quarterlywinter1972

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THE KEY TO ACTION

DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY JANUARY

1972


DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY Volume 90

Number 1

J anuary

OFFICERS PRESIDENT- JA MES C. McLEOD, Middle · b"ry '26, 1501 Maple Avenue, Apt. 309, Evanston, Illinois 60201 CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD- W . D . WATKINS, North Carolina '27, Box 355 , Liberty, North Carolina 27298 VICE·PRESIDENTSBERTEL W. ANTELL, Cornell '28, One Pier ~ repont Street, Brooklyn, New York 11201 S . Ross JOHNSON , British Colu.mbia '5 2, 1312 Cleaver Drive, Oakville, Ontario, Canada FRANK B. JONES, Il1dt'alla '46, I ndiana Uni versity Alumni Association, Biddle Continuation Center, Bloomington, Indiana 47401 J. PAU" McNAMARA, Miami '29, 88 E. Board Street, Columbus, Ohio 432 15 SECRETARY-HARRY W. LAUBSCH ER, Vir9,:nia '50, 220 Columbia Heights, Brooklyn, New York 11201 TREASURER- BRUCE S. BAILEY, De",soll '58, Farmers Savings & Trust Company, Mansfield, Ohio 44902 ASSI STANT TREASURER- DoNALD C. RASMUSSEN, P.u,rd1le '46, Walston and Company, 146 wlonument Circle, Indianapolis. J ndi ana 46204

DIRECTORS L. BULLOCK, Kansas State ' 61, Suite 1100, First National Bank Tower, Topeka, Kansas 66603 (1973) \VI LLIAM G. DILLO N, CotHell '43} Simpson, Thacher and Bartlett, One Battery Park Plaza, New York, New York 10004 (1972) BRUCE H. FELLOWS, W7~Sco1lsin '50, 7 Haviland Drive, Scotia, New York 12302 (1973) GERALD A . HALE, Western Michigan '52, 7 Winchester Road, Summit, New Jersey 07901 (1972) HOWARD KAHL,ENllECK, JR., I"diana '52, 2860 Indiana National Bank Tower, One Indiana Square, Indianapolis, Indiana 46204 (1973) J A"ES J . KAUFMAN, Bucknell '61 , 112 E. Un ion, Newark, New York 14513 (1973) O . EDWARD POLLOCK, Virginia '51 (ViceChairman), Vice-President and Director of Student Services, 'vVright State University, Colonel Glenn H ighway, D ayton, Ohio 45431 (1972) NORMAN D. SANDERS, Ohio '59, Advanced Managel- Development Corporation, 221 Nassau Street, Princeton, New Jersey 08540 (1973) NELSON SCHAENEN, Cornell '23, Private Export Funding Corporation, 40 Wall Street, Room 2222, New York, New York 10005 (1972) SAMUEL M. YATES, San Jose '55, 100 Brook Street. Garden City, New york 11530 ( 1973) TERRY

PAST PRESIDENTS llnUCE S . GRAMLEY, Pennsylvania State '08 J . ARTHUR CLARK, K.C., Esq ., Toro1lto '06 HORACE C. NICHOL, Carnegie '21 MARSH M . CORBITT, Wasirillgton '17 WILLIAM F . J ONES. Nebraska '27 CLARK W. DAVIS, Swa:rtlrmore '17 ARAD RIGGS, DePauw '26 CHARLES D. PRUTZMAN, Pennsylvania State ' 18 HENRY A. FEDERA, Louisville '37 HENRY W. McCoBR, Michigan '25 ORVILLE H. READ , M1'SSOUfi '33 CHARLES F, JENNINGS, Ma·r ietta '31

1972

Published by

THE DELTA UPSILON FRATERNITY Founded 1834 Incorporated, December 10, 1909, under the Laws of the State of New York General Office-Po O. Box 40108, Indianapolis, Indiana 46240 Telephone 317-293-8926

ARTHUR E. AVER, Western Michigan '65, Editor 8545 Huckleberry Lane, RR 2, Lansing, Michigan 48917 Fred L. Roberts, Jr., Bradley '71, Editorial Assistan t

TABLE OF CONTENTS Report of the President By James D. McLeod Trustees Elect New Officers Survey Gives Insighl Into Delta U

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Fraternity Realigns Provinces Chapter Locations Map

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INVOLVEMENT '72 Is Seminar Theme

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Chapter Installed at Tyler, Texas

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Student Volunteerism

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DU Newsmakers

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\'Vhat You Use Is \'Vhat You Get By W. A. But ler, .Jr.

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Chapter Activi ties Review

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Vital Statistics

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Directory

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THE COVER- Five sections based on results obtained from the RESPONSE '71 survey will be used as core content for the Province Conferences which will follow the theme: INVOLVEMENT '72.

STAFF E.recu.tive Secretar'j' W . A. BUTLER, JR. Oi.l'ector of Chapter Services LAURY D. i\1ANGIN Leadership COllslllt..,,! T l-:RR E N CE F. GRIMES

THE QUARTERLY is publi shed in January, April, July, alld October at 1201-05 Bluff Street, Fulton, Missou ri 65251. The subscription price (checks and money orders shOUl d be made payable to Delta Upsilon Fraternity) is $3.00 a year in advance; single copies 75¢. Send changes of address and correspondence of a business nature to Delta Upsilon Fraternity, P . O. Box 40108, Indianapolis, India na 46240; correspondence of an editorial nature to the editor, Arthur E . AUer, 8545 Huckleberry Lane, RR 2, Lansing, Mich . 48917. Second-class postage paid at Fulton, Missouri. ® T.M. Registered U. S . Patent Office_

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REPORT OF THE PRESICENT

JAMES

C.

McLEOD

DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY'

"The editorial writer is not the Anointed of God. He is not solely endowed with supernatural wisdom. He is not the exclusive custodian of the truth. And he must avoid giving the impression that he thinks he is." Fortunately for Delta Upsilon and this newly elected President, the above gem of wisdom came to me, courtesy of the writings of long-time Editor Hoben of the Milwa1-lkee Journal. Now I shall more calmly comment on the state of our fraternity, but in the larger context of this hour in history. It is a dangerous century but all centuries have been dangerous and Whitehead of Harvard reminds us that "on the whole the great ages have been the unstable ages." Surely this age qualifies! Ours is a tension filled world with tinder boxes ready to burst into flame, while the giants of science enable man to reach the moon, conquer disease, produce more than he needs and shrink his world to a few hours travel time. This then is the backdrop against which we view all aspects of our complex civilization including our colleges and universities and the facets of the constantly changing campus life. As in the political arena where pompous pundits pontificate as prophets of doom through the media, so their smaller editions prophesy the death of fraternities on the American campus, and they seek a major role in the last rites. "The State," said Edmund Burke, "is a partnership not only with those who are living but with those who are dead." I believe our fraternity is much the same. , It is a partnership of ideas and ideals, of customs and values, in which we have found an identification and sense of being, which we share not only with our contemporaries but also with those who have gone before us from 1834 until now! I sincerely believe this to be a priceless possession which we try to keep and at the same time share, and ultimately pass on. Tradition is a timeless quality of character. It never can remain static. It is a growing thing, often preserved by a few for the many. "The Courage to Be" is the title of a great book by Paul Tillich, philosopher and theologian. The book is widely read by college students who have found it as provocative as its title. All those who have helped make any age great, especially in the hours of insecurity and instability were men who had "the courage to be." No matter who you are, no matter what you do, no matter what your talents, you are You. You are important, and you have the courage to be and to become. Within every chapter of Delta Upsilon are men who have the courage to be brothers in a living fellowship and comradeship in what is often a very impersonal academic world. They can do this because Delta Upsilon has prided itself in striving to make each chapter the best of all places to make friends at the best of all times. We have done it because men learned to surround the members of each chapter with help, discipline, friendship and understanding. Isn't that what Fraternity means? That's what we must have the courage to be! We are brothers in a great Fraternity which was born in the early nineteenth century through the desire of a group of students who sought to relate themselves to something more personal than a dormitory. They wanted to belong to a fellowship to whkh they could give themselves and for which they would be willing to sacrifice the time and energy necessary to fulfill an ideal. Other men of Williams and other colleges sought similar goals in secret subrosa groups. Our founding brothers believed they could accomplish and achieve without secrecy and sought permission of the faculty to do so. We believe they were right and Delta Upsilon's history of achievement and steady growth is proof. Our founders had the courage to be and so must we.

january 1972


Trustees Elect New Officers For the sixty-second time the Assembly of Trustees of Delta Upsilon Fraternity was called to order in October. The meeting was held at the Union League Club in New York City. Elevated from the position of vice路chairman of the Board of Directors to the position of President of the International Fraternity was James C. McLeod, Middlebury '26. Most recently involved in fraternity affairs as chairman of the Dedication Committee for the International Headquarters and as chairman of the Committee on Reorganization, Brother McLeod has long been active in DU affairs. He served as vice-president of Delta U for four years during the 1960's. He served for 15 years as dean of students at Northwestern University and was then appointed professor of History and Literature of Religions. Dr. McLeod is an ordained Presbyterian minister. Elected to his third consecutive term as chairman of the Board of Directors was W. D. ''''atkins, North Carolina '27. He had previously served as a director from 1965 to 1969. Brother Watkins is beginning his fifteenth term as trustee for the North Carolina Chapter. Frank B . Jones, Indiana '16, was elected to his third terms as vice-president while J. Paul McNamara, iVliami '29, will continue with his sixth term as vice-president. Brother Jones recently served as chairman of the

