sp emerald vol 76 no 2 - enivation · ross followed his grandfather's advice and ......
TRANSCRIPT
.. ...
"· .,
It's Not A Game. I
Peers Award EMERALD "Tbe Critics Choice"
At the 1989 College Fraternities Ed.itors. Association Conference in Cincinnati , OhiO. ''THE EMERALD" received the CFEA's Critics Choice Award. The editors choose the magazine cover they believe to be theBes~ of the Year in our industry. This was the 1st maJor award the magazine has ever received at the annual meeting.
The EMERALD also received 2 honorable mention awards " Feature Article Layout" and " Innovative Handling of Routine Materials:·
The content and layout of the EMERALD will continue to improve with contibutions from the alumni as well as undergraduate chapters .
Mantua. ON-Geoffrey Stamm (Gamma , Ohio State , ' 67) , a
freelance poet and songwriter, would like to dedicate one of his poems. " The Long Black Wall ", to all the men and women who served in Vietnam and to the ones who didn 't come back.
THE. LONG BLACK WALL
Some went down in a fire{ight Some were ambushed in the middle of the night
Bravely they answered their nation 's call These are the men on the long black wall.
They were at Khe Sahn. Da Nang, and Pleiku They {ought the battles {or me and you
They sacrificed the ultimate. they gave their all These are the men on the long black wa ll .
They were sent to a {ar·off land 1b die for reasons they didn 't understand
These Innocent lambs were slaughtered all These are the men on the long black wall.
Their bodies came back in boxes of pine They were the victims of the time
They beg us not to forget. {rom their grave they call These re the men on the long black wall .
They cry out for sanity, {or no more u'l)ust war They silen tly plead for killing no more
They pray for p eace at th lr final roll all The e are the men on I he long bl ck wa ll .
© 1986 Oe {frey tamm
Louisville. KY-Thank you very much {or my Golden Cross Award
and 50 year pin ..... 1 {ee l fortunate that my fraternity cared enough to remember me on my "fiftieth ".
Someone asked Bernard Baruch. Roseuelt 's famous economist how big business was built? He replied, "Big Business is built by people that care and destroyed by people that don 't care." . . .
That goes {or business. unwers1t1es. governments, and fraternities.
Macon M. Dalton (Rho)
South Africa-Thank you very much for the lapel pin and the very
attractive certificate . .... Since I've been living in Africa I haven 't had much contact with the fraternity. but I do appreciate receiving the EMERALD.
As a result o{my name being mentioned in the mag a· zine. 1 got a letter {rom an old Psi pal. Bill Shealy in Do· than, Alabama ......
John Kernan (Psi)
Bridgewater. MA-On behalf of E.ta-E.ta Chapter. I would like to extend
my thanks {or your presence at our Initiation and Or· chid Ball. Your Fraterna l knowledge will be well con id· ered in the continuous expansion of our chapter. I be· lieue our initiation was extremely unique {or many reasons. one being the quality people who were able to attend. April 15th wi ll a lways have a special place in my heart. it was well worth the wait. I sincerely hope you wi ll continue to stay in touch with our BROTHERHOOD and continue to share your ideas of how to maintain a respectable Brotherhood.
Scott F. Murray
Magnolia. AR-There are no words I could use to express what being
Sigma Pi Sweetheart has meant to me. This honor has done more for me than I will ever be able to do {or Sigma Pi as a whole. Not only has it broadened my horizon. but it has brought me so many new and dear friends. Each of you at Shadow wood are special to me in a dif· {erent way. Thank you {or allowing me to become a part of Sigma Pi International Fraternity. All of you are in· uited to Magno lia for a visit any time you can make it! Please keep in touch! Hope you all have a wonderful and successful year.
Leann Rogers
Carrboro. NC-Thank you for your letter of congratula tion upon
my winning a Lloyd G. Balfour F'ellow hlp {rom the N.I.F. .
J hn R b rt 1 bl I
Volume 76 Number 2 Published continuously since 1911
Kevin J. Darst Editor
E. Andrew Morris Assistant Editor
Louis Foley Editor Emeritus
EXECUTIVE OFFICE STAFF
Executive Director E. Andrew Morris
Epsilon-Beta / Gamma-Upsilon '70 Director of Program Development
Kevin J. O'Rourke Gamma-Pi '85
Director of Expansion Jeffrey M. Crook
Beta '88 Director of Chapter Services
Louis F. Hurrle, Jr. Epsilon-Tau '88
Chapter Consultants Donald A. Cronk
Epsilon-Omicron '89
Richard Dornberger Zeta-Omega '89 Paul M. Dudley
Kappa '89 Brian E. Reynolds
Epsilon-Nu '89
Business Manager Martha Dobos
Grand Chapter Bookkeeper & Membership Records Clerk
Margie McCormack Grand Chapter & Alumni Services Secretary
Nadine Mills
Chapter Services Secretary Jeanne Leppert
Receptionist & Shipping Clerk Joyce Thacker
When making an address change, send full name and chapter with both the old and new addresses to the Executive Office.
The Emerald of Sigma Pi is a quarterly journal published by Sigma Pi Fraternity, International Inc .. P.O. Box 1897, Vincennes, Indiana 47591. The magazine is published by KDEE Inc .. a Graphic Design Company, Louisville, Kentucky.
Third class postage is paid at Vincennes, Indiana, and at additional mailing offices.
JESSE JAMES GOES ON TRIAL 1
ALUMNI FEATURES 5
GOLDEN CROSS AWARD 19
ALUMNI NEWS 21
EDUCATIONAL FUND 24
ADYTUM ON fi/Gtl 50
Book !Jy judge james R. Ross
A painting called " Disaster at Northfield", depicting a James Gang robbery, adorns the chambers of Orange County Superior Court Judge, James R. Ross, descendant of Jesse James.
Judge Ross, a graduate of U.C.L.A. and a 1947 initiate of Upsilon Chapter of Sigma Pi Fraternity, is still seeking justice for his great-granddad, Jesse James.
Since he was shot in the back of the head and killed in 1882 at his home in St. Joseph, Missouri, Jesse James has been portrayed as an American Robin Hood, a vicious murderer and a Civil War guerrilla fighter.
Jesse James is the subject of Ross' new book, " 1, Jesse James", which he believes tells the truth that has been ignored in numerous movies and other books about Jesse, his brother Frank and the rest of the bank robbing, gun-slinging, hard-riding James-Younger gang.
" There have been all kinds of movies. In one, Jesse James ended up marrying Frankenstein 's widow; ' Ross said, shaking his head.
Such misrepresentations have irked three generations of Ross' family, beginning with his grandfather. Jesse James, Jr. , Jesse James' only son.
" He used to get very frustrated with the dime novels and all of the stuff that was untrue;' Ross said.
His mother, Josephine James Ross, had hoped to set the record straight by writing an account of her grandfather's exploits, which she sold to Twentieth Century Fox. It became the basis for the 19.38 movie "Jesse James", starring Tyronne Power, Henry Fonda, Randolph Scott and John Canadine.
The New York Times called it " an authentic American panorama", Ross calls it hogwash.
Worse yet, he said, was a recent TV movie, " The Last Days of Jesse James", with Kris Kristofferson and Johnny Cash .
" They talk about Jesse as a womanizer:· said Ross, 6.3, of Fullerton. " That's so far from the truth. He had one wife. He had kids. He was well respected when he was going under the name of Howard in Kansas City. There was just nothing like that in either Jesse or Frank 's backgrounds:'
Ross finds little irony in the fact that he sits on the bench while his famous relative had a $5,000 reward on his head when he was killed at the age of .34. One historian estimates the gang was responsible for .32 deaths while robbing nine banks, eight trains and four stagecoaches.
" I've had a lot of kidding about it, but no one has ever held it against me;' he said.
In fact, his grandfather, Jesse James, Jr., was an attorney who practiced in Kansas City, Missouri, before moving his family to California in L926.
-- - --- ~\ .• ."'\ . -!
..... _.. ......_..... -
The Bank at liberl)• Missouri, site of lsi dayligbt bank robbery
" He was a criminal defense lawyer. I kidded him when I was younger by saying, 'With the name Jesse James, Jr., you didn ' t have any problem getting clients: He would just smile;· Ross said .
" But he did not want me to go into criminal law. He said you get into that bad element. It's good to stay away from it:'
Ross followed his grandfather's advice and practiced civil law in Los Angeles for 29 years before he was appointed to the bench.
He began his book seven years ago, on the lOOth anniversary of his great-grandfather's death.
He relied heavily on three family source.: stories told by hi grandfather; .remnants of h~s mother's manuscript, and a diary kept by h1s " Uncle" Billy Judson, who rode with the James gang and willed his notes to Ross' mother upon his death in 19.36.
Written as a first-person " biographical novel;' his tale begins: " My name is Jesse ~oods.on James. 1 grew up in Clay. Co~nty, M•s~o.un . I spent my formative years f1ghtmg the CIVIl War on the side of the South. As far as I was concerned, the Civil War never ended. I started out robbing banks to get back at the Northern carpet-baggers who were not content with having won the war, they wanted to rub the Southerners' noses in the dirt:·
" Hopefully, it will be recognized as the tru.e story;· Ross said. " I believe it is. I've rechecked 1t and rechecked it. I know everybody who was really there and their right names. I know as much about them as anyone. I haven' t left any· thing out:·
" I don ' t think I've romanticized the tale. I hope to have done a job that gives feeling and person· ality to the people without romanticizing:'
Ross· publisher, Dragon Press of Thousand Oaks, California, has printed 10,000 copies of the book, and the first-time author is optimistic the book will sell well, citing the public's contin· uing fascination with the James legend.
Brother Ross agrees that the Jameses' notoriety was largely due to newspaper stories written by John Newman Edwards, a former Confederate officer who was sympathetic to the former rebel soldiers.
Orange County is home to the sole surviving members of the notorious James family. Jesse James' granddaughter Ethel Rose lives in Hun· tington Beach . She's writing her own book on the outlaw.
Judge Ross appeared recently on the NBC To· day Show and was interviewed by Jane Pauley. She asked him, if Jesse James were to come be· fore him in his court today, what verdict would he indict for his crimes. Brother Ross looked at her and said, " I was afraid you might ask that. I would probably have to give him life in prison or the electric chair:'
James R. Ross has been a very active alumnus in Sigma Pi. He was instrumental in the local fraternity at Drexel University by helping them to become the Beta-Theta Chapter. He also helped colonize the brothers at the University of California- Santa Barbara (A lpha-Omicron), and has served as a Province Archon for California. This past spring he was on the installation team that initiated our 172nd chapter at California State University-Dominguez Hills into the Fraternity.
Colt pislol, property of jesse W james.
Tbejamesfann and bouse u•berejesse james wasfaUilly sbot.
Are those guys Goose and Maverick? No, even better, they're Major Chris Mears (GammaLambda, Wisonsin-Stevens Point '70) and Major Bob Shaw (Eta, Purdue, '69) who, unlike Tom Cruise, are real fighter pilots. Chris (" Bear" ) and Bob ("Mouse" ) are squadron mates at the 89th Tactical Fighter Squadron , USAF Reserves, based at Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio, flying F-40 Phantom II supersonic fighters . They were recently deployed to NAS Miramar, the home of TOPGUN, to act as adversaries for Navy and Marine fighter aircrews. (Kind of like " Viper" in the movie.)
Bob is a former Navy fighter pilot of seventeen years and a graduate of the TOPGUN program. About three years ago, Bob and his family moved to Dayton, Ohio, to continue his flying, this time with the Air Force Reserves. He currently runs his own consulting compan , " Fighter Command International", pro iding the defense community withe pert service in air combat tactics development and training. Bob has accumulated over 4,000 hour n ing fighters (F-4s, F·l4s, A·4s) and is the auth r f popular book on air combat (Fighter Comb t : Tactics and Maneuvering) th t i n \ b used as a referenc b all U. . rm d ~ r many allied nations. H i ond book dealing ith th tic nd t hn I
7
0
No sporting event is complete without a golden voice ringing through the public address system. Whether it's an action packed Team USA Volleyball match against the USSR in the Los Angeles Forum or a hot-air balloon festival in Pa lm Springs. public address announcers combine facts. fun and fan manipulation into an electric edge that keeps crowds educated, excited and under control.
You may not notice the man at the microphone, but he's got one eye on you, the other on the action and answers for everyone from the sponsor to the film crew. Take equal measures of cheer leader. newscaster, researcher and fan , stir well , add an extensive education in marketing, promoting and management and bake well. Garnish with a sprinkle of the little boy that lurks in all men and top with a generous dollop of a powerful. express ive voice. What you have when you 're finished is the new rising star of event announcing: the irrepressible, Sam Lagana.
" An announcer's job is to develop and channel energy," says Lagana. " I have to educate and energize whi le keeping the crowd under control and provide information for both the first time fan as we ll as season-ticket holders. When there is an unexpected delay in the action. a strange turn of events or a heatedly debated referees' call , the art of instant improvisation comes to the force . At the same time you never steal the spotlight. the fan shou ld remember the game, not the announcer. While hopefully my performance wi ll come across smooth, in reality, it's just organized mayhem :·
Organized mayhem also describes Lagana's breakneck schedu le which he cheerfully admits is " sheer hecticity" . While many announcers are happy to stay at one venue. this nonstop 27-year old lives by the credo: have voice will travel. A g lance at his June-July calendar shows Sam in twenty cities. talking up eight different events. Every two weeks he's lucky to get to spend a day at home doing his laundry.
For every afternoon of announcing a sporting event he's familiar with , Lagana spends 5-10 hours researching. whil new vents can take 20-40 hour of newsclips, interviews, library cubicl and noppy discs.
