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Delta Sigma Phi | Spring 2013 Read inside to see how volunteerism at the core helped Illinois State rebuild its chapter house. Read inside to see how volunteerism at the core helped Illinois State rebuild its chapter house. lead taking the

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The Spring 2013 Edition of Delta Sigma Phi Fraternity's Official Magazine, The Carnation

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Page 1: Spring 2013 Carnation :: Delta Sigma Phi

Delta Sigma Phi | Spring 2013

Read inside to see how volunteerism at the core helped Illinois State rebuild its chapter house.

Read inside to see how volunteerism at the core helped Illinois State rebuild its chapter house.

leadtaking the

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2 The CaRnaT Ion | DelTaS Ig .oRg

Brothers of Delta Sigma Phi,

When former Delta Sigma Phi Executive Director Scott Wiley asked me to take a second turn as editor of The Carnation, all I could think of was the famous quote by baseball legend Yogi Berra: “It’s like déjà vu all over again.”

My previous stint as Carnation editor came during some very tough times. To keep the magazine alive, we cut costs by printing it on newsprint. I personally wrote almost every word for several issues. I also set the type, designed the magazine and even pasted up the pages. All that, of course, was back in the days before computer-assisted design was possible.

That occurred during one of the periodic declines that have ravaged fraternities over the years. We came out of it and were able to hire some talented young people to take on more of the load, including Scott Cooper, Missouri ’84, a former staff member who contributed the article on the Delta Sigma Phi Leadership Institute in this issue.

I volunteered to edit The Carnation then because I value it as the primary link between our alumni and the Fraternity. Our alumni are extraordinarily important to the fraternity’s operation and, through their tax-deductible contributions to the Delta Sigma Phi Foundation, they finance critically important events like the Leadership Institute, held each summer, and Regional Leadership Academies.

Without alumni contributions of time and money, Delta Sigma Phi would not be able to provide the terrific training opportunities it now offers to undergraduates. The Leadership Institute, RLAs and other similar events have put Delta Sigma Phi on course to become America’s Leading Fraternity. That is our mission, and to accomplish that we have vastly improved programming aimed at undergraduates.

For those of you out there who remember the days when the national Fraternity provided minimal help to undergraduates, please know that times have changed. To get a glimpse of the

difference our donors are making in the lives of our young men, just read Scott Cooper’s article on page 15.

In that article, you’ll read quotes from undergraduates who say that the Leadership Institute did nothing less than change their lives. It gave them a new perspective on what it means to be a leader and a member of Delta Sigma Phi.

I just retired after 38 years on the faculty of the University of Missouri School of Journalism, the oldest such school in the world. There, I dedicated my life to making things better for the next generation of young people. I took great satisfac-tion in that work and watched many of my former students win Pulitzer Prizes; Emmy Awards; Silver Anvils, the top award for public relations practitioners; and AAF-ADDY Awards, the top prize for advertising professionals.

My volunteer work for the Fraternity has been equally satisfying, whether serving as a member of the Beta Beta ACB, as Carnation editor or as your national president from 1989-93. I have watched the young men of Delta Sigma Phi go out into the world and accomplish great things. With the programming we now offer, I expect even greater accomplishments in the years ahead.

As your new Carnation editor, I’ll once again have a chance to tell you about that, but this time around I’ll have lots of accomplished folks to help me. That includes a team of writers we are assembling, including Scott Cooper; Jennifer Graham and Nick Gerhardt, Missouri ’08, the fraternity’s marketing and communications coordinators; and others to be named.

I hope you’ll enjoy the changes we are planning for the magazine. Stay tuned.

YITBOS,Brian Brooks, Missouri ’64Editor

Letter from the Editor

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3SP R In g 2013

EditorBrian Brooks, Missouri ’64

Contributing WritersJennifer GrahamScott Cooper, Missouri ’84Nick Gerhardt, Missouri ’08

Art DirectorShelle Design Incorporated

Address publication materials and correspondence with national office to:Delta Sigma Phi1331 North Delaware StreetIndianapolis, IN 46202(317) 634-1899FAX: (317) 634-1410E-mail: [email protected]: www.deltasig.org

THE CARNATION OF DELTA SIGMA PHI (USPS 091-020), official publication of Delta Sigma Phi, 1331 N. Delaware St., Indianapolis, IN 46202, is published semiannually. Publication postage paid at Indianapolis, IN and additional mailing offices.

Postmaster: Send address changes to THE CARNATION OF DELTA SIGMA PHI, 1331 N. Delaware St., Indianapolis, IN 46202. Subscription price to non-members is $8.00 per year. Single copies $3.00.

Copyright 2013 by the Delta Sigma Phi Fraternity; 1331 N. Delaware St.,Indianapolis, IN 46202. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, mechanical, electronic, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without prior written permission of the copyright owner.

THE CARNATION® and Delta Sigma Phi® are registered trademarks of Delta Sigma Phi Fraternity, Inc.

CARNATIONTHE

10Volunteerism at the Core

182011-12 Foundation Annual Report

37State of the Fraternity Report Cards

Contents

DEPARTMENTS

2 Letter from the Editor6 New Chapter Development10 Alumni Corporation Board15 Leadership Institute18 Foundation Annual Report

37 State of the Fraternity46 Donor Spotlights48 Scholarship Winners51 Fraternity Volunteers53 Bond Eternal

Mission: The Carnation is a lifestyle magazine meant to entertain, educate and inspire the members of Delta Sigma Phi to become better men and lead better lives, while also educating and entertaining other readers who may not be members.

Letter from the Editor

/DeltaSigmaPhiHQ

@DeltaSigmaPhiHQ

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4 The CaRnaT Ion | DelTaS Ig .oRg

Fraternity News

Delta Sig Names New Executive Director

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5SP R In g 2013

The Grand Council named Patrick F. Jessee, Purdue ’01, as the next Executive Director of Delta Sigma Phi Fraternity. Named January 15, Jessee is the eleventh executive director for the Fraternity. Jessee, previously an attorney in the Washington D.C. office of the international law firm of Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Felp, LLP, began his time on staff February 4. “Patrick is a leader with in-depth knowledge and experience and is highly results-driven, but most impor-tantly, he has an authentic passion for our mission, to make Delta Sigma Phi America’s leading fraternity,” Grand Council President Chris Edmonds said. Jessee has been actively involved in Delta Sigma Phi since his 2001 initiation into the Delta Delta Chapter at Purdue. “The personal and professional successes I have enjoyed are in no small part attributable to Delta Sigma Phi,” Jessee said. As the Executive Director of Delta Sig, Jessee will lead our Fraternity’s efforts in pursuit of Vision 2025. “We are educating thousands more men each year at our programs–at our Regional Leadership Academies, at our Leadership Institute, at Summit, at Convention–and we are continuing to develop and expand new and exciting ways to engage you, each of our members, with more consistent, more reliable, meaningful training that you can [use to] develop yourself into a better man, all as a part of our Vision 2025,” Jessee said.

Jessee is committed to driving towards the strong goals Vision 2025 lays out for the Fraternity’s future. “By bringing all of our men into the fold, our idea is that when we get to 2025, every single one of our members–from top to bottom, from when you become a member until when you graduate–will consistently engage the leadership training we offer as a national fraternity,” Jessee said. Since Vision 2025 was adopted in 2005, Delta Sigma Phi has continued to make large strides. With Jessee at the helm of headquarters, we will continue to be well on our way to becoming America’s Leading Fraternity.

Please read the next issue of The Carnation for a full biography on Executive Director Patrick Jessee.

“We are educating thousands more men each year at our programs... and we are continuing to develop and expand new and exciting ways to engage you, each of our members, with more consistent, more reliable, meaningful training that you can [use to] develop yourself into a better man, all as a part of our Vision 2025.”

executive Director Patrick Jessee participates in the 2013 Indianapolis Regional leadership academy.

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WITTENBERG

LOYOLA MARYMOUNT

APPALACHIAN STATE

ARIZONA STATE

TEXAS A&M

UNC GREENSBORO

CASE WESTERN

6 The CaRnaT Ion | DelTaS Ig .oRg

aCB members & dedicated volunteers have assisted with the reopening of the chapter through a close partnership with the national fraternity

headquarters.

The university and Delta Sig are collaborating on a redevelopment of theTheta Upsilon chapter.

The university values and mission statement closely align with the values-based experience

Delta Sigma Phi strives to achieve.

DevelopmentNew ChapterNew ChapterDelta Sigma Phi’s New Chapter Development team is in the middle of one of its most successful years in Delta Sig history. This school year Delta Sig will return to four campuses, as well as break ground on three new campuses.

New Chapter Development

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WITTENBERG

LOYOLA MARYMOUNT

APPALACHIAN STATE

ARIZONA STATE

TEXAS A&M

UNC GREENSBORO

CASE WESTERN

7SP R In g 2013

Currently Delta Sigma Phi Fraternity has 17 new chapters, all at

different stages in their pursuit of a chartering ceremony.

Last fall our NCD team was

on the ground at Appalachian

State, Arizona State and Wittenberg

recruiting founding fathers and

helping the chapter begin the road

to chartering.

The progress doesn’t stop there,

though. At the end of last semester,

three new chapters were chartered.

The first, University of Central

Florida, was installed in

September, becoming

the Iota Epsilon

chapter of Delta Sigma

Phi. November and

December brought

chartering ceremonies

for UC-Berkeley (Hilgard)

and Miami University (Iota

Zeta). Gamma Chi at Drexel

University chartered March 9 of

this semester.

The Beta Iota Chapter at Wittenberg University in ohio

has over 800 alumni members. of the 1900 students on campus, one-third of the

student body joins fraternities and

sororities.

The university has placed emphasis on the student life engagement

and greek life programming which creates an environment

for a strong partnership with the fraternity.

UnCg administration determined it wants greek life to be a

component of developing student life, enrollment & student benefits. Delta Sig was specifically asked to

be the first group in a new stra-tegic effort to strengthen its programming and student

involvement.

New ChapterNew ChapterCase Western has four

professionals who work directly with greek life. The university

hosts several educational programs that benefit the development of undergraduate men. greek life is continuously growing

and thriving at the university.

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New Chapter Development

Iota Epsilon’s charter will hold a special place not only in members’ hearts, but in the hearts of staff, too.

“I couldn’t be more excited to see the first new chapter development project I worked on as a staff member receive their Charter. To see those men’s excitement the night we presented them the Iota Epsilon Charter will forever be one of my proudest moments as a member of Delta Sigma Phi,” Kevin Parks, Assistant Director of Chapter Advancement, said. Parks is UCF’s staff contact in his current role. He also worked with the chapter in his previous role as a New Chapter Development Coordinator. “It’s a great leap forward for Delta Sigma Phi as we continue to build chapters in the state of Florida, not to mention the chapter is at one of the largest universities in the country.”

This semester, the NCD team is on the ground at Texas A&M, UNC Greensboro and Case Western Reserve University, as well as Loyola Marymount.

Fall 2013 will bring three more projects to New Chapter Development. The Fraternity will be recolonizing two chapters: Alpha Nu at Oglethorpe University and Gamma Alpha at San Diego State University. Delta Sig will also break ground for the first time at Indiana University. National Fraternity staff members, university officials and alumni have been working for the past year in preparation for Delta Sig’s return to Oglethorpe & San Diego State University.

Recruitment will begin in August & September for the three colonizations. Please contact Nik Koulogeorge ([email protected]), Assistant Director of Fraternity Growth, for questions regarding the Fraternity’s recruitment efforts and recruitment referrals.

Each colonization will require alumni and volunteer support – if you live in the Atlanta, Bloomington, Ind. or San Diego area, please contact Amber Huston ([email protected]) for information about alumni involvement and/or volunteer opportunities.

neW ChaPTeRS

Appalachian State

Arizona State

Boise State

Case Western (Spring 2013)

Indiana (Fall 2013)

IUPUI

Louisiana-Monroe

Loyola-Chicago

Loyola Marymount (Spring 2013)

Oglethorpe (Fall 2013)

Ohio State

San Diego State (Fall 2013)

Texas A&M (Spring 2013)

UNC Greensboro (Spring 2013)

UNC-Wilmington

Utah

Wittenberg

MEN IN FRATERNITIES ON CAMPUS

33% 6% 3%6.3% 5.6% 12%

11,55110,389 5,0176,1101,985 5,7306,356

10,000

60,000

NMSTATE

NMSTATE

CAMPUS GPA

UNDERGRADUATE POPULATIONUNDERGRADUATE POPULATION

CAMPUS GPACAMPUS GPACAMPUS GPACAMPUS GPA

3.41

3.53.02.5

2.96

3.363.06

3.10

2.98

ALUMNI WITHIN 200 MILES OF CAMPUS

WITTENBERG

LOYOLA MARYMOUNT

APPALACHIAN STATE

ARIZONA STATE

TEXAS A&M

NEW MEXICO STATE

25%

More New Chapter Development Highlights

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9SP R In g 2013

TerminologyneW ChaPTeR (Formerly: Colony)Delta Sigma Phi is moving away from the term “colony”

in favor of “new chapter.”

We prefer to call the new Delta Sigma Phi groups “new

chapters” instead of colonies. We believe the term

new chapter is in line with the goals we set forth in

furthering our organization. New chapters are held to

the same standards and have the same values as exist-

ing, older chapters. They use our ritual just like any

established chapter, too. Therefore, these groups should

have the same designation: chapter.

neW ChaPTeR DeveloPmenT (Formerly: Expansion)Delta Sig is getting away from using the term expan-

sion when it comes to building chapters or returning to

campuses.

This mindset mentioned above in the colony vs. chapter

discussion has changed Delta Sig’s approach, expecta-

tions and performance. Delta Sigma Phi has set itself

apart from other fraternities that expand to campuses,

versus building high-performing chapters and members.

Our motto is Better Men. Better Lives. We aren’t just

expanding our success, we are bettering it with each new

chapter development project.

ReCRUITmenT (Formerly: Rush)Delta Sigma Phi refers to the process of selecting new

members as recruitment. Recruitment, as opposed to

rush, spans more than just a week. Rush traditionally

means a few days to a couple of weeks where potential

members rush a house, and the house attempts to get

as many people as possible. Recruitment, on the other

hand, allows Delta Sig chapters to bond with and get to

know potential new members. Recruitment is year-round.

neW memBeR (Formerly: Pledge)Being a new member means you are a member—you

don’t have to earn your right to be in the fraternity. New

members are treated with same respect and dignity as

initiated members. Pledges, on the other hand, have

to do their time and work to gain membership into the

Fraternity.

FRaTeRnITy (Formerly: Frat)Fraternity builds strong men. Fraternity develops character.

Fraternity is a home away from home. Frats are everything

the outside world thinks they are. The term “frat” gives off

a very negative connotation.

UnDeRgRaDUaTe oR alUmnUS (Formerly: Active)Both undergraduates and alumni who are in good standing

are all active members of the Fraternity. Therefore, we

refer to them as undergraduates or alumni.

m

m

m

m

m

m

3

3

3

3

3

3

Delta Sigma Phi

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10 The CaRnaT Ion | DelTaS Ig .oRg

Alumni Corporation Board

VoluNTEERiSMat theCORE

It happened while the number of social fraternities on campus

was dropping from 15 to seven over the last several years.

If you ask any Alumni Corporation Board member in a similar

situation for a list of nightmare scenarios, one is sure to be on

his mind—fire in the chapter house.

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11SP R In g 2013

A year and a half after the Illinois State chapter house caught fire, Alumni Corporation Board President Phil Rodriguez, Illinois State ’03, reflected on that fateful night at Epsilon Omega and the weeks that followed.

“It was unreal,” Rodriguez said. “It was really amazing, and I could not have been more

proud at that time to be a Delta Sig, and a [Illinois State] Redbird,” he said.

Where one might expect a nightmare scenario, we see a unifying experience. How do we get there?

Mark Zappa, Illinois State ’82, ACB Vice-President and the man in charge of the reconstruction of the house, was in disbelief when he first received the call that night in 2011.

When he answered the phone around midnight, Zappa remembered, ‘My first thought was, they’re pulling a prank on me!’”

There were times in Zappa’s couple of decades and change on the ACB where he had gotten late night calls; “the toilet’s broken!” someone might say. But when the calls kept coming rapid fire in April of last year, Zappa knew this one was probably for real.

He hit the road immediately, still on the fence about the likelihood the chapter house was in real danger. The chapter had just nailed down a contract earlier that month to have a modern sprinkler system installed by 2013. The timing was almost too perfect.

When Zappa arrived he saw a roof ablaze, with fire and smoke poking through the top floor windows behind Epsilon Omega’s four pillars.

“Well, I guess it isn’t a joke, you know?” he remembers thinking. “It was kind of an eye opener,” he says.

Meanwhile, two hours away at his home near Chicago, Rodriguez had already snapped into recovery mode.

“I talked to the [undergraduate] president,” Rodriguez said, “asked him if everyone was out of the house, and he assured me they were.”

“So from there I immediately called the university on-call people and got that ball rolling, then talked to other ACB members and we had three [at the house] within twenty minutes,” Rodriguez said.

By the time fire fighters contained the inferno, the fire and subsequent water damage had claimed everything but the shell of the building. The roof was gone, a victim of the flames that would soon be immortalized on YouTube.

The undergraduates called their brothers and friends to find somewhere to sleep for the night – none of them knowing what to expect next.

The entire ACB was in Normal, Ill., by 3 a.m., Rodriguez arrived last, having driven the farthest. By then, the fire had

been contained and the house was obviously a total loss. ACB members agreed to get a little rest and meet first thing in the morning.

At 6:30 a.m., the recovery process began in earnest. In that initial meeting, the ACB mapped out a recuperation strategy.

The ACB set up a 2 p.m. meeting, away from the prying eyes and cameras of the media, where the chapter and alumni could meet with representatives from the university, the Red Cross and Delta Sigma Phi headquarters that afternoon.

Ry Beck, Delta Sigma Phi Director of Education, then Assistant Director of Chapter Advancement, drove out from headquarters to be there. A liaison from the Red Cross, University Health System, and university housing representatives were also in attendance.

“The first thing was,” Zappa remembered, “where are the guys going to sleep?”

Rodriguez’s call to the university early that morning immediately paid off.

Within days, Illinois State administrators put the displaced active members in a residence hall on campus, where they remained for the rest of the semester.

“Everybody was there together; everybody took off time from work; everybody was just making sure these guys were taken care of, had a place to live, would get their money back… it was just phenomenal,” Rodriguez said.

For three more days the ACB and the rest of the team met with various parties.

They orchestrated meeting after meeting after meeting, with no shortage of questions to be answered.

“Every 10 minutes there was a new issue to deal with,” Rodriguez said.

And although the board members had to take time off work and time away from their families in order to completely immerse themselves in finding solutions, Rodriguez doesn’t think it could have gone any better.

VoluNTEERiSM

onlookers watch as the epsilon omega house at Illinois State is engulfed in flames.

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For the 2011-2012 school year, the undergraduates lived in rental housing at 410 Oak, a fraternity house now occupied by Tau Kappa Epsilon.

The undergraduates persevered. Their story of hardship and triumph made its way around the media outlets that once hovered outside their secret meeting room.

Two years later, the chapter is back in its original house on 711 Kingsley, with a new roof, new interior, and a fresh start.

Now, finally, the members can live much the same as they did before.

“There was news cameras in here last week,” one undergraduate said. “We’re used to it now.”

“By the time I came home,” Rodriguez remembers, “[I knew] we made a total difference, we got through this, and some people may not have.”

So what’s the key? Why did the Epsilon Omega chapter at Illinois State make it through stronger than before? On this campus where overall fraternity membership is plummeting?

“A lot of that credit goes to Zappa and everyone else who’s been a part of the team,” Rodriguez said. “To the university, the other ACB members, to the alumni who have donated a lot of money to make the year a little easier on us – to make sure we get there. It really was the definition of a team effort.”

Rodriguez is quick to thank everyone who helped along the way. But those around him believe the project went as well as it did, in part, due to a well-functioning ACB.

Zappa, who has been involved with the chapter or ACB pretty much since his initiation in 1980, believes the current Alumni Corporation Board is as cohesive as it has ever been.

With two alums working for his construction company responsible for the upkeep of the house, and with the constant state of repair typical of any college living environment, the undergrads see at least one alumnus on a fairly regular basis.

Illinois State has a fully functioning ACB. And while no relationship is perfect, the ACB has a fully functioning relationship with the undergraduate members, making for

a pleasant environment for both sides.The traumatic event helped strengthen this relationship.

Trauma and crises act as catalysts, for better or worse.So what about the chapters that don’t want to deal with

tragedy to prove their success?It starts with quality leadership at the top. For his part,

Rodriguez brings great communication skills to the table. “Not many people live in Normal,” Claude Warren,

Director of Operations, told the Carnation. “Three members of the ACB live in Normal or Bloomington, the sister city, but most of the alumni and the rest of the ACB reside in the greater Chicagoland area.”

Because of the distance and time, dedication is a must for an ACB.

“Rodriguez has an engaging personality, and he has a very dedicated group. He doesn’t have to rally the troops constantly,” Warren said.

That’s the second key—the group. Everyone from the president to the secretary is dedicated to his specific niche on the board at Epsilon Omega.

Asked for the key to ISU’s success, Mark Zappa said, “It’s alumni actually doing their job. Everybody’s got their role.”

Zappa described Rodriguez as the face guy, the “rah-rah” type. Then there’s Ryan Osolin, Illinois State ’03, the treasurer, whose ability to govern chapter finances was made drastically simpler when the chapter switched over to Omega Financial.

“I used to be the treasurer,” Zappa said. “It used to just be an inquisition for undergrads who owed money. Omega Fi changed all that,” Zappa said.

