upsilon - spring 2009

2
The Upsilon Ups Issue 1 • May 2009 • www.illinois-pikapps.com Pi Kappa Phi, Upsilon Chapter, University of Illinois • Est. 1921 Issue 1 • May 2009 • www.illinois-pikapps.com Pi Kappa Phi, Upsilon Chapter, University of Illinois • Est. 1921 Upsilon alumni return to Champaign – regardless of age – for Homecoming each year. With the house more successful than it has been in a long time there is more reason than ever to become active again. By Adam Nekola Alumni Chapter Vice-President For the refounding fathers, broth- erhood was a certainty. But then graduation came – the real world beckoned. Suddenly the youngest alumni of the Upsilon Chapter be- gan to feel disconnected. From the chapter, from each other. Only a small group of alumni were still involved. Some served on the Housing Corporation, while others were on the Board of Alum- ni Advisors - but in these facilities they were there to serve the chapter. There was no group, or position, that could adequately strengthen the alumni base. That’s when the advisors began looking into the formation of an alumni chapter. “We felt that a third alumni group was the strongest options,” said Gene Giannotta (Y1030), a 2007 Illinois graduate and recently elected Alumni Chapter President. A third group seemed right for Upsilon for several reasons. The first is to maintain the brotherhood that is developed dur- ing a brother’s undergrad years. It solves the disconnect that recent al- ums are beginning to feel. Moreover, starting the or- ganization now will pre- vent that from happening as brothers continue to reach alumni status. The Housing Corpora- tion had been inadequate in this facility since the new house was construct- ed. The bills were a heavy burden and required much effort. The Alumni Advi- sors did not exist to be a proactive group – they were appointed by the undergrads. Another reason is to help the chapter. “It will help to coordinate bet- ter with the undergrads on their alumni relations efforts and hope- fully build a strong foundation of support for the chapter which it can count on for years to come,” Giannotta said. “Hopefully, that will be a great resource for them.” The alumni chapter could help with homecoming – both with planning and attendence – and could take over the newsletter program. The intent is to help encour- age older alumni to be- come involved. With greater atten- dence and participation by alumni, Giannotta hopes they would serve as an example to the under- grads. “Alumni involvement is impor- tant because it shows how seriously those who have come before take the concept of a lifelong commit- ment, and so it serves as a model for them through college and af- ter,” he said. Additionally, it will show that ALUMNI CHAPTER NEWS Pi Kapps for Life Alumni Chapter strengthens ideal of lifelong brotherhood alumni exist for more than donating money. It is no secret that undergrads hope to get donations from alumni. Although fundraising may become an aspect of the alumni chapter, the networking benefits alone will help the chapter during recruitment. “We already have about 30 alumni since the chapter was re-founded, as well as over 600 living alumni across the country that I’d like to reach out to. So, I see no reason why we can’t have 50-75 members at least by the time we celebrate the 90th anniver- sary of Upsilon in 2011,” Giannotta said. He and the others starting the organization are already eying key alumni recruitment dates. The first, to be celebrated at the next Home- coming, is the fifth anniversary of the chapter’s refounding. By this point, Giannotta hopes to have all of the alumni since refounding as part of the alumni chapter. His goal for 2011 is much more grand. “I see 2011 as the goal line for our efforts and I want to do whatever we can to build enthusiasm and ex- citement across the greater Upsilon brotherhood so we cross a threshold that will ensure many, many years of success as a fraternity of leaders and men of CLASS, from freshman year into the golden years,” he said. With a functioning alumni chap- ter, brothers can look forward to events like Founders’ Day dinners, bar trips, golf outings, an alumni football block for Fighting Illini games, the Rose Ball, and, of course, Homecoming. Events will be located across Illinois. “As time goes on we will expand our programming calendar and the range of benefits for alumni brothers who are active members,” Giannotta said. Right now the possibilities are endless for Upsilon. Pi Kappa Phi it- self started with three men and their dream, while the recolonization at the University of Illinois began near- ly the same way. For Giannotta and others, the Alumni Chapter is the final step to ensure that Pi Kappa Phi’s strength will endure forever. n New Web site includes community Forum, calendar, maps keep alumni up to date Instant messenger, G-chat, Face- book. There are countless ways to get in touch with someone over the internet these days. Introducing one more - except this one is for alumni of Upsilon only. The new Upsilon Alumni Web site (www.illinois-pikapps.com) is more advanced than ever. Anyone can visit the page and learn about