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ITK+ ALUMNI and ACTIVE MEMBERS-You Can Order Your Official Jewelry Direct From This Page

PI KAPPA PHI

Official Badge Price List

JEWELED STYLES Minia-ture

Pearl Border $12.50

Pend Borde r, " Garnet Points -- - 13.50

Pearl Borde•·, 4 Ruby or Sapphire Points ------ --- ·---·- 15.00

Peal"l Border, 4 Emerald Points --- 19.00

P end Border, 2 Diamond Points ___ - 32.50

Pearl llm·de r , 4 Diamond Points ·-· -- 52 .50

PcarJ, Ruby or Sapphire Alternating 17.75

P earl and Diamond Alternating ·-· ___ 92.50

All Diamond, Yellow Gold - ·-------· 172.50

S tand - Extrn ard Crown

$16.50 $22.50 17.50 23.50

20.00 27 .25 24.00 35.00 42.00 57.50 67 .50 92.50 25.50 32.00

144.00 162.50 271.50 302.50

Above prices are for badges made in 14k yellow gold and 14k white gold. If 18k white gold is des ired add $5.00 to prices given above.

Prices for platinum will gla dly be quoted on request.

PLAIN STYLES

10k ·-----14k Nugget Border Chased Border Plain Border, White Gold Chased Border, White Gold

RECOGNITION BUTTONS-

Min in-turc

4.00 4.50 6.00 5.00 6.00

Miniature Coat-of-Arms, Gold-Filled 1.00 Silver------- - 1.00

Special Recognition with White Enamel Star, Gold-Filled _______ 1.00

10K - ------- 1.50

Stand-ard 4.50 5.50 6.50 6.50 7.50 9.00

Pled~re Buttons 9.00 per dozen

Guo rd Pin Price List SinJl' IE" Letter

Pluin -------- ---- --· ------- -- - - -- --------- $2.25 Ct'own Set l'eud -- - --- - - -- 6.00

Large

11.00 12.00 12.00 13.50 15.00

Pnuhlt­Letter $ 8.50

10.00

~

COAT OF ARMS GUARDS

Miniature, Yellow Gold ·-· ·-------- -- - - ---- $2.75 Scarf Size, Yellow Gold _ --------- - --- -- - ------- 8.25

All prices quoted above ore subject to 20% Federal excise tax, and to state sales or use taxes wherever such state taxes ore .n eftcct.

Be sure to mention the name of your Chapter when ordenng o guard for your pin.

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STAR

and

LAMP

o/ Pi Kappa Phi

Fraternity

RICHARD L. YOUNG Editor

• Enter d the e as second class matter at Carof·ost office at Charlotte, North a 18 ma, under the Act of March si>eci7f· Acceptance !or mailing at in t~ rAte of pos-.ge provided for ernho ~ c~ of February 28, 1926, 412 ~lei In paragraph 4, section ary' 7," 19 32~nd R., authorized Janu-

'l'he 'Sta Quar r nnd Lnmp is published lina terly at Charlotte, North Caro­~ atio Ulder the direction of the Phi Fa Council of the Pi Kappa Fehru raternity in the months of her. ary, May, August and Novem-

~h~h~ife s1ubscrrption is $12.60 and

Single on .Y form of subscription. COptes are 50 cents.

Chang . t>orte/" In address should be re-33 \7irgpr_omptly to Central Office,

In1a Bldg., Richmond 19, Va.

A.U tnat · tion sh e'j1al intended for publica-~ana .au d he in the hands of the ll.ich~~n~ Editor, 33 Virginia Bldg., the 111 n 19, Va., by the lOth of issue. onth preceding the month of

Volume XXXIII MAY, 1947 No . 2

Contents PAGE

Pi Kapp Coaches Georgia Elevens .... 2

What Every Pi Kapp Veteran Should Know .. 3

President's Plaque 4

Pi Kapp Director of FHA ........... .. .......... . . .. .. . 5

Timmerman, South Carolina's Youngest Lieutenant Governor 6

Council Makes Plans

College Head

Meet Brother lin~

Among Our Chapter Advis ~r

Alumni Corner

Marriages and Engagements

Directory

THE COVER

Entrance to Historic Roanoke College

Solem, Virginia, Home of Xi Chapter

7

8

8

9

.... .. ... 12

...... .1 8

" .. 30

Pt · 'J:::app COACHES

EORGIA ELEVEN

(Right ) Brol her Wallace Butts, renowned coach at the University of Georgia.

UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA last season boasted the nation's only

untied and undefeated major college football team and the man responsible for the Bulldogs' rise to national fame on the gridiron was plump, jovial Wallace Butts, a member of Pi Kap­pa Phi.

Butts, now in hi~ eighth season as Georgia's head coach, bas bad sen­sational success since he became the guiding genius of the Bulldogs in 1939. Since that time his teams have played in four major Bowl games (Rose, Orange, Oil and Sugar) and won all of them. Their record under Butts also includes a couple of Southeastern Conference champion­ships.

In eight seasons under Butts, the Bulldogs have posted an overall rec­ord of 59 victories, 21 losses and two ties, not counting the four Bowl wins. That's something to shoot at considering rhat Wally is still ~ youngster as head coaches go. The popular head mentor of the Georgia teams has, i.n the last eight seasons, ascended to the very top among the country's outstanding football coach­es and since he is only 41 years old , as of last February 7, he has a lot of good years left.

Exactly two years after he took over the coaching reins at Georgia in .1939, the ~ulldogs, sparked by tbetr All Amencan ace Frank Sink­wich, were playing T~xas Christian University in the Orange Bowl at Miami where they won, 40-26. The next year, led by Sinkwich and soph­omore star, Charley Trippi, they won

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nine out of 10 games and walloped UCLA in the Rose Bowl at Pasa­dena, Calif., 9 to 0.

The war interrupted the Bulldogs' achievements but they came back in 194.5 with an Oil Bowl champion. But the past season, 1946, was by far Butts' greatest at Georgia. His col­orful Bulldogs won every game of a 10-game schedule and then defeated University of North Carolina in the Sugar Bowl at New Orleans, 20-10, in a thrill-packed contest on New Year 's Day.

In addition to other achievements, Butts has developed the following all­American players at Georgia: Frank Sinkwich, halfback. 1941-42; George Poschner, end, 1942; Mike Castronis, tackle, 1946; and Charles Trippi, l<lalfback, 1946.

TI the

1

sen drec ed 1

vice is!a1

ans of 1

at p era] boy Whil by

~I WitE ly d dre~

Georgia's highly successful yoi f~~ 1

coach -was born in MilledgeVI st e, Baldwin County, Ga., on FebruarY, re~f' 1905, the son of Mr. and Mrs. ~int lace Butts, Sr. He received his earto ~ education in the public schools an that city and at Georgia MiJitStios J College from which be was gradua1then in 1924 after an outstanding rec Offj as a Cadet student. Ci

Butts entered Mercer Universi1~'1Vo Macon, Ga., as a freshman in 19 ato and was graduated from that in~ In tution in 1928 with the A.B . degr•renze He was outstctnding as a student s'al! tJ athlete at Mercer and captained 1ton 1

football team in 1927. He was selelwbo ed on the All-S. I. A. A. team at ous end position the same year. and ,

His first coaching job was at :Msare ~ (Continu ed on Page 6) ll1ake

THE STAR AND LA ~Of'

What Every Pi Kapp Veteran Should Know This is the first of a series of articles containing practical tips and important

information for the hundreds of P Kapps who are veterans of World Wars I and II. The author, Robert C. McLees, Beta '36, is a Veterans Administration Contact Rep­resentative, and a previous contributor to THE STAR AND LM'IP.

TIIE United States Government is sation or pension, education or train- arated from the service (not before) th probably the mo5t generous in ing under the G. I. Bill (or very his N file was shipped to the VA se: .world to its veterans of armed nearly any other benefit other than Branch Office having jurisdiction ov­dr VIce. Congress has passed him- the 52-20 (Readjustment Allowance) er his home of record ("permanent ed eds of laws granting benefits bas- Club or Guaranty of Loan.) A "C" home address" to which you receiv­v· Upon wartime and peaGetime ser- number means a Claim File some- ed your final travel allowance). (Un­is;c~ .. To. administer this mass of leg- where. Your file is kept in the VA der the V. A. Central Office in Wash­an a Ion 1s the mission of the Veter- Regional Office or Center having ington, D. C. the United States is of \h Administraton, since 1930 one jurisdiction rwer the state or area broken down into thirteen V. A. at e major Federal agencies and where you file claim or make your Branch Office Areas, which are in era)re

0sent under the direction of Gen- home. That C number is yours for turn over V. A. Regional Officer or

bo , mar N. Bradley, the "Dough- life; note it rlown in your billfold and Centers located one or more in each ~s General." The "red tape" of identify your:;elf by it in all corres- state. The Branch Offices have

~hl~h the. V. A. is sometimes accused pondence. Find out w'hich office NSLI files, and also all XC files, a~ 1.mpabent or disappointed veter- has your file. It will not be moved and normally handle all claims of

U s lS usually reaulation and proced- except upon your formal request, deceased veterans' families.) For in~ re h" h o be th Ic -=xperience has shown to using a "Cha~ge of Address" form. stance, my home of record was South

With e only practical way of coping Use the same form to keep your mail- Carolina. My N file was shipped to ly d an_d accomplishing the immense- ing address current if you are receiv- V. A. Branch Office No. 5, Atlanta dredetalled task of handling the hun- ing disability compensation or sub- 3, Ga., which is over South Carolina, Vet s of thousands of claims filed by sistence checks, for Postal Regula- Georgia, Alabama, Tennessee and oveerans and their beneficiaries. For tions forbid the forwarding of gov- Florida. (Ask your nearest Contacl the r ad year-since two weeks after ernment checks such as these. Re- Representative where your N file

en of my terminalleave-I have member very little can be accomp- should be). All premiums and cor­a Contact Representative, one lished except through the office which respondence should be sent to the

basic links betw.een the V. A. has custody 0f your file, so always Branch Office having your N file . Vete the veteran public. We meet the write to that :uidress. You will have If you are an old codger with ten;an, analyze his problems in jittle occa~ion to move your file un- United States Government Life (the legis]s ?f his rights under existing less you change your address perm- type issued to World War I appli­

atiOn; :tssist him in the neces- anently to another state, or desire cants, and available to service men Vela . exac~ing task of filing and de- to take G. I. training in another up until the commencement of NSLI the Ping his claims; explain to him state. In the latter instance, until October 8, 1940) your file is not de-

yo~1list/eason~ for action finally taken; you move your filr to the new state centralized, but kept by the V. A., geV1 stan~· to his complaints with under- you will not !:>e able to receive trainee Washington 25, D . C. If you have ua~!,reaJ Ing and attempt to correct any subsistence allowance. both types within your maximum of ;. v•

1introdor P.ossible injustice. With this In addition to the C file. if vou $10,000, you are supposed to have

s ea to b Ucbon I should like to bring had National Service Life Insunince a combined !ile, in Washington. l?l.S ans ;other .Pi Kapps who are veter- you have another file, identified by National Service Life Insurance 1Ihl8tion ome of ~arne practical informa- an "N" number, kept entirely sep- Right now NSLI is in the veteranil .dua1thern and advice I would like to give arate from the "C" file until you die limelight. Last August Congress reco ffice.personally if they came to my (when the C file becomes an "XC" passed amendments to the original

versiiTUJo 111 tl

t91'alo ore Numbers to , o on Yo Ch t t in! In . ur es . . .

degr'ren-ze ~almg with the V. A., always :nt aral] th er to identify yourself from 1ed !ton Ce other Bill Burnses and Pres­selei\vho harleses with identical names,

1 at ous a;e,. of course, filing simultan-and af aims. Give your full name

t :Msare g· 1 service serial numbers. You make Iven ~ "C" number when you

a claim for disability compen-A ~0 F p

I KAPPA PHI

file and is consolidated with the In- bill which improved the usefulness surance file}. You may have several of this insurance by making it more N numbers, depending upon how flexible. Some of these provisions, many NSLI policies you applied for which practically wiped out the dif­before you secured your maximum ferences between World War I type coverage of $10,000 government in- (USGLI) and World War II type surance, but the first one-"FN"- (NSLI) government life insurance, is your "File" N number. Up until are as follows: (1) If you desire about the middle of 1946 all N files proceeds of vour policy paid to your were kept by the VA at 346 Broad- beneficiary in one lump sum, you way, New York, New York. At that can arrange it by notifying the VA time a policy of decentralization was in writing. This is one of four set­adopted, and as each man was sep- tlement options now available. ( 2)

3

Unlimited choice of beneficiaries, no longer limited to the members of your immediate family. (Be sure to review your designation of benefi­ciary whenever you change your family situatjon; your word is law to the government on this matter, so make sure it is the latest word.) ( 3) A choice of six permanent plans, including endowments, all at rates with which no commercial company could be exp~cted to compete because the government pays all administra­tive costs. These are all GOVERN-

1MENT policies. ( 4) All NSLI plans include Waiver of Premium provis· ion (no Double Indemnity). A new " Disability Income Provision" is now available, and can be added to your present policy if you now make ap· plication, pay a small additional monthly premium, and pass an in­surance physical exam. On the first day of the seventh month of total dis­ability commencing after you apply for and secure this provision, the pro­vision starts paying a monthly in­come at the ':ate of $5 for each $1,000 of protection you carry. These pay· ments in no way affect the face val­ue of protection for your beneficiary, and continue so long as you are to­tally disabled. ( 5) If you did not get your maximum of $10,000 govern­ment insurance while in service, and were in between October 8, 1940 and September 2, 1 945 ("Wartime" for insurance purposes) , you are now eligible to apply (subject to physical examination ) for NSLI to make up this maximum figure. Easy Reinst,ztement Provisions

It is estimated that more than 7 5% of the vetenns who had NSLI in service have let it lapse through carelessness, ignorance, or just plain inability to know a bargain when they see one. For the benefit of veterans who have "dropped" their protection, the government has made it especially easy to reinstate the 5 year level-premium term policy wt all had in service. These are the re­quirements: (1) Secure from yam nearest VA representative, County Service Officer or other service or· ganization an application form (VA Form 9-353a) and complete it. Try to secure your "N" number to iden­tify your <tpplication. (You may find this on the letter-size yellow "Certificate" sent to the home of each application when he originally applied, giving the N number,

4

amount, and effective date; or on a premium notice, if the VA has com­menced to send them to you). If you can't, use all your service serial numbers. ( 2) On this form you are required to be able to state honestly "Yes" to the question "Is your health now f.I.S good as it was at the date of lapse?" (the date due of the first premium you missed when you stopped paying). This is the "Com­parative Health Statement" which it is your privilege to use instead of the more complicated procedure of an actual physical exam, up until August 1, 1947. If you can't say "Yes," you may still be able to re­instate it by using a physical exam­ination, provided you are not so dis­abled as to be eligible for waiver of premiums, and if your disabilities were incurred in or aggravated by service as shown by VA records. ( 3) Send the application, properly com­pleted, with a check or money order made to "Treasurer of U. S.," to Collections Unit, at VA Branch Of­fice which has your N file. A tip: write on the face of your check or money order your N-number (or serial number); it is recorded on microfilm, and helps to identify your remittance. Save your cancelled checks or money order stubs as evi­dence of payment.

You can reinstate all or any por­tion (Minimnm policy $1,000; max­imum the amnunt you had in service; in multiples of $500 in between). The rate on reinstated term policies is the same ?..S that paid in service. You are not required to pay any term premiums in arrears. Your re­mittance should be equal to at least two monthly premiums on that amount of NSLI you are applying to reinstate (one month covers the "month of grace" during which you had protection after stopping pay­ments, the other is the current month's premium). It is good policy to pay three months premium, and stay one month ahead for safety's sake. Remember, you can keep it at this low term rate for the duration of the original term policy which you are reinstating, but must convert it to one of the six permanent plans to continue protection beyond that time.

To repeat: to reinstate your NSLI, here is all you need do: MAKE AP­PLICATION, COMPLY WITH SIMPLE H E A L T H REQUIRE-

MENTS; MAKE SMALL REMI1 TANCE WITH APPLICATim And DO IT NOW. And if you wa1

professional help, see a VA Conta' man.

1 The next article will be on the su ject of compensation for service col nected disability.

Competition Strong for President's Plague

PI

Since the announcement of the r sumption of the President's PJaqt award in the November issue of 'f~ STAR AND LAMP, competition has~ come more keen by the month. !t1

chapters are already "in the runnt01

and all are doing a good job. Dl Now in order to give everyone· I

fair a chance as possible in tbt ( 19 efforts to win the trophy, all ch8, of t ter publications issued during I and summer semester will be consider; ity in this year's group. This will a 194 make the two periods between U carf resumption of the award and the ne hac: convention of about equal length. assi

This should be an added indttr the ment for all chapters who will be 0 na. erating during the summer to co 1 tinue their normal activities. ey

So here's a chance for you to sl fam qualify if you have not published 1 that third issue of your chapter paper Car date. farr

Get busy, editors, and let's ' del~ what you can do. in 1

. bpc clas late tain forr trai· caJ

Alumnus- Part E

191 ly r

Have You Paid YoLJt ~~s~ Ma

Voluntary Dues fot in~ Was rep]

1947? See page 3.2· ter Wa ~Pe1 llli]j Wou als 1

0 F

THE STAR AND LA'

.her :>JaQ\ -f 1t 1as ll t. fit nninl

~OI«J ~ PI KAPP

DIRECTOR OF FHA

By

lamar L. Murdaugh, Lambda.

one DILLARD B. LASSETER, Pi Kap-1 tbl (l~a Phi from Emory University

cha of ~3 )' has served as Administrator 1g t. an .e Farmers Home Administration · ideP it d Its P~edccessor, the Farm Secur­lll al 1?

46 Adm1?istration, since .January,

en t• car · . His present post chmaxes a 1e ne bac~r In government service dating :rth. ass· to 1916 when he accepted an ~dur thei~nme~t as student interpreter for be o na. mencan Legation in Pekin, Chi-

Dillard B. Lasseter

o co L e asseter was born in Vienna Dool-y c '

to sl famiJ ount~, Georgia, member of a

1ed t tha Y Which had moved there more 'lper Carn 1~ hundred years earlier from the

far 0 Inas. He worked on the family t's ~ de]~' atten~ed high school at Cor­

in 19 Georgia, then entered Emory l.Jpo 09 as a bachelor of arts student

--""' clas n graduation, he enrolled in lateses at New York University and tain: at Columbia University, ob­for~ng an M.A. degree from the trai ~r. Throughout his university cal lli~g he was interested in politi ­Part~Cietce and foreign relatiom and

E cu ~rly adept at languages. 191 ~termg the diplomatic service in Iy r· '·Lasseter gave promise of quick­

t fess~smg to the top in his chosen pro­~IJ to / 00 by !earning in eight months

Ma~~d,. write and speak fluently the ing ann language-a task requir­

fot A Years for most students. Was Year later th e diplomafic career rep]a temporarily abandoned, to be

32• ter feed by a military one. Lasse­War 0

1ught in France during World

~Pent ' was seriously wounded, and lllilit almost a year in British Woun~y hospitals recovering from his als at s. Discharged from the hospit-

--"' last, he returned to China where 0 F

lAI Pt KAPPA PHI

h e served as vice-counsel in Tientsin and consul '-lt Antung and Hankow.

In 1920 !1e was joined in China by Helen Frances Smith, also a na­tive Georgian, who became his wife and worked with him for the remain­ing four years-Lasseter spent in for­eign service.

In 1924 he returned to the United States, engaging in cotton textile manufacturing in South Carolina, New York !lnd Chicago until 1931. The following two years he spent in Georgia, working with his fa th : r in a farm supply and equipment business in Vienna.

In 1933, Lasseter once more enter­ed government service, this time with the National Recovery Administra­tion. While so engaged h studied for and passed th e Georgia bar ex­amination.

