..... ..... . . 14

Three Field Secretaries Appointed .. .. . . . ........ . . .. 15

Graham F. Pa ton - Our M an in London .... . . ..... 16

What's ew at Mu Chapter . .. . . .. . .............. . 18

Chapter Highlights in Word and Picture ....... . .. . . . 19

Our Gallant Phi T aus .... ... . .......... .. . . ....... 29

Chapter Eternal ................. ... ...... . . . . . ... 31

Our Cover

Cooke M emorial Libra ry, Georgetown College, Georgetown, Ky. Phi K a ppa Tau's Second Annua l Leadership chool, IM­PACT 1969, will be held on the Georgetown Colleg carnpu August 24 to 27, 1969.

THE LA REL is the exoteric publica tion of The Phi K appa T au Fraternity . Published prior to 1919 as " idclights. " cheduled to appear quarterly under direction and authority of the N ational Council of The Phi K appa T au Fraternity.

THE PHI KAPPA TAU FRATERNITY CE TRAL OFFICE OXFORD, OHIO Acceptance for mailing a t special rates of postage provided /or in Section 1100, Act of October 3, 1917. Published quarterly by the Lawhead Press, Inc . ~.-.900 East State Street, Athens, Oluo, official printers for The Phi Kappa 1 au Fra­ternity. Second class postage paid at Athens, Ohio, U .S.A. and at additional mailing offices . Form 3579 should be addressed to The Phi Kappa Tau Fraternity, Central Office, Oxford, Ohio 45056.

Page I

The Fraternity's JOOth Charter

TH BRYANT CO LLEGE Mac is ca rried at Camm nce m nt Ex rcises and oth r col­I affairs symboliting pow r of a uthori ty .

f'uu 1

Install Delta Delta At Bryant College

P hi K appa T au has gran ted it l OOth cha rter! Thi importa nt m ile­stone in the h i tory of the Fraternity wa achieved on M ay 10 1969 when the K appa T au fratern ity on the campu of Bryant ollege, P rovidence, R hod I land, became D elta D elta chapter of Phi K a ppa T au.

The charter- i!!D ing ceremon y on the afternoon of M ay 10 was a momentous occa ion, for it marked th · culmina tion of nearly a quarter cen tury of growth for the Bryant ColleO'e local tha t came into beinO' in the fall of 1945 a \'eterans of World Wa r II returned to the Bryant campus to re ume their tudie .

T he D elta D elta in talla tion banq uet wa the o ca ion of the official presentation of the lOOth charter of Phi K appa T au. p aker at the banquet included Na tiona l Pre ident I lvin D ettra J r. Bryan t ollege Pre ident chuyler D ean H o lett, a nd Na tiona l ecretary J ack L. n on . Gene Bibam, pre iclent of Bryant Greek-letter Council, welcomed Phi K appa T au to the Bryant family of fra ternitie . The harter pr enta­tion \· as made by ecreta ry An on, a nd D avid J. Pai re, a pre ident, accepted it on beha lf of th n 11· D elta Delta hap ter.

The Saga of Phi Kappa Tau at a ryant

I n the fall of 19-l-5, after the end of World ' a.r II, Bryant ollege was literall ' flo dec! with returninO' wa r \'eteran . Th change in a tmo­phere for the e m n pre ented eriou adju tment probl m and like

mo t olleg newcomers they aw a lon O' ha rd road ahead 11·ith n on to \ hom they ou ld turn for help or guidan e.

D uring thi fir t eme t r a number of O'roup tarte l to f rm a.mpu . Th e grOLq were omp d f m n wh har d imilar id a

and id al and fr m thee oToup fra t rnitie emer ·ed , was K appa Tau. T wenty- \'en m n . io·ned the ffi ial ch, tter n 1 'o­\' mb r 15, 1 -~5 an l the fir t me tino wa · held t\1' m nth l. tcr in the old Bry n t ibrar '. [ l f thL' time 1 rior to the fit ' t meeting \1 :-\\ spent f rmul ti nn· the by-la 11 ' , ncl the con. tit uti n of th ' new org,1niz.1-ti n. T hee twen t '-SC\l' n built for the fu ture , Ll1ing :1 found.1til n f)t an rn·a niza ti on 11 hieh l' \ L'n tua ll ' \ IOt d d bl' out st:,nZling· on tlw H l\ ,HH

campu .

TH L ·\ I L

PR INCIPALS IN THE INSTALLATION OF PHI KAPPA TAU 'S lOOTH CHAPTER. Pictured a t th e cha rter presentation ce re mony a t Brya nt Coll ege, Provid e nce, R.I. , a re, le ft to right, National Presid e nt Me lvin De ttra , Jr.; David J. Pa ire , presid ent of the new Delta De lta chapte r at Bryan t; and Jac k L. Anson , th e Frate rn ity 's national secre tary , shown p resenti ng the 100th C harter of Phi Ka ppa Ta u.

The early years of K appa T au's existence how­ever, were difficult and sometimes filled with disappoint­ment. Finances were precarious. Experience needed to run such an organization was lacking. The members always strived for the top, but along the way encoun­tered obstacles that seemed many times to be insur­mountable.

In 195 1 K appa Tau was one of the smallest of the Bryan t College fraternities and it appeared that dis­bandment was immanent. M embership was down to fourteen, but at this point regeneration began to take place with the pledging of twelve men, all of whom were instrumental in a vigorous rebuilding program that, by the fa ll of 1952, brought to Kappa Tau one of the largest p ledge groups of any fra ternity on the Bryant campus.

The years 1963 and 1964 were studded with K appa T au mi lestones. For the first time Turkey Trot Week­end was an enormous success, and K appa T au had won the George A. Richards M emorial Trophy in two consecutive years for over-all sports victories.

But it wasn't only sports or those people who played sports that put K appa Tau on top. It was every member in the fraternity working towards a common goal. Each had his own contribution to Kappa T a u's success. K appa Tau members were officers of every large organization on campus: Greek-letter Council,

SUMMER • 1969

Charter Initiates of Delta Delta Chapter

BRYANT COLLEGE

UN DERGRADU ATES

Ri cha rd Prescot Bake r Steven B. Berlin Will iam Douglas Blan ey Thomas S. Burns Robe rt De nze r Dave Du d as Tho ma s F. Duffy J e ffrey B. G erla ch Da vid Greenblatt J e ffr ey B. Hodgdon Ma rk Edward Koe llm er De nn is Brian Ledbe tter T. Me rri tt Ludwig , J r. Miles M. Lull Pe te r A. Martin Danie l Bruce Me lle n Karl M. Nadeau David J . Pa ire Dominic Palumbo John J . Pcolka Stephe n Arno loe Rosenberg Steve Rothman Pau l L. Savader David Sche nke l Donald Paul Se rvidone David Ernest Sgorbati Ke nn eth Lewis Snow, J r. Walte r W . Tho rne Ph ilip Conrad Wa lker John R. W estman Micha el T. Whitn ey James Matth ew Wolk

Tho ma s W. Young Micho e l A. Za rou r

ALU MN I

David Adel ma n Pau l Astorino Dick Bou lds W illiam C orne Brad Dupee Dan iel G eiger David Greywacz De nn is H ei pt Ka rl Kery Thoma s Le nnon Richa rd Macomber W ill iam Magu ire Cra ig Ma ine Wa lter Mc Man n Jac k Minnehan Ra mo n D. O 'Ha ra Fra nk Perreau lt Ja ck Ra y Be nn y Robe rt Ribaud o F. W illiam Richa rd Edwa rd St. John Richa rd C . Sa rd ella John Shea Vincent Sm ed es Felix Swinta k Peter Tetreau lt W illa rd W a terhouse

Page 3

Student Senate, Hillel, ewman Club, Youth Guidance, Freshman, Sophomore, Junior and Senior classes, as well as men on every Bryant varsity team.

At numerous times the Fraternity wa commended by the school for its outside activities. In 1965 K appa T au ran the blood drive and set a new chool donor record. In 1968 the pledge class did a community work project for Progress of Providence. And in the same year the annual K appa T au Leader hip and Brother­hood Award was founded. This award is pre ented at graduation to the student who has exemplified the meaning of brotherhood through his chool activitie . It is no wonder that K appa Tau has been acclaimed as being one of the most outstanding Bryant organiza­tions.

The history of K appa Tau would not be complete without mention of its advi ers : Messrs. Yorks, M c­Killop, and McAuliffe. These three gentlemen have contributed greatly to the success of the organiza tion. They are always willing to lend a hand when the go­ing gets rough. Over the years they have truly been the mainstay of Kappa Tau.

The Bt·yaut Story

Founded in 1863 as a profes­sional college of business, today the primary obj ective of Bryant College is the intellectual and professional development of each student, crea t­ing in him an awarenes of his own intrinsic worth and a sense of re­sponsibility as a future business leader.

H alf of the Bryant curriculwn is devoted to studies in the liberal arts because businessmen and educators are agreed that college students need more than profe -sional competence if they are to make maximum use of their capabilities.

Bryant bases its program on the premise that it

P(Jg 'I

BRYANT COLLEGE ADMINISTATION BUILDI NG Charm in Trad itional -Style Archi tec ture

STUDENT UNION BUILDING AT BRYANT

seeks to prepare men and women to take an active part in our culture and ociety and to progre s by their own

competen to leadership position in the world of bu ine s. It College seal bear the motto, " Educando Dirigere M ercaturam'' - " Educa­tion For Bu ine Leader hip."

Bryant currently enrolls 1900 tudent in the D ay chool and 1450

in the Evening Division . The col­leae plant includes thirty-one build-o . ina of which ixteen are dorml-

o' torie . Twenty-six sta tes and even foreign countrie are repre ented m its tudent body.

Bryant College is a member of and has been accredited by the Iew England Association of Colleges and

Secondary Schools (NEACSS). Regional member hip is accepted as the nationwide standard of accreditation. College membership in a regional associa tion is usually required by graduate schools in considering student ap­plications for admi sion and by the state licen ing boards in reviewing candidates for certificate , such a the C.P.A. The military services al o place importance on uch member hip in admitting individuals to officer '

training programs. The College i also a member of the American Council on Education the meri an ocia tion of Colleges for Teacher Education, the ollege

Entrance Examination Boa rd of Princeton, ew Jer and the Ea tern ta tes T eacher A so ia tion. The ol­lege has been approved for member hip b the merican .\ ociation of Univer it Women. In addition, the program in Accounting meet the requirem nt for admis ion to the Certified Publi ccountant examina­tion in the variou ta t

Gr

itrtituti n' urrent , tal ,.., ne lists being est. bli -he I on thee

IH L L

JOist Charter Granted

May 17-18 Week-End

ST. CLOUD STATE COLLEGE - A CEN TU RY O F EDUCATIONAL SERV IC E

Our First Minnesota Chapter­Delta Epsilon at St. Cloud State

Phi Kappa Tau's one hundred and first chapter and the first in the State of Minnesota, D elta Epsilon, can1e into being the week-end of M ay 17 when the Fraternity's colony at St. Cloud State College, St. Cloud, Minnesota, was given chapter status in a n appropria te four-part program. It is significant to note that the granting of the Delta Epsilon char­ter, which embarks Phi K appa T au on the road to achieving its second hundred undergraduate chapters, coincides with the lOOth anniversary of St. Cloud State College, thus af­fording both Phi Kappa Tau and St. Cloud the opportunity of joining hands for progress during the in­stitution's second century of service to higher education.

Past National President Warren H . Parker, J ack L . Anson, national

SUMMER • 1969

secretary; and William D . Jenkins, assistant national secretary, were the representatives of Phi K appa T au nationally a t the ceremonies which began Saturday afternoon with the

charter signing and continued Sat­urday evening with a dinner and formal dance. On Sunday afternoon the chapter opened its house to the public. The e ceremonies followed the earlier initiation of the under­graduate members by a ritual team from Alpha u chapter, Iowa tate Univer ity.

Highlight of the inception of D elta Epsilon was the installa tion ban­quet on Saturday evening a t twood Memorial College Center on the t . Cloud State cam pus. The main speaker was Past ational Pre ident Parker. O thers on the program in­cluded Dr. Robert H . V\ ick. pre ident of St. Cloud College; Delta Epsilon member John Wei h who rra, e a history of the Colon ; D ean H a t ' Colony advi er- J im Hoakan on, IF president· and William ord, pre -

Page 5

ident of Delta Epsilon chapter. Gary Baumann was announced a the winner of the M r. Phi T au award for 1968-69 and K athy Wi ler a Delta Zeta, was a nnounced as th i year' Phi Tau weetheart.