Lagana ha b en involv din a non top str am of proj t v r ince he wa in high chool. Aft r hi fath r di d in 1973, m k pt him elf bu y nd fill d th void by workin on program
t h I. oil
o rdln t r
aspect of the project. from advertising and announcing to promotions and marketing.
While at Loyola Marymount University pursuing a double major in both Management and a self designed major: Administration/Marketing/ Promotions. he became involved in announcing for the Loyola volleyball team as well as events for the Epsilon-Sigma Chapter of Sigma Pi. earning the title Most Inspirational Student for two years running. At the same time he worked in marketing for an audiovisual telecommunications company.
In March of 1986, Lagana was helping to organize and promote the NCAA Volleyball Western Regionals . From behind the microphone he moved into promoting a variety of projects for a long list of clients. including the U.S. National Volleyball team.
Lagana would like to pursue on the air possibilities. as well as announcing golf from the point of view of a layman, feeling that a lot of the lingua fraca that typical golf announcers utilize is utterly incomprehensible to the average fan.
Vince Scully, Dick Enberg and Jim Lampley are Lagana 's three favorite announcers. " Scully is great because his approach is so realistic and down to earth;' said Sam. " He entertains and gives you all the facts while pointing the perfect visual picture. I admire Enberg because of the tremendous energy he brings to the event. Lampley. I like for his journalistic approach :'
The Loyola Marymount Greek System does not have the traditional fraternity row with ivy covered homes with big white columns. But Sam Lagana considers himself fortunate to be a member of Epsilon-Sigma Chapter.
"Joining was a challenge since the chapter had a lot of different personas. Learning to cope with the individuals who were founding fathers and our pledge class was a unique experience;· he said. " Meeting brothers from different chapters, I actually think that we were fortunate to be at a small college. The fraternity was based on friendship. teamwork, and goal accomplishments rather than on a place to hang your hat:·
Sam stays in contact with many alumni since he lives near the campus . " I see my Little Brother. Joe Washington, on a regular basis and Chris Harrer:·
At the present time Lagana is working on the movie Side Out. due for release in the pring of 1990 by Tri Star Pictures. The mo ie will tar Thomas Howell, who played in oulman, Pet r Horton of the television s ri Thirty thing, and Kathy Ireland the 1989 port trated Cover Girl.
o th n t tim ev nt that t k pi c
June 23, 1989 began as a normal day in the Port of Providence. Shipping moved in and out of Narragansett Bay in Rhode Island without incident. The seas were calm with clear visibility.
A local lobsterman hauling his traps outside Narragansett Bay first noticed the tanker five miles away and it seemed to be on an unusual course at full steam. Being familiar with shipping patterns, he realized the danger and attempted to contact the tanker on the radio, but it went unanswered.
About the same time, the Northeast Pilot's boat was getting underway from Newport Harbor with the Pilot scheduled to meet the ship south of Brenton Tower. As the Pilot rounded Castle Hill Light, he saw his intended client in much closer range than it should have been and outside of the normal shipping channel. The Pilot radioed the vessel to inform the Captain that he was off course and to turn his ship hard towards port. The message was received, but too late.
The World Prodigy, a 560 foot Greek tank ship with 8.23 million gallons of heating oiL came hard aground.
Captain Eric J. Williams of the United States Coast Guard and an alumnus of Alpha-Theta Chapter at Beloit College took charge of the accident. Two hours after the World Prodigy had hit the reef, Captain Wil!iams and his crew determined the situation was well beyond control by the ships Captain. As the vessel representative would not assume responsibility the decision was made to Federalize and take immediate action to save the vessel and mitigate the environmental damage already done. A $50,000 ceiling was initially established for the Federal Project which would later be raised to $2, 750,000.00.
A spill trajectory was requested and clean up contractors were hired. The first of three booms was placed around the vesseL but oil was already washing on the shores of Rhode Island.
By June 24, the ship was completely encircled with the other booms and tank barges commenced pumping cargo off the World Prodigy.
With the Exxon Valdez fresh on everyone's mind, plans for such an incident were already being formulated. In minutes, Capt. Williams was on the scene and in less than three hours the vessel had been contained.
The disaster could have been much worse, but the quick work to federalize the cleanup efforts saved hundreds of miles of rich fishing grounds from devastating effects from the oil. The final cost for the three days work was nearly four million dollars.
Following Brother Williams college career, he graduated from the Coast Guard Officer Candidate School in Yorktown , Virginia. In the past twenty-three years he has had many and varied assignments. He served as a Deck Officer on the USCGC Plantree in Hawaii and Executive Officer on two successive 82-foot patrol boats in Vietnam. He also served on the staff of the Commander, Atlantic area and third coast guard district as Public Affairs Officer. After an intense training program, he was assigned to the Environmental Protection and Port Safety staff at the office of Marine Safety in Baltimore.
Recently, Eric was transferred to Providence, Rhode Island from his assignment as Deputy Group Commander and Alternate Captain of the Port of New York. Captain Williams has been decorated with the Coast Commendation medaL Navy Commendation Medal, two Coast Guard Achievement Medals, two Coast Guard medals, along with combat action and Vietnam service medals.
z c en z -:::.:: -I
i
To a casual v isi tor, Dr. Tolber t Wilkinson 's office looks more like a luxurious penthouse su ite, than a doctor 's offi ce.
Plush carpeting and exotic Egyp tian moti f wall paper decorate the office, while a crystal wine decanter is in arms reach in the m irrored waiting room . There's a full bar in the conference room and color TV to pass the time. A beauty salon offers hai r styling, skin care, facials, and manicures, while nearby a therapist works out with patients on a set of exerc ise equipment.
And , oh yes. there's a J acuzzi and sau na nearby.
Welcome to the Institute of Aesthet ic Plastic Surgery, which specializes in what Wilkinson describes as lowering the mountains and filling in the valleys that either heredity or age impose on the human body.
Many of his patients desire secrecy because there still is some social stigma to having plastic surgery purely for cosmetic reasons. Yet Wilkinson believes that tummy tucks, face lifts, breast augmentation or reduction and liposuction serve a useful purpose because they help boost a person 's self-confidence.
Helping people to feel better about themselves is one of the reasons Wilkinson went into plastic surgery. Another is that it allows him to be creative.
" I went through general surgery for five years;· said Wilkinson . " It was exciting. It was blood and guts surgery. It was life and death . But I enjoy building. Plastic surgery is artistry, happy patients. and you can be so creative. Operations that I've designed are now in the textbooks. In general surgery there are just so many ways to do this, so many ways to do that:·
Another aspect of his work that he enjoys is the high level of interaction with patients that is required for cosmetic surgery, he said. He loves the psychology involved with finding out what body part a patient wants to change, why they want to change it and what they expect the change to do for them.
To reach the level of success marked by the office decor or his shiny Ferrari parked downstairs, Wilkinson had to invest 16 years of his life in study and training.
After spending three years at Wake Forest University where he was initiated into the Alpha-Nu Chapter of Sigma Pi Fraternity, four years of medical school followed, one year in an internship, four years in general surgery residency, two years in study and residency in plastic surgery and two years as a plastiC surgeon in the Air Force, he earned his wings as a plastic surgeon.
When he left the Air Force in 1971, he accepted a position as chairman of the division of plastic surgery at the University. of ~exas Health Sci· ence Center" in San Antomo. Hts thought at the time, Wilkinson recalled, was, " Why not start at the top?"
But within a couple of years, he became disenchanted with academia and started his own pract ice in 1973.
Since then, he has built a successful .practice where he sees 15 to 20 patients a day and oper· ates four or five days a week.
Wil k inson freely admits the practice is lucrative, but he says that prices for cosmetic surgery in San Antonio are much cheaper than New York or Cali fornia.
Besides being a Sigma Pi. he is a member of Phi Beta Kappa and has addressed numerous medical forums around the world and written dozens o f scho larly articles on different surgical techn iques and ot her aspects of plastic surgery. Since 1977, Wilkinson also has served as editor o f t he Bulletin o f International Association of Clinical Plast ic Surgeons.
While dedicated to his profession and to the spread of medica l knowledge, Wilkinson enjoys his play t ime as much as his work.
His interest in horses is centered on polo; as a health professionaL player, promoter and horse breeder.
Dr. Wilkinson started outjumping horses, but after getting " banged up pretty badly" , he switched to polo, practicing and studying the sport for a year before taking to the field.
Over the years. he has developed into a proficient polo player. 'T m rated plus-1 now;· he says, " which puts me with about 90 percent of American players. The ratings go from minus-2 up to plus-10, though there are only five people in the world at that level :'
Dr. Wilkinson plays the spring and fall seasons in a sport he likens to " chess on horseback:' His teammates include movie star Tommy Lee Jones and polo star Tommy Wayman, the top ranked American player.
Developing safety standards and equipment for the sport was driven home to Wilkinson after being involved in an accident. " The horse fell at a full gallop after I had just hit a forehand shot and I went sailing through the air;' he says. " Ire· member getting up and going over to the canteen , and thinking it would be all right; then Irealized it was getting hard to breathe. 1 ended up in intensive care:·
Dr. Wilkinson has taught a special CPR cour e for polo mishaps, and he's currently working with manufacturers to develop a standardiz d black bag-type emergency kit for fir t aid in polo accidents. He's written e tensi 1 ab ut polo and recently held discussion ith a h mpagne company about sponsoring hi t
In addition to the enjo m nt f th m polo has had Its pro~ ional p ff th u h ~he referral h ' r I d . f hi p t1 nt m recent y r h b pi t lea tth knowp 1 pi
15
z
Bernie Boston has his lens focused on history-whether it's covering Egyptian President Anwar Sadat's funeral or creating the definitive image of the troubled 1960s.
As the Washington-based photographer for the Los Angeles Times and former photo director for the Washington Star, Boston has been on the scene for the events of our time.
" The decisions made in the nation's capital are historic and I'm covering the powers of the world ," he said. " As a photographer, Washington is the only place I would want to be:·
Yet. as a photographer he has traveled the world , from visiting the Soviet Union during the Nixon-Brezhnev years to covering the four living U.S. presidents at Sad at's funeral.
His best-known photograph, however, did not feature a world leader, but rather symbolized a decade. His " Flower Power" photograph-of a war protester placing a flower in a soldier's gun in a protest at the Pentagon-is still being reproduced today in books about the 1960s and the Vietnam War era.
" It ran on page 12 of the Washington Star:· he said. " It wasn 't until later that the photograph really took off and became widely known. At the time, all I thought was that it was a good picture:·
At Rochester Institute of Technology, Bernie N. Boston pledged the Beta -Phi Chapter of Sigma Pi in 1952. He studied photoscience, intending to concentrate on research and development. Boston did not originally intend to be a photojournalist. but the lure of travel and meeting people shut the door on the dark room.
He began working for the Pentagon doing secret aerial surveillance projects for the Air Force, then served in the Army before joining a custom color processing house. He later became a freelance photographer, joined the Dayton Dailey News in Ohio and ended up landing a job at the now-defunct Washington Star as director of photography. In those turbulent 1970s, as protesters converged on the capitaL he was teargassed and routinely carried a gas mask.
When the Star folded in 1981, he was invited to join the Los Angeles Times.
Boston has had the opportunity to know several presidents and other world leaders while working in Washington for a national newspaper. He remembers President Richard Nixon as being " obsessed with power" and sums up Gerald Ford as friendly. He likes Ronald Reagan as a person , and saves much of his critici m for Jimmy Carter.
" He was not that nice to photographers;· he recalls. " Carter's staff were masters at holding back the press and would yell at you to get into your pen. We called it the pig pen. But I recently went to Plains, Georgia, and Carter and I had a delightful time:·
Boston attributes many of his accomplishments behind the camera to his RIT education and what he learned about the tools of his trade.
" I know the materials and the equipment very well. 1 know what the chemistry does and what the lenses are capable of. I know the underlying aspects of my trade-and a lot of photographers don' t. A number of my colleagues ask me the technical questions;· he said.
In his decades as a news photographer, Boston has seen changes develop.
" There 's tighter security and more pushing and shoving, which I detest. We used to have more respect-now photographers are more like paparazzi ;' he says.
But his years in Washington have paid off. Because he is well-known, he gets access that may be denied to other photographers. He also may get the photographs others miss because he can match the faces with the names and the titles.
Unlike many photographers, Boston also believes in dressing in a suit and tie. 'Tm in the capital of the world and I don ' t believe you should walk into an office in jeans and a sweatshirt. I think you should blend in;· he said.
Bernie Boston 's outfits may blend in . His work will stand out.
14
15
Franklin B.W. Woodbury (MissouriRolla '64) is Province Archon for Virginia, which includes the chapter at the University of Virginia, James Madison University, Christopher Newport Col lege, and the Averett College Colony. Brother Woodbury is a Divisional Staff Engineer for Minerals and Materials Research for the United States Department of the Interior, Bureau of Mines. He is a member of the National Society of Professional Engineers in Virginia , Missouri. and the Minnesota Society of Professional Engineers. In 1979 he was named Minnesota Engineer of the Year. As an undergraduate at Alpha-Iota Chapter, he served as Rush Chairman and First Counselor.
Robert M. Montesano (Rochester Institute of Technology '82) is Province Archon for Northwestern Pennsylvania, Northwestern New York, and Ontario,
Bruce H. 1b11ey
Canada, which includes Cornell University, Rochester Institute of Technology, SUNY - Buffalo, Edinboro University of Pennsylvania, and University of Toronto. Brother Montesano is a Security Consultant in Buffalo, New York . He holds a degree in Criminal Justice from R.I.T .. As an undergraduate he served as chairman of rush, social , public relations, and fund raising for Beta-Phi Chapter.