From 193 6 to 1939, he was Georgia Stat·~ Director for the Na­tional Youth Administration and during that t!me also served as part­time professor at Emory University, lecturing on public adrninistration and public !aw. In 1939 he was promoted to the post of deputy ad­ministrator for the NYA in Washing­ton.

When the War Manpower Com­mission was established in 1942, Las­seter was selected as regional direc­tor in charge of the middle Atlantic states. For 1en months, he served as staff director for the House Civil Service Investigating Committee

(Rams peck .-ommittee) , then return­ed to War Manpower as regional di­rector for the Southeast. In Janu­ary, 1946, he was appointed national administrator of the Farm Security Administration; and was appointed by President Truman to be Admin­istrator of the Farmers Home Admin­istration in August, 1946, when that agency was formed by a merger of FSA with the Emergency Crop and Feed Loan Division of the Farm Credit Administration.

As a former regional Commander of the M ili tary Order of World Wars and an active member of the Amer­ican Legion, Mr. Lasseter feels that his present DOst provides him with unusual opportunities to assist form ­er servicemen who desire to return fo· agriculture. He is proud of the record of FHA and its predecessor agencies in assisting approximately 40,000 World War II veterans re­turn to agriculture as farm owners or farm operators.

. lVIr. Lasseter is a Methodist, and IS a member of the Atlanta and Georgia Bar Associations. In addition to his membership in Pi Kappa Phi, he belongs to the Chevy Chase (Md.) Country Club and the Atlanta (Ga.) Athletic Club.

His hobbies include the study of foreign languages, research in Amer­ican-and especially SoutJlern- his­tory, and the collect ion of military anecdotes.

5

PI KAPP COACHES GEORGIA

ELEVENS (Continued from Page 2)

ison, Ga., A. & M. College, where he coached from 1928 to 1932 and produced outstanding teams. He coached at Georgia Military College his prep alma mater, from 1932 t~ 1935 and was head coach and athletic director at Male High School Louis­ville, Ky., from 1935 to 1938. He became assistant coach at Georgia

·in 193 8 and was named head coach in 1939.

Butts is guite active in civic af­fairs of Athens, where he is a mem­ber of Rotary and Elks. He is also a ~~mber of Blue Key fraternity, Gnd1ron Club, Round Table, Pi Kap­pa Phi and is a Shriner. On Febru­ary 19, 1929, he married Winifred Fay.e. .Taylor of Atlanta, a childhood sweetheart, and they have three daughters: Winifred Faye, 17, Mar­tha Jean, 15, and Nancy Elizabeth 9. '

They reside at 510 Hampton Court, Athens.

Pledge Drowned John McGill, Epsilon pledge, and

son of Brother Myron T. McGill Ep­silon of Davidson, N. C., was ctr~wn­ed near Cambridge, Md., when the jeep in which be was riding skidded off a snow-covered bridge into 15 feet of water on March 29.

Young McGill was a graduate of Davidson high school and had en­tered Davidson college last fall but had withdrawn at the end of the' first semester to join a rural electrification surveying crew for the Vannort En­gineering company of Charlotte, N. C. He was a member of the high school basketball and baseball teams and had played on the "B" football squad at Davidson where he pledged Pi Kappa Phi.

6

FALL RUSHING NOTE

Be sure to send Central Office the nome of any friend attend­ing a college where Pi Kappa Phi is represented.

TIMMERMAN-South Carolina'~ Youngest Lieutenant Governor

() By Joe Wheeler Drennon, Jr., Sigma

GEORGE BELL TIMMERMAN, Jr., Sigma is South Carolina's first

lieutenant-governor since January 2, 1942 when Governor Olin D. John­ston, also an alumnus of Sigma, sub­mitted his resignation as governor of the state and turned over the duties of his office to nis lieutenant-governor Ransome J. Williams. '

Recent years have seen very little of Brother Timmerman in action along the political-front, but between August 10, 1942 and November 11, 1946 he was active along military fronts. Most of this time was spent in oversea's ~reas where the rank of Lieutenant, U. S. N. R. was attained by Brother Timmerman.

Brother Timmerman was li sted among the ~urvivors of the torpedo­ing of a merchant ship on January 9, 1943. He later saw service as com­manding officer of the Rocket Ship, USS LSMR 198, participating in initial landings at Aka Shima, Okin­awa, Ie Shima, Ihaya Shima and Aguni Shima.

There are several interesting facts about the life of Brother Timmerman. Of particular interest is the fact that George Bell, Jr. opened his law office at the close of the war in the same small frame cottage in which his father, George Bell, Sr., had set up his law office some forty-odd years ago. Then comes the strange fact that Brother Timmerman's father and the father of Governor J. Strom Thurmond, were partners in law for a while. Also to be listed among these oddities is the fact that this white house that shelters Brother Timmerman's law practice is one of the land marks of this area, being one of the oldest houses in this sec­tion of South Carolina and being one of the structures to survive the march of Sherman's troops to Columbia.

Brother Timmerman was born in Anderson on Augtwt 11, 1912 thus claiming the honor of being the youngest man to serve in the capac­ity of lieutenant-governor of South Carolina. It has been the rule that

tio Vi tot Ph to1 tic Co Bi1 ent Pr1 'l'e b. tio Sta be eel lin I

~~ an1 co~

2t J GEORGE BELL TIMMERMAN, Jr. p)~

ex-officio presidents of the Senat Ine1 have been much older men, but tb Col present lieute:1ant-governor is the eJ dirt ception of the rule. And, as this pa' Wat election showed, youth has gone 1 anc the polls to claim positions for thO: fur' men nearest their ages and with id dep about governmental matters that f Cifi1 more nearly their own conceptions fu)f

Th d . 1 h' h . ter~ e e ucatwna. 1g -pomts ex' Brother George Bell Timmerrna 10 P Jr.'s life have been centered arotlf ne

01

Anderson and Batesburg pub a))S! schools, The Citadel, and the v~ to I

versity of South Carolina, where \ ~ became affiliated with Sigma of g Kappa Phi and from which be r a~ ceived his Bachelor of Laws degr~ ~~0 I

While at the University, Geon Jodi Bell, Jr. made a name for himself tak1 the histories 0f several honorary ~ Offj social organizations, Pi Kappa the being the most important one for Brother Timmerman's store of rne~ low ories. In addition to Pi Kappa Pl frat! Brother Timmerman's name can

1 dutj

fo~nd on the rec?rds o_f Phi JJe, a Pt Ph1 Legal Fratermty, Wtg and Rot Inon Blue Key, the Cotillion and Gerll1· \Vas clubs. He bas since become a mer assi• ber of the South Carolina Bar AS: Pia~ dation and the American Legion·

.J 0 F THE STAR AND LA"'

or . QUT of the hopper of a two-day

t' concentrated session of the Na­vfrn~J. Council, held in Richmond, t gmta on February 15-16 came a ~tal of 2 5 formal resolutions. All

io ~s of Fraternity activity were ti u ~d upo~1 in discussion and ac­C~n I~ this second meeting of the

B. unctl since e I e c t i o n by the It '

ent m;ngham Supreme Chapter. Pres-p . or all c;essions were National

Treshtdent Devereux D. Rice, Georgia ec · 11.r • , D t' ~'latumal Treasurer Howard ti~ eake, Washington & Lee; Na­St ~al. Secretary J. Al Head, Oregon n:· e, National Historian John W. celJunler, Drexel; and National Chan­lin or Theron A. Houser, South Caro­sesa: In attendance at many of the Be SlOns were Executive Secretary W. an~na~d Jones, Jr. , South Carolina; cou obert W. Morse, traveling

;selor, Michigan State. 2lsthe tnand~tes and wishes of the

lr. Plac S?preme Chapter, held primary Senal me ~ In the lengthy agenda of the ut t.b Co~tng, prepared by President Rice. 'h el d' Prehensively, the program was t.se g! \V~~cted to the regaining of the pre­~n~ 1 anct status enjoyed by the Fraternity, • thO: furtb of going beyond that with the ~ ide depr er. long ~tride of attaining pre­hat r Cific esslOn status. In terms of spe­ronS fulf'lsteps, OUtlined for discussion and 1

r ters1 tnent were the important mat-1 ts ex of reorganization re-activation

a' Pan · ' ' erJ11 Ill Ston and revision. In an at-arotlf ne~~Phere . of optimistic aggressive­pub alJ a these Items were considered from

e v~ to g ~gles and workable plans devised 1ere 1 A:m d~sired goals.

of r gani a~ Important step in the reor-

dhe rr or ·t~at.10n of the fraternity, just pri­eg Plo time of the meeting newly-em­

Geor Jo:eed Executive Secretary Bernard tself takes had arrived in Richmond to ry ar Offj over his duties in the Central Ja 1 the ce. Se_veral hours were spent by me for t~ounctl in formulating policies ' rne~ low . e Executive Secretary to fol­>a pt frate m. handling the routine of the can : dutierntty's affairs, in outlining the

pe a Pr 5 of the office and in furnishing Rol lllon~fam of his work in the coming

ierJll· Was a 5· ~n additional employee . rner assist u.thonzcd for Central Office to · As: Placed In carryin.g the heavier load ~ioil· Upon the office.

• .~OF PI ,.,.. KAPPA PHI

Back to Central Office is to go the editing and publication of TI-IE STAR AND LAMP, for many years in the able and veteran hands of Dick Young, North Carolina. Young has expressed a wish to retire from the editorship, to devote all his spare time to a now-blooming authorship. The Council was of the opinion that the Central Office was the proper place for the publication of the Fraternity.

A short visit by the group to Cen­tral Office quarters proved that the new Executtve Secretary has made good use of his short time in the of­fice in an organizational way by cre­ating a wall chart of the national or­ganization :>bowing lines of control and responsibility and having ample space to identify personnel ij1 each position; and :~lso by having provided a map of the States which at .a glance, through use of colored thumb-tacks, shows Pi Kappa Phi chapters. The organizational map showed need of personnel ap~ointment in district po­sitions and much work was done later t~ complete this part of tbe pic­ture. It was decided by the Council to appoint district archons for those districts having neither undergradu­ate or alumni chapters, as one step towards the stimulation of the cre­ation of both in these districts. While in Central Office the National Pres­ident and National Secretary affixed their signatures to the newly-en­grossed charter of the Lansing Alum­ni Chapter, first of the post-war alumni groups to organize.

Each of the war - and depression - dormant undergraduate chapters was discussed in turn with re-activa­tion keenly in the forefront of group thought. Procedures toward revival and restoration of these units were laid down, key alumni were named to be asked to render assistance, and responsibility for immediate action placed upon the Executive Secretary.

Review of the prospects for ex­pansion revealed a total of 19 con­tacts some of casual and unpromis­ing character, others wliich have def­inite promise of rounding into addi­tional undergraduate units of the Fraternity. 'The university or col­lege in each instance was considered

at length in terms of its educational rating, and general fraternity pic­ture. The Executive Secretary was authorized to proceed with proper action in several favorable cases. The assistance of alumni and undergrad­uate chapters will be sought to es­tablish these undergraduate chap­ters.

Renewed and increasing alumni interest is to be sought through var­ious steps and methods outlined as a result of a discussion led by National Historian John Deimler, in whose hands as National Historian fall the alumni activity phases of the fra­ternity. Towards such ends the alum­ni will be:

1. Given more publicity in the pub­lications of the Fraternity.

2. Urged to take over specific Fraternity projects of benefit to un­dergraduate chapters in their vicin­ity.

3. Asked to organize in heavy Pi Kappa Phi centers.

4. Urged to publish local director­ies.

5. Provided with a manual of in­struction similar to those published for undergraduate chapters.

National Treasurer Howard D . Leake made full financial and budget reports. As a part of his report be read the summary of the condition of THE STAR AND LAMP Fund, pro­vided for the occasion by Ralph W. Noreen, California, chairman of the Finance Committee. This report of the Committee showed that 66 % of the funds wt:e in government bonds, 19% in common stocks, and the bal­ance in cash, preferred stocks, and mortgages. The thanks and com­mendation of the Fraternity were extended to the Committee.

Greetings of the two living Found­ers were sent by the Council.

Revision of paper work of the Fra­ternity was !.ndicated as being well underway by the report of National Chancellor Houser to the effect that the corrected and up-to-date edition of the Constitution and Supreme Laws might be expected from the

7

press soon. National Historian Deim­Jer presented the newly published revised editi0n of the Ritual of Ini ­tiation.

The only 'locial feature of the two­day series of meetings, but a most delightful one, was the reception giv­en to the members of the Council and their wives on Sunday evening, Feb­ruary 16, by Miss Laura Parker, be­loved office manager of the Fratern­ity.

Success Story In Thomson, Ga., they will tell

you, with great pride, of its young men who stayed at home. And of the lot they will mention the Knox boys, all ~i Kapps: Peter and William, of Eps1lon, and Robert and Lawrence of Lambda.

There are two large construction jobs going on in Thomson. One is the factory for producing pre-fabri­cated houses, and the other is a com­bined business and office building, a large, two-story affair.

The Knox boys are building both.

The Government thought enough of their abilitv, already demonstrated by a successful timber and lumber business, to loan the four Thomson boys an even million dollars to do the prefab job. They will turn out substantial bouses which will last as long as any of those, within the same price range, huilt in the conventional manner.

When they got out of college, they hied themselves right back to Thom­son. And there they have stayed.

They have business branches in three other Georgia cities. '

')

Rebuilding?

Expansion?

See Page 32'~

8

College Head Dr. J. L. Zwingle, who has been

in charge of all USO work in the United States for the past year, bas been named president of Park Col­lege, Parkville, Missouri, it was an­nounced February 16 by Joseph F. Porter, Jr., president of the Board of Trustees.

Brother Zwingle received his doc­torate in philosophy from Cornell

University, where he taught litera­ture before coming to the USO in 1942. He has served on the facul­ties of the University of Tennessee, where he earned his A.B. and A.M. degrees; of Bethel College, Tenn. ; and of Northwest Missouri State Col­lege, where he was director of per­sonnel as well as a member of the teaching staff. He will be the sixth president of Park, which was found­ed in May, 1875, by Colonel George S. Park.

Dr. Zwingle's wife is the former Blanche Young of Jackson, Tenn., a graduate of Union University and the Memphis College of Music, who has also studied with Ernesto Beru­men in New York. They have a daughter, Christa, 14 months old.

Brother Zwingle is a Kent fellow of the National Council on Religion in Higher Eciucation , and a member of the American Association of Uni­versity Professors, the American Col­lege Person-:-~el Association and be­longs to the Phi Delta Kappa. He

was initiated into the Alpha Signl Chapter of Pi Kappa Phi Fraternit in November of 1931.

-----·----

Meet Brother Cline ed

Just off Highway 15-A, along si~ G1 a spur of the Seaboard Railroad 1 II, Raleigh, N. C., there is a dusty Jittl in street where vou see severai scattert buildings and more than 5everal pie~ es of construction machinery. AJ111 F, all this is a little green office builC Vi1

ing. Here Mr. F. Dewey Cline rn~' terminds his extensive construct!~ program. Now, Brother Dewey CliC is first of all, Tau Number One. ~ size and manner are sufficiently ur posing to make it most befitting t~ he be Number One. He is 6' 3" wd 240 lbs. packed on a big frame. Yo know by the fact that he is Tau Null ber One that he isn 't a spring chicl en any more, but you wouldn't kn.lf it to watch his step and his pierCie eye.

Upon entering his office, you ~ a little taken back when from beh!P all this imposing manner and statu~ Brother Cline comes up with a hunll so subtle that you are caught in tl web of one nf his little jokes bef~ you realize he is having his laugh your expense. Brother Cline tak' his being the Number One 11 brother se.l1iO.l1Sly. When the co rent group·· e>f Tau undergradua1' lie undertook to buy themselves. 19 house, it was Brother Dewey Chi b~

an1 at da, de~ of Unt Ph lie ba Wa: 19;

who said, "All right, boys, I'll gi i 1

you $500 as a starter and indor .~n your note for $2 500 more if you 11 ~· u scrap up $1300 among you for 1 t 1

e' balance of the initial cash needed \' The fellows took him up, and nc I they are comfortably quartered Ric the neat, little bungalow you. : con gracing the "i)ead of these few !1~ Sw, Hats off to the Number One Tau B· '-'al a Number One All-Round Pi J{af