Delta Epsilon-W eii-Kno"rn ou £am pus

The St. Cloud Sta te olony of the Phi K appa T au Fra ternity was founded on February 25, 1968 when Larry J one , Phi K appa T au field ecreta ry, pledged thirty men into the fifth ocia l fra tern ity on the St. Cloud ta te campu . Other national Greek-letter group are Tau K appa Epsilon, Si!!ma T a u Gamma, Theta hi, and Phi Sigma Epsilon.

Although the colony wa only seven months old, it moved in to i t firs t house at 201 R amsey Place on the banks of the Mi i sippi Riv r. M any activities kept the colony bu y Ia t fa ll, including the Centennial H omecoming in whi h Phi K appa Ta u won the floa t competition and fi nished second in overall participation.

Winter quarter brought eighteen pledge the lar<Test number on campus. It also saw Phi Tau win the Sno-Sculptu re contest and fini h second overa ll in the annual Sno-D aze competition.

This spring- ten more men were pledged, bringing the total t. Cloud membership to forty-eight with a large pledge cia s hoped for in the fall.

Phi Taus have been active and are leaders on the t. Cloud tate campus: past president of the ollege center go erning board ; president of the college center governing boa rd ; trea urer of the coll e<Te center governing board ; president of the Society of Engineering and T ech­nology ; two members in Who's Who in American Colleges and Univer­sities and many members serving on various comm ittee and board .

St. £loud State-I 00 Y e ars of Ser,riee

St. Cloud State Col! e<Te i the second largest of the ix ta te ol­leges in Minnesota . The college is accred ited by national! recognized educational and profes ional associations requiri.n <T the highe t stan­dards of programs, facu lty, facilities and library resource .

The college, which opened in 1869 with fifty-three student , now has over 9,000 students studying in numerous area of intellectual and technical specialization. An outstanding faculty of over 500 include many scholars who have gained distinction in their re pective disciplines.

While earning a national repu tation for its fir t one hund red years, St. Cloud today is known as a multi-purpose in titution of higher education because of growth in ma ny a reas of tudy leading to other important career fi eld .

Undergradua te instruction i offered in four major clivi ion a t St. Cloud tate College. The e are the School of r t and ience , Busines , Education, and the In titute of Indu tri al Educa tion a nd T hnology. Under each of th chool aTe departments whi h offe r maJOr and minor fi eld of stud . t. loud <T rant th Ba h lor of

c1en and Bac h lor of rt d gr e which normally require four years f stud y. two-y ar pr gram leadin <T to a n legr , is a ! o ffer I plu many Prc-Profe iona l progra m , which ov r on and two y ar urri ulum leading to fu rth r tu I in th

professiona l fi elds a t other co llcg , and univcr ' itic. Th (3 t r f Science, M ast r f Business dmi ni tra ti n a nd 1a t r f a n• conferred on stu Ients Statc·'s C:radua te Sc hoc !.

f'o 6

Rec e ption for Gu ests

DELTA EPSILON IN STALLATION Pres id e nt Nord signing Cha rter

TH L· l

Fraternity Milestone

Delaware Phi Taus

Dedicate Addition

At Alpha Gamma

5 he dedication ceremony of a new $52;000 addition to the Alpha Gamma chapter house on the University of Delaware campus was the highlight of an Open H ouse M ay 10 that was attended by more than 200 Phi K appa Tau alumni, Univer ity of Delaware faculty and administrators, parents, and friends. Guest speakers included University of Delaware President E. A. Tra­bant, Phi Kappa Tau National Council M ember Robert J. K. Butz, Distinguished Alw1mus Dr. Paul

SPEAKERS at Alpha Gamma 's chapter house ded ication incl ud ed J. Frank McMullen, Graduate Council treasurer ; Un iversity of Delaware President E. A. Trabant; National Councilor and Domain Chief Robert J . K. Butz, and Paul M. Hodgson , Alpha Gamma '27.

SUMMER • 1969

ALPHA GAMMA - PHI KAPPA TAU AT DELAWARE

M. H odgson ' 27, and Graduate Council Trea urer J. Frank M cMullen. Other di tinguished guests included University of Delaware Vi e Pre ident for tudent Af­fairs and Dean of M en Donald P. H ardy, D ean of vVomen Bessie B. Collins, Assistant Dean of M en and Fraternity Adviser T. Albert ickles, Phi K appa Tau Domain IV Chief Bert E. M ansell and niversity of Delaware Professor of Military cience Col. Frank J.

emethy. In addition to the addre e by the four main

speakers, Undergraduate Council President \ illiam F. Englehart announced that a plaque would be placed in the new dining room in honor of the graduate council officers who worked o diligently in the pa t year to make the addition a reality.

The addition it elf includes even new study rooms with accommodation for four men each, a completely equipped kitchen and dining area and increased recrea­tion space in the basement of some 5200 square feet. The construction also included the remodeling of part of the first floor to accommoda te Mr. and Mrs. George E. Broomell Jr. , Alpha Gamma's fir t housemother and her husband. The couple are unique as the niversity of Delaware's first "Hou e Parent " and are the par nt of George Broomell III of pha Gamma.

Other event during the aft moon included tow of the chapter house and two graduate council meeting . The annual alumni meeting saw the election of orm Collins '62 as graduate council pre ident, Bob \\ ood 57 as graduate council secretary and the re-election of Frank tfcMullan '60 a graduate council trea urer. The afternoon was capped off by a hou e corpora­tion meeting a t which tfc Iullan briefed alumni on the chap ter 's financial ituation. * * *

Page 7

OH IO UNIVERSITY BEAUTY-PHI KAPPA TAU STYLE. The Ph i Kappa Tau -sponsored Miss O hio Un ive rs ity contest sow the above three campus beauties crowned as port of the University 's annual Mothers' W eek-end . Virgin ia Leath erbury, cente r, was named to re present the Athens campus in the state Miss America finals . C la ud io Kehr , left ; and Susan Cottier, right, were runners-up in the pag e ant.

Beauty Pays Off

Beta Sponsors Miss Ohio U Pageant /J eautifu l girls and Beta chapter go togeth er at Ohio niversity, Athens, Ohio.

The beauty doesn' t only refer to the pinmates of the men of Beta, but to a ll Ohio . girl who are given the opportunit) to compete for the title of mo t beautifu l girl in the tate.

Thanks to the effort of Beta four girls since 1966 have been able to compete in the Ohio Miss America Pageant. That's the year Beta pick­ed up the fran chi e for the ifi Ohio Univer ity beaut queen con­test.

William Newlon, producer of the last two pageants, said Beta decided to obtain the franchi e becau e of a rea l defi nite need for a pon or. The \'ent i a fund raisin o- acti,·ity fo r Beta and, more importa nt, the program is bui lding the kind of broth rh od a nd fra terna li m e\·ery­on hop to gain when they wa lk through the porta l of a Phi T a u chapt •r. s ewlon p int out, mor tha n sevcnt)' per cnt f th hap-ter is c tiveJ inv lvcd in a tivitic such a set constru cti n tagc ma n­agement, ti cket sa les, :111 I u ·h ring.

g, idt•t)( '(' of the popula rity of the t'Vt'nt is ti ll' cun t·nt size of th pro-

Po'j 8

BY R OGE R B ENNETT, B ETA

gram and the list of candida te . In 1966, ex pen es for the event ran $400. Thi year' program, which grew to $2,500 in expen e and drew more than 2,000 ob erver , ,,-a by far the bigaes t ince Beta a umed re pon ibility for the event.

I n addition to the eighteen tun­nina contestant , Beta had the o-ood fortune of havina the most beautiful ma ter of ceremonie to e er arace

PAGEA NT PROG RAM C OVER

a tage. Mi Jacquelyn M ayer, Mi America 1963 and a native of an­du ky Ohio, handled the chore in

thens which Bert Park undertake in Atlantic City. The eighteen girl introduced by Mi M ayer repre-ented the entire Ohio U campus.

Shortly after the ta rt of chool in eptember, Roger Rice and his com ­

mittee began the arduou ta k of aetting conte ta nt for the May 2 event. Be ide Rice other Beta Phi T au ac tively involved in the project included Jame D . Edward who di­rected the how ; Newlon ; Dave Beltz, bu ine ma nager ; Mike D a,·i , in charge of ecurina judge · and Grega K eidel, adverti ing.

B ' deadline time, eiahteen air! \\'e r in line to compete for a 150 cholar hip provided b ' th - P p i .ola B ttlina ompany and Beta

chap ter, a nd the right to ao on to .eda r Point in Jul ' f r th 1Ii hio event. Nc\\'lon ummcd up th fe l'iing

f th entire hap tcr when he m-mcnted " I t' I t o f work, but en­joyable." Th, nk t the work f B ta men th ,·ent h, s been in the bb k Pvery y a r , nd the pt -'L•ed · nrl' limbing with ea ·h pr -

0 '1':1111.

T L l

Interesting Things That Phi Taus Do EWING T. BOLES, Centre ' 17, president of the Phi K appa Tau Founda tion has been . honored by the Centre CoiJege, D anv1lle, Ky., Board of Trustees by being chosen as a Life Trustee in special recognition of his work with the College.

The action was taken a t a meeting of the Board of Trustees on May 31 when Boles announced his retirement from the board . H e has been a board member for a total of sixteen years, during five of which he served as board chairman.

A native of Williamstown, Ky. Boles is a Phi Kappa T au past national presi­dent. H is sizeable gift to Centre College in 1950 made possible the construction of fraternity houses on the Centre cam­pus.

A generous gift by Boles enabled Centre College to recently construct the first Centre campus swimming pool. The $400,000 structure is known as Boles Natatorium and has been hailed by architects throughout the na tion as an outstanding structure of its kind.

WILLIAM F. HEATON Ill , St. John's '68, currently a law student at Creighton University, Omaha, Nebr., is the recipi­ent of a $1,000 prize for being one of the top ten Wear-Ever aluminum col-

EW ING BO LES W M. F. HEATON

lege distributors in 1968. T he prize money was shared equally by Creighton a nd H eaton .

The $500 won by H eaton boosted his scholarship earnings from Wear-Ever to $2,500 during last year. The scholarship awards were made on the basis of sales, managemen t leadership, and tra ining program participa tion.

H eaton is continuing his associa tion in the industr.ial scholarship program sponsored by the Wear-Ever Division of Alcoa while studying law, but has been forced to reduce his sales time because of the pressure of study. PETER A. BERKEL, St. John's '65, admin­istra tive assistant in the admissions office

of the U ni ted States M ilitary Academy, West Point, is gain ing va luable experi­ence in his chosen fi eld of endeavor whi le sa tisfying his milita ry commitment.

Berkel was dra fted into the U . S. Armed Forces in J anuary of 1968 and after tra ining a t Fort J ackson, S.C., and Fort Gordon, Georgia, was assigned to his present positi on as the result of ex­tensive prior experience as an admis­sions counselor a t St. J ohn's.

Upon completion of his milita ry ser­vice next spring Berkel plans to remain in the admissions field and complete work towards his Master's degree in Guidance at the Univesi ty of Bridgeport, Bridgeport, Conn.

GORDON R. CLOSWAY, Lawrence '24, closed out ::1. newspaper career that spanned a forty-five year period when he retired J uly 1, 1969 as executive editor of th~ Winona, M innesota, Daily News.

Closway, who was associated with Omega chapter at the University of Wisconsin as well as M u at Lawrence, started with the News in 1924 as a re­porter. H e later became sports editor and in 1930 was made city editor, a post he held unt il he was drafted into mili-

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CONGRESSIONAL AIDE PAUL D. HINKLE FINDS WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND EXCITING EXPERIENCE

PAUL D. HINKLE, Sacramento State ' 60, is one of Washington's young m en "in the know" as administra tive assistant to Con­gressman J ohn E. M oss representing California's T hird Con­gressional District. Hi nkle's duties a nd those performed by other congressional administrative assistants are as vital to the smooth functioning of our government on the na tional level as the work carried out by the law-makers they represent. A list of the ac tivities of an administrative assistant runs the gamit a ll the way from serving as confidant and critic to ou t­lining speech ma terial, advising on district poli tical matters, and writing leads for a rticles the congressman inserts in th e Congressional R ecord.

H inkle is well qualified for this a ll-inclusive position he occupies on the staff of Congressma n M oss. His experience goes back to age th irteen when he cut his "political eye teeth" as a teen-age worker in the Adlai Stevenson presidential cam­pa igns. "This really got me hooked on the political line of ac tivity," Hinkle confesses.

As a studen t at Sacramento State Hi nkle became deeply involved in campus politics and served as editor-in-chief of The State H ornet, campus newspaper. H e was also active in the World University Service, a member of Blue K ey, nati onal honor society; Alpha Phi Gamma, journalism honorary; and X i Theta Chi social fra ternity, the group that became Gamma Iota chapter of Phi K appa T au.