Upsilon news and events, but only alumni can log in to a members-only section and have access to numerous resources. “Registering for the site is not only easy, but only possible for Upsi- lon alumni,” said Adam Nekola, the developer of the site. All it takes is your last name and New Housing officers have grand vision By Adam Nekola Alumni Chapter Vice-President Homecoming is usually about meeting old friends and seeing cam- pus again, but for the Upsilon Hous- ing Corporation, it serves another purpose. For what has been the largest an- nual gathering of Upsilon Alumni for some time, the Housing Corp. has used the occasion to elect new members. This fall was no different as four members joined the eight- member board. Jim McMahon (Y965), Eric Chen (Y1008), Gene Giannotta (Y1030), and Andrew Ostendorf (Y1068) were elected to the board, while Mike Nolte was ap- pointed as the Undergraduate repre- sentative. Members are elected to at-large positions and the board itself ap- points members to offices. Return- ing members James Nelson (Y1005) and John Hankus (Y1009) take over as president and vice-president. “Since the house has been com- pleted, HC has been a very lopsided organization – the president did most of the work, and took most of the blame from the undergraduate chapter,” Nelson said. “The VP now acts as the sounding board to the chapter or undergradu- ate liaison, and is also in charge of handling all of the repairs needed in the house. By the end of Jeff (McMahon)’s term (as President), we had some structure to all of the positions on HC.” For the newly-defined vice-presi- dent position Hankus seemed to be the perfect fit. As a former house manager himself, he knows what it takes. “Since the primary function of VP was to communicate with the House Manager and coordinate house repairs, I figured this would be a natural role for me,” Hankus said. “I also have a good background of maintenance with plumbing, elec- trical work, and construction so I figured I could help out with repairs and can help diagnose problems over the phone or give preventative main- tenance advice.” It’s communication that the Hous- ing Corp. has identified as their big- gest problem. With a knowledge- able alumni in the vice-president position, the organization hopes to streamline how the undergrad chap- ter asks for house repairs, and to pri- oritize in order to get these repairs completed. Improving the quality of the house will help the undergrads recruit bet- ter. Better recruitment will help the finances improve. And with a bud- get earning a surplus, the Housing Corp. hopes to soon own the house - they the possibilities will be limit- less. “Finances are looking good and so are house numbers - a great basis to start on. Now we need to work on improvements to make housing corps more active in day to day op- erations of the house,” Hankus said. Nelson has the same plan, but with the formation of the alumni chapter, he sees things differently. “This might sound unusual, but my main goals for HC in the future are about reducing responsibility,” he said. “The chapter wants greater owner- ship of the house’s costs and repairs, and we hope to work out a solution to give it to them. The chapter is already streamlining rent payments for the first semester ever. Instead of us collecting rent from each indi- vidual in the house, the chapter will collect rent from everybody, and the chapter will be responsible for pay- ing HC. We’re hoping to work out a way where we can allow the chapter to make house repairs faster, without having to go through 3-5 different people just to get something done.” By giving more responsibility to the undergrads and sharing goals with the Alumni Chapter, he sees the Housing Corp. becoming a smaller group in the future. The idea is not to burden one individual or one alumni body too much. The Housing Corp’s sole focus on house operations will allow it’s members to specialize better. Hankus wants to take that focus to the next level, though. “Hopefully we can pay off the mortgage to the house as soon as possible in order to create a house where expenses are low and provide a cheaper alternative to dorms and some apartments. This will help to keep a flourishing undergraduate chapter at U of I. Having a place to call home on visits to Champaign is something every alumni would ap- preciate,” he said. n See ‘AC’ • Page 4 See ‘Housing’ • Page 4 The Upsilon Alumni Chapter Board President – Gene Giannotta (Y1030) Vice-President – Adam Nekola (Y1007) Treasurer – Nick Stoczanyn (Y1011) Secretary – Kevin Spitz (Y1020) Chaplain – Joe Themig (Y1028) * Elections held at General Meetings Housing from page 1 Alumni from page 1 The Housing Corporation Board President – James Nelson (Y1005) Vice-President – John Hankus (Y1009) Treasurer – Jim McMahon (Y965) At-Large – Gene Giannotta (Y1030) At-Large – Eric Chen (Y1008) Undergrad – Andrew Ostendorf Undergrad – Mike Nolte * Elections held at Homecoming See ‘Web site’ • Page 3 Gene Giannotta AC President I want to do whatever we can to build enthusiasm across the brotherhood • Anyone interesting in serving as a chairperson or volunteering should contact Gene