0 F THE STAR AND LA~

~~~~: AMONG OUR CHAPTER ADVISERS te g si~ ad 1

r Jittl ttere I pie~ Ami builr ~ ma' ucti~

CliP ,e. :6' ly ill g thl "wit ~. yo Nun chid

· knO' ierci~

ou al behi~ tatur hum in tl bef~ ugh·

tak' ~ 11

Active Pi Kapp ectThere is 110 firmer pillar in the G~ Ice of Pi Kappa Phi than Dr. a/ R. Vowles of Davidson College. int has worked consistently in the

erest of Pi Kappa Phi.

F Dr. Vowles was born in 1883 in Vi~~'· Dakota Territory (since di­

e mto North and South Dakota).

e co tdU~(t I:l

~~Jit 1 9~~raduateil from Fargo College in Dak' Was a Rhodes Scholar for North and octa, Oxford University, 1907-10, at Ox ornpl~ted his M.A. in German days ford m 1914. After his college dean Were ov_er, he was prof~ssor, of the and .assts.tant to the president unti]

1 Umverstty of North Dakota

, Ph.D 923. In 1925 he received his I:le h · at the University of Chicago. Davi~s been professor of German at Was . ~~ C01lege since 1925. He I926 ~nttJated into Pi Kappa Phi in

'II ~i I:le i th . ot ian t s e author of two Norweg-md

11 iourn eftbooks, articles in language

·ou 1 views a. s, and of over sixty book re­for j LV tn the GERMAN QUARTER-eedev . Jd J\r I:le i . !red Richards marne~ and has one son, ou ~ consul . B. Vowles, recently vice­" Ji fll Swed Ill Gothenburg ( Goteborg), 'au~~ Vale e~. ~ichard is now back at

J{af '-'orkmg for his doctorate.

. .A~OF Pr KAPPA PHI

Eta Adviser With the reactivation of Eta

Chapter on the Emory campus last fall, there came a need for a chapter adviser. The newly formed group nominated and elected Brother Sam L. Laird by oopular acclaim.

Brother Laird was born in Geor­gia in 1911. He is a graduate of Em­ory University and received his B.D. in 1944. Since 1944 be has been Di­rector ·of Religious Life for Emory. He is an ordained minister.

As an undergraduate, be was ini­tiated into Pi Kappa Phi in 1931 and was archon in 1932-33. Brother Laird is married and has a two year old daughter.

Named Chapter Adviser Robert "Bob" Adams, Jr., newly

appointed ch::tpter adviser of Sigma, is a veteran in Pi Kappa Phi , hav­ing left the campus of Presbyterian College more than 20 years ago. Ini­tiated into Beta Chapter on March 16, 1923, Brother Adams was very active in the undergraduate chapter and perhaps, what is more important at the moment, is that he has main­tained an interest throughout the years. This ~as resulted in his being

called upon to share his enthusiasm and interest with Sigma in the ca­pacity of chapter adviser.

After leaYing Presbyterian Col­lege, Brother Adam joined the New York Life Insurance Company in Columbia, S. C. In the ensuing years, he has at one time or another served as president of the Columbia alumni chapter of Pi Kappa Phi and president of the Columbia Life Un­derwriters ' Association. He is cur­rently vice-president of the South Carolina Association of Life Under­writers and a member of the Top Club (New York Life Agents). He is married and makes his home at 210 S. Saluda Avenue, Columbia, s. c.

Named Adviser Things were tough during the war.

That was true on the battle field, at home, and with our undergraduate chapters. Some survived. Some did not. Among those surviving was Al­pha Epsilon at the University of Florida. The lion 's share of the credit for this survival must go to Brother Walter H. Beisler. The un­dergraduates recognized this, and be became the Chapter Adviser virtual­ly by popular acclaim. He was of­ficially appointed by the National Council this spring.

9

Brother "Heisler graduated frorr Rutgers in 1918, receiving a B.S and in 1919 received an M.S . there. He received 1.n M.S. in 1921 and his D Sc. in 1922 at Princeton.

He has been a member of th :! fac­ulty at the University of Florida since 1922 . He was Assistant Pro­fesso r of Chemistry, Professor of Chemical E ngineering and has been Head Professor of Chemical Engin­e ~ring since 1939.

He is a registered professional en­gineer, State of Florida, a member of the American Chemical Society, the American Institute of Chemical Engineers, American Society for En­gineering Education, Florida Engin­eering Society, Pi Kappa Phi , Gam­ma Sigma Epsilon, and Sigma Tau. He is listed in AMERICAN MEN OF SCIENCE ~nd WHO'S WHO IN ENGINEERING.

Brother B~isler is a charter mem­ber of Alpha Epsilon and was treas­urer of the advisory war council dur­ing the war period.

H uey Is Adviser Were you at the convention ir.

Birmingham last summer? Well then you know th1t V. Hain Huey is a Pi Kapp who gets things done l

Perhaps you don 't know, but all the Pi Kapps in Birmingham do know that Brother Huey is, and has been

10

for several years, the Chapter Ad­viser for Alpha Eta. He has stayed with them through good and bad years alike. Men like him are the ones who show that fraternity is a way of life -•nd no t a passing fancy of undergrad~1ate days.

Brother Huey attended the Uni­versity of Alabama and was initiated into Pi Kappa Phi in 1919. He had a part in the chartering of Alpha Eta Chapter, a contribution of which he is justifiably proud He is a former member of the Chicago Alumni Chap­ter and has served as president of the Birmingham Alumni Ch1pter for

several terms. He was Chairman of the Convention Committee in the 1929 Birmingham Supreme Chapter meeting. It is noteworthy that both the 1929 and the 1946 conventions set attendance records.

He has published the Birmingham Alumni Directory for the past fif­teen years. This Directory could well be an example for other cities having more than a few Pi Kapps re­siding therein .

He is a member of the Exchange Club and the Baptist Church. He is married and has one daughter.

Long Record There are few Pi Kapps who have

thirteen consecutive years in an of­ficial capacity of the fraternity. Dr. Paul Irvine, Alpha Iota's adviser,

ho1 ds such a record. The present c011

dition of Alpha Iota reflects the til11

and interest which Dr. Irvine an• his undergraduates have devoted 1' making it a topflight chapter. Alpb_ Iota has seventy-five members. 'fbi is one of Brother Billy Robert= chapters which will cause him no u~ happy moments. Brother Robe.rts. 1

the new Dis~rict Archon of D1stnc VII (Alabama) .

Pr, of tor Ar. tht Er: Wh of ye, in grc: in ris; an1 Stc:

Brother Irvine obtained his A~ me degree from Willamette Universitl Off Salem, Oregon, and his M.A. ~0 19, Ph.D. from New York Universii; Ste He is currently Director, Resear Alt Interpretation C o u n c i I, Alaba111 ate Polytechnic Institute. Ph

Dr. Irvine is the author of VALL'1 me

OF EDUCATION TO THE STA1f nil

SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC CO~ cor DITIONS IN ALABAMA, rfll for

WORLD AT WORK, and ADVL EDUCATIONAL LEVELS IN rfll SOUTHERN STATES.

He is a member of Pi Kappa ph II; Phi Kappa Phi, Phi Delta KaP~ his Kappa D~lt~ Pi, Na!io~al Edtl Ph< tion Assocmtwn, Association of s~: tric ervision and Curriculum Deye!O Pri• ment, National Association of S~ ter; ondary School Principals, Alaba~ for' Academy of Science, Kiwanis In I , m

01 national and the Methodist Churo ' 1

He is marded and has three sof the and a daughter.

M 0 F THE STAR AND LA

t coil ~ tiJ11 , an ~ed t AlpP

'fbi ;bert: 10 ur !rts i istric

I A.f ersitl

an -~rsitl searc ,.baJll

ALtl

rA'fr ('0~

rfl' oVL · rfl'

Albritton Is Archon Pr F~om the office of the National of e~hdent c?mes the announc~ment ton e appo!ntment of ]. M. Albrit­Ar 'h Jr., to the position of District th c on of District VI, comprising E e state of Florida He succeeds w~nest W. Machen, Sr., Furman '11 , of ~h has ~~ly performed the duties Year e POSitlOa during the trying war in

1s9

1 B:other Albritton was born

grad 6 111 Chicora, Florida. He in 1~ated from Stetson University risi 41. He served in the Navy, antg ~rough the ranks to lieuten­Sta· e was awarded the Bronze

r Medal for meritorious achieve-

111ent wh off th en t.he FRANKLIN burned 1945 e coast of Japan in March, Stets' After the war he returned to Alumo~ as Executive Secretary of the ated ~ 1 Association. He was initi­Phi .pn~o Chi Chapter of Pi Kappa 111el11b e ruary 13, 1946, as associate

er of Chi Chapter. lie is t k' ni in a 1_n~ the lead among Alum-

corpor or~amzmg a graduate holding for Ch ~bon to purchase a new home

1.

---·--- ---Taylor Archon

PP liere · · ~ pa lie ,_., IS a JOckev without a mount. :-..a r h' '"ust beo- b · b 1 EdUC: IS ow ..,, uy, arrow, or stea f s~f Pha I~ steed. Adrian C. Taylor, Al-

lof trict ~ ~ has been appointed Dis­!rSfi Ptising ~~ on t)f District XIII, com­, ban' ters b e Dakotas. He has no chap­al te' for 'h.Ut that doesn 't lessen his ardor 'hnrcl 111ore

1b ftask. He will have one or . u B e ore long.

:e 5°1 the ~~~fer _Taylor was initiated into

ermty by Alpha Iota in May 0 F

AM Pt KAPPA PHI

1930. He is married and has one son and two daughters.

He served three and one-half years in the army, being a major in the Corps of Engineers at the time of his separation. He is presently District Bridge Engineer with the Public Roads Administration in Bismarck . He is a Mas•m, Rotarian, member of the American Legion 40 and 8, Re­serve Office~s Association, the North Dakota Society of Professional En­gineers, and the Presbyterian Church.

Active Archon Would you like to visit a Pi Kappa

Phi district which is buzzing with activity? When you come into Dis­trict XXI (Pennsylvania) don 't be surprised if you are greeted at the border by Raymond .T. Cannon be­cause be really gets around.

Brother Cannon was appointed Archon of District XXI last Octo­ber, and he bas made his presence keenly felt by both undergraduates and alumni.

Brother Cannon graduated from Drexel in 1939, with a B.S. in com­merce and a reserve commission of

2nd Lieutenant, Infantry. Upon graduating he was affiliated with the Scott Paper Company of Chester, Penn., until he was called to ac tive duty in September, 1940. He was in the armored force with the 1st and later with th <.! Sth armored divisions.

He saw combat with both units and came home with a chest full of rib­bons which numbered among them several battle stars, arrowhead for beachhead invasion , Bronze Star Medal, Presidential Unit Citation for battalion gallantry, and French Croix de Guerre for battalion gallantry. During his service he rose to the rank of major. Upon returning from th e service iT) January, 1946, Brother Cannon returned to the Scott Papet Company as cost accountant.

He became a member of Alpha Upsilon Chapter May 12, 1936 and was rushing chairman for two ~ears, house steward, and a delegate to the Jacksonville convention in 1938.

In Who's Who

In the news is this fair haired Pi Kapp . .. Thomas (Tommy) Vance Bumbarger of Hickory, N. C. He is listed in WHO'S WHO AMONG STUDENTS IN AMERICAN COL­LEGES AND UNIVERSITIES. He is a member of Omicron Delta Kap­pa, the D. Club, Beaver Club, and the Scabbard and Blade. He is also editor of the Davidson College QUIPS AND CRANKS and was managing editor of the SCRIPTS 'N PRANKS in 1943.

He was a member of the golf team in '42 , '43, and '47. He is a member of Phi Beta Kappa.

11

This column is the correspondence column of the alumni. We are naming it the "Alumni Corner" and urge you to send information about yourself, and your Pi Kapp friends. Whenever you have an item, even if you think it to be of little interest to others, send it to the "Alumni Corner."

Sp A, ga bu en Gt bu

ALPHA

Lowell E. Remington has moved to his new home at 252 Canyon Road, Salt :Lake City, Utah; Law­rence Philyaw Hamilton still lives in Charleston, S. C., but has recently moved to 28 Rutledge Ave.; John T. Robinson, Jr., has changed his home from Charlest.on to P. 0. Box 596, Summerville, S. C ; Rev. Robert W. Hastings now lives in St. Michaels, Md. ; Ward .J. Remington moved from Pittsburgh to 198 Hillside Ave., Nutley 10, N. ].; J. Chester Reeves, has established a new home at 110 Sunset Drive, Asheville, North Carolina. W. B. "Bernie" Jones, Jr 's., address in Richmond, Va. is 903 Wat­kins St.

BETA

Robert C. McLees is a contact representative for the Veterans' Ad­ministration, with offices in the Bank of Aiken Building, Aiken, S. C.; Ro­bert A. Burgess, Jr., married since 1943, has one son, Robert A. Bur­gess, III, and he and his family live at 508 Church St., Sumter, S. C. He is the owner of a building supply company there. Gaddis W. Gilmer, 319 W. Whitner Street, Anderson, S. C., is still in the service as a first lieutenant. His military address is 7108 A. M. G. Det., APO 88, P. M., NYC. John W. Steenbergen, is ad­dressed at Rt. 60, Box 40, Columbia, Tenn., where he is a mine foreman for the Monsanta Chemical Co.

GAMMA

Robert Henry Frank still lives in California but has moved from Au­burn to 235 Fleming Avenue, Val­lejo ; Edward Leslie Kellas changed his address in Fresno to Route No. 2, Box 26; Robert W. Thom­son's new address is 88 Tunior Ter­race, San ·Francisco 12, Calif.; Allen

12

K. Reasoner has left Mill Valley, Calif., and may now be reached at Gen. Del., Marin City, California. John Howa:-d (Jack) Morgan, Jr., moved from El Centro, Calif., to 406 Exton Ave., Inglewood, Calif., and is employed in the Sales Dept., of the American Airlines in nearby Los Angeles. Charles Louis Dimm­ler, Rt. 1, New Castle, Calif., has changed his Box number to 198.

DELTA

Euta M. Colvin, M. D., now a practicing :mrgeon in Spartanburg, S. C., lives with his wife and son at 529 Poplar Street: Kenneth P. Stu­art, Captain, AVS. is stationed at Fort Defiance, Virginia;' Thomas F. McAfee, Jr.. moved from his old address in Greenville, S. C., to 114 West Earl Street; William Kirk Al­len changed his address in Greenville, S. C. to Box 42 5; Harold Ellis Shaw, also among the Greenville alumni on the move, is at 510 Rutherford Street; James W. Culbertson has abandoned South Carolina for Mass­achusetts and lives at 86 East New­ton St., Bo5ton ; Robert E. Allen, Number One Delta, and since 1938 a vice-president of the Central Han­over Company in charge of the Southern Division, lives with his fam­ily at 180 East 79 Street, New York 21, N.Y.

EPSILON

John T. Rhett. a retired Army Colonel, lives at 932 North Wood­land Blvd., Deland, Fla.; George D. Horan, 208 King Street, Dalton, Ga., is an executive with the Duane Chair Co., of Dalton. Children: He re­ports, "None, yet"; Scott N. Brown announces a new address 'n Chat­tanooga of 105-7 West Eighth Street; Brother Brown now has two boys, Scott N. Jr., six years old, and George W., two years this month; Robert

St th

C. Grady's new address is Box 40: Pa 600 West North Avenue, Pittsburg D, 12, Pa. Sc

Jo ZETA ne

St Paul F. Carroll-A letter from i\l' A1

William T. Bodenhamer, president; ne Norman Junior College says, "1\11 lu: Carroll is at present superintend~t ha of the Peabody Demonstration Il1g to School of the Georgia State Coil~ C. for Women, Milledgeville, Ga.

3 lC

was dean of Norman from 1928· FJ and president from 1933-44. DuriO St his sixteen vears of service at NO' is man, he endeared himself to facultl B, students, and to the supporters of I~ cil college. He served for one year, 194 Ft 45, with the Educational Panel ( hi the Georgia Agricultural and Indll U, trial Development Board. In h

1 T;

present position at Georgia s~a G, College for Women, he is recogn1z; an as an outstanding member of t: is staff. He has hig master's de~[;, or from Peabody College, Nashvt B: Tennessee."; Reuben Earle Mo?~ PI has a new address, Kable StatJO G< Staunton, Va .; Holmes A. Jones lc overseas and can be addressed, Jlr Sa 2nd Major Part., A. P. 0. 503, ~ di~ P. M., San Francisco, Californ1; Ct Gregg C. Bissell has moved to ~( l\1 Union St., Spartanburg, S. C.; 1\1 ward Smith Tennant, also of SpM. c, anburg, has moved to 3 Front Stree; sa Benjamen L. Allen of Spartanb11

1 has changed his address to 641 0 Boulevard; Ralph S. Owings is o; of the army and is superintende.

to is of public c;chools in Thomas 1

rn Georgia, adrlress: P. 0. Box 8 C Thomaston. Arthur B. HammoP' I has moved to No. 12 Converse Apt: ~ Spartanburg, S. C.

ETA

George Williams has left Corde; TJ Ga., and moved to 90 Abram a at Bowlon, Savannah, Ga.; Baro

THE STAR AND LAM O

Spraybe L . Avond ry aird has moved to 1615 gar B a e Ave:, Charlotte, N.C.; Eel­but h yron Hilley is still in Atlanta enue·as moved to 854 Amsterdam Av-

G '. Joseph F. Puett Eastman eorg1a · . ' ' busi ' Is In the building supply

ness that city.

IOTA

__., St;;:i~l H. .N:=wton. 2nd, 420 S. Hill the N Gnffm, Ga., is president of

: 40: Pan ew~o~ Building Suppy Com­burg Dei;; G?ffm; George C. Griffin is

School 0 ~tudents at the Georgia John R of fechnology, in Atlanta; neck, N Paus, formerly of !-'lamaro~­Sumter · Y., pow makes h1s home 1n

n ~11 Aven ' S. C. at 321 W. Hampton ue · W'll' ent 1 new ' I !am P. Dunn, Jr. has a

"Nl' lumb~~dress, 3369 E. Board St., Co-mder has ' Ga.: Frank A. Athanason

gig to 1 ~oved _from Charleston, S. C. :oil~~ c .. B: Robmson St., Greenville, S. a. fl 1oo1 5°1~nd Stebbins has moved to )28-3 Fia . G entucky Ave., Winter Park )urin Str~ti Jorge P. Murray, 3950 N: : :No1 is viceor ~oad , N. E. Atlanta, Ga. , tcultl Buckh president and treasurer of the of tJi city C~ad Hardware company that 194' Fer~ Rarles G. Fulton, 311 E. Paces

nel 1 his occ d., ~- E .• Atlanta, Ga. , lists IndO lie u~at10n as a sound engineer. [n h 'I'rue~~Ted the former Miss Fritzi

Stat Green a e, August 17. 1946. D. gnizt and d"ood Hen~on, still with Proctor ?f tt is now <l;mble _D1s~ri~uting company, degrt office 10 th~1r Cmcmnati ( 1) Ohio, ;hviJI Buntin ?av1d _ C. Boy moved from Yiood Place g~n, Y"· Va. , to 137 Harris tatiO Gord' anv11le, Va. William L. 1nes Los X moved from Atlanta, Ga, to d, Jtr San Mge_les, Calif. , Apt. 305. 2700 13 c district anno St. Brother Gordy is fo~ni~ Credit sales manager of a Retail to 71 McMur con:pany. Thomas Richard · W Mont ry IS now addressed at 1644

·spar Calif ere1 Blvd. , Hermosa Beach Stree: sales ·e w. ere he is employed as ~ anbtll ngmeer. ' ~1 01 is o

:en de nast~ X g1 :trnoll ~API:

KAPPA

is dDeudJey Dewitt Carroll C P A an of h ' · · .,

rninistr t' t e School of Business Ad-Chapel a 10_n , University of N. C., be rea

1 Hill ; Carlisle Shepard can

B:ill, N.1~- at 208 S. Bldg. , Chapel

LAMBDA John w .

'I'homs · Wilson, formerly of at 1 708°~(- Ga., now makes hi s home

mgwood Dr , Augusta, Ga.;

0 F p I KAPPA PHI

Seaborn J. \Joss, Jr. has a '!1ew ad­d.ress in Decatur, Ga., 110 Pinecrest Ave. James B. Harbuck changed his address to 1957 W. 84th Pl., Los Angeles 44, Calif. Clarence E. Brock­inton can be reached at 559 Anna St., Dayton 7, Ohio.

MU

Frederick D. Vanderlinde now makes his home at 60 Richland St., Rochester, N. Y.; E. Brewster Snow is a sanitary engineer, and is ad­dressed at: Ql Fresh Pond Parkway, Cambridge, Mass.; Richard W. Spen­cer, 1737 -18th Avenue, Columbus, Ga., is comptroller of the Chancellor Company in Columbus; Harry P. Raymond, Jr., has moved from New Jersey to Charlotte, N. C .. His ad­dress there is 240 Post Office Bldg.; John C. King, Jr., on the other hand, has come north from •New Orleans and settled at 1851 Brandon Avenu~, W. H., Petersburg, Va. Richard M. Taliaferro moved from Columbia, S. C., to 1107 Reynolds Bldg., Winston­Salem, N. C. Richard C. Morrow's new address in Wyandotte, Mich., is 107 Poplar St. R. Menese Gardner moved from Lock Haven, Penna., to 7409 Woolst'1n Ave., Philacl~lphia, Pa. Jack C. Lunn moved from Chi­cago to 351 Radcliffe Way, Hin~dale, Ill .

NU Eugene Ta:-r, formerly of Lincoln,

Nebraska, .'1fJW makes his home a't 2919 Monroe St., Columb:a, S. C. (Brother Tarr, visit Sigma at Ten. 7 at the University of S. C. and join the Columbi;1 alumni.); Joseph F. Thomas has a new address in Omaha, Nebraska, at 4715 Wakely Street. Brother Bill Simpson, Marysville, Kansas writes in the following changes: Dr. E. J . Garrison now lives in Blight, California and C. C. Simp­son makes his home at 1304 Eye St., N. W. Washington, D . C.; Ralph R. Park has a new New York address which is 17 E. 57th Street, New York 22, N. Y.; Harvey L. Rice, 4100 Perry Way, Sioux City, Iowa, is secretary nf the C. F. Lytle· Corn· pany in that city; Jack Devoe, 1505 Sharp Avenue, Lincoln, Nebraska, is practicing law in that city; R. G. Lewis, makes his home at 301 S. 52nd St. in Omaha, having moved from Fairfield, · Nebraska; A. D. Oren­dorff announces a new address, 2032