Headquarters Building Committee. He is the executive secretary of the Indiana University Alumni Association . Brother McNamara has served as trustee, secretary and president of the Delta Upsilon Educational Foundation. Brother McNamara has also served eight-year terms as a trustee and director. He is a senior partner in the law finn of McNamara and McNamara in Columbus, Ohio . Brother Bertel W. Antell, Cornell '28, and S. Ross Johnson, British Columbia '52, were elected to their first term as vice-president. Brother Antell had previously served a term as director in 1942 and as a trustee for the Arizona Chapter from 1960 to 1967. He served his Cornell Chapter as counsellor and trustee for ten years. He is senior partner in the management consultation firm of Antell, '''' right and Nagel in New York City. Brother Johnson served as trustee for the British Columbia Chapter in 1968 and 1969. He is the resident vice-president for the New York Life Insurance Company in Toronto. Harry''''. Laubscher, Virginia '50, was elected to his fourth term as secretary. Brother Laubscher served as a field secretary during 1958-59, as the assistant secretary from 1964 to 1968 and most recently as a member of the DU Matching Fund Grants for Cultural Programs. Bruce S. Bailey, Denison '58, was elected to his first term as treasurer. He is treasurer of the Delta Up-

w. D. Watkins, North Carolina '27, will serue as Chairman ot the Bom路d to!路 his third term.

James C. McLeod, Middlebul)l '26, was elected International Fmternity President.

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DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY'

January 1972


Bertel W. Antell Vice-President

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S. Ross Johnson

Vive-pj'esident

silon Educational Foundation and president and chief executive officer of The Farmers Savings and Trust Company, Mansfield, Ohio. Elected assistant treasurer was Donald C. Rasmussen, PW'due '46, who had previously served as chapter deputy during 1957-62. He is assistant vice-president for the brokerage firm of Walston and Company, Indianapolis. Reelected for another three-year term as director was Terry L. Bullock, Kansas State '61, partner in a law firm in Topeka. Five directors were elected to their first three-year term on the Board of Directors. They include Bruce H. Fellows, TIVisconsin '50, who has served as trustee for the Wisconsin Chapter, a member of the Undergraduate Activities Committee and province governor, Brother Fellows is manager, commercial development, the General Electric Company, Schenectady, New York. Howard Kahlenbeck, Jr., Indiana '52, of Indianapolis was also elected a director. A partner in the

J. Paul McNamara Vice-President DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY.

law firm of Krieg, DeVault, Alexander and Capehart, he most recently served on the Headquarters Building Committee. James J. Kaufman, Bucknell '61, a Newark attorney with the firm of Culley, Marks, Corbett, T anenbaum, Reifsteck and Potter and Norman D. Sanders, Ohio '59, were also elected. Brother Sanders served as a field secretary during 1959路60 and a trustee for the Ohio Chapter since 1959. From 1965 to 1968 he served as province governor and is president of the Advanced Manager Development CorpOl'ation in Princeton, New Jersey. The fifth brother elected to a three-year term was Samuel M. Yates, San Jose '55. He served as convention chairman for the 1963 International Convention which was held in San Jose. Designated vice-chairman of the Board of Directors was O. Edward Pollock, Virginia '51. Three other directors are completing the final year of their three-year terms. They are William G. Dillon, C01'路 nell, '43; Gerald A. Hale, Western M~ichigan '52; and Nelson Schaenen, Cornell '23.

Harry W. Laubscher Secl'etmy

January 1972

Frank B. Jones Vice-President

Bruce S. Bailey Treasuj'er

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Donald C. Rasmussen Assistant Treasurer

Terry L. Bullock Director

Bruce H. Fellows Director

Howm路d Kahlenbeck, Jr. Directo1路

James J. Kaufman Directo1路

Norman D. Sanders Director

Warren C DuBois 1891-1971 Warren C. DuBois, Hamilton '12, past chairman of the board of directors from 1928 to 1930 and former International president from 1937 to 1940, died on December 29, 1971, at Brooklyn Hospital, New York. Brother DuBois' lifetime of dedicated service to the ideals of Delta Upsilon began with service as one of thirty-six undergraduate members of the Executive Council during its effective life from 1888 to 1910. A graduate of Hamilton College where he received his A.B. and A.M. degrees, he graduated from New York Law School in 1915 and began what was to be a lifelong practice of law in New York City. Warren DuBois was president of several historical and fraternal associations including the Huguenot Society of America, the DuBois Family Association , was a past chairman of the Conference of Patriotic and Historic Societies and served as a director of several other organizations. He

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was a devotee of the theatre and had served as counsel of the Episcopal Actms' Guild. As President of the DuBois Family Association he turned over the Old Fort in New Paltz to the trusteeship of the Huguenot Society of America in 1967. The stone fort on Huguenot Street had been built in 1705 by Daniel DuBois, a member of the group who had fled religious persecution under Louis XIV. In later years he was often called upon to give an opinion on a point of Delta Upsilon law or to review the historical development of some phase of the Fraternity. He continued his devotion to the Fraternity and had attended the December meeting of the Board of Directors as a past president. He led the Fraternity with distinction and foresight in <;Iifficult times, while never losing his patience or gentle humor. DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY路

January 1972

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Survey Gives Insight Into Delta U Undergraduates, Chapters and Programming RESPONSE '71, the Fraternity's every undergraduate survey has been completed, the results analyzed, and prepared for the use of officers, directors and staff to help in planning future programs and activities of the Fraternity. Forty-seven chapters or 52% of the chapter roll and 850 members and pledges were queried on a wide range of topics from attitudes, socio-economic background, current fraternity trends, and their ideas about present and future Fraternity services and programs. The RESPONSE '71 questionnaire was designed to get personal comments and thus the possibility of machine tabulation was eliminated. Brother Terrence F. Grimes, leadership consultant, spent a substantial part of the summer compiling the survey results. Interestingly there was no difference expressed in the opinions from one geographic area to another in the areas included in the study. Originally the statistics were compiled by geographic areas, but there proved no difference in the replies, so this breakdown was eliminated from the final report. Friendship, brotherhood, the feeling of belonging, of identification with and being a part of something, continue to be expressed as the strongest values of the Fraternity and the ones which were identified by respondents as those which influenced their decisions to pledge Delta Upsilon. This finding is similar to comparable studies of the reasons for fraternity affiliation conducted recently at several colleges and universities. It also underscores the importance for chapters in establishing fri endships as a pre-condition for the best results in membership recruitment. Expectations of pledges changed slightly about their fraternity experience after they had pledged. Some were disappointed with the disparity of presentations during rushing and what took place as part of the pledge education-membership development phase of the chapter. The survey reiterates the importance of being able to reasonably deliver what is presented as the Fraternity during rushing. Vestigial remains of hazing, physical or mental servitude were identified as highly disappointing and undesirable aspect of fraternity life by the majority of respondents. This is a finding which refutes those who suggest that hazing has any place in the Fraternity today, and those who claim that pledges want such activity. Chapters with high rates of depledgings should take a critical look at what they present in rushing as compared with life in the chapter and their pledge education program. Soon after a man has pledged, the survey revealed, he knows a great deal about the chapter. Changes in the perception of rushees as they pledged and became familiar with the Fraternity were cited as disillusioning in some cases. For some men, the ulti-

DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY'

January 1972

mate disappointment came after initiation when the style of leadership within the chapter became known fully and was at variance with the modes displayed during rushing and pledging. Honest presentations of the Fraternity during rushing and pledging prepare a man for the responsibilities of membership at the time of his initiation. Pre-initiation seminars which delve into the actual problems of the chapter, or educational projects which use the manpower of the pledges to solve a major problem or develop a new program are recommended solutions. Features of Delta Upsilon which were influential in the decision of the respondents to pledge were, in order of importance, the modern approach to membership education found in the trademarked program "The Unpledge"; the Four Principles of the Fraternity; and the non-secret nature of Delta Upsilon. The appeal of the new program and concept of "The Unpledge" and the expressions of the Fraternity in the basic principles of Delta Upsilon again emphasize the importance to chapter rush efforts of adoption of these elements as the major thrust and purpose of chapter activities. The non-secret nature of the Fraternity appeals to the prospective member as a demonstration of our historical opposition to early injustices and is the unique selling proposition of the Fraternity. These elements suggest that many chapters should carefully reevaluate what they present in rushing. In a battery of multiple choice questions which dealt with the factors influencing decisions to pledge, respondents were asked to score on a four point scale ranging from "very influential in my desire to pledge," "somewhat," "not influential," "detrimental to my desire to pledge." Sixty-one percent said that the interest of members of the chapter was the single most important factor in their desire to pledge Delta Upsilon. Diversity of membership represented in the chapter was important in 45% of the cases as being very influ路 ential in the pledging decision, while only 30% scored social programs as being very influential in their pledging selection. This finding suggests that chapters who are concentrating on a strictly social event rush may be "turning off" some of the most promising rushees if they do not balance the social program with a variety of situations where rushees and members can get to know one another better. Diversity of membership as an attraction in the pledging decision means that chapters need to watch carefully the membership balance in their chapters to make sure that they do not recruit exclusively from one area, one academic interest, extracurricular activity, etc. Those chapters with such limited recruitment activities will soon find that they are unable to attract other groups and will