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Upsilon - Spring 2009 Newsletter

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The Upsilon UpsIssue 1 • May 2009 • www.illinois-pikapps.com Pi Kappa Phi, Upsilon Chapter, University of Illinois • Est. 1921

Issue 1 • May 2009 • www.illinois-pikapps.com Pi Kappa Phi, Upsilon Chapter, University of Illinois • Est. 1921

Upsilon alumni return to Champaign – regardless of age – for Homecoming each year. With the house more successful than it has been in a long time there is more reason than ever to become active again.

By Adam NekolaAlumni Chapter Vice-President

For the refounding fathers, broth-erhood was a certainty. But then graduation came – the real world beckoned. Suddenly the youngest alumni of the Upsilon Chapter be-gan to feel disconnected. From the chapter, from each other.

Only a small group of alumni were still involved. Some served on the Housing Corporation, while others were on the Board of Alum-ni Advisors - but in these facilities they were there to serve the chapter. There was no group, or position, that could adequately strengthen the alumni base.

That’s when the advisors began looking into the formation of an alumni chapter.

“We felt that a third alumni group was the strongest options,” said Gene Giannotta (Y1030), a 2007 Illinois graduate and recently elected Alumni Chapter President.

A third group seemed right for Upsilon for several reasons.

The first is to maintain the brotherhood that is developed dur-ing a brother’s undergrad years. It solves the disconnect that recent al-ums are beginning to feel. Moreover, starting the or-ganization now will pre-vent that from happening as brothers continue to reach alumni status.

The Housing Corpora-tion had been inadequate in this facility since the new house was construct-ed. The bills were a heavy burden and required much effort. The Alumni Advi-sors did not exist to be a proactive group – they were appointed by the undergrads. Another reason is to help the chapter.

“It will help to coordinate bet-ter with the undergrads on their alumni relations efforts and hope-fully build a strong foundation of

support for the chapter which it can count on for years to come,” Giannotta said. “Hopefully, that will be a great resource for them.”

The alumni chapter could help with homecoming – both with

planning and attendence – and could take over the newsletter program. The intent is to help encour-age older alumni to be-come involved.

With greater atten-dence and participation by alumni, Giannotta hopes they would serve as an example to the under-grads.

“Alumni involvement is impor-tant because it shows how seriously those who have come before take the concept of a lifelong commit-ment, and so it serves as a model for them through college and af-ter,” he said.

Additionally, it will show that

AlUmNi ChApTer News

Pi Kapps for LifeAlumni Chapter strengthens ideal of lifelong brotherhood

alumni exist for more than donating money.

It is no secret that undergrads hope to get donations from alumni. Although fundraising may become an aspect of the alumni chapter, the networking benefits alone will help the chapter during recruitment.

“We already have about 30 alumni since the chapter was re-founded, as well as over 600 living alumni across the country that I’d like to reach out to. So, I see no reason why we can’t have 50-75 members at least by the time we celebrate the 90th anniver-sary of Upsilon in 2011,” Giannotta said.

He and the others starting the organization are already eying key alumni recruitment dates. The first, to be celebrated at the next Home-coming, is the fifth anniversary of the chapter’s refounding. By this

point, Giannotta hopes to have all of the alumni since refounding as part of the alumni chapter. His goal for 2011 is much more grand.

“I see 2011 as the goal line for our efforts and I want to do whatever we can to build enthusiasm and ex-citement across the greater Upsilon brotherhood so we cross a threshold that will ensure many, many years of success as a fraternity of leaders and men of CLASS, from freshman year into the golden years,” he said.

With a functioning alumni chap-ter, brothers can look forward to events like Founders’ Day dinners, bar trips, golf outings, an alumni football block for Fighting Illini

games, the Rose Ball, and, of course, Homecoming. Events will be located across Illinois.

“As time goes on we will expand our programming calendar and the range of benefits for alumni brothers who are active members,” Giannotta said.

Right now the possibilities are endless for Upsilon. Pi Kappa Phi it-self started with three men and their dream, while the recolonization at the University of Illinois began near-ly the same way.