Secretary Jeff Fink, Illinois State ’00, keeps the chapter website, www.deltasig1.com, going, pumps out newsletters to keep local alumni in the loop, and other various other tasks. Don’t be surprised if you see him at the chapter house.

Zappa handles the brick-and-mortar investment, the house. And Rodriguez, the president, well he makes sure it all gets done.

Thirty years after his initiation, Zappa says working with the house has “become a hobby, kind of. I almost feel like the [chapter] is a child of mine.”

Alumni Corporation Board

12 The CaRnaT Ion | DelTaS Ig .oRg

above: The aftermath of the april 2011 fire. Right: The chapter house as it stands, reconstructed, today.

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The ACB’s strategic objectives moving forward out of the recovery phase revolve around improving the college experience for undergrads.

Specifically, Rodriguez would like to get an alumni network up and running.

“Step one is to get back to normalcy and get back to focusing on undergraduate and alumni development,” Rodriguez says.

The plan includes providing job and internship oppor-tunities for the undergrads by setting up get-togethers where alumni can network with undergrads in their same field.

Normalcy in Normal, Ill. The fraternity made it through one of the more difficult scenarios you can imagine.

Back to our question from above: what about an ACB that doesn’t have a tragic event to bring them closer?

Beta Kappa at the University of Alabama was founded nearly 90 years ago, in 1933. After reorganizing late in the last decade, the chapter officially rechartered in 2010.

For the first two years, Beta Kappa and ACB drove towards one singular goal: becoming an active chapter of Delta Sigma Phi.

“When you’re a colony (new chapter), setting goals is easy; you just want to become a chapter,” David “Glenn” Reeves, Alabama ’80, the current ACB President, said.

Two years past rechartering, the men at Alabama recruited 39 men and have moved into a beautiful new house.

The University of Alabama’s Greek system is a behemoth wrought with old traditions and long-established unwritten rules by which the Greek organizations are expected to play.

Beta Kappa went out and immediately bucked those norms, recruiting and retaining members who didn’t necessarily fit the typical southern fraternal stereotype. The willingness to do what’s right has everyone excited about the possibilities in Tuscaloosa.

“You have to do the right thing, even when it’s not the popular decision,” Reeves says. “If you do that, they’ll respect you for it.”

What’s amazing isn’t just how well the chapter is recruiting or the stands it has taken—it’s that the group is following a course it set.

“As an alumni corporation, we can’t say, ‘you’re going to do this, this, and this,’” Reeves said.

A board certainly can take that approach, but it illustrates a thinly-veiled distrust of the very men they’re trying to help become better.

Where’s the benefit in doing everything for the under-grads? There’s very little room for personal growth there.

“We don’t try to determine every step they make,” Reeves said.

growing aCBNot every Alumni Corporation Board has the advantage of generational diversity.

Delta Sigma Phi colonized at the University of Oregon in 1996, chartering (Theta Rho) two years later. At the same time, the university and town of Eugene bloomed into a nationally prominent university with real name recognition.

Theta Rho doesn’t own a house because, “we’re really young, only been around since 1996…and the housing market at U of O has become increasingly competitive,” Ian Trumbo, ’04, president of the Theta Rho ACB, said.

For such a young chapter in the northwest, building an ACB meant having to constantly reinvent the wheel.

“Everything they’d be working on for the next three years, when the next guy took over, he’d have to reinvent the wheel,” Trumbo said.

So Trumbo and his team have built a sustainability model at Oregon. He has been meeting with small groups of three-to-four alumni whom he knows can make a difference for the chapter if they go all in.

Then, earlier this year, Trumbo organized a bigger meeting to follow up—35 men showed up, plus Delta Sigma Phi Director of Volunteer Development Claude Warren.

“I didn’t hardly hear the same pledge class twice,” Warren said. “They have the potential to be a great group. All ages seem to be more represented.”

With younger groups, it’s important to remember that a gentleman who graduated before the millennium had a different experience than the guy who graduated in ’07. There’s a low ceiling on age for a chapter in existence just more than a decade.

After that meeting, alumni involvement spiked. Then a non-member galvanized the group.

When the house cook lost her car in an accident—she had been with the chapter for a very long time and was “very involved in our chapter’s growth,” according to Trumbo—the alumni and undergradu-ates all worked together to fundraise money to go towards helping her get into a new vehicle.

In just four days they raised over $2,000 and more continued to come in.

“Things like that remind me of the kind of unique and special community we have here at Theta Rho,” Trumbo said. “I just want to continue to be a part of it.”

The Oregon ACB has two long-term goals; owning a house in an increasingly competitive fraternity/sorority system and Eugene housing market, and expanding the alumni involvement at Theta Rho.

So far they’re well on their way to the second goal. But with or without a chapter house, an involved and invested ACB can make all the difference in driving toward our mission: to build better men.

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Gannon Advisor inspires, leads Chapter Advisors span the Delta Sig collegiate community. At the bare minimum, advisors act as a sounding board for members when they have questions. Gannon undergraduates and alumni don’t know bare minimum – they know Father Jason Glover – an actively involved advisor who serves as the beating heart of the Gamma Rho chapter.

Glover began his time at Gannon with Delta Sigma Phi when the Fraternity reorganized on campus in May 2010.

“A young man I knew before he started college wanted to get involved and decided he wanted to start a fraternity on campus, so he reignited Delta Sig,” Glover said. “He approached me at lunch one day and asked if I’d be interested in helping out.”

From there, the rest is history --- he has loved Delta Sig ever since. Glover said his experience has been unforgettable. “The experience of going through colonization and then getting our charter was a highlight for me and our founding fathers,” Glover said.

The chartering was a peak of excitement for Gannon. Glover said he felt a challenge following the chartering.

“There was so much excitement after chartering, but we had to keep the momentum going,” Glover said. “There was so much more we could accomplish – there were new goals we could set.”

Gamma Rho’s past Chapter President Keefer Kopco, ’11, said, “Having Fr. Glover means that we’ll never truly lose sight of what our end goals are. He constantly reminds us to strive for excellence and be better men.”

Glover dedicated himself to his role as chapter advisor. He provides guidance and assistance to the Gamma Rho chapter. Although he acts as a mentor, he is careful not to hover over the members.

“There is a healthy balance between helping them grow and letting them develop on their own,” he said. “I let them take care of internal matters internally, and I provide guidance.”

Glover thinks the key to being a successful advisor is to avoid being overbearing and allow the undergraduates to make some of their own mistakes and learn from them.

“Fr. Glover is really the rock that holds up our chapter. When the guys feel disheartened, he’s the one that starts looking at a situation a different way; but in the same vain, when they get out of hand, he’s not afraid to get them in line,” Kopco said.

Aside from mentoring, Glover also participates in Fraternity events and philanthropy activities – he prides himself on being a very hands- on advisor.

Although Glover is not an initiated member of Delta Sigma Phi, he still holds the Fraternity close to his heart and beams with pride for the organization. “I see Delta Sig as a Fraternity that tries its best to live life with integrity,” he said. “Integrity in the classroom and in relationships within the Fraternity and society.”

Father Jason glover with members at gannon University.

Alumni Corporation Board

14 The CaRnaT Ion | DelTaS Ig .oRg

Instead of laying out the course and making sure the undergrads don’t deviate, Reeves says, “They just have to have a map.”

“We’ve asked the boys to come up with what we call five-year goals. I’m not a believer in a one-year plan. A plan should be achieving a long-term objective; otherwise your victories are short-lived,” Reeves said.

Reeves brings 17 years of experience in corporate America with him. He served for 11 years as the vice president of a Fortune 500 company.

The experience offers him with some insight on how to run the business side of fraternal operations—essentially one of two main functions of the ACB (the other being that of an advisory board).

At the first chapter meeting of the year, Beta Kappa discussed its long-term strategy then condensed it into a yearly list of goals.

Members post those goals all over the house, a constant reminder of their purpose.

“We ask, what is your job here? To get an education and grow as a man,” Reeves said.

Reeves’ board is composed of members from three

separate generations. With that diversity, the chapter has a variety of advisory possibilities.

“We have a nice mixture of undergrads, recent grads, moderate-to-long-term graduates, and we even have a Delta Sig from another university who has been there for us since day one of the ACB,” Reeves said.

Ultimately, the key to a highly functioning ACB is the presence of invested volunteers. Reeves has been involved since the 1990s, and he believes in the ability of the alumnus to affect positive change at any chapter.

“Volunteering with the chapters shows the younger guys we are still involved and interested in them,” Reeves said. “It shows them that it isn’t just about now—the bond of brother-hood is something after college. It’s a life long commitment.”

Volunteering isn’t just in the chapter’s best interest, though. Volunteers themselves get something out of the time they commit to the Fraternity.

“The benefits of volunteering don’t have to be tangible,” Reeves said. “Volunteering makes you feel good – the feeling should be all you need, and it is for me.”

“They need us now more than ever,” Reeves concluded.

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SP R In g 2013 15

Leadership Institute

Why the Next Henry Ford Could Be a Delta Sig(and other observations on Leadership Institute)

BRookS

honeyCUTT

is the chapter

treasurer of the Theta

Epsilon chapter at Wingate

University in Wingate, N.C. A

slightly-built young man with a

messy haircut, a country accent and

a smile that lights up any room, he found

himself at a loss for words at the close of the

20th annual Delta Sigma Phi Leadership institute,

held at Camp Tecumseh in rural Indiana July 27-31.

SCOTT COOPER, MISSOuRI ’84

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16 The CaRnaT Ion | DelTaS Ig .oRg

Leadership Institute

Reflecting back on the end of five days of personal leadership developed and paid for by generous Delta Sigma Phi alumni from across the country, Honeycutt seemed momentarily at a loss for words when asked to describe the experience. “Monumental” he finally offered. “I have rediscovered myself, and I have found a new love for Delta Sigma Phi.”

Steve Deptola, an engaging and athletic member of the Alpha Iota new chapter at Ohio State University, who also happens to be the academics chair, offered an even stronger assess-ment: “It has shattered how I approach leadership. I have the tools to go out and tell people, ‘If you follow me, I can lead you in the right direction.’”

Blake Pederson, past president of the Delta Delta chapter at Purdue University, whose leadership course-work already requires an extra page of his resume to list, thought the Leadership Institute offered something different than other training events he has attended: “Leadership Institute pushed me outside my comfort zone and forced me to consider how I could change my leadership style to get back in my zone. My leadership so far has been about speaking out and being heard. What I’ve learned here is that some of the most powerful leadership is sometimes provided when I talk the least.”

These are just some of the perspectives of the brothers chosen from across the country to attend Delta Sigma Phi’s pinnacle leadership training event, held amid the wilting cornstalks and withered soybeans of Central Indiana in the hottest part of

the summer. Undergraduates spent hours hunkered down in intensive classwork while soaking in a curricu-lum built around the five exemplary practices of leadership laid out by James M. Posner and Barry Z. Kouzes in their the best-selling book, “The Leadership Challenge,” now in its fifth edition. But the undergraduates also balanced their study time with carefully tailored activities, designed to test their leadership skills in real-world settings.

It was during one of those ses-sions that Felix Navarro, current President and past social chair at the Gamma Epsilon chapter at San Jose State University, came face to face with his “leadership moment.”

Reflecting back on his struggle as part of team attempting to climb to the top of a 40-foot rock wall in the heat of the midday sun, Navarro said, “I’m not used to failing. I’m the person who is used to taking charge. I haven’t failed in something for a very long time. I inspire people and encour-age others, but for the first time, while I was failing, it wasn’t me who was doing the encouraging, it was me who was failing, and the experience of being brought through that experience by others was not something that I could have gotten anywhere else. It’s some-thing that I will definitely keep in mind as I go back home to new responsibili-ties on my campus.”

Salem Awwad, the chapter president of Zeta Chi, University of Alabama-Birmingham, a man with an outsized personality and a physique to match, also found his humbling moment at Leadership Institute. “I

came here to put another checkmark on my resume,” he said. “I learned how to be champion and a cheer-leader, and I learned what it was like when other people cheer you on and encourage your heart. I want to take that back with me. I want to make sure that other people have that feeling when they do something well.”

“My ideas on leadership are com-pletely changed,” said Seth Engelman, a self-described country boy with a lanky frame and a deep southern drawl. “I thought you had to be gung-ho, strong to be a good leader. But now I know that you sometimes have to just step back and ask, ‘What can I do?’ Leadership is not about being directive. It is about modeling the way.”

Engelman, Theta Omega’s (Georgia Southern) social chair, also commented on the important role played by alumni, often themselves Leadership Institute grads, who facilitate the program in a small- group formats. Engelman said the contribution of time and advice from the 10 facilitators and trainers who attended – as well as the many alumni from across the country who funded the program – made a deep impression on him: “I have a whole new appreciation for this fraternity. I had no idea the alumni cared so much. After going through this process, I’ve come to realize that y’all love us, y’all care—even those of us tucked away down in the borough.”

Karlton Smith, the pledge director and brotherhood chair of Beta Beta chapter at the University of Missouri and a three-way legacy of his chapter and fraternity through his father, Steve

“It has shattered how I approach leadership. I have the tools to go out and tell people, ‘If you follow me, I can lead you in the right direction.’”

Page 17: Spring 2013 Carnation :: Delta Sigma Phi

Smith, Beta Beta ’76, and his uncles, Karl and John Adrian (Beta Beta, ’78 and ’80), briefly contemplated skipping the Leadership Institute experience in favor of a last-moment opportunity for a lakeside vacation with friends. In hindsight, he says, “That would have been a horrible decision. This was a life-changing experience. To the alumni who funded this program, all I have to say is this: ‘Thank you, from the bottom of my heart.’”

For Kelly Ebler, a senior music major and a former recruitment chair at Gamma Xi chapter at the University of North Texas, the experience also was a once-in-a-lifetime event. “When I read through the book, and I saw Henry Ford’s quote about the goal of his life being ‘to make the horse obsolete,’ it made me stop and think, ‘Maybe my goals aren’t all that far away after all’,” he said.

The Leadership Institute is an annual program funded through donations provided by Delta Sigma Phi alumni who buy into the concept of using the fraternity model of build-ing better men to change the world. It has been recognized and copied by other fraternities. It is available only to undergraduate members of Delta Sigma Phi. So far, the program, which costs approximately $1,000 per undergraduate and is offered at no cost to the best and brightest of the fraternity’s members, has graduated nearly 1,000 leaders.

To be a part of the experience, visit: www.deltasig.org/about/ongoing_ initiatives/the_leadership_institute

SP R In g 2013 17

leadership attendees leave lI with an even stronger bond to Delta Sig and their brothers. During lI, members work with leaders outside of their chapters to develop personal leadership skills. “It has shattered how I approach leadership.

I have the tools to go out and tell people, ‘If you follow me, I can lead you in the right direction.’”

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18 The CarnaT ion | DelTas ig .org18 The CaRnaT Ion | DelTaS Ig .oRg

MEN

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19Fall 2012

Annual Report

Delta Sigma Phi Headquarters welcomed

Nathan Wight, Illinois State ’97, to staff in

January. Wight will serve as Delta Sigma

Phi’s Chief Advancement Officer.

Wight has an extensive background

in development efforts. In 2006, he began

working for Purdue University. While at

Purdue, Wight worked as the Director of

Development in the School of Aeronautical

& Astronautical Engineering, the School

of Civil Engineering and the College of

Pharmacy. While at Purdue, his main role

was to raise private support and keep

alumni and corporate partners connected

and engaged with the academic leadership,

faculty, and students.

Prior to his time at Purdue, Wight worked at the Delta Sig Headquarters.

From 2001 to 2006, he held various roles including Director of Expansion,

Director of Chapter Development and Director of Development and Alumni

Relations.

In his role as Chief Advancement Officer, Wight will oversee all fundraising,

alumni relations, communications and marketing efforts. Delta Sigma Phi,

through Vision 2025, has launched a bold effort to greatly enhance the alumni

and student experience. In order to achieve organizational goals, the Fraternity

will seek to raise more private support and offer more services and benefits

to Delta Sigma Phi’s general alumni base.

While at Illinois State, Wight earned his Bachelor of Science in Business

Administration. He earned his Master of Arts in Student Affairs Administration

in Higher Education from Ball State University. Wight is married to his wife,

Monica; they have two daughters, Mela and Reagan.

Fraternity hires chief advancement officer

IRa ChaRITaBle RolloveR

If you are 70.5 years or older, don’t forget you have a chance to

partake in the IRA Charitable Rollover program.

Program Details:

• Must be 70.5 years or older

• Rollover up to $100,000 from IRA to a qualified charity (this

includes the Delta Sigma Phi Foundation)

• TAX-FREE withdrawal that counts towards yearly minimum IRA

withdrawal but does not qualify for a charitable deduction

• Amount of rollover is excluded from gross income

• Good through December 31, 2013

For more info, go to www.cof.org and search: IRA Charitable RolloverMEN

FoundationannuaL REPoRt

2011-2012

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20 The CaRnaT Ion | DelTaS Ig .oRg

Annual Report

SocIety of benefactorSas of June 30, 2012

FoUnDeRS’ SoCIeTyBruce Loewenberg, Missouri ’58Hensel McKee, Washington ’30*Cornel Raab, Purdue ’66

PReSIDenTS’ SoCIeTy Ted Desch, Illinois ’49Mike Griffin, UNC-Chapel Hill ’86Dick Handshaw, Alfred ’68Loren Mall, Kansas State ’58Louis Ripberger, Purdue ’74William Shepherd, Alabama ’34*William WilderGil Williamson, San Jose State ’58

CenTURy SoCIeTy Rolfe Allen, Maryland ’34*Ed Clements, San Jose State ’48*Tom Decker, St. Louis ’69Jon Gundlach, Oglethorpe ’87David Harvey, UNC-Chapel Hill ’88Gary Kalian, UC-Berkeley ’58Robert H Koch, Wisconsin-Oshkosh ’67*Tom Roeser, Purdue ’70

goRDIan knoT SoCIeTy Thomas Archer, Virginia ’87Gene Blanchard, Illinois ’50John Boma, Illinois ’80T Mabry Carlton, Stetson ’54*Marshall Cox, UCLA ’56Steve Cunningham, Missouri ’70Lee Dueringer, Illinois ’60Chris Edmonds, Alabama-Birmingham ’87Chuck Finklea, Barton ’74Jim Greener, Arizona State ’62Neal Griesenauer, Missouri - Rolla ’58Frank Hoke, Missouri ’30*Allen James, NC State ’65Don Keltner, USC ’51Ken Kramer, Detroit ’58*David McCarthy, UCLA ’81Richard McLellan, Michigan State ’61Chris Northern, Texas ’77Jerry O’Brien, Purdue ’59Mike Renfro, Texas ’79Russell Roebuck, Barton ’58*Bob Rojka, San Jose State ’49*Ed Runser, Edinboro ’72*Russell Shaw, Ohio State ’59Tony Smercina, Texas ’81

John Ting, UC-Berkeley ’67*Bud Tishkowski, Hillsdale ’57Jim Unger, Missouri ’67

lamP SoCIeTy Steve Banfield, Transylvania ’87Bob Banning, Missouri ’57Barton ACB, BartonRoy Bliss, Arizona State ’62Frank Boyle, Michigan State ’48Jim Braeutigam, Texas ’58Brian Brooks, Missouri ’64Roger Carroll, Virginia ’80Don Chandler, Texas ’73Kevin Cole, High Point ’89Cam Creech, UNC-Charlotte ’89Chris Cronin, Detroit ’84Howard Etling, Missouri ’32Don Falk, Illinois ’49Allen Fore, Eureka ’86Tim Forrester, Michigan State ’85Timothy Gentry, Missouri ’81Charles Gilbert, Georgia Tech ’59Rodney Gould, Eureka ’84Jim Haleem, Western Illinois ’66Morris Heintschel, Texas ’70Don Heppermann, Missouri ’63Jon Hockman, Ohio State ’87Mike Hoffman, Arizona State ’85Donald Hunt, Iowa State ’28*Patrick Franklin Jessee, Purdue ’01Erik Johannesen, San Diego State ’77Mark Johnson, San Diego State ’83Bob Kennel, NC State ’57Dan Kitrell, St. Cloud State ’80

Charles Kubin, Texas ’52Walt Kurczewski, Illinois ’62James Wesley Larson, Cal Poly, San Luis

Obispo ’72Willard Leutzinger, Missouri ’68Larry Lundberg, San Jose State ’66Ramsey Mankarious, Michigan State ’87John Douglas McDonald, Purdue ’70Stan McLemore, Alabama-Birmingham ’84Richard Metz, Illinois ’50Jonathan Monfort, Cal Poly, San Luis

Obispo ’82Randy Peterson, UNC-Charlotte ’93Ed Rodriguez, Texas ’86Dennis Sheehan, Maryland ’53*Gene Vance, Transylvania ’85Harry Vogts, UW, Madison ’29*Eric Wagner, Ohio State ’62Scott Wiley, SUNY-Oswego ’97Mike Wims, North Texas ’66Allan Winter, Colorado ’55*

lUTe SoCIeTyKarl Adrian, Missouri ’78Chip Ahlswede, Arizona State ’94Kurt William Allen, U of Michigan -

Dearborn ’87Margaret Austin, Wittenberg*Dave Bahlmann, Hillsdale ’57Jason E Baker, Arizona State ’97David Balas, UNC-Chapel Hill ’86Leahbell Balbach, MichiganAlain Balmanno, Utah State ’07Dave Bartnett, Missouri ’69Larry Barton, Missouri ’67

The Society of Benefactors was created to recognize those who have made

lifetime gifts of over $10,000 or planned gifts of more than $50,000 to the

Delta Sigma Phi Foundation. The Society of Benefactors also recognizes Brothers

who have named the Foundation as the beneficiary of an Individual Retirement

Account, 401(k) plan, pension or a life insurance policy owned by the donor.