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Fraternity Realigns Provinces The continuing growth of Delta Upsilon requires periodic realignment of provinces to reduce the number of chapters in areas of greatest growth and to consolidate regions for greater efficiency_ Since the last province division some 20 years ago, the Fraternity has chartered over 20 new chapters. The accompanying map will assist you in learning the numbers Of the new regions. The Fraternity continues to search for Province Governor candidates to replace those who have been promoted to the Board of Directors or as International Fraternity officers, or to replace retiring governors. Province Governors are the chief regional officers in the 12 areas. They provide a vital service in coordinating and assisting the chapters and their Deputies, counselors and corporation officers. Three members of the present group of officers and directors have been or continue to be Province Governors. Norman Sanders, a member of the Board of Directors, was a former Province Governor before moving to the New York City area; Bruce Fellows, a member of the Delta Upsilon Board, is the Province Governor for Province One, and Delta Upsilon vice-president Frank B. Jones is continuing as Province Six Governor. Province Governors attend the province meetings annually, visit each chapter, colony and petitioning group in the area, and organize joint chapter rushing and assistance seminars. Regularly they are in-

Response '71 thereby lose their competitive advantage in rushing. At the other end of the scale, 75% said that parents were not influential in the pledging decision. This total becomes 84% when the "detracted from" response is added to the total. Chapter test files were not important or influential in 72% of the replies, and former classmates were not influential in 53% of the cases. Benefits of Delta Upsilon membership which were most often expressed were the International character of Delta Upsilon; the benefit of having exposure and interchange with members from another nation scored high in the tabulated replies. Lifetime membership privileges and the opportunity to visit and enjoy the hospitality of other chapters was repeatedly mentioned as one of the main benefits of the International Fraternity. Services which their chapter enjoyed as a result of association with the International Fraternity included: organizational help, guidance and advice, manuals, guides, problem-solving, leadership development activities of Leadership Conference, Convention, and the Province Conferences, the expertise of the officers, directors and staff. Members wanted services available to them more clearly and frequently identified. New services desired included job guidance, placement, more alumni involvement, assistance and sup-

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vited to report on activities in their area to the Board of Directors, and take part in the activities of the Leadership Conference and Convention. Province Governors come from a variety of fraternity experiences. Most of them were chapter officers, often the rush chairman and president, many served as successful alumnus advisor to a good chapter, as alumni club officer, or in some role in the Fraternity. Others are interested alumni who have never been actively involved, but are interested in helping undergraduates to achieve stronger chapters. Heading Province One is Bruce H. Fellows, Wisconsin '50, who is a General Electric executive. Brother Fellows is a former member of the Committee on Undergraduate Activities and has served as physical plant commissioner for Delta Upsilon. Chapters located in the Maritime Provinces, Maine, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Vermont, Eastern New York, Rhode Island, New Jersey and Connecticut have been grouped in Province One. Brother Fellows has just been elected to the Board of Directors of the International Fraternity. In Province Two, the Governor is Robert Broad, Colgate and Symcuse '60. He is sales manager of Syracuse China Company, and assists chapters located in Eastern Ontario, Quebec and Western New York which make up Province Two.

(Continued on page 8)

(from page 5) port of chapters, more frequent contact and interchange of ideas between officers, staff and chapters were mentioned with frequency as being desirable. Readership of the DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY was significant. Twenty-six percent reported that they read it throughout; 41% read parts of it; 26% skim it; while only 6% discard it entirely. Changes in membership education and pledging were mentioned most frequently as the major new directions provided by the International Fraternity which were most useful in chapter programs. Chapters reporting the most difficulty with rushing and retaining of members were those where pledge education-membership development activities had changed the least. Most of the respondents said that the new individualism in students had caused their chapters to work harder to convince prospective members of the advantages of Fraternity membership. Some pointed out that where fraternities once had many rushees coming to them, the trend was now firmly reversed. There was a good deal of optimism expressed about the future of the Fraternity and comments about the need for all fraternities to adopt modern programs if they are to survive. The complete findings will be presented to chapters attending the Province Conference Chapter Officer Seminars in February and March. DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY.

January 1972

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DELTA UPSI LON FRATERNITY

Chapter Locations 1. Williams, Williamstown, Mass . • 2. Union, Schenectady, N. Y. 3. Hamilton, Clinton, N. Y. 4. Case Western Re serve, Clevel and, O. 5. Colby, Waterville, Me. 6. Rochester, Rochester, N. Y. 7. Middlebury, Middlebury, VI. 8. Rutgers, New Brunswick, N. J. . 9. Colgate, Hamilton, N. Y. 10. New York, New York, N. Y.' 11. Miami, Oxford, O. 12. Cornell, Ithaca, N. Y. 13. Marietta, Marietta, O. 14. Syracuse, Syracuse, N. Y. 15. Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich. 16. Northwestern, Evanston, III. 17 . Wisconsin, Madi son, Wis. 18. Lafayette, Easton, Pa. 19. Lehigh, South Bethlehem, Pa . 20. Tufts, Medford, Mass. 21 . DePauw, Greencastle, Ind. 22. Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pa. 23. Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minn. 24. Technology, Boston, Mass. 25. Swarthmore, Swarthmore, Pa. 26. Stanford, Palo Alto, Calif. 27. California, Berkeley, Calif. 28. McGill, Montreal, Que! 29. Nebraska, Lincoln, Neb . 30. Toronto, Toronto, ont. 31 . Chicago, Chicago, III. 32. Ohio State, Columbus, o. 33. Illinois, Champaign, III. D E LTA UP SILON QUARTERLY ·

34. 35. 36. 37 . 38. 39. 40. 41 . 42. 43. 44. 45. 46. 47. 48. 49. 50. 51. 52. 53. 54. 55. 56. 57. 58. 59. 60. 61. 62. 63. 64. 65. 66.

Washington, Seattle, Wa sh. Pennsvlvania State, State College; Pa. Iowa State, Ames, la . Purdue, West Lafayette, Ind. Indiana, Bloomington, Ind. Carnegie-Mellon, Pittsburgh, Pa. Kansas, Lawrence, Kan. Oregon State, Corvallis, Ore. Virginia, Charlottesville, Va. Missouri, Columbia, Mo. Iowa, Iowa City, la. Oklahoma, Norman, Okla. Johns Hopkins, Baltimore, Md . Manitoba, Winnipeg, Man . Washington and Lee, Lexington, Va! Western Ontario, London, onl. Washington State, Pullman, Wash . Oregon, Eugene, Ore. Alberta, Edmonton, Alta. British Columbia, Vancouver, B. C. San Jose, San Jose, Calif! Kent State, Kent, o. Louisville, Loui sville, Ky. Michigan State,East Lansing, Mich. Texas, Austin, Texa s Bowling Green, Bowling Green, o. Denison, Granville, o. Bucknell , Lewisburg, Pa . Bradley, Peoria , III. Colorado, Boulder, Colo. North Carolina, Ch apel Hill, N. C. Ohio, Athens, O. Western Michigan, Kalamazoo, Mich .

January 1972

67 . 68. 69 . 70. 71 . 72. 73. 74. 75 . 76.

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78. 79. .80. 81. 82. 83. 84. 85 . 86. 87 . 88. 89. 90. 91. 92. 93. 94. 95. 96. 97. 98. •

Kan sas State, Manhattan, Kan. Georgia Tech, Atlanta, Ga. Florida, Gainesville, Fl a. Pacific, Stockton, Calif. Ripon, Ripon, Wis. Wichita, Wichita, Kan. Arizona, Tucson, Aria! Oklahoma State, Stillwater, Okla . Clarkson, Potsdam, N. Y. Auburn, Auburn, Ala . North Dakota, Grand Forks, N. D. Simpson, Indianola, la . Northern Illinois, DeKalb, III. Fresno, Fresno, Calif. San Diego, San Diego, Calif. Northern Iowa, Cedar Falls, la. Creighton, Omaha, Neb . Arlington, Arlington, Te x. Platteville, Platteville, Wis. Tennessee, Kno xville, Tenn. Delaware, Newark, Del. Central Mi ssouri. Warrensburg, Mo. Marquette, Milwaukee, Wis. Oshkosh, Oshkosh, Wis. Cal Poly, San Luis Obi spo, Calif. North Dakota State, Fargo, N. O. Maine, Orono, Me. Eastern Kentucky, RichlTlpnd, Ky. Colorado State, Fort Collins, Col. Dayton, Dayton, o. South Dakota, Vermillion, S. D. Southern Illinois, Carbondale. III. denotes inactive chapter.