Les L. Wright (Murray State '68) is Province Archon for Eastern Missouri chapters, which includes Central Missouri State University, University of Missouri-Columbia, and University of Miss ouri -Rolla . Broth e r Wright is a R glonal Sales Manager of Hertz orporatlon . H holds a degree in Bachelor of Art ('70) and Ba he lor of Fin Arts ('7 1) from Murray ta t Univ r lty. Le I a l o on oflh Founding Fath r ofG mm -Up lion h ap ter.
Christopher R. Brown (Rutgers '77) is Province Archon for New Jersey and Pennsylvania chapters. They include Temple University, Drexel University, Rutgers State University, Villanova University, Glassboro State College, and Monmouth College. Brother Brown is an Attorney for Brazin and Warshaw, in Hazlet. New Jersey. He holds a Bachelor of Arts degree from Rutgers ('81) and also a Political Science Juris Doctor degree from New York Law School ('85). Chris held the office of Steward ('79-'80) , Fourth Counselor (' 78-'79) , and Sage ('80- '81). He also represented Gamma-Eta Chapter at the 1980 Convocation.
Bruce A. Tolley (Murray State '82) is Province Archon for Southern Illinois. Westt rn Kentucky and Tennessee . Thes chapters include Southern Illinois niversity - Carbondale, Murray State :university, and the University of Tennessee- Martin. Brother Tolley is employed by Blue Cross/Blue Shield of Illinois of the Government Contract Division at the Marion Medicare Office as a Supervisor. He holds a degree in Communications from Murray State University. As an undergraduate he served as Sage and First Counselor.
Edward J. Panconi (Loyola Marymount ' 82) is Province Archon for Northern California and Nevada. His
Edward] Paconi Cbristopber R. Braum Franklin B. W. lftlodbury
Dean F. H()USer
Dean F. Houser (Ohio '70) is Province Archon for chapters located in Florida. They include Embry Riddle Aeronautical ~niversity -Daytona , University of Flonda, and Flonda State University. Brother Houser is a Member Service Representative of the Navy Orlando Federal Credit Union at the Naval Training Center in Orlando. He holds a degr~e in . Broadcasting from Vincennes Umvers1ty and Ohio Univ rsity (' 72). In the early seventi , D an wa in trumental in r op ning th Ep ilon h pter at Ohio Unlv r lty, whi h wa r _ chart r d In 197 6. A
raduat h rv d hapt r.
Les L. Wright Robert M. Mon/esiRIQ
• • •
a use
Hazing has no place in the fraternity experience.
It is a dangerous form of intimidation that make a mockery of the whole concept of fraternal love. It does not strengthen bonds of friendship. It does not demonstrate leadership. It doe not prove an individual 's superior qualifications in any way.
We, the men's general fraternities united in the National Interfraternity Conference, are dedicated and determined to deal with hazing.
We stand united in our affirmation of ba ic tandards of human behav ior.
We in till the principles of diligence, honor, integrity, virt ue, duty and respect for human di gnity.
Consider these facts :
• Ha:ing is a criminal act in more than 30 states yet during the past decade more than 40 students have died in ha:ing-related tragedies .
• College students continue to be crippled and injured every year by ill-conceived and illegal ha:ing in a variety of student organi:ations.
• Although ha:::ing has been actively discouraged by national fraternities for decades, highlypublici:ed, isolated incidents consistently diminish or destroy the value of worthwhile. positive and beneficial fraternity activities across the nation.
·ties ' •
This is what we're doing about it:
• Ha::ing- which fraternities define as any action or situation intended to produce mental or physical harassment , embarrassment or ridicule- is ABSOLUTELY FORB/ DDEN.
• Fraternities which recogni:::e that the best candidates for membership will neither support nor submit to hazing, have long attracted the best members and will continue to do so.
• We are developing new and inno1•ative ways to provide positive membership education to our members - not just education for new members, but ongoing personal development programs for members throughout their college career.
• Our educational programs, by ~-t hich we encourage sound moral precepts and the highest standards of constructive social responsibility, are designed to inspire respect for individuals and their personal worth as human beings; they emphasize the negative and degrading impact of hazing on the perpetrators and the group.
Violation of our standards leads to swift and certain sanctions: ranging from directives to probation to suspension to expulsioneven to revocation of charter and dissolution of chapter. We 're serious about hazing and we think you ought to know it.
There is no place in today's fraternities for those who think anyone should demonstrate hi s worthiness by suffering insult or injury. That's an attitude that now threatens the entire fraternity system. If you're interested in finding out how the leaders of tomorrow can experience the joy of mature relationships with respect for individual dignity then write to us at the Fraternity Executives Association, 3901 W. 86th St , Suite 390, Indianapoli s, IN 46268.
We ' re in the business of developing leaders with integrity: brotherhood is an essential ingredient.
America's Fraternities
"Developing Integrity In Leadership" © 1%'9
The Golden Cross Award is presented to Sigma Pi 's on their 50th anniversary of membership. If you were initiated before April 19.39, and haven 't received your Golden Cross Award , please contact the Executive Office.
*lost +deceased
Merit W. Kreher + James W. McCrea +
BELOIT COLLEGE
Elmer D. Barraclough + Joseph L. Bean Leslie P. Bunker Larry W. Burns ' Lyman S. Carpenter Robert Cleveland Lewis W. DeGraff Benson B. Fisher • Bayne E. Freeland • Guy M. Freeman + H. Hurst Gibson • John M. Griffith • John W. Kittell Norman C. Millett Laurence A. Raymer
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA· BERKELEY
WllllamO. Ball
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA· LOS ANGELES
Galen Fuller Bartmus Roy M. Billings + 0 . Stan ley Cerro Willi am M. rlckard
. Lane Donovan +
COLLEGE OF WILLIAM AND MARY
Cecil C. Abbott • Howard P. Anderson Charles W. Beville • Carrington S. Cockrell • Marshall B. Garth • Coulbourne H. Godfrey • Charlie H. Masters WalterS. Meadsday Peter J. Stone • Paul c. Taylor + H. Sanford Warren Augustus M. Winder
CORNELL UNIVERSITY
Frank C. Abbott Louis L. Baldwin + Irving Powell Brown • Raymond R. Critchlow Frederick R. Haverly ' Samuel F. Herrick Benjamin F. Kellogg Arsen Melkonian + PaulS. Morton ' Russell W. Munkenbeck Ronald A. Nye • Albert H. Oswald, Jr. ' Corles M. Perkins • Clifford A. Stanton, Jr. +
John Q. Kernan Charles L. Middlebrooks Charles M. Miller + Efroem J. Miller • Richard W. Olewiler * John E. Powell. Jr. + EariR. Reaves William P. Shealy L. Harden Webb
FRANKLIN llt MARSHALL COLLEGE
Rex M. Allyn Frank F. Burgess William G. Conrad RodericA. Dietz E. Eugene Eshleman, Jr. Charles H. Frey, Ill • George C. Fryburg Richard K. Honaman + J. Stephen Kurtz Edmund B. Lytle + William T. McKillip ' George E. Meagher • George L. Mirick • Richard J. Murfit James L. Robb • W. Lamar Steward • E. Coblentz Swank + H. Scott Young, Jr.
UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS
Eugene F. Blades • Danie l A . Cherskove • Marion E. Hebron Robert E. Henwood Randall R. McMillin Stanley W. Moore Elmer Allen Neely • John W. Sanders • Robert Slrotek
Stanley R. Slack Robert W. Stitt Robert D. Walker '
INDIANA UNIVERSITY
Louis J. Blanco F. Kuane Collinge + James F. Cox + Ralph A. Deetz Joseph E. Dukes Hugh B. Dunlop James W. Fischer ' William c. Fitzgibbon Dorrance W. Funk William R. Howard, Ill Lex H. Jordan + John E. King George A. Kirsch • Earl H. Mitchell , Jr. Robert R. Naugle + Robert L. Paulsen • James R. Phillippe
IOWA STATE UNIVERSITY
Albert J. Hanssen Wilbert M. Klett Walter E. Max Ivan C. Pedersen + Clarke J. Potter • Dean H. Schaffer
KENYON COLLEGE
George W. DeGraff Fred S. Henschel • Harold Jacobsen Robert H. King • James G. Lewis John A. MacLean • Joseph W. Rose Alexander B. Sharpe
LOUISIANA STATE UNIVERSITY
Bentley J. Blouin Leslie E. Dixon John H. Dore James D. Fahs • Meredith G. Heard James A. Lei the ad Robert J. Mertl • Fred Oster, Jr. Luther V. Smith •
MERCER UNIVERSITY
John Easter Minter, Jr.
MISSISSIPPI STATE UNIVERSITY
Carl A . Barrett • William H. Gann • Charles R. Googe • James T. Hale, Jr. • George F. Newman • Thomas A. Rodgers • Steve M. Short + Littleton Upshur, Jr. • C. A. Whittington, Jr. Edwin L. Wilkins •
UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI-ROLLA
NEW JERSEY INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
Ivan J. Amo, Jr. Robert E. Anderson Hugo C. Biertuempfel , Jr. A. Raymond Bird Frank A. Busse + William B. Cronise • Arthur L. Davis + Richard P. Ebersdach Henry G. Elwell , Jr. Lars E. Erickson Fred H. Fellows • James H. Floyd + Alfred C. Fritsch • Richard W. Garratt Francis G. Ginder Stuart C. Hand Frank l in H. Harris, Jr. William H. Hassall , Jr. William Hazell Robert F. Heinzerling Raymond E. Hodgkinson + John G. Kronseder • Robert G. Leonard Herbert T. Lotee John C. Lum Harry J. Mallon • William J. Melick Harvey W. Mumford, Jr. • Theodore Roosen Raad • Victor W. Rose + William H. Schoeller, Jr. Irving P. Scott Willis B. Townsend Robert W. VanHouten + Frank R. Welsh • William J. Workman
NORTH CAROLINA STATE UNIVERSITY
John J. Amero + Robert E. Baker • Nestor W. Coli • Macon M. Dalton Roland L. Gay + Charles N. Gross Robert M. Howard Walter M. Keller • Jack M. Knight • Willard J. LaMorte + Clanton J. Mcinnis + John L. Morgan, Jr. • J. Albert Rolston Frank H. Saunders • Ray W. Scarborough + J. Nelson Strawbridge Henry M. Taylor Edwin R. Todd Billy T. Vaughn Jack P. Williams + Charles N. Wright
OHIO NORTHERN UNIVERSITY
Paul W. Adam C. Robert Ash Dean G. Benedict • Nelson H. Bloom + Howard R. Lloyd • Archie R. Moore William J. Schnitzer, Jr. • Arthur W. Zeiher
OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY
George P. Hoostal + Howard I. Jones, Jr. William C. Leslie •
J. Richard Lloyd John B. McCoy • Norman 0 . Pierce Glen L. Shor ts Stanley B. Shuman James Delbert Smith Ralph G. Smith William DeKalb Tallevast Frank M. Wenger + Wade J. White +
OHIO UNIVERSITY
Francis T. Baldy • Paul A. Baldy • David Carr • Alexander Ellerman , Ill + Graydon C. Houck + Gordon R. Koons • Frank J. Kuncel Dalton C. Lamp + Richard 0 . Linke • Robert K. Morrison • Robert F. Pancoast Adrian F. Pilliod • Robert C. Price Robert J. Richenbacker • Max H. Robertson Samuel K. Robinson , Jr. • Max R. Sechr is t • H. Lowell Thomas JohnS. Todd • Max F. Wenger •
OREGON STATE UNIVERSITY
David C. Burwell Ernest John Kirsch + Norbert Ler Sieg Carwin A. Woolley Ray A. Yoder
PENN STATE UNIVERSITY
H. Franc is Keene James W. Kithen Walter M. Osborn L. Raymond Parks, Jr. David L. Powel John L. Price • Mark E. Sing ley RobertS. Stafford • Eugene T. Stil es
UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA
Frank Strassner Victor T. Wallder
PURDUE UNIVERSITY
Loring R. Alstadt Maurice H. Bradfield John E. Helmich Robert D. Hogue + Warren G. Klehfoth James A. Kutz • Samuel A. Noblet Donald C. Pippel Ralph Reath Richard P. Reul Clarence H. Robertson + George Saboff Clyde L. Stewart
ST. LAWRENCE UNIVERSITY
Leonard E. Baker, Jr. Elon L. Barber + George A. Cutting Richard M. Farney
Oliver A. Houston Herbert F. Mayne Howard R. Thomas + Theodore H. Vroom an •
TEMPLE UNIVERSITY
Charles E. Fields, Jr. Lawson H. Gotwols Robert E. Hess John A. Jackson William E. Johnson + Robert D. Mason Louis G. Milan • Charles F. Neuhaus Donald H. Schersten • William B. Schmidgall • Karl W. Thomason Harry K. Von Dreau +
TULANE UNIVERSITY
Arthur A. Calix Joseph V. Gregoratti • Elmo L. Jones • Francis J. Ory George L. Rogers •
UNIVERSITY OF UTAH
Frederi ck L. Bagby J. Richard Barnes Thomas E. Bauman Richard J. Brooks • Collins B. Cannon Frank C. Child W. Franklyn Compton Frederick M. Conely, Jr. Richard Crandall • William H. Dalebout • Harold J. Hargreaves • David W. Moore Lawrence P. Moz ley • W. Pace Richards • Sherwin G. Taylor •
WAKE FOREST UNIVERSITY
Clyde H. Coopedge, Jr. Byron L. Davis Willis S. Turner
20
21
A VINCENNES UNIVERSITY February 26, 1B97
Vincennes, IN - Joe W. Booher is a Real Estate Agent and Broker in Fort Wayne, Indiana for Charleston Bet· ter Homes and Gardens.