Brothers who have made charitable bequests under $50,000 are also recog-

nized as members of the Society of Benefactors.

Society ...................................Current gifts .......................Deferred gifts

Founders’ Society ....................$500,000 ............................$1 Million

Presidents’ Society ..................$250,000 ............................$500,000

Century Society .......................$100,000 ............................$250,000

Gordian Knot Society ...............$50,000 ..............................$150,000

Lamp Society ..........................$25,000 ..............................$100,000

Lute Society ............................$10,000 ..............................$50,000

Page 21: Spring 2013 Carnation :: Delta Sigma Phi

21SP R In g 2013

Bob Beaver, UCLA ’28*David Beck, Purdue ’93Brian Bernardoni, Illinois State ’86Beta Tau ACB, Western Michigan Mike Biebrich, Purdue ’65*Jeff Black, Millikin ’72Stuart Black, Millikin ’49*Tony Blanton, Transylvania ’85Ron Bloom, Missouri ’64Bert Boeckmann, USC ’51Gary Bonnell, Missouri ’60Allan Brandt, Nebraska ’64Bill Bray, Purdue ’87Clifford Burk, Detroit ’65Jeff Burrows, Missouri ’76Tony Byerly, Eureka ’87Philip Arthur Capling, UNC-Charlotte ’89Brian Carson, New Mexico State ’94Bob Chapman, Michigan State ’60Mathew Aaron Charney,

New Mexico State ’90Landon Christy, Louisiana-Monroe ’00Michael James Clayton, Millikin ’92Dave Collins, Western Michigan ’65Mike Connelly, Missouri ’73Ross Cowan, NC State ’88Carl Cowen, Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo ’56Daryl Crouse, East Carolina ’90Tom Cycyota, Illinois ’77Jay Dade, Missouri ’83Bob Dathe, Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo ’58Dal Davis, Missouri ’77Mark Davis, Missouri ’97Jason DeKuester, Wisconsin-Eau Claire ’95John Derbin, Grand Valley ’94Ed DeWald, Purdue ’77Azeem Dhalla, CSU-San Bernardino ’91Devon Dobrich, Missouri ’84Bill Donato, Penn State ’91Rodney Drinkard, Oglethorpe ’89Wes Eaton, Boston ’40David Eisenhauer, Purdue ’71Epsilon Rho Alumni Association, Cal Poly,

San Luis ObispoDoug Eroh, Penn State ’93Robert Rocco Ferreira, SUNY-Brockport ’94Greg Forester, Cal Poly, Pomona ’88Gary Fortner, San Diego State ’87Andrew James Fyke, U of Cal-Davis ’83Pete Gallagher, Ohio Northern ’82Fred Ganaway, Illinois ’66Greg Garland, Western Carolina ’85Jim Gay, Missouri ’01Jim Greenwood, Texas ’81Bryan Hannegan, Oklahoma ’88Larry Harris, Purdue ’59

Wayne Harshberger, Rose-Hulman ’92Mark Haselton, Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo ’61Wes Hayden, Illinois ’75Dean Henderson, Missouri ’67Brett Henery, Texas A&M ’99Chris Hill, Texas ’78James Hill, Oglethorpe ’03Carl Hintze, Arizona State ’64Richard Holmes, UC-Berkeley ’78Tom Howard, Houston ’66Carl Howard, UNC-Chapel Hill ’87Dennis Howard, Virginia ’71Harry Hufford, California-Los Angeles ’50Jim Hyde, Albion ’32*Trent J Inman, Purdue ’94John Jenkins, Virginia ’84Don Jennison, Kansas State ’55Donald Jensen, U of Southern California ’67John Jones, Arizona State ’93James Jost, Missouri ’64Jim Kalb, San Diego State ’79Barry Kalian, Cal State, Sacramento ’85Roger Kelton, North Texas ’66John Kiely, Washington ’28*Scott Kimpel, Texas ’93Mark Kipp, Rose-Hulman ’80Steve Kleinschmidt, Missouri ’77Christopher Ira Klug, Washington State ’91Jim Knoll, San Jose State ’83Robert Kramp, Houston ’93Jon Krause, Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo ’82Donald Kukla, Valparaiso ’81Mike Lane, Missouri ’64Bill Lawhorn, Wisconsin-LaCrosse ’93Jon Lee, Iowa State ’78Greg Lewis, Purdue ’71Kevin Lynn, Penn State ’92Matthew Macaluso, Purdue ’92Mike Makuch, Texas ’82Marc Mathews, Transylvania ’77Donald McCloud, Millikin ’93Kelly MillerRoger Mola, Purdue ’66Orlando Montesino, Texas ’72Bill Moore, Georgia Tech ’36*Chris Moore, Texas ’91Mike Morris, Eastern Michigan ’65Dennis Muchmore, Eastern Illinois ’65James Mumford, Wingate ’92Bill Murray, Texas ’51Jim Nitsos, UC-Berkeley ’55Daniel Earl Nitzsche, Illinois ’87Ted Owens, North Carolina State ’58Thomas Parks, Missouri ’66Brian Patrick, North Texas ’68John Penicook, Illinois ’77

Scott Peterson, Purdue ’80Mike Petrik, Eastern Illinois ’76Kevin Powers, UC-Berkeley ’75John Prange, Millikin ’58Frank Ramirez, Loyola ’85Derek Rasmussen, Oglethorpe ’98David Howard Recht, San Diego State ’68Ron Reed, Western Illinois ’68Raul G Retamoza, Arizona State ’93Rusty Rice, Illinois ’73Frederick Rosenkampff, Western Carolina ’59Scott Ross, New Mexico State ’93Shy Scheihagen, Eta ’73Dan Schwartz, Purdue ’80Jon Shull, Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo ’83Noel Shutt, Missouri ’69Mike Smid, Missouri ’74Steve Smith, Missouri ’75Jim Spare, North Carolina State ’89Greg Speno, Missouri ’65Bill Steers, Albion ’40*Gordon Steil, Iowa State ’39*Mike Stravino, St. John’s ’66*Hank Stricker, Michigan ’48Gene Sullivan, Michigan State ’81Brad Sullivan, Transylvania ’99Bill Surles, North Texas ’66John Swanson, Illinois ’60Thomas Sweatt, Millikin ’02Rick Tank, Nebraska ’75Bill Tilghman, Barton ’84Erik Token, Missouri ’83Patrick Allen Trowbridge, North Texas ’88Craig Van Doren, Hartwick ’76John Van Hook, Western Illinois ’68Bill Vanjonack, Missouri ’64Brian Vincent, Maryland ’00Joe Vitale, New York Tech ’89Charles Walgreen, Michigan ’55Nathan Wight, Illinois State ’97Ed Wilder, Purdue ’64Ken Willard, Purdue ’90Roger Willis, Purdue ’68Rob Wyckoff, Texas ’96Marcus Wyss, Kansas State ’90Bill Yates, Grand Valley ’97Jason Zullin, Hofstra ’94

*Bond Eternal

Page 22: Spring 2013 Carnation :: Delta Sigma Phi

22 The CaRnaT Ion | DelTaS Ig .oRg

DIamonDPUrDUeTom Roeser ’70

PlaTInUmILLInoISTed Desch ’49MISSoUrISteven Cunningham ’70teXaSMike Renfro ’79

golDarIZona StateRoy Bliss ’62Mike Hoffman ’85eUreKaAllen Fore ’86HILGarDGary Kalian ’58KanSaS StateLoren Mall ’58MISSoUrIBob Banning ’57Mark Davis ’97Tom Decker ’69Howard Etling ’32Skip Leutzinger ’68Bruce Loewenberg ’58oHIo StateRuss Shaw ’59PUrDUeJohn McDonald ’70

San JoSe StateLarry Lundberg ’66teXaSJim Braeutigam ’59UabChris Edmonds ’88UcLaDavid McCarthy ’81VIrGInIaTom Archer ’87

SIlveRarIZona StateJim Greener ’62Carl Hintze ’64John Jones ’93aUbUrnHal Shepherd ’66bartonChuck Finklea ’74brocKPortRob Ferreira ’94caL PoLy-SLoBob Dathe ’58Jim Larson ’72Jonathan Monfort ’82eUreKaTony Byerly ’87GranD VaLLey StateBill Yates ’97HIGH PoIntKevin Cole ’89

LoUISIana-MonroeLandon Christy ’00MIcHIGan StateRamsey Mankarious ’87MISSoUrIKarl Adrian ’78Dave Bartnett ’69Larry Barton ’67Mike Connelly ’73Jay Dade ’83Timothy Gentry ’81Dean Henderson ’67Don Heppermann ’63Mike Lane ’64Thomas Parks ’66Noel Shutt ’69Mike Smid ’74Greg Speno ’65Eric Token ’83Bill Vanjonack ’64nc StateAllen James ’65Bob Kennel ’57neW MeXIco StateMat Charney ’90oGLetHorPeRodney Drinkard ’89James Hill ’03Derek Rasmussen ’98Penn StateBill Donato ’91Kevin Lynn ’92PUrDUeDavid Beck ’93Bill Bray ’87Patrick Jessee ’01San DIeGo StateJim Kalb ’79SUny-oSWeGoScott Wiley ’97teXaSMorris Heintschel ’70Scott Kimpel ’93Charles Kubin ’52Mike Makuch ’82Orlando Montesino ’72Chris Northern ’77Tony Smercina ’81tranSyLVanIaBrad Sullivan ’99UabStan McLemore ’84UcLaMarshall Cox ’56Unc-cHaPeL HILLMike Griffin ’86Dave Harvey ’88Carl Howard ’87Unc-cHarLottePhil Capling ’89Cam Creech ’89Randy Peterson ’93

UScDonald Jensen ’67VIrGInIaJohn Jenkins ’84WaSHInGton StateChris Klug ’91WeStern ILLInoISJim Haleem ’66

BRonZeaLfreDDick Handshaw ’68arIZona StateChip Ahlswede ’94Jason Baker ’97Chris Popjoy ’96Bill Simon ’59Michael Van Milligan ’99bartonBill Tilghman ’84boWLInG GreenBart Ankney ’01brocKPortScott Farrell ’88Unc-cHarLotteCraig Van Doren ’76caL PoLy - SLoCAL POLY - SLO Alumni Association Duane Kerber ’75Jon Krause ’82Jon Shull ’83caL PoLy - PoMonaGregory Forester ’88cLarKSonDavid Heacock ’80cSU-freSnoClay Blanton ’94Jeff Cova ’90Austin Hastings ’91Jeffrey Percell ’95cSU-SacraMentoBarry Kalian ’85cSU-San bernarDInoAzeem Dhalla ’91DetroItClifford Burk ’65Chris Cronin ’84eaStern ILLInoISMike Petrik ’76eaStern MIcHIGanEd Stewart ’74eUreKaBucky Boland ’94Rod Gould ’84GeorGIaDan Harper ’03GeorGIa tecHCharlie Gilbert ’59

GranD VaLLey StateZach Brevis ’96John Derbin ’94HartforDKevin Meisinger ’95HIGH PoIntJay Amernick ’89HILGarDKevin Powers ’75HofStraRob Salvatico ’93Jason Zullin ’94HoUStonTom Howard ’66Robert Kramp ’93IDaHoMatt Espe ’77ILLInoISGene Blanchard ’50Tom Cycyota ’77Fred Ganaway ’66Wes Hayden ’75Frank Maggio ’65Rusty Rice ’73ILLInoIS StateBrian Bernardoni ’86Phil Rodriguez ’03Nathan Wight ’97Duane Saunders ’58KanSaS StateMarcus Wyss ’90LoUISIana-MonroeTim Roussel ’93LoyoLa MaryMoUntFrank Ramirez ’85MaryLanDBrian Vincent ’00MIcHIGan StateBen Aloia ’92Timothy Forrester ’88Richard McLellan ’61MIcHIGan-DearbornKurt Allen ’87MILLIKInJeff Black ’72Mick Clayton ’92Seth Goodman ’07Grant McCloud ’93John Prange ’58Thomas Sweatt ’02MISSoUrIRon Bloom ’64Brian Brooks ’64John Brown ’71Dal Davis ’77Devon Dobrich ’84Burt Ewing ’63Tony Garrett ’93Jim Gay ’01

1899 SocIety MeMberS

Annual Report

1899 Society of Premier Giving LevelsDiamond ...............$100,000+ over 5-year periodPlatinum ..............$50,000+ over 5-year periodGold ......................$25,000+ over 5-year periodSilver ...................$10,000+ over 5-year periodBronze .................$5,000+ over 5-year period

new ways of giving to the 1899 Society were introduced in 2011.

Premier.................$5,000+ within 5 years or less associate ............. One-time annual donation

of $1,000Recent graduate .. $1,899+ within 3 years or less

(5 years since graduation)Undergraduate...... $10/month for 12+ months

(while still in school)

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23SP R In g 2013

Cary Griffin ’63Steve Kleinschmidt ’77Bill Lang ’74Gabe Lansberry ’96Donald Myears ’75Ron Osborne ’60Ron Pondrom ’63Matt Stagner ’96Robert Wagner ’61Jim Yemm ’82MISSoUrI S&tJim Butler ’62nc StateRoss Cowan ’88Ted Owens ’58Jim Spare ’89nebraSKaRickey Tank ’75neW MeXIco StateJames Apodaca ’95Brian Carson ’94Dominic Sanchez ’93Ernest Teves ’92nortH teXaSDan Claiborne ’67Roger Kelton ’66William Strong ’92Pat Trowbridge ’88Mike Wims ’66nortHern coLoraDoCraig Temmer ’81nortHern ILLInoISNick Gialamas ’92oKLaHoMaBryan Hannegan ’88Penn StateDoug Eroh ’93PerU StateTodd Green ’82PUrDUePaul Cantrell ’90Mike Cave ’79Pat Dillon ’82Shane Kondo ’95Matt Macaluso ’92Roger Mola ’71Scott Peterson ’80Scott Uelner ’92Ken Willard ’90Roger Willis ’68rocHeSterRonnie Gross ’85roSe-HULManWayne Harshberger ’92Mark Kipp ’80rUtGerSJohn Golden ’78San DIeGo StateGary Fortner ’87San JoSe StateJustin Baldwin ’67

Jim Knoll ’83Gil Williamson ’58Steve Wisbar ’97Michael Wycisk ’90SD ScHooL of MIneSJames Laurenti ’80SoUtHWeStern LoUISIanaHarold Abdalla ’61St. cLoUD StateKeane Bjorkman ’98SUny-neW PaLtZDavid Guzzetta ’90SUny-oSWeGoMichael Doody ’93SUny-StonybrooKGeorge Liakeas ’91tenneeSSee-KnoXVILLeThomas Desmond ’50teXaSEd Blair ’69Don Chandler ’73Jimmy Greenwood ’81Mel Hainey ’74Israel Hernandez Jr ’90Chris Hill ’78Joseph Rubi ’83Shy Scheihagen ’73Todd Thurber ’83Elmo Vestal ’47Rob Wyckoff ’96teXaS a&MBrett Henery ’99tranSyLVanIaTony Blanton ’85Gene Vance ’85UabNathan Welch ’06Uc-DaVISFrank Creede ’79Andy Fyke ’83UcLaChris Zyda ’81Unc-cHaPeL HILLDave Balas ’86Will Hoyle ’08Greg Nivens ’87Ajay Ojha ’95Unc-cHarLotteWes Chaney ’94Rob Jessup ’89UScSteven Finley ’73Dean Hallett ’77John McNulty ’77UtaH StateAlain Balmanno ’07Alan Freer ’93Joshua St. John- Sellers ’08

Dave Weeshoff ’85UW-LacroSSeBill Lawhorn ’93UW-oSHKoSHRobert Koch ’67Mark Novell ’91Peter Williams ’71VaLaraISoDon Kukla ’81VIrGInIaPat Allman ’79Eric Edwardson ’89Cameron MacLeod ’69WeStern caroLInaJay Barnhill ’87Greg Garland ’85Jasper Garrett ’61Shane Johnson ’92WeStern ILLInoISNick Katsoolias ’94Dennis Lubbs ’73Ron Reed ’68WeStern MIcHIGanDave Collins ’65John Knowles ’99WInGateJames Mumford ’92

aSSoCIaTearIZonaCharles Smith ’51aUbUrnLawrence Montgomery ’46boStonWes Eaton ’40eaStern MIcHIGanMike Morris ’65DreXeLRich Brome ’97GranD VaLLey StateMichael Losey ’90HIGH PoIntDick Vert ’58KanSaS StatePat Wilkerson ’55MIcHIGanCharles Walgreen ’55MISSoUrIMatt Bond ’80Don Hummel ’59Arnold Jellison ’58Larry Pemberton ’61Steve Speier ’69MISSoUrI S&tJohn Droste ’81Ron Hoffman ’69Gene Ronchetto ’77nortH teXaSBill Surles ’66

tranSyLVanIaSteve Dobler ’79UcLaHarry L. Hufford ’50

ReCenT gRaDUaTearIZona StateBo Faust ’06cSU-eaSt bayJohn Lane ’03GeorGIa coLLeGePJ Schinella ’06GeorGIa tecHCameron Aubuchon ’03MILLIKInTim Bartin ’07John Regner ’05Zachary Uttich ’04nortH teXaSKyle Turner ’03PUrDUeTom Seto ’05rUtGerSGeorge Quilca ’07StetSonNik Koulogeorge ’08tranSyLVanIaTaylor Johnson ’08Unc-cHaPeL HILLPeyton Maddox ’03

UnDeRgRaDUaTeaLabaMaJames Rodgers ’09boISe StateMicah Floyd ’11Reginald Nappier ’11centraL fLorIDaAlejandro Gutierrez ’11cLeVeLanD StateBrody Fiesler ’07Kristopher Karr ’10Mohamed Saab ’10William Wodka ’07cSU-San bernarDInoPaul LaCorte ’10eUreKaBenjamin McCauley ’09GaLLaUDetRaymond Sevrie ’10GannonChad Gauthier ’09Mark Lesniewski ’10GeorGIa coLLeGeRoss Klein ’09HILGarDDane Tingleff ’11IU-SoUtH benDDave Kuczmanski ’10KanSaS StateCole Grieves ’09

Matt Marchesini ’08Brett Seidl ’10Nate Spriggs ’10Kent StateBrett Kay ’09Ryan Murphy ’06MaryLanDShawn Greenspan ’11MIaMI (oH)Alex Gase ’10MILLIKInRyan Abernathy ’10Cameron Arndt ’10Caleb Buscher ’10Dylan Howser ’09MISSoUrI S&tDavid Lecko ’10nortH teXaSTravis Weeks ’08nortHern coLoraDoLucas Calhoun ’09Ignacio Gallegos ’10PUrDUeTyler Giffel ’09John Holland ’09Blake Pedersen ’10roSe-HULManPeter Cisineros ’09Dylan Kessler ’11San JoSe StateNicholas Ayala ’10Justin Evans ’11David Hu ’07Ryan Whitchurch ’07St. cLoUD StateCharles Frank ’08SUny-oSWeGoDan Snyder ’09teXaSMarco Galvan ’10UabSalem Awwad ’09Caleb Jones ’09Joshua McCool ’08UcLaAndrew Litt ’11Stephen Perez ’11UtaH StateZachary Campbell ’10Mikal Kelaidis ’11Sean Klein ’11Philip Nenni ’09Seth Peavler ’09UW-oSHKoSHJoe Fletcher ’09VIrGInIaColin Hood ’08VIrGInIa tecHMario Gazzola ’10WInGateRobert Straube ’09

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24 The CaRnaT Ion | DelTaS Ig .oRg

Donor rePort 2011-2012Donors from July 1, 2011 through June 30, 2012.First-time donors are listed in italics.