F ollowing graduation from Sacramento Sta te where he was named as one of twenty top student leaders of the Class of 1960, and service in the Army Na tional Guard, Hinkle became managing editor of the R ancho Cordovan and North H ighlands Bullet in, two Sacramento County weekly newspapers. On November 22, 1963, the day President K ennedy was assassinated, he decided to embark on a career closely allied to poli tics by joining the staff of California Sta te Assemblyman Leroy F . Greene as a dministrative assistant. While working for Assemblyman Greene H inkle became Sacramento County

SUMM ER • 1969

PAUL D. H IN KLE A ND SECRETARIES

publicity director for the J ohnson for President campaign, not a new experience since he had previously served as press aide to Congressman Jerome Waldie while Waldie was majori ty fl oor leader in the California Sta te Assembly.

As a member of Congressman M oss' staff H inkle has had an opportunity to meet many well-known figures in merican political life including Presidents Kennedy and J oh nson and UN Ambassador Adlai Stevenson. " One of the most exciting experiences in Washington," Hinkle adds, "was working in Senator Eugene McCarthy's campaign for the Democratic nomination for President in 1968."

Page 9

tary service in 1941. Discharged as an Air Force lieutena nt colonel in 1946, he returned to Winona to become editor of the newspaper, a position he held for twenty-three years.

H e plans to spend summers golfing and on his houseboat on the M ississippi River in southeastern Minnesota and his winters in Florida, Arizona, and Cali­fornia.

Closway is a member of the ational Press Club, Washington, D .C.; Mi nne­sota Press Club, Minneapolis; St. Paul Athletic Club ; Sigma Delta Chi, na tional

PETER BERKEL GORDON CLOSWAY

professional journalistic socie ty ; the As­sociated Press Ma naging Edi tors Asso­ciation; and is a past president of the Minnesota State Junior Chamber of Co=erce and the Minnesota ewspaper Association.

DAVID G. BUDD, Ohio University '59, has recently become associated in the general practice of law with the firm of Cox and Brandabur, Home Federal Building, Xenia, Ohio. David served as a trial attorney in the An titrust Division of the United States Department of Justice and both set up and served as chief of the antitrust section of the Ohio Attorney General's Office.

Budd received his AB degree from Ohio Universi ty in 1959 and his JD de­gree from the College of Law, Univer-

DAVID BUDD J . PHILLIP G I BBS

sity of Cincinna ti, in 1962. t Cincin­nati , David received the Frank S. Rowley M emorial Scholarship (named in honor of a pas t Dea n of the Law College ) for three yea rs, was clas p residen t for two year , and a member of the editoria l board of the Cincinnati L aw R eview in hi third yea r.

While a t O hio niversity, Budd served as pre ident of Beta chap ter and he is now lending his legal services a nd coun­sel to th e Beta H ouse Fund D rive. Da vid, his wife, Barbarann, and their eight­month-old da ughter, Anne Elizabeth, are residing a t 138 U nion Street in Xenia .

J . PHILLIP GIBBS, Ohio State '28, known to many in central O hio as "Mr. T ele­phone," was guest of honor at a dinner held in early M ay to salute his fortieth anniversary with Ohio Bell T elephone Company. Tearly fifty te lephone com­pany executives and long-time friends from a round Ohio a ttended to pay tribu te to Gibbs who has been district commercial manager and spokesman for the phone company in Columbus for twenty-one years.

Born in ew Straitsville, Gibbs moved to Columbus as a young man and at­tended orth High School. H e began his telephone career the year following graduation. Dur ing his early years with the company, Gibbs attended F ranklin University a t night, and in 1939 was awarded his law degree. H e was ad-

mitted to the Ohio State Bar in 1942. D uring World War II, Gibbs was

" loaned" to the Office of Civilian De­fense to set up state, regional and na­tional communica tion networks and is widely known for his numerous civic and comm uni ty im·olvement . '

Besides membership in Gamma chap­ter Gibb wears the Past M aster's pin of ' D avid Kinsman Masonic Lodge No. 617 F. & . M ., Columbus.

VINCENT P. BLAIR, Ohio State ' 25, gen­eral manager, Delco Prod ucts Division of

THOMAS BANKS VINCENT BLAIR

General M otors was signa lly honored a t the recent T wenty-First Annual Futu!'e T nlirnited banquet, sponsored by J unior Achievement of Dayton a nd Miami Val­ley, O hio, by being named the 1969 re­cipient of the Spirit of American H eri tage Award .

Blair has been in his current position with General M otors since 195 7. Previ­ously he was comptroller of the GMC Truck and Coach Division, Pontiac, Michigan.

Blair is a member of the Advisory Council of the Charles F . K ettering Memorial H ospital. H e is a member of the local United Appeal Campaign Board of T rustees and is Chairman of the Advisory Committee, and recen tly com­pleted serving a th ree year term as mem­ber of the Board of Trustees of the Dayton Art I ns titute.

Past recipients of the Spiri t of Ameri-

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STAFFORD, ZETA '20, PRESENTED ILLINOIS LOYALTY AWARD IN RECOGNITION OF SERVICE TO HIS ALMA MATER EDWARD E. STAFFORD, Illinois '20, was pre ented one of six

niversity of Illi nois a lum ni Loya lty Awards by the Ill inois Alum ni Associa tion in recognition of h i ma ny contributions to the U . of I. and to higher ed uca tion genera lly. Besides Sta fford those honored included Fred H . T urner, former national presiden t of Sigma Alpha Epsilon and the Na tional I nterfra ternity Conference.

Stafford, a member of the Zeta Board of Governor , was a pilot in World War I and from 1923 to 1939 managed the Illini n ion until that organiza tion was a bsorbed into the

niversity of Illi nois. H e then accepted a position as field seer tary of the Illi nois Al umni Associa tion, and in 1942 be-arne assista nt d a n of men, the start of a areer that con­

tinued his I se onta t with the Illi nois student body as a memb r of th niv rsity 's fficial fami ly unti l hi r tircment in 1966 - first as a ting d an of men ( 1942), dea n ( 1944 ), and asso ia le de, n of students ( 19r. 9 ) . ta fford • lso scr cd as executi ve seer ta ry of th niver it of Jil in is Dad ,\ so­< ia tion.

In 1966 he was award d a rtifi ate f appr ia tion by

Page 10

EDWARD E. STAFFORD, Il l inois ' 20 ! left ) , one o f out tandin9 Un ivers it y of Illinois alum ni t o receive Illinois Loyall ards Ot hers Pictu red are C . E. Bowen, Beta Theta Pi ; R. • Stipes , Delta ; and Fre d H . Turner, lon9-t ime Dean of Student National Pre si de nt of Si9ma Alpha Eps i lon and a fo rmer N l

th cars

f Illin i B ard ni rsit .

I'l l tees r, r hi f rt \ -fiy

TH L U l

can Heritage Award include Charles F. Kettering, Charles R . Hook of Armco Steel Corporation, and Stanley C. Allyn, of the ational Cash Register Company.

THOMAS M. BANKS, William and M ary '50, who recently received his doctorate in H igher Education Administration from the University of Miami, Coral Gables, F la., was a guest attendant at the 1969 International Air Show, Paris, France. The show, which was closed to the general public, provided Banks with a rare opportunity to see the la test in U.S ., Soviet, and other foreign aviation and space development.

After obtaining an AB degree in En­glish from William and Mary, Dr. Banks served as an I ntelligence Officer a t the Pentagon for two years. He spent the next three years in New York working in advertising, publicity, and exploitation for Columbia Pictures. While a t Colum­bia, Banks wrote many articles con­cerning celebrities for magazines and newspapers.

Banks earned his Master's degree from the University of Florida, Gainesville, in

Cromer, Miami '38, Boy Scout Comptroller

WILLIAM E. CROMER, Miami '38, ( r ight ), is shown unloading one major responsibility as he acquires another. H ere he passed the presidency of the Miami Univers ity Alumni Associa tion to G. Sheldon Veil, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, a Grosse Pointe Wood , Mich. , resident who is executive vice president of Pontiac Varnish Company. Cromer recently became comptroller of Boy Scouts of America, wit h offices at ew Brunswick, Conn., and a home a t Princeton, .J. after having been controller of East Ohio Gas Company with offices a t Cleveland, Ohio, a nd home at R ocky River, Ohio. Cromer remains on the executive council of the alumni association until 1971.

August of 1964. H e is presently serving as a research associate, supervising the evaluation of several educational prac­tices for the University of Miami and the school system's Division of R esearch in Fort Lauderdale. He and his wife,

L orraine, a research specialist for in­structional te levision, a re presently tour­ing Europe, comparing and assessing multi-media in higher education.

In Fort Lauderdale, Banks still main­tains his commission as a naval officer.

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Name Metz, Mankopf, Wilson New Phi Tau Field Secretaries

THOMAS WILSON

SUMMER • 1969

Three new field secretaries have recently been added to the Phi Kappa Tau Central Office staff. They are Richard S. M etz, Ohio State '69; John F. M ankopf, Coe '67; and Thomas E. Wilson, Kansas '69. They replace Frederick H. (Buzz ) Green, I ndiana '68; Gilbert McCoy, Southwest T exas State '68; and Alfred (Al ) Hutchings, East Central State '68, who termi­nated their work with the Fra ternity on June 1, 1969 in order to enter other fields of endeavor.

RicHARD S. METZ, an alumnus of Gamma chapter, graduated from Ohio Sta te University in M arch of thi year with a B .. degree in educa­tion, majoring in social studies. While an undergraduate Dick held Gamma chapter offices of scholarship chairman, M ay Week chairman, a i tant pledge trainer, and pledge trainer, as well as participating actively in the chapter's rushing program. Before a suming his po ition with the entral Office, M etz taught school in Columbus Ohio and served as Paae in the Ohio Hou e of R epresentatives.

JoH F . MANKOPF secured a B.A. degree in p ychology from oe College, Cedar R apid , Iowa, in August of 1967. \1 hile at Coe he held the positions of president, vice president, IFC representative and membership on the Board of Governors in Iota chapter. H e was also a 1966 Phi K appa National Convention delegate from Iota. Prior to his new "'ork a a Phi Kappa T au field secretary M ankopf was a Sears manager trainee. He currently makes his home in heboygan, \!Vise.

THOMAS E. WILSON, Garden City, Kansas, is a member of Beta Theta chapter, University of Kansas, where he majored in Social ciences in the School of Education and is qualified to teach. As an undergraduate mem­ber of Beta Theta he held numerous offices including corresponding and recording secretary, chaplain, song leader, public relations committee, pledge education officer, activities chairman, and participated in the 1968 I 1-PACT program . He co-authored an article in the \ inter, 1969 LAUREL on Beta Theta chapter. Campus committees at K an as with which he wa identified included IFC rush evaluation, cultural affairs, pledge training and Greek Week steering. * * *

Page II

Excellence at Nebraska Wesleyan

Everything • IS 'Up' Upsilon at

..!} n his message in the spring, 1969, is ue of The Laurel National Pre ident Mel Dettra Jr. tre ed the existen~e of the fraternity as an integra l part of the uni­versity program. H e sta ted sim ply, "T he uni_versi_ty doe not exist for Phi T au ; we exi t for the umvers1ty and each other." Thi is especially true in the environment of the small liberal art college, a college such as Nebraska Wesleyan University, home of Up ilon chapter.

Wesleyan was founded in 1887 at Lincoln, e-braska as a M ethodist church coli ge. Phi K appa T au becam~ the first national fraternity on campu when Up­silon was chartered in 1923. Four more fraterniti e have developed since that time. Choosina to remain small, Wesleyan has kept enrollment in the area of 1200 to 1400 students over the past few years.

What, then, is the role of a fraternity in its existence for the small university? And, more relevant to psilon, how can a chapter excel on the small college level to a point of being o. 1 in the na tion of eighty-eight chap­ters and eight colonies in both large universities and colleges smaller than Wesleyan?

A fraternity in this situation must be diverse, with an appeal to, and opportunities for, men of varied back­grounds and academic interests. It cannot urvive by stereotyping into an a thletic fraternity, a collection of schola rs, or a drinking ociety. But properly directed (i.e . maintaining orne type of balance ) , diver ity i the real year-to-year strength behind a solid Greek organi­zation . In short, the fra ternity mu t be an educa tional experience for all of it member . In this role, the fra­ternity serves as a va luable exten ion of the univer ity in broadening the liberal art concept of each member.

psilon 's re pon e to the challenae of a mall co l­lege situation has been exemplary. ix of the Ia t eight years, the chapter has won the Roland . M a..xwell Out­standing Chapter Awa rd. ' a rds for admini tra tive ex­c lienee, coopera tion, and cholar hip line the wa ll of the alumni room.