N. 64th St., in Omaha, Nebraska; D. M. Argenbri?bt has recently moved from Lincoln, Nebraska, to 5024 De­catur A venue, Omaha, Nebraska; D. E. Thompson makes his home in Omaha. His office address is: 405 Federal Office Building, 15th at Dodge; W. E. Christensen has a ~ew address of 5512 Harvey Street m Omaha ; Charles Reed also has a new address. It is 9104 Hickory Av­enue, Omah::t, Nebr.

XI Louis J. Mullineaux lives at 210

Huntington Blvd., Roanoke Virain­ia. H. S. Boring is Comptrolle;' of the Portsmouth Steel Corporation of Portsmouth, Ohio; Lt. Col. E. Gar­rison Wood is serving in the Pacific area. His ad(Jres5 ic; 363 ASG, A. P. 0. 182 cj o Postmaster, San Francis­co, Calif.; Captain Marcus Scott Wood, Col. Wood's brother is also in the Pacific area. His malling ad­dress is Headquarters 4th C. I. C. Area, A. P. 0. 713 cj o Postmaster San Francisco, <;ali f. ; Calvin Grady Cates, Jr. , now ltves at 5519 Winston Ct., Dallas 9, Tex.· John Burdette Slicer still Jives in Roanoke, Va., bul has moved to 1706 Clover Ave.· Wil­liam Clegg Eversale has moved' from A_labama to Kingsport, Tenn., and h1s address there is 313 Chero­kee; Allen T. Nelson has also moved to Franklin Park, New Jersey and his mailing address is Box 305'. Ed­ward Delos Myers, Jr. , now Dean of Roanoke College, can be reached in the Dean 's Office, Roanoke Col­lege, Salem, Va. Jacksonville alumni note: Charles L. Engers has moved from Salem, Va., to 1510 E. Adams St., Jacksonville, Fla.; Alumni of Birmingham, Ala. , note: George Thomas Butcher moved from Roan­oke, Va., to Bi1:mingham , address Box 1404; MaJor Cornelius M. (Corky) Smith is on the General Staff-Civil Affair~ Div., Pacific Area., Pentagon Bldg. Washington D . C.;-home address:' 1911 N . . 15th St., Arlington, Va. Other new Roan­oke, Va., addresses: Lewis V. Stone cj o Airheart-Kirk Clothing Co., 10i W. Campbell Ave. ; Randolph John Salmons, cj o TJ. S. Post Office · Jack B. Frier, cj o 0 . W. Yates, 965 Av­enel Ave.; Arthur E. Smith Colonial­American Ba :1k Bldg. ; F~ank Har­ris Vest, Rt. 8, Box 650; Dorsey Hamilton Go•)dman 301 Weltoti Ave. s. w.

13

OMICRON

Joseph Pev,ues Burchfield, Jr., now lives at 1305 Greensboro Ave., Tus­caloosa, Ala.; Harley R. Hope has moved to 142 McClung St., Hunts­ville, Ala.; Richard C. Van Hala has left Alabama and moved to 1210 En­gineers Building, Cleveland, Ohio; Rex Alman's new address is Rex Tractor & Equipment Company, Meridian, Miss.; Edward Pagelsen lives at 1100 .Beach Drive, P. 0. Box 326, Panama City, Fla. His business is the Panama Home Insulating Com­pany. Leonard E. Blood has moved from University, Ala., to Rt. 6, ;Box 405, Bessem~r, Ala. John W. Starnes moved from New Orleans to Talla­hassee, F la., and can be reached care Shell Oil company.

PI '•

' Albert T. Carter, Jr., is t}Ut .qf• the

Navy and although back 1n Orlando, Fla., P. 0. Box 785 ; William Cross­ley Perkins has moved to 42 Rumson Way, N. E., Atlanta 5, Ga.; Clifford Sims bas left Georgia and his new business address is 1027 State Office Building, Richmond, Virginia. James C. Vocalis is now program director (chief announcer) Radio Station WLBB, Carrollton, Ga. Shaffer B. (Shack) Wimbish , 409 1st Natl. Bank Bldg., Rome, Ga., has been elected president of the State Assn., of Life Underwriters.

RHO

Clark Winter is now out of th e service and with the American Ex­press Co., as assistant to the execu­tive vice-president. He is married , has a daugh ter 14 months old, and lives with his family at 220 Smith St. Merrick, N. Y.; C. Walton Rex is 'president of the Rex-McGill In­vestment Co ., Inc., 128 North Orange Ave., Orlando, Fla. ; Professor Earl K. Paxton, associate professor of mathematics at Washington and Lee since 1920, !1as resigned his position; Stephen E. Hanasik has a new ad­dress in Yonkers, N. Y., 167 Stan­ley Avenue; John J. Mangan, too, has a new residence at 36 Lincoln St., New Britain, Conn. Charles K. (Steinhoff) Latus, is connected with the Williamsburgh Savings Bank, Brooklyn, N. Y., and lives in Rock­ville Centre, N . Y., at 557 Lakeview

14

Ave. George Hill is with the Lock­heed Aircraft Co., McArthur Field, Sayville, L. I. , N. Y. Fred Waters moved from NC~sliville, Tenn., to 1209 W. Rugby Ave., College Park , Ga.

SIGMA

Clifford H. Hardy moved from Co­lumbia to Dillon, S. C., address him at Box 586; Edward M. Parler now lives at 204 N. Catawba Street, Lan­caster, S. C.; Algin B. King has also changed addresses to Box 30, Latta, S. C.; John S. Holland has left the University qnd is now at 2606 Ger­vais St., Columbia, S. C.; Samuel B. Cartledge, Jr. , changed his address in Columbia to 2309 Santee St.; Pope C. Scurry has left the University too, and may be r~ached at 1001 Confed­erate Ave., Columbia, S. C.; Travi ~ E. Sandi fer 's address is now 34 7 Main Street, Bamberg, S. C.; James W. Parler's post-war address is 1312 Taylor St., Columbia , S. C.; Robert Adams, Jr., can be reached cj o N. Y. Life Insurance Co., 1107 Liberty Lift Bldg., Columbia, S. C. Fred Quinn has given up his job in Hopewell . Va., and returned to York, S. C. Benjamin Lewis Youmans moved from Columbia to Mullins, S. C.

TAU

Robert E. Towers bas moved from Rome, Ga. to Queretaro , Mexi~o ~nd his business address is Negociatwn, Textilla Concordia . . S. A.; G. Tyn­dall , 2nd, 1545 Walnut Grove Aven­ue Santa Clara, California, remain!> in ' the service as a Lt. Colonel with the Headquarters of the Sixth Army address: 1545 Walnut Grove Ave .. Santa Clara, Calif.; Roland E. Nob­lin is with the State Highway De­partment, Raleigh , N. C., address: 2012 White Oak Road , Raleigh, N. C.; Albert M. Guillett, Jr., moved from Washington, D. C., to 1935 Crescent Avenue, Charlotte, N. C.; S. Leigh Wilson has moved to 71 ~ W. Palmetto St., Florence, S. C.; Neil C. Alford has changed his address in Raleigh, N. C. , to 1600 Bickett Blvd. Fred Gorter has left Phila­delphia and is now connected with Wannamaker Chemical Co. Inc., Orangeburg, S. C.

UPSILON

Ronald W. Scheck's new address is 307 S. Poplar, Urbana, Ill.; John M.

Seldon has moved from San Fran cisco to 81 Post Street, San Jose !6 Calif.; Jerry Pech has only chang~ his house number to 2816 West 55! Street, Chicago 3 2, Ill. ; Ora D. Gal also has a new address at 5532 Soutl Colfax Ave., Minneapolis 9, Minn. Knute Madison moved from Arkan sas to 2 53 Orchard, Kankakee, II\ Millard E. Brame's new home is 173 Myrtle Avenue, Visalia, Calif. Bar ry A. Ohlinger's new address in. Chi cago is 7443 Crandon Ave., Ch1cag 49, Ill. Douglas Barnett has ac. cepted a position as set designer fr Paramount picture in Hollywoo his address there is 84 72 0 Sun~ Blvd.; the 'phone is Granite 2647 II case some alumni may stray out tha. way. Additional addresses: Walt~ S. Renner, 570 Normal Rd ., DeKa~ III.; Ed Czyzewski. 2408 N. McV1~ ker, Chicago 39, Ill.; Lt. Col. ClaY

1 ton W. Wells, Hdqrs. Alaska DeP (Public Relations Office) APO 941 Seattle, Wash.; Charles F. McEu.eP 5448 Electric Ave., LaJolla, Cahf­Walter W. Schutt, 8485 Grand AVe River Grove, Ill. ; Bill Spicer, I(e narden 6, College of Wooster, Woo; ter, Ohio ; Edwarcl F. Coates, 2 Richmond Rd. , McHenry, Ill. ; La'( renee C. Altmansberger, 531la rtask• St., St. Louis 9, Mo.; A. Robe( Moore Bonnie Dundee Farm, Dt1n

. ' dee, Ill.

PSI

(

hor Av1 Vic~ of Fif cen Dn Go to; 1\.ii Wit Ma B:a 21( Fla dre Ga Wit Par F!9 rea llle adc l\1:a lllo Mi O]d hor Bi! J.'w Bl:: Pa, Av1

]

Emerson S. B. Pitkin, formerly 0 1~ I

Oswego, N. Y. now makes his hoO~ bta, at Champlain College, Plattsburl W N. Y.; Charles Hunter Howard h~, S\ ~ moved from Greensboro, N. C.. tv, 1821 E. 93 Street, Cleveland 6, Oh 1~ B : John R. H eilman , Jr. , 31 Holnl h 01

. N y . nat as Street Poughkeepsie, . . 1s a 1

br1·

' Ah ( torney in Poughkeepsie. W. G. ter1 son is office manager of Scott 'feSI P!a ers' Inc., manufacturers of scientift ~or instruments ; home address: 69 we) 4~s mouth St., Providence, R. I. Evere: ers8

Clair Bradley has moved from Cb aw· r ' cago to 1223 Grove St., Evansto Cb,

Ill · Norman Rusc;ell Miller moV~ lllo1 ., - . gS273

from Pasadena, Calif., to 8 1

n_ 1 Frankstown Rd., Pittsburgh, Pa. ' at

0

1 A. Olsen, is on the facult~ at t~ R. University of North Carolma; ~I Jan dress Caldwell Blclg., Chapel If! bo: N.C.

0 F

THE STAR AND LAM

~ran

~ 16 ngei sstt Gal

iout! inn. :kan

IlL 173( gar Chi

icag' ; ac :r fo' rood unse 47 if

· tha Taite: Kalil :cViC ClaY Dept

941 Euen :alii· AVe

J{e Noo~

2D­'La1( :task' :abe( pun

CHI

ho~arl S. Ledbetter writes that his A e address is 131 West Howry vi~:~ De!and, Fla. J. Albert Avrack, of thpr~ldent and medical director Fifth e A · S. Life Insurance Co., 101 cent) ve., New York City, was re­D . Y elected a Trustee of Stetson

ll!versity D 1 d Gord ' e an , Fla. Harry S. 1053 on has a new address; P. 0. Box I<irb' Lake 'Yortb, Fla.; Grover C. WithY, Jr., IS presently connected Mart BC Studios, Merchandise liass~Jlldg., Chicago, Ill. ; Judson 21o S Ine now makes his borne at Fla . · . W. Tenth Avenue, Miami, dre~' Richard B. Hall bas a new ad­Gabfe at 3472 S. W. 27th St., Coral With ~b Fla.; Lloyd C. Pawley is Pan ess, Morton & Altemus Com­FJ/·~620 duPont Bldg., Miami 32, read

1 d ewen A. Lasseter may now be

ll1ee, eFJ a~ P .. q. Box 331, Kissim-add a., Wilham S. Mathis' new

ress · M:arv· IS Box 475, Chipley, Fla.; ll1ove~n D. Garrison has recently Minne from I.akeland, Fla. to 316 old L sota, I;Iollywood Beach ; Har­h001 · Mutispaugh is making his lii!t~n at New Port Richey, Fla.; C. J\ven t Sh_oemaker bas moved to 15 21 Blain/-sJxth, Lubbock, Texas; H. Pa, Fl Pea_cock, an attorney in Tam­Aven a., hves at 5919 North Rome

ue .

OMEGA

I Robert W B . b 'd rly o y 010 d · am n ge has recent-hoJ111 ria 0~~ to 247 Harvard Ave., Ely­~burg be 'rea ~0 ; Harold E. Montfort can ~ h~ West ~led at 2,0 South Smith Street, c. t' Swans exandna, Ohio. William A. Ohio to Sou~h ~oved from Dayton, Obio, (oltJ'lt Box 54 end, Ind.; address: P. 0.

at has tn 4· Chester Alpha Langston an nl bridge OV~d from Portland to Cam­. A tero)) hCJty, Ind.; William E. Cat­'f~ I>lace a~ moved to 31 Elmwood

entift Jorcta~ Elizabeth 3, _N. ]. ; George I. wer has go' another mJd-westerner who

. ere! 418 F~e ~o.a new town, now lives at

.v 1

ers Wn an hn, Normal, Ill. ; Chalm­J Cb away son Gilbert moved to 52 Hath­mstof Charle Court, Pittsburgh 21, Pa.; moVIl ll1ore 1/· Harris still lives in Balti-

gSS 2736' !('d., but has a new home at

'

I Rob1· Jldaire Dr.· Jack Holland 'a nson · ' · ·that 11 24 IS f)Ut of the army and lives at I R. L T~m Street, Shelbyville, Ind.; 1; ~ Jarne~ St omas has moved to 1720 1 Jfll bon B reet, So., Minneapolis, Minn.

eggs can be reached at his

AM 0 F

Pr KAPPA PH

business address: Rm. 1950, 608 S. Dearborn, Chicago 5, Ill. William W. Glenny bas moved from Palo Alto, Calif., to: Bldg. 205-13 Stanford Vil­lage, Stanford, Calif. Other new addresses: Robert B. McNear, 406 W. Jackson St., Abington, Ill .; Ro­bert E. Thomson, Rt. 2, Rochester, Ind. ; Richard B. Fitts, 207 S. Park­way, Prospect Heights, Ill.

ALPHA ALPHA

John T. Cash, Waynesboro, Ga., is vice president and treasurer of the Knox Metal Products, Inc., that city. William Clarence Askew left the Uni­versity of Arkansas and is now at Colgate University, Hamilton , N. Y. William Pollard Jent bas moved from Montgomery, Ala ., to 420 Rock Spring Rd . N. E., Atlanta, Ga.

ALPHA BETA

Dr. William B. Clark heads the Department of Ophthalmology at Tu­lane Medical School. William W. Armistead, Jr., has changed his Shreveport, La., address to 1200 Fair­field St.

ALPHA GAMMA

Lester Pennington Smith is now connected with the Veterans' Admin­istmtion in .Muskogee, Okla.; Har­old F. Vessels, formerly of Houston, now resides in Bandera, Tex.; Major Joseph C. Edwards' new address in St. Louis, Mo., is 5604 King's High­way Ct.; J esse W. Ash now makes his home at 795 W. 8th Avenue, Eu­gene, Ore. ; Foster F. M. Monahan, formerly of Tulsa, writes that he has moved to 401 N. Loraine, Midland, Texas; Cleo C. Ingle who makes his home at 1603 S. Delaware Avenue, Tulsa, Oklahoma, is president of the Tulsa Fedeml Savings and Loan Assn. Henry Patterson Mershon has moved from Florence, Calif., to 644 E. 73rd St., Los Angeles 1, Calif.

ALPHA DELTA Elmer Hutchinson Gillespie has

moved almost across the country, from New York City to 6 State Street, Reno, Nevada; Harold C. Bancroft has moved to Issaquah, Wash., from Port Townsend , Wa-h. Ralph M. Snider has moved from Portland, Ore., to 7335- 20th N. E, Seattle, Wash. (Seattle Alumni note.)

AlPHA EPSILON

Robert L. ,White has left the site of his Alma ' Mater for Coronada Beach, Florida (Box 6}; Joseph H. Pearce can be reached at Badger's Pharmacy, Sarasota, Fla., while James M. Pe<1rce's address is : Chem­istry Department, University of Florida, Gainesville; William R. Rol­lins has moved from Rockwood Tenn., to 508 Ridge Ave .. Norton: Va.

ALPHA ZETA

Doctor Aron L. Douglas bas a new address in Los Angeles, Calif.: 342 N. Norton; Ernest E. Fisher has moved to 3550 _S. E. Kelly, Portland 2, Oregon ; M 1lorad J. Angelich is still in Fresno but has a new address 5060 Platt Avenue; Albert E. John~ son formerly of Corvallis now gets his mail at R .3, Box 23,' Greenway Dr., Blaner ton, Ore. Clark Ewing Beardsley moved from Los Angeles to 1451 W. 158th St., Gardena, Calif. Ned A. McElroy's new .address is 12433 - 8th So., Seattle 88, Wash. Howard F. Daughton has moved from Clovis, N. Mex., to 6300 E. Centra],· Albuquerque, N. Mex. Wil­lard A. Hamlin has changed his ad­dress in Corvalli~. Ore. , to 324 N. 14th St.

ALPHA ETA

Richard M. Fmnks now lives at Columbian Ave., Fort Payne, Ala. ; Dr. Charles W. Stroud has left Bryce Hospital and his new address is Uni­versity, Alabama; Frank T. Bryan moved from Livingston, Ala., to 725 S. Adams, Tallahassee, Fla. Hugh D. Claugbton can be reached at the Teachers' College of Connecticut New Britain, Conn. '

ALPHA THETA

Robert W. Morse, our traveling counselor, admonishes us to be sure and list his address as 9.385 Pryor Street, Detroit 14, Mich .; Edwin L. Brown has :1. new address at 11493 Whithorn St, Detroit 5, Mich.; Dan­iel F. Ciernick has a new addre~s in Burlingame, Calif., 1444 El Camino Road ; James F. Sterling, formerly of Fowler, Colo., ha~ a new address, RR 2, Box 37, Pueblo, Colo.; Rich­ard Routsong has moved from Tra­verse City, Mich., to 1090 W. Lud-

15

ington St., Ludington, Mich.; John P. Hirvela '110ved from Ironwood, Mich., to 46 Vernon St. , San Fran­cisco 25, Calif. ; William G. Wahl, makes his home in Lachine P . Q. Can­ada; G. Ronald Heath is attending dental school, University of Michi­gan ; address: 1502 Hill St., Ann Arbor, Mich.

ALPHA IOTA

Robert Livingston Ferrell gradu­ated from Alabama Poly this spring. He expects to accept a position on the faculty staff of the mechanical engineering department at Auburn. He was recently married to Miss Peggy Tucker of Bay Minette, Ala. Robert D. Dean still likes Montgom­ery but has :1 new address there at 710 Cioverdale Rd.; Wilmot G. Rhodes has moved from Savannah, Ga .. to Auburn , Ala., (Box 883).

ALPHA KAPPA

Wilbur A. Chapman bas a new address in Topeka, Kan., 1831 Oakley Avenue; J. T. S. Swanwick, auditor for tl1e Universal C. I. T. Credit Corp., now makes his home at 360 Roberts St., St. Paul 1, Minn., hav­ing moved ~here from Brookline, Mass. ; Harold L. Gould has moved from Brant, Mich ., to East Tawas. Mich. Charles H enry Frank changed his address in Cleveland. Ohio to l 7002 Madison Ave., Clevelar;d 7.

ALPHA LAMBDA

Richard A. Miller, 416 N. 11th Street, Oxford, Miss. is assistant pro­fessor of Mathematics at the Univer­sity of Miss.; JoeN. Friend has mov­ed to· 4805 Ellsworth Ave., Pitts­burgh, Pa.; Ollie N. B. Cowart now makes his lwme in Savannah, Ga., A9dress: cj o S. H Kress Company, there.

ALPHA MU

P ter B. Sheridan, Jr. has a new address in the nation's capitol at 843 Decatur Street, Washington 11 , D. C.; David N. Back now makes his home at 5309 Branch Ave., Tampa 3, Fla.; Elmer Devor has moved to 126 Hamilton Avenue, Stamford, Conn.

16

ALPHA NU

Harvey E. Lippin has moved to 1410 Marlboro St., Sandusky, Ohio; Prentice C. Woodhouse, now makes his residence at 4299 W. 137 St., Cleveland, O'hio; Frederick L. Coop­er writes he now resides at 21- l 2 th Ave., Columbus, Ohio; James W. Freshwater has moved to 822 N. Main St., Marion, Ohio. S. Frederick Whirl has changed his street address in Pittsburgh, Pa., to 166 Spring St., Zone 21.

ALPHA XI

Ernest C. Harper has moved from West Hartford to 902 Folly Brook Boulevard, Wethersfield, Conn.; Douglas L. Keys, Jr ., has moved to 3301 St. Paul St., Baltimore, Md.; Allen G. Hegarty now lives at 350 Putnam Road, Union, N. J.; James Henry Doyle now lives at 192 Clare­mont Avenue, Montclair, N. J.; Dr. Edgar W. Schmitt'~ new residence is the Gramercy Park Hotel, 52 Gra­mercy Park 1:\o., New York 10, N. Y. Former National Prexy, William J. Berry, has moved his permanent res­idence to Stony Brook, N. Y., where he can be reached at P. 0. Box 298. Gordon K. Ahlers, is a structural engineer for Burns & Roe, New York City; his home address is 243-78 St.. Brooklyn 9, N. Y. Charles Saladino, changed his 1.ddres!' from Hollis, N. Y., to 36 Old Field Lane, Lake Suc­cess, Great Neck, N.Y.

ALPHA OMICRON

Everett Oakley Fleming now makes his home in Runnells, Iowa; Carl Olsen, Jr . has moved from Amherst, Mass. and can be addressed cj o 4th Service Com. Lab., Fort McPherson, Ark.; Marshall Olson now represents the National Live Stock and Meat Board with headquarters in Chicago; Robert 0. Brown can still watch the Green Bay Packers play ball but has a new address there, at 122 S. Roos­evelt Ave., Green Bay, Wise. Arthur A. Halbauer now makes his home in Sutherland, Iowa.

ALPHA PI

George H. Hann, formerly at State School, N. Y., is now chaplain at Wallkill ~rison , Wallkill, N. Y.; William McGehee has left the De-

partment of Education at N. C. Statt College, Raleigh, N. C. to bec~nl: Personnel Officer at Marshall, F1el and Co., Spray, N. C.

ALPHA SIGMA

Roy Earl ~chultz, Jr. formerly ot Chattanooga, is now making his h~I11 at the site of our last convent1oo 1412 Bush Blvd., Birmingham, Ala bama; Raymond George Ritter ha: moved from Beloit, Wise., to 153 ~ 3rd St., Hamilton, Ohio. Robert .

1 Nicholson changed his addess 1 Knoxville, to Apt. 55, 3510 Souther land Ave., Zone 16. Brothers a Memphis, Tenn., in the Medical 0

Dental Schools, are: Wi.lliam ~ Daly, Jr ., 1107 Madison Ave., J~ eph H. Hennessey, Jr., John ._ Jones, 864 :vt:onroe Ave., Memph1· Tenn. James A. White is an int~r~ at Ft. Sanders Hospital, W. Chnc Ave. , Knoxville, Tenn.

ALPHA TAU

Robert P. Sheehan has moved 1

46 State Street, Troy, N. Y.; Lour F. Muller, Jr. writes that he ca~ b found these !ong summer eve111nll' on hi~ front lawn at Packanack Lakt

c in l Bar F"d ton, and ton to ( Zon

s repr exp Bir: Air tive

I figt Be nat air rne, air trie

hi~ sib' for.

N. ]. (Box ?.38); Oliver C . .Tack'0

has moved to 322 Bontona Avenrr Fort Lauderdale, Fla.; Edwin

1 Clark has moved to: Rear 481 . Ye< Main Meridian, Conn. Harry ,' ha: Cram~r , Jr . moved from White Plall' aer N. Y .. to Lake Hill, N. Y. Rand~

zi]j rna ter:

S. Manchester gets his mail at J,e ersee Rd., Rt. 2, Troy, N. Y., be asst. factory manager of the Be~ Manning Corp., Watervliet, N. Alex K. McClellan, Jr. , has mo~' be

1 from Port Henry, N. Y., to Mort9 19.

Center, N. V. 53 au.

ALPHA UPSILON Co I tht

Lane F. McBurney has chan~ tio his address fr::~m 51 N. Cannon JW' IIi to 1401 Haines Ave., in WilmingtO Del.; Fred E: Morgan has mo1· afl from West Chester, Pa., to 10. · Oakley Ave., Chicago, Ill. ; Wilh~ ~: H. Taylor 'has moved from Vp~ Darby to 4013 Vernon Road, Dre

1· tit

Hill Pa. Andrew K. Sweeney 1 We

mov'ed from Newton Square, Pa··r At 153 Upland Rd., Havertown, he William C. Taus has also move~ Havertown, ·Pa. , 6.31 N. Eagle J'' an from •Drexel Hill , Pa.

0 THE STAR AND LA~

3tatt :omt Field

ALPHA PHI

in <;;ril Leroy DuSell is now located l:I urora, Ill. at 622 North Avenue. F~old1 Pavel is associated with the ton,e'D Works Agency .in Was~ing­and I' · C., ::ts a chemical engmeer ton Ives at 4105 N. 3rd Rd ., Arling­to Cya. Leo A. Polivka has moved Zone~~~~' Ill. , at 1903 S. 50th Ave.

ly 0

honr 1tion

Ala r ]Ja· ;3 ,!\ rt fl

--···--------

Directs Air Show . 5 ir '· St Jther re ~a~ham Acker, Omicron, whose rs a ex~~ ~hon as an aviation promotional :al 0 n· r. grows each year will manage

fl Irrnmgha ' 1 ' 1 Air C . m ~ 3th annual National

Jo: r armval for the 13th consecu­~ fl tve Year.

npbi' Broth !\ . rll figur . er · cker IS a much-wanted