Penn STaTe - ePSIlon carnatIon Doug Eroh 13Kevin Lynn 5ScarabaeUS Joe Curley 21PHaraoH Marc Albero 5Tom Daubert 3SPHInX Al Maxson 27Ty Rost 2Jim Shaughnessy 22PyraMID Mark Cochard 25Will Schollaert 4Gene Sprague 11nILe Roger Gieseke 5John Jobe 29John Mautino 20Howard Williams 21SUStaInInG Martin Costa 3David Helmer 1

TeXaS - eTa PearL Chris Northern 19Tony Smercina 27carnatIon Ed Blair 21Don Chandler 31Mel Hainey 6David Hayes 3Morris Heintschel 21Scott Kimpel 9Orlando Montesino 33Pepe Rubi 6Shy Scheihagen 25Elmo Vestal 45ScarabaeUS Tom Giltner 22Jimmy Greenwood 11Mike Makuch 9Rob Wyckoff 3PHaraoH Patrick Birdsong 2SPHInX Jim Braeutigam 36Irving Cutter 32Wiley Mangum 8Reese Mathieu 12Bo McCarthy 7Frank Molsberry 14

Robert Pace 8Richard Passler 11Ron Pruitt 42Ed Rodriguez 26Marcus Singletary 3Mark Whiteman 3PyraMID San Ingram 7Kenneth Knopp 44James Lightfoot 5Mark Stolle 7nILe Carmon Alexander 20Marco Galvan 1Leland Miller 20SUStaInInG Brian Puckett 3

CoRnell - TheTa SPHInX John Machemer 20

aUBURn - kaPPa carnatIon Lawrence Montgomery 15Hal Shepherd 10SPHInX Gerald Kelly 10Jim McCune 22John Ozier 34nILe Lawrence Clark 12George Holdcroft 5Richard Ingram 18Taylor Littleton 20Hal Tanner 25

SoUTheRn meThoDIST - lamBDa ScarabaeUS Robert Glaze 22PHaraoH Forrest Jones 38SPHInX Nathan Dodge 8Carl Ussery 6PyraMID Ed Hudson 14William Walker 13Chuck Winston 39nILe Bruce Marshall 31

WayneSBURg - nU SPHInX Jack Rowley 39Joe Vilseck 19PyraMID Wilbur Williams 15nILe Ronald Bowman 14William Reed 7

UC-BeRkeley - hIlgaRD PearL Gary Kalian 32

carnatIon Kevin Powers 14ScarabaeUS Bill Ervin 6PHaraoH Jerry Crump 49Mark Dunker 36Ed Sangster 10SPHInX Reed Harris 15Charles Jones 40Roland Rempel 23Burton Rohde 34Bill Walker 37Ron Winkler 33PyraMID Benson Quan 28Mark Schoepfle 9Errol Summy 21Dane Tingleff 1nILe John Carr 17Lester Jacobs 33John Obana 25Bill Rubendall 8Roland Wedemeyer 36

TenneSSee-knoXvIlle - omICRon carnatIon Thomas Desmond 33PHaraoH James Carico 18PyraMID Joe Burrow 27

nC STaTe - Rho carnatIon Allen James 42Bob Kennel 12Ted Owens 41Jim Spare 13PHaraoH Hal Ingram 29Dave Lumpkin 19SPHInX Larry Blackburn 25Byron Mabry 6Thomas Miralia 20Thomas Phoenix 11

PyraMID Rex Childers 9David Darwin 36Frank Frederick 35Harold Gilbert 13Mike Hamby 22Phil LeDuc 4nILe Joseph DuBois 25

ThIel - SIgma SPHInX Bill Bauer 1PyraMID Richard Foulk 31Norman Hasbrouck 6Nicholas Steadman 1Guy Thigpen 35David Whelan 10nILe Hugh Murray 17John Wotus 4

hIllSDale - TaU PHaraoH Bud Tishkowski 25SPHInX Dave Bahlmann 20Roger Bisschop 14Edward Kuchar 20Hubert Ross 1Ed Swanson 32PyraMID Harry Constant 9John Huss 6nILe Bernard Clay 5Frank Kovalic 10Aaron Petersen 3

FRanklIn & maRShall - UPSIlon SPHInX Maury Garten 17Eugene Harsh 6Marc Leibman 8Olof Scott 14PyraMID Denny Ciganovic 25Jeffrey Choney 5

annUaL GIVInG cLUbSOrder of the Pearl...................$5,000+

Order of the Carnation ............$1,000-$4,900

Order of the Scarabaeus .........$500-$999

Order of the Pharaoh ..............$250-$499

Sphinx Club ...........................$100-$249

Pyramid Club..........................$50-$99

Nile Club ...............................$25-$49

Sustaining Brothers ................Under $25

• The number following each name denotes total years of giving.

Annual Report

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25SP R In g 2013

Joseph Garemore 8Wayne Jarvis 14nILe Wallace Bieber 8Edward Frackelton 2David Johnson 18SUStaInInG Stephen Lockey 2

SaInT loUIS - PhI PearL Tom Decker 25SPHInX David Byrne 10Frank Carroll 10Daniel Jacoby 19Robert Klopper 10PyraMID Jack Groneck 29Brian Kielbasa 9Greg Wolf 27nILe Fred Bartz 8John Bufe 23Michael Engle 38James Hilbert 29Schad McGovern 5Michael Medland 20David Rudder 9Joseph Schaefer 9Ron Simmons 25SUStaInInG Wes Riesmeyer 1

TUlane - ChI SPHInX Frank Basile 33Hank Millon 23PyraMID Jack McNaughton 5Maurice Picheloup 12nILe Art Richard 2

PITTSBURgh - omega ScarabaeUS Paul Ference 5

PHaraoH Heinrich Bonstedt 16SPHInX Edward Adamchik 24Gregory Ference 21Lou Nudi 10Jesse Weigel 39PyraMID Richard Dolson 29Tom Foley 22Larry Keisling 45Frank Sabino 18nILe Jack Ott 35Joseph Young 13SUStaInInG Robert Mross 1

IllInoIS - alPha alPha PearL Ted Desch 39Richard Metz 4carnatIon Gene Blanchard 45Tom Cycyota 18Lee Dueringer 42Fred Ganaway 16Rusty Rice 30ScarabaeUS Doug Gibbens 14Wes Hayden 23PHaraoH Jim Dvorak 18Mark Jones 11SPHInX Gary Allie 20Donal Barry 5Rick Baxendale 19Edward Biskup 26Marshall Collins 18John Heneghan 19Arthur Homann 11Jeffery Jarvis 12Gary Likins 29Rick Lober 20Robert McCarty 19Rolfe Sick 11Win Wuttke 35

PyraMID James Ayers 20Joseph Curran 9David Edquist 25W Hedgcock 11John Macauley 31Nick Macris 16Donnie Snedeker 41nILe Jack Gordon 33Bill Healy 19Eugene Munin 28Bruce Penwell 37Bruce Zum Bahlen 23

BoSTon - alPha BeTa carnatIon Wes Eaton 28

geoRgIa TeCh - alPha gamma carnatIon Charlie Gilbert 46ScarabaeUS Cameron Aubuchon 2Michael Young 2PHaraoH Han Chang 7Walid Neaz 5Meeks Vaughan 2SPHInX Stephen Counts 22Stan Hill 1Joseph Hsu 10Kevin Haluska 5David Lach 25Kenneth Pharoah 26Melville Smith 27PyraMID Paul Meggs 1Philip McLaughlin 21Zachery Trinite 2Frank Webb 20nILe Fred Anthony 9J. P. Coughlin 3Harold Lyons 26Nicholas Solana 1SUStaInInG Scott Hakim 1Jonathan Kosh 1Justin Stutts 1Regis Walker 21

UnC-ChaPel hIll - alPha DelTa carnatIon Dave Balas 11Mike Griffin 22Dave Harvey 21Greg Nivens 8ScarabaeUS Mike Garlow 6Will Hoyle 3Peyton Maddox 2

PHaraoH Joseph Ligon 4Ajay Ojha 6SPHInX Carter Johnson 17William Wiswesser 2PyraMID Brett Christmas 4Marc Cochran 6Dennie McGarry 6SUStaInInG Jason Hollifield 2

DUke - alPha ePSIlon PHaraoH John Wooten 3SPHInX Kenneth Bieber 34Brownie Futrell 34PyraMID Frank Barkley 28Peter Graybill 24Joe Luchetski 29nILe Joseph Baden 11Benjamin Straus 25Hugh Wells 23SUStaInInG Michael Black 1

alFReD - alPha ZeTa carnatIon Dick Handshaw 7SPHInX Michael Barrett 14PyraMID Carl Blanchard 35Thomas Curtin 7Dean Pomeroy 11nILe Nicholas Chuff 6James Clark 11Wilfred Drake 13

ohIo noRTheRn - alPha eTa PHaraoH Thomas Galloway 12James Gelsanliter 13Rick Pavlak 16SPHInX Charles Bethel 8Randall Breaden 9Mark Hoffman 17Donald Reichert 13DeFord Schwall 20Ronald Woofter 40PyraMID William Bissey 38Kenneth Oberly 15Jefferson Sampson 23nILe George Killian 15Wayne Shaffer 13

ToP ChaPTeRS By aveRage gIFT amoUnT

ChaPTeR aveRage gIFT nUmBeR oF gIFTSDetroit $14,637 7Missouri $6,180 74Ohio State $3,293 11Boston $1500 1Iowa State $1,486 16Western Carolina $1,145 12UAB $1,026 7Rochester $1,000 1Cal Poly-Pomona $1,000 1SUNY-Oswego $988 5

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26 The CaRnaT Ion | DelTaS Ig .oRg

SUStaInInG David Cellar 21Matthew Cupp 1

mIChIgan-ann aRBoR - alPha TheTa carnatIon Charles Walgreen 38PHaraoH Bradley Gray 6SPHInX Walter Bailey 23Gary Flowers 21Jim Jones 16Jacob Hellrung 11Carl Raiss 39PyraMID William Chase 24Ken Hallenbeck 8David Hilderley 21Charles Huber 25Raymond Jung 20Robert Stoltenberg 18nILe Denton Fitzgerald 18Walter Gerdes 21David Speicher 3SUStaInInG Donald Strobel 17

ohIo STaTe - alPha IoTa PearL Russ Shaw 38PHaraoH Eric Wagner 41SPHInX Richard Hempy 13William Protheroe 23Matthew Tangeman 3PyraMID Scott Hale 5William Henneke 25Eric Liggett 10Kyle Pendleton 11nILe Robert Day 47William Hoover 34

UW-maDISon - alPha kaPPa SPHInX James Bradley 39

mIllIkIn - alPha lamBDa carnatIon Jeff Black 14Seth Goodman 1Grant McCloud 9John Prange 38Thomas Sweatt 8ScarabaeUS Mick Clayton 10Tim Martin 2John Regner 3PHaraoH Robert Macholan 5

SPHInX Cameron Arndt 1Ed Belcher 6Michael Gurney 1Dylan Hoswer 1Raymond Moore 19Nathan Reisman 1Zachary Uttich 1Michael Waller 3JR Waltrip 38PyraMID Ryan Abernathy 1Caleb Buscher 1Dave Coonrod 6Kyle Curry 1Paul Davidson 15Will Frankenberger 1Jerry Freeman 13John Harris 21Ben Howenstine 21Richard Knox 7Aaron Kramer 8Thomas Naughton 19Robert Nelson 3Rickey Spivey 1Gary Workman 33nILe Robert Breyer 12P Lattner 23Scott Skinner 8SUStaInInG Kevin Braden 1Justin Brohard 1Bill Flowers 7Edward Le Fevre 38Timothy Havis 1Larry Neuzel 17

vIRgInIa - alPha mU PearL Tom Archer 18carnatIon John Jenkins 9Eric Edwardson 6Cameron MacLeod 16ScarabaeUS Dennis Howard 34James Marshall 4PHaraoH Pat Allman 24Bill Anderson 23Thomas Loew 18SPHInX Brian Ashby 7Jeffrey Barb 12Jon Dubrow 12Robert Martin 33Greg Stayin 14Michael Steger 16PyraMID Jonathan Woodall 16nILe Matthew Brumback 1Peter Bryan 6Robert McGuinness 17

Junius Pridgen 27Lester Wagner 33

ogleThoRPe - alPha nU carnatIon James Hill 6Rodney Drinkard 7ScarabaeUS Derek Rasmussen 7PHaraoH Christopher Brantley 7

neW meXICo - alPha XI PyraMID Robert Damiano 21Fred Estano 9Bob Wheeler 12

mCgIll - alPha omICRon SPHInX William Caine 21nILe Alan Livingstone 31

mIChIgan STaTe - alPha PI carnatIon Ben Aloia 7Ramsey Mankarious 15ScarabaeUS Bob Chapman 40Richard Clow 5John Czarnecki 22Richard McLellan 34Bud Sullivan 9PHaraoH Rodney Hagenbuch 4SPHInX Douglas Ashmore 1Michael Kotyk 11Matt Mayer 1Glen Norton 1Steven Rindskopf 5Larry Stringer 20Mitch Swayze 17Drew Ten Eyck 16Tom Townsend 13

PyraMID Don Brownell 25John Clark 8Andy Draybuck 2Edmund Ferguson 18Art Fetters 34Ralph Graper 1Robert Henny 34Kenneth Ivan 4Bob Luscombe 22Bob Martin 1Dick McNary 23Michael Smelt 30nILe Norm Blemaster 22George Cope 1Andrew Daitch 1George Dovas 22Corey Litwin 2James Pranger 19Roger Warner 20SUStaInInG Michael Vallo 1

ColoRaDo - alPha Rho SPHInX Jim Wilson 16nILe Fred Clark 5Robert Phillips 23SUStaInInG Frank Haynes 32Charles Henry 1Terry Shroyer 5

maRylanD - alPha SIgma carnatIon Brian Vincent 8PHaraoH Matt Kissane 7SPHInX Allen Blackburn 9Ronald Sakamoto 15PyraMID Frank Bentz 12Shawn Greenspan 1Gene Fatula 8

Annual Report

ToP ChaPTeRS By ToTal DonoRS

ChaPTeR ToTal DonoRS Missouri 74Purdue 59Kansas State 46Millikin 42Texas 38Michigan State 37Illinois 36UCLA 35Transylvania 31CSU-Fresno 29

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27SP R In g 2013

ToP ChaPTeRS By ToTal DonoRS

ChaPTeR ToTal DonoRS Missouri 74Purdue 59Kansas State 46Millikin 42Texas 38Michigan State 37Illinois 36UCLA 35Transylvania 31CSU-Fresno 29

Robert Hahn 42Bob Pevenstein 24Orlando Ridout 5nILe Michael Lackett 19John O’Donnoghue 5SUStaInInG Brian Gildea 1Mike Jankiewicz 7Albert Nardone 25Warren Wagner 41

alBIon - alPha TaU SPHInX Richard Bohl 21James Gignac 7Thomas Nulf 12Chip Rankin 8PyraMID Frank Burdine 7John Walters 26nILe Robert Andrews 40SUStaInInG William Harder 1Mark Stevenson 2

kanSaS STaTe - alPha UPSIlon PearL Loren Mall 44carnatIon Don Jennison 24Duane Saunders 18Pat Wilkerson 32Marcus Wyss 14ScarabaeUS Keith Ely 1Patrick Reilly 10PHaraoH Bill Kush 17Dale Mueller 17David Ott 14SPHInX Howard Benton 37Fred Dellett 39Cole Grieves 1David Hotchkiss 31Don Hunziker 27Ted Knapp 8Matt Marchesini 1Mike McGivern 8David Mertz 8Dan Ott 8James Ruff 27Wayne Rush 32Brett Seidl 1Nathan Spriggs 1Loren Tregellas 47PyraMID Robert Beattie 5Henry Boss 32Paul Burch 29Jeffery Chapman 7Alex Dean 9

David Fansher 5Jim Gieber 18Cameron Moore 11William Ridge 10Brian Scarlett 10Richard White 13nILe Nicholas Attwater 1William Clark 18Chris Harris 2Donald Powell 8Wayne Stoskopf 2SUStaInInG Matthew Anderson 4Matt Castro 1Casey Dwyer 1Joesph Falter 1Timothy Gogolski 20

SoUTheRn CalIFoRnIa - alPha PhI carnatIon Steven Finley 6Dean Hallett 7John McNulty 4PHaraoH Jim Foss 43SPHInX Hans Vogel 12Del Worthington 25nILe Al Baker 20Don Valentine 24Delvin Woock 6SUStaInInG Hal Faber 5Mike Van Sickle 8

STeTSon - alPha ChI PHaraoH Tony Baumgartner 5Nik Koulogeorge 1Kip Rupp 2SPHInX Bill Cross 49Paul Lawson 13Bill Lindholm 12Scott Wall 7PyraMID Andrew Oden 2John Pierce 14Cory Rhoads 1Doug Sobieski 7nILe Jimmie Yeargin 14SUStaInInG Parker Mynchenberg 2

neBRaSka - alPha PSI carnatIon Rickey Tank 22PHaraoH Allan Brandt 33John Flemming 19

SPHInX Peter Lawson 11PyraMID Bob Glantz 27Robert Johnson 20nILe Bud Johnson 19Brian McHugh 24Robert Shively 4John Williams 5

WaShIngTon - alPha omega SPHInX Robert Morton 24

IoWa STaTe - BeTa alPha PearL Donald Hunt 17ScarabaeUS Matt Borgstrand 5PHaraoH Bill Tiedje 22SPHInX Richard Duroe 49Lester Erlemeier 7Ali Javad 1PyraMID Grant Halsne 21Gerry Hartmann 33Brian Melvin 14Bob Rowell 1Michael Scigliano 32nILe Gilbert Langerhans 5Kenneth Klindt 32Gerald Retzlaff 29SUStaInInG Micah Berberich 1Kenneth Langer 12

mISSoURI - BeTa BeTa PearL Karl Adrian 6Bob Banning 13Larry Barton 10Mike Connelly 5Steven Cunningham 8Mark Davis 1Howard Etling 29Timothy Gentry 6Mike Lane 11Bruce Loewenberg 47Noel Shutt 4Mike Smid 6Jim Unger 14Robert Wagner 14carnatIon David Bond 1Ron Bloom 32Brian Brooks 36John Brown 2Jay Dade 2Dal Davis 24Burt Ewing 22

Jim Gay 8Cary Griffin 4Dean Henderson 1Don Heppermann 21Donald Hummel 4Arnie Jellison 11Steve Kleinschmidt 26Willard Leutzinger 6Donald McDaniel 13Donald Myears 3Ronald Osborne 5Larry Pemberton 24Kirk Peterman 21Ron Pondrom 19Steve Speier 2Greg Speno 9Eric Token 7Bill Vanjonack 13Jim Yemm 11ScarabaeUS Dave Bartnett 7David Baynes 8Devon Dobrich 10Frank Hallemann 4Bill Lang 20Wayne Mathias 9Bob Paris 2Elvin Pauls 17PHaraoH Delus Johnson 1Matt Stagner 8Gregory Vroegindewey 1William Westbrook 4SPHInX Nicholas Damaso 12Gabe Lansberry 12Matthew Vasquez 8Gene Schaeffer 11Ragnar Lindberg 43Steve Monnig 4Randall Pilliard 3Fred Rible 21Dan Sitar 8Euin Swafford 13Larry Van Dyne 3Todd Walther 8Carl Wermuth 39PyraMID Paul Flinn 1Stephen Greer 3Jerry Redhage 5nILe John Gay 3Joe Heggie 1John Olson 1Todd Powelson 6Harold Taylor 5SUStaInInG Brydan McNeely 2

UC-loS angeleS - BeTa gamma PearL David McCarthy 15

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28 The CaRnaT Ion | DelTaS Ig .oRg

carnatIon Marshall Cox 38Harry Hufford 13Chris Zyda 3ScarabaeUS Jarvis Arellano 23Steven Elliott 8PHaraoH Marvin Allison 39Richard Bacio 12Kermit Greene 45Jeff Guy 13Ben Holmes 25David Lund 3Steven Morris 6SPHInX Jim Christopoulos 3Michael Fenerin 6Jim Kemerer 28Jeffrey Lauber 6David Lubetzky 28Donald Nichols 22George Reinhardt 17George Sarantinos 19Mario Stavale 22PyraMID William Armstrong 27James Cipra 29Andrew Litt 1Stephen Perez 1Wayne Redmond 28Harry Stroud 33nILe Gerald Anderson 21Jack Blaney 4Jeffrey Bolander 3Gordon Larsen 21Marvin Sargent 5SUStaInInG Mario Martini 27Stephen Upton 7

oRegon STaTe - BeTa ePSIlon PHaraoH Phil Ramazzina 43SPHInX Loren Gardner 23

Robert Gebo 19Jack Pfeifer 19PyraMID Glenn Eades 30Robert Zurcher 8nILe Bill Helin 6Don McCormick 12SUStaInInG Thomas Cunningham 8

FloRIDa - BeTa ZeTa PHaraoH Bazil Duncan 8SPHInX Walter Clark 29Waldo Emerson 38PyraMID Justo Baltar 7Robert Eberley 23nILe Donald Jones 8Michael Miller 1

lSU-BaTon RoUge - BeTa eTa PyraMID Sergio Waldeck 11nILe Joseph Cutcher 13

lehIgh - BeTa TheTa SPHInX Thomas Applegate 44David Press 33Warren Sawyer 41John Weber 33nILe Robert Gravereaux 8Briant Marsh 24

WITTenBeRg - BeTa IoTa SPHInX Cecil Lettis 17nILe Ken Beals 13Charles Imhoff 7Greg Park 22

Carl Sword 8Marc West 1SUStaInInG Jack Dostal 35Bobby Mansour 3

alaBama - BeTa kaPPa carnatIon John Barrett 8ScarabaeUS Randy Engle 3Richard Field 20PHaraoH Clarence Angelette 1Keith Farr 18Michael Pigford 1John von Weisenstein 28PyraMID Jim Hicks 2James Rodgers 1

Wake FoReST - BeTa lamBDa SPHInX Rusty Beck 22PyraMID Mark Tucker 8Lonnie Williams 31nILe Alton Raynor 8

TRanSylvanIa - BeTa mU carnatIon Tony Blanton 17Steve Dobler 9Brad Sullivan 8Gene Vance 25Shane White 13ScarabaeUS Paul Allen 12Vinson Barber 7Jim Burton 6Taylor Johnson 1PHaraoH Mark Goss 3Rich Mains 11Marc Mathews 29Richard Medley 23Steve Merriman 20SPHInX Philip Bailey 3William Brown 1Darren Carrico 3Christopher Cook 21Cam Culbertson 4Corey Howard 2William Martin 2Kirk Tolle 18PyraMID Philip Cunningham 10Bruce McMurdo 5Kyle Melloan 6nILe Jamie Bisotti 6Thomas Claycomb 5Giles Light 35

Shane Rau 2John Weaver 1SUStaInInG Cohen Swiney 14

CSU-FReSno - BeTa nU carnatIon Austin Hastings 18ScarabaeUS Clay Blanton 6Jeff Cova 2Justin Emmi 2Jeffrey Percell 2PHaraoH Todd Swanson 13SPHInX Matthew Betterton 2Vince Carter 24Johnny Elizondo 1David Garcia 1Kevin Kloka 3Nathan Lourenco 5Edward McTaggart 14James Smith 13PyraMID Patrick Collins 2Bob Coyle 7Tommy Daly 2Lionell Handel 5Michael Pickett 2nILe Kyle Palmer 1Martin Perez 1John Sullivan 21Brandon Wells 1SUStaInInG Craig Cook 1Isaac Coronado 1Adam Hughes 2Andrew Peyton 9Michael Wandzell 2Jerry Wen 2