THE UPSILON CHAPTER HOUSE at 5305 Huntington Avenue, Lin coln, Nebr., " hom e" to N braska Wesleyan Phi Taus since 1928.

f'og 12

How ha such a record of exc lien e been compiled ? .

fi rm foundation on which to build wa prov1ded largely by Dr. H arry . T aylor, who guided psilon throuah the early year , and served P hi K appa T au as national pre iden t from 1926 to 1928. Dr. H arry' un­tiring efforts earned him the title of the ' Fifth Founder ' of Up ilon chapter. The chapter house wa built in 1928. Twenty-seven years later the morgage was burned, lend­ing Upsilon further stability.

A second outstanding Upsilon alumnus, W arren H. Parker, is immedia te pa t p re ident of the na tional fra ternity. Hi direction in th year of growth and ex­pansion of the local a nd na tiona l fra ternity i a contin u­ing credit to Up ilon. D omain hief John M. Green, and Tom Cunningham, former national director of chapter development, both of Upsilon, teamed up in a joint Domain Conferen e ' ith Domain 15 a nd 18 this pa t April. The re ult vva one of the mo t con truc­tive conference of recent year .

o upon Upsilon falls a heritage of leadership . Campus-wise, the record is clear. Five tudent enate pre idents in succession have been Phi T aus ; Bob Blank­enship, a chemistry major from Beatrice, Nebraska, ha climaxed three years of service to the organization by assuming the gavel. Bob al o serves as pre ident of the We leyan chapter of the American Chemical ociety.

The Model United Ia tion program ha been guid­ed by Up ilon men ince it inception. W ally R andall, political cience m ajor from v\ a hinaton, D . ., will as ume the pre iden y next year. J ohn Munn math major from ·w averly, ebra ka, " ·ill be the fou rth Phi T au in u ce ion to erv a pre ident of the tudent Edu a tion s ocia tion . J ohn wa al o elected tudent Prin e b the tudent body.

Mike K emling an urora ebr. hcmi tr ' major, the out tandina back on the Plainsman footba ll quad

MEMBERS AND PLEDGES OF UPSILON CHAPTER AT NEBRASKA WESLEYAN UNIVERSITY FO R 1968-1 969.

last year, will a lso serve as president of the Interfrater­nity Counci l next yea r. Fred Catlett, pre-med from Pap­ill ion, wa recently elected sta te president of the

1ethodist Student :Niovement. For tvvcnty-four yea rs Wesleyan ha awarded the

K enneth McKibben cholar hip Trophy for the highe t grade point average by a fraternity and for a ll t\.venty­four year , psilon has captured the trophy. The domain cholarship trophy, named for Warren Parker, has been

won for nine onsecutive years . With this tradition of chola rship, the a ttitude ma kes the d ifference for Up­

si lon. It is expected, but not belaboured. T he tutori al proararn , under which men of different majors are available for help to pledges and other brothers, is an important a id .

Upsi lon has led the campus in pre-medical school and pre-dental chool candida tes. Three junior , two eniors, a nd one ophomore were accepted to medical

and dental schools this past year. Service is an integral part of the fra ternal experi ­

ence a t Wesleyan. Painting the nearby chool for re­ta rded chi ldren required hours of labor. Short-term projects, such as stuffing material for the American Cancer Society, supplement long-term projects like sup­porting a Lebane e chi ld, Arline a rien.

Diversity, tradition, leadership, scholarship, and service have brought psi lon chapter to na tional prom­inence, not for one or two years, but for several. And so long as the fraternal experience at psilon continues to benefit each brother, Nebraska We leyan, a nd the na­tional fra tern ity, continued success is assu red. * * *

SUM MER •

THE AUTHORS T he accompany ar­ticle on Upsilon chap­ter and how it is achieving a positive identity at N ebraska W esleyan was pre­pared by Mike Knise­ly, left , and j ohn Munn, Upsil on presi­dent.

1969

UPSILON-LEADER in SCHOLARSH IP. Bob Bla nkensh ip accepts th e Nebraska Wesleya n Campus schola rs hip trophy - won by Upsi lon of Ph i Kappa Ta u for th e twenty-fourth consecutive yea r.

PHI TAU RIVALRY-Upsilon vs Ga mma Rho a t Kea rney State in the annual inter-chapter basketba ll ga me. Upsilon won in 1969.

Page 13

A Chapter That Thinks Big

Beta Alpha -Involved at Texas

/Jeta Alpha of Phi K appa T au's year, since it received two trophies at the 1968 Phi Kappa T au French Lick

a tional Convention, has been highlighted by increased campus leadership, community involvement, and inter­nal strength.

Phi Taus at the University of T exas at Austin ad­ded to their honors the Secretary of the Interfraterni ty Council ; D rum Major of the Longhorn Band ; Cadet Commander of the Air Force ROTC ; President of Kappa K appa Psi, honorary band fraternity; a Cactus Goodfellow; a member of Phi Beta K appa; members of Phi Eta Sigma; a member of Cowboys, honorary spiri t organization; Co-Chairmen of the R ound- p Publicity Committee; Outstanding Senior of the Longhorn Band ; Secretary of Scabbard and Blade, honorary military fraternity ; Vice President of the Longhorn Band ; Asso-

cia te Editor and Editor of the IFC Light; a member of the freshman baseball team ; a member of K appa Tau Alpha, honorary journalism fraternity, and a member of Omicron Delta K appa, honorary leader hip fra ternity.

I n addition to increasing it campus leadership, Phi T au, in its twenty- ixth year on the niver ity of T exas campus (on which the students now number 32,000 and the Greek y tern i compo ed of thi rty-three fra ternities and twenty sororities), has increased its community involvement. Phi Tau spearheaded the Greek system's pon or hip of a pops concert serie by the Au tin Symphony. Phi T aus were ushers and ticket takers ; and a Phi T au created the promotional material for the concerts. Following a successful spring program of Li ttle League ba eball for the boy of Ea t ustin coached by fraternity men, Phi T au is leading in the

PHI KA!~A ~AU INVO LVEM ENT AT UNIVERSITY OF TEX('S. Beta Alpha chapter leaders Travis Froehlich (left) and Wayn G dm n (rig ht) jotn wi th Ma~gar?t Moore (left) and ? ue Len.th e !.nght) to watch Texas Governor Preston Smith ig n a pr lamati n ma in Round-Up at the Un tvers tty of Texas a state-wtde allatr . Mtss Moor , Froehl tc h, and Goodman w r O · ho irm n I R und-Up pu li it •

Page 14 TH E L U L

BORRADAILES AND BETA ALPHA at the 1968 Na­tional Convention . Left to right: Travis Froehl ich with trophy lor best alumni directory ; Donald Paul ; former National Field Secretary Charles Borup {Beta Alpha); Mrs. Borradaile; Honored Found er Borradail e; Domoin Chief Leon Whitney; Beta Alpha President David Griffin , with Maxwell Outstand ing Chapter Award .

organization, in conjunction with IFC, of a fa ll Little League football program for East Austin.

Using to its advantage a modern house, a new philosophy of rush, and the knowledge gained through a rush clinic administered by Assistant National Secretary William D . J enkins, Beta Alpha took one of the largest pledge classes on campus and the largest in Beta Alpha's history this past fall.

JON MEYER, left, and Hal Moore, right, help with the Greek promotion of the Austin Symphony Pop Concerts. Beta Alpha Ph i Taus put out all posters , wrote ads , and served as ushers during the promo­tion which may b e the first where a Greek system has sponsore d a sym­phony orchestra. The Phi Tau effort help­ed to doub le atten­dance at this ye ar's Pop Concert series.

Ground work for the progress Phi T au at the m­versity of T exas has made the past year under the • leadership of President D avid Griffin, was laid by some of the immediate past presidents, including John Mc­Duff, Joe Fletcher, and Pat Willson.

Beta Alpha was installed as a chapter on February 6, 1943, after being founded in the summer of 1942 for the express purpose of petitioning Phi Kappa T au for colony ta tu . The Re ident Counci l enjoys the u e of a five­

year-old modern house of its own provided through the help of the chapter housing corporation.

The University of Texas, established in the 1880s and located in central Texas, has become well-known in sports circle for its brand of football and in academic circles for its outstanding departments in such areas as German, classics, and other .

Looking to the future Beta Alpha's plans for 1969-70 include implementing both through the IFC and the chapter an inten ive peakers program for the Greek sy tern, an improved rush program for the y tern, con­tinued ymphony work, development work in East Au tin a well as trengthening the chapter internally and improving even more it campu leadership po ition.

Officers for 1969-70 are Travis Froehlich, president ; Larry iler, vi e president ; Al Wheatley, ecretary; and David Hughes, treasurer. * * *

l!l····························································· ···········································ll lllllllllllllllll lllllllllllllllll llltlllllllll lll lllllll lllllllllll ll llllll llllllllllllllllllllllllllll [!}

Phi Kappa Tau Convention Time - Edition of 1919

DELEGATES and officers attending the first Phi Kappa Tau National Convention alter World War I held at Mount Union Colle ge, Alliance, Ohio, on January 11 and 12 , 1919, included, left to right, the follow ing : Alvin C . Zurcher, Miami '19, Chillicothe, Ohio; 0. M. Stone, Ohio State '19, Cleve­land, Ohio; Michael H. Conrad, Mt. Un­ion (deceased); Leonard M. Utz, Muhlen­berg '19, Wilkes Barre, Po.; J. M. Knap­penberger, Illinois '18, grand field secretary (deceased); Corwin R. Williams, Ohio State '17, grand alumni secretory, Columbus, Ohio; R. K. Bowers, Mt. Union '18, grand secretary, Seminole, Fla.; D. E. Rea, Illino is '20, Sandusky, Ohio; J. B. McMurray, Cen­tre (deceased). Photo submitted by Tom Purviance, Mt. Union '21 , of Carrollton, 0.

SUMMER • 1969 Page IS

RUST ENG IN EER ING HEADQUARTERS, CAROLINE HOUSE, CROYDON, ENGLAND

q raham F. Paton, a member of Alpha Delta chapter and a 1942 civil engineering graduate from Case Western Reserve has been taking a major part in the work of Rust Engineering Company, Ltd., by sup­plying many of Great Britain's in­dustrial giants with top-grade engi­neering and professional manage­ment contruction service during the last four years. He is now com­pleting a tour of duty at the firm's London headquarters, located at Carolyn House, Croydon, Surrey, having been transferred there in January of 1965. He became assis­tant manager of Rust Engineering Ltd. in July of that year, and in May of 1967 became managing di­rector of the entire company. In this capacity he has been responsible for the over-all administration of contracts the firm has with many well-known Britain-based firms in­cluding Uniroyal and Firestone, tire and plastic manufacturers, and the Kendall company, processer of sur­gical cotton wool. Both the Uni­royal and Firestone projects have in­volv d the layout, d sign, site super­VIS! n of produ tion equipment, pro ss pipin , 1 ctri al and process v nti l ti n of 1 lants tending to 300,00 f t ar a . th r Rust

li nls in lud ro s

Pog 16

and Blackwell, Fried, Krupp, H.E.B. of Hamburg, Germany ( construc­tion of a tire plant in Dublin, Eire), National Coal Board, H. J. Heintz Ltd., and Peter Dixon and Son Ltd., newsprint manufacturers.

Croydon, located approximately eleven miles south of Metropolitan London, is a city of contrast. Caro­line House and several other struc­tures in the area are of the modern skyscraper variety, but immediately adjacent one finds large areas of England's celebrated "Row Houses" and many buildings that have a link with the country's great historical tradition. These include the venera­ble red-brick structures of Whitgift Hospital, founded in 1599 ; the Old Palace of the Archbishops of Canter­bury; and the parish church of St. John the Baptist which still retains its Fifteenth Century tower.

Paton joined the Rust staff in 1952 as a structural draft man and served successively a structural de­signer, as i tant project engineer and project engineer in the chemi al metallurgical and paper field . In­dud d in th se ubje t were walk­ing-b am furnac , addition to a wa t pi kl liquor n utralizntion plant, th d i n f a plant t f rcr and roll mol bd num in nn in rt a tm ph r , th de io·n . nd d t, ilin

Graham Paton, London Busin~

Alpha Delta Alu Of Rus1

* * of tructural steel for a metallurgical building addition.

In 1961 he was as igned to the Estimating Department for training and development purposes. H e ex­celled in this field and became a very valuable member of the de­partment, eventually becoming en-

cutive

s Managing Director ~gineering, Builder of Factories

* *

ior estimator. During this assign­ment he worked on various esti­mates, m any of them for large scale pulp and paper projects in this country and Canada, along with work on cement plants and steel mills.