~~~ d l:Ie .e 1k aviation circles these days. J

10 nati IS nown nationally and inter­air o~ally for his prowess in staging rnen~ ows, a11d two foreign govern­air c s ~re ~eeking his services for

d 1 triesarnivals :n their respective coun-re · Loll' The B ..

·an b hirn t nt1sh government has asked ;ninlt sible 0 fly ~o London as soon as pos­Lak' for a at t.he1r expense to discuss plans lck ·~ ziliann air show this year . The Br~­venli' lllan i government seeking "the be<Jt in 1 ternat~ the ~orld " to put on an in­.gl f Year 1~na) :ur show in Brazil this ry ! has ~a so ~as approached him and p]aifl aeron ad~ h1m an offer to head their and~ autJcal venture.

t V' be

' Be~ N. \ movt tfori ~

---------·----

Brother Dies be~~lVlcCord Shaver, a charter mem-1947 . Eta chapter, died on April 12, 53 }t Atlanta, Ga., at the age of audit tother Shaver was branch Corn or for the Coca-Cola Bottling tbe ~any, and former secretary of tion · t~nta, Ga., Baseball Corpora­l:Iisp. e was also president of the

ana-American Club there.

ar~~s":as active in civic and religious lllori 1' M member of the Gl enn Me­inen:. etbodist church and prom­titne 1 ~ Boy Scout activities. At the Was t 0 Brother Shaver's death he Atlan~easurer of the newly organized helpeda Alumni Chapter, which he

to oraanize s ':> •

and urviving are his wife, two sons a daughter.

0 F Pr KAPPA PHI

"A Real Pi Kapp Till He Lays Him

Is Always Down To

One, Die"

Don 't think hecoz you wear the pin an ' hold your bead up high,

That you are worthy to be called a true Pi K1ppa Phi ;

Don 't think that you've done reached yer goal, when you are once tuk in

Yer obligation only starts, when you put on th ' pin .

If you 're not true gold , you won 't hold out, fer such folks never do ;

If you wanta bring honor to yer bunch, you gotta be loyal and true .

You gotta be mighty careful 'bout how you talk an ' act-

When you hurt yourself, you hurt yer frat ; no gettin' 'round that fact.

You'll find two different types of boys in every bunch , I guess:

Them that do their bit, and them that leave it to th' re~ ' :

There ain ' t no room in a Pi Kapp fold fer loafers, drones, an ' such­

You · can always help a little bit, if you can 't do ver~r much.

You 'll see a feller now an ' then that 's been out )' school a while,

An ' when he sees yer STAR AN' LAMP, he 'll say with a wistful smile,

"Look here , ol ' chap, give me th ' grip ; When I wuz young like you,

Up there a-doin ' evr'thing, I wuz A Pi Kapp, too! "

Just put it down he ain ' t much force, if he begins that way,

A-tellin ' what he used to be, 'stead o' what he is todav.

He shoulda learned this long ago: A real Pi Kappa Phi ,

When once he's one, he's always one till he lays him down to die. ·'

Then remember this, my firm good friend: a true Pi Kappa Phi

Is avatar of all that 's good, an' noble, an' true, :tn ' high.

So hitch your wagon to the STAR, an' ste~r by th ' LAMP's bright glow,

.'\n ' ten to one, you 'll play yer role, as on throngh life you go.

- ]. Neville Holcombe, Zeta, '24

liMY PLEDGE11

EXECUTIVE SECRETARY "BERNIE" JONES TAKES OVER

As I toke over the executive reins of Pi Kappa Phi Fraternity, it is with humility and a profound respect for the interests and welfare

of our fraternity, that I approach the task of directing its affairs

under the guidance of the Supreme Chapter and the Notional

Council.

I om not unmindful of the magnitude of the task nor am I unaware of the havoc that the recent war has wrought in the

individual Pi Kopp or in the undergraduate chapters. This havoc will, in many instances, seriously alter our course of action in dealing

with the individual o'nd the organization. It is with these facts in

mind that I undertake my new responsibilities and I pledge here and now that the best I hove is dedicated to the advancement of

Pi Kappa Phi.

17

Dr. William A. Wallace, Alpha, Spartanburg, S. C., and Miss Anne Louise Murray, Holly Hilt, S. C., have announced plans of their marriage which will take place in the late spring.

C. Courtenay Freeman, Alpha, Mt. Pleasant, S. C., and Miss Dorothy Anne Dudley, Reidsville, N. C., have recently an­nounced their engagement.

The engagement of John Drayton Hopkins, Delta, Simpson­ville, S. C.,· and Miss Elizabeth (Betty) Agnew, Columbia, S. C., has been announced. The wedding will take place June 7.

James Fleming Daniel, III, Delta, Greenville, S. C., and Miss Dorothy J eynelle Nash, Atlanta, Ga ., were married in March.

Lyman J . Parrigan, Epsilon, Lexington, Ky ., and Miss Nancy Chamberlin, Elmira, N. Y., have announced their en­gagement.

Marvin Turner Launius, Jr., Iota, and Miss Marion E . Bell, both of Atlanta, Ga., were married on April 8. Brother Launius is now associated with · the Railroad Retirement Board in Knoxville, Tenn., where they are making their home.

· John Porter Bunn, Iota, and Miss Frances L . White, both of Atlanta, Ga., were married on April 19. Brother Bunn is associated with the Calvert Iron works in At lanta.

Allen T . Nelson, Jr., Xi , and Miss Gracia Pape, both of Brooklyn, N. Y., were married on April 5.

John W. Starnes, Jr ., of Omicron , Guntersville, Ala., and Miss Peggy Barker, Tampa, Fla., have announced their en­gagement. The wedding will take place some time in May. Brother Starnes is connected with the Shell Oil Co., in Talla­hassee, where they will make their ]lOme.

Richard C. Self, Omicron, and Miss Sara L. Womack, both of Birmingham, Ala., were married in th e First Presbyterian Church of Birmingham on March 2. They arc making their home at 317 S. Park Road , Birmin~ham .

John S. Holland, Sigma, and Miss Merial E. Black, both of Columbia, S. C., were married in the First Baptist Church , Columbia, S. C., on February 5.

Brother and Mrs. Albert W. Hoppe, Omega, announce the arrival of William Gregory on February 6, 1947 .

William Jack Gilliford, Jr., was born on January 27, to Brother and Mrs. William J. Gilliford, Jr ., Alpha Upsilon .

Arthur Wesley Busbee, Jr., was born to Brother and Mrs. Arthur W. Busbee, Sigma, on February 17.

Brother and Mrs. Franklin Goettman, Alpha Mu, announced the arrival of Martha Marie Goettman on January 30, 1947.

18

Jim Hinga, Omega, Fort Wayne, Ind., and Miss Mary LoU Douglas, LaFayette, Ind ., recently announced their engage-ment. ·

John Fred Gumpper, Omega, Fort Wayne, Ind ., and Miss Lora J . Klinefelter were married in the Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church, Fort Wayne, on April 5.

John Paul Hirvela, Alpha Theta, San Francisco, Calif., and Miss Claire Happel!, Carmel, Calif., were married on May 1. Brother Hirvela is employed as a chemical engineer for the Stauffer Chemical Co., Berkeley, Calif.

William Morrell (Billy) Roberts, Alpha Iota, and Miss Dol­lie Lucretia Whetstone, both of Sylacauga, Ala. , were mar· ried in the First Methodist Church, Sylacauga, February t5. They arc making their home in Sylacauga where Brother Roberts is vice-president of the Marble City Dry Goods Co. Brother Roberts has recently been appointed District Archon for the State of Alabama.

Ralph Spencer Carroll, Jr., Alpha Iota , Atlanta, Ga., and Miss Wylenc Hill, Dalton, Ga., were married on March 14.

Harry B. Henry, Alpha Sigma, C10ssville, Tenn ., and MiSS Elizabeth B. Johnson, Knoxville, Tenn., were married at St. John's Episcopal Church on April 8. Brother Henry is as­sociated with the Monsanto Chemical Co ., Oak Ridge, Tenn.

William C. Jaus, Alpha Upsilon, Havertown, Pa., and Miss B. Alene Sharpe, Evansville, Ind ., were married on August 4, 1946.

Upsilon Chapter has reported the r~ccnt marriages of Wil­liam Hewlitt, James Burtnett, Robert Way, and John Bod· kin, Upsilon alumni.

Roy 0. Malo, Alpha Zeta, Sheridan, Oregon, and Miss Vir­ginia Fischer, Portland, Oregon were married on April 3.

Word bas been received in Central Office of the marriage of R. Geddie Herring, Epsilon, on March 15 .

William E. (Billy) Cullom, Sigma, Columbia, S. C., and Miss Alpha Wilson Hammond, Batesburg, S. C., recentlY announced their approaching marriage.

Major Harvey A. Leich, U. S. M. C. R. , Alpha Tau, and Mrs. Leich are the proud parents of their second child, Carol June, born July 8, 1946.

Born on October 3, 1946, John Howard Morgan, III, to Brother and Mrs. John Howard Morgan, Jr ., Gamma.

Robert E. Thomson, Jr., Omega, fi nd Mrs. Thomson are the proud parents of a son, Robert E . Jr ., born January 14, 1947·

John T . Robinson, III, Alpha, was born on August 9, 1946 to Brother John T . Robinson, Jr., and Mrs. Robinson.

THE STAR AND LAMP

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[ L Word has been received in Central Office that Arnold Dale /on, Alpha Theta, died on October 12, 1945. At the time of

IS death he was an officer in the Army Air Corps. No other Particulars are available.

-

New York Alumni Chapter

NeTwytY-two brothers attended the February meeting of the 1Q w t ork alumni chapter, held on the evening of February Th a Brother Ray Orteig's Hotel Lafayette in New York. haec! Were: F. W. Krupp, Mu; K. C. Lauter, W. S. Magal­and 'G C. F. Ostergren, and 0. R. Ostergren, Psi; C. E. Davies Bett · N. Graf, Alpha Tau; W. R. Berger. W. J. Berry, W. L. Ilar s, C. R. Davidson, W. Eisele, J . E. FitzSimons, E. G. Scuber, F. L. Magruder, F. V. Magalhaes, L. N. Rowley, A. Pha ~.t, C. H. Steffan, J. E. Stevens, and A. F. Tyrrill, AI-

"''· srn~\\'nulated by a good dinner, the group made up for the · Was hturnout by animated conversation and a very good time for Diad. by all. Brother Stevens, newly appointed archon the hstrlct 1, gave a most satisfactory report on the sta tus of for ~ apters in his district and held out excellent prospects this urther expansion and strengthening of the fraternity in

area.

A!;o.ther Clarence E. Davies, Alpha Tau, secr~tary of the the {'~an S.ociety of Mechanical Engineers, and delegate to er or" t~rnabon~l Technical Commission in Paris, was the speak­trials e ev~nmg. He gave us a most inter~sting talk on the rctar and tnbulations of a national professional society sec­that Y, together with the problems and ·personalities confronted Was rnade up the Paris meeting. That he spoke interestingly conti attested by the fact that the question-and-answer period of thnued .well over an hour after his talk . A heartfelt vote ing e an~s IS due Brother Davies for providing a very interest-

venmg.

-ARTHUR SEUBERT, secretary

Portland Alumni Chapter

ele~t~~ Portland, Oregon alumni chapter met in January and dent. A~he following officers for 1947: Robert Harris, presi­and 'W'JrJ ohnson, vice-president; T. H . Hammond, treasurer, Friday 1

.. ~arn Ross Roberts, secretary. They met again on • ••.tarch 7, in the Masonic Temple.

Ross Rb . . rneetin ° erts furniShed the entertamment for the January a repo g-13 trip by film to Alaska and Europe. AI Head gave ing in rk _on the March meeting of the National Council meet-

Jchmond, Va., which he attended on February 15-11>.

OF PI KAPPA PHI

Also reported deceased are the following · brothers: William Kelly, Alpha Tau; Joseph Gaddy DeBerry, Tau; Rudolph F. Dowdy, Tau; and Roger D. McCaoe, Alpha Xi. Lloyd Breese, Upsilon, passed away while in the Marine Corps Reserve at Purdue University in February 1944.

.

Detroit Alumni Chapter

The Detroit, Michigan alumni met the night of March 27, and elected the following officers: William Zabriskie, archon; Milford Morse, secretary; and Avery Cameron, treasurer.

Among the topics on their agenda were the house situation at Michigan State and the coming installation of the Lansing­East Lansing. Mich., alumni chapter.

Another meeting was held on April 24. Secretarv Milford M. Morse, 9385 Pryor Ave., Detroit 14, Mich., writes· he would like to have any and all Detroit and nearby alumni attend future meetings of the group. He may be reached at the ad­dress above.

Alpha Mu Alumni Association Ernest C. Miller, Secretary and Treasurer of the Alpha Mu

alumni corporation writes that their alumni ar working to­gether in an endeavor to build up their reserve fund as a safeguard against any lean years ahead. They have sent Central Office a list of the alumni who are now eligible for Certificates of good standing and these Pi Kapps will have their certificates by the time you read this.

Alpha College of Charleston Officers for the second term were elected at a meeting held

on February 26. Burrell P . Jones, elected archon, is serving his second term. "Jonesy" was also archon in '44. Joe Cab­iness, secretary, who is a senior this year, was recently elected to Sigma Alpha Rho, the honorary fraternity at the College. Joe won the Bingham oratorical contest, which was held m the chapel on March 25. Our treasurer this term is Harry Robison, who has been serving all year as an assistant in the Physics laboratory. Chaplain Charles Parker is the number two man on the tennis team. Bill Cronan, warden, was the sparkplug on our basketball team which won the £,lass "B" championship in intramurals.

The annual Rose Ball was held on Saturday, March 22. Immediately following the grand march, in a very impressive ceremony, Miss Anne McKeithen, a senior at Charleston and president of Zeta Gamma chapter of Chi Omega, was crowned as the Rose of Pi Kappa Phi.

19

The fo llowing men were initiated en Apr~ l 3: Charles Palm­iter, Emile Aiman, McGregor Rugheimer, James Howell, Ed­ward Allston, Harold Mouzon, Hubert Peale, Leslie Wagner, and Jack Shuman.

We were pleased to have traveling counselor, Bob Morse, visit us in February.

We are deeply grateful to Dr. J. H. Easterby, Alpha '20, our facu'lty adviser, for his assistance during the year.

-JACK EASTERBY, historian

Beta Presbyterian College New officers for this semester are: Sandy Howie, archon;

Marvin Bettis, treasurer ; Joe Scruggs, secretary; Cally Gault, historian; Frank Perry, chaplain; Herbert Lindsey, warden; James Kellett, pledgemaster; and Warren Koon, Pan-Hellenic representative.