UC-SanTa BaRBaRa - BeTa XI SPHInX Bob Lagomarsino 34PyraMID Roger Horton 13Alan Perry 23

CenTRal mIChIgan - BeTa omICRon SPHInX Robert Brander 30William Kroger 25Dane Zahner 10PyraMID Gerald Oehmke 20nILe Lloyd Wepman 19

mIChIgan TeCh - BeTa PI PHaraoH Zach Drake 2Glenn Hay 15

DonoRS By InITIaTIon yeaR ToTalgeneRaTIon # % 20s 1 0.1% 30s 8 0.5% 40s 64 4.1% 50s 258 16.4% 60s 372 23.7% 70s 218 13.9% 80s 217 13.8% 90s 209 13.3% 00s 224 14.3% 1571 100.0%

Annual Report

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29SP R In g 2013

SPHInX Danny Dodge 19Michael MacDonald 16William Redman 21Don Saxon 27Ken Scotford 13PyraMID Lawrence Brice 10Daniel Downs 12Samuel Evett 19Kent Heaton 6Robert Pawling 23Roger Weidelman 22nILe David Carlson 8James Lizenby 6Joe Rowe 12John Walters 21SUStaInInG Warren Koch 12Kyle Krueger 2David Koch 5Richard Le Blanc 4

haRTWICk - BeTa Rho SPHInX Phil Kluge 32PyraMID Frank Gallucci 3nILe John Leyden 20

WeSTeRn mIChIgan - BeTa TaU carnatIon Dave Collins 37ScarabaeUS John Knowles 10SPHInX Robert Isbister 17Ryan Kamerad 8RobertWarner 4Doug Zloto 17PyraMID Dale Aidif 18Richard Bryck 18Robert Ham 1ThomasTaube 2nILe Richard Green 15Jeff Krieg 10Rod Metcalf 1John Whitmer 22SUStaInInG Kyle Soffin 1Phillip Wood 3

SoUThWeSTeRn loUISIana - BeTa UPSIlon PHaraoH Robert Vining 14

SaInT FRanCIS - BeTa PhI SPHInX Anthony Mosca 8

PyraMID David Marsh 18Samuel Pantano 20John Pietras 42Christian Resick 11nILe Hiram Driscoll 14SUStaInInG Herbert Smith 17

aRIZona STaTe - BeTa PSI PearL Mike Hoffman 25carnatIon Jason Baker 9Roy Bliss 20John Jones 7Chris Popjoy 7Michael Van Milligan 1PHaraoH Bo Faust 1Judson Nierman 4SPHInX Doug Gehrman 3Grant Johnson 18Chuck Misfeldt 19Gary Tucker 19Kirk Zapp 15PyraMID Chip Ahlswede 8Daniel Deschinny 5nILe David Hoppe 2Charles Maggio 28SUStaInInG Jae Allen 36

aRIZona - BeTa omega ScarabaeUS Chuck Smith 35PHaraoH Ryan Griffeth 2SPHInX Richard Moore 12PyraMID Michael Crowe 1Stephen Terry 5

San DIego STaTe - gamma alPha carnatIon Gary Fortner 11ScarabaeUS Erik Johannesen 28Jim Kalb 15SPHInX Jack Brennan 12Tom Briant 24Alex Doig 37Harry Newlon 34Muggs Stoll 25William Truex 42PyraMID Roger Clarkson 13Skull DiAngelis 9

Richard Ferguson 16Paul Hargis 11Quinton Lee 14Kay Madsen 21Warren Sauer 33Kenneth Schoeni 8

aRkanSaS - gamma BeTa SPHInX Bob Pitts 46nILe Jack Ballard 26

WaShIngTon STaTe - gamma DelTa carnatIon Chris Klug 3ScarabaeUS Ed Maher 9SPHInX Christopher Jellison 22Frederick Parks 2David Petersen 29Michael Sheppard 7Winton Wefer 21PyraMID Gregory Walker 11nILe Kenton McDougall 8SUStaInInG Gale Mitchell 19

San JoSe STaTe - gamma ePSIlon PearL Larry Lundberg 43

carnatIon Jim Knoll 22ScarabaeUS Mike Wycisk 2PHaraoH Steve Wisbar 17SPHInX Rob Clottu 17Raymond Conrady 24Bill Mazzocco 19Dick Mills 26John Munday 31Don Newhall 36Terry Potts 40Michael Rodolico 7Ronald Sykora 4Bruce Westphal 33PyraMID Nicholas Ayala 1Eugene Gastelum 11Ryan Whitchurch 2nILe Miles Bellamy 1Ronald Blake 3Justin Evans 1David Hu 2

RUTgeRS - gamma ZeTa carnatIon John Golden 18ScarabaeUS George Quilca 1PyraMID Ernest Docs 24James Monsul 21John Sweeney 8

ToP ChaPTeRS By FIRST TIme DonoRS

ChaPTeR FIRST TIme DonoRS Millikin 14Kansas State 9Michigan State 8Missouri 8CSU-Fresno 7Purdue 7

annUaL GIVInG cLUbSOrder of the Pearl.................. $5,000+

Order of the Carnation ........... $1,000-$4,900

Order of the Scarabaeus ........ $500-$999

Order of the Pharaoh ............. $250-$499

Sphinx Club .......................... $100-$249

Pyramid Club......................... $50-$99

Nile Club .............................. $25-$49

Sustaining Brothers ............... Under $25

• The number following each name denotes total years of giving.

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30 The CaRnaT Ion | DelTaS Ig .oRg

nILe Bob Buckstad 14

WaShIngTon-ST. loUIS - gamma eTa nILe John Bowers 28Clarence Goetsch 21

DeTRoIT-meRCy - gamma TheTa PearL Ken Kramer 27carnatIon Clifford Burk 43Chris Cronin 23SPHInX David Amrozowicz 6Pete McManus 7nILe William Mellerowicz 8SUStaInInG John Fognini 4

IDaho - gamma IoTa carnatIon Matt Espe 4SPHInX Ronald Houghtalin 21Barry O’Brien 17PyraMID Ron Galbraith 11nILe Roger Anderson 16Roger Gregory 31Michael Rowles 9SUStaInInG Nicholas Hill 1

WeSTeRn IllInoIS - gamma kaPPa carnatIon Bill Epperly 35Jim Haleem 30Nick Katsoolias 4Ron Reed 12ScarabaeUS Justin Allen 9Gary Baise 2Dick Crain 40Marc Sanzone 2PHaraoH David Allen 47Timothy Sattley 2David Timmermann 10SPHInX James Craig 3Gilbert Griffel 22Kenneth Krupa 4Ed Noel 4Marvin Potter 19Robert Reynolds 14Gordy Taylor 8Melvin Van Sky 9Cary Youman 1Gordon Zdeblick 1

PyraMID Todd Hassett 4Milo Shult 20Michael Waight 10James Zinck 29nILe James Esworthy 4Douglas Gregory 10SUStaInInG George Baughman 20

noRTheRn aRIZona - gamma nU PHaraoH Jim Kellis 26nILe Carl Stephens 31

noRTh TeXaS - gamma XI carnatIon Dan Claiborne 20Roger Kelton 13William Strong 3Pat Trowbridge 13Mike Wims 40ScarabaeUS Kyle Turner 5SPHInX Scott Butler 11Gregory Cornwell 13Cecil Harold 20David Holmes 40CJ Howard 1Brian Patrick 15Travis Weeks 2PyraMID Jim Crouch 23Murray Edge 31Gary Scarborough 4Michael Strozeski 1Donald Timbes 7nILe Marcus Drewa 34Larry Tucker 12SUStaInInG Edward Brettel 23Bill Surles 31

FT. hayS STaTe - gamma omICRon PyraMID Darrel Miller 1Kenneth Miller 19Harry Walz 13nILe Patrick Charlton 11Philip Harris 9Benny Neaderhiser 12SUStaInInG Lynn Francis 22

InDIana oF PennSylvanIa - gamma PI SPHInX Dennis Faust 19David Fratta 34

Keith Sullenberger 11PyraMID Gary Keefer 13nILe William Hamilton 7SUStaInInG John McMillin 15

gannon - gamma Rho SPHInX Steven Hanson 9John McCool 20PyraMID Chad Gauthier 1Mark Lesniewski 1James McGivern 1nILe James Nichols 25

UC-DavIS - gamma SIgma carnatIon Andy Fyke 26

PHaraoH Carleton Meyer 2

eaSTeRn mIChIgan - gamma TaU carnatIon Mike Morris 26ScarabaeUS Joe Lepak 18PHaraoH Jim Maran 7SPHInX Bill Clark 10Paul Pillsbury 14William Stidham 32Larry Zahn 12

PyraMID Andy Goldberger 8William Kulchar 11nILe Ray Carlson 5Sheldon Janse 26Jim Madsen 37Jason Salhaney 4

SD SChool oF mIneS - gamma UPSIlon carnatIon James Laurenti 5ScarabaeUS Baron Fidler 11SPHInX Robert Case 23David Crumrine 6Bob Glodowski 18Allen Ness 3Douglas Olson 31Randy Powell 27

Gary Walker 5PyraMID John Baker 10James Hauck 9Randall Ice 30Raymond Rossi 18Charles Schoenfelder 18Dale Schoenfield 24nILe Mads Andenas 16SUStaInInG Kyle Calvin 1

alma - gamma PhI nILe Hilary Goerge 24

Annual Report

memoRIalS anD TRIBUTeSmemoRIalS Arnold Henry Jellison, Missouri ’58, by Badih El-KarehArnold Henry Jellison, Missouri ’58, by Pat Sue GwynArnold Henry Jellison, Missouri ’58, by Gary & Barbara HammakerArnold Henry Jellison, Missouri ’58, by Joe Heggie, Missouri ’58Arnold Henry Jellison, Missouri ’58, by Russell KormanArnold Henry Jellison, Missouri ’58, by Ragnar Lindberg, Missouri ’57Arnold Henry Jellison, Missouri ’58, by Bruce Loewenberg, Missouri ’57Arnold Henry Jellison, Missouri ’58, by Cheryl A. MayArnold Henry Jellison, Missouri ’58, by Damian & Kay MayArnold Henry Jellison, Missouri ’58, by Gene Schaeffer Jr., Missouri ’59Arnold Henry Jellison, Missouri ’58, by Harold Taylor, Missouri ’58Arnold Henry Jellison, Missouri ’58, by Vistakon Commercial Ops & Strategy Ken Kramer, Detroit ’58, by Roberta KramerJohn David Martin, Western Carolina ’81, by Gregory Garland, Western Carolina ’85

TRIBUTeSJason Scott Hang, East Carolina, by Nicholas Thorpe

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31SP R In g 2013

DReXel - gamma ChI carnatIon Richard Brome 4ScarabaeUS Michael Schnee 8PHaraoH Richard Tellier 18SPHInX James Casey 13John Fekete 21Daniel Riganati 23Quincy Waldron 7Lawrence Wasser 24PyraMID LaVerne Bausher 10Niles Johnson 8Thomas Long 18nILe David Dean 16Daniel Elliott 38William Hodson 43Wayne Thomas 8SUStaInInG Paul Cunningham 5Scott Whitaker 26

moRnIngSIDe - gamma PSI SPHInX Bruce Holmgren 38Nicholas Krommenhoek 12Jayson Santi 13nILe Neil Hyink 11Brian Schulte 8SUStaInInG Delbert Christensen 17Wayne Kolbe 9Kurt Lidke 14Wendell Roth 14

hoUSTon - gamma omega carnatIon Robert Kramp 12ScarabaeUS Scott Chase 23Tom Howard 23SPHInX Mike Hudson 20Gary Teixeira 31PyraMID Ted Ellsworth 21Scott Sonsalla 8nILe Thomas Couch 9William Rozelle 19

CSU-ChICo - DelTa alPha PHaraoH William Liddicoat 26nILe John Bullock 5Neil Cossey 1SUStaInInG William Mellberg 8

oklahoma - DelTa BeTa carnatIon Bryan Hannegan 12ScarabaeUS Stephen Myers 15PyraMID Richard Morris 19nILe Harry Sims 14

kanSaS - DelTa gamma SPHInX Dale Swenson 40Steven Viskup 28SUStaInInG Gary Zarybnicky 38

PURDUe - DelTa DelTa PearL Tom Roeser 16carnatIon David Beck 7Paul Cantrell 5Mike Cave 4Pat Dillon 15Patrick Jessee 6Matt Macaluso 7John McDonald 29Roger Mola 33Scott Peterson 23Ken Willard 6Roger Willis 23ScarabaeUS Ed Buening 24David Eisenhauer 18David Pyle 8Dan Schwartz 25Dick Seidenstricker 12Tom Seto 2PHaraoH Shane Kondo 1Karl Lang 8Joe Willerth 30Matthew Yiengst 3SPHInX Brian Conway 6Bruce Faulkner 13Rick Gamble 14Tyler Giffel 1Lew Graham 31Brian Grigsby 6Dale Halverstadt 10Douglas Hively 12John Holland 1William Kovalski 10Mac McCain 14Donald Oberleas 3John Parker 37Richard Pedersen 1Joe Rago 5Brian Rupley 8Craig Saddler 4Dean Shelato 25George Smith 23Thomas Smith 21Scott Uelner 6

Ed Wilder 18PyraMID Tab Barth 16Mark Franco 2Alan Gohn 9Nicholas Halkias 3Richard Halsey 15Jonathan Haven 5John Magyar 16Joe Martin 7Merrill Morey 14Thomas Sgritta 31nILe Kyle Hodges 1Lyle Shoot 13Mike Tomasello 10Eric Wallis 1SUStaInInG Alexander Davies 1

mISSoURI S&T - DelTa ePSIlon PearL Jack Droste 4carnatIon Jim Butler 23Ron Hoffman 18Gene Ronchetto 1ScarabaeUS Tom Hrastich 9PHaraoH Gary Kaletta 21Bruce Taylor 2SPHInX Richard Allen 2David Dunavant 19Charles Lemons 3Glenn Noe 1Joe Offutt 31Breck Washam 5Richard Witzel 19PyraMID Bruce Baker 31John Conway 17Terry Donze 37John Groneck 18David Lecko 1Charles Myles 3Thomas Noggle 14Richard Thom 22

nILe Allen Townsend 5SUStaInInG David Buttig 2

hIgh PoInT - DelTa ZeTa carnatIon Kevin Cole 19Jay Amernick 4SPHInX Robert Holliday 41Mark Murphy 15Brien Perkins 1

monTana STaTe - DelTa eTa John Ockomon 8

monTana - DelTa TheTa PyraMID Charles Wicks 20nILe Phillip Van Ness 15

BaRTon - DelTa IoTa carnatIon Chuck Finklea 29Bill Tilghman 25SPHInX James Dawson 22John Sumrell 12nILe George Breece 10George Lamm 43Stephen Midgett 4

hUmBolDT STaTe - DelTa kaPPa PHaraoH Rich Stewart 13nILe Lou Gurney 21

UTah STaTe - DelTa lamBDa PearL Dave Weeshoff 18carnatIon Alan Freer 11ScarabaeUS Tony Perfilio 30

annUaL GIVInG cLUbSOrder of the Pearl...................$5,000+

Order of the Carnation ............$1,000-$4,900

Order of the Scarabaeus .........$500-$999

Order of the Pharaoh ..............$250-$499

Sphinx Club ...........................$100-$249

Pyramid Club..........................$50-$99

Nile Club ...............................$25-$49

Sustaining Brothers ................Under $25

• The number following each name denotes total years of giving.

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32 The CaRnaT Ion | DelTaS Ig .oRg

Annual Report

PHaraoH Bryan Blemler 3Bob Calderwood 32Randy King 7SPHInX Joshua St. John-Sellers 1Martin Lomax 23PyraMID Zachary Campbell 1Sean Klein 1Seth Peavler 2nILe Philip Nenni 2SUStaInInG William Bermudez 1Mikal Kelaidis 1Brooks Marshall 1

loyola-maRymoUnT - DelTa mU PHaraoH Frank Ramirez 11John Rossbach 5SPHInX Jim Bohan 21Bill Campbell 11Pat Padon 5nILe Charles Donaldson 8James Klink 15Richard Klumpp 46

eDInBoRo - DelTa nU SPHInX Richard Belcher 44PyraMID C Arnt 5nILe Emery Gathers 16Larry Morris 10Ralph Murray 16

SUStaInInG Lee Jackson 12Darrell Kougher 35

WeSTeRn CaRolIna - DelTa omICRon PearL Greg Garland 7carnatIon Shane Johnson 2ScarabaeUS Jay Barnhill 10PHaraoH Jasper Garrett 2Fred Rosenkampff 29SPHInX Brian Barlow 10William Carver 8PyraMID Chris Carrington 9Hub Hickson 16nILe Daniel Irvin 18Steve Norman 23Jim Woodard 6

STePhen F. aUSTIn STaTe - DelTa PI ScarabaeUS Keith Haddock 3PyraMID Richard Katusak 3Terry Williamson 1

ST. maRy’S - DelTa Rho PyraMID Raymond Jones 5

yoUngSToWn STaTe - DelTa SIgma nILe Leland DuBrock 6SUStaInInG Jerry Weikart 3

FeRRIS STaTe - DelTa TaU SPHInX Jack Knapp 11Bob Mills 9Stephen Puterbaugh 3PyraMID Jon Eshleman 16Bob Frounfelker 22Michael Judd 3Michael Sinn 5

noRTheRn mIChIgan - DelTa UPSIlon PyraMID Jon Birchard 7David Garrett 16nILe Donald Hartman 1SUStaInInG Mike Rastello 17

CalIFoRnIa oF PennSylvanIa - DelTa PhIPyraMID Rick Pfalzgraf 27SUStaInInG Sherman King 23James Ruege 23

lamBUTh - DelTa ChI nILe William Goodyear 19

eaSTeRn IllInoIS - DelTa PSI carnatIon Mike Petrik 9SPHInX Thomas Broderick 6Chad Franks 3John Hay 25PyraMID Joseph Unekis 10nILe Ronald Garrity 14Larry Green 10Nelson Newton 6

ClevelanD STaTe - DelTa omega SPHInX Kristopher Karr 1William Wodka 1Timothy Wolfe 11PyraMID Brody Fiesler 1Michael Singerman 14nILe Harry Humphrey 4

John Vasil 1SUStaInInG Nyle Hillson 9

UW-oShkoSh - ePSIlon BeTa carnatIon Robert Koch 10Mark Novell 8Peter Williams 4PHaraoH Jim Rath 24Dave Messer 4SPHInX John Benson 16Tom Hewitt 31Michael Hoeft 1PyraMID Daniel Bierman 15Joseph Fletcher 1Saravanan Shanmugabaskaran 2nILe Gary Cherny 19Peter Esser 1Josh Hufford 2Nathan Michael 2SUStaInInG Robert Wilcox 6

PeRU STaTe - ePSIlon gamma ScarabaeUS Todd Green 6SPHInX James Roy 13Rick Sloan 10nILe Vincent Longo 13

UW-PlaTTevIlle - ePSIlon DelTa ScarabaeUS Burnie Oates 35PHaraoH George Krueger 17SPHInX Dale Dixon 20Dennis Rockow 21PyraMID Thomas Tuescher 12nILe Craig Cerqua 33Gregory Knoke 19Rich Russman 5SUStaInInG James Booth 8

olD DomInIon - ePSIlon ePSIlon SPHInX Joseph Hughes 6PyraMID James Creasy 13nILe Alexis Bishop 6

annUaL GIVInG cLUbSOrder of the Pearl...................$5,000+

Order of the Carnation ............$1,000-$4,900

Order of the Scarabaeus .........$500-$999

Order of the Pharaoh ..............$250-$499

Sphinx Club ...........................$100-$249

Pyramid Club..........................$50-$99

Nile Club ...............................$25-$49

Sustaining Brothers ................Under $25

• The number following each name denotes total years of giving.