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Provinces

(from tJage 6)

Province Three is currently without a governor and an active search is underway to find an interested, qualified member of the Fraternity for this important assignment. The area includes chapters located in Maryland, Pennsylvania and Delaware. Alumni are invited to make suggestions for this post. Southern chapters in Province Four are under the direction of Brother R. D. Tucker, Georgia Tech '58, a financial executive, whose territory includes chapters in West Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Mississippi and Virginia. Delta Upsilon chapters located in the State of Ohio are in Province Five, which is directed by Captain Frank L. Howe, Louisville '64. Brother Howe, an Air Force ROTC instructor at Ohio State University, was chapter president and his father Dr. Laurence Lee Howe, Louisville '31, was the longtime deputy of the Louisville Chapter. The dean of Province Governors in terms of service is Frank B. Jones, Indiana '46, who guides chapters in Province Six. This includes chapters in Western Ontario, Michigan, Indiana and Kentucky. Jones is alumni secretary of Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana, and is also International vicepresident of Delta Upsilon. Roger M. Fitz-Gerald, Illinois '57, is the Province Seven Governor. His area includes chapters in Illinois and Wisconsin and has been an active expansion area for Delta Upsilon recently. Brother FitzGerald is a Chicago attorney and has served as an officer of the Illinois Chapter house corporation. Another area of Delta Upsilon growth is Province Eight which is led by Province Governor Donald R. Larew, Iowa '58, who is a member of the faculty at North Dakota State University. Province Eight area covers Manitoba, North Dakota, South Dakota, Iowa and Minnesota. Province Nine includes chapters in Colorado, Kansas, Missouri and Nebraska. It was formerly included in Province Ten, but the continuing growth of the area made it necessary to divide the regions. The Fraternity president is actively discussing the Province Governor position with several alumni, and an appointment should be made shortly after the first of the year. Province Ten Governor J. C. Grimes, Oklahoma '40, is a principal in Grimes-Valentine fund-raising counsel of Kansas City and Arlington, Texas. He is a former general secretary of the Fraternity and has been active in promoting the addition of new chapters in the area. Province Ten now includes chapters in Arkansas, Louisiana, New Mexico, Oklahoma and Texas. Remaining unchanged as to area or chapter distribution are Provinces Eleven and Twelve. Province Eleven Governor is Robert S. Wallace, Stanford '38, a Los Angeles insurance consultant. The chapters in the area include those located in Arizona, California, Nevada and Utah. Robert G. Holdridge, Washington '54, is the Province Twelve Governor. He is a YMCA executive and specialist in leadership dynam-

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"INVOLVEMENT '72" Is Seminar Theme Delta Upsilon undergraduate chapter leaders, key chapter alumni advisors, Province Governors, members, and staff will travel to the 1972 Chapter Officers Seminars in 12 provinces in February and March. The theme for this year's conferences and for the leadership conference and convention is "Involvement '72, the key to action." Unlocking the key to involvement is the increased emphasis on the findings of research as they relate to present day chapter operations. Five sections based on research findings, { and the results of the Response '71 study of Delta Upsilon members, have been prepared as working papers for the Conferences. A wide variety of topics will be discussed including International Fraternity programs and services, chapter operating trends, new reporting requirements, pending legislative proposals for Convention consideration, and outstanding, innovative projects of area chapters. Province Governors will report to the delegates about the condition of chapters, colonies and petitioners in the Province, while looking ahead to plans for the 1973 conference and the host chapters. There will also be opportunities for individual chapter conferences on Friday evening and at the conclusion of the program on Saturday afternoon. Information on conference details is available either from the listed host chapters or from Fraternity Headquarters.

Tentative Schedule 1972 Province Conferences Province Host Chapter

Date

I II III IV V VI VII VIII IX X XI XII

March 3 & 4 March 3 & 4 February 18 & 19 February 11 & 12 February 25 & 26 February II & 12 February 18 & 19 February 11 & 12 February II & 12 February 4& 5 February 25 & 26 February 4& 5

Middlebury Clarkson Lehigh North Carolina Ohio State Eastern Kentucky Illinois Manitoba Kansas State Oklahoma Fresno Washington

ics. Province Twelve includes British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Montana and Wyoming. The January chapter directory in this issue of the QUARTERLY provides a handy province key to check on the location of your chapter if you have questions. DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY.

January 1972

,I,


Chapter Installed at History was made on the weekend of November 20-21 with the installation of the Tyler Chapter, representing Delta Upsilon's first junior college site. Thirty-seven members of Alpha Delta Chi, local fraternity petitioners, were installed in appropriate ceremonies which began on Friday evening with orientation for initiates and Rite One of the initiation ceremonies. Terry L. Bullock, Kansas State '61, Delta Upsilon director, led the installation team which included a large group of area alumni. It was a beautiful Texas fall morning as the initiate candidates assembled at the Fifth Street Presbyterian Church which is located on the Tyler Junior College campus. There the rite of chapter installation, the initiation of the charter members of the chapter and installation of officers took place. William Gordon, Kansas State '60, delivered a most meaningful charge to the new initiates, followed by the presentation of the chapter charter to Dan Pearson, chapter president, by J. C. Grimes, Oklahoma '40, Province Ten Governor. Alan Haynes, Texas '61, and Weldon McDonald, Texas '62, served as assistant marshals. William Bried, assistant executive secretary, conducted the installation of chapter officers. Following the installation, the group adjourned

Tyler~

Texas

to the Student Center for the installation luncheon. Guests at the event included college officials, many parents of the newly initiated brothers, as well as delegations from every chapter in Province Ten. Brothel' Grimes served as toastmaster and introduced Dr. E. M. Potter, academic vice-president of Tyler Junior College, who welcomed Delta Upsilon on behalf of the College. Brother Bullock responded and Brother Emil Friberg, Texas '58, extended a welcome to the new chapter on behalf of alumni. Brother Bried then called on representatives of the Texas, Arlington, Oklahoma and Oklahoma State Chapters, who made special presentations to Brother Pearson on behalf of the Province. Brother Pearson reviewed highlights of the chapter's history and accomplishments as well as its plans for the future. Special recognition was given to Brother Alan Haynes for his assistance and help with the new chapter. He was named as Alumnus of the Year by Brother Grimes. The luncheon concluded with a very challenging address by Brother Bullock. Immediately following the luncheon, the assemblage gathered in front of the College Administration Building for the official flag raising ceremony. The day's activities concluded with a formal reception held in the lounge of the Student Center.

Visitors m'e encoumged to stop by the DU headquarteTS located in the College PaTh aTea of Indianapolis. DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY路

]anuaTY 1972

9


Why do students volunteer? by Anthony E. Neville

T

HOSE who established the public's image of the college student in the late 1960's were the radical activists: the leaders of sit-ins, the throwers of bombs, the prophets of revolution. Those who will establish the collegiate image for the 1970's may well be a different breed: students who are giving generously of their time outside the classroom to volunteer activities in their community.

No less the activists, no less bizarre in dress, and no less convinced that America is a "sick" society, these students differ from the radical activists of the Sixties in one important way: they are working, right now, to change that society in constructive ways. They are satisfied to make progress by small steps-by teaching a ghetto child how to read, by encouraging a dropout to return to school, by warming the atmosphere in a hospital ward. An estimated 400,000 college students give an average of two to four hours a week (but sometimes as many as 20 or 30 hours) to volunteer activities in their communities. Though a small fraction of the seven million students in American colleges and universities, they are a minority sizable enough to set the pace for this generation of students. Some small

10

DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY.

January 1972


colleges report that 75 percent of their students participate in volunteer programs. Budgets for studentrun volunteer activities range from shoestring levels to $75,000 a year.

overnight sanctuary for drug addicts. The students dispense no drugs or medical treatment, but "rap" with the addicts to calm them down or relieve their depression.

A recent survey by the National Student Volunteer Program (NSVP), the small federal program of action that technically assists campus programs, charts the fantastic rise in student volunteer activities. A decade ago, only a handful of colleges and universities had student volunteer programs, but a recent survey revealed that today, out of 2,314 institutions queried, 1,675 have some form of student-operated volunteer activities.

Tutoring has become more varied also. "Today not all the tutoring is with kids in school," says Jeanne' Carney, the attractive young acting director of NSVP. "Students are tutoring in prisons, in mental hospitals, in adult education classes, in storefronts-there are many different areas of involvement."

The growth of student volunteer programs has led to another development: the emergence of a new kind of professional on the college administrative staff, an administrator whose primary duty is to give continuity and guidance to the student programs. In 1969, when NSVP came into existence-and when its communications network was admittedly incomplete -the federal program could identify 15 people carrying that responsibility. Today there are about 600, and nearly a quarter of them work at that job full time. The bulk of student projects are in the area of tutoring, most often with poor and disadvantaged children. But under colorful acronyms like EPIC, SCRUB, CAVE, and CACTUS, leaders of student programs have been branching out, extending their reach, and attracting to volunteer service students who have no interest in tutoring.

IT Business students from a state university in the Midwest are advising Mexican-Americans in their community on income tax matters. So overwhelming has been the response that people are being scheduled a month in advance for twenty-minute interviews. IT In California, students from a state college are brightening the lives of elderly, mentally retarded patients with activities ranging from arts and crafts to square dancing.