* * In 1963 Paton became assistant

project manager of the Rust Project Department, collaborating with an­other project manager on extensive addi tions to the pulping and paper making facilities of the M arathon Division of American Can at

GRAHAM F. PATON Case W este rn Reserve '42

aheola, Alabama. In London the Paton home is at

48 Campden Hill Court, Campden Hill Road, in the Nottingham area only a short distance from K nsing­ton Palace and the K n ington Gardens. ***

Busy Lawrence Phi Taus

What's New at Mu

P hi Taus are making them elves known by their actions on campuses throughout the country. The men of Mu chap ter are certainly no ex­ception, having made their mark in every phase of campus activi ty work a t Lawrence niversity, Ap­pleton, Wise.

Activities in which Phi T aus lead cover a wide scope. Andy R eitz has been named as next year's cro s country captain, and Jeff Vaa1er has likewise been selected as next year's golf captain. Frank Duchow is genera l manager of WLFM, the campus radio station. Sam Tolley is an officer of L WAC, the Lawrence World Affairs Council. Dick Stoc­chetti, Dave Vaughan, and Bill M elby are ROTC officers.

This winter was a successful, yet frustrating, season in ports for the Phi Taus. The ping pong team, consisting of Arthur K oo, Andy R eitz, Dang Ngoc Man, and Tom Wendorf finished econd in IFC competition. Two other teams fini h­ed second in clo e races. The bas­ketball team finished a strong second thanks la rgely to Andy R eitz and D ave Matz, both named to the All­Quad team. Andy was the league's leading corer and mo t valua~ le player . The bowling team took second, tying for fir t but losing in a close playoff. D ave Vaughan won

1-M BASKETBALL PLAYERS AT M U CHAPTER. Bot­tom row : Dole Schuh , Bill Wagner, and J im Hart. Top row : Willy Stauber, Wally Yuch'hich, Dave Matz, Denn is O'Brian!, Andy Reitz, and Paul Bouck, coach.

the chool fencing champion hip and the Lawrence m ita tional tour­nament.

In the groves of academe the Phi Taus made significant accom­plishments. Bruce Bu ert was named by the Chemical ociety of Torth­east Wi con in a the out tanding senior chemi t, following a long line of Phi Taus that have won cien e award . Also showin o- academic bri lliance was the Phi Tau-Gamma D elta College Bowl team which gained the Lawrence champion hip by winning matches with scores of 215-15, 195-5, and 215-75. But more in keeping with the intellect of Mu chapter was the fact that the Phi Tau-Pi Phi team won Lawrence' annual trivia contest thanks in part to the work of Paul Bauck and K evin Gi lmartin in compiling a thorough, cross-referenced index of trivia que -tion and answer . Out of this file Dave Fremon is compiling a book of tri via, hopefully to be publi hed thi ummer, profit o-omg to the chapter.

Phi Taus also tand out in the a rts a t Lawrence. J im F ry wro te and directed the school' pring play, The L ittle Prince, and D enny Young wrote the pla ' mu ical core. D enny, at saxophone, and

Bruce Band y on the drums, make up half of the D enny Young Jazz Qua rtet, the chool s mo t popular combo. D enny wa one of about fort tudent thi ea r to win a jazz chola r hip for the umrner from Down Beat magazine.

For out tandin o- n ·ice to th hou e throuo-h the year Bruce Bu -ert wa named Phi T au of the

Y ar. am Tolley wa na med Pledg of th Year hopefully to carr th tra liti n f Bruc Bu crt a ll of the other I hi T au th t h< ,.e ma l Iu h ptcr < vita l a nd l ·­namt fore in the !if '

ntv r it .

TALENT AT MU! J im Fry (left). and De n­nis Young. J im wrote and d irected the Lawrence spring play, Th e Little Prince. Denny, Downbeat jazz scholarship win~er, wrote the musical score lor the production .

MU CHAPTER BOWLI NG TEAM Close Second at Lawrence

TH L U L

By Word and Picture-Chapter Highlights

BETA BETA at Un iversity of Lou isv ille picked Sigma Kappa Jeannie Sauer, Univers ity of Louisville junior, as Phi Tau Dream G irl.

SUMMER • 1969

Ohio State- Gamma chapter, rank­ed s holastically tenth out of forty­two fraternities with a 2.607 grade point average for the first s mester of 1968-1969, is anxiously awaiting the 1969-1 970 chool year under the direction of Phillip Le lie, newly­elected president. T ransylvania­Theta has ranked first in grade point average fifteen out of the past sixteen years a t Transylvania, an achievement that won for Theta the Sigma Cum Laude award for rank­ing eighteenth scholastically in the nation among all fraternity chap­ters. K entucky- Kappa won the All­Campus Sing contest for the third consecutive year, thus becoming the only organization on the University of Kentucky campus to win this coveted trophy this many times. Franklin and Marshall- Four mem­bers of Xi chapter, Robin Appleby, James Cullen, Leonard Lipson, and Arthur M cClanahan worked at the home of Arthur B. Sinkler, Hamil­ton Watch Company board chair­man, for the Franklin and M arshall Pre-College Enrichment Program, a college-sponsored project geared to aid underprivileged youngster in the Lan caster area. Penn State-Com­peting in the stories and book divi­sion of Penn State's annual Spring Week Carnival, Omicron again placed among the leaders with their individual theme, "The Grimm Truth," winning two trophies; a second-place in the window paint­ing contest and third in the poster contest. N orth Carolina State- The 1968-1969 spring semester at Chi chapter was highlighted by the cele­bration of Founders' Day with the annual Carnation Ball and the Chi's selection a t the Fifth Domain Con­ference as the most improved chap­ter in Domain No. 5. Kansas State - The Alpha Epsilon R ed Carna­tion Formal was the occasion for naming Paul Woods, pa t chapter president, as Most Outstanding Un­dergraduate member ; Sharon West, Wood's fiancee, as Chapter Sweet­heart; and Scott Linders as Mo t Outstanding Pledge. Case W estern

PAT LANG, University of lou isville, pre­sents Bill Brasch of Beta Beta with Kappa Delta 's "K D Colonel" award lor th is year.

Page 19

Pag 20

CONNIE GISEL Iowa Wesleyan Dream Girl

KATHY DONOVAN North eastern Sweetheart

ROSEANNE TUCC I Sweetheart at Youngstown

R eserve-Alpha Delta wound up an eventful 1969 spring emester by participating in a rain-soaked, but fun-filled 'Spring Week-end." I owa State-The men of Alpha Nu va­cated their chapter hou e the week­end of M arch 28 to 30 so that the undergraduate members of Alpha Omicron Pi orority recently in tall­eel as a chapter at Iowa State but without a hou e, could move in and 1111t1a te their new pledge clas . Cornell-Alpha Tau undergraduates are looking forward to Homecoming this fall at which time the chapter house dining room will be dedicated in honor of Eugene Montillon, Cornell '12, a distinguished alumnus of Alpha Tau chapter. Baldwin­Wallace-Alpha Omega undergrad­uates enjoyed an eventful pring quarter by completing their new chapter room, placing in Interfra­ternity Sing and May D ay even ts, and capturina the outstanding pledge scholarship award. University of Ak­ron-By being first in campus ath­letic participation for the third straight yea r lpha Phi gained permanent possession of the Akron All -Sports trophy. Middlebury-Beta Pi placed second among fraternities in scholarship for the past semester and won the intramural rifle cham­pionship with top individual honors going to Shawn K eenan. Bowling Green- Beta Tau chapter men host­ed their mothers at the annual Moms' Week-end, May 3 and 4. W estminster-Phi Taus of Beta Phi took first place in Westminster's first annual Greek Week by cap­turing first place in the golf tourna­ment, first place in the bike races, and third place in the swimming event. California State at L ong Beach-The men of Beta Pi are proud to announce that Bob Wacht­ler was elected by the student as Black Bart for 1969 the top male honor in the annual campu '+9er Day Celebration. Chico State-B ta Omega accomplishments durina the 1968-1969 year included a third pia e in co tume judo·ina a Hill­billie of hico tate' 51 t Pioneer Week eel brati n and winnino· for th fiftc nth out f twent - io·ht times, th fall em ter IF hip r phy ' ilh a 2.8_ r I

a ra , th high t a ra0 r

MA RY TABAKA N. Michigan Godd ess Choice

THERESA RES IG University of Kentucky Beauty

TH L U L

PAMELA SM ITH CAROL ERETH G EO RG ETOWN SWEETHEART Appropria tely Serenad ed U. of Delaware Sweetheart Akron University Dream G irl

achieved since the trophy was inaugura ted. Michigan T ech- The week-end of May 9 and 10 marked the da te of the tenth anniversary of Gamma Alp ha, the spring formal, and combined celebration of the Michi­gan T ech Mil ita ry Ball, the anniversary event including a banquet a ttended by Michigan T ech's President and M rs . Smith, Phi K appa T au National Councilor Ray Clarke, and many Gamma lpha a lumni. St . ]ohn)s­For the third consecutive year Gamma Gamma has been awarded the coveted Trondel Trophy, symbolic of fraternity a thletic supremacy and the winner of the annual TKE Olympics for the second consecutive year, and the first prize trophy in the annual school-wide

FLOWERS FOR CORNELL SWEETHEART. Alpha Tau Social Chairman Jock Hurley presents Sweetheart Solly Derek with flowers du ri ng Founders' Day cere monies at the Ithaca , N.Y., chapter house.

SUMM ER • 1969

variety show. NoTtlu rn Mjchigan- Gamma Delta won the following honors at the 1969 orthern Michigan Greek Week : fir t p lace in the Bantam Tug-of- \ ar firs t p lace in the Bicycle R ace and first place in the fraterni ty and sorority di i ion of the ollege Bowl, beating the team that Northern Michigan i ending to the General Electric College Bowl in New York . East CaTalina Univnsity- Three members of Gamma Eta : Jame C. Greene, David R . Lloyd, and Rhode Stokes have been named to " Who's Who Among tu­dents in American Univer ities and Colleges." C. W. Post College- For the seventh con ecutive year the Gamma K appa entry in the C. W. Po t pring arnival com-

ALL SMILES fo r this yea r's Alpha Eps ilon Co nnon Bo ll Q ueen a t Kansas State Un ive rsity, Mo nho tto n, Ka ns ., shown with AI Hutchings, Ea st Central Sta te '68 , former Ph i Ka ppa Ta u Field Secretory.

Page 21

pletely outcla sed its competitors and took first prize for the best booth with a Phi Kappa Tau "Treasure Island" pirate ship. Bradley- Gamma Mu, by giving the most blood, won the spring semester blood drive trophy. R ochester T ech- Gamma u points with pride to its top IFC grade average of 2.6 and its winning of two of the three major IFC sport trophies- in football and softball. Youngstown State-Gamma Pi initiated nine men, obtained a first place rating in IFC scholarship and a second place in IFC oftball, and crovvned Mi s Ro eanne Tucci as 1969 Sweetheart at the 1969 Sweetheart Banquet during Spring quarter. Northeastern- Gamma Phi dominated Greek Week ac­tivities at ortheastern niversity with the chapter's first place finish in the Greek ing and by having Miss Kathy Donovan, the Phi Tau entry, named as "Greek Sweetheart." Delta State-This past spring Gamma Chi ponsored a campus-wide "Ugly Man" Contest ·with proceeds being donated to the winner' favorite charity, St. Jude' Hospital in M emphis for leukemia stricken chi ldren ; ran the conce sions for all

Delta State athletic events and concerts; organized Delta State's Greek Week and conducted most of the Week's major activities· and placed second in competi­tion for the Greek Week trophy. LaSalle- Gamma Omega won first prize in the Open House competition at LaSalle for the second straight year. I ow a W esleyan­D elta Alpha recently completed its spring service cam­paign by becoming involved in the cleaning of the Mt. Pleasant community, a project that raised $200 for re­building of grandstands at McMillan Park and raising over $200 in collections for the American Cancer So­ciety. N ew M exico Highlands-The ew Mexico High­lands Phi Taus took first place in the annual Greek

ing for the third year in a row and enjoyed the annual pring Ball held May 16 and 17 at Sipapu Ski Lodge.

Georgetown- The men of Georgetown olony retired their 1968-1969 Sweetheart by serenading her in front of her K appa Delta sorority house and presenting her with a dozen red carnations, miniature composite pic­ture, and a Phi T au sweetheart pin. * * *

i!l···························· ··· ····· ··· ········ ·· ····················· ································· tl lt llllllltlltllllllllllllltllllllltlllllllllllllllllllllllllllltllllllllllllltllllltllllltllllltlltlllll[!l

Kentucky Governor Lauds Kappa Service Project Effort KAPPA chapter at the University of Kentucky received state­wide recognition during April when Governor L ouie B. Nunn issued a challenge to K entucky college groups to emulate Phi Kappa Tau in becoming involved in the problems of the Commonwealth. The governor's action foll owed a day and a half stint on the part of fifty K appa members spent refurbish­ing and painting the gymnasium at the Frenchburg Boys Center in Menifee County prior to the arrival of sixty boys who have special educational needs and requirements.