FoUnDaTIon STaTISTICS

195 First time donors with average gift of $15667 first time donors are undergraduates146 members have donated 30+ years

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33SP R In g 2013

CaRlkSon - ePSIlon ZeTa SPHInX Paul Donoghue 25PyraMID Roger Hermann 1nILe Robert Bielawa 13

UW-WhITeWaTeR - ePSIlon eTa SPHInX Gary Huske 17Thomas Robinson 17nILe Spencer Kneubuehl 33SUStaInInG Bruce Overdahl 7

ST. John’S - ePSIlon TheTa SPHInX Bedell Terry 22

UW-laCRoSSe - ePSIlon IoTa carnatIon Bill Lawhorn 7ScarabaeUS Tony Beaster 6Glenn Decker 13SPHInX Bob Brown 12Kevin Ellis 1Wayne Jacobson 38David Kuhn 8James Schmalz 27Vance Werner 25PyraMID Drew Baillargeon 2Randall Docauer 10Kenneth Johnson 29John Riggio 10Pat Stephens 31nILe Michael Clark 25Joe Tomsyck 20SUStaInInG Carl Rausch 1Ralph Stover 6

loyola-ChICago - ePSIlon kaPPa SUStaInInG Michael Laxner 33

noRThWeST mISSoURI STaTe - ePSIlon lamBDa SPHInX Steven Bleish 18Tyson Robinett 12PyraMID Russell Freeman 19Steve Lovell 11Michael Pierson 7nILe Richard Hamilton 18

William Haskell 5John Kelly 19William Sybert 7

WooDBURy - ePSIlon PI PyraMID Thomas Sale 2SUStaInInG Salvador Fernandez 18

Cal Poly-San lUIS oBISPo - ePSIlon Rho carnatIon Jonathan Monfort 5Jim Larson 20Jon Krause 17Jon Shull 19ScarabaeUS Jim Evans 36Michael Roanhaus 10PHaraoH Don Cole 30Ric Heinzen 25Russ Yensen 31SPHInX Richard Barca 25Scott Berkebile 3Thomas Brooks 4Bruce Cameron 31Bill Hartwig 32Joe Koch 23Duane Paul 26PyraMID Randall Brame 22Charles Cabassi 8Zachary Feinberg 1Mark Gay 24Gilman Goodrich 11Douglas Paul 6Robert Stuart 19nILe Bob Bader 31Alvin Trivelpiece 16

nevaDa-laS vegaS - ePSIlon SIgma PyraMID Steve Evenson 22Mike Ramirez 4nILe Steve Hommel 3

gRanD valley STaTe - ePSIlon TaU carnatIon Zach Brevis 11Bill Yates 7PHaraoH John Derbin 9Michael Losey 4Tony Nicolette 5SPHInX Mark Adams 13Charles Bron 14Kevin Thomas 11

nICholl’S STaTe - ePSIlon UPSIlon SPHInX David Arceneaux 29Blayne Bergeron 3

eaST CaRolIna - ePSIlon PhI PyraMID Jeffrey Prys 2SUStaInInG Robert Cansler 30

valDoSTa STaTe - ePSIlon ChI PyraMID Ronald Collins 25

BRyanT - ePSIlon PSI PyraMID Richard Kart 8nILe Bernie Spirito 1

IllInoIS STaTe - ePSIlon omega carnatIon Brian Bernardoni 11Nathan Wight 11ScarabaeUS Phil Rodriguez 2SPHInX Paul Hahn 8Bill MacLeod 7John Schmitt 12nILe Jeffrey Fink 1

neW yoRk TeCh-olD WeSTBURy - ZeTa alPha PHaraoH David Isaacson 8nILe Gary Fippinger 9SUStaInInG Ira Yellin 1

mURRay STaTe - ZeTa BeTa nILe Donald Nicholas 20

valPaRaISo - ZeTa gamma carnatIon Don Kukla 25ScarabaeUS Paul Kolarczyk 15PHaraoH Bob Wichlinski 10

CSU-FUlleRTon - ZeTa ePSIlon ScarabaeUS Gerald Kim 4PHaraoH Gregory Beck 11SPHInX Paul Hirsch 16

TeXaS TeCh - ZeTa ZeTa PyraMID Brent Jackson 14nILe Len DeSecottier 3Karl Heim 1Jeff Ray 9SUStaInInG Evan Cudd 5Taylor Williams 1

RoCheSTeR - ZeTa IoTa carnatIon Ron Gross 15

noRTheRn ColoRaDo - ZeTa kaPPa PHaraoH Craig Temmer 7PyraMID Ignacio Gallegos 1Lucas Calhoun 1

ToP ChaPTeRS By ToTal DollaRS gIven

ChaPTeR ToTal DollaRS gIvenMissouri $457,355Detroit $102,465Ohio State $36,231Illinois $34,404Texas $33,128Purdue $29,167Kansas State $28,733Iowa State $23,791Transylvania $15,567Arizona State $15,071

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34 The CaRnaT Ion | DelTaS Ig .oRg

RoSe-hUlman - ZeTa lamBDa carnatIon Wayne Harshberger 9Mark Kipp 21PHaraoH Len Dattilo 5SPHInX Peter Cisneros 1Christopher Cleary 27Dylan Kessler 1Fred Pabon 4nILe Kevin Gilbert 9Zachary Hawkins 1Ryan Kinn 10Christopher Meyer 4Jeremy Norris 2Michael Rooney 2SUStaInInG Chad Wenn 1

ST. CloUD STaTe - ZeTa XI carnatIon Keane Bjorkman 7SPHInX Brian Nieting 20Ken Walsh 15PyraMID David Clarke 2Charles Frank 1Dan Kitrell 23Sean Richardson 6Paul Urich 3nILe Matthew Schafer 15SUStaInInG Alex Roup 1

CSU-eaST Bay - ZeTa omICRon SPHInX Kenneth Louis 5KB Paige 15

PyraMID Jonathan Fey 6James Nicholls 9

UnIveRSITy oF loUISIana-monRoe - ZeTa PI carnatIon Landon Christy 6ScarabaeUS Doug Ardoin 22Ben Ford 5PHaraoH Stephen Lee 8Tim Roussel 12nILe Clifton Veatch 1SUStaInInG Todd Benoit 6

aURaRIa - ZeTa Rho nILe Kurt Schmelzel 11

UC-San DIego - ZeTa SIgma SPHInX Barry Hager 22nILe Taylor O’Connell 2

lake SUPeRIoR STaTe - ZeTa TaU ScarabaeUS David Cryderman 14nILe Mark Worden 16SUStaInInG Buffy Reattoir 4

eUReka - ZeTa UPSIlon carnatIon Tony Byerly 18Allen Fore 22Rod Gould 17

ScarabaeUS Bucky Boland 14SPHInX Jeremy Fauser 1Benjamin McCauley 1Allen Moushon 1PyraMID Andrew Cohen 2Jacob Etscheid 1nILe Bryan Hybki 1SUStaInInG Jordan Barkley 2

SlIPPeRy RoCk - ZeTa PhI SUStaInInG John Downing 15

UaB - ZeTa ChI PearL Chris Edmonds 18carnatIon Nathan Welch 2SPHInX Caleb Jones 1Marc Martinelli 1PyraMID Lance Mailloux 2Joshua McCool 1nILe Salem Awwad 1

SUny-BRoCkPoRT - ZeTa PSI carnatIon Rob Ferreira 5ScarabaeUS Scott Farrell 7

UnC-WIlmIngTon - ZeTa omega nILe Marty Lassiter 7

mIlWakee SChool oF engIneeRIng - eTa alPha SPHInX Al Irion 4Joshua Lewis 6SUStaInInG Paul Smith 1

CSU-San BeRnaRDIno - eTa BeTa carnatIon Azeem Dhalla 14PyraMID Dale Geurts 5Paul LaCorte 1Mark Ullrich 6

noRTheRn IllInoIS - eTa ePSIlon carnatIon Nick Gialamas 2

SPHInX Terrance Scroggin 10Christopher Shields 5nILe James Meinken 7

RoCheSTeR InSTITUTe oF TeCh - eTa eTa nILe John DeLuca 7SUStaInInG Jose Peralta 1

CSU-SaCRamenTo - eTa IoTa ScarabaeUS Barry Kalian 17SPHInX Curtis Butler 7

mIChIgan-DeaRBoRn - eTa kaPPa PHaraoH George Kawwas 12SPHInX Kevin Bonner 8Andrew Centlivre 8Mike Jasinski 1Michael Mazowita 14nILe Cardi DeMonaco 3SUStaInInG Ali Beidoun 3

ChaPman - eTa lamBDa SPHInX Eric Miller 15

neW yoRk TeCh - CenTRal ISlIP - eTa mU nILe Lee Wuelfing 2

ToWSon - eTa XI SPHInX Daniel Ovenshire 1

UW-eaU ClaIRe - eTa omICRon PHaraoH Adam Clayton 4SPHInX Chuck Chapek 9

DayTon - eTa PI SPHInX Bryan Carey 12

UnC-ChaRloTTe - eTa Rho carnatIon Phil Capling 11Cam Creech 14Randy Peterson 16PHaraoH Josh Coggins 8

Annual Report

ToP ChaPTeRS By yoUng DonoRS (Brothers initiated since 2002)

ChaPTeR ToTal yoUng DonoRSMillikin 17Kansas State 10Georgia Tech 9Utah State 8Rose-Hulman 7Transylvania 7CSU-Fresno 6Purdue 6Eureka 6UNC-Chapel Hill 5UAB 5

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35SP R In g 2013

SPHInX Keith Long 2PyraMID Robert Bunzey 1Neil Shaw 11nILe Richard Brooks 1Peter Jadelis 2John Olenick 8

Cal Poly-Pomona - eTa SIgma carnatIon Gregory Forester 7

neW meXICo STaTe - eTa ChI carnatIon James Apodaca 5ScarabaeUS Dom Sanchez 10PHaraoH Mike Stephens 6Ernest Teves 5SUStaInInG Daniel Hergenrader 1

gallaUDeT - eTa PSI SPHInX Raymond Sevrie 1Branton Stewart 8PyraMID Brian Lucas 2

JohnSon & WaleS - eTa omega SPHInX Chris Yankowski 5PyraMID Paul Page 2nILe Chris Horvath 5

SUny-STonyBRook - TheTa gamma ScarabaeUS George Liakeas 1PHaraoH Cesar Caro 1

hoFSTRa - TheTa DelTa PHaraoH Rob Salvatico 7nILe Joseph Ferragina 1

WIngaTe - TheTa ePSIlon carnatIon James Mumford 5SPHInX Darren Pierre 8Robert Straube 1

ColoRaDo STaTe - TheTa ZeTa SPHInX Scott Beasley 1Dave Eason 20Rob Kuehl 6

haRTFoRD - TheTa TheTa carnatIon Kevin Meisinger 12PHaraoH Matthew Jurgensen 2

SUny-oSWego - TheTa kaPPa carnatIon Scott Wiley 13ScarabaeUS Michael Doody 2SPHInX Kevin Powers 2nILe Daniel Snyder 1SUStaInInG Andy Wittman 2

DICkInSon - TheTa lamBDa PHaraoH John Raynes 7SPHInX Kevin McCormack 1SUStaInInG Bo Snitchler 1

kenTUCky - TheTa mU SPHInX Nathan Reardon 1PyraMID Jared Thomas 4nILe Julian Boyd 1SUStaInInG Matthew Marano 2

oRegon - TheTa Rho PHaraoH Andy Bremer 1PyraMID Nick MacIlveen 1

TeXaS a&m - TheTa UPSIlon carnatIon Brett Henery 11SPHInX Ben Larsen 3PyraMID Robb Jenson 8

geoRgIa - TheTa ChI ScarabaeUS Dan Harper 1SPHInX Caleb Williams 3

ShoRTeR - TheTa PSI SPHInX Josh Byers 2PyraMID Chris Cannon 1

geoRgIa SoUTheRn - TheTa omega PyraMID Brett Davis 3SUStaInInG John Balmforth 1Gary David 1

geoRgIa College - IoTa alPha SPHInX Ross Klein 1Kevin Parks 1PJ Schinella 1SUStaInInG Andrew Deneen 2

IU-SoUTh BenD - IoTa gamma SPHInX David Kuczmanski 2

JameS maDISon - IoTa DelTa SUStaInInG Benjamin Jerauld 1

UnIveRSITy oF CenTRal FloRIDa - IoTa ePSIlon nILe Alejandro Gutierrez 1

vIRgInIa TeCh - kaPPa DelTa PyraMID Mario Gazzola 1Minh Le 1Patrick McGonigle 1nILe Derek Jones 2Aaron Bock 2SUStaInInG Matt Emerson 4

BoISe STaTe SPHInX Micah Floyd 1PyraMID Reginald Nappier 1

BoWlIng gReen STaTe ScarabaeUS Bart Ankney 1

InDIana TeCh SPHInX Stephen Zemanek 25PyraMID Dennis Sensenich 20nILe Robert Baird 11

kenT STaTe SPHInX Ryan Murphy 1SUStaInInG Brett Kay 1

manSFIelD nILe David Rollick 17

mIamI (oh) PyraMID Alexander Gase 1

mInneSoTa PHaraoH Jim Gustafson 34

annUaL GIVInG cLUbSOrder of the Pearl...................$5,000+

Order of the Carnation ............$1,000-$4,900

Order of the Scarabaeus .........$500-$999

Order of the Pharaoh ..............$250-$499

Sphinx Club ...........................$100-$249

Pyramid Club..........................$50-$99

Nile Club ...............................$25-$49

Sustaining Brothers ................Under $25

• The number following each name denotes total years of giving.

Page 36: Spring 2013 Carnation :: Delta Sigma Phi

30+ yeaR DonoRS

49 Bill Cross, Stetson ’59 Jerry Crump, UC-Berkeley ’55 Richard Duroe, Iowa State ’50 47 David Allen, Western Illinois ’61 Robert Day, Ohio State ’61 Bruce Loewenberg, Missouri ’58 Loren Tregellas, Kansas State ’55

46 Charlie Gilbert, Georgia Tech ’59 Richard Klumpp, Loyola-Marymount ’58 Bob Pitts, Arkansas ’48

45 Gene Blanchard, Illinois ’50 Kermit Greene, UCLA ’46 Larry Keisling, Pittsburgh ’57 Elmo Vestal, Texas ’47 44 Thomas Applegate, Lehigh ’53 Richard Belcher, Edinboro ’62 Kenneth Knopp, Texas ’54 Loren Mall, Kansas State ’58 43 Clifford Burk, Detriot ’65 Jim Foss, Southern California ’53 William Hodson, Drexel ’64 George Lamm, Barton ’58 Ragnar Lindberg, Missouri ’57 Larry Lundberg, San Jose State ’66 Phil Ramazzina, Oregon State ’59 42 Lee Dueringer, Illinois ’60 Allen James, NC State ’65 Robert Hahn, Maryland ’62 John Pietras, St. Francis ’51 Ron Pruitt, Texas ’60 William Truex, San Diego State ’62 41 Robert Holliday, High Point ’67 Ted Owens, NC State ’58 Warren Sawyer, Lehigh ’38 Donnie Snedeker, Illinois ’57 Eric Wagner, Ohio State ’62 Warren Wagner, Maryland ’41 40 Robert Andrews, Albion ’58 Bob Chapman, Michigan State ’60 Dick Crain, Western Illinois ’53 David Holmes, North Texas ’66 Charles Jones, UC-Berkeley ’61 Terry Potts, San Jose State ’67 Dale Swenson, Kansas ’57 Mike Wims, North Texas ’66 Ronald Woofter, Ohio Northern ’59 39 Marvin Allison, UCLA ’57 James Bradley, UW-Madison ’49 Fred Dellett, Kansas State ’56 Ted Desch, Illinois ’49 Carl Raiss, Michigan ’49 Jack Rowley, Waynesburg ’57 Jesse Weigel, Pittsburgh ’53 Carl Wermuth, Missouri ’62 Chuck Winston, Southern Methodist ’56

38 William Bissey, Ohio Northern ’72 Marshall Cox, UCLA ’56 Daniel Elliott, Drexel ’61 Waldo Emerson, Florida ’60 Michael Engle, St. Louis ’66 Bruce Holmgren, Morningside ’67 Wayne Jacobson, UW-LaCrosse ’65 Forrest Jones, Southern Methodist ’50 Edward Le Fevre, Millikin ’54 John Prange, Millikin ’58 Russ Shaw, Ohio State ’59 Charles Walgreen, Michigan ’55 JR Waltrip, Millikin ’47 Gary Zarybnicky, Kansas ’60 37 Howard Benton, Kansas State ’60 Dave Collins, Western Michigan ’65 Alex Doig, San Diego State ’57 Terry Donze, Missouri S&T ’68 Jim Madsen, Eastern Michigan ’68 John Parker, Purdue ’68 Bruce Penwell, Illinois ’48 Bill Walker, UC-Berkeley ’47 36 Jae Allen, Arizona State ’64 Jim Braeutigam, Texas ’59 Brian Brooks, Missouri ’64 David Darwin, NC State ’65 Mark Dunker, UC-Berkeley ’58 Jim Evans, Cal Poly - San Luis Obispo ’58 Don Newhall, San Jose State ’51 Roland Wedemeyer, UC-Berkeley ’51 35 Carl Blanchard, Alfred ’59 Jack Dostal, Wittenberg ’60 Bill Epperly, Western Illinois ’64 Frank Frederick, NC State ’63 Giles Light, Transylvania ’63 Darrell Kougher, Edinboro ’67 Burnie Oates, UW-Platteville ’68 Jack Ott, Pittsburgh ’55 Chuck Smith, Arizona ’51 Guy Thigpen, Thiel ’47 Win Wuttke, Illinois ’65 34 Kenneth Bieber, Duke ’67 Marcus Drewa, North Texas ’53 Art Fetters, Michigan State ’50 David Fratta, Indiana of Pennsylvania ’67 Brownie Futrell, Duke ’75 Jim Gustafson, Minnesota ’67 Robert Henny, Michigan State ’57 William Hoover, Ohio State ’64 Dennis Howard, Virginia ’71 Bob Lagomarsino, UC- Santa Barbara ’48 Richard McLellan, Michigan State ’61 Harry Newlon, San Diego State ’50 John Ozier, Auburn ’69 Burton Rohde, UC-Berkeley ’68 33 Frank Basile, Tulane ’58 Allan Brandt, Nebraska ’64 Craig Cerqua, UW-Platteville ’75 Thomas Desmond, Tennessee-Knoxville ’50 Jack Gordon, Illinois ’47 Gerry Hartmann, Iowa State ’56

Lester Jacobs, UC-Berkeley ’62 Spencer Kneubuehl, UW-Whitewater ’70 Michael Laxner, Loyola-Chicago ’71 Robert Martin, Virginia ’65 Roger Mola, Purdue ’71 Orlando Montesino, Texas ’72 David Press, Lehigh ’69 Warren Sauer, San Diego State ’58 Harry Stroud, UCLA ’48 Lester Wagner, Virginia ’66 John Weber, Lehigh ’60 Bruce Westphal, San Jose State ’61 Ron Winkler, UC-Berkeley ’65 Gary Workman, Millikin ’61 32 Ron Bloom, Missouri ’64 Henry Boss, Kansas State ’69 Bob Calderwood, Utah State ’68 Irving Cutter, Texas ’60 Bill Hartwig, Cal Poly - San Luis Obispo ’61 Frank Haynes, Colorado ’56 Gary Kalian, UC-Berkeley ’58 Kenneth Klindt, Iowa State ’56 Phil Kluge, Hartwick ’76 Wayne Rush, Kansas State ’59 Michael Scigliano, Iowa State ’60 William Stidham, Eastern Michigan ’58 Ed Swanson, Hillsdale ’57 Pat Wilkerson, Kansas State ’53 31 Bob Bader, Cal Poly - San Luis Obispo ’59 Bruce Baker, Missouri S&T ’71 Bruce Cameron, Cal Poly - San Luis Obispo ’61 Don Chandler, Texas ’73 Murray Edge, North Texas ’55 Richard Foulk, Thiel ’46 Lew Graham, Purdue ’69 Roger Gregory, Idaho ’58 Tom Hewitt, UW-Oshkosh ’64 David Hotchkiss, Kansas State ’57 Alan Livingstone, McGill ’65 Bruce Marshall, Southern Methodist ’77 John Macauley, Illinois ’42 John Munday, San Jose State ’55 Joe Offutt, Missouri S&T ’73 Douglas Olson, SD School of Mines ’57 Thomas Sgritta, Purdue ’65 Carl Stephens, Northern Arizona ’54 Pat Stephens, UW-LaCrosse ’67 Bill Surles, North Texas ’66 Gary Teixeira, Houston ’72 Lonnie Williams, Wake Forest ’75 Russ Yensen, Cal Poly - San Luis Obispo ’63 30 Robert Brander, Central Michigan ’51 Robert Cansler, East Carolina ’75 Don Cole, Cal Poly - San Luis Obispo ’76 Glenn Eades, Oregon State ’55 Jim Haleem, Western Illinois ’66 Randall Ice, SD School of Mines ’68 Tony Perfilio, Utah State ’66 Rusty Rice, Illinois ’73 Michael Smelt, Michigan State ’57 Joe Willerth, Purdue ’67

36 The CaRnaT Ion | DelTaS Ig .oRg

Annual Report

Page 37: Spring 2013 Carnation :: Delta Sigma Phi

37SP R In g 2013

How does your chapter stack up with the rest of Delta Sig?

How does your chapter stack up with the rest of Delta Sig?

State of the Fraternity

Page 38: Spring 2013 Carnation :: Delta Sigma Phi

Fall ‘11Spring ‘12

TOTALChapterAll M

ale

Academics LeadershipAverage GPA Average GPA

SummitLeadership Institute Applicants

Membership

Regional Leadership Academy

STATE FRATERNITYof the

Columbia

Penn State

Texas

Auburn

NC State

Thiel

Hillsdale

Franklin & Marshall

St. louis

illinois

Georgia Tech

North Carolina

Duke

46

70

26

35

59

31

29

51

42

46

58

18

44

68

99

39

35

75

50

36

63

54

58

72

33

79

77

110

45

35

94

61

37

72

37

64

78

43

100

0.0

3.1

2.8

2.5

2.8

2.9

0.0

0.0

3.0

3.2

3.2

3.1

3.3

0.0

3.1

3.2

2.8

2.9

2.6

0.0

0.0

3.0

3.0

3.0

3.1

0.0

0

12

7

8

22

7

0

8

12

2

13

9

0

38 The CaRnaT Ion | DelTaS Ig .oRg

State of the Fraternity

With our previous

financial obligations to

the national fraternity

met in full, we are

prepared to spread the

ideals of Delta Sigma

Phi on campus, by

consistently recruiting

the best men, and also

within the community,

through our extensive

community service

projects. Better Men

Better Lives.