Brother John Davis has recently been promoted to Regional Manager for Terra International in the Tennessee and Kentucky area.
Ronald Martin graduated from the Culinary Institute of America and is now a Chef for Se lma Farm, a Union Pacific Corporation .
B INDIANA UNIVERSITY May .31. 1924
Bloomington , IN - Dr. William E. Brattain is the Assistant Vice President for Student Affairs at Western Illinois University. Brother Brattain is a lso the i 989 recipient of the Patsy Morley Outstanding Programmer Award, which honors an individual who exemplifies outstanding achievements in the field of campus ac· tivities advisement.
Franklin H. Smith has served as Mayor of the City of St. Joseph, Michigan for 17 years. Ne was also elected to the St. Joseph Athletic Nail of Fame in 19B9.
r OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY June 6 . 190B
Columbus, ON · Gregory Duche is Director of Phar· macy at the Mt. Carmel East Hospital and also President of Central Ohio Society of Hospital Pharmacists for 19B9-90. He now resides in Columbus, ON.
Ralph Spencer now operates Mulligan. Williams &: Company inc. , an advertising specialty distributing firm .
E OHIO UNIVERSITY May 7. 1910
Athens . ON - Richard Borgner is a Financial Consultant with Shearson Lehman Hutton .
z OHIO NORTHERN UNIVERSITY June 1 , 1912
Ada, ON - Michael Deminski has been a Pharmacy Manager since September 1987 for Grant Medical Cen· ter in Co lumbus. Ohio.
Errold Struble is retired at the age of 82. He was formerly the owner and operator of five Struble's Drug Stores in Ohio.
H PURDUE UNIVERSITY June 8 . 1912
West Lafayette . IN· James Demarest is an Associate Consultant with CSC partners in Chicago.
8 PENN STATE UNIVERSITY October 26, 1912
State College, PA · J. Curtis Mairs has been retired since 1970. Curtis remains active as a volunteer in AARP and other Senior Citizen organizations.
T UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA-BERKELEY MayS , 191.3
Berkeley. CA · Kevin S. Vineys received his M.A. in Journalism from the University of Michigan. Ann Ar· bor, in May 1989 and is currently working as a reporter for the Bay City (Michigan) T imes.
A KENYON COLLEGE May 1.3. 1916
Gambier, ON · Ed Forrest was promoted to dual posi· tlons of National Sa les Manager and Director of International Sa les as a result of exceptional performance In overseas trade.
M CORNELL UN IVERSITY May 18. 1917
Ithaca, NY · Timothy J. Henn is mark tlng Cap tool s for VLSJ Te hnology In San Jose, allfornia . Tim re· ently bought a house In Sunnyvale, all fornla . L . K . Mull er Is r tired and r si d es in Omaha ,
N braska.
N FRANKLIN Ill MARSHALL COLLEGE April27. 1918
Lancaster, PA · Robert K. Aichele is Vice President· Marketing for Keystone Cement Company in Bath, Pennsylvania.
George Long purchased Pakoil Co. in October of 1988. The company was established in 19S2, and he has been employed there since 1970. The Pakoil Co. is a Manufacturers Representative for seven companies and the primary products are m o lded plastics for the packaging industry.
Herman Weeks resides in Ramsey. New Jersey and is President of Facile Technologies. Inc ..
P NORTH CAROLINA STATE UNIVERSITY· RALEIGH
May 2B, 1921 Raleigh , NC · William Campbell is the new Vice Pres·
ident ofCogentrix Development Company. Inc.. Richard Schmidt is President of the Sigma Pi Alumni
Association- Rho Chapter.
T UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA-LOS ANGELES February 24, 192.3
Los Angeles. CA · Ned R. Ash retired from the Army as a Lt. Col. in 1969 with over 22 years of service. Ne earned his doctorate degree, taught. sold and was a consu ltant. Brother Ash resides near Mobile. Alabama and has twelve grandchi ldren and one great grandson.
Douglas Glantz is a Financial Analyst with Great Western Financial Services in California . Ne is a lso a Scholarship Chairman for the Upsilon Chapter Sigma Pi Alumni Association .
Willard Harriss published his second murder mys· tery, enti t led Timor Mortis .
Robert Lashbrook retired in January t989 from Rockwell Internationa l Corporation. Ne was with the company for .3.3 years. with his last position held as Vice President and Controller.
James Ross has authored a biographical novel on his great grandfather, "' I. Jesse James"' . Ne has pro· vided a copy to the Sigma Pi international Office for the library collection. Otherwise, Brother Ross says life as a Superior Court Judge just goes on.
Glen E. Smith retired in 1987 from AT&T after :n years in quality assurance.
Robert T. Wail is head Geologist with Hedrick Industries. He resides in Rockingham, North Carolina.
UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS May 21 , 1908
Champaign. IL · Fred Linn has retired for a second time as a Consulting Communications Engineer. Pre· viously he was Manager of Engineering at Singer and retired in 1980. His wife. Louise . is also retired as a School Psychologist and Educational Supervisor.
Larry Wolfson is currently employed as an Account Executive with Coca Cola , USA.
AUBURN UNIVERSITY February 26, 1926
Auburn . AL • Ambassador James Bullington is retiring from the U.S. State Department after 26 years of service and has accepted the position of Director of International Affairs for the City of Dallas. Texas .
Clarence Hornsby became President of the Technical Associatio n of the Pulp and Paper Industry at their 1989 Annu al meeting in New York.
David Shaffer is presenting Christian seminars to youth and co llege students worldwide . The last three years he has presented program seminars In 4S states and 19 countries. David says he loves his work.
AZ ST. LAWRENCE UNIVERSITY May 17 , 19.30
Canton, NY · Anthony Passaretti i Assistant ~l an· ager for the Kern wood Country lub in aiem, Massa· chusetts.
tephen K. Wallender rece lv d his Master in Bu I· ne Administra tion from th Univer It of Hou ton thi past May and ranked se ond in h i lass. Hi ife
andy al o gav birth to t h ir e ond hild, Kath rln L eon pt mb r 0 . 1988.
AI UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI-ROLLA April 29. 19.3.3
Rolla . MO - Randall Lubbert is now working for Southern Illinois University in Carbondale at the Coal Research Center in the Dragiine Training Program . He Is also working on a graduate degree in Mining Engi· neering when time permits.
Lawrence Tipton has moved back to St. Louis and is now working for Barnes Hospital as a Programmer / Analyst in the Clinical Applications Group of the M.i.S. Department.
Franklin Woodbury has just completed a term as President of the Virginia Society of Professional Engi · neers. Ne is now President-Elect in the American Soci· ety for Engineering Management. In his spare time he does a little visiting work for Sigma Pi.
AK LOUISIANA STATE UNIVERSITY May 24, 19.36
Baton Rouge. LA · William Austin is currently the Executive Officer for the S2nd Signal Battalion at U.S. European Command Headquarters in Stuttgert. Germany.
AM NEW JERSEY INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
November 26, 19.3B Newark. NJ · George Ehrhardt was a Graduate In·
structor in the History Department at Duke University during the Spring t 989 semester.
Mark Piotrowski has recently been appointed to Vice President-Operations for Pillsbury Bakery Products. Mark resides in Plymouth, Minnesota .
Fred Stober retired from Exxon Company, USA in November 1988. Ne is now employed as a Consulting Engineer licensed to practice in the State of New Jersey.
AN WAKE FOREST UNIVERSITY May 12. 1940
Winston-Salem. NC · Eric Blalock works at Bowm an Gray in Pharmaology I Physology. His duties are to train , collect data from. and surgical implant cats. His plans are to work for two years and t hen get his Ph. D. in Molecular Biology.
David Cobb recently finished serving a 17 month tour in South Korea and was selected for promotion to Captain in the Army. His next assignment is a fully funded graduate position in Bio Engineering at University of Pennsylvan ia. David would also like to let h is brothers know he was married on March 2, 1989 to 2-Lt. Yun Nui Yu from Ann Arbor. Michigan .
Robert M. Helm h as his B.A .. M.A. and Ph.D. Ne is currently Worrell Professor of Philosophy at Wake For· est University. Bro ther Helm has authored, co-authored and co-edited several books. His profile is listed in Who's Who in America .
John Humphrey fi n ished h is graduate degree in De· cember and now has his MBA from University of Texas· Dallas.
AO UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA· SANTA BARBARA
February 28, 194B Santa Barbara, CA • Donald N. Fredricksen just left
his post at the Pentagon as De put under Secretary of Defense. Ne is now a senior partner of Nicks&: A ocl· ates, Inc .. a consu lting firm t h at pro Ides ad Ice and counsel on defense related issues to clien t firm
All ARKANSAS STATE UNIVIlRSIT Marc h 7 , 1948
State University, AR · PaulK. Moore graduated from the University of r kansas College of Pharm "' lth B . . In Pharma In Ma 1989. Pauli urrentl Pre I· dent of the Kappa Psi Pharma eutl al Fraternity at the
o llege of Pharma
AP SOUTHWt;:ST MISSOURI STATE UNIVERSITY April 1. 1948
Spr.lngfield.' MO · Kenneth M. Burk was recently appomted D~rector, Sponsorships and Trademark Diversification for Brown and Williamson lnterna· tiona I. in Louisville. Kentucky.
John Moses was promoted to International Field Sales Manager for Storz Instrument Company.
Dorsey Troutman is a Regional Sales Manager for U.S. INTEC Corporation. They specialize in roofing rna· terials. Brother Troutman also reported he chaired an auction last October for Children 's Mercy Hospital and helped to raise $40.000.
AT UNIVERSITY OF RHODE ISLAND September 25. 1948
Kingston . Rl -James Callahan and Kimberly Anne Schroder exchanged their wedding vows on July 29, 1989. They reside in Ellington, Connecticut.
Eugene P. Kachele graduated from Stevens Institute of Technology in Hoboken, New Jersey. with a M.S. in Information Management.
Manuel J. Vales . IV resides in Swansea, Massachusetts and is President of M.J.V. Internatio nal. Ltd .. an investment and real estate firm .
A <I> UNIVERSITY Of GEORGIA October 24. 1948
Athens. GA - forest Raven is into his third year of retirement after 37 years of public school teaching. and enjoying It immensely.
frank Van Haltern recently retired as Colonel from the Corps of Engineers - USAR. He is now President of Product and Package Des ign.
SAN DIEGO STATE UNIVERSITY May 18, 1949
San Diego. CA · Robert W. Hauer received the third highest Department of Army Civi lian Award - " The Commanders Award for Civilian Service" in January of 1989.
Mike Kraft is still working for Exxon. After being transferred from Houston. he went on assignment to Germany and later to London. which he has been there since July 1987. He Is scheduled to stay there for one more year. Mike and his wife. Laura. have three chil· dren now.
Roberto M. Valencia graduated with a Finance Degree and is now selling Commercial Real Estate wi th Scher-Volt Commercial Brokerage Co .. Inc. in Orange County. Brother Valencia has also worked with companies such as Hertz . Ryder. Ladllaw and Econo-Lube &'Tune.
Br EASTERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY June 10. 1949
Charleston. IL - Craig Lange married Amy Weber in October 1988. He is employed by Caterpillar. Inc. in Peoria, Illinois. as an Engine Division Marketing Representative. His duties include product introductions and training to dealer sales and product support (parts and services) areas.
Steven Marek is an Insurance Agent for Country Companies Insurance and investment Group in Pinckineyvllle. Illinois.
James R. McCracken is returning to Austin to resume practicing law and to be President of Texas National Planning Corporation . a full -service financial planning firm.
Gary R. Shafer is Vice President of Harris Bank in Chicago. Illinois. They are a banker to the Futures. Options and Securities Industry in Chicago. New York City and St. Louis.
frank R. Sllvocka resides in Bayonne. New Jersey and retired as a Physical Education Teacher in January 1986.
Be DREXEL UNIVERSITY November 18, 1950
Philadelphia. PA - Alfred D. Calabria is currently Senior Vice President and Principal of Quigley and Associates. It is a general management consulting firm specializing in corporate and institutional strategy and marketing.
William Cattafesta is presently employed as an Electrical Engineer with the US Army at Boeing Helicopter Company in Ridley Park. Pennsylvania .
BA' LYCOMING COLLEGE May 23, 1953
Williamsport, PA - Albert Burba is a Sa les Representative for Donnelley Directory Yellow Pages. He resides in Phi ladelphia. Pennsylvania.
BM UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI September 2 7. 1953
University, MS · Walter A. Reagan is a Marketing Education Teacher / Coordinator for White Station High in Memphis. Tennessee. He is also a retired Lt. Col. USAR and father of six with five grandchildren. Brother Reagan also replied that he is single again , footloose and fancy free.
BO CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITYLONG BEACH
March 12, 1955 Long Beach, CA · Marc Edward Leever is a member
of Laguna Niguel Community Services District Board of Directors.
Tim Leslie has been elected to his second term in the Assembly of the Ca lifornia State Legislature. The Brothers at Sacramento State worked actively in the campaign. His son, Scott, was Pledge Master at Ca l Po ly and was initiated last year. Brother Leslie is now working on reactivating the Camellia City Alumni Club in Sacramento.
David Newberg will be getting married in earl y 1990. He also received his MBA· Finance from Long Beach State and changed job positions to Manager o f A&'R Administration at Warner Brothers Records.
BT VALPARAISO UNIVERSITY Aprll2 . 1960
Valparaiso. IN · Wilbur Hutchins has retired from the College of Business Faculty at Valparaiso Universi ty and is now selling real estate in Valparaiso and Porter County. Indiana.