"At the first meeting of my Student Advisory Commission, I charged the student body presidents of our state colleges and universities to develop a program to actively involve young people in such public projects as you have under­taken," Gov. Nunn told the fraternity members.

It a ll began a short time ago when the Governor re­ceived a letter from R andy Owen, service project chairman

Po '11

for the Phi Kappa Tau fra ternity, stating the fra ternity needed a "project."

Jack Tracy, director of institutions for Child Welfare, arranged for Rick Landon, superintendent at the Frenchburg center, to contact Owen, and the deal was made.

Child Welfare bought paint, orne scrapers and brushes, borrowed some scaffolds, and Phi Kappa Tau did the rest .

Landon said " I was impressed with the willingness of this group to undertake this project and their excellent spirit and purpose are to be commended."

According to Landon, they first cleaned the gym, re­moving tons of unusable material. The inside of the building was scraped and given two coats of paint.

" They did a fine job with wonderful spirit," Landon said, "a wonderful bunch of boys to whom I shall always be thankful."

TH L -\ U L

The

SUMM ER •

GOOD DEEDS AT ROCHESTER TECH . Me mbe rs of the Gamma Nu spring pled ge cla ss ta ke time ou t to pose lor th e above p ictu re wh ile wo rking a t c lea ning up streets in the Roche ster, N.Y., slum areas. Besid es having the high est I FC grad e a verag e of 2.6, Ga mma Nu won two of three ma jor I FC sport troph ies (Football and softba ll ) and has mem bers pa rticipating in foot ball , tra ck, wrestli ng , student gove rnment and campu s publica tions , a ll of wh ich is hel p ing to estab lish the pos itive identity of Ph i Kappa Tau a s part of the fratern ity syste m on the Rocheste r Te ch campus.

Spotlight • IS on These Phi Taus

STAND-OUT PHI TAUS! Left to right: Greg Marzure k, record-b reaking d iscus t hrower a t Ba ld win-Wa ll a ce, named Alpha Omega " Athle te of the Year" . Trent Ford , Be ta , Phi Tau king cand ida te and Beth C onra d , Alpha Delta Pi queen candidate, at Ohio U 1969 J -Prom. J im Donne ll y, chose n " G reek God " at Norther n Mich ig a n. Joh n Ga ry W indus , a member of Gamma Gamma , cu rre ntly serving as presid ent of the St. Joh n's Unive rs ity Stu d ent C ouncil.

1969 Page 23

Phi Mascot Charms Bethany Co-Eds HANNI BAL, the St. Bernard mascot of Phi chap ter at Beth any College cou ld easily be one of the most popular males on the campus of this West Virginia institution of higher learning. H annibal is tall, dark, and handsome and he' s loaded with personality . Wh en he's n ot charging mad ly through one of the girl ' s dorms, he can often be seen walking from clas room to classroom giving teachers the eye.

This lovable campus "pet" weighs more than 160 pounds and is m ore th:m five a nd a ha lf feet ta ll. H e out-weigh more than four of his Phi chapter brothers and is taller tha n three of them - and he eats $35 worth of groceries a week.

" We got h im three years ago when he was six months old . When he was a puppy we used to let him run in and jump u p on our beds. We did n't know what we were getting into. H e' s five or six times as big now and he sti ll tries to d o i t! " - This from J ack Hillwig, Phi chap ter undergraduate, who adds, in co= enting on how the Phi T au dates take to H annibal, " When they first see him , he looks kind of massive. But when th ey get used to tha t, they really love him."

LAVI SH IN G FE MININ E ATT ENTI O N on Hannibal , ma scot of Phi chapter at Be thany C ollege, are (l eft to r ight ) Mary Eym a n of Verona , Pa .; De e Turner of Norwood , N .J .; a nd C ynth ia Bo ic h, Scottsdale, Ar iz.

i!)··· ······································································································································································· ······ ················ ············ ···· ·l!:!

PH I TAUS IN THE PUBLI C EYE. Top photo shows members of Delta chapter participating in Spri ng Sing 1969 at Cent r C lleg . Thi y ar the Ph i Taus donned wigs and appropriate costumes to present a rous ing version of "Ha ir." BELOW: Alpha Om ga "Day at th e Races" a nd a re shown wi th J ockey Rini and Owner Coatn ey after Danger King won ' 'The Phi Tau of Bald in

Page 2-4- THE l U l

BLACK BART AT LONG BEACH . Ph i Tau Bob Wachtl e r wa s e lected by Cal ifornia State -Long Beach stud e nts a s Black Ba rt 1969 for the '49-er Days ce le bration. Th is is a stand -ou t campus ho nor .

RECOGNITION AT OREGO N STATE. Al p ha Ze ta 's ad vise r, Dr. The odore Ye rian (ce nte r) , be ing presented a plaqu e fo r th irty yea rs of se rvice to the c hapte r. Ma king th e prese nta tio n a t th is yea r's Found e rs' Day ba nq uet is Steve Sla ve ns (l e ft). Dea n Do n Poling , Oregon State Dean of Me n and long -time fr ie nd of Dr. Ye ri an ( right ), wa s th e gu est spe a ke r a t t his sig nific a nt Alpha Ze ta e ve nt.

LOWER RIGHT: 1969 Lambda p led g e group poses in fro nt of the chapter house a t Pu rd ue Un ive rs ity . No ex plana tio n fo r th e stockad e .

PHI KAPPA TA U PULCH RITUDE. Comp ris ing th e cha rm ing couple (l e ft) o re Ma rgaret K. ( Kath i ) Bla yn ey, a me mbe r of Phi Mu at Uni ve rsity of Florida and a Prince ss in t he Fort Mye rs Ed ison Pa g ean t of Light, proudl y e scorted by Fred Bozard of A lpha Eta ch a pte r, Uni ve rsity of Florida . Rig ht: Pre se nting M iss Artie Ed wa rds , t he ne w Phi Ka ppa Tau Dream Girl of Th e ta at Transyl van ia .

THREE PHI TAU lacrosse attackme n ho ve he lped th e M idd le bu ry te am ach ieve one of its best seasons. Be ta Pi squodm e n, le ft to righ t, are G eo rg e Ba rr, A rt Johnson, and Rick Moore , named All -Ne w England and A ll-Am e rican g oal ie.

SUMME R • 1969

NEW INITIATES AT UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE. A sharp-looking Alpha Gamma class of eighteen new initiates poses above for posterity.

DELTA ALPHA'S second-place Coll ege Bowl team of Joe Shaffe r, Leo A. Gordon, Douglas D. Hayes and Robert Neswold proudly displa"/ their hard-won trophies a t Iowa Wesleyan College.

BETA OMEGA BRAIN TRUST. Members of Ph i Kappa Tau at Ch ico State proudly display the fall semester scholarship trophy - won with the highest grades ever rece ived during the trophy's history.

BOB KITTREDGE, Beta Omega, cha irman of th o College Un io n Progra m Coun ci l at C hi o Sta t College in Chico, Ca lifornia .

Paget 26

BOB GRIFFITH, MIAMI UNIVERSITY TENNIS STAR

ROBERT GRIFFITH , M iami ' 71 , occupied the No. 1 pos ition on the 1Iiami niver ity tennis team for the 1969 eason, a position he earned as a re ult of his out tanding performance on the cia courts during a brilliant high school career and as a Miami fre hman.

While enrolled a t B llevue, Ky., high h I Bob won the Lexington pen tourne ·,

was winner of the K entu ky ta te 16-and-und r inglc and double, regiona l tourna- BOB GRIFFITH m nt winner two ca r , runner-up tw •c, r , runne t~ llp in the K cntu k · tnt tournament in 1967 and winn r of the hio \ ':lllc · louble tO\II"tU ment , 18-and-und cr.

l iami B b i maj ring in Bu ine .\ !mini !ration nd is planning l \l go into tcnni professi on II upon graduation.

lH L L

HAVE AN AIRPLA N E THAT NEEDS WASHING? Just c heck wi th the pled ges of Be ta Beta cha pter, Un iversity of Louisv ille, and they'll do the job as port of th e chapte r's mo ne y-ra ising p rogram . Above photo re printed from the C ourie r-Journal and Lou isville Times.

PE N N STATE PH I TAUS ore shown above busy add ing th e, fi nish­ing touche s to the Om icron chapte r fa cad e for Spr ing W eek '69. The c hapte r's ind ivi dua l th e me th is year was " The Grimm Truth ."

TOPS IN GRADES AT TRA NSYLVANI A. Theta me mb ers Jam es Whisl er and G eorg e Carter p roud ly displ o y the Sigma Cum Laud e Award for ran ki ng eighteenth in the no tion a mong a ll fraternities.

OH! MY ACHING BACK! Th ese Gamma De lta (North e rn Mich igan) Tug -of-Wa r stal wa rts hel ped win first in the Greek W eek competition.

SUMMER 0 1969 Page 27

RICHARD WINSTEAD NAMED GEORGETOWN HONOR GRADUATE

RICHARD M. W INSTEAD, Georgetown '69, one of the first alumni members of the Georgetown Colony, graduated M agna Cum L aude with a 3.6 (on a 4-poin t cale) academic standing after four years

of undergraduate study in Business Ad­m inistrat ion and Economics. During the course of securing his degree he received the Student Accounting Award of the Wall S treet J ournal, the Outstanding Accounting Student Award of Alpha Beta Pi, the honorary business fra ternity, and the Yeager, Ford, and Warren Ac-

McCLANAHAN , FRANKLIN & MARSHALL EARNING FAME AS COMPOSER A MEMO RI AL CO NCE RT for the late Dr. M ar­tin Luther King Jr. and R obert F . Kennedy, presented at the Brooklyn cademy of !usic on June 8, featured music written to the text of Dr. King' famous Lincoln ?-.Iemorial speech, " I H ave Dream!" The comp sition, written by rthur Lee I cC lanahan of Garden City,

ew York. and a member of Xi chapter at Franklin and M arshall College, was performed

ARTHU R McCLANAHAN by the Adelphi University O ctet with the specia l permission of the M artin Luther King Jr. estate.

M cClanahan, a freshman at Franklin and Mar hall, composed the choral setting of " I H ave Dream!" during the pring of 1968, whi le in hi senior y ar in high chool. While in the Garden City High chool he received the Band D irectors Award and his choral selection, " I Sing of a M aiden" won acclaim when it was performed by the "Celestones," a select concert group of female voices, a t the spring concert of the Choral Mu ic department of Ga rden City High.

At Franklin and M arshall M cClanahan ha co ntinued his high school interests. H e is a chemi try maj or, a member of the Concert Band and is a member of THE COLLEGE REPORTER staff.

counting Firm ward for proficiency in accounting.

Winstead made the D eans' Li t, A­H onor R oll , and has been awarded a graduate assistantship in the I ndiana Universi ty School of Busine . As an un­dergraduate he was pre ident of Alpha Beta Pi, a member of the Georgetown newspaper staff, Belle of the Blue year­book staff and Young R epublican Politi­cal Club. In Phi Kappa T a u he served as vice president of hi pledge clas , senator to the tudent Government As­soc iat ion. and public re lat ions chairman.

TOPS AT MIDDLEBURY MEMBE RSH IP in Blue K ey, campus honor ociety, has been extended to Art J ohn­

son, Middlebury ' 70, as a fitting tribute for his accomplishment in all phases of campus life. A "B" student majoring in geology, Art, no stranger to the Dean's Li t, will be doing an honors senior thesis in his major next year. His aca­demic talent is almost equaled on the playing field since Art has lettered twice in lacrosse, this year on a team rated one of the best in ew England.

BEST OVER ALL FOR PHI KAPPA TA U! Tha t was the verdict of th e judges in declaring consocut iv y or, in th e onnual Spring Carnival competition at C. W. Post Colleg . Th

Po o 28 TH L L

* * OUR GALLANT PHI TAUS * * Air Force Captain David R. Poli, Florida State '64, Orlando, Fla ., has been decora ted with the Distinguish­ed Flying Cross for aerial achieve­ment in North Vietnam. Captain Poli distinguished himself as an F -4 Phantom pilot. With disregard for his own safety, he helped rescue two fellow pilots downed by enemy ground fire.

Captain Poli, who completed his combat tour at D a Nang AB, Viet­nam, in M ay 1968, flew 100 comba t missions over North Vietnam, and also holds fourteen awards of the Air M edal and the USAF Com­mendation M edal for Southeast Asia service.

The captain was presented the medal a t V ance Air Force Base,

RICHARD PARTIN

SUMMER • 1969

Okla., where he is now serving as an instructor pilot in a unit of the Air Training Command .

* * * Capta in Dennis C. Wilson, Southern Cali forn ia '63, an instructor in the Lackland AFB, T exas, Officer Training School, has been recog­nized for helping his unit earn the U. S. Air Force Outstanding U nit Award and as a recipient will wear the distinctive service ribbon as a permanent decoration.