Dan Fox

Upsilon, Franklin & Marshall

Upsilon - Franklin & Marsshall

Beta Omega - Arizona

Gamma Tau - Eastern Michigan

ZETA ZETA - Texas Tech

Zeta Xi - St Cloud State

IOTA DELTA - James Madison

Iota Epsilon - UCF

Epsilon Tau - Grand Valley State

Zeta Chi - UAB

Iota Beta - Binghamton

Epsilon Delta - UW Platteville

Eta Xi - Towson University

Theta Psi - Shortern University

Theta Theta - University of Hartford

Gamma Xi - North Texas Delta Lambda - Utah State

Alpha Mu - University of Virginia

Alpha Sigma -- University of Maryland Alpha Lambda - MIllikin

Page 39: Spring 2013 Carnation :: Delta Sigma Phi

Fall ‘11Spring ‘12

TOTALChapterAll M

ale

Academics LeadershipAverage GPA Average GPA

SummitLeadership Institute Applicants

Membership

Regional Leadership Academy

STATE FRATERNITYof the

Fall ‘11Spring ‘12

TOTALChapterAll M

ale

Academics LeadershipAverage GPA Average GPA

SummitLeadership Institute Applicants

Membership

Regional Leadership Academy

STATE FRATERNITYof the

ohio Northern

Millikin

Virginia

Michigan State

Maryland

Albion

Kansas State

Stetson

Missouri

uClA

Alabama

Transylvania

CSu, Fresno

27

52

51

54

37

47

76

37

81

51

66

64

32

33

67

55

77

51

57

92

66

108

47

90

85

44

34

82

71

94

67

67

94

67

122

45

93

85

50

3.0

3.3

3.3

3.1

3.1

3.4

3.1

0.0

2.9

3.1

2.7

3.3

0.0

3.0

2.8

3.2

3.1

3.1

3.1

2.8

0.0

3.0

3.2

2.8

3.0

0.0

15

12

9

19

7

16

23

14

37

4

13

15

14

39SP R In g 2013

[We are] promoting

better men, better lives

with a focus on scholarship,

leadership and service to

the community. [We] plan

to continue success with

focus on recruitment and

continued achievement.

kevin White

Alpha Mu, Virginia

-----------------------------------------

Alpha Lambda is currently

doing very well, but we

are always focused on the

pursuit of our total perfection.

If great is possible, good

is not enough.

Caleb Buscher

Alpha Lambda, Millikin

Upsilon - Franklin & Marsshall

Beta Omega - Arizona

Gamma Tau - Eastern Michigan

ZETA ZETA - Texas Tech

Zeta Xi - St Cloud State

IOTA DELTA - James Madison

Iota Epsilon - UCF

Epsilon Tau - Grand Valley State

Zeta Chi - UAB

Iota Beta - Binghamton

Epsilon Delta - UW Platteville

Eta Xi - Towson University

Theta Psi - Shortern University

Theta Theta - University of Hartford

Gamma Xi - North Texas Delta Lambda - Utah State

Alpha Mu - University of Virginia

Alpha Sigma -- University of Maryland Alpha Lambda - MIllikin

Upsilon - Franklin & Marsshall

Beta Omega - Arizona

Gamma Tau - Eastern Michigan

ZETA ZETA - Texas Tech

Zeta Xi - St Cloud State

IOTA DELTA - James Madison

Iota Epsilon - UCF

Epsilon Tau - Grand Valley State

Zeta Chi - UAB

Iota Beta - Binghamton

Epsilon Delta - UW Platteville

Eta Xi - Towson University

Theta Psi - Shortern University

Theta Theta - University of Hartford

Gamma Xi - North Texas Delta Lambda - Utah State

Alpha Mu - University of Virginia

Alpha Sigma -- University of Maryland Alpha Lambda - MIllikin

Page 40: Spring 2013 Carnation :: Delta Sigma Phi

40 The CaRnaT Ion | DelTaS Ig .oRg

State of the Fraternity

Fall ‘11Spring ‘12

TOTALChapterAll M

ale

Academics LeadershipAverage GPA Average GPA

SummitLeadership Institute Applicants

Membership

Regional Leadership Academy

STATE FRATERNITYof the

Michigan Tech

Western Michigan

Arizona

Washington State

San Jose State

Rutgers

idaho

Western illinois

North Texas

Eastern Michigan

iuP

uC, Davis

SD School of Mines

19

39

23

45

69

22

56

31

19

23

17

23

51

27

48

25

54

96

25

59

50

27

41

19

46

65

31

55

26

61

106

25

70

50

29

44

21

63

81

2.7

2.7

2.7

2.7

2.8

3.0

2.9

2.4

2.1

2.8

2.2

3.0

2.4

2.7

2.8

2.8

2.9

2.8

2.9

2.8

2.8

2.6

2.8

2.6

2.9

2.7

2

9

7

7

32

2

7

15

8

12

3

0

4

Where we are: Starting

our 4th year, we are

making great strides to

improving ourselves and

the campus community

around us. Where is the

chapter moving forward:

We are working towards a

large new member class

of high quality gentlemen,

building better bonds

with American Red Cross

and taking leadership

positions campus-wide.

Rich gorski

Gamma Tau, Eastern Michigan

Upsilon - Franklin & Marsshall

Beta Omega - Arizona

Gamma Tau - Eastern Michigan

ZETA ZETA - Texas Tech

Zeta Xi - St Cloud State

IOTA DELTA - James Madison

Iota Epsilon - UCF

Epsilon Tau - Grand Valley State

Zeta Chi - UAB

Iota Beta - Binghamton

Epsilon Delta - UW Platteville

Eta Xi - Towson University

Theta Psi - Shortern University

Theta Theta - University of Hartford

Gamma Xi - North Texas Delta Lambda - Utah State

Alpha Mu - University of Virginia

Alpha Sigma -- University of Maryland Alpha Lambda - MIllikin

Page 41: Spring 2013 Carnation :: Delta Sigma Phi

Fall ‘11Spring ‘12

TOTALChapterAll M

ale

Academics LeadershipAverage GPA Average GPA

SummitLeadership Institute Applicants

Membership

Regional Leadership Academy

STATE FRATERNITYof the

SP R In g 2013

Fall ‘11Spring ‘12

TOTALChapterAll M

ale

Academics LeadershipAverage GPA Average GPA

SummitLeadership Institute Applicants

Membership

Regional Leadership Academy

STATE FRATERNITYof the

Gannon university

Morningside

Purdue

Missouri S&T

High Point

utah State

Western Carolina

Cleveland State

Wisc-oshkosh

Wisc-Platteville

Clarkson

Wisc-la Crosse

NW Missouri

24

12

57

51

30

31

26

15

16

27

5

24

20

28

10

79

69

41

42

25

15

21

28

17

30

30

30

11

90

77

52

59

29

20

24

30

18

38

31

0.0

0.0

2.9

3.1

0.0

0.0

2.8

0.0

2.8

2.5

2.8

2.6

2.5

0.0

0.0

2.8

3.0

0.0

0.0

2.9

0.0

2.8

2.7

2.9

2.9

2.8

7

0

11

17

2

17

13

9

9

12

0

15

8

We will be participating

in many philanthropy

and charity events. Stop

the Hate, raking leaves

for elderly, Relay for Life,

highway clean up and

selling Christmas trees,

to name a few. We’re

also discussing an

international mission

trip to Peru, which is

in South America.

Pedro Sotelo

Epsilon Delta,

Wisconsin-Platteville

Upsilon - Franklin & Marsshall

Beta Omega - Arizona

Gamma Tau - Eastern Michigan

ZETA ZETA - Texas Tech

Zeta Xi - St Cloud State

IOTA DELTA - James Madison

Iota Epsilon - UCF

Epsilon Tau - Grand Valley State

Zeta Chi - UAB

Iota Beta - Binghamton

Epsilon Delta - UW Platteville

Eta Xi - Towson University

Theta Psi - Shortern University

Theta Theta - University of Hartford

Gamma Xi - North Texas Delta Lambda - Utah State

Alpha Mu - University of Virginia

Alpha Sigma -- University of Maryland Alpha Lambda - MIllikin

41

Page 42: Spring 2013 Carnation :: Delta Sigma Phi

42 The CaRnaT Ion | DelTaS Ig .oRg

State of the Fraternity

Fall ‘11Spring ‘12

TOTALChapterAll M

ale

Academics LeadershipAverage GPA Average GPA

SummitLeadership Institute Applicants

Membership

Regional Leadership Academy

STATE FRATERNITYof the

Woodbury

Cal Poly, Slo

Grand Valley State

East Carolina

illinois State

Northern Colorado

Rose-Hulman

St. Cloud State

Cal State East Bay

uC, San Diego

Eureka

uAB

MSoE

14

63

68

18

78

15

59

18

24

18

19

25

10

23

86

86

33

75

25

73

15

42

21

29

33

19

28

112

88

36

80

29

73

20

42

27

37

35

22

0.0

3.0

2.8

2.7

2.9

2.7

3.1

0.0

0.0

0.0

3.0

2.7

0.0

0.0

2.9

2.9

2.7

2.8

2.6

3.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

2.7

2.8

0.0

11

6

12

7

12

10

13

5

12

2

11

15

9

We are continuing to

establish who we are,

now all that’s left is to

keep raising the bar.

nick Ryder

Epsilon Tau, Grand Valley State

-----------------------------------------

We’re setting goals

and creating plans to

get to where we need

to go and that is back

to the mountain top.

Salem awwad

Zeta Chi, UAB

Upsilon - Franklin & Marsshall

Beta Omega - Arizona

Gamma Tau - Eastern Michigan

ZETA ZETA - Texas Tech

Zeta Xi - St Cloud State

IOTA DELTA - James Madison

Iota Epsilon - UCF

Epsilon Tau - Grand Valley State

Zeta Chi - UAB

Iota Beta - Binghamton

Epsilon Delta - UW Platteville

Eta Xi - Towson University

Theta Psi - Shortern University

Theta Theta - University of Hartford

Gamma Xi - North Texas Delta Lambda - Utah State

Alpha Mu - University of Virginia

Alpha Sigma -- University of Maryland Alpha Lambda - MIllikin

Upsilon - Franklin & Marsshall

Beta Omega - Arizona

Gamma Tau - Eastern Michigan

ZETA ZETA - Texas Tech

Zeta Xi - St Cloud State

IOTA DELTA - James Madison

Iota Epsilon - UCF

Epsilon Tau - Grand Valley State

Zeta Chi - UAB

Iota Beta - Binghamton

Epsilon Delta - UW Platteville

Eta Xi - Towson University

Theta Psi - Shortern University

Theta Theta - University of Hartford

Gamma Xi - North Texas Delta Lambda - Utah State

Alpha Mu - University of Virginia

Alpha Sigma -- University of Maryland Alpha Lambda - MIllikin

Page 43: Spring 2013 Carnation :: Delta Sigma Phi

43SP R In g 2013

Fall ‘11Spring ‘12

TOTALChapterAll M

ale

Academics LeadershipAverage GPA Average GPA

SummitLeadership Institute Applicants

Membership

Regional Leadership Academy

STATE FRATERNITYof the

CSu, San Bernardino

Michigan, Dearborn

Towson

Wisc-Eau Claire

Gallaudet

Johnson & Wales

SuNY-StonyBrook

Wingate

Colorado State

Hartford

SuNY-oswego

Dickinson

Kentucky

22

28

20

17

14

24

7

14

34

6

31

15

100

52

25

36

26

21

27

7

22

44

11

40

30

138

54

28

36

31

29

32

11

23

53

15

46

42

155

2.0

2.4

3.0

3.1

0.0

2.8

0.0

2.7

3.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

3.0

2.8

2.9

2.9

3.0

0.0

2.8

0.0

2.8

2.8

0.0

0.0

0.0

2.9

11

3

3

10

10

12

6

16

8

0

7

10

11

Fall ‘11Spring ‘12

TOTALChapterAll M

ale

Academics LeadershipAverage GPA Average GPA

SummitLeadership Institute Applicants

Membership

Regional Leadership Academy

STATE FRATERNITYof the

We are lower in

numbers than we

would like, however

we have a close

bond of brotherhood.

We are going to

increase numbers

in our fraternity

while helping

the community.

Daniel Peterson

Theta Theta, Hartford

Upsilon - Franklin & Marsshall

Beta Omega - Arizona

Gamma Tau - Eastern Michigan

ZETA ZETA - Texas Tech

Zeta Xi - St Cloud State

IOTA DELTA - James Madison

Iota Epsilon - UCF

Epsilon Tau - Grand Valley State

Zeta Chi - UAB

Iota Beta - Binghamton

Epsilon Delta - UW Platteville

Eta Xi - Towson University

Theta Psi - Shortern University

Theta Theta - University of Hartford

Gamma Xi - North Texas Delta Lambda - Utah State

Alpha Mu - University of Virginia

Alpha Sigma -- University of Maryland Alpha Lambda - MIllikin

Page 44: Spring 2013 Carnation :: Delta Sigma Phi

44 The CaRnaT Ion | DelTaS Ig .oRg

State of the Fraternity

Fall ‘11Spring ‘12

TOTALChapterAll M

ale

Academics LeadershipAverage GPA Average GPA

SummitLeadership Institute Applicants

Membership

Regional Leadership Academy

STATE FRATERNITYof the

oregon

Virginia Tech

Texas A&M

uGA

Shorter

Georgia Southern

Georgia College

Binghamton

iu-South Bend

James Madison

univ. of Central Fl

112

72

12

75

33

28

66

27

18

42

32

88

90

10

105

38

36

92

38

29

59

53

82

87

10

113

38

40

108

44

34

73

61

3.0

3.1

2.7

3.3

0.0

2.9

0.0

3.0

0.0

3.0

2.8

3.0

3.0

2.9

3.1

0.0

2.7

0.0

0.0

0.0

2.8

2.8

8

19

7

13

12

12

10

2

12

12

13

We won Greek Week this

past year and have plans

to do it again this year.

Our goal this year is to be

the best organization on

Shorter’s Campus and

win our first Pyramid

of Excellence.

Jeff Rice

Theta Psi, Shorter

-----------------------------------------

With our founding fathers

having graduated, the

brothers will be banding

together to recruit unlike

ever before to ensure

they create a legacy at

Binghamton University.

mike kumar

Iota Beta, Binghamton

Upsilon - Franklin & Marsshall

Beta Omega - Arizona

Gamma Tau - Eastern Michigan

ZETA ZETA - Texas Tech

Zeta Xi - St Cloud State

IOTA DELTA - James Madison

Iota Epsilon - UCF

Epsilon Tau - Grand Valley State

Zeta Chi - UAB

Iota Beta - Binghamton

Epsilon Delta - UW Platteville

Eta Xi - Towson University

Theta Psi - Shortern University

Theta Theta - University of Hartford

Gamma Xi - North Texas Delta Lambda - Utah State

Alpha Mu - University of Virginia

Alpha Sigma -- University of Maryland Alpha Lambda - MIllikin

Upsilon - Franklin & Marsshall

Beta Omega - Arizona

Gamma Tau - Eastern Michigan

ZETA ZETA - Texas Tech

Zeta Xi - St Cloud State

IOTA DELTA - James Madison

Iota Epsilon - UCF

Epsilon Tau - Grand Valley State

Zeta Chi - UAB

Iota Beta - Binghamton

Epsilon Delta - UW Platteville

Eta Xi - Towson University

Theta Psi - Shortern University

Theta Theta - University of Hartford

Gamma Xi - North Texas Delta Lambda - Utah State

Alpha Mu - University of Virginia

Alpha Sigma -- University of Maryland Alpha Lambda - MIllikin

Page 45: Spring 2013 Carnation :: Delta Sigma Phi

Fall ‘11Spring ‘12

TOTALChapterAll M

ale

Academics LeadershipAverage GPA Average GPA

SummitLeadership Institute Applicants

Membership

Regional Leadership Academy

STATE FRATERNITYof the

2013 Delta Sigma Phi Convention

#DSPCONV13July 18-21, 2013, arizona biltmore, Phoenix aZ

Page 46: Spring 2013 Carnation :: Delta Sigma Phi

After being initiated at Shorter College in 2009, Drew Burney had the opportunity to attend a Regional

Leadership Academy, which was funded and sponsored by the Delta Sigma Phi Foundation.

“The ideas and people we were exposed to at that event made a lasting impression on me,” Drew said. Many of the speakers there were Delta Sigs who had

been successful in the business world, a path that Drew wanted to follow.

Then, at the last national convention in Orlando, Drew learned that alumni donations were what made it possible for him to participate in that event. Donations from alumni similarly fund The Leadership Institute, Delta Sigma Phi’s top training academy for undergraduates.

“I always thought that our undergraduate dues paid for things like that,” Drew said. “When I learned that alumni donations were largely responsible for those opportunities, I vowed to help when I could.”

Drew graduated from Shorter, located in Rome, Ga., in December 2011 with a bachelor of business administration degree in marketing and management. He soon landed a job as a management trainee at Enterprise Rent-A-Car and remembered the opportunity provided to him by the Delta Sigma Phi Foundation.

“When the Foundation called and asked me to contrib-ute, it was a simple choice,” Drew said. “I didn’t hesitate at all.”

He pledged $1,000 a year for five years, a gift that made him a member of the foundation’s 1899 Society. The pledge also made him a first-time donor only a year or so after graduation from college at age 22.

“I wish more young Delta Sigs fresh out of college would do this,” he said. “The fraternity has given us so much and provided some great opportunities. I’m a big believer in repaying the debt I owe Delta Sigma Phi. My gift is a start, and when I can afford more, I hope to increase the amount I’m giving.”

Like many Delta Sigs, Drew counts his fraternity brothers among his best friends. He expects some of them to be there for his wedding next June.

“I was born in Alabama and moved to Georgia when I was 5,” Drew said. “I was fortunate to get a great education at Shorter. But that was supplemented by the great experiences I had as an undergraduate in Delta Sigma Phi.

“Seeing those older alumni invest in the fraternity and come back to help train undergraduates in life skills made a big impression on me. My intention is to do the same, and someday I hope I’ll be successful enough to lead one of those seminars at The Leadership Institute.”

Drew challenges other recent graduates to join him in contributing to the foundation.

“We are on a mission to make Delta Sigma Phi America’s Leading Fraternity,” Drew said. “In some small way, I hope my contribution will help make that possible. The concept of Better Men, Better Lives is important to me, and a stronger Delta Sigma Phi can bring that dream to reality.”

Young alumni interested in following Drew’s lead can contact a foundation representative at national headquarters.

46 The CaRnaT Ion | DelTaS Ig .oRg

Donor Spotlight

yoUng alUmnI DonoR

SPoTlIghTDrew Burney, Shorter ’09Drew Burney, Shorter ’09

Page 47: Spring 2013 Carnation :: Delta Sigma Phi

47SP R In g 2013

When Bob Dathe was looking for a college back in the 1950s, one thing that attracted him to California

Polytechnic State University at San Luis Obispo was that it lacked a large Greek system. Coming out of high school, fraternities didn’t appeal to him at all.

After arriving on campus, however, he decided that something was missing in his college life, particularly a social life and all the benefits of developing lifelong friendships that would be important in the business world. Fortunately for Bob, Delta Sigma Phi was in the process of establishing the first nationally affiliated group on campus (there were two local fraternities), and Bob decided to check out the newcomers. He pledged and was initiated in 1958.

Today, Bob believes his decision to join Delta Sigma Phi was one of the best of his life.

“I made lifelong friends there,” he said. “I married the dream girl (Carlotta), and another of the brothers married my wife’s sister. Both of my sons went through the chapter there, and my own brother was initiated into the fraternity at UCLA. So Delta Sigma Phi has deep roots in our family.”

The best part of college, Bob said, was being a part of the fraternity and helping as it grew and finally got chapter status at a university that was initially reluctant to embrace national fraternities. Bob graduated in 1960 with a degree in mechanical engineering, and he credits his fraternity, along with his degree, for helping him to become successful.

“People who don’t join a fraternity have no good way to reconnect with their university after graduation,” Bob said. He should know. Epsilon Rho has one of the most active alumni groups in Delta Sigma Phi and stages annual events to bring alumni together.

“Most of the guys leading those events are from the 1970s, but a lot of them have become good friends despite the fact that we weren’t in school at the same time. That wouldn’t happen if you lived only in a dorm.

“The fraternity helped me in so many ways, and I believe in giving back to things that helped me.”

That philosophy led Bob to begin contributing to the Delta Sigma Phi Foundation many years ago. Now that he owns his own company, A&B Die Casting in Hercules, Calif., he’s become a regular contributor. A few years ago, he pledged $10,000 to the foundation.

Bob’s father founded the company. Bob ran it for many years, and his son Stephen is now in charge. “So the compa-ny has been in our family for three generations,” Bob said.

In the business world, Bob has noticed that fraternity men make good employees. “It’s obvious that fraternities build good character and leadership skills,” he said. “You typically don’t learn those things in a classroom.”

His company’s accountant is a good friend and a mem-ber of Hilgard Chapter of Delta Sigma Phi at the University of California-Berkeley. “That chapter is starting up again, and I’m going to a tailgate with that group this weekend. As you move around the business world, you run into Delta Sigma Phi members in many places.”

alUmnI DonoR

SPoTlIghTBob Dathe,

Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo ’58Bob Dathe,

Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo ’58

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The Delta Sigma Phi Foundation proudly recognizes the following 21 men as winners of the 2012 McKee Scholarship.

The scholarship was open to all undergraduate men and all alumni who are pursuing graduate degrees. To be eligible, applicants needed a cumulative grade point average of at least 3.0 on a 4.0 scale in addi-tion to being an initiated member of Delta Sigma Phi Fraternity in good standing.

The McKee scholarship program is made available thanks to the generosity of the late Hensel McKee, Washington ’30, and his late wife, Jeanette.