For Giannotta and others, the Alumni Chapter is the final step to ensure that Pi Kappa Phi’s strength will endure forever. n

New Web site includes communityForum, calendar,

maps keep alumni up to date

Instant messenger, G-chat, Face-book. There are countless ways to get in touch with someone over the internet these days. Introducing one more - except this one is for alumni of Upsilon only.

The new Upsilon Alumni Web site (www.illinois-pikapps.com) is more advanced than ever. Anyone can visit the page and learn about Upsilon news and events, but only alumni can log in to a members-only section and have access to numerous resources.

“Registering for the site is not only easy, but only possible for Upsi-lon alumni,” said Adam Nekola, the developer of the site.

All it takes is your last name and

New Housing officers have grand vision

By Adam NekolaAlumni Chapter Vice-President

Homecoming is usually about meeting old friends and seeing cam-pus again, but for the Upsilon Hous-ing Corporation, it serves another purpose.

For what has been the largest an-nual gathering of Upsilon Alumni for some time, the Housing Corp. has used the occasion to elect new members. This fall was no different as four members joined the eight-member board. Jim McMahon (Y965), Eric Chen (Y1008), Gene

Giannotta (Y1030), and Andrew Ostendorf (Y1068) were elected to the board, while Mike Nolte was ap-pointed as the Undergraduate repre-sentative.

Members are elected to at-large positions and the board itself ap-points members to offices. Return-ing members James Nelson (Y1005) and John Hankus (Y1009) take over as president and vice-president.

“Since the house has been com-pleted, HC has been a very lopsided organization – the president did most of the work, and took most of the blame from the undergraduate chapter,” Nelson said.

“The VP now acts as the sounding board to the chapter or undergradu-ate liaison, and is also in charge of handling all of the repairs needed in the house. By the end of Jeff (McMahon)’s term (as President), we had some structure to all of the positions on HC.”

For the newly-defined vice-presi-dent position Hankus seemed to be the perfect fit. As a former house manager himself, he knows what it takes.

“Since the primary function of VP was to communicate with the House Manager and coordinate house repairs, I figured this would be a natural role for me,” Hankus said. “I also have a good background of

maintenance with plumbing, elec-trical work, and construction so I figured I could help out with repairs and can help diagnose problems over the phone or give preventative main-tenance advice.”

It’s communication that the Hous-ing Corp. has identified as their big-gest problem. With a knowledge-able alumni in the vice-president position, the organization hopes to streamline how the undergrad chap-ter asks for house repairs, and to pri-oritize in order to get these repairs completed.

Improving the quality of the house will help the undergrads recruit bet-ter. Better recruitment will help the finances improve. And with a bud-get earning a surplus, the Housing Corp. hopes to soon own the house - they the possibilities will be limit-less.

“Finances are looking good and so are house numbers - a great basis to start on. Now we need to work on improvements to make housing corps more active in day to day op-erations of the house,” Hankus said.

Nelson has the same plan, but with the formation of the alumni chapter, he sees things differently.

“This might sound unusual, but my main goals for HC in the future are about reducing responsibility,” he said.

“The chapter wants greater owner-ship of the house’s costs and repairs,

and we hope to work out a solution to give it to them. The chapter is already streamlining rent payments for the first semester ever. Instead of us collecting rent from each indi-vidual in the house, the chapter will collect rent from everybody, and the chapter will be responsible for pay-ing HC. We’re hoping to work out a way where we can allow the chapter to make house repairs faster, without having to go through 3-5 different people just to get something done.”

By giving more responsibility to the undergrads and sharing goals with the Alumni Chapter, he sees the Housing Corp. becoming a smaller group in the future. The

idea is not to burden one individual or one alumni body too much. The Housing Corp’s sole focus on house operations will allow it’s members to specialize better.

Hankus wants to take that focus to the next level, though.