* * * Captain Richard Pa rtin, Oregon State '64, is a U. S. Marine Corps recipient of two citations of the dis­tinguished Flying Cross, twenty-one

DENNIS C. WILSON

Air M edals, the a tional Defense Meda l, and Vietnamese Campaign Medal for heroic action while serving in outh Vietnam.

Partin's most recent Distinguished Flying Cross Award came a a re­sult of operations against orth Vietnam on October 31, 1968, the last day before a halt in the orth Vietnam bombing was ordered by President J ohnson.

Partin flew 257 combat mission in the A-6 Intruder, with about 11 5 of these over North Vietnam.

* * * Captain J ames W . M cBride, M ichi­gan T ech '60, Bay City, Mich., has received the U . S. Air Force Com­mendation M edal a t Binh T huy AB,

DAVI D R. POLl

Page 29

Vietnam. H e was cited for hi out­standing professional skill, knowledge and initiative a an aircraft com­mander and flight examiner at Stewart Air Force Ba e, Tenn .

* * * Air Force Captain Nicholas A. K eck, M dryland '59, has been decorated with the Bronze Star Medal for meritorious service while engaged in military operations aga in t Viet Cong forces. Captain Keck was cited for his performance as a security police officer a t Udorn Royal Thai Air Force Base, Thailand.

* * * Air Force Captain Gary R. Tomp-kins, University of Califomia at L os Angeles '60, Culver City, Calif., has been decorated with the ilver Star for heroism in Vietnam as an F-100 Super Sabre pilot.

Captain Tompkins supported the U. S. Army' Iinth Infantry Divi­sion that h ad been trapped by a large Viet Cong force near Ben Tre. As the battle raged and fight­ing became too intense to permit flare lighting for an airstrike, Cap­tain Tompkins, using only the flash of marking rockets, repeatedly braved antiaircraft fire to deliver his ordnance.

* * * Air Force Major Harold L. Davi , Miami '54, Piqua, Ohio, has re­ceived the Air M edal a t Phan Rang Air Base, Vietnam, for air action in Southea t Asia. M ajor D avis was cited for his out tanding airman­ship and courage as a navigator­bombardier on ucce ful and im­portant miss ions under hazardov conditions.

* * * M ajor Jerry L. herman, Beta Theta '53, has received ixteen awards of the Air M edal and the . Am1y

Commendation M edal a t Andre" · Air Force Base M aryland .

herman earned hi Air M edals for his outstanding airmanship and courage as an aerial tanker pilot on succe sful and important mis ions under hazardou condition .

H e received his commendation medal for meritoriou achievement while erving wi th the Twenty-fifth Infan try Divi ion in Vietnam. He was cited for his outstanding pro­fessional skill a nd knowledg .

* * * Air Force Captain rthur W. hi, L ouisville '64, is the recipient of the Bronze Star M edal, awarded for meritorious service while engaged in military operation against iet Cong force . Captain h1 was cited for hi performance as a forward air controller at Phan Rang AB, Vietnam.

* * * D ennis E . Hoskins, Akron '67, has been awarded . S. Air Force ilver pilot wings upon graduation a t Wil­liams Air Force Ba e, Arizona. ec­ond Lieutenant Hoskins, a graduate of H oban high school, Akron, re­ceived hi commission through the Reserve Officers Training Program at the University of Akron.

* * * A second award of the Di tingui heel Flying Cross for aerial achievemen t over North Vietnam has been given to \.ir Force M ajor William W. R aitt, Coe '55, t. !Edward, ebr.

Major R aitt, who holds a senior pilot ra ting, distingui heel him elf Aug. 9, 1967 when, de pite extreme­ly hazardous condition , he de troy­eel a major railroad bridge. H e wa presented the medal a t Eglin Air Force Base, Fla ., where he is now ser ing as an in tructor in the AF

ir Ground Operation chool.

HAROLD L. DAVIS GARY THO MPKIN S DENNI S E. HOSKINS

f'au 30

NICHOLAS A. KECK

A RTHUR W. AHL

JERRY L. SHERMA N

TH L I L

The Chapter Eternal HOWARD C. REES, Miami '21 April 10 1969. A fifty-year member 'of Alph ~ chapter, Dr. R ees resided 111 Grosse Poin te, Mich.

WILFORD F. SIZELOVE, M iami '10, M :ty 8, 1969. Sizelove served as principal in Covington, K y., schools and was assistant superintendent of schools in H ami lton County (Cincinnati ) Oh io for twenty­nine years, retiring in 1951. H e was one of the organizers of the Hamilton County Ath letic Association and served as presi­dent of the group for twenty-five years. A daughter and four grandchildren sur­vive.

CHARLES K. SWAFFORD, Mia mi '26, March 21, 1969. A long-time resident of the L os Angeles area, he maintained offices (Swafford & Company) a t 9890 Wilshire Blvd.

ROMAN J . ZIPFEL, M iami '26, O ct. 20, 1968. Although reported in the Fall , 1968, issue of THE LAUREL, addi­tional inform ation regarding his passing has been received from R ay M . King, Miami '27, who advises that "Zip," as he was known to his friends, was ret ired vice president of the American I nvest­ment Company a nd is survived by his wife, Mrs. H elen B. Zi pfel, two sons, a sister, and four grandchildren.

B. FRANI<.LIN BUTT, Ohio '34, O ct. 17 , 1963. H e resided at 143 Eaglepoint R oad, R os ford, Ohio, prior to his death.

WAYNE VAN PELT, Ohio ' 16, J an. 30, 1969. Van Pelt, who made his h ome in Leesburg, Ohio, was elected Phi Kap­pa Tau Grand Treasurer in 1917 and re-elected to this position in 1919.

EDWARD T. BOYLE, Centre '3 1, Jan . 1, 1969, fo ll owing surgery at St. J ohn's H ospital, Springfield , Ill. Boyle was a long-time resident of Springfield, an d is survived by his wife whose home is at 207 1 M arland Avenue there.

WILLIAM C. TROUTMAN, Illinois ' 17, June 8, 1969. Troutman, the Fratern ity's first G rand Ritu a list, was g iven that title a t the 191 7 Convention, held at Zeta chapter, University of Illinois. Through his efforts evolved the Phi K appa Tau ritual, which is essentially the same impress ive initia tion ceremony today as i t was fo llowing its completion under his directi on in 191 8. Always in­terested in the elrama, particula rly as it applied to college theatrica ls, Troutman was a n earl y midwest pioneer in cham­pioning theater training as a part of the speech depa rtment curricu lum, rather than as an English departmen t adjunct. From 1918 until his ret irement Troutman was associated with the teaching of speech and drama . H e founded a nd di­rected the first University Thea tre at Illinois, the Un iversity of Wisconsin, a nd the University of K ansas City. The latter

SUMMER • 1969

yea rs of hi a reer were devoted to teach ing of speech a t K ansas tate Col­lege and the University of Baltim ore. Included in wel l-known personages of the theater, television, and radi o who ·tud ied under Troutman are T om El well Don Ameche, Eri ck Brotherson, Ru t; Lane, K enda ll C lark and orris H ough­ton. Bernadine Flynn, a Troutman pupi l at Wisconsin, starred in the "Vic and Sade" and " H awkins Fa lls" produc­ti ons in Chicago.

DONALD G. CARPENTER, M uhlenberg '33, December 15, 1968. H e was an Allentown, Pa., res ident.

RUSSELL S. SNYDER M uhlenberg '40, December, 1968. Snyder was a manage­ment consul t ing engineer with offi es in R eading, Pa. Those who survive include his wife, Mrs. J osephine Sn yder, a daughter, a son, and a brother, LeR oi E. Snyder, Muhlenberg '3 1, of Paoli, Pa.

CLIFFORD G. TURNBULL, Coe'2 / , March 8, 1969. Turnbu ll was a charter member of I ota chapter and res ided in Cedar Falls, I owa.

FRANK B. BORRIES, K entucky '36, D ec. 19, 1968, at Lexing ton, K y. , where he was press information specia list for the University of K entucky. His wife, Mrs. Betty Borries, and three children survive.

JOH N E. STONE, JR., K entucky '39, J une 29, 1969. Stone, manager of whole­sale sales for Ash land Oil & R efining Company, collapsed wh ile pl aying golf at Bellefonte Country Club, Ashland, K y. Surviving a re his wife, Mrs. E leanor Reed Stone; two daughters ; and a grand­daughter.

MAURICE T. PREBSTER, Purdue '3 1, Nov. 4, 1968. H e was the enior staff engineer, logistics and propulsion sect ion, Space Support Division, Huntsville, Ala ., where he resided at 2600 Trai l R idge R oad.

FREDERICK C. RUSKAUP, Purdue '25, M arch 11 , 1969. R uskaup, president of Lambda chapter in 1924-25, succumbed a fter a brief illness at his home in Cin­cinnati, Ohio. H e had recently retired from service with the ew York Central Railroad.

HAROLD T. STRYKER, Franklin and M ar­shall '42, April 30, 1969. Stryker was a former Xi chapter president ( 19-l 1) a nd was a member of the Boy Scout Order of the Arrow. H e lived in Lititz, Pa., at the time of his pass ing.

CARL C. GINGRICH , Penn State '26, May 21, 1968. I ncluded in th ose wh o survive are his wife, of 2 106 Presby­terian Apts. , 322 Second Street, H arrisburg, Pa., a brother, William Gingrich, Penn State '27, and a nephew, Blair Gingrich, Penn State '54.

JOHN B. HARBAUGH, Penn State '36, June 24, 1968, we are advised IJy his wife who resides at 214 Montrose Street, H arrisburg, Pa. J 7 110.

WILLIAM N. McCOY, Penn State '39, Dec. 26, 1968. At the time of his death he lived in Weirton, West Virginia, and was em ployed as a project engineer with Weirton Steel Corporation. H e is sur­vived by his wife, Mrs. J ean B. McCoy, two daughters and a son. The name of J ohn E. McCoy was erroneously sub­stituted for that of William N. McCoy in reporting th is item for the Chapter Eterna l section of the Spring, 1969, LAUREL. Information on William Me oy's passing was received from his brother, J ohn E. McCoy, Penn State '42, of 10 Race R ock Road, Waterford, Conn. 06385.

RICHARD A. TILDEN , S outhern California '33, April 25, 1969. Tilden, who had law offices in ew York City, and M ount Kisco, N.Y., a lso served for the past eighteen years as carsdale, .Y. , village attorney. H e was first president of the Westcheste1·, .Y. , M unicipal Planning Federation. H e is survived by his wife, Mrs. Thela Ca ll Tilden, a son, two daughters, his mother, and two brothers.

HAROLD V. HA RR ISON , SJ•racuse '24, is deceased. H e re ided in Scranton, Pa., and at one time was music dir tor for the Edwardsvi lle, Pa .. public schools.

BUD G. HAMMANS, Colorado '27, Feb. 3, 1969. H ammans, a charter member of Psi chap ter, was owner of the alverde D rug store in Denver, Colo. His wife, Mrs. H elen H ammans, is included in th se who survive .

FRANCIS E. STEWART, ebraska W esleyan '53, April 30, 1969. Major Stewart w" killed in act ion in ietnam, the re ult of an aircraft era h at Da Nang. due to Viet Gong ground-fire. H e had left the Sta tes M arch 10 for jungle survi\·al trai ning in the Philippines, after which he had fl own nearly thirty unarmed photo-reconnai ance mi ion ove r outh Vietnam. Besides rece iving hi ba he lor' degree at Nebraska \ esleyan a a mem­ber of psil on chapter, Stewart a l o re­ceived master's degree at the .. Air Force High Command College Mont­gomery, Ala. , and another from a branch of George Wa hington niver ity. On February I 0 of this year M ajor tewart completed specia l training in an RF4c pla ne and wa scheduled to serve a year ovPrseas. urviving are hi \\"ife , I r . Rhoda Stewart, two daughter and a on; his parent , the R ev. and M r .

Ernest B. tewart ; a iter; and three brothers, Eu aene V ernon tewart, e­bra ka W esleJ•an '59, Eldean Boyd te­wart, ebraska II' esleyan '62; and Terr ·I Edwin tewart, ebraska ll 'esleyan '67, a ll member of Up ilon chapter.