IT In another California community, psychology majors are manning the telephones of a "crisis center" from 4 p.m. til midnight on weekdays, and til 4 a.m. on weekends. Faculty members advise them on how to handle the often desperate problems of callers. IT Four fraternities in a private Southern university each undertook to establish a park in a different section of their city. They solicited contributions of land, money, and play equipment. When the four parks were finished, the fraternity brothers continued their involvement as recreation leaders. IT In Florida, students from a predominantly black college have opened their second house to provide DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY.

January 1972

Ordinarily these projects are suspended during summertime, often with unfortunate consequences. As John Hubbs, director of volunteer programs at the University of Missouri, remarks: "One of the greatest needs is continuity. When a relationship is broken for three months, sometimes things don't fall back into place. Old problems recur and new ones develop." Or, as Rick Moran of Eastern Michigan University puts the problem: "You can't have nine to five hours, or close up for vacation. People's difficulties don't have any pre-ordained schedule." On scores of campuses, volunteer programs ran at full tilt during the summer of 1971. In many instances there were imaginative departures appropriate to the season. And if, indeed, the student volunteers set the pace for their generation, what does that bode for the future of American society? Certainly many students will be enticed by the volunteer experience into a professional commitment to some form of social service. Jim Tanck sees that as a secondary goal. Much more important, he believes, is the lifelong pattern the collegiate experience will establish. Whatever their profession, people will be spending their spare hours in community involvement. And as a result of that involvement, fewer of our social problems will be prolonged by citizens' indifference. To this, Richard E. Dewey adds the prediction that the new-found concern over social problems will change the design of curricula and the structure of higher education. He also predicts that the "infusion of young bright faces and new ideas" into established agencies will have profound effects. All agree that the student volunteers offer an antidote to the alienation and sense of hopelessness that so many Americans feel. "This force of mobilized, concerned youth," President Nixon has said, "is an essential means of re-humanizing American society." This special report was prepared from information provided by professionals in the field of voluntarism. Contributing editors were: Jeanne Carney, acting director, National Student Volunteer Program; James Tanck, former director, National Student Volunteer Program; Richard E. Dewey, director, Center for the Study of Voluntarism, University of Maryland. Š 1971, Interpreting Institutions. Anthony E. Neville, Editor.

11


D U NEIIVSAAAKE'RS DU's Take Over Alberta Government E. Peter Lougheed, AlbeTta '51, has been elected Premier of Alberta after leading his Progressive Conservative Party to victory in the Province of Alberta. Following his election, Brother Lougheed established a cabinet including two brothers of Delta Upsilon. Allan A. Warrack, AlbeTta '61, former Delta Upsilon International Field Secretary, was elected Min-

Lougheed

Warrack

Forms General Consulting Firm Richard Benjamin Boddie, Bucknell '61, has formed a new consulting firm, Gilbert, Boddie, and Fields, Inc. in Rochester, New York. The firm consults on projects ranging from social agency staff management to the preparation of sales meetings and seminars. Brother Boddie who received his Juris Doctor Degree from Syracuse University in 1970 is married and has three daughters. His civic activities include the chairmanship of the Rochester City Narcotics Guidance Council.

Leitch

ister of Lands and Forests in the new Provincial Government. Mervin Leitch, AlbeTta '51, was named Attorney-General. Brother Ron Ghitter, AlbeTta '59, also gained election. The new leadership in Alberta adds still another tribute to the Canadian membership of Delta Upsilon which in recent years has amassed an impressive political record in Canada. Other notable brothers in Canadian government include recently retired Premier of Ontario, John Robarts, and former Canadian Prime Minister Lester Pearson .

Receives Good Citizenship Honor Earl M. Richards, Bucknell '13, has received the "Good Citizenship" medal from the National Society of the Sons of the American Revolution. Brother

12

Richards received the award from the organization's Philadelphia chapter on November 18. As a recipient, Richards joins other great Americans such as General Eisenhower, General Patton, General Bradley, Admiral Byrd and many of the nation's past and present leaders.

Joins Law Firm Peter B. Sang, Bucknell '62, has joined the Portland, Maine law firm of Thompson, Willard, Smith and McNaboe. The 1965 valedictorian of Boston University Law School was recently admitted to practice before the Supreme Judicial Court of the State of Maine. Brother Sang also holds a Masters of Law in Taxation degree from Boston University.

Kelly Authors Book About the Mind Cardinal L. Kelly, Chicago '11, of Longview, Texas, has just written a book, Challenge to intelligence. Published by the Naylor Company of San Antonio, Texas, the book deals with the question of man's intelligence, how it developed and how it met subsequent challenges. The author, lifelong student of man, finds the scientific theories of the nuclear age a spur to a reevaluation of the accepted concepts of the universe. DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY.

January 1972

~I I


In reevaluating those concepts the author comes to a reappraisal of intelligence-its slow development, its use and misuse. Cardinal L. Kelly, a retired businessman, is 85. He and his wife, Nellie, reside permanently in Longview, Texas. Brother Kelly is a member of the Kiwanis International and the International Platform Society.

Swank Named Vice-President Richard B. Swank, Johns Hopkins '53, has been elected a vice-president of the Reuben H. Donnelley Corporation_ Brother Swank is general managerdevelopment for the Company's Directory Division. He had been named an assistant vice-president in 1969. Since joining Donnelley in 1963 as sales manager for national accounts, he has served in a number of executive positions, including assistant to the executive vice-president, general manager for National Yellow Pages Service and general manager for directory operations. A graduate of Iowa University, Brother Swank also attended Johns Hopkins University. He and his wife Jean reside in Rye, New York with their four sons.

Elected Company Vice-President John E. Meyer, Kansas '50, has been elected Group Vice-President-International of Cities Service Company and President of Cities Service International, Inc., New York City. He was previously Vice-President, Natural Gas Liquids of Cities Service Oil Company in Tulsa. Brother Meyer was graduated from the University of Kansas with a Bachelor of Science in Mechanical Engineering where he was elected to Tau Beta Pi, the national honorary scholastic engineering fraternity. He attended the Advanced Management Program of the Graduate School of Business of Harvard University. He is a member of the Executive Committee of the National LP-Gas Association, the American Petroleum Institute, Twenty-five Year Club of the Petroleum Industry, and the Society of Naval Architects and Marine Engineers.

Promoted in Scouting Steven J. Gerber, Northern Illinois '68, has been promoted from District Scout Executive in the DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY.

Jan.uary 1972

Orange Mountain Council Boy Scouts of America to the Council's Program Director. While in the District post, Brother Gerber served the South Mountain District, including South Orange, Maplewood, Millburn and Short Hills, New Jersey where his responsibilities included Cub Scouting and Boy Scouting. In his new position, Gerber will direct the planning and implementation of the Orange Mountain Council's special programs, activities and events, supervise the business office operation, public relations, and direct the planning of the Council's new camp facility and program in New York State while serving as the Camp Director. Brother Gerber is an Eagle Scout and a member of the Northern Illinois University's Alumni Association Executive Board. He also serves the Northern Illinois DU Chapter as the trustee. While an undergraduate at NIU, he was senior class representative on the Student Association Board, IFC representative and IFC rush chairman. Currently residing in West Orange, New Jersey, Gerber served as chairman of the installation committee while his chapter affiliated with the Fraternity in 1966.

Appointed Assistant US Attorney Harold O-Hanlon Atkinson, Texas '56, has recently been appointed an assistant United States Attorney for the Western District of Texas. Brother Atkinson . will assume the responsibility for land conclemnation. A former assistant city attorriey for San Antonio and a writer for the San Antonio Light, Atkinson received his Doctor of Jurisprudence degree from Saint Mary's University School of Law.

Named General Manager Sheldon C. Anderson, Jr., Wichita '63, has been named General Manager of New York Life Insurance Company's new Medical Center General Office in Birmingham, Alabama. Brother Anderson was graduated from Wichita State University and joined New York Life as an agent in Kansas City in April, 1963. He was appointed Assistant Manager in Kansas City in July, 1966. In January, 1971, he was promoted to management assistant in the company's home office in New York City, where he served prior to his present position. Active in community activities, he is a member of the Midtown Optimist Club, Toastmasters, and Fellowship of Christian Athletes. Brother Anderson, his wife Judy, and three children are residing in Birmingham. (Continued on page 14)

13


Living Memorial Gifts "We must Temembe,T the futuTe, Ternembering that soon it will be part of the past; and we must respect the past, remembering that it was all that was humanly possible." -George Santayana Lasting remembrances are the thoughtful memorial gifts for the ongoing programs of Delta Upsilon made in honor of these deceased Brothers: Mr. and Mrs. B. C. Amsberry in memory of Greg Amsberry, OTegon State 1969 Mrs. Bertha Chase in memory of Edwin T. Chase, III, Lafayette 1933 Mrs. Onalee H. Dale in memory of F. Monroe Dale, RochBSteT1915 Mrs. Mary Hayes in memory of James B. Hayes, Kent State 1968 Mrs. Harriet C. Hoyt in memory of Dr. W. Fenn Hoyt, Hamilton 1925 Mrs. C. W. Ljunquist in memory of C. W. Ljunquist, Virginia 1954 Mrs. Myrtle A. Norris in memory of William B. Norris, Jr., Amhent 1912 Mrs. Edward T. Williams in memory of Edward T. Williams, Technology 1907 Mr. and Mrs. John F. Wynne in memory of John J . Wynne, Miami 1968 Mr. Bertel YV. Antell in memory of Warren C. DuBois, Hamilton 1912 All memorial gifts are promptly acknowledged and a handsome memorial gift card will be sent at your request. Make your check for memorial gifts payable to Delta Upsilon Fraternity, and

address Memorial Gifts Secretary, Delta Upsilon Fraternity, P. O. Box 40108, Indianapolis, Indiana 46240.