“Hopefully we can pay off the mortgage to the house as soon as possible in order to create a house where expenses are low and provide a cheaper alternative to dorms and some apartments. This will help to keep a flourishing undergraduate chapter at U of I. Having a place to call home on visits to Champaign is something every alumni would ap-preciate,” he said. n

see ‘AC’ • page 4 see ‘housing’ • page 4

The Upsilon Alumni Chapter BoardPresident – Gene Giannotta (Y1030)Vice-President – Adam Nekola (Y1007)Treasurer – Nick Stoczanyn (Y1011)

Secretary – Kevin Spitz (Y1020)Chaplain – Joe Themig (Y1028)* Elections held at General Meetings

housing from page 1

Alumni from page 1

The housing Corporation BoardPresident – James Nelson (Y1005)Vice-President – John Hankus (Y1009)Treasurer – Jim McMahon (Y965)At-Large – Gene Giannotta (Y1030)

At-Large – Eric Chen (Y1008)Undergrad – Andrew OstendorfUndergrad – Mike Nolte* Elections held at Homecoming

see ‘web site’ • page 3

”Gene GiannottaAC President

I want to do whatever we can to build enthusiasm across the

brotherhood

• Anyone interesting in serving as a chairperson or volunteering should contact Gene

Issue 1 • May 2009 • www.illinois-pikapps.com Pi Kappa Phi, Upsilon Chapter, University of Illinois • Est. 1921 Issue 1 • May 2009 • www.illinois-pikapps.com Pi Kappa Phi, Upsilon Chapter, University of Illinois • Est. 1921

Bike Illinois for Push AmericaPush America is pleased to an-

nounce that it has named Bicycle Illinois as one of the Push America Challenge 2009 events.

Held from July 11-18, Bicycle Il-linois is a six-day bicycle tour across the state of Illinois from Cairo, at Illinois’ southernmost tip, to down-town Chicago. Bicycle Illinois is owned and operated by former Journey of Hope cyclist Rob Layton (‘98 North), who credits his experi-ence participating in the Journey of Hope to create the event.

Bicycle Illinois covers at least 500 miles, an average of 85 miles per day, with century options available every day, as well. Registration in-cludes everything you need such as nightly lodging, food, vehicle sup-port, baggage transportation and

some very nice extras are available including transportation to Cairo from Chicago and hotel options. Getting to and from the event is easy from wherever you’ll be coming as the event starts and ends in Chicago. If a week is too long, partial tours are also available.

If you are inter-ested in participat-ing, Push America recommends you register as early as possible. The ear-lier you register, the easier it will be to plan around the dates and avoid unexpected work/family conflicts. It will also give you more time to con-vince your friends and riding part-ners to participate with you. You’ll also assure yourself a spot when the

registration limits are reached and have a set, motivating fitness goal toward which you can work.

Most importantly, however, is the time you will allow yourself to raise

valuable funds and awareness on behalf of people with dis-abilities. While the registration fee is your own expense, participating as part

of Push America Challenge requires fundraising to meet your goal. Mon-ey raised will go to further the num-ber of grants given to organizations that serve people with disabilities.

For more information on how to participate please visit www.bicy-cleillinois.com or the Push America Challenge Web site. n

Undergradexcellence

Help our philanthropy during a week-long trip

Chapter excelling in all areasThis year has marked

great strides for Upsilon chapter. It is a great plea-sure to bring back “Up-silon Ups” as our alumni newsletter. It is just one of the ways we hope our forming Alumni Chapter will help keep strong that special type of brotherhood that con-nects us undergrads with our esteemed alumni.

For those of you who haven’t kept up to date with all that is going on at the house, we current-ly have 62 active broth-ers and an associate class of five more. Upsilon is currently ranked fourth on campus in GPA, third in total money raised for Push America out of all Pi Kapp chapters – not including our newest fundraiser, the Greek Marathon Challenge.

We have also commit-ted ourselves to partici-pating in every sorority philanthropy event on campus to help improve our social relations and participation in the uni-versity and Greek com-munities.

Another exciting an-nouncement is that the chapter capped off an ex-citing intramural season with a soccer champion-ship.

On behalf of the un-dergraduate chapter I’d like to thank all of our alumni for your con-tinuing support. We look forward to ushering in a new era of alumni relations for the Upsilon chapter of Pi Kappa Phi.

In Pi Kappa Phi,Tommy CarratoY1056

Planning underway for Homecoming2009 reunion will be the fifth anniversary of recolonization

Mark your calenders, make your reservations. Homecoming is set for Oct. 10 this year.

It’s the 25th anniversary for 1984 graduates, 20th for 1989 grads and 15th for the class of ’94. Talk to your brothers and make your plans to come down as soon as possible.