BOYD GUTH RI E, W isco11sin '24. far 6, J 969. Gu thrie made hi home in un City, California, and had been ho piral­ized since M ar h. H e i un·ived br hi

Poge 31

wife, Mrs. Anona Guthrie. Guthrie, as­sociated with the U. S. Bureau of Mi nes at Rifle, Colo., gained an interna tional reputation as a n authority in the fi eld of oil recovery from oil sha les. H e wa later associa ted with Socony-Mobile Oil Company a t Paulsboro, N.J., and la ter a t the firm's ew York Ci ty headqua rters as seni or consulta nt in matters rela ting to the energy potentia l of oil deri \'ed from the tremendous sha le deposit in the western states. In 1962 a consortium of five maj or oil compa nies reactivated the R ifle, Colo., Shale Oil Experimen tal Sta tion under a lease contrac t from the U . S. Government and Gu thrie returned to Rifle as a consulta nt to the oil com­pa nies a nd their research opera tions.

EDWARD J. KLEIN , M ichigan S tate '53, is deceased, according to informa ti on re­ceived from the post offi ce a t M endon, Mi h ., where Kl ein made his home.

WILLIAM H. WILSON JR., Florida '27, Nov. 11 , 1967. Wilson suffered a fatal heart attack while a ttending a Georgia­Florida football game, Jack onville, Fla . An a ttorney, he prac ticed law in Lake C ity, F la ., for forty years.

GEORGE P. CALLAWAY, Aubu rn '34, Sept. 23, 1967. H e was formerly asso­ciated with Anniston M anufacturing Company, Anniston, Ala., in a textile engineering capacity.

GLADWYN E. ELLIS, I owa S tat e, March 3 1, 1969. Ellis and his wife were vic­tims of an automobile accident near Fort D odge, Iowa . Two other persons,

Mrs. Ellis' niece and the niece's twelve­year-old son also los t their lives as a result of the accident.

HARRY W. FORREST, Colorado State '25, Jan . 7, 1969. Forrest, a charter member of Alpha igma chapter, ma de his home in Grand Junction, Colo.

EDWARD C. M. STAHL, Cornell, ov. 28, 1968, in Waterford, Va. Stahl at­tended Cornell from September 1909 to J une of 191 3 a nd was ini tiated into Phi K appa Tau on March 10, 1932.

RUTHERFORD T. WALSH, Cornell '42. is deceased, according to informa tion re­ceived from . Carl M o er, Cornell '40. Walsh was with the . S. Depar tm ent of State a nd had served with the U. S. D iplomatic Service in hanghai, China.

PHILIP S. DEYO, Colgate '36, J an. 8, 1969. D eyo, a cha rter member of lpha Upsilon chapter, was a long-time residen t of Bound Brook, N.J . H e had retired Ia t 1 ovember from Union Carbide Cor­poration .

WALTER D. ROBERTSON JR., Baldwin­W allace '48, J an. 6, 1969, we a re ad­vised by his wife a t 3240 Wilson Avenue, Ashtabula, Ohio 44004.

JOHN M. RULE JR ., Baldwin-Wallace '48, March 14, 1969, in Clearwater, Fla.

EDMUND D. HORNER JR., Un iversity of M iami ( Fla.) '50, Jan . 11 , 1968. H orner, president of Beta D elta chapter in

1949-50, was a long-time resident of Chicago.

CLIFTON L. ARMSTRONG, Oklahoma State '67, Feb. 2, 1969. D eath resulted from injuries sustained in an automobile accident in Las V egas, evada.

JOHN EARL HINISH Ill, Georgia '72. Funeral services, which included the Phi Kappa Tau service, conducted by mem­bers of Beta Xi chapter, was held June 10, 1969. Hinish, a student in business administra tion a t University of Georgia had been ill for some time. He is sur­vi\'ed by hi parents a t 2183 Shancey La ne, College Park, Ga. 3033 7.

MICHAEL J. McPARLANE, St. John's '67, J une 3, 1969. Dea th resulted from wound rece ived while fighting in Viet­nam. Originally as igned to the 5th Ar­tillery a a medic, he switched to the I t Ba tta lion, 5th Cavalry, 1st Air Cava lry Division in April. McParlane, an a lumnus of St. R egis high school, ew York City, a t t. J ohn's University, worked in the claim department of the Libe rty M utua l In ura nce Compa ny in Fore t Hills, N .Y. , un ti l his army en­li tmen t last Septembe r. Besides his pa rents of 67 -2-J. ! 68 th treet, Flushing, N .Y. a sister, M r . Eilee n M eade of r­lington, V a. a l o urvives.

JOH N H. IRWIN , Y oungstown State '68, M ay 19, 1969. D eath occurred as the re ult of an autom obile accident while Irwin was returning from his home in Na trona H eights, Pa., to Youngstown. H e is survived by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence H . Irwin.

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II hether your home, office, or studio follows the so-called 11 conventional or modern trend, this beautiful chair will lend

. itself in perfect harmony ... for this chair, which comes in black with gold trim, has the proper place in the conventional or modern setting.

You have always admired this type of chair for its beauty in design and comfort . .. and now you may own one with that added Phi Kappa Tau " Personal Touch" ... The Phi Kappa Tau Coat of Arms has· been attractively. silk screened in gold to the front of the chair.

Price: $43 with cherry arms; $42 with black arms. Shipped freight collect from factory in Gardner, Mass. Other types of Phi Kappa Tau Chairs: Side chair, $26; Boston Rocker, $33.50.

Order From: P hi l{appa Tau ent ral Office 15 North Camtm. venue, O,' ford, Ohio -l5056

Ohio HeHidcntA Add 4% ' ale · Tax

Po J )2 TH L U L

Tit is is the new Phi Kappa Tau Foundation symbol of your generosity to deserving students, universities and of course to Phi Kappa Tau.

You can help through contributions of cash, securities or you can remember the Foundation in your Will.

A certificate of appreciation, suitable for fram­ing, will be sent to each contributor of $50, $100 or more. And remember it's tax deductible.

Send your contributions to :

Ernie E. Emswiler, Treasurer The Phi Kappa Tau Foundation 694 S. Cassingham Rd. Bexley, Ohio 43209

·--------------------------------------------------------Here's my check. Enroll me as a: 0 Centurion ($100) 0 Spartan ($50) 0 Sponsor (an y am ount below $50 )

Name ______________________________________ __

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--------------------------------------------------------Please make check payable to the Phi Kappa Tau Foundation

~

The Phi Kappa Tau Fraternity Founded at M iami University, Oxford , Ohio , M arch 17, 1906

FOUNDERS T aylor A . Borradaile, Lewis Apartments, Apt. 4, 2214 S. K anawha St .,

Beckley, W. Va., 2580 1; Dwight I . Douglass; W illiam fl . Shideler; Clinton D. Boyd.

NATIONAL OFFICERS NATIONAL PR£S IDENT - M elvin Dettra fr ., Blue Cross of Northeast Ohio,

2066 East 9th, Cleveland, Ohio 44115. Residence: 3899 Woodthrush Rd ., Akron, Ohio 443 13.

NATIONAL VtcE PRESIDENT - J olo n A . Edwards , P .O . Box 10422, Raleigh , N .C . 27605 .

EDUCATIONAL DIRECTOR - T homas L . Stennis II , 45-55th Street , Gulfpor t, Miss. 3950 1.

Ho u INC AND FtNANCtAL ADVI SER - F. L. M cK inley, Suite 3700, 60 East 42nd St. , New York, N .Y. 10017.

NATIONAL CHAPLAIN - Rev. Charles D . Spotts, Smoketown, Pa. 17576.

THE NATIONAL COUNC IL Edward A . Marye ] r., 50 Broadway, M ount Sterling, Ky. 40353. Ray A . Clarke , 3403 Scarborough Road , Toledo , Ohio 43615. T homas L . Stenn is II , 45-55th Street, Gulfport, Miss. 39501. F. L . M cKinley, Suite 3700, 60 East 42nd St. , ew York, N. Y. 10017 R obert ] . K . Butz , 32 S. eve nth St. , All entown , Pa . 18101 Robert W. Hampton, 700 Electric Bldg., El Paso, T exas 79901 Warren fl . Parker, Nebraska Wesleyan University, 50th and St. Paul.

Lincol n, Nebr. 68504.

THE CENTRAL OFFICE 15 North Campus Avenue, Oxford , O hio 45056

Telephone: 513-523-5419 NATIONAL SECRETARY - Jack L . Anson Ass t TANT NATIONAL SECRETARY - William D. Jenkins NATIONAL EDITOR, ATIONAL ALUMNI SECRETARY - jack W . ]a reo Ft ELD SECRETARIES- Richard S . M etz, j olon F. Mankopf, Thomas E. Wilso n

DOMAIN CHIEFS l. f am es W. Seawrigh t , Suite 3700, 60 East 42nd St. , New York.._ N .Y.

10017 . Chapters: Rho. Beta Pi , Gamma Gam ma, Gamma Zeta, l.iamma K appa , Gamma Phi, Delta Delta .

2. Alessar1dro fl . Beret ta , 64 S. Morrell Ave ., Geneva , '.Y. 14456. Chapters : Alpha Tau, Alpha Upsilon , Beta Upsilon , Gamma u .

3. R obert ] . K . Butz, 32 S. Seventh St., Allen tO\vn, Pa . 18101. Chapters : E ta , Omicron , Alpha Omicron , Gamma Omega.

4. Bert E . Mar~sell, 494 1 N. 26th St., Aslington , Va. 22207. Chapters : Xi , Alpha Gamma, Beta Omicron .

5. f am es A. Bass Jr. , 5105 Liles Road, Raleigh, N .C . 27606. Chapters : Chi, Alpha Theta, Gamma Eta, Gamma T au .

0. Lawrence H . M cDaniel, Universi ty of Georgia Alumni Society, Academic Bldg., Athens, Ga . 30601. Chapters: Alpha Eta , Alpha Rho, Beta Iota, Beta Xi .

7. Oscar E. Davis , Jr . 3395 Clearbrook, M emphis, T enn. 38118. Chapters : Alpha Lambda , Alpha Ch i, Beta Epsilon, Gamma Upsilon , Gamma Chi , Delta Gamma.

8. ] ames E . Boggess, 108 Shaw Ave ., Versailles, Ky . 40383 . Chapters : D elta , Theta, Kappa , Beta Beta . Colonies: Georgetown , T ennessee.

9. ] . Philip R obertson , 819 Wilmington Ave ., Apt. 14, Dayton , Ohio 45420. Chapters: Alpha , Beta, Gamma, Gamma Beta. Colony: M arshall.

10. ]ames K. H eilmeier, 2649 H awthorne Rd ., Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio 44221. Chapters: Epsilon , Phi , Alpha Phi , Beta Mu, Gamma Pi . Colony : Muskingum .

II. H arry Lash , 351 Bassett R d ., Bay Village , O hio 44140. Chapters: Alpha Delta , Alpha O mega , Beta T au , Beta Phi .

12 . R obert ] . Zimmerman , 308 Van Buren , Apt. D-32, Jackson , Mich . 49201. Chapters: 1 au , Alpha Alph a , Gamma Theta , Gamma Lambda.

13. E rvin C . L entz Jr., 101 Westminster Square, Racine , Wis . 53402 . Chapters: Iota;., Mu, Gamma Alpha, Gamma Delta , Delta Alpha , Delta Epsilon . L'olony : Wisconsin at Mllwaukee.

14. Donald A. H enry, ]r ,, 29 Sunnyside D r ., Springfield, Ill . 62702. Chap­ters: Zeta , Lambda , Beta Lambda, Beta Chi, Gamma Mu, Delta Beta.

15. J oh n M. Green, 5165 J ackson St ., Omaha, 'ebr. 68106. Chapters: U psi lon , Alpha Epsilon , Alpha Nu, Beta Theta, Gam ma Rho. Colony: Emporia Sta te .

16. Leon A . Whitn ey, 4501 R amsey Ave., Austin, T exas 78756. Chapters : Beta Alpha , Beta K appa, Gamma Xi , Gamma Psi .

17. R obert W. Ha mpto n, Better Business Bureau of El Paso, I nc., 700 Electric Bldg., El Paso, T exas 79901. Chapters: Alpha Psi , Beta Zeta . Colonies: Santa Fe, New M exico Hil(hlands .

18 . ci.~i>·t~~; . P~ i·, . Ali>h'~ ·si~~: .... ................................ ..... . 1 ' · c·.;~i> i~.;;, · ·,.;.iph~ · z~t~·. ·Ali;.;~· K:~Pi>~: · il~i~ · a~;,;~~-- · ·· ········· ······

20. R obert D . L eath erman, c-o Federal Trade Commission, 450 Golden Gate Ave ., Box 36005.,~ San Francisco._ Cali£. 94102. Chapters : Nu, Beta O mega , Gam ma .t.psilon, Gamma l ota, Gamma Sigma.

21 . Bernard Y. Eakes , 3933 E~lanade, West, M arina del Ray, Cali£. 90291. Chapters: Pi, Beta Psi, Gamma O micron .

L. Edward Kl ~- B-L Ch en· v ~ rt, 7100 Cod ar Rd. Maume , Ohio 43537