BT SHIPPENSBURG UNIVERSITY Of PENNSYLVANIA April 23, 1960
Shippensburg. PA - Robert F. Rank I ex hanged wedding vows with Nancy Berardi of Youngstown. Ohio on August 19 , 1989. They will reside in the south suburbs of Pittsburgh.
Ted Wolicki is District Manager for American Bearing and Power Transmission. He resides in Mt. Airy. Maryland.
B<I> ROCHESTER INSTITUTE Of TECHNOLOGY May 14. 1960
Rochester. NY - James Randall Berndt has recently been promoted to Corporate Director of Catering for Hyat t Hote ls and Resorts . His responsibilities include overseeing the catering functions of all Hyatt Hotels throughout the United States.
BX LOYOLA UNIVERSITY-CHICAGO february 11, 1961
Chicago. JL - Brian Kuhn was commissio ned as 2nd Lieutenant in the United States Marine Corps in April o f 1969 after successfully completing Offi cer Candidates School. After completing training at Marine Corps Combat Development Command in Quantico, Virginia. he will go to Naval Air Station. Pensacola. Florida for flight training as a Marine Naval Aviator.
r A UNIVERSITY Of DETROIT May 4 , 1962
Detroit, Ml - Charles Benke has been promoted to Supervisor - Environmental Compliance of PetraChern Processing. Inc ..
John Dinka opened a dental practice with his wife Catherine in Sterling Heights. Michigan.
George Hakim was promoted to the position of Plant Engineering Manager at Modern Prototype Company in mid 1968.
James J. Williams became partner at the Law Firm of Monaghan. Campbell. La Prete . McDonald In Bloomfield Hills. Michigan . He Is also Director of University of Detroit Law School Alumni Association . and Director of Oakland-Livingston Legal Aid in Michigan .
rr CENTRAL MISSOURI STATE UNIVERSITY May 13, 1962
Warren sburg. MO ·Jerry Foulds is a Staff Industrial Engineer at Allied / Signal Aerospace Co. at the Kansas City Division. He res ides In Overland Park. Kan sas.
r ,6. SLIPPERY ROCK UNIVERSITY Of PENNSYLVANIA
December 2 , 1962 Slippery Rock, PA · Geoffrey Landry and his wife.
Barbara. would like to announce the birth of thei r first chi ld . Lauren Adrianne, born July 6. 1988.
rE FAIRMONT STATE COLLEGE November 12. 1963
Fairmont. WV ·After fo llowing a career in Rehabilitation Counseling with t he West Virginia Division of Rehabilitation Services for almost 22 years. Gale P. Bentz retired and began a new career as Executive Director of People's Hospice, Clarksburg. West Virginia, a home health care agency for termin ally ill people.
rH RUTGERS UNIVERSITY March 14. 1964
New Brunswick, NJ - Patrick Forker is a Technical Sa les Representative for Quantum Chemical USI Division. Adhesive and Specialty Polymers. He recen tly purchased a new home in Cranford . New Jersey.
Carl Soranno joined Network l Financial Secu rities in Red bank. New Jersey as Vice President of the firm .
re UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS January 9 , 1965
Arlington . TX · J. Klaslng was promoted to Manager o f Product Sa fety and Toxico logy for the Am oco Corporation in Chicago.
rN UNIVERSITY OF AKRON October 15, 1966
Akron . OH - Homer (Butch) Stine is Vice President of Lomas Mo rtgage USA located in Dallas. Texas.
UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI-COLUMBIA November 18 . 1967
Columbia , MO - James G. Hazel. Jr. is Chairman -Department of Radiology at Pemiscot County Hospital and President of Pemiscot County Medical Soc iety. Brother Haze l resides in Caruthersville, Missouri.
Lester C. Joern, Jr. is a member of University of Missour i Interco llegiate Athletic Committee. the Alumni Athletic Committee. President of Mizzou Quarterback Club, and served on the Search Committee to select the new athletic director and football coach for the University of Missouri.
Lt. Co l. Clinton Tennlll. Jr. was reass igned from HQ 2nd Armored Division to HQ Ill Corps. Ft. Hood. Texas last January. His son. Clint Ill. is a sophomore at the University o f Kansas, and his daughter. Christine is a freshman at Texas A&'M University.
r<I> UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN WHITEWATER May 18, 1968
Whitewater, WI - Jeff Butler is a Tax Manager of Coyle. Fanning and Co. in Deerfield. Illinois.
r'lr ST. LOUIS UNIVERSITY February 1 . 1969
St. Louis. MO - Ronald Lind has transferred to Houston . Texas to work at corporate offices as Area Manager - Product Trading and Supply for Coastal Refining and Marketing. Inc ..
,6.A CENTRAL MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY · February 16. 1969
Mt. Pleasant. Ml - William C. Smith is currently employed by Busicomp of Rochester. Michigan. He works as a business systems consultant. specializing in computers. accounting software and networks. Bill would also like to announce his efforts on " Sigma Pi Business Connection" . All interested Brothers should send their business card along with a return address and phone number to: Bill Smith. 1586 SHill Circle . Bloomfield. Ml46013 or call (313) 653-SSS7. The purpose is to provide networking and career opportunities for Sigma Pi alumni and graduates.
22
23
AI UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-PLATTEVILLE Aprilll, 1970
Platteville, WI- Gregory Addison is a Computer Programmer / Analyst for Madison Software, Inc ..
Eric Haas is presently a management trainee with DMC of Wisconsin (Direct Marketing Concepts) in a supervisory position over 120 te lemarketers.
.:lT INDIANA UNIVERSITY-SOUTH BEND May 16.1971
South Bend , IN - Roger Gingerich is an Accountant with Winn-Dixie Stores in Tampa, Florida.
EB UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY October 20, 197.3
Lexington, KY - Brent M. Damron has been working for Marriott Hote ls for four years now.
Randy Smallwood is a Sales Engineer for the Plastic Moldings Corporation in Cincinnati. Ohio.
COLUMBUS COLLEGE May .31, 197S
Columbus, GA - Paul A. Lee is currently employed with McKenney 's Mechanical Contractors In Atlanta. Georgia as a chemical sales manager.
EE EMPORIA STATE UNIVERSITY March 6. 1976
Emporia, KS - Michael Grillot Is going Into his second year of orthopedic surgery and residing In Wichita, Kansas.
Scott McGiassor is a law student at Washburn Law School in Topeka , Kansas.
Brian Weber is a tax specialist with Peat Marwlck Main and Company. He passed his CPA exam In November 1987.
EZ WESTERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY May 1. 1976
Macomb, IL - Thomas Bernth is a Field Marketing Manager in Chicago for E&J Gallo.
Daniel Swanson is a Manufacturing Systems Consultant for Cullinet Software Inc. and became President of the North Texas Chapter of APICS (American Production and Industry Control Society) in July 1989. There are 900 members in the Dallas area.
EI CA[JFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITYNORTHRIDGE
November 19, 1977 Northridge, CA - James Lane is a stockbroker with
Power Securities. Barry Mal ten is Vice President and General Manager
o fS.I.D.S. Air Conditioning and HeatingCompany, inc. and is a lso a Realtor in West Los Angeles. Brother Maiten recen tly celebrated his .30th birthday.
EM JAMES MADISON UNIVERSITY April 29, 197 8
Harrisonburg, VA- Matthew Chamberlin is a foreign exchange trader with Tudor Investment Corporation.
EN CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITYFULLERTON
December 10, 1978 Fullerton , CA - Christopher Baade has recently
moved to San Francisco and attending the University of San Francisco to obta in his MBA in Internationa l Business.
Steve L. Banks Is a senior in Medical School. David Brown moved to South Orange County. He had
a promotion with Columbia Savings and Loan and will be managing a new offlce in Mission VIejo.
Joseph Conway Is VIce President/ Resident Manager of Diversified Securities, Inc ., a stock brokerage firm . Brother Conway resides In Anaheim, California.
Edward Gogln, Jr. Is a Tax Manager for a progressive local CPA firm - Yoder Kushner and Company.
Larry Rovira Is engaged to former CSUF HomecomIng Queen and Little Sister, Theresa Kawase .
E z FAIRLEIGH-DICKINSON UNIVERSITY May 6 , 1979
Rutherford , NJ - Dr. Paul Lucha Is currently PGY IV Surgl a l Resld nt al Kennesy Memorial Hospital In N w Jers y. His wife. Roxann , Is expe tlng theirs cond hlld In January 1990. Broth r Lu ha Is a l o a Lt. In lh U.S. Navy I{ s rves.
E<P EMBRY RIDDLE AERONAUTICAL UNIVERSITY
February 25, 1984 Daytona Beach. fL - John McDonald Is working at
Warner Robins Air Force Base. Georgia, as an Aerospace Engineer.
EX UNIVERSITYOFSANDIEGO April 16, 198.3
San Diego, CA - Harold Tasker Is a Commercial Loan Offlcer of Weyerhaeuber Mortgage Company of San Francisco in the Income Property Division.
Z8 STATE UNIVERSITY NEW YORK-PLATTSBURGH
January 26, 198S Plattsburgh , NY - John West Is an alum of 198S and
President of the Alumni Association . " The future looks bright at Zeta-Theta Chapter! "
ZE NORTH CAROLINA WESLEYAN COLLEGE Aprils . 1986
Rocky Mount, NC - Joseph Brunetta is employed by Clariden Asset Management as a Portfolio Accountant In which he monitors Individual portfolio accounts and investment decisions.
Z<P SOUTHEASTERN LOUISIANA UNIVERSITY
September 29. 1987 Hammond, LA- Ward Rovira Is a 2nd Lt. In the U.S.
Army and stationed In Dexhelm. Frg. as Maintenance Platoon Leader.
AB UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN April 4 , 192S
ROBERT C. STRAUB - Alpha-Beta '2S
Age: Four score plus Home: Traverse City, Michigan Occupation: Retired
The Traverse City native has sweet memories of his boyhood. His father was one of the partners in Straub Brothers and Amiotte, later Straub Candy Co .. The factory built in 1906 still stands at 400 West Front Street.
A graduate of Traverse City schools and the University of Michigan, Brother Straub was initiated into the Alpha-Beta Chapter of Sigma PI in 192S. He has always been active in the University of Michigan alumni activities and a loya l contributor to the fraternity. He Is a national director of the alumn i association. serves as president of Michigan Club of Chicago that last year observed its lOOth anniversary and was national chairman of former Michigan Annual Giving Fund.
Straub had 40 years of business experience in Chicago! and, where he started R.S. Company (Robert Straub & Co.), specializing in marketing, merchandising, promotions, advertising, sales manuals, etc .. He was one of the founders and president of what is now the Promotion Industry Club of Chicago.
He married Marian Williams In 19.31 and the couple has no children .
Brother Straub returned home in 1972 and has been an active volunteer. He became a male lib In what was then the Women 's Auxiliary of Munson Medical Center. He has .3.100 hours of service in what is now Munson Medical Center Auxiliary.
He has been a volunteer docent (guide) for the City Opera House and served as a member of its Heritage Committee.
He has been with the Traverse Ad Club since Its founding In 1972, serving several terms as director and Is the on ly person to have received Its Lifetime Member Award .
He leads several other retirees " doing nothing" at Du Nuthln' Bunch meetings every Wednesday noon at the Elks Club. The group now has 1.3 years of no speeches, no officers, no programs, no rules, just nothing but fellowship and chatter.
He follows sports closely and hobbles Include readIng, TV watching, pleasant contacts with friends.
He says he was too young for World War 1 and too old for World War II but quote Gen. El enhower on retirement:
JobnMoser E8 ELON COLLEGE
April 2.3, 197 7 Elon College, NC - John Moser Is studying for a Ph.D
In English at the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill. His goal is to teach at the college level.
A magna cum laude graduate of Elon College. he was chapter president, IFC vice president and Student Government Association president. John Is also a member of Omicron Delta Kappa and was named the outstanding student leader. His name Is listed in Who's Who.
WALTER H. LEMMOND. JR. ALUMNI ASSOCIATION ELON COLLEGE - EPSILON-THETA CHAPTER
The Walter H. Lemmond, Jr .. Alumni Association will celebrate Its tenth year anniversary during homecoming festivities at Elon College on October 28. 1989. Members of the Epsilon-Theta Chapter are excited about showing orr their new home built over the summ er. Sigma PI was one of six organizations selected by the college to get a new house on campus.
Dear Brother,
The Educational Fund's Board of Trustees would like to thank you for helping Sigma Pi set another record this year for the annual Alumni Loyalty Drive. More than eleven hundred brothers contributed over $50,000 this past fiscal year. These tax-deductible contributions to the Sigma Pi Educational Fund have helped provide over $30,000 in educational grants to the Fraternity for programs such as chapter visits, leadership workshops, and support for the Emerald.
More than $2,500 was set aside from these contributions for scholarships for your chapter. Five percent of all Annual Loyalty Fund gifts are being used for scholarships toward the donor's chapter. All contributions to the Sigma Pi Educational Fund, whether for the annual fund, membership, or bequests are tax deductible to the full extent permissible bylaw.
A special thanks to those listed below for giving the Fraternity and its members additional opportunities through the Sigma Pi Educational Fund.