DUNewsmakers Joins Marketing Firm

Another Executive

(fTom page 13)

Timothy Sharpe, Stanford '55, has been named vice-president and general manager of T-L & K Direct Marketing Division of Tatham路Laird and Kudner, Inc., of New York City. Prior to joining the marketing firm, Brother Sharpe was an account supervisor with Wunderman, Ricotta and Kline in New York City. He and his wife live with their two sons in Manhattan.

Presidential Appointment Robert H. Bassett, Wisconsin '32, was appointed by President Nixon to the Pay Board. The Pay Board was established as a part of the President's Phase Two economic policies. Brother Bassett, a trade journal publisher from Chicago, is one of the representatives of industry on the Board. Altogether there are 15 members of the board charged with reviewing pay increases. WANT TO CONTACT A FRATERNITY BROTHER? If you are new in an area that has no alumni club, and would like to contact a brother DU, drop a card to the Fraternity Headquarters, POB 40108, Indianapolis, Indiana 46240. The Addressing and Records Division will send you the names and addresses of several. Include the zip codes of towns in your area with your request.

14

Brother Elmer "Woody" A. Glenn, RutgeTS '24, has thoughtfully reminded us that in the April, 1971 dedication issue of the Quarterly his contribution as Executive Secretary from 1930路1932 was omitted from the list. We hasten to correct the record and to report that Brother Glenn is alive and well in retirement in the beautiful Pennsylvania Dutch hills. He may be addressed at 128 North Fifth Street, Hamburg, Pennsylvania 19526.

Missing Brothers? Headquarters addressing service has lost the address of these members of the Bradley chapter. If you know their correct mailing address please send it to: Addressing Records Secretary, POB 40108, Indianapolis, Indiana 46240. Peter W. Bent, '55 Stephen R. Borre, '58 Charles B. Burns, Jr., '53 John D. Cowell, '56 Gregory A. Diete, '60 Bill Grigsby, '55 Jim N. Griner, '51 Alfred Hetzel, '57 Harland V. Howard, '59 Roger L. Mahler, '61

Gene McGraw, '55 Patrick C. McNamee, '59 Richard E. Modari, '54 Robert T. Patey, Jr., '69 Robert M. Pierce, '54 George F. Schuster, '53 Frederick W. Seghi, '52 John Shehy, '60 W. K. Smith, '64 Alden E. Wanger, '44

DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY.

janttaTY 1972


COMMENT ON FRATERNITY

What You Use Is What Yau Get!

It is the old question of cost versus benefits of lifetime affiliation, of being a part of Delta Upsilon International Fraternity to which we address ourselves at the start of this new year. If you don't make much use of what your Fraternity offers then your return on your original investment, no matter how modest, will be really quite non-existent. However, if you take advantage fully of the myriad opportunities for self-development, leadership training, for friendships that span the years, and for fellowship that is boundless, you will be rich in Fraternity. There is no chapter so successful that it cannot profit from the help and interest of another alumnus, there is not a single chapter in the Fraternity which cannot use more enthusiasm, hard work, and real motivated achievement from pledges or members. Two or three people can make a real difference in remolding the direction of a chapter, an alumni group, almost any fra ternal effort. If you take no part in your Fraternity, you're really in a poor position to evaluate its cost effectiveness in terms of your personal experience. The total life-time cost is under fifteen dollars a year, even with that ten-dollar check you've been thinking about writing for the alumni support program. Time after time our most successful brothers tell us that it was the training, the opportunity for personal growth, to try to solve difficult real-life problems in fraternity which started them on the road to great personal achievement. The stories about alumni finding fraternity friendships to make or renew thousands of miles away repeat the ageless wisdom that Fraternity is for using, for enjoyment, and for involvement. The more you get involved, the more you'll reap the rewards of Brotherhood. But you'll never get a chance to be on the receiving end of these fraternal joys if you don't start using Delta Upsilon right now. Fraternally yours,

DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY路

januaTY 1972

15


CHAPTER ACTIVITIES REVIEW

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AlbeTta The academic year at the Alberta Chapter started with an excellent rush, organized by Rush Chairman Don Barber. Fourteen men were pledged giving DU the largest pledge class on the Alberta campus. Another highlight of the early part of the year was the initiation of eight new members. In the area of intramural sports the "A" football team once again did very well, reaching the semi路 finals of competition before being eliminated. Individually, Brothers Ian McDonnell and Dave Biutek currently hold vice-presidential positions on Student's Council. Preparations are already being made for our Spring Formal and many other activities. The Alberta Chapter is eagerly anticipating another very good year. Mike Hurst

A Tlington After an enthusiastic rush, we obtained a 21-man pledge class of hard workers. They have since dedicated themselves to winning the IFC's best pledge class award. The fraternity house was converted into a scary mansion that was visited by over 1,500 children and their parents. Proceeds went to the American Cancer Society. The project enjoyed extensive coverage by all news media in the Dallas/Ft. Worth area. Further emphasis has been placed on scholarship this semester. An active-tutoring program has been initiated by which we all help each other achieve a more liberal education. On campus, DU continued to expand its influence. Already, sever-

16

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al other fraternities have adopted pledge programs similar to our UNPLEDGE. We feel that continued progress in this area will secure the future of a strong fraternity system. DU now has all three IFC members on Student Congress, with a total of four DUs serving on that body at present. DU blitzed the opposition in intramural football before losing a heart- breaker to Phi Delt.

AubuTn No chapter letter received.

Bowling GTeen Attitude is the big word for this year's B.G. Chapter, towards scholastics, athletics, and social functions. Being second in scholastics over a 21 fraternity campus last year, has inspired the brothers to initiate several new programs this year. Guest speakers highlight our Thursday night formal dinners, while study sessions have been adopted between brothers and pledges. Our 37-member chapter contains a lot of young blood with many n ew and updated ideas on how to make ours the best house on campus. Eight pledges have been taken in along with a 20-member little sis class. Athletics look very promising this year with two all-state performers in our pledge class plus many top-rate actives. This is one year our Bowling Green Chapter can only go straight to the top. Steven M. Rippley

Bmdley The chapter had another full weekend of activities to celebrate

their 25th anniversary as the 69th Delta Upsilon Chapter Nov. 5 and 6. The weekend started with a reception held at the chapter house Friday night. Saturday the alums were treated to a delicious buffet luncheon, and later, alumni Brother John Schad. and his wife, Marcia, were hosts to an open-house. Climaxing the weekend was a 25th anniversary dance held in the ballroom of the Voyager Inn. Cited for their ou tstanding service to the chapter were alumni Brothers John Schad, Fred Roberts, Bill Bried, and Tom Robinson. The chapter recently h ad an allhouse dinner with a faculty guest. Professor H. W. Bach, senior member of Bradley's Political Science department, held an informal question-answer period with the brothers following dinner. Rob Bach

BTitish Columbia The B.C. Chapter's Fall Pledge class are the first new individuals to experience our swiftly adapting policies. The "Unpledge" program was stressed highly in our rushing functions. A successful attempt has been made to incorporate the new members immediately into the mainstream of the active chapter. Hazing of any degree was strictly prohibited, as were to a lesser extent the traditional activities that pitted the "pledge class" to compete against the "actives." The length of the pledge period was also substantially shortened. Similarly we initiated the "four-year development program" here as outlined in the plan recommended by headquarters. The B.C. members are endeavoring at all times to designate our limited

DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY'

January 1972


funds to the widest scope possible of what they consider to be more relevant activities, and hopefully get out of the pitfall of planning a topheavy schedule of purely social events_ Originality in activities has been given the priority. Michael R. Young, International Coordinator

Bucknell

California Poly No chapter letter received.