The ball of the year at Presbyterian College is the Rose Ball traditionally held immediately following the Military Ball. This has been a tradition for many long years but sad to re­late "'twern't the Pi Kapps" who put it on. This year, how­ever, a group of enterprising Beta Pi Kappa Phi's managed to steal the show. We did put it on in 1947! And we vow that "from this day forward" it will be the sole property of Beta of Pi Kappa Phi. Long live the Beta Rose Ball! Held, on March 1, it was probably the best dance of the year at Pres­byterian . We were pleased to have present several brothers from nearby chapters and their presence added to the occasion and helped to make the event a successfu l one.

We added four additional pledges to our roll recently. They are: Richard Grant , Howard D. Sloan, Lewis Prather, and John H. Allen.

Brothers Herbert Lindsey and Lucius Morgan were on the starting five of Presbyterian's basketball team and Roy Krouse also saw plenty of action. The number one, two, and three men on P .C.'s nationally ranked tennis team will undoubtedly be Pi Kapps Art Prochaska, Bob Spurrier, and Kay Kaiser. Lucius "Rusty" Martin, who has leit school for spring base­ball training with the Atlanta Crackers has been doing ex­ceptionally well. According to the papers, he stands a good chance to secure a starting berth with them this summer.

Roy Krouse has been named to head a committee to carry out the plans for a houseparty at one of South Carolina's beaches this summer.

-CALLY GAULT, historian

Gamma California Although Gamma is suffering considerab!e inconvenience m

being unable to obtain a chapter house, it is still a very much alive chapter. Since the reactivation at the beginning of the school year, it has grown from seven members and four pledges to twelve members and seventeen pledges. At our coming initiation we expect to initiate twelve more members.

Gamma has a lso been holding its own in the intra-mural sports program and is getting out its first issue of the GAM­MAZETTE since its reactivation .

Much remains to be done before Gamma is again firmly established but we are very optimistic regarding our future .

-BEN T. LAFLIN, JR., secretary

Delta Furman Delta has really forged ahead this year. This semester has

brought more changes. Last month formal initiations were held and 14 men were put through. They are: Cooper White, Samuel McKittrick, William McKinney, John Bindewald, Jack Bowen, Cal Haskell , and Curtis Welborn, all of Green­ville, S. C., Marion Waters, Florence, S. C. , Reese Daniel,

20

Charlotte, N. C., Harold Dillard, Easley , S. C., Fred McBride, Sanford, N. C., Frank Perry, Kannapolis, N. C., Travis Cash, Taylors, S. C., and Jimmy Wright , Cheraw, S. C.

We also pledged 10 new men this semester, which gives us a grand total of 32 actives and 23 pledges. In February, we published our first post war issue of the DEL TALITE under the co-editorship of Reese Daniel and Louis Forgoine. The publication wiiJ be distributed monthly during the school year to both alumni and undergraduate members of Delta.

On February 25, an alumni-undergraduate banquet was held, . at which plans were formulated for the reorganization of the Greenville alumni chapter. Alumni present included: Quittman Rhodes, Dean Robert N. Daniel, Robert Scal~s, Dr. Harold Miller, Herman Hipp, Francis Hipp, Mac Chr1s· topher, Walter Callaham, and Dr. C. N. Wyatt.

Delta has begun a building fund under the direction of 3

newly formed finance committee consisting of Sidney Burts, chairman, Randy Graham, and J . M. King. The fund was begun for the purpose of obtaining a chapter house as soon as feasible.

On March 20, a dinner party wa.; held at the Sunnydale club at Landrum, N. C. The affair was a great success and was well attended. Plans are now under way for a number of other such affairs before the end of tile school year.

Representing us on the Panhellenic council are: Archon E~­um Hinnant and Sam McKittrick.

We would enjoy hearing from any of the alumni and anY news for our publication will be great ly appreciated.

-Lours G. FoRGIONE, historian

Zeta

Newly elected officers are: David Prince, archon; Howard Pettit, treasurer; Don Linn, secretary; Dent King, historiani Gregg Bissell, warden; and Jack Atwater, chaplain.

Zeta has enjoyed a full period of socia l activities since th last report. Among them have been two parties at RainboW Lake. These were well attended and very much enjoyed; 1P this way members and pledges are ·Jvercoming the handicap of not having a house. Our spirit is high and everything is being done to keep it that way.

Our Rose Ball was held Friday evening, April 18, at tl~_ Cleveland Hotel in Spartanburg. Henry Westbrook and h orchestra furnished the music. A tea dance followed on Sal urday with Jack Barry furnishing the music. This Pi KaP? weekend was the outstanding social event of the year at Wol· ford. Most of the credit for it goes to Brother Joe Parker, social chairman for the Rose Ball. Spon~ors for the dance were: Misses Jenny Cox, Floreuc<

Harris, Dee Anderson, Ann Rogers, Mary Gregory, and Bct~Y Welborn, for archon David Prince, treasurer , Howard Pett.Jt, secretary Don Linn, historian Dent King, warden, Gregg BJS' sell, and social chairman, Joe Park~r.

A house party is being planned i;:,r the first week in June· Brother Pettit is in charge of the arrangements.

Steve Barry and Fred Elias were form ally initiated in!~ Zeta chapter on March 1.

- DENT KING, h3storian

Eta Emory UniversitY

Eta is proud to make its first STAR AND LAMP report since 1937. We now have our feet well on the ground here at E.Jll' ory. The Chapter has grown to a respectab!e size, is partJCI' pating in inter-fraternity activities, and is carrying the torcP in true Pi Kapp style.

Our present enrollment is 16 since the initiations last quarte[ of Brothers C. J. Bernhardt, Jam~s Pence, Paul Carmich~' James Vickery, and Douglas Spong. We also have five f101

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21

pledges in Robert Edwards, William Greenfield , Lee Patter­son, Thomas Fredrickson, and Howard Butler.

We are pleased to welcome back Brother Joseph Price, and we know that the tennis team is well bolstered by his return.

We are still without a house, but the committee is in full swing to rectify the situation as soon as possible.

At the last meeting of the winter quarter, Eta Chapter held its election of officers: Harry Dicus, archon; Jack Bernhardt, treasurer; J ack Turner, secretary; James Pence, historian; Bob Noland, warden, and John Stubbs, chaplain.

Our so ft ball team is now being formed, and the prospects for a top-shelf contender are very good, with a ll the positions well filled .

The chapter started the social calendar th 's spring with a steak fry given at "Tall Oaks," the home of J olm Armour, a friend of the chapter. The function began in the afternoon with badminton, although some of the brothers and their dates preferred the beauties of nature, being more aesthetic than athletic. Supper was held at the outdoor barbecue pit, followed by an evening of dancing.

-JAMES PENCE, historian

Iota Georgia Tech

On February 5, we elected the following officer3 for the spring semester: Stanley Roberts, archon; Bennie DeLoach , treasur r; Hiram Tribble, ~ecretary; Charles Darby, historian; Leslie Tarbutton , chaplain; and Fr.mk Col'ins, warden.

Dr. Jock Guy Standifer

Dick Almand and Lemmie Henry are on the Inter-Fraternity Council, with Lemmie holding clown the secretary's job.

During the first part of March we pledged three men : Herbert Owings, James Stills, and Lee Gaskin. We are plan­ning on initiating seven! men in the near future.

22

Our bowling team got to third place in the inter-fraternit)' league. Chuck Colletta was captain. We didn't do so well 111 basketball.

Since we don't have a house, we haven't too much time to get together, but try to remedy this by having functions pretty regularly. Saturday, April 12, we had a picnic and dance afterwards at Lake Grover. Everyone had a fine time. With "picnic weather" coming up, we're planning on more such socials again soon.

The school has purchased several h0uses around the cam· pus. It intends to tear them down in about a year to make room for new buildings. Until that time they are consider· ing renting a couple of houses to fraternities who are without quarters. Since we've been without a house longer than anY other fraternity on the campus, we are supposed to have first choice if and when the school releases them.

On June 10, the Inter-Fraternity Council is having its final dance at the city auditorium. There are several good possi· bilities in the way of a band, among them Jimmy Dorsey, Charlie Spivak, and Vaughn Monroe. This should be a fine affair.

-CHARLES DARBY, historian

Lambda Georgia On March 26, after three years of war and many months

looking for a place to rent, Lambda moved back into its old chapter house at 599 Prince Ave. The house is being redcc· ora~ed, both inside and out, and will he very nice when it IS fin"shed. Most members and pledges, other than those whO are married, are living in the house and everyone enjoys be· ing back together again.

Sinoe we are now better equipped, we are planning to launch a big rush week with the opening of the new quarter. We have a lis t of men who have been recommended to u· . Ad:'e'! to these, we would certainly appreciate having our alurnn1

send us recommendations on other good Pi Kapp prospects. Lambda entertained its members, pledges, and a ·ur:mi with

a banquet in February, at which time we were happy to bear news of the progress of Pi Kappa Phi from Tr1veling Coun· se!or Bob Morse.

We have begun the practice of having dinner and the chap· ter meeting at the Georgian Hotel on ;;econd Mondays of cac~ month. We would be most happy to have any of our alurnnh who are in Athens these second Mondays, drop in on us.

Lambda recently was pleased lo initiate Dr. Jack GuY Standifer of Blakely, Ga.

Dr. Standifer is the father of William Bryan Standifer II. Lambda, who died December 23, 1944 at the age of 24.

Dr. Standifer attended Mercer University, Staunton Mili· tary Academy, and graduated from the School of Mg]icine, University of Georgia in 1911. He was the third generation o: his family to graduate from this college. He is a member od Phi Rho Sigma Medical Fraternity, Knights Templar an is a 32nd degree Mason . He is a Pa~t Grand Master of thC Grand Council of the Masons of Georgia, a Past Grand :High Priest of the Grand Chapter, Royal Arch Masons of Georgi~ · and is the present Junior Grand Deacon of the Grand Lodge of Free and Accepted Maso ns of th e St:.!te of Georgia. Both are members of the Episcopal Church .

Grandfather, father and son have practiced medicine iii Bbkely for 109 years. Bill was to have followed in their foot· s~eps .

- AT.l'RED BROWN, secretarY

Mu Duke Mu Chapter's activities for the sprin:; semester were iiid

augurated by a very successful ru :hing s~ason that fea ture a series of open houses.

T H E STAR AND LAMP

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Ch tx1teen rushees wen: pledged. The pledges are: Paul Cato,

To ar otte! N. C.; Ed Carson and Bud Sager, Lynchburg, Va.; La Ill Drtver, Bristol, Tenn.; Charles Early, Norfolk, Va.; s. ws?n Crowe, Durham, N. C.; Grier Hudson, Spartanburg, Pa C. , Joh!' Dee, New York, N.Y.; and Dick Strauch, Benton, BuddAssooates include: Bill Westmoreland, Goldsboro, N. C.; N. C ~ Whisnant, Concord, N. C.; George Eaves, Durham, bar . ,NCar! Jones, Laurinburg, N.C.; Ted Thompson, Greens­Spe~' · C. ; Jim Hamilton, Uniontown, Pa.; and Talmadge

I ce, Raleigh, N. C. andn charge of the pledge class are Jim Boggs, pledge master, standWes Gilbert, pledge lecturer. At present the chapter roll

s at 65

JoJ.he neoph~tes and associates were honored at a dance fol­goJdngf formal pledging. Decorations were of blue, white, and span eaturing a diamond-shaped archway through which Wa :o,rs and pledges were presented at intermission . Clarence s~ as orchestra furnished the mu::.ic. .

date ortly before spring vacation, brothers entertained thetr ter ? at a dinner given at Durham's Saddle Club. Mu Chap­Fonts ~he first fraternity at Duke to hold a function there.

ptWtng the dinner, dancing was enjoyed. exch ans for. future social functions include a fraternity-sorority shor~nge Wtth Pi Beta Phi sorority, a cabin party to be held dates Y after Easter, and a weekend party for brothers and ties r Myrtle Beach the fir · t week of May. Social activi­depa

0f the year will be culminated by a farewell banquet for

erettr ~ng brothers. Those graduating are: Jim Boggs, Ev­lCope kbb, Bill Elam, Myrlon Gatlin"', John Hayworth, Bob Milo;e • Art Leonard, Bob McGreevy, Francis Merritt, Bob Mitch\ Warren Pope, Buddy Blanton, Jim Seay, Fred Sharky,

I utton, Bill Vallotton, and Bill Watson. ore~ bxtracurricular activities, Mu Chapter was greatly hon­

y the election of Brother Ed Gatling to presidency of

0 F p I KAPPA PHI

Chapter Dance

the YMCA, one of the most influential organizations on the campus. During 1944 this position was held by his brother, Myrlon Gatling, a member of Omicron Delta Kappa, Duke's highest leadership honorary.

Brother Bill W~alen, an accomplished tap dancer, holds tile leading role in this year's Hoof 'n Horn Club musical comedy, while Pledges Tom Driver and Lawson Crowe, newly elected members of the sophomore honorary, Beta Omega Sigma, were outstanding in the Duke Players' production of Antigone. Pledge Charles Early was recently elected to Phi Eta Sigma, freshman scholastic honorary.

Pi Kapps prominent in athletics included Pledge Dick Strauch, left handed pitcher on the varsity baseball team and Jim Hamilton, a player on the all intramural basketball team. Brother Art Van is expected to surpass his record of last year in varsity baseball.

An important phase of · Mu Chapter's activities during the spring semester has been the serenading of brothers' pin-ups. Pi Kappa Phi is the first fraternity :tt Duke to return to the pre-war cu~tom of formal dress for s~renades. Plans are now being mad~ to serenade the misses Wtnn Kern, Barbara Kerr, and Joan Godwin, the pin-ups of Brothers Fran Merritt, Man­ley Stockton, and Bill Whalen.

-NORU NELSON, historian

Xi Roanoke Sine the last issue of THE STAR AND LAMP, we have initiated

James Little and William Smith, bringing our total number of brothers up to 40. This, with a pledge class of 2 7, gives us a roll call with which we are well satisfied. We miss Cur­tis Gray, who J(raduated, and Bill Burch, who left school at

23

These pictures, taken at Pennsylvania State University, home of Alpha Mu Chapter, strike a familiar chord in the memories of th011

around postwar campuses. (Photo by Sherm Lutz, Penn State Alumni News )

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~~~ end of last semester. The new semester brought to us my Thompson and AI White.

sel~ru~ng February we received ca lls from Traveling Coun­Were ob M_orse, and Executive Secretary, "Bernie" Jones. We rnce· vdery Interested in their news of other chapters and

IVe many useful suggestions from them. W~~ ~ result of the elections for student body officers, De­of Bl et;;rson was elected president. DeWitt is also president and .ue "'-ey. Hugh Hill was recently tapped for Blue Key Presi~s president of the Pan-Hellemc Council; Jim Doyle is the Gnt of the senior class; George M ougenel, president of the d erma~ club; and Blake Lidule secretary-treasurer of

B. ramatJc society, Alpha Psi Omega. Ill Cu · left b ~ne was installed as warden to fill the vacant post

Y B1ll Burch.

OnN~merous informal parties have been held this semester. a cab~bruary 14-15, the pledges entertained the brothers with broug~~ ~arty i the 14th a stag affair; and on the 15th we intersp ates. A very good double quartet san~ a few songs, freshm ersed with dancing and card games, after which re­Which ents were served. On March 29, we had a dance at are n we Were. pleased to see many of our alumni present. We 24 a~w tlanmng our spring- formal which will be held May ah;mn · tthe County Woman's Club. We hope to see many 1 ere too .

AI~~ ahe leading in intramural sports at Roanoke College . in sec~g 'YC have yet to win an individual title, we have come test T~~ In volleyball and basketball, and entered every con­der · th IS has given us a slight lead over the other teams un­Yet toe b system used here. There are several more contests in th e played and we are confident we will be on top

e end.

-CHARLES WEIDLE, histori011

Omicron Alabama We finished f" I . . few d ~ur ma exammat1ons on March 19. After d

surpaS:ys vacatiOn we started the spring quarter with un­Sidney e1 zeal. Omicron's officers are: Robert Guillot, archon; Ham H ackson, treasurer; Mack Kennamer, secretary; Wil­llarpe embree, historian; Robert Brown, chaplain; James

J r, warden ; and George Black, house manager. the a~~s Carha~t Harper is the newly elected president of on th crfratermty council, one of the outstanding positions lead tb campus. Omicron is extremely proud to have a brother selectede Greek organizations here. Willard T. Young has been from th representative of the student government association crctt D ~ ~School of Engineering, another important post. Ev­ANn W~ and Bill Strickland are on the weekly CRIMSON le~e Y bITE staff; Bill Abbott is on the staff of the col­of theca~ ook, the COROLA; and Walter Meeks is a member MER. s aff of the monthly magazine, the RAMMER-JAM-

\V~~mbers and pledges, in a body, were special guests of the 9 W Y FoundatiOn at their Sunday morning service March · e co t "b housem th n uted the flowers for the altar in honor of our

0 ° · er, Mrs. W. H. Stoddard. ur ·

many ~Inter quarter was very eventful. We were hosts to Morse rot~ers and friends; among them, Brother Robert coach ' f wiOnaJ traveling counselor; Brother Paul Davis, stan B.o ashington County high school ; Dr. and Mrs. Lang­Frank Kwley, of the Economics department of the University; a speci

1 eown, president of the student body at Auburn, was

the Dn~ W~ekend guest of the chapter; and we entertained my Fa~rers1ty P_ress Club at a c~ffee hour on March 3. Jim­Preside tkner, ed1tor of the Baldwm County Times and former ation n and present director of the Alabama Press Associ-

' Was the guest speaker. Our softb II · · leadersh. a team 1s gettmg off to a good start under the

a Valu ~ of Brother Jules Davis. Brother Joe Ed Kirkland, Dniver~·t ~ "~outh paw," bas earned a starting berth on the 1 Y s mtramural sports.

0 F p I KAPPA PHI

We lost one of our outstanding members, past pledge pres­ident Bailey F . Brooks. Holding a reserve commission in the Navy, Brother Brooks, has gone back to active duty, in the special field of photography. At our last initiation the chap­ter presented him with a jeweled pin for being our outstand­in~ _p ledge.

Our new pledges are: Robert Hcmbr~c, William Strickland Donald Worrell, James C. Dobbs, Joe Cassidy, James N. Me~ Gowen, Henry Murphy, James Stine, Frank Barker, Theo­dore Pouncy, Daniel Matthews, and Richard Lacey. Pledge officers this quarter are : William Abbott, president; Joe Cas­sidy, treasurer; and William Strickland, secretary.

We welcome the return of our former treasurer, G. H . Hollis and two transfers from Alpha Iota, Grady Beard and Harry Hansen .

Omicron invites a ll alumni to visit us when on the campus. We always enjoy meeting and talking with you. And we'd appreciate it if you'd send us more recommendations on boys you know who are planning to enter the University or on boys who might be already here.

- WnLIAM HEMBREE, historian

Sigma South Carolina Sigma of Pi Kappa Phi was :~warded the silver cup for

presenting the best skit out of ten cumpeting fraternities at STUNT NIGHT, March 13, on behalf of the World Student Service Fund. Focusing itself around an amusing drinking and jitterburg scene, the skit, entitled "A Night at the Blue Moon," was awarded first prize. Capers ran rampant with action occupying every foot of the stage and every minnte of the skit. Brother Millsaps, played the lead as a drunk Carolina student taking a few minutes break at the Blue Moon, sup­ported by pledge Jack Westmoreland. Brothers Drennan and E<::son, and pledge Gregg Hitopoulos, added the feminine frills to the skit. They were decked in the choice finery of barfly bessies and gathered many laughs from the packed house. The supporting cast included Hubert Carmichael, Allen Sands, Bill Bobo, Joe Henry Williams, Bill Kinlaw, Gerald Smith, Doug­las Plowden, Marcus Smith, Burt Orr, Cater Floyd, Fred Henderson, Lou Gantt and Teddy Maass. Ad Jibbing was furnished by all and gave added spice to the skit.