Fraternally,
D. Dean Crook President Educational Fund
Jim Corridan Executive Vice President Educational Fund
SIGMA PI EDUCATIONAL FUND GIVING CLUBS Valedictorian (V) $1000+ Summa Cum Laude (S) $500+ Magna Cum Laude (M) $250 + Cum Laude (C) $100+ Dean's List (D) $50+ Honor Roll (H) $1- $49
ALPHA VINCENNES
Joe Booher- H Vincent Cox - H John Davis- H David Elmore- C Michael Green- H David Holmes · H Randall Johnson - H William Lane- D Ronald Martin- H Dennis Nixon - C Keith O'Donnell - D Scott Parker · H
BETA INDIANA
Harold Anderson - D John Banka- C David Belaga - H William Brattain - H Rollin Brown- H Stephen Butler · H Michael Craig- H Henry Decker - H Ralph Deetz - D Alfred Goffinet - D James Grossman - D Maurice Hawbaker- H Byron Jackson - H James Johnson - C Kenneth Kesler- D Donald King - H Leonard Lorey - H Arthur Mengon- H Edward Mitchell - C Glenn Morehead- H Thomas Perry - H Wilbur Roberts - H Charles Schreiber- D Allen Sims - H Franklin Smith - H Martin Snyder - C Sam Van Arsdell - D Jeffrey Webster - H
GAMMA OHIO STATE
Karl Anderson - H Richard Anderson - H Ward Ashman - H James Bailey - H Henry Bell- H Richard Bobb - H James Burrows - D Robert Caldwell - D Orville Coy - H Gregory Duche - H Claude Goldsmith - D Frederick Good - D Wallace Hall - D James Hill - e
Tim Honeck - H Howard Jones - H Ronald Klamert - H Arthur Leisk - H Daivd Lum - H John Marshall - C Robert Menninger - H Edwin Monroe- H Jan Mosser- M Robert Obenour- H Norman Pierce - H John Richards- C E. Snyder- H Ralph Spencer - H Roger Stauffer- H Charles Townley - H Lester Webb- D Samuel Yanen- H
DELTA PENNSYLVANIA
Charles Beck - C Frank Braden - H Robert Cron - D Harry Domhoff - H Walter Kephart - C Howard Sands- H Frank Strassner - D Charles Tomlinson - C Victor Wallder - C
EPSILON OHIO
A. Beach -c Richard Borgner- H Melvin Frank - H Robert Pancoast - H Edmund Williams- D
ZETA OHIO NORTHERN
Christopher Campbell - H Robert Coleman - D Howard Craig- D Michael Deminski - H James Diefenderfer - H Lee Hammond- H Robert Koger - H Frederick Kusta- H Eugene Rogers - H William Ruse - H Charles Snyder - H Errold Struble - H Clare Stump - H Ron ald Trauger- H George Vogelgesang -D Donald Walli ck- H John Weber - D Douglas Wolfe - H Randy Young- C
ETA PURDUE
Loring Alstadt- H Dale Amstutz - H Galen Baker - H Michael Bowman - D Cletus Broecker - C Gerald Cassidy- C C. Chandler- D Joseph Close- C
24
25
Kenneth Coan - D Joseph Columbe- D David Demarest- D Richard Grotemeyer- C Thomas McMichael- D K. Miller- H Thomas Morton- D Clay Rhodes- D J. Sanders- D Charles Schreiber- H Rodney Smith- H Joseph Solan - D H. Thompson- H James Willen - C Paul Willen- C
THETA PENN STATE
Raymond AI bed- C Edwin Andrews- H Wilford Beisel - H Louis Benzak - C Patrick Buckley - H George Burke- D Ira Coldren- H Arthur Crow- H Frank Della Penna- D Richard Dennis- H Joseph Frederick - H James Golightly- H David Grill - C Thompson Harner- H G. Inskeep - H Michael Kerr- H John Landis- H William Lapitsky- H Emrys Lewis- H J. Mairs- H Charles Moran - H Robert Newcomer- H Albert Opperman - C Walter Osborn - H William Roth- H George Stiftinger- D Charles Watkins- H John Williams- D Norman Wolff Carl Zeigler- D
IOTA CALIFORNIA-BERKELEY
Juan Hayes- D Jack Hursh- H Whitney Jones- D Francis Kendall - H David Matson - H Ronald Misrack - H John Moskowitz- D Thomas Pierce - H Gerald Towne - H
KAPPA TEMPLE
Arthur Bobbs - H LeRoy Carl - H H nry Conrad - D Donald ox - H Roland D Mott - H Frank th rldg Brook un allu - H lanl y How II - H
1. Alpha-Mu 2. Upsilon 3. Phi 4. Gamma 4. Beta-Gamma 5 . Theta 6 . Beta 7. Beta-Omicron B. Psi B. Alpha-Iota
John Logan - C David Martin- H Michael Messersmith- H James Miller- H Charles Neuhaus - H Edwin Riebel - C Maynard Ross - H Carroll Van De Boe- D Anthony Wasch- H
LAMBDA KENYON
William Culbert- H George DeGraff - H John Horner - H Jack Knudson- H Harold Millikin- H Charles Stires- H
MU CORNELL
Craig Binetti - H Joseph Cal by- H P. Callan- H C. Carr- H Thomas Chapple- H Donald Clark- H Richard Clark- D Winthrop Cody- C Howard Critchlow- H Earle Elmer- H Francis Fowler- C Robert lnslerman- H James Keene- C John Lloyd- D Lawrence MacLennan- H Peter Matlock- C Robert Mattern - H Timothy McCann- H Edward Melchen - H Lorenz Muller- H David Myers - H John Perrollaz- D Peter Romeo - H John Sacco - H Joseph Witzel - H
NU FRANKLIN & MARSHALL
Robert Aichele - H Donald Birrell- H George Fryburg- C John Graybill- H Jonathan Hillegass - C Thomas Hughes- C George Long- H Richard Munk - C Peter Polovchik- H Robert Ranck - H Bruce Ryder- H Arthur Sciarrotta- D Peter Sprecher - D Joseph Thatcher- C David Vollmer- C S. Waugaman - D H rman Weeks - D
XI IOWA
ott Brown - H Gary Dvorchak - H T rran Fahl nkamp - D
NJIT UCLA Univ. of Illinois Ohio State Eastern Illinois Penn State Indiana University CSU-Long Beach Emory Univ. Univ. of Missouri-Rolla
Jay Hamilton - H John Heddens- D Orion Landmark - D Stephen Lawler- D Elwin Lohse - C Rory O'Kane - H George Rathbun - H Larry Wright - D
OMICRON TULANE
Gerald Andrus - H Michael Bast - D Dudley Foley- H William Haile - H Richard Piske - H Mallory Read - H
PI UTAH
Richard Birkinshaw - H Ray Free - C W. Merback- C Donald Pauley - D
RHO NORTH CAROLINA STATE
William Campbell - D John Eaton - D Charles Gross- H Louis Hoffman- C James Marshburn - H Frederick Schmidt - H Richard Schmidt - H Robert Snead - H John Springthorpe - H Grady Sykes - H Arnold Taylor- H John Watson - H
SIGMA IOWA STATE
Phillip Ellingson - H Ralph Henderson - D Clyde Hoover - D Joel Nystrom- C John Piccolo - H Bradford Stanerson - H Conrad Timpe- M Steven Tripmacker- H James Watson - C
TAU WISCONSIN-MADISON
Samuel Davies- H John Rabbe - C
UPSILON CALIFORNIA-LOS ANGELES
Ned Ash- H Douglas Bastyr- D Rainer Beck- D Claude Blakemore - D Clifford Bowman - H Donald Bullock - H Allan Cooley - H Noah urti - H Alan Davi - D A. Gifford - H Rob rt GiH rd - ~~ D ugl Gl ntz - H
48 42 40 32 32 30 28 27 26 26
John Goodlad- C Willard Harriss- H Mark Helmick- C Kenneth Ingman- H Irwin Kasten - H Kurt Kenworth - C Walter Keusder- D Claude Keyzers - C Richard Krueger- D Harold Lahr- H Robert Lashbrook - D Richard Leserman - D Richard May- D William Meyer- C Peter Mysing - D Charles Osterlund- H Bruce Peterson - C Daniel Peterson - H Michael Rausch- H Louis Ravetti - H James Ross- D Karl Schuttenhelm - H Robert Seaman - H James Seely- H Andrew Shaw - C David Shiokari - H Glenn Smith- H Jay Van Holt- H Robert Wall - H Donald Woodford - H
PHI ILLINOIS
Robert Anderson - D Donald Bunnell - C Richard Connelly - D Robert Cultra- D Norbert Cygan - D Vincent D'Orazio- H Robert Dannehl - H Roger Dickinson - C Stanley Felderman- H Everett Fitzjarrald- D James Heise - D Robert Hillman - D Stanley Holmes - D Wayne Johnson - H Peter Kirch - H George Kleen - H Steven Koomar - H Ronald Kornell - C Robert Korsgard - H Robert Leonard - C Timothy Loughran - H Robert Luetje - H Peter March- H Chester McKeen - C John Meyer- H George Morris - D Frank Nickels - H Robert Oie - H Norman Peter on - H John Schmidt - D
CHI PITISBURGH
Charles Booher- H Emmons Mortson- H Nick Nicholas- C W. Widdowson - C
PSI EMORY
Ernest Allen - C Thomas Amason- H George Barker- D H. Barker-C Richard Beckman - H Earl Brinson- H Earl Canfield- H M.Culler-D Charles Glisson - C Murl Hagood- D John Kernan - H Thomas Masters - H Cecil McDonald- H Duval Maier- H Clifford Oxford- D H. Peavey - H James Pruitt- D George Ricketson - H John Rooney- H Edward Scruggs - H Thomas Shealy- H Vincent Shiel - C Charles Smith- H William Wall - D Judson Ward- D James Watkins- H
OMEGA OREGON STATE
David Foster- H John Godman - H Richard Henzel - D Eric Jochim- D David Lowell - H Timothy Milliron - H John Sanderson - H Edgar We is - H
ALPHA-BETA MICHIGAN
Leigh Jackson - H John King- H Robert Straub - M James Woller- D
ALPHA-GAMMA WASHINGTON
Marcel Cole- H John Eliason - D Howard Jensen - H Jack Mayer- H Patrick McGrath- H Douglas Schlepp- H J. Woodruff- D
ALPHA-DELTA AUBURN
Jeffrey An germ ann- H John Belville- H Clyde Boozer- D Russell Boren - H
L. 2. 3. 4 . 5. 6. 6. 7. 8. 9.
Phi TOP TEN CHAPTERS BY DOLLARS CONTRIBUTED
Upsilon Beta-Omicron Beta-Gamma Alpha-M u Eta Alpha-Theta Gamma Theta Alpha-Nu
Daniel Breeden- s James Bullington - H Jack Capell - D Clarence Hornsby - D James Leslie - H Dowling Miller- D John Mullins- H Stephen Phillips- C David Shaffer - H William Shealy- H HerbetSpencer-H John Ward - D
ALPHA-EPSILON MERCER
Howard Bivins- H George Hulme - D
ALPHA-ZETA ST. LAWRENCE
Robert Armbruster- H Bruce Boss - H Robert Daly- H William Davison- H Norville Downie- H J. Finch- H Thomas Foster- H Stephen Graham - H Herbert Hallman - C Andrew Kaye - H Anthony Passaretti- D James Smithers- H Stephen Wallender- H
ALPHA-ETA WILLIAM & MARY
Fred Gosnell- C Charles Harris- H Walter Hoffman- D Paul Hogge- D Carlton Holladay- H Thomas Reavely - H Lowery Sanders- D C. Sinclair- H Arthur Winder - C
ALPHA-THETA BELOIT
Roy Cibulk - H James Edwards- H James Espy- V John Florin- C Frederick Johnson- C Joseph Kobylka- H Frederick Schuchardt- H Howard Un - H Thomas Wildman- D
ALPHA-IOTA MISSOURI-ROLLA
Jeffrey Bopp - H Edson Bumps- H Donald Gardner - D Dennis Gilliam - H Geoffrey Heberle - H John Hummell - H Vernon Kasten - H Raymond Kopsky- H Randall Lubbert- H
Univ. of Illinois UCLA CSU-Long Beach Eastern Illinois NJIT Purdue Beloit Ohio State Penn State Wake Forest
Blayne Mayfield - C Robert Niehaus - H Robert Orr- H Jeffrey Ramberg- H John Riggs- H Carl Sauer- D Richard Schmidt- H Robert Stabo - H Joseph Stahl- H Richard Taylor- D Thurman Thomes- D Billy Thompson - H Lawrence Tipton- H Franklin Woodbury- M Mark Woytus - D Robert Zagar- H Donald Zeitinger- C
ALPHA-KAPPA LOUISIANA STATE
William Austin- H John Dore- H John Ehricht- D Robert Fontenot - H Trudeau Hogue - H William Morrison- H Thomas Whipple- H
ALPHA-LAMBDA MISSISSIPPI STATE
Jackson Tillman- H
ALPHA-MU N.J.I .T.