More information regarding specific Upsilon plans will be sent out in the coming months, but rest as-sured this will be the largest gathering of alumni in many years. Hopefully all the alumni in attendence will get to see an Illini win over Michigan State as they make their way to the Rose Bowl! n

initiation number to register. The site’s database will find your record and allow you to update your infor-mation on file. From there an alum will create a username and pass-word.

“Many features on the site are still evolving. We want everything to be user-friendly and helpful,” Nekola said.

When logged-in, alumni are able to RSVP for events on the calendar. As this feature becomes more ad-vanced, it will be the primary way to announce your attendence. A Google map shows you the alumni nearest to you, and an additional map allows you to find alumni anywhere in the country.

But the most advanced feature of the site is the Upsilon forum.

“The potential of this board is endless, but it’s main goal is to get alumni from many different classes talking and building brotherhood,” Nekola said. “Alumni should be ex-cited to use this feature to reconnect with others from their time as under-grads.”

Registering on the Web site, up-dating your information, and ex-pressing your intent to be an active part of the Alumni Chapter are easy steps to help make Pi Kappa Phi a strong force. n

web site from page 1

how to register1. Visit www.illinois-pikapps.com and click on the “Register” link in the navigation

2. Enter your initiation number and last name in the appropriate fields to find your record

3. Update your information and set your username and password. Declare if you’d like to be a dues-paying member of the Alumni Chapter

4. Explore the site and make a post on the forum!

ArChoN’s reporT

Upsilon alumni Eric Chen, Elliott Tagtmeier, Mark Peluse, Sam Oehlert (undergrad) and Adam Nekola catch up in the chapter room at the house (306 E. Gregory) during the 2008 Homecom-ing. Below, other alumni attending the afternoon enjoy the weather on the chapter’s lawn.

Your Alumni Chapter officers are here to help. If you have any questions or concerns, feel free to contact them.

PresidentGene Giannotta(630) [email protected]

Vice-PresidentAdam Nekola(630) [email protected]

TreasurerNick Stoczanyn(847) [email protected]

SecretaryKevin Spitz(847) [email protected]

ChaplainJoe Themig(757) [email protected]

Housing Corp. PresidentJames Nelson(630) [email protected]

Undergraduate ArchonTommy [email protected]

• Mark Reinersman (Y1012) was married to his college sweetheart, Chelsea, on XXXX xxxxxx.

• Adam Rosenberger (Y1004) and his college sweetheart, Pamela, were married on June 23, 2007.

• Chris Britt (Y1001) became engaged to Kristen Miller in February. Britt is in graduate school at Saint Louis University.

• Brandon Maslov (Y1019) graduated from Harvard Law School this May. He will begin work in Washington D.C. this summer.

Remainder of 2009 will have big eventsJune 6General Chapter meetingLocation is still being worked on, but if you’d like to attend please let us know. We’ll try to make it a conveinient location.

June 14white sox @ BrewersSeveral brothers are planning on at-tending the Father’s Day game. Bring your son or your dad and let us know you’re coming, we’ll arrange a tail-gate. Afterwards will have dinner.

July 11Arlington park (see at left)

September 6illinois @ mizzouIt’s becoming an annual event. We’ll tailgate, we’ll go to eat after the game. Hopefully it’ll be the start of a Big 10 championship!

October 10homecoming (see above)

ANNoUNCemeNTs

CoNTACT iNformATioN

Pi Kapps at ArlingtonUpsilon alumni and a

day at the track – sounds like a plan. The Alumni Chapter will be renting the Miller Lite Party Deck at Arlington Park race track Saturday, July 11.

It’s a family event, so alumni should feel free to bring their significant others – even your kids. The day is Ladie’s Day at the park.

“Ladies pull out your fashion hats, slip on a summer dress, and spend the day at elegant Arling-ton Park for Million Pre-

view Day,” the park says.The event will cost $50

for adults and $25 for kids. Included in the price is a three-hour beer and wine bar, snacks includ-ing bratwurst and chicken wings, and our own per-sonal wagering host.

The room opens at noon, and the event lasts until 4 p.m., with the rac-es continuing until 6 p.m.

RSVP with the Alumni Chapter today! We need 40 people to get the room and we only have room for 80!

impromptu eventsThese events won’t be the only ones the Alumni Chapter will be organiz-

ing throughout the year. There will be bar nights, sporting events, etc. Get involved today and stay in touch! PKF