Devon Baker, Georgia ’08*

Jonathan Brigham, Kentucky ’11

Cory Collins, Transylvania ’10

Charles Delisle, Grand Valley State ’08*

vitesh enaker, Transylvania ’96*

James Faust, Arizona State ’06*

McKeeScholarship

Devon Baker, Georgia ’08*Jonathan Brigham, Kentucky ’11

Cory Collins, Transylvania ’10Charles Delisle, Grand Valley State ’08*

vitesh enaker, Transylvania ’96*James Faust, Arizona State ’06*

Corbin Freres, Illinois ’04*grant gargus, Alabama-Birmingham ’11

Ian Jones, Georgia ’09*Daniel koessler, Grand Valley State ’05*

Joshua lee, Grand Valley State ’10Thomas mclemore, Alabama-Birmingham ’07*

nicholas moeder, Kansas State ’10John norton, Georgia ’10

Justin ostergard, Millikin ’10Tadarro Richardson, Transylvania ’09*

lowell Ritter, IU-South Bend ’11Brett Seidl, Kansas State ’10

nathan Spriggs, Kansas State ’10Taylor Williams, Texas Tech ’10

Ryon Wiska, Hillsdale ’07*

*Graduate Winners

Foundation Scholarship Winners

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Corbin Freres, Illinois ’04*

grant gargus, Alabama-Birmingham ’11

Joshua lee, Grand Valley State ’10

Thomas mclemore, Alabama-Birmingham ’07*

Justin ostergard, Millikin ’10

Tadarro Richardson, Transylvania ’09*

nathan Spriggs, Kansas State ’10

Taylor Williams, Texas Tech ’10

Ian Jones, Georgia ’09*

Daniel koessler, Grand Valley State ’05*

nicholas moeder, Kansas State ’10

John norton, Georgia ’10

lowell Ritter, IU-South Bend ’11

Brett Seidl, Kansas State ’10

Ryon Wiska, Hillsdale ’07*

applications for the 2013

mckee Scholarship

are now available.

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Delta Sigma Phi Fraternity named seven chapters as winners of the Pyramid of Excellence Award for the 2011-2012 school year.

The Pyramid of Excellence award is the highest award pre-sented to Delta Sigma Phi chapters nationwide, and recognizes those chapters who have been judged the most outstanding in all areas of chapter operations and programming. The following chapters received the 2012 Pyramid of Excellence Award Winners:

alpha Lambda – Millikin Universityalpha Pi – Michigan State Universityalpha Upsilon – Kansas State Universityalpha chi – Stetson Universitybeta Mu – transylvania UniversityGamma epsilon – San Jose State University Delta epsilon – Missouri University of Science & technology

The seven chapters receiving the Pyramid of Excellence set the bar for all Delta Sigma Phi chapters. These men outperform their campus peers in areas of retention, recruitment, organization size and GPA.

Four other high performing chapters were named Chapters of Distinction for the effort they put forth for last school year:

alpha eta – ohio northernalpha Sigma – University of Marylandalpha tau – albion collegeZeta Lambda – rose-Hulman

ChaPTeR hIghlIghTS

MILLKIn (Installed April 16, 1921)• 96% of members are involved outside of the Fraternity• 26 more members than campus fraternity average“The Pyramid means a lot to us,” past Chapter President Caleb Buscher, ’10 said. “We continue to put forth the extra effort because we realize that there are a lot of new chapters out there.”

MIcHIGan State (Installed January 13, 1923)• Surpassed all-male average GPA• 35 more members than campus fraternity average“This is something our chapter has been working towards for a couple of years,” past Chapter President Tyler O’Hara, ’09, said.

KanSaS State (Installed January 30, 1925)• 95% retention last school year• Surpassed both all-male and all-campus GPAs“[The award] is a testament to the contributions of all our men, from dynamic recruitment efforts and hard work in the classroom, to serving our community and leading organizations across campus,” past Chapter President Jake Pritchard, ’10, said.

StetSon (Installed May 15, 1925)• 28 members larger than campus fraternity average• 100% of members exceeded national minimum of service

hours per semester“Overall [the award] is a huge testament to what we believe our chapter can accomplish,” past Chapter President Hussein Hussein ’11 said.

tranSyLVanIa (Installed October 19, 1941)• GPA exceeds all-campus and all-male average• 32 members larger than campus fraternity average“[The Pyramid of Excellence] is a goal every year,” past Chapter President Bobby Puckett, ’10 said.

San JoSe State (Installed June 19, 1949)• 57 more members than campus fraternity average• Became the first IFC chapter on their campus to exceed

3.0 GPA“We have achieved so much in the past, now it is time to look upon the future. What can we do to raise the standard even higher? We must remain humble and continue striving to become better men,” past Chapter President Nicholas Ayala, ’10 said.

MISSoUrI S&t (Installed March 10, 1957)• 100% retention last school year• 92% of the chapter is involved outside of the Fraternity• 53% of the chapter has a leadership role in a different

organization“[The Pyramid] shows that every member of the chapter is working toward the same goals and helping their brothers be more that they could on their own,” past Chapter President Philip Matt, ’09 said.

Pyramid ofExcellence Winners

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maTT ZeeDyk, OHIO NORTHERN ’97 Matt Zeedyk currently serves as his chapter’s ACB president and believes in paying the debt to his Fraternity. Fifteen years ago, he had no idea how much he would be in debt to the Fraternity.

Zeedyk’s Delta Sig career started out pretty average; he only had one leadership role during his time at Ohio Northern – house manager.

“I didn’t put as much effort into the Fraternity as I should have as an undergraduate, so I decided to volunteer,” he said.

Zeedyk starting putting in the effort right after gradu-ation – he joined Ohio Northern’s ACB the following fall. Volunteering offered great things for him as well as the chapter right off the bat.

“I still wanted to be involved with my college friends, but I was in the real world, and I thought it could offer an advantage. Our ACB didn’t have anyone younger so we thought the guys could relate to me,” he said.

Zeedyk credits the Fraternity for putting his life together and helping mold him into the man he is today.

“If it wasn’t for Delta Sig, I wouldn’t have met my wife, my friends, and I probably wouldn’t have graduated. The Fraternity gave me way more than I can ever give back, but volunteering is the best way to try,” he said. “You don’t realize what the Fraternity gave you until you get into the real world.”

Although Zeedyk graduated over a decade ago from Ohio Northern, he never really left. He dedicates the majority of his free time to the Fraternity.

“Being a volunteer isn’t just coming back on home-coming. Volunteering lets you see these kids grow. It’s nice to see these kids develop leadership skills when they don’t even know it’s happening. Volunteering really is developing and building better men.”

Zeedyk has the same lasting impact on his chapter the Fraternity had on him.

“(Matt) Zeedyk has been the most passionate alumnus from the Alpha Eta Chapter. He is willing to do anything to help out the chapter and has helped evolve the chapter to win honors such as a Pyramid of Excellence. Thankfully at the Alpha Eta Chapter, Zeedyk is surrounded by many other passionate alumni on our Alumni Board that sets goals for the undergraduates to accomplish,” Chapter President Kevin Carper, ’09, said. “Without Matt, the Alpha Eta Chapter would not be what it is today, and every undergraduate who has had the pleasure to work with him is thankful for the time and effort he has put into the chapter.”

RoBBy maRTIn, KENTUCKY ’03For University of Kentucky ACB President Robby Martin, volunteering is about enhancing and enriching the lives of those men with whom he comes into contact.

On an undergraduate level, Martin and fellow ACB members assist with operational items like finding a chapter house on campus, as well as developmental items such as developing leadership skills.

In 2009, the Theta Mu chapter and ACB worked towards the opportunity to move undergraduates into a house on UK’s campus.

“My biggest accomplishment (on the ACB) has been securing our house,” Martin said. “I worked with a team inside our alumni base.”

Being on the ACB has personal benefits, too. Martin said volunteers not only bring professional expertise to the Fraternity, but they also build skills, too. “Volunteering also helps build new skill sets – for example, if you are the treasurer, you can grow your finance skills.”

Having volunteers connected to a chapter has a clear benefit in Martin’s view: connections and networking.

“Volunteers help undergraduates make career connec-tions,” Martin said. “We can connect them to networks with graduate students as well as professionals in their area of interest. Volunteering helps us enhance the lives that come after us and makes our chapter stronger.”

VoLUnteerS GIVe bacK to DSPVolunteers come in all different forms, and, while vast amounts of differences exist, one thing stays constant throughout the personalities of each volunteer: their bond of brotherhood and love for Delta Sigma Phi is so strong, they feel the need to give back. Delta Sigma Phi spoke with two ACB presidents to find out what they do… and what makes them give back to Delta Sig.

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Fraternity Volunteers

Excellence Winners

Zeedyk presents Thomas hagan, ’61, with the loren C. Schoenberger alumnus of the year award.

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Big Changes Coming

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name ChaPTeR JoIn DaTe DeCeaSeDRalph Cooper Alpha Gamma 5/6/61 4/2/08Joseph Malloy Alpha Upsilon 10/11/64 4/11/08John Johnson Alpha Upsilon 10/2/55 4/22/08Joel Goode Delta Delta 9/24/89 10/16/08Owen Mamura Alpha Upsilon 4/27/69 11/7/08Calvin Pflug Chi 1/9/43 11/21/08Chester Nichols Alpha Lambda 10/2/55 12/5/08Louis Baum Alpha Tau 10/11/48 1/1/09David Stone Alpha Upsilon 10/20/72 1/1/09Gilbert Kurschner Beta Tau 5/27/50 2/24/09Mearl Greene Alpha Zeta 11/14/39 6/1/09Anthony Krueger Eta Nu 5/9/88 6/26/09Tyler Bushnell Theta Rho 1/8/05 7/1/09E. Smoot Zeta Lambda 1/13/81 7/3/09Ernest Carlton Alpha Chi 5/17/50 7/19/09Clifford Danielson Alpha Omega 6/13/47 7/29/09George Whittles Alpha Eta 12/15/40 9/2/09Charles Rothschild Alpha Eta 6/30/46 10/24/09Henry Templin Theta Mu 10/19/41 11/12/09Richard Sterneckert Gamma Pi 5/1/58 12/17/09Donald Pond Alpha Eta 6/30/46 12/21/09Simon Bariuan Gamma Iota 1/24/00 1/11/10Robert McFadden Alpha Lambda 2/16/47 1/20/10Murray Ball Alpha Pi 3/10/61 1/27/10Zenon Trivelis Alpha Sigma 5/20/48 2/19/10Daniel Larchuk Epsilon 12/3/50 2/25/10James Stevens Beta Iota 1/8/40 3/19/10John Galicki Beta Pi 1/14/51 4/4/10Gregory Hardy Hilgard 1/6/79 4/18/10Gerald Hardy Alpha Theta 3/12/50 4/18/10Jack Guinn Beta Nu 2/8/47 4/20/10Thomas Grace Gamma Theta 12/18/55 5/1/10Daniel Drake Beta Kappa 3/2/35 5/5/10Jack Moynes Alpha Pi 1/29/39 5/10/10Stephen Pohlman Delta Delta 10/11/70 5/13/10Wayne Mowrer Alpha Upsilon 10/2/55 5/15/10Lawrence Stafford Gamma Nu 1/24/55 5/19/10Finley Jones Beta Omega 3/30/58 5/20/10James Gothard Gamma Mu 12/9/55 6/1/10Thomas Haddock Delta Pi 1/4/63 6/1/10William Lowry Delta Xi 5/6/62 6/14/10Milford Dinker Alpha Sigma 11/10/49 6/23/10Louie Sansing Kappa 3/4/59 7/1/10Ardell Sieck Alpha Psi 6/4/55 7/1/10James Nunnelley Kappa 2/13/36 7/12/10Gilbert Eberhard Beta Gamma 2/18/51 7/16/10Richard Mascuch Beta Theta 3/4/38 7/31/10Stephen Hendrick Delta Alpha 1/11/72 8/1/10James Braden Alpha Eta 11/16/52 8/11/10Laurence Fortin Eta 2/21/60 8/18/10Scott Davis Beta Gamma 3/1/64 8/18/10Patrick Waring Beta Beta 6/5/58 8/21/10Neil Valois Alpha Zeta 4/3/60 8/22/10Roy Vujovich Beta Gamma 10/2/49 10/1/10James Tucker Beta Pi 1/15/56 10/1/10Gary Stockton Beta Nu 2/14/58 10/10/10Karl Chase Gamma Delta 2/20/66 11/9/10John Nunes Alpha Zeta 4/3/60 1/16/11Marino Floreani Alpha Alpha 9/13/64 2/1/11John Alstat Alpha Upsilon 3/31/57 3/19/11Charles Neal Psi 10/29/35 3/20/11Benjamin Sassoon Alpha Sigma New Member 3/27/11Donald Modesitt Delta Epsilon 5/27/56 3/28/11Jack Stammer Epsilon Rho 4/15/56 4/1/11James Harkness Gamma Kappa 5/3/68 4/2/11

bond eternal

53SP R In g 2013

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name ChaPTeR JoIn DaTe DeCeaSeDWyatt Newman Gamma Delta 2/19/61 4/13/11Alex Bentley Alpha Omega 1/25/57 4/15/11Houston White Kappa 1/30/51 4/17/11Anthony Rubino Epsilon Xi 5/1/84 4/26/11Robert Canier Gamma Gamma 2/12/50 5/16/11William Beasley Beta Psi 2/8/59 5/30/11Paul Cianfichi Hilgard 9/29/57 6/1/11Peter Slusar Alpha Psi 11/2/51 6/22/11Todd Baldwin Eta Nu 12/3/89 7/1/11Michael Monteen Epsilon Iota 12/5/71 7/10/11Alan Bertram Epsilon 2/8/41 7/23/11Paul Maca Beta Omega 4/3/50 7/29/11Armour Titus Alpha Alpha 10/20/46 8/4/11Scott Rutherford Delta Alpha 9/18/86 8/14/11Eugene Novak Beta Phi 5/29/48 8/21/11Donald Matthews Beta Xi 3/5/50 9/1/11Michael Heimerdinger Delta Psi 5/7/72 9/30/11Richard Metz Alpha Alpha 3/26/50 10/2/11Robert Leigh Alpha Pi 2/8/32 10/3/11Phillip Teusink Alpha Pi 5/16/32 10/3/11John Dreystadt Alpha Pi 1/14/52 10/3/11David Lindemann Gamma Tau 1/6/61 10/10/11John Hill Alpha Epsilon 3/13/73 11/16/11Frank Crow Eta 5/12/48 11/18/11Roy Scudday Eta 11/17/40 11/18/11Seth Breeding Eta 2/15/53 11/18/11Morris Estess Eta 3/27/55 11/18/11Danny Jackson Beta Beta 10/4/69 12/5/11Daniel Acciani Beta Pi 3/6/48 12/21/11Robert Ross Eta 6/2/48 1/1/12George Robbins Alpha Pi 4/18/48 1/30/12Charles Stockton Gamma Kappa 12/10/53 2/2/12Pedro Barquin Alpha Gamma 10/13/45 2/3/12Robert Jaeger Beta Iota 4/9/32 2/4/12Joseph Holsomback Eta 3/27/55 2/5/12Kenneth Brown Alpha Phi 9/24/50 2/6/12Alex Ehr Theta Mu 11/20/10 2/22/12Homer Anderson Beta Gamma 10/5/47 2/23/12Lovell Chase Epsilon Rho 4/9/61 3/1/12Harry Johnson Alpha Psi 5/15/49 3/2/12Ronald DeMers Gamma Psi 11/17/83 3/4/12David Dennis Beta Pi 1/19/58 3/5/12Geoffrey Coleman Delta Phi 2/23/90 3/6/12Arnold Jellison Beta Beta 12/7/58 3/7/12Edward Filhart Alpha Eta 4/3/60 3/13/12Ronald Nordstrom Alpha Phi 3/26/51 3/15/12Roger Meyer Beta Tau 4/26/52 3/20/12Terry McLeod Tau 3/1/59 3/24/12Clifford Callis Kappa 3/11/81 3/26/12Edward Householder Gamma Pi 10/25/98 3/27/12Brenton Dewar Kappa 2/29/56 4/1/12Douglas Hummel Delta Alpha 5/10/70 4/1/12Howard Mehlschau Epsilon Rho 5/24/59 4/3/12Richard Loeppky Gamma Iota 6/14/56 4/21/12Matthew Renken Theta Epsilon 4/25/92 4/22/12Bruce Ferguson Sigma 2/12/50 4/23/12Scott Hinman Eta Xi 2/1/92 4/28/12Frank Hinman Phi 3/20/26 4/29/12Norman Morrow Alpha Upsilon 3/14/54 5/1/12Roger Imhoff Beta Iota 2/24/57 5/1/12Terrence Reese Alpha Pi 4/20/98 5/4/12Terrence Reese Omega 1/10/60 5/4/12Bob Coyle Beta Nu 12/17/50 5/7/12Wendel Leibe Beta Upsilon 6/6/48 5/11/12Karlos Sieg Delta Gamma 12/13/59 5/11/12

bond eternal

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Robert Fairbanks Epsilon Rho 5/24/59 5/17/12Harvey Little Eta 5/31/62 5/21/12Brian Supler Theta Lambda 3/22/94 5/22/12Jonathan Ruben Eta Nu 11/20/88 5/24/12John Loduha Epsilon Beta 12/17/66 5/29/12Ronald Hall Gamma Alpha 11/14/48 6/6/12Roy Mimna Alpha Iota 1/25/63 6/7/12Louis Riethmann Phi 4/25/54 6/9/12Stephen Lackett Alpha Sigma 3/2/70 6/14/12Jason Van Stone Epsilon 9/20/92 6/15/12Kenneth Ahlstrom Gamma Delta 10/13/68 6/18/12Tom Bangert Rho 5/12/68 6/21/12Robert Koch Epsilon Beta 1/1/67 6/23/12Richard Moody Alpha Alpha 3/26/50 6/25/12Ernest Wolfe Beta Gamma 10/9/43 6/26/12Richard Noyes Beta Pi 6/2/57 7/1/12Jerry Bridgman Beta Psi 9/25/60 7/1/12Robert Pullen Alpha Alpha 11/2/84 7/2/12Lawrence Stacey Alpha Eta 1/27/52 7/3/12Anthony Palo Epsilon 3/29/54 7/19/12Robert Nelson Beta Phi 5/29/48 7/19/12Cay Weinel Gamma Eta 3/24/40 7/19/12Scott Quasebarth Alpha Upsilon 4/27/80 7/23/12Matthew Huffman Gamma Kappa 12/4/10 8/3/12Warren Wagner Alpha Sigma 10/15/41 8/6/12Alexander Sylvester Theta Epsilon 11/19/11 8/6/12Samuel Stone Gamma Alpha 1/1/56 8/14/12James Crow Eta 2/26/50 8/29/12Jason Higginbotham Eta 4/29/90 8/29/12Gary Cardwell Alpha Mu 5/29/66 8/29/12Leland Lester Hilgard 10/12/52 12/11/10W. McNary Alpha Pi 1/24/50 2/11/12Bernard Clay Tau 2/26/39 4/16/12William Buhrmann Omega 3/4/51 6/17/12Francis Shellem Beta Kappa 11/3/40 7/1/12Francis Whisler Alpha Upsilon 3/26/50 8/2/12Richard Pfalzgraf Delta Phi 5/7/69 8/19/12Gary Cardwell Alpha Mu 5/29/66 8/29/12James Crow Eta 2/26/50 8/29/12Jason Higginbotham Eta 4/29/90 8/29/12Jack Blaney Beta Gamma 9/19/48 9/8/12Christian Anderson Gamma Delta 3/1/90 9/17/12Dave Kipp Zeta Nu 3/21/81 9/20/12William Kush Alpha Upsilon 3/15/53 10/2/12William Ethridge Delta Iota 5/10/59 10/4/12Todd Kirsch Zeta Xi 5/6/79 10/4/12Arlo Bonar Alpha Upsilon 9/16/56 10/13/12Steven Hoffman Beta Psi 7/19/07 10/20/12Frank Luksa Eta 2/6/54 10/23/12Aulton Harris Beta Omega 2/21/54 11/12/12William Buchanan Beta Alpha 5/11/47 11/13/12John Jobe Epsilon 12/3/49 11/27/12Oscar Klamer Alpha Alpha 2/26/49 11/27/12Howard Etling Beta Beta 2/28/32 11/30/12James Hilbert Phi 6/6/55 11/30/12Bronald Mead Gamma Kappa 5/14/61 12/8/12Joseph Johnson Alpha Upsilon 3/31/57 12/11/12Ronald Cunningham Gamma Pi 1/13/63 12/18/12Samuel Rearic Gamma Alpha 4/23/83 12/18/12James McCune Kappa 2/16/57 12/19/12Henry Negrette Eta Zeta 12/6/86 12/21/12John Roy Alpha Pi 11/3/50 12/28/12Harold Abdalla Beta Upsilon 3/4/61 12/29/12Nicholas Barlow Gamma Rho 11/13/09 1/8/13Robert Kille Alpha Eta 10/2/49 1/9/13David Decareaux Beta Eta 12/3/94 1/12/13William Scichilone Alpha Eta 2/25/51 1/22/13

Due to incomplete information, deceased dates may reflect the date the fraternity was notified.

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nonPRoFIT oRgUS PoSTage

PaIDgReenFIelD, oh

PeRmIT #286

OF DELTA SIGMA PHI

1331 N. Delaware StreetIndianapolis, IN 46202

ShoUlD ThIS magaZIne Be DelIveReD To a DIFFeRenT aDDReSS? UPDaTe The aDDReSS aT WWW.DelTaSIg.oRg oR Call 317-634-1899

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