Sigma has increased it pledges from 23 to 48, harvesting 25 pledges during the last rush season. The present officers of the pledge class are: Marcus Smith, president; Joe Johnston, vice-president, Bob Hartley, treasurer; and Joe Hughes, sec­retary.

Recently added to active ranks are: William Bobo, Law­rence "Pop" Chapman, William Eason, Hugh Going, Robert Gunter, Robert Hamilton, Harry O'Bannon, and Robert Rich-ard. ·

Chapter voca lists are practicing for the up-and-coming song-fest in which all the U. S. C. fraternities are taking part. Sigma Nu has been the highest noted fraternity for the past two song-fests. Sigma has its eyes on the cup simply because if the Sigma Nus take it again, it becomes a permanent tro­phy in their chapter room.

Sigma opened its intramural · basketball season on the short end of a 25 to 20 score with Kappa Sigma, only to make a good com · back for three straight wins from freshman "Y", Sigma Nu, and Phi Kappa Sigma . The .tournament found Sigma nosed out of the semi-iinals only to be reinstated after Kappa Alpha had been disqualified. The semi-final score cha lked up by Sigma Alpha Epsilon went on the permanent records to show Pi Kappa Phi as third in the standings. Brothers and pledges playing were: Cater Floyd, Bill Kinlaw, Gene Lewis, Gregg Hitopoulos, GrahRm Wolfe, Joe Drennan, Marcus Smith, Douglas Plowden, Dick Singleton, Hubert Car­michael, B. C. Ellis, J ack Westmoreland, also part-timers Jimmy Pike, Bob Moorer, and Jimmy Milligan. Pledge Burt Orr fu rnished the helpful coaching advice.

Pledges George K . Willis, Jr., and Owen Evans were re·· cently injured when a car plunged into the side of the Dixie

25

View of prize-winning skit presented by Sigma Chapter at University of South Caro l ina.

Tavern, located two miles outside of Rock Hill, S. C. Owen has been dismissed from the hospital after a week's treat­ment and is now back in classes at U. S. C. Word from G. K. Willis, Sr., is that George, Jr., has been taken from the ser­iously ill list at York County hospital where he underwent an emergency operation for internal injuries received in the accident.

Sigma recently carried out its traclition of taking a sorority to breakfast and church, once or twice a semester. On April 20, the Alpha Delta Pis were our r:ue,ts.

-Loms P. GANTT, historian

Tau North Carolina Sta :e Tau has achieved its supreme objective. With the beginning

of this term the chapter moved into its new home at 407 Horne Street, an address which is destined to become. as fam ­ous as 17 20 Hillsboro. The house is rather small and only twelve men are Jiving in it.

It is in excellent condition as t he former occupants had just had it remodeled throughout, complete with a new coal stoker. One of the most charming features about it is the new wall papering in all the room5. It also possesses a very spacious basement in which we plan to build a recreation room and reopen the famous Blue Room of which all Tau men are familiar. A vacant lot next door on one side of the house will allow us to expand our recreational facilities even more. The bouse is in a very nice section of Raleigh and is only a few blocks from the heart of the campus.

We are now busy trying to provide ourselves with furni ­ture which is developing into a formidable task as our building

26

fund is rapidly disappearing. We :ue also experiencing diffi· culty in securing a telephone. Tau takes this opportunitY: tot welcome and urge all -<!hunni and all Pi Kapps who m1gb come to Raleigh, to visit\:iS in our new home. Remember that address: 407 Rorne Street. Please mail all correspondence to this address also.

On March 9, 11 new brothers were brought into the chaPd ter in a very impressiv~ ceremony. They are: Raymon Damron, Millard M. Fisher,' Jr., .Daniel F. McCulloch, anj Andy Nee!, Charlotte, N. C.; Do_nald 1\;1· Seltzer, Co?co~: N. C.; Charles B. Harper, Jr., H1gh Pomt, N. C., Olm C Gordon, Monroe, N. C.; Robert L. McCoy, New Bern, N. ·• John V. Fox, Jr., Randleman, N. C.; Jayson Deyton, Spruce Pine, N. C., and Robert M. Sanders, Wilmington, N. C.

During mid-winter dances Tau held its 18th annual banquc1t

in the Virginia Dare room of the Sir Walter Hotel. The bal · room was attractively decorated with flowers and each datd wore the red rose. A mock meeting was held and enjoye immensely by all. Each pledge gave a short speech on soJil~ chosen subject and they were well received. After the banque everyone went to the dance which was being held in tne school gymnasium.

We have been honored recently by visits from Bob Mo~~; Traveling Counselor, and Executive Secretary "Berme. Jones. We enjoyed having them and profited greatly by their helpful and generous advice. We chink the fraternity, as d whole, will profit by having such men as these close at han to give help when needed. f

With the sprouting of the trees and the joyous singing 0

the birds, the fraternities at State arc dusting off their soft; ball gloves and throwing the "old apple" around to ' limbe up stiff arms. Tau is more than usually enthusiastic about tn,~ coming season. The first afternoon we held practice "Slugger

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Blow br k . Wan ° e a bat trymg to flatten out the ball. Southpaw to r ac~, the terror of the mound, has suddenly been forced Cha efhz,~ that he has a competitor for his accustomed job m all ~t1e Hollywood" Harper, who is destined to be feared by Pup ter fraternities. Our newest player is a very eager little biscu· ro~ next door who has been worth his weight in dog b·ushits In retrieving the ball when it happens to land in a ·T Patch.

en · hop ~Is season is here also and the chapter has banked Its Plac~s. m ?Ur very able archon, A use Harvey, who took third Millar1~ ~!Jgles' matches last year. He has some good help in

Ou Is~er, Don Seltzer, and Dan Mulloch. and ~ bowh.ng team is coming down the final stretch now exper~ Pushmg the top of the list. Small wonder with such liarv as Demming Smith, Harold Jordan, Billy Blow, Ause with eyh a~d Millard Fisher in the lineup. The team, complete troph c eermg section, is certain of walking away with that

y. Unn seeing 1 the next issue of the STAR AND LAMP we hope to be

You all at 407 Horne.

-FRE:.J KENDAU, Jn., /listoria11

Omega Purdue loJris term Omega chapter is under the guidance of the fol­secre~g officers: archon, Don Swager; treasurer, AI Knuth; Anke a:;, Van Heely; historian, Don Shaw; chaplain, Charles and ~ rock i warden, Dick Shaw; steward, Tom Alleman;

Th" ouse manager, Paul Lawall. the hiS semester has brought an intensified rush program to Jim ~u~e under the expert supervision of Sprague Chapin and nett d u duth. Their work has been very praiseworthy, and lowe ~h a fine class of 13 pledges, with a few more to fol-

. e class now con£is"s of: Bill Adamson, sophomore,

~ho views of the formal dinner held in the Omega apter prior to the annual TAP dance.

~tsGrjn~e, Ill.; Richmond McQuistion, freshman, lndianap­end~n n · i Bill Thompson, freshman, Gary, Ind . ; Jay Wolf­Ra111p' h?Phomore, Northfie ld, Ohio; Lowell Bahc, sophomore, Ohio. \te, III.; Clark Thornton, sophomore, Ashtabula, I<eny' f enneth Wright, sophomore, Maywood, Ill.; and Dick

With reshman, Evanston, Ill. Omc . our first semester of pre-war strength behind us, activ7~ IS now getting into the swing and entering into campus Playshles. Van Heely recently played the leading part in the and wop Production of George Bernard Shaw's "Pygmalion", star W~ts a ?reat success. On May 3 Jim Uebelhart will co­operett1 h h1s wife, Joyce, in the Harlequin show of '47, an

The a. called "New Moon." sica an~JrsBt call out for varsity baseball found Steve Ruda­

ob Ladd, '46 lettermen, and Fred Quiesser, of the

OF PI KAPPA PHI

'45 team reporting as candidates for positions on this year's team. Also Don Shaw and Rich McQuistion are out for varsity track.

Along the scholastic line, we have two new "honoraries" members in the persons of Van Heely, who made Scull and Crescent, sophomore activities honorary, and Theta Alpha Phi, dramatics honorary, simultaneously. Philip Neff was re­cently initiated into the Civil Engineering honorary, Chi Epsilon. -

On the social calendar, trade dances have been coming along quite regularly and successfully. On March ·29, the annual TAP dance was held in the Union. The TAP dance is a three-way dance sponsored by Triangle, Alpha Gamma Rho and Pi Kappa Phi. Maury Maim, effectively provided good music for the occasion. We held a formal dinner here at the house for the dance-goers.

With nine of our men in the University choir, our song leader, Bob English, has formed a singing group of 20 men to form the nucleus for song sessions in the "University Sing". The group has so far drawn many favorable comments on its pin serenades and a recent broadcast on the local radio station.

A few weeks ago we were honored by the presence of four members of Fred Waring's show, which appeared at the Music Hall. They impressed us very favorably and we enjoyed their short visit to the house very much. On March 27, Brother George V. Denny was here with "The Town Meeting of the Air" which he broadcast from the Music Hall. Although a Pi Kapp alumni, he was unable to get to the house because of his very _ full schedule.

An idea blooming from a bull session last winter has now materialized in the form of a photograph album for each class here in the house. It is bound in "Senior Cord" and be­sides an informal photo has a sheet of "statistics" on each page.

-DONALD E . SHAW, historian

Alpha Delta Washington In January 1947, out of fifteen pledges, six were initiated

into Alpha Delta . Our next initiation will be somewhat larger because the warden is cracking down on study hours. We again have fifteen pledges and as long as we keep acquir­ing new ones, everything is okay. We feel that young high school graduates will make good fratt:rnity material and are going to concentrate on them. MoJt of our new men now are veterans and it won't be long before they will be hard lo get.

We are planning to move by the end of spring quarter. The new house is a great deal larger than our present one and will accommodate 38 men.

Our social affairs have been very successful; our firesides have been wonderful and Fred Thompson, social chairman, has done a grand job in obtaining dates. Several sororities have commented on our decorations and good music. We have a beautiful selection of records which we purchased out of our "piggy" bank . The house has purchawd cards, napkins,

27

and book matches with the Pi Kappa Phi inscription on them, and they are in evidence at a ll our socia ls.

We've made a good start , t he future looks bright , and we a re getting stronger all the time. From now on we can hold our own.

- J OE J OHANSON, historian

Alpha Epsilon Florida Spring session a t F lorida finds Alpha Epsilon moving right

a long with many new pledges and brothers. After successful rush week the following men were pledged : Russell S. Batch­elor, Sharon, Pa.; Audrey M . Crawford , John Crow n, Jr., Aubrey M . Daniel, Joe Doney, Jr. , J acksonville, Fla.; David L . Roberts, Earl Boyce, Miami, Fla.; Julius Conde, Jr., Mi­ami Beach , Fla.; Charles G. Wells, Jr., Coral Gables, Fla.; Conrad Kicklighter, Gainesville, Fla.; Sam Ridou t, M elbourne, F la.; Robert C. H ayes, Charles B. Jones, Tampa, Fla.; Dun­can Johnson , J ames Straughan, and John Rohan.

On M arch 12, we welcomed the fo llowing new brothers into the chapter : Frank N. Holley, George Pena, and J ack Raudenbush, Coral Gables, Fla.; H al Combs, Gainesville, Fla.; Carl Pease, David Reid, J ames Willis, J . P . Stevens, and Wil­liam Veal, J acksonville, Fla.; Bob Small , Lake Worth , Fla.; Bill E lgin and George Johnson, Miami Beach, Fla.; J ames Murray, Ormond Beach, Fla.; Bill Graves, Vera Beach, Fla.; and J ames Fleisher, Terre H aute, Ind. This brings our chap­ter tota l to 55 brothers and 25 pledges. We plan another in i­tiation this semester to prepare the chapter for a big yea r next fa ll.

On th e week end of March 21-23 the annual Military Ball , which was revived this year a fter a three-year lapse, was the occasion for the christening of our new patio which has re­cently been added to our chapter house. After dancing to the music of Dean Hudson, brothers, pledges, and their date; returned to the house for a post midnight dance. It was ap­parent tha t everyone had a jolly time. We revived our t ra-

. ditional Mothers' Day program this yea r, follo wing its lapse during the war yea rs. The first one held on Easter Sunday a fternoon was a definite success; favo rs were presented to a ll mot~ers in attendance. The inter-fraternity conference spon ­sored Sprin~ Froli cs the first weekend in M ay with music pro­vided by Harry J ames. The chapter gave a very enjoyable dance on Saturday night .

At long last Alpha E psilon has go tten the wheels rolling to publish a chapter paper . If everything goes according to plan our fir st issue should be published in April and every other month thereafter . We are still looking for a good name fo r i t and any suggestions will be appreciated . Than~s to the Miami Mothers' Auxil iary, the chap ter house

will soon sport an electric water cooler. At present the campus is in the midst of an election cam­

paign. Pi Kappa Phi is proud of the fact that we have two nominees: Walter M cCall , executive counci l, and Eddie Graeme, Lyceum council.

- J. KEN ENZOR, historian

Alpha Zeta Oregon State Present chapter officers a re: Glenn Allen, a rchon ; H arry

Jones, secreta ry; Stanley Wyss, manager ; Fred Thompson , assistant manager ; Paul Rodgers, historian ; Charles M ark­man, chaplain ; and J ack Steward , pledge wa!den.

Alpha Zetans have enjoyed a term filled with social events. The Lolly-Hop on February 1, set the tone for winter term activities for the house, and the pledge class is to be co ngra t­ulated for conducting a successful and unique socia l a ffair. The pledges converted the house into a veritab:e nursery with red and white streamers as ceiling decorations, a flashing lolly-pop bearing the name of the dance, a huge ca ndy cane, ar\d modernized nursery rhymes on the walls. T o start the evening appropriately, dates were transported in li ~ tl e red wagons; there they climbed a ladder and slid down a slide to the dance floor . The " Lolly-Hop" was su -:;ges~ed by John Gulan and it set the pledge class to feve rish preparatio n. Gen-

28

era! Chairman Clyde Christman was assisted by J ack Schenck. decora tions; Rod Dallas and Bob Thoman, music; ·Bob Mart· in, refreshments; and Ken Hosler, chaperones.

On February 28, a fireside was held at the house at which everyone spent an enjoyable evening talking and dancing to a va riety Of records. A guest dinner was held Sunday, M arch 2, and exchange dinners with the girls of Alpha Chi and Sigma Kappa rounded off a well-balanced social schedule.

Mell Knorr, rushing chairman, has really been doing a re­markable 'job. Under his supervision, nine men have pledged t his term . These new pledges include Dick Luse, Joe Connor, Ear l Barton, J ack Stiles, J erry Breeding, Bob Ellison , Myron Dougherty, M ark H artley, and Ferris Gilkey.

Bob Coates, a thletic manager, has been busy keeping ~p the in tramural a thletic schedule. The house participa ted IO touch footba ll, basketball , volley ball, speedball , and is took· ing forward to a successful season in softball this spring.

The ALPHA ZETA NEWS, published by Bob De Shazer, is especia lly good this issue; Bob is really on the ball . Too, we must express a word of appreciation to our co-adviser;. Edward Goman and George Cadmus, who have given manY helpful hints and much good advice to the actives of their fraternity.

- P AUL C. R ODGERS, historian

Alpha Iota Alabama Polytechnic Institute

Officers for the spring semester are: Glen Crim, archoll i Calvin Adamson, treasurer ; William Smyly, secreta ry; J oh0 H awthorne, historian ; Luther Weaver, chaplain ; and Fran~ Robinson, warden.

We started our rush season off with a fine group of fresh· man and sophomore pledges. They :u e: Sam Bass, Thomas Morgan , Jim Tuey, Jack Pearson, Lawrence Skipworth , Stan· ley Whorten, and Arthur Fix.

Our last formal initiation was held on February 16, when , 1,the ··· following became brothers : H enry Armstrong, Alt~0

Clifton, Gail Com fort, Wallace Drury, John Goodson , EdW10 Grant, F . A. Maddox, Langdon Morton, Gerald Parrne1• Frank Robinson, J ames Robinson, Wilson Roby, Edwin TripP• Luther Weaver, Floyd Younger, George Kind , and WarrC11

Borland. Blueprints have been drawn up and approved to pave thr

road in front of th e fraternity house, and the work will bC' gin soon .

On the evening of January 17, t he pledges enterta ined thC brothers wi th a wild west party. Decorations followed thf theme of a barroom in the days of the settling of the west• and a ll present were dressed accordingly. Skits were presented and followed by dancing to make a most enjoyable party·-1,or a ll .

- J OHN B. H AWTHORNE, historia ll

Alpha Omicron Iowa State At present the following men are serving as officers : E . J.

H armon, a rchon ; Harold Cowles, treasurer ; Verne TownleY· secretary; William M . Carey, historian ; Robert Biederrnn~i chapl!iin ; and Harold Fischer , warden. These men a re '!'e. qualified and will surely lead us· through another glono0'

quarter . d On M arch 8, 16 lucky Pi Kapps and their da tes enj~ye.

t he privilege of dancing to the• sweet music of Cha rlie Sp1var and his orchestra. The occasion was the annual Pan :Eie' and tickets were very scarce. -These lucky couples attended 9

wonderful formal dinner at the house before the dance ..... thanks to the excellent planning of M other "Mac." AfteJ the dinner they w~re entertained by the pledges who prescnte a skit which kept them roaring for a full half hour. . d

This quarter marks the big I. S. C. Veishea and we [In e Peter Cuff leading the boys a t the house by serving on tl:. Veishea advisory council. Bill Rickert, not to be outdone, E working like mad on the Veishea canoe race committee. · J . Harmon is serving on the Animal Husbandry Veishea open house committee, anti William M . Ca rey, is in charge of the

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~~ultry .H~sbandry Veishea open house committee. Forest a dets.ch ts m charge of our float and promises a super job on

B:stgn. turned in by Howard Roberts. to t~J Rickert, by way of a little political maneuvering, (much

e horror of Chaplain Biederman) is now secretary-treas-11?~ of .the interfraternity pledge trainers' council. Pledge Bob f ~ m. IS working on the publicity committee for the inter­W~J~rmty-intersorority pledge ball. Not to be forgotten is F; tam Boyd, of air corps fame, who is secretary of the Air co rce. Association. Howard Roberts is chairman of the social a mmt~tee of the same organization and Forest Goetsch ts n assiStant

w After win.ning the trophy for runner-up in class A football a e seem to be jinxed. Much to the sorrow of intramural man­b~~r· Brother Keith Spiker, all three of our promising basket­th feams were defeated in the semi-finals. Then along came w: ateful Thursday evening when our two handball teams an~e ~created in the semi-finals, ~nd the boys lost at bowling fo ~tng pong. Everyone hung his head and shed a few tears vo~J r. Spiker. However, we now have two softball and two lh eybaiJ teams ready for action, and "Spike" says to tell

sm 95% of the boys are participating. the'ome of the boys have gotten the bug and are redecorating pa·tr roon:ts. Probably the keenest belongs to Pete Cuff who Wh~ted .hts cei ling canary yellow, egg shell blue walls, with th ! e tnmmings. Our thanks go to Pete and Bill Rickert for ar~tr Work in sanding and refinishing the parlor floors-they

Snow smooth for dancing at firesides and exchanges. Wi'hltKday afternoon dance exchanges have been arranged di~ appa Kappa Gamma and Deita Zeta sororities, an~ De!~er exchanges lined up with the Pi Phis, Chi 0, and Trt the R The highlight of the social events this quarter will be Mu ose Ball which will be held May 10, at the Sheldon­of Cn Hotel. Pi Kapps and their dates will dance to the tunes to 1~uck Hazelton's orchestra. We extend a cordial invitation chaa t alums of this chapter or to those of any other Pi Kapp

Per to attend. -WlLLIAM M. CAREY, historia11

Alpha Upsilon Drexel Institute \VeE!ections were held in February and the following brothers scare chosen to serve for the remainder of the year: AI Andru­rct vage, archon ; Bill Hartranft, treasurer; Joe Shields, sec­Ga~~y i Gene Kraber, historian; Mart Burrows, chaplain; Jack

Th ncr, warden; and George Kinmonth, house manager. men e dchapter completed a very successful rushing season, com­smoke by the traditional "Monte Carlo" setting for the ner er on January 30 and wound up by the acceptance din­Joe ~ February 13. Following is a list of the new pledges: Dea 1~on, Joe Couris, Allen Carson, Charles Childs, Walter Robro • Robert Evans, Edward Mahoney, William Pearson, \'ettert St~wart, Jack Stoner, Robert Wolfinger, and Henry las t· Phtlad~lphia; John Cc;~il, Moorestown, N. J.; Doug­Will' lark, Balttmore, Md.; Phtlip Cloud, Kennett Square, Pa.; JatntamFCornellsen, Ardmore, Pa.; Robert Crede, Elmira, N. Y., N. r rank, Springfield, Pa.; Ben Hallowell, Maple Shade, S!ati · • Harry E. Johnson, West Chester, Pa.; Charles Kuntz, tino ngtonr, Pa.; John Lawless, Ventnor, N. J .; James Mar­and':\g Harbor City, N.J.; Jack Streator, Lansdowne, Pa.;

AI 0 crt ~esno, Ashland, Pa. the Pha Upstlon's own publication the "DUSAK" finally htt interpr~ss m late March and should be in the hands of all cop/s ed alumni by this time. If you have not received a toria' 'Ye do not have your address. Please contact the his­Yourl!Dnnmediately and notify him of your whereabouts and

Th usak will be forwarded. May e annual Pi Kapp Show will be presented at Drexel on to be 2 and 3 of this year. "Graduation or Bust" promises the a on~ of the best musical comedies presented to date and tnent iustng intricacies of its plot promise genuine entertain-

All or the most critical audience. Which bro.thers are eagerly anticipating the "Spring Weekend" includ Wtll !Je held May 16, 17, and 18. Tentative plans formaf da dmner dance on Friday evening at the house, a

ance Saturday evening, and a picnic on Sunday. -GF.NE KRABER, historian

0 F p I KAPPA PHI

Alpha Phi Illinois Tech There's a new cup on the Pi Kapp mantle at Illinois Tech .