Under the direction of House Managers Mark Davies and Jim Ferguson and President Lloyd Jones, the brotherhood cleaned and repainted most of the house. An extensive rush program was planned and organized by Rush Chairman Steve Brittin. Formal rush ended with 19 pledges plus three additional sophomores under Pledgemaster Rich Dittenhafer. The DUs are remaining active in campus affairs. Nine are counselors and several are participants in varsity athletics. Included are Glenn McLaughlin, cross-country; Jim Ludwig, soccer; Jeff Capron and Mark Delano, water polo. The Demies were also active in intramural athletics taking first in their division in handball. Rick Edwards continued the program started last year of entertaining dinner guests from the University and the community. The house academically tied for first place among fraternities with a second semester average of 2.9. An improved alumni program directed by Mark Eberle and Ed Woehling was also introduced. It resulted in the return of more than 40 alumni for Homecoming festivities. Parents' Weekend was a success thanks to Rich Buckelew. Michael H. Wolf

California The California Chapter continues to be one of the strongest houses on campus this year. During rush week we took 15 new members (the second largest group in the fraternity system here), who quickly integrated themselves into the swing of things, making DU a very tight-knit, spirited group. The social calendar this quarter has featured Thursday Night functions with females, ranging from quiet wine tasting affairs to a "Butch Whacks and the Glass Packs Party" bringing back those oldies but goldies. The chapter is continuing its policy of not distinguishing between "pledges" and "actives." In fact, I haven't heard the word pledge used this quarter. It's worked out superbly. Emnity is down to a minimum, DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY •

and a true sense of belonging prevails. Everyone does housework and everyone does work during Work Weekend in the Spring. Of course Hell Week has long been eliminated. Paul Smith

Carnegie This year looks extremely interesting for the Carnegie Chapter. Last spring's 16 pledges al'e back now as actives and have strengthened the house accordingly. The Carnegie Chapter continues to number small (24 actives) but our spirit and attitude remain high. After a disappointing intramural football season the soccer team came on strong, and at this writing is engaged in playoffs to determine the school champions. Due to the inexperience of the large sophomore class rush hasn't been as good this year as last. However in the later part of the rush program the good intentions of the avid sophomores are paying off and we are looking forward to between 12 and 15 pledges. The highlight of this year so far has been Homecoming which saw more returning alumni than any event in the last five years. All in all things are much better at the Carnegie Chapter than they have been in several years. Bob Barker

Centml Missouri The Missouri State Chapter is well on its way to the best year yet. Our rush program proved successful when 19 men pledged this fall. The DU intramural standing should continue to improve this year. We have strong hopes of repeating as all-campus champions in swimming and league champions in softball. DUs actively participate in numerous campus organizations, such as the Student Government Association, where Brother Mike Bowersox serves as president. DU is represented on the varsity football, mgby, cross country, swimming, gymnastics, track, and baseball teams. We are proud of the rapid progress that has been made since we were installed in 1970. Perhaps our greatest accomplishment is our recent incorporation. Through the leadership of our corporation, we hope to build our chapter into the best on campus. George Smith

January 1972

Chicago The renovations begun last year have been carried forward and are now near completion. The new bathrooms which were made usable last year have been remodeled this year. In addition, a new kitchen floor has been laid and a new stove installed. Addie Johnson, our beloved cook of many yeal's, retired this fall with a pension. Members now cook their own meals, with occasional cooperative cooking efforts. There is also a cooperative voluntary cleaning system in effect. This system has been working fairly well, despite some problems. It is probable that in the near future we will hire a part-time maid and retain our voluntary tasks.

Clarkson The fall semester has already proven to be quite successful for the men of DU at 30 Elm Street. On September 26, 24 men were officially inducted into our chapter, thereby maintaining us as one of the larger houses on campus. Our intramural football and soccer teams have completed successful seasons giving DU a good start on the overall sports trophy. Academically, DU has always been among the leaders on campus and the house average this fall should keep us on top. Through the efforts and generosity of Duncan Anderson, Clarkson '24, our house has undergone extensive renovations in the dining and living rooms. In all we are looking forward to a rewarding and successful year.

Colby Thanks to a highly successful rush program last year (20 unpledges), Colby's DU Chapter of over 40 brothers is the most active fraternity on campus. In social events, community service (student-teaching) and house improvement, the brothers have been

COLBY-DU's and their dates gather around for a friendly game of passout at the annual Halloween Happening.

17


hard at work. Social Chairman Dave Sacone and associate Bronco Lizotte have helped to make frequent social events lively and well-attended, while rush chairmen Paul Silvia and Gary Millen foresee another banner year. In interfraternity sports, DU is always a power in football and upcoming basketball. Varsity soccer co-captain Bruce Frisbie and All-League Goalie and Chapter President Mark Serdjenian recently ended their season, as did several D U football players. The remainder of the year is sure to be as fruitful and enjoyable as it has been so far, since the house shows the greatest diversity and interest that it has in recent years.

Colgate Currently,the situation at the Colgate Chapter of Delta Upsilon appears very favorable. The house itself is in fine shape, as its appearance has been much enhanced by landscaping and interior work performed this fall. The house, as usual, is filled to maximum capacity. OLlr rush chairmen are seeing to it that we have the largest pledge class on the row for the fourth consecutive year. Perhaps our biggest social event of the fall was the sponsorship at Colg"ate of the reverent rock opera, Jesus Chr'ist Super'star, performed by the traveling group, "Zebra." SwpeTStaT was performed before a packed house at Reid Auditorium and definitely was a financial success for the brotherhood. Finally, in athletics, currently 22 brothers are participating in the varsity football program with as many as 18 starting. Also, several brothers are playing varsity basketball and football with many more planning

to tryout for varsity baseball, lacrosse, track, and tennis in the spring. Thus, the brotherhood has maintained the tradition of participation in Colgate athletics.

Colomdo The Colorado Chapter initiated a fall pledge class of 14 quality men. While our financial condition is not the greatest, our attitude is the best it has ever been. Fall has seen good participation, successful parties, and new improvements to the chapter house. Something very special has also happened to our chapter. We are experiencing the true sense of brotherhood. The members are finding the answers to questions such as: "What is truth?, Why am I here?, What am I going to do when I get out of school? Field Secretary Larry Mangin was here to evaluate our chapter and we have had some good raps since he left. Our chapter has started to successfully change to meet the needs of the new students.

Steven Poust

C olm-ado State This year hegan at the newly initiated Colorado State Chapter with a fairly good rush which resulted in a pledge class of nine men. Although rush was dampened by a whole week of snow, thanks go to Rush Chairman Larry Andersen and his assistant Terry Marquert. To date, we are in temporary housing but we are working at moving into a house in the near future. Elections were held in February and new officers were: ''''es "White, president; Chris Thompson, vice-president; Pat Hog"an, treasurer; Dan

Greenfield, secretary; Rick Barber, pledgemaster. Ranking fourth out of 20 last year in both academics and intramurals, we fared quite well, and this year we hope to surpass last year's achievements. \lVe are continuing to maintain our leadership on campus. We are a small house and are encountering a few obstacles, but we view the future as a challenge.

Ray Mendoza

Cornell The brotherhood of Delta Upsilon at Cornell is experiencing an exciting fall semester. The excitement is due to the fact that Cornell's football team is presently undefeated. Attempting to gain their first Ivy title, the Big Red sports 20 of our brothers, II being starters. Special recognition should be given to senior Broth路 ers Craig Lambert, Doug Herron, Tim Rowlands, Randy Shayler, Tom Guba, Tom Rakowski, Jack Cushing, and Jack Moresko who will be playing their last game for the Big Red against the University of Pennsylvania. The extensive l'enovation of the interior of our House has added to the extraordinarily pleasurable fall. The numerous improvements, completed over the summer, were made possible by our alumni. The brotherhood would like to express our deep appreciation to our alumni for making all the improvements possible. Without a doubt, this fall at Cornell has all the signs of being one of the best ever and the en tire brotherhood is looking forward to one of our finest years.

Creighton October I, 2, and 3, the Creighton Chapter sponsored a "DU Weekend."

COLORADO STATE-An old antique car' provides the setting tor the br'others to pose to!' the camera's eye.

18

UE;LTA UPSILON QUARTERLY'

January 1972


The festivities began when two movies and a number of cartoons were shown. A bicycle race was held, and 18 contestants competed for a $25 prize. Sixty seventh and eighth graders representing six schools took pal't in ten Junior Olympic events. Other activities are: we helped out at Class Registration; co-sponsored a Casino Night for the incoming Freshmen; conducted a retreat with Province Governor J. C. Grimes; and we worked at a haunted house co-sponsored by the Omaha Variety Club and a local radio station. Our bowling teams captured first and second places, we won third place in the swim meet and our football team finished fifth. The Creighton Chapter hopes to sponsor a Basketball Tournament this spring for the DU chapters in our immediate area. Our chapter is small this semester, 18 brothers and four pledges, but we have been active. Hopefully, we can keep our chapter as lively in the future as it has been in the past. BemaTd McNary

Dayton This has been an outstanding year for the Dayton Chapter of Delta Upsilon. We were first installed last March, and since then the progress has been first rate. For starters we picked up two new fraternity houses. All the brothers would like to thank Dan Shell, Dave Sunderland, and Mike Dixon for all the help they gave us in obtaining these houses. As far as pledging goes, we have one of the most together pledge classes in the history of the chapter. In a few weeks, we will have initiated our new Little Sister Program. For the future, community involvement is our biggest goal. Bert Ebbitt and his fellow officers will be going out of office this semester, but things are well in hand. The brothers are initiating a new policy whereby each officer will have an assistant. We are hoping this will foster more involvement on the part of ALL the brothers. The brothers would also like to thank Terry Grimes for stopping by and giving us all the help that he did. Roofer, our German shepherd, is now the proud mother of thirteen puppies. William R. Lyons

Denison The Denison Chapter has done another exceptional job in rush and we've begun a project to improve the house. In October, the DUs increased their numbers with 25 excellent men from the class of '75. We ran a rather low key rush program, but very well organized by Danny De Crecenzo and Grant Levitan. Through support from the Mothers Club and money taken from our social fund, new furniture is going to be bought to replace the old and, somewhat, worn relics now gracing the DU house interior. Ranking among the top ten in the class of '72 are three DUs, Randy Cebul (Chemistry major) , Mark Dalton (History major) , and Bruce Hoffman (History major) . In sports, DU Ed Exler ranked second in Ohio Conference rushing with 897 yards. He averaged 6.4 yards per carry . Leading the soccer team to a number five ranking in Ohio was Geoff Merrill. Geoff was the high scorer in the Ohio Conference this year with his 20 goals. Mark Trambull

Denver Colony No letter received.