Frederick Betz - H Howard Beyer- D Albert Bickhardt - H A. Bird- H Walter Braun - D Donald Burtis- D Edwin Campbell - H John Chamberlain- H H. Clarke- H Robert Criswell - H Ronald Dieter- H Vincent Difini - H Richard Ebersbach - H Robert Eisele - D Richard Garratt - H Glenn Geardino- H Frank Harwood- H Peter Hueber - H Thomas Keenan - C Robert Kinzler- H Loren Lauterbach- D Bennett Leichter - C Arthur Lewis- D Harry Loeser- H Clyde Macfarlane- D David Mangnall - H Thomas Mascaritolo - H Robert McMillian- D Gordon Missimer- H Godfrey Moll - H Raymond Mortensen - H William Mutter - H Frank Navratil - H Albert Ott- D Anthony Pezzano- H Leo Pnug- H Mark Piotrowski - D
2,380.00 2 , 130.00 1,865.00 1.755.00 1.670.00 1.500.00 1,500.00 1.460.00 1.345.00 1,290.00
George Rafferty - D Edward Rogers- H Edward Schnepel- H Ellis Sharadin - D Frank Sincaglia- H George Sohm- H Frederick Stober- H Alvin Stoeckert- H Lawrence Swartz- D Neil Tremaine- H Thomas Woodruff- D
ALPHA-NU WAKE FOREST
Anderson Alcock - H Eric Blalock - D David Brinjac- C Bernard Brophy - H David Cobb - D Dean Coulopoulos- H Robert Davis - M John Dimmick - H Ronald Dinsmore - H George Ehrhardt- D Albert Hammill - C Michael Havrilla - H Robert Helm - H John Heydt- H Michael Lands- H Arthur Lewis- H James Mahoney - D Stuart McGuire- D L. Pegram- D John Thompson- D Edgar Voress - C Bruce Warrington- D
ALPHA-XI C.S.U.-FRESNO
Harvey Baumann- D
ALPHA-OMICRON CALIFORNIA-SANTA BARBARA
Anonymous - C Don Fredericksen - H Raymond Pian tan ida- H Merry! Powell - H B. Troy - D
ALPHA-PI ARKANSAS STATE
Mark Briscoe- H Robert Burnett - C AsaCrow- H Clarence Crowder- H Robert Ferra Iasco - D Donald Haney - H Lesley Harwell - C Paul Moore- H George Sansoucy - D
ALPHA-RHO SOUTHWEST MISSOURI STATE
Jerry Black - H Basil Boritzki - C Larry Bradley - H Kenneth Burk- D Alan Dobson - H William Eldred- H
26
27
Ellis Hefner- D Darrel Hopkins - H William Moon - D John Moses- H Michael Selph - H Bill Taylor- H Lawrence Thomas- H William Tillotson - H Charles Wiles- D
ALPHA-SIGMA ARKANSAS
Carl Baker - D Robert Franklin- H Hermann Ivester- H Donald Pullen - H William Sch iller- H Clair Smith- C Darrell Spriggs- M Dennis Young- C
ALPHA-UPSILON RHODE ISLAND
James Callahan- D Paul Capaldo- H Arthur Gruhn- H David Jacobs- H Eugene Kachele - D Paul McEnanly- H George Nazareth- H Francis Pierce - H
ALPHA-PHI GEORGIA
Michael Brown- C Michael Bushaw- H A. Crout- C Charles Dark - H Edward Gregory - H Sam Jacobs - H George Kreeger- D Norval McClung- H Thomas McConnell- H Hoyle Puckett- D Franklin Rayfield- H William Reed- H Robert Ross - H Jerry Stepp- H Bjorn Swenson - H Rufus Tindol - H Frank Van Hal tern - H George Walker - D David Wells- D
ALPHA-CHI MARYLAND
Antonius Delange - D Michael Fitzgerald- H Thomas Harris - D Bruce Hoffberger- D Mark Levin- D Bruce Macrae - H Stephen Majors - D John Pensinger - D Peter Zuras - H
1. Alpha-Thete 2 . Epsilon-Lambda 3. Alpha-Beta 4. Pi 5 . Alpha-Sigma 6 . Sigma 7. Alpha-Delta 8 . Beta-Omicron 9. Delta
10. Eta
ALPHA-PSI UTAH STATE
Wei do Hyer- D Reed Petersen - H
ALPHA-OMEGA SAN DIEGO STATE
Garry Butterfield - D David Chambers- C Brian Chase - H James Corridan- C Jay Farber - D Joseph Ferrero - H Steven Garnett - H Thomas Hinds- H Kenneth Nelson - C Ronald Sinclair- H Howard Stone - H Don Vonk- H
BETA-GAMMA EASTERN ILLINOIS
Eugene Aikman- H Gary Bachman- H Roger Baker- H William Barr- H Thomas Beissel - H Scot Brewer- C Thomas Brown - H Roger Claar- D D. Dean Crook - C Philip Doster - C John Duncan- H Mark Fleshner- H Ted Hoffman- D Robert Howrey - H Gerald Huot- D Joseph Knapp - C Jeffrey Knezovich - D Harry Miller- H Martin Morgan - C Michael Murphy- D J. Oglesby - H James Poneta - H Norman Pratt- D Gary Shafer- H EliSidweii-C John Uptmor- D John Waggoner - D Charles Wagoner - H Jack Weber- D David Winters- H David Woijeck- H Thomas Zelasko - D
BETA-EPSILON SYRACUSE
Albert Brown- H
BETA-ZETA MIAMI-FLORIDA
Richard Leone - H Charles Pettine - H Frank livocka - H
TOP TE" CHAPTt:KS HT AVt:;KJ\UE. uar a Beloit Eastern Kentucky Michigan Utah Arkansas Iowa State Auburn CSU-Long Beach Pennsylvania Purdue
BETA-ETA SAN JOSE STATE
Charles Barren a - H Charles Butler - D Charles Chappell - H James Freeman - H Robert Kircher- H R. Knight - D
BETA-THETA DREXEL
Rahoul Banerjea- H Gregory Bentz- H Byron Biggs- H Alfred Calabria - H Gordon Callaway - D Raymond Cassetta - D William Cattafesta- H Roy Cornely - H Ellison Davison - H Ted Fiala - H Richard Fitzer- H Kevin Gazzara - H Dale Glatfelter- H Boyd Mack leer - C Dennis Membrino - D Thomas Nagle - D Wayne Outten - D Brian Pollock - H John Poprik- D Walter Robbins - D Nicholas Rondolone- H Edward Rubeo - H Robert Steinman - D Ralph Stowell- D
BETA-IOTA NORTHERN ARJZONA
Anthony Juarez- D John Manobianco - D Jack Rainey - H
BETA-KAPPA ARIZONA STATE
Bruce Ballard- D Robert Best- H Robert Harrington -D Ray Stephan - H
BETA-LAMBDA LYCOMING
Albert Burba - H John Snyder- D
BETA-MU MISSISSIPPI
Patrick Cavanaugh - H Thomas Green - H Walter Reagan - D Carl Tanner- D James Verplanck - D
BETA-NU SOUTHERN ILLINOIS-CARBONDALE
William Fee - H Wayne Gabrys - H Georg Haa - H
166.67 145.00 126.25 97.00 90.00 82.22 71.25 69.07 68.88 65.22
David Johnson- H Daniel Lanno- H Robert Mees- H Thomas Reis-H Joseph Rowand - H Edward Walter - D
BETA-XI NEW MEXICO STATE
Richard Force - D
BETA-OMICRON C.S.U.- LONG BEACH
Henry Aguilera - H Jeffrey Arnold - H Richard Bemis - H Bobby Bridwell - C James Dirmann - H Stephen Dumalski - H Lloyd Farris - H Robert Gau - C Ralph Grosso- H Floyd Hindman - H Julius Kanasi- D Jon Kasten - H Marc Leever- H Lawrence Lennon - D Tim Leslie- H John McDowell - D John Merino. Jr. - C James Neal - C David Newberg - D Robert Parsons - D Howard Pease - D John Rance - H Lawrence Redman - M Michael Ryan- C John Salas- D James Stotler - C Edward Thompson- H
BETA-PI VIRGINIA
Franklin Flippo- H John Geib- D Forrest Hunter- H GaryTash- C
BETA-RHO ATLANTIC CHRJSTIAN
James Hicks - H James Lamberson - C George Pippin - D
BETA-SIGMA NORTHERN ILLINOIS
Lee Crittenden - H William Edgar - H Karl heinz Peter - D Peter Roknich - D William ims - H Alan Tra i - H Allen Wood ard - D
BETA-TAU VALPARAI
J hn Drah im - H J hn Hin h - H
TOP TEN CHAPTERS BY PERCENT OF JIIEJIIBERS CONTRIBUTED I. Psi Emory 10.92% 2. Alpha-Mu N.J.I.T. 6. 18% 3 . Delta Pennsy lvania 5. 17% 4 . Phi Univ. of Il li no is 4.69% 5 . Upsilon U.C.L.A. 4.59% 6. Epsilon-Omicron SUNY Buffalo 4.39% 7. Gamma OhioState 3.99% 8 . Gamma-Psi St. Louis Univ. 3 .85% 9. Alpha-Phi Georgia 3. 77% 10. Alpha-Iota Missouri-Rolla 3 .76%
Wilbur Hutchins- H Louis Donato - H Mark Flaherty - H GAMMA-RHO Rudy Jabs- H George Hakim - H Barry Grenier- D WESTERN MICHIGAN Kenneth Metcalf- H Kenneth McCrory - D Jeffrey Lord - H
Gregory Conant- H Jeffrey Miller- H Martin Simon- H John Mazur- H Scott Hoke - H James Tadsen - D Anthony Wildenman- H Brian McKeon - H Earl McHugh- H Edward Thormahlen- D James Williams - D Robert Mitchell - H Thomas Moore- D Charles Vick - H Mark Skinner - H Dennis Mortlock- D A. Von Heimburg- H GAMMA-BETA Daniel Schneider - H EASTERN MICHIGAN GAMMA-KAPPA
BETA-UPSILON William Korbelak - D INDIANA INSTITUTE
GAMMA-SIGMA SHIPPENSBURG Of TECHNOLOGY MISSOURI-COLUMBIA
William Cowden- H GAMMA-GAMMA Joseph Bush - D Brian Akerson - D Karl Gable- D CENTRAL MISSOURI STATE Moe Mitzman - H Thomas Hanaway - H Robert Gimmi - H Bruce Ballard - D Thomas Sommerfield - D James Hazel - H Robert Rankl - H Roger Bisges- H Scott Spooner - D Lester Joern - D Robert Selan - H Dennis Chandler - H William Knepler - H
David Clausen - H GAMMA-MU G. Miller - H BETA-PHI
Jerry Foulds - D WISCONSIN-OSHKOSH William Mozo- D ROCHESTER INSTITUTE
James Moran - H Philip Belongie - H Clinton Tennill - H OF TECHNOLOGY Ronald Thompson- H Richard Dodge - D
James Berndt- C Charles Yates - H Robert Hernke - H GAMMA-TAU Howard Beye - H Norman Kohn - H GEORGIA SOUTHERN 28 Scott Brown - C GAMMA-DELTA Steven Mathews- H
Edward Dunnavant - H Christopher Carlson - H SLIPPERY ROCK William Krenson - H Gregory Evans - H Jeffrey Cavalero - H GAM MA-NU George Rem eta - H William Hard- D Terry Hall - D AKRON Gordon Turner- H Christopher Hurley- H Jeffrey Keefer- H Richard Ashley- H
Paul Jakins- H Geoffrey Landry - H Kenneth Denholm - D GAMMA-UPSILON Alan Kurtzman - H Eric McCuen - D Ronald Gajewski - H MURRAY STATE Michael Nesbitt- D William Schmitt - C John Gurley - H
Scott Ashley- C John Overboe - C Tamas Mesterhazy - H John Fallo t - H Brian Stanko- H GAMMA-EPSILON Gregory Polyak - H Jack Guetterman - H David Walsh - D FAIRMONT STATE Homer Stine - D Thom as Harwood - D David Wechter- H James Weisbarth - H Will iam Mo field - H Robert Zito- H Gale Bentz - H
Gary Williams- M Terrence Murphy- H William Suan - D
BETA-CHI GAMMA-XI Larry Ruff- H
LOYOLA-CHICAGO GAMMA-ZETA WEST VIRGINIA INSTITUTE GAMMA-PHI PARSONS OF TECHNOLOGY
WISCONSIN-WHITEWATER frank Barranco - H Rodney Fiene - H Howard Hall - D
Richard Borum - H Jeff Butler - H Joseph Grewenig- H Robert Mason- H
Patrick Frazer - H William Onsgard- H Gerald Heimoski - H Ronald Straley - H
Carl Hanning - H James Tennant- H James Heller - D Richard Houchins- H Gregory Van Wie- H James Kolasinski - H GAMMA-ETA
Paul Santrock- D Marc Kunis - H RUTGERS Dennis Urbas - H
GAMMA-CHI Michael Kuzlik- H Christopher Brown - D QUINNIPIAC John Martin- H Vincent Celli- H GAMMA-OMICRON
John Mitchell- H James Fisher - D FINDLAY Nicholas Havelick- H Dion Wilhelmi- H Patrick Forker - H Merrill Mirsky - H Gregory Ziolkowski- H
Richard Gallagher- H Michael Murphy - H GAMMA-PSI BETA-PSI Gerald Gam lin - H Gregory Wise - H ST. LOUIS EAST STROUDSBURG David Gutin - H
Kenneth Davis - H Leonard Kubik - H GAMMA-PI William Cole- H James Moore - H Steven Magidson - H INDIANA STATE Richard Crofton - H Richard Spear - H Edward Metz - D Ronald Lind - H
Carl Soranno - H Ronald Binkley- D Paul Starr - H
Stephen Taylor- H Walter Botich - H Robert Usselman - H BETA-OMEGA
Dean Hemmersbach - D LOCK HAVEN GAMMA-THETA Emerson Kendall- C
GAMMA-OMEGA Michael Clover- H TEXAS Kevin O'Rourke - D WAYNE STATE David Glassner- H William Quinn- D
Mahlon Schlegel - D J. Klasing- D Raymond Schwenk - H Kevin Cox- H John Stachura- D Kur t Lauer - D
GAMMA-ALPHA GAMMA-IOTA M.Wade - H Anthony McDonnell- H WORCESTER POLYTECHNIC William Wagner - H Gerald Varcak - H DETROIT INSTITUTE
Charles Benke- D Kenneth Beyer- D James Clemens - D Wayne Civinskas - H John Dinka- D Mario Digiovanni- H
DELTA-ALPHA CENTRAL MICHIGAN