The interfraternity basketball tournament was won by Alpha Phi chapter. The hardwood squad went through the season undefeated. At present, the chapter is practicing for the forth ­coming softball tourney, and prospects are excellent .

Since the start of the semester, Pi Kapps have been holding informal Saturday-night dances in the fraternity house, and supported the Illinois Tech Interfraternity Formal. Plans are being made for a party to be held in the house in conjunction with the Chicago alumni chapter. A senior farewell also IS

scheduled for the near future. Alpha Phi has planned a program of activities to coincide

with the IIT Junior Week, to be held during the last week of April. Fraternity skits, interfrat sporting events, and an interfraternity turtle race are among the traditions of Junior Week. With the cooperation of the Illinois Tech News Bureau, plans have been made for us to get publicity coverage in the city papers during this quest for a "racing turtle."

During the current term, a program to bring up to date the files of the fraternity has been evolved. Alpha Phi was active all through the war, bu't it was impossible to keep our records and alumni file in top order. Questionnaires have been prepared for mailing to the last known addresses of alum­ni and Archon Bill Pottenger expects these to help fill some of the gaps in the records.

- BILL BURKHART, historian

Alpha Xi Brooklyn Polytechnic There have been quite a few changes at 33 Sidney Place,

Brooklyn. Among the notable alterations are as predicted in the last issue of the STAR AND LAMP the increased number of Brothers and Pledges. Of the former, those initiated in De­cember, are brothers Bill Habehtrecht, John McKiernan, Charlie Murn, John Passalacqua, AI Skogland, and Bill Wright. New Pledges include Jim Beil, Carl Larsen, Rud Miller, George MacDuff, Ed Mulcahy, Maurice Ryan, Joe Peters, and AI Seawald. It is expected that quite a few of these shall become brothers, as another initiation will be held before the summer vacation. There are, by the way, twenty-five brothers at this present date and to be sure Pi Kappa Phi is THE Fraternity on the Campus with a most enviable position and record.

An unfortunate change was when the chapter was forced to accept the resignation of Archon Jack Callahan. Brother AI Steele was elected to succeed him. About this time, our secre­tary Artie Smith'!eft school. This was quite a smack to Alpha X! as Artie was one of the best liked men in the Chapter. Though he has left school, Arthur still attends parties down at the house. His position was filled by Brother John Smiley and "Big John" is quite capable as he held the same last term and did a terrific job at that time. Nor was this the last brother to leave school, for Alpha Xi was really hit hard this past month as Howie Barbour also left school and the chapter will most certainly feel his loss. But some time circumstances over which we have no control , force people to do things that are farthest from their minds and such was the case with both Artie and Howie, and to them Alpha Xi wishes the best of luck and happiness and hoping we shall not lose contact with them.

The better changes at Alpha Xi and really good news is that Johnny Stevens, who has done so much in reactivating the chapter has been rewarded for his zealous work by being named District Archon in the New York area. This vacated the post of Chapter Advisor which has been filled by Walter Eisele, a Poly graduate and former Archon of this chapter. His great interest in Pi Kappa Phi assures the chapter of only the betterment of Alpha Xi . It goes without saying that Wal­ter immediately received a unanimous vote of confidence m taking his position.

We also wish to express our grati~ude to Brother Berry, past National President, who so graciously donated two beautiful rugs, besides tables and lamps that have really freshened up 33 Sidney Place. It has added that "Homey" atmosphere that is appreciated by all brothers. To "Prof" Berry-Thanks again.

Thus is seen the alterations at Alpha Xi-some pleasant­some sad-but always with the chapter ca rrying on in a true Pi Kapp manner.

29

PI KAPPA PHI

Founders

SIMON FoGARTY, 151 Moultrie St., Charleston, S. C.

ANDREW ALEXANDER KROEG, dec.eased. LAWRENCE HARRY MIXSON, 217 East

Bay St., Charleston, S. C.

National Council

NATIONAL PRESIDENT- Devereux D. Rice, P. 0. Box 88, Johnson City, Tenn.

Alpha - College of Charleston, Charleston, S. C.

Beta Presbyterian College, Clinton, S. C.

Gamma-University of California, c/o Ben T. Laflin, Jr., 2410 College

, Avenue, Berkeley, California

Delta-Furman University, Green­ville, S. C.

Epsilon-Davidson College, David­son, N. C.

Zeta- Wofford College, Box 221, Spartanburg, S. C.

Eta-Emory University, P. 0. Box 252, Emory University, Ga.

Iota-Georgia School of Technolo­gy, Box 1847, Georgia Tech, Atlanta, Georgia.

Lambda- University of Georgia, 599 Prince Avenue, Athens, Georgia.

Mu-Duke University, Box 4682, Duke St., Durham, N. C.

Xi-Roanoke College, Box 374, Sa­lem, Va.

Ames, Iowa, secretary-James R. Sage, Reg­istTar, Iowa State College, Ames, Iowa.

Atlanta, Ga., secretary-Allen Morris, 191 Huntington Rd., Atlanta, Ga.

Birmingham, Ala., secretary-Henry Smith, 820 N. 31st St., Birmingham, Ala.

Charleston, S. C., secretary-unassigned Charlotte, N. C., •ecretary-Ernest S. Delan­

ey, 621 Louise Street, Charlotte, N. C. Chattanooga, Tenn., secretary - Scott N .

Brown, 106-107 West Eighth Street, Chatta­nooga, Tenn.

Chicago, Ill., secretary-Richard H. Becker, 4924 Grace Street, Chicago 49, Ill.

Columbia, S. C., secretary-W. Bernie Jones, Jr., 1910 Green St., Columbia, S. C.

Columbus-Ft. Benning, Ga., secretary-Hol­comb M. Verdery, RFD Rogers Dr., Colum- . bus, Ga.

30

DIRECTORY FRATERNITY

Founded 1904, College of Charleston

Incorporated 1907, Laws of South Carolina

NATIONAL TREASURER - Howard D. Leake, 314 Edgewood Blvd., Birm­ingham 9, Ala.

NATIONAL SECRETARY-J. Al Head, 255 Vista Ave., Salem, Ore.

NATIONAL HISTORIAN-John W. Deim­ler, 335 Righters Ferry Rd., Bala­Cynwyd, Penna.

NATIONAL CHANCELLOR- Theron A. Houser, St. Matthews, S. C.

Undergraduate Chapters

Omicron- University of Alabama, 804 Hackberry Lane, Tuscaloosa, Ala.

Rho-Washington & Lee, 201 Wash­ington St., Lexington, Va.

Sigma-University of S. C., Ten. 7, Univ. of S. C., Columbia, S. C.

Tau-N. C. State College, 407 Horne Street, Raleigh, North Caro­lina.

Upsilon-University of Ill., c/o Richard H. Motz, Sec., 309 E. Spring­field, Champaign, Ill.

Chi-Stetson University, Deland, Fla.

Omega- Purdue University, 330 N. Grant St., West Lafayette, Ind.

Alpha Delta-University of Wash­ington, 4743 17th St., N. E., Seattle, Washington.

Alpha Epsilon-University of Flor­ida, 1469 W. University Ave., Gaines­ville, Fla.

Alpha Zeta-Oregon State College, 2111 Harrison St., Corvallis, Ore.

Alumni Chapters

Cleveland, Ohio, secretary-unassigned. Detroit, Mich.- Mil!ord M. Morse, 9886 Pryor

Street, Detroit 14, Michigan. Florence, S. C., secretary-una•sig ned Greenville, S. C., secretary-unassigned Ithaca, N. Y., secretary-unassigned Jacksonville, Fla., secretary-unassigned Knoxville, Tenn., secretary-unnssigned Lansing- East Lansing, Michigan. secretary-

Loren C. Ferley, 611 Carey Street, Lansing 16, Michigan.

Leesburg, Fla., secretary-unassign~u Lehigh Valley, Pa., secretary-unassigned Miami, Fla., secretary-William A. Papy, III,

816 Viscaya Ave., Coral Gables 84, Fla. Montgomery, Ala.-Lowell J. Black, sec., 13

Japan Ave., Montgomery, Ala. New York, N. Y., secretary-Arthur Seubert,

639 Bronx River Rd., Yonkers 4, N. Y .

Central Office

W. Bernard Jones, Jr., EXECV~r SECRETARY-33 Virginia BuiJdii Richmond 19, Va.

Robert W. Morse, TRAVELING COIP SELOR-9385 Pryor Street, Dett( 14, Mich.

Richard L. Young, Editor, THE S11 AND LAMP, 2021 Ashland Aven

Charlotte, N. C.

Alpha Eta -Howard College, Bit! ingham, Alabama.

Alpha Theta- Michigan State} lege, Box 568, East Lansing, 1"1'

Alpha Iota-Alabama Polytech~ Institute, 255 S. College St., AubU Ala.

Alpha Mu-Pennsylvania S t ll 1

College, State College, Penna.

Alpha Xi- Brooldyn Polytecht Institute, 33 Sidney Place, Broold~ 2, N.Y.

Alpha Omicron-Iowa State D lege, 407 Welch Ave., Ames, IoWil·

Alpha Sigma-University of T~[ 1541 W. Cumberland Ave., KnoJC'I'I Tenn.

Alpha Tau-Renssalaer Pol~et nic Institute, 4 Park Place, 'fl' N.Y.

Alpha Upsilon-Drexel Institute Technology, 3405 Powelton Ave., pb adelphia, Penna.

Alpha Phi - Illinois Institut~ r Technology, 3220 S. Michigan r>

Chicago, Ill.

Philadelphia, Pa., secretary-G. W. Thor!IP~ 106 Bryn Mawr Ave., Lansdowne, Pll·

Pittsburgh, Pa., secretary-unassigned btl Portland, Oregon, secretary-W. Ross Rd 0

47 N. E . Forty-seventh Street, Portlan • Raleigh, N. C., secretary-unassigned ~ Roanoke, Va., secretary-William Criegle~

Day Avenue, S. W., c/o Mrs. H. N. Roanoke, Virginia. rt'

San Francisco, Cali!., secretary-Fred .f 11. 311 El Toyonal Avenue, Orinda, Cnl!,~JI

Seattle, Wash., secretary-John M. "' 6742 35th N. E., Seattle, Wash. V

St. Matthews, S. C., secretary-John L. ' P side, St. Matthews, S. C.

St. Louis, Mo .. secretary-unassigned. !II' Washington , D. C., •ecretary-Lamar L· 1

daugh, 616 Arlington Village, Arlington•

THE STAR AND LAM <

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, 'J'er ·ox vii

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"I HAD NO IDEA that there was so much hand work entering into the making of our insignia!" are the first words from fraternity officials and other visitors after a tour of the BAL­FOUR plant.

This skill, borne out of long experience in fine craftsmanship here in the heart of the jewelry industry, together with the large BALFOUR production facili­ties, MEANS that you may take addi­tional pride in the wearing of your BALFOUR made insignia.

While insignia is our primary concern, your needs in ldndred lines are also pro­vided for in our other factories.

Extensive additions have been made in our AWARDS facilities, PAPER PRODUCTS and LEATHER factor ies.

A force of over 1000 employees is en­gaged in the manufacture of these things for your greater enjoyment. Some of this merchandise is Jisted at the right.

It is our sincere desire to serve you to your complete satisfaction.

OFFICIAL JEWELER TO PI KAPPA PHI

HANDS Endowed with

SKI L Insure the high quality

of Balfour Products

* BALFOUR

MERCHANDISE

INSIGNIA-Badges, guard pins, recognitions, keys, charms.

AWARDS- Plaques, cups, trophies, bronze memorials, hollow ware.

GIFTS - Rings, charms, bracelets, lapel pins, com­pacts, cowhide billfolds, leather cigarette cases, ear­rings.

SCROLLS-and testimon­ials hand illuminated.

STATIONERY - place cards, invitations, member­ship certificates.

PARTY REQUIREMENTS -Unusual dance programs, clever party favors.

Write for catalog

* SPECIAL SERVICE FOR NEW ORGANIZATIONS

Write for your copy of the 1947 edition

BALFOUR BLUE BOOK

Mailed in U.S.A. only* • Our catalog is on display at nil BIRKS stores in CANADA.

L. G. B~L\LFOUR £0MPANY · )I Factories - Attleboro, Massachusetts, U.S.A. L· 1 to"· *IN CANADA - Contact your nearest BIRKS store AM OF PJ KAPPA PHI 31

Rebuilding?

Expansion?

It depends on YOU! Pi Kappa Phi not only desires to keep its enviable place in the fraternity world, but it also needs to strengthen its position. The development of post-war plans toward these ends requires the interest and support of alumni everywhere. You can help by using the blank at the bottom of this page to forward your contribution to the VOLUNTARY DUES fund.

Use This Handy

Form Today!

To: Pi Kappa Phi Fraternity,

33 Virginia Bldg.,

Richmond 19, Va.

Date ................................... ..

Enclosed find my check in the amount of $ ................................. .. .. ..... .... ..

representing my VOLUNTARY DUES for 1947.

Chapter ........................................................ Name ........ ..

Address .... ......................... .................................................................................................... .. .......... .......... .

CONTRIBUTORS Contributors to the VOLUNTAR).

DUES FUND since the February iS' sue of the STAR AND LAMP ba"1

brought the total receipts to date tO

$2,83 7 .35. Their names appear be: low. Join them and help make 1'' Kappa Phi a "bigger and better fra· ternity."

Herbert S. Boring Xi

Scott N. Brown Epsilon

J. Louis Buchanan Alpha Alpha

Clyde Cinnamond Xi

Estill E. Ezell Iota

George C. Griffin Iota

Albert W. Meisel Alpha Xi

Andrew T. Pensa Alpha Xi

F. H. Standifer Lambda

R. E. Thomas Tau

E. W. Trogden Alpha Eta

__./

AR). ry js· havf te tO

r be· .e pi · fra·

ph a

:a

Buy Ehco Badges For Quality And Satisfaction

OF'FiCJAL. REC,

Order Your Badge from the Following List

Miniature Plain Border, 10 Karat ·----- - ---"Plain Border, 14 Karat _______ ------· --· $ 4.00

FULL CROWN SET BORDER Pearls ----· ------------------$ Pearls, 4 Garnet Points-------------------Pearls, 4 Ruby or Sapphire Points _______ _ Pearls, 4 Emerald Points-------------· __ Pearls, 2 Diamond Points ------------· _ Pearls, 4 Diamond Points ___ _____ _ _ Pearl and Ruby or Sapphire Alternating __ Pearl and Diamond Alternating----­Diamond Border ---------------------· __

GUARD PINS

Crest ---· - ----------------------- $2.75

12.50 13.60 15.00 19.00 32.60 62.60 17.76 92.60

172.50

Single Letter

~~~le -p-;,~rl--=======· -~=~==~=======-=--== $ ~:~g ALUMNI CHARMS

Standard $ 4.60

5.60

$ 16.50 17.60 20.00 24.00 42.00 67.60 26.60

144.00 271.50

Double Letter

$ 3.60 10.00

Single Faced, 10 Karnt ---------------- ----·--··- $ 4.50 Double Faced, 10 Karat ------------------------- 7.00

RECOGNITION BUTTONS Crest _ -----··-----------------··--------· ______ _ Official ---- ·-------- --------- ---------- ---··-Monogram, Plain, Gold Filled __ ---------··------­Monogram, Enameled, 10 Karat_______ ---------

Pledge Button ------· ·--------· _____ _

All Prices Subject to 20% Federal Tax Mention Chapter or College When Ordering

$ 1.00 1.00 1.26 2.25

.76

A Pi Kappa Phi Favorite Ring by Ehco

800 10K Yellow Gold, Heavy Signet---------------------$21.76 Plus 20% Federal Tax

Write for Your Free Copy of Our

1947 BOOK OF TREASURES FINE FRATERNITY RINGS

COAT OF ARMS JEWELRY AND NOVELTIES

EDWARDS, HALDEMAN AND COMPANY 1249 Griswold Street - -----~~~ards,_ Haldeman & Co. D 9 Grrswold Street etroit 26, Michigan

Send f ree copy of the 8001< OF TREASURES to

Official Jewelers to Pi Kappa Phi Detroit 26, Michigan

Pi Kappa Phi Name ____________________________________________________ _

Street ____________________________________________________ _

CitY------------------------------------------------------·

FraternitY------------------------------- -------------------

1904

PI KAPPA PHI

ALUMNI QUESTIONNAIRE

If you have changed your address since you received the last issue of the STAR AND LAMP, kindly fill in this questionnaire and return to Central Office, 33 Virginia Bldg., Richmond, 19, Va.

Name------------------------------------------------- Chapter __________ Year _____ _

Home Address -------------------------------------------------------D IC.:::fl~n~f a~d~t;.~)ed

Occupation -------------------------------------------------------------------------<Please include title or rank)

Business Address _____________ ----- _ ---- _ -- __________________________ D t Ch•~1~ if r>drdeferrled mm 1ng a ress

Date of marriage ________________________ Wife's maiden name _________________________ _

Children __________________________________________________________________________ _ (Include names and dates of birth)

Name and Address of someone who will always know your address-----------------------------------------------------

Postmaster:

Return and forwarding postage are guaranteed by the Pi Kappa Phi Fraternity, 33 Virgin•

Bldg., Richmond, 19, Va. If returned please check reason: D Removed-left no address: D claimed: D No such number: D Not found: D Refused: D (Other-explain)-----------------

If forwarded please send report on P.O. Form 3578-S or

acor~ of s. A. E . , Sheri Jan Road,

•ston, Ill..


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