Barry Johnson - H Michael Kline- H Kevin Lou bert- H Scott Lumsden - H David Partlo- H Robert Peterson - c William Smith- H
DELTA-GAMMA MILTON
Richard Barnard- C Robert Chanson - H
DELTA-EPSILON SETON HALL
John Bayeux- H Michael Kelly- H Robert Nowark - H Peter Smith - D
2 9 Robert Zajac - H
DELTA-ZETA MISSOURI-ST. LOUIS
James Rede- H Steven Thomas - H
DELTA-THETA CORPUS CHRISTI
Richard Tracy- H
DELTA-LAMBDA LOUISIANA TECH
Wayne Caraway - H
DELTA·MU SALEM
Anthony Santangelo- D
DELTA·NU BALL STATE
Lawrence Duncan - H
DELTA-OMICRON WISCONSIN -MILWAUKEE
Anthony Stolz- D
DELTA-RHO MOREHEAD STATE
David Bailey - C
DELTA-SIGMA WISCONSIN -STOUT
Gary ho nborn - H
DELTA-TAU INDIANA-SOUTH BEND
Kurt!'(' lowskl II
DELTA-CHI WESTERN COLORADO
John Clark- H
DELTA-OMEGA SOUTHERN ILLINOISEDWARDSVILLE
Stephen Belcher- H Robert Gallo - H Michael Meurer- H
EPSILON-ALPHA SOUTHERN TECHNICAL INSTITUTE
Jesse Ellington - H Charles Massey - H
EPSILON-BETA KENTUCKY
Bill Bigham - H Jeffrey Buchanan - H James Carrico- H Kim Forster- C Phillip Huffman- H Edward Lee - H Randy Smallwood- D
EPSILON-GAMMA ILLINOIS WESLEYAN
Lorren Beneke - D Charles Deffenbaugh- C Jack Fields - H Herbert Guarascio- D Joel Hapke- D William Havlik- H Bruce Howell - H Henry Konzelmann - H Robb Robison - H Mark Teachman- H
EPSILON-DELTA COLUMBUS
Carl Schultz- H
EPSILON-EPSILON EMPORIA STATE
John Bell- D Brian Weber - H Rick Yarnell - C
EPSILON-ZETA WESTERN ILLINOIS
Thomas Bernth - H Mark Hamilton - H Kenneth Kaupas- H Gregory Kubik - H Mark Metz - C Daniel Swanson - D Dale Wheeler - H Edward Zanghi - H
EP ILON·THETA ELON
EPSILON-IOTA CAL STATE- NORTHRIDGE
Michael L.aberteaux- H R. Lane - H Barry Maiten- H Jay Mangel - H
EPSILON-LAMBDA EASTERN KENTUCKY
Michael Cox - H David Johnson - H Monty Northcutt - H Stephen Woodring- S
EPSILON·MU JAMES MADISON
Matthew Chamberlin- H Robert Slavonia- H Douglas Smith- H
EPSILON-NU CAL STATE- FULLERTON
Steven Banks- H Arthur Blais- H David Brown - H Joe Conway - D Kevin Foley- D Edward Gogin - H Gabriel Ibarra- H J.lbarra- C William Kittredge- C Kenneth Martinez- H Martin Olson- D Howard Poulsen- D Larry Rovira- H Edward Scott - C Donald Shea - H Michael Simmons - H
EPSILON-XI FAIRLEIGH-DICKINSON
Paul Lucha- H Michael Meramo - H Bruce Paparone - D
EPSILON-OMICRON SUNY-BUFFALO
John Byrne - D Patrick lulianello - H Raymond Kuehnel - D Charles Muldoon - D Timothy Neville - H
EPSILON-PI CHRISTOPHER NEWPORT
Jarrell Elliott - H Greg Toth - H
EPSILON-RHO DRURY
Robert Branom - H
EP ILON- IGMA LOYOLA MARYM UNT
Nl hoi J rd< n - D dward Pan ni - D
EPSILON-TAU TENNESSEE-MARTIN
James Barnes - H
EPSILON-PHI EMBRY RIDDLE AERONAUTICAL-PRESCOTT
Greg Peterson - H
EPSILON-CHI SAN DIEGO
Harold Tasker- H Peter Wood - H
EPSILON-PSI WIDENER
Robert Cappiello- H Robert Wagner- H
EPSILON-OMEGA NEW YORK-POTSDAM
Christopher Dyer - H David Kenna- H
ZETA-GAMMA MILLERSVILLE
Stephen Danforth - H
ZETA-ZETA FLORIDA-GAINESVILLE
Alan Taliaferro- H
ZETA-ETA SANTA CLARA
Craig Vallarino- D
ZETA-THETA SUNY-PLATTSBURGH
John West - H
ZETA-SIGMA NORTH CAROLINA WESLEYAN
Joseph Brunetta- H
MATCHING GIFTS
Archer Daniels Foundation Pfizer Inc. Quantum Tran am rica Foundati n
AUBURN UNIVERSITY Jack Estes, January 15, 1988
CALIFORNIA-LOS ANGELES, UNIVERSITY OF Burnett L. Bear Edgar Hoag
DRJ:XEL UNIVERSITY David McCall, January 6 , 1989
tASTtRN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY David Bruce Boyd, October 22, 1988 Jack Pritts, November 6 , 1987
fRANKLIN~ MARSHALL COLLEGE William Owen Binkley, February 24, 1989 s. Merle Waugaman , March 7, 1989
GWRGIA SOUTHERN UNIVERSITY Edward M. Dunnavant tacy Lenn Harbin
Theodore Larry Medlin Michael David Shealy Leonard A. Sowell Paul Draughn
ILLINOIS, UNIVERSITY OF Arthur Pasmas
INDIANA UNIVERSITY Henry Hammond, May 1, 1989
KtNYON COLLEGE George R. Selway
MURRAY STATE UNIVERSITY Burton Warren Baker
OHIO NORTHERN UNIVERSITY Ru ell L. Bunger
OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY Calvin Bartlett Erie 0 . Blair Charles L. Crook Dana C. Farnham Jame P. Gardner Frank W. Hollman Harold M. Mahan , April 18, 1989 William M. Marr Frank Milliken, May 19, 1989 Ralph W. Munn 0 . Peabody Rogers George P. Sam man Lawrence E. Sanders Hubert A. Scott Edmund F. Shedd Guy Tresilian
OHIO UNlVERSITY Harold Way Anderson Frank E. Cook Winthrop Edwin Foley Rollin Edward Guttridge Charles C. Higgins Alex Charles M. Hoffmeister, Jr. D.L. Jasinsky James Robertson King Earnest C. Miller Harry E. Reinhold William H. Richmond James E. Sherman Emmett L. Thomas Carl A. Weinman
OREGON STATE UNIVERSITY Alfred I. Tilton
PENN STATE UNIVERSITY James H. Ammerman Elmer Martin Bauer Bruce A. Beattie Robert Andrew Bustard David J. Hajjar George L. Haller, January 1989 Timothy Haney Edward J. Hartnett Daniel J. Hass. Jr. Frederick J. Jobst Jennings B. Knoebel William Marks, February 6 , 1989 Charles Melville RobertS. Morris, April 27, 1989 Donald L. Murray H. Merton Ruth Lewis W. Shollenberger Fred L. Simmons Wahl John Snyder, Jr. Roman M. pangler, Jr. James P. Storm William L. Strubble Howard A. Tinsman Thomas B. Wheatley
PENNSYLVANIA, UNIVERSITY OF H. Kerr, March 1989
PURDUE UNIVERSITY William C. Gandel Paul N.G. Hoffman
SAN DIEGO STATE UNIVERSITY Brian C. Billotte, May 1989
SAN JOSE STATE UNIVERSITY James Giussi. March 21 . 1989
SHIPPENSBURG UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA Billy L. Hart Allen C. Woodell
SOUTHWESTERN LOUISIANA STATE UNIVERSITY Cecil Daigle, April 25, 1988
TEMPLE UNIVERSITY Raymond Brady, January 1989
UTAH UNIVERSITY Glenn Everette Newton , March 21. 1989
WASHINGTON, UNIVERSITY OF Elliott E. Hurd, May 13, 1989
OUR MISTAKE The Executive Office was notified that GREG GOR
RELL (Gamma-Xi) of West Virginia Institute of Technol ogy, as being deceased . This was reported and listed in error.
DR. GEORGE L. HALLER FORMER VICE PRESIDENT OF GENERAL ELECTRIC
Dr. George L. Hailer, Theta Chapter '24, entered the Adytum on High on December 2, 1988, at his home in Naples, Florida.
Brother Haller was Dean of the College of Chemistry and Physics at Penn State University from 1947 to 1954.
In 1954 he joined the General Electric Company and retired in 1967 as Vice President of advanced technology.
He received Penn State's Distinguished Alumnus Award in 1958 and the Distinguished Service Award of the College of Science in 1985. Sigma Pi also recognized Brother Haller in 1978 with the Founder's Award.
30
31
Edward C. Janzen Delta Nu Chapter Ball Stale University
Owls Head Tie Full colored owl heads Navy blue accented w ith gold & white stripes lOOOJo Silk
$24.00
Sigma Pi Official Ring Display your pride of membership to your Inter
national Fraternity, by purchasing a ring designed exclusively for Sigma Pi.
Each ring is crafted with the pyramid of stars and encircled by the Fraternity name with the 1897 founding date.
Your own initials or full name can also be in· scribed inside the IOk ring. tyle number: 3309
Men's Fashion Ring The distinct design of this gold ring with black
onyx highlights the badge replica of the Golden Cross of Sigma Pi.
You may personalize this very popular IOk ring with your initials or full name, inscribed on the inide.
Style number: 3252
Signet Ring This fashion ring can be worn on either the ring
or little finger. The raised badge replica on the tOk gold ring will show your pride in Sigma Pi.
tyle number: 3040 $210.00
RING SIZE: If you do not know your finger size, go to a
local jeweler or college bookstore, and ask them to size your finger ... or see below.
HOW TO MEASURE YOUR FINGER FOR RINGS
Fraternity ___ S_,ig,_m_a_P_i ---------
Name ________________ _
Address Take a band of firm paper same size as ring chart. Wrap it '------------------around the largest part of the finger if the joints are not promi- City State ___ Zip __ nent. Lay it on the finger chart below to get your exact size. ----------
RING SIZE FOR MEASURING FINGER Chapter _________________ _
111111111111111111111University ___ _
3 4 5 6 7 s 910111213 Telephone+--+-----'or-+-- +-----
14K Yellow FINGER SIZE SUB STY LEW lOK Yellow FOR RINGS TOTAL TAX TOTAL
Polara • • •
SEND ALL ORDERS AND TOTALAMT. CHECKS TO: WITH TAX
Balfour-Recognition SHIPPING& P. 0. Box 3012 HANDLING $3.95 147 Armistice Blvd. Pa~ucket,RI02861
TOTAL CHECK (401) 722-0500 ENCLOSED
• • • Polara"'"' A precious metal alloy combining palladium and silver which looks and wears like White Karat Gold.
~::~~ •:me 0 Check or Money Order enclosed C.rd No, Customer SiQnature
l I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I Exporea Bank 1.0. No.
Grand Second Counselor Dennis V. Day Alpha-Rho '75
9604 W I 25th Street. Overland Park , KS 6621:3
Grand Third Counselor Howard L . Vierra
Beta·Eta '67 22650-A McKean Road . San Jose. CA 95120
Grand Fourth Counselor Mark A . Metz
Epsilon -Zeta '76 2 125 Sherman Avenue, Evanston. IL 60201
Grand First Counselor John H. Williams
Epsilon -Psi ·as I 16 W 19th Street, Wilmington. DE 19602
Grand Hera ld Bruce L. Peterson
Upsilon '76 5.319 S Woodlawn. #2 ·N. Chicago . IL 606 15
Past Grand Sage John J. Merino, Jr. Beta·Omicron '56
16.371 Gramercy Drive, Santa Ana . CA 92705
SIGMA PI EDUCATIONAL FUND
President D. Dean Crook
Beta·Gamma '59
Vice President Cletus Broecker
Eta '29
Secretary Richard Barnard Delta ·Gamma '64
Treasurer Eli Sidwell , Jr.
Beta-Gamma ·sa Past Pres ident
Darrell Spriggs Alpha-Sigma '52
Executive Vice President James Corrldan Alpha-Omega '6.3
Trustees Daniel Breede n Alpha -Delta '57
Harold Jacobsen Lambda '24
Ed McClane Beta-Gamma '74
Edward Panconl Epsilon -Sigma '64
J. Dan Lilley Beta-Omicron '66
HOUSING AND FINANCE COMMITTEE
Chairman David L . Walsh
Beta-Phi '74
Vice Chairman Robert A. Prichard
Rho '46
Treasurer Frank Navratil Alpha-Mu '46
Committee Members Charles S. Bicksler
Theta '41
Howard H. Beyer Alpha-Mu '56
Tim Kirkpatrick Beta-Eta '67
Mark Metcalr Epsi lon-Beta ·so Donald Stanrord
Gamma-Upsilon ' 7.3
TAKE DRUGS AND LOSE ALL YOUR FRIENDS.
If you think drugs cost a lot now, wait until after college. They could cost you a career.
Last year alone, America's
businesses lost more than 60 billion to drugs. So this year. most of the Fortune 500 will be administering drug tests.
Failing the test means you won' t be considered for employment.
And that 's one hell of a price to pay.
WE'RE PUTTING DRUGS OUT OF BUSINESS.
TH M RALD OF SIGMA PI FRATERNITY
Old Wheatland Rd ., P.O. Box 1897 Vine nnes, Indiana 47591
~DDR ss CORRECTION REQUESTED I
Partnership for a Drug-Free America
Non-Profit Org nizati n
U.S. Postage PAID
P rmit N . 7 L ui ill , 1\ ntu