Delaware The 45 brothers at Delaware this year are placing an emphasis on diversification. Academically, we rank DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY.

third among all the active fraternities. To add an incentive for maintaining this status, the brothers have been grouped into teams of four to compete against each other for a steak dinner. Athletically, the Delta Upsilon teams compete in all sports to promote a spirit of friendly competition among fraternities and other organizations. Trying to become involved with the community, the brothers have initiated various activities including a recent successful car wash and plans for a police-brother basketball game. Our Christmas plans include a drive to collect toys for underprivileged children . This semester our chapter initiated 12 pledges. Currently, the pledges are working with the brothers in renovating the basement and painting the chapter room. The Homecoming game and an informal buffet afterwards were a great chance for the alumni, parents and brothers to get together. Our future plans include a trip to New York and the annual Christmas Dinner-Dance. Tony Gelano

DePauw The DUs have begun another fine year at DePauw University. Two "pig

January 1972

CREIGHTON-The bTothers spona bike mce during Creighton's DU Weekend.

S01'

roasts" highlighted this year's rush at DU as 15 well-rounded individuals pledged the chapter. The new pledges together with our 49 actives enabled us to maintain our 64-man house. The DUs were the only one of five chapter houses, out of 13 on campus, to fill quota. Fall activities this year inclUded: our annual fall house dance with the theme "House of Terror" on October 30; a "Neighborhood Picnic" at which the DUs became more acquainted with the people of Greencastle; a "Senior Sports Day" honoring Ron Sikorski for his standout performance in varsity football and Ken Ritz and Steve Winkler for their years in varsity soccer; and the annual Dads' Day Weekend, November 6. The big news at DU this year is the new work cooperation system initiated in the house. Instead of the pledges having the responsibilities of the so-called "housework," the work is now shared by all the brothers. Groups are formed according to the sections of the house they live in. Each group is responsible for keeping their section clean with everyone working to keep the public areas of the house looking good. Mark Diak

Eastern Kentucky A success for the Eastern Kentucky Chapter was the third annual "Delta Upsilon Grand Prix Bike Race." Trophies and plaques were awarded for the various events and it provided a day of fun for many students on campus. It was also a very rewarding day for the DU riders. Intramural football provided another opportunity for our chapter to surpass the crowd. The DUs were undefea ted through the regular season and a tournament arranged by Beta Theta Pi. The brothers went on to defeat the independent leaders, making DUs campus champs. The point spread for the season was 403 to the

19


opposition's 56. The team then traveled to Frenchburg Correctional Facility. The win at Frenchburg put the finishing touch on a fine season. A little sister program was renewed this year. They call themselves the "Delta Dasies" and they are very helpful. A bunch of great brothers visited us from the Western Michigan Chapter this fall. We were glad to see them and are extending an open invitation to any brothers who want to visit us. Roger SchomakelGary Hall

FlO1-ida No chapter letter received.

Fresno The long, continuous work of this fall's rush week culminated in a fine, enthusiastic 17-man pledge class. DU truly seems to be going places at Fresno State College, and much credit is due to tbe planning and work done by the past few rush chairmen. Four brothers are currently in Blue Key Honor Fraternity. In student government George Wada serves as sophomore senator while Steve Vartabedian is on the Student Affairs Committee. On the athletic field Chuck McMeechum plays centerfield for the varsity nine, and Dave Lee occupies a top slot on the tennis squad. The annual "Autumn Rock" dance held in October was a financial success and also good publicity. Following closely on the calendar was the building of the DU Spirit Float for the homecoming festivities. In addition, this semester will show our continued support of the Big Brothers of America program as well as plans to work with underprivileged children in the Fresno area. Ron Mikuni

Georgia Tech

Houston Petitioners

Fall quarter began with a very successful workweek in which the overall appearance of the chapter house was improved. Fall brought the initiation of four new brothers and the pledging of 11 new junior actives. Our main goals for the year are to improve the overall financial status of the chapter and to increase the size of the brotherhood. A new Little Sisters Program has been started here as we feel this will improve the quality of the brotherhood as well as be meaningful to our little sisters. Mark Twrne1-

This fall has been one of variety and excitement for the Houston DUs, as well as one of success and frustration. The Houston Colony continued to number small, but our spirit and attitude remained high. Our achievement in athletic endeavors continued, as the chapter took first place in Fraternity Intramurals Football. The chapter hopes to have a productive spring, and the Houston brothers will be busy as an extensive Spring rush is being formulated. In general the Fall semester has been an exciting one-disappointing in rush, only six rushees, but satisfying in activities and brotherhood. After all, that's what counts. Bob Bosch

Hamilton Fall 1971 has proved very eventful for the Hamilton Chapter. Highlighting our activities was the initiation of 25 pledges in an impressive ceremony during Parents' Weekend in November. In time for the ceremony, House Manager Jeff Paton completed extensive repairs to the house, including a major renovation of the front porch. Individual honors this year have gone to Jack Gordon, president of the Senior Class; Al Stauber, football co-captain; John Persun, soccer captain; Brian Cavanagh, president and leading scorer of the water polo club; and Andy Sopchak, recipient of the Ralph A. Rue Award as outstanding Hamilton player in the traditional Union football game. Andy is the second consecutive DU to win this award; Mike Scarpitto was the 1970 recipient. Under the leadership of President Ross Pelers and Rushing Chairmen Andy Sopchak and Vito Stellato, the 52 brothers expect to gain another strong pledge class.

Illinois The Illinois Chapter began the new school year with tremendous enthusiasm, and that spirit has been unfailing. We opened the year with 54 men in the house, 12 of whom were new pledges. Since September five more men have been pledged, with hopes of pledging more by Thanksgiving. A fall formal rush was held November 12-13, and several good contacts were made. The future of Delta U at Illinois looks very secure. This fall the brothers have been busy with parties, dances, and bolts to other campuses. The 1975 pledge class presented the annual pledge dance October 30. The "Devil's Pastime" was highly successful and featured a band and masquerade contest. Weekend bolts to other chapters have played a large part in recent activities. In November we visited the lndiana Chapter for a football weekend, and in early December we got together with the Bradley brothers for a happy weekend in Peoria. Bruce A. Shipman

Indiana

GEORGIA TECH-DU versus Phi Kappa Sigma in first intramuml game on Georgia Tech's Grant Field.

20

The men of the Indiana Chapter returned this fall to find two major improvements in their home; their vintage water pipes had been replaced and their mascot had run away. Unfortunately the water pipes again broke and Oliver returned. Eighteen men from all corners of the state comprised this fall's pledge class and all indications are that we are well on our way to building an equally strong group for the second semester. This fall's activities were highlighted by our campus-wide championship basketball and cross-country teams

DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY.

January 1972


and by the mysterious burning of our homecoming display. Coming up for the rest of this year, the DUs are looking forward to participating in the campus-wide LU. Sing competition with the Alpha Epsilon Phi sorority and especially to the return of their championship bike team for the Little 500 Bicycle Race. Cad M. Miller

Iowa Formal rush resulted in the pledging of 14 fine men at Iowa. Informal rush looks even more promising. Under the leadership of President Steve Rusk, the Iowa Chapter has modernized its pledge program. The pledges are no longer reg'arded as "pledges" but as "new members." There is no hazing of any type; they attend chapter meetings and have a vote in most cases; and "pledge work sessions" have been changed to "house work sessions." vVe have placed first in All-University in football, swimming, and wrestling. After placing second in intramurals last year we have gotten off to an excellent start and hope to finish first this year. The Iowa Chapter is making organizational plans to gain interest and participation of more area alumni. Plans for an alumni club and a newsletter are now being formulated. Our chapter is interested in hearing from any alumni in our area. Greg Farrow

Iowa State Fall quarter at Iowa State proved to be an interesting and fast moving period for the DUs. A number of changes and reorganizations within the house stimulated the living experience for all the brothers. Instead of having a housemother the chapter brought in a graduate couple, Rob and Pat Denson. The Densons have been a valuable asset to our house when experience counts. Rob works in the Dean of Students office, so this gives us a better understanding of the university functions. The chapter voted to consolidate the activities and scholarship positions into an education chairman. This allows the education chairman, Rich Hansen, to initiate some new programs. The idea of these programs is "to develop a complete man," as Rich says. His activities range from test-file organization all the way to promotion of campus and community activities. Early in the fall the DUs played the Ames Police Department in a friendly softball game. The actual DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY.

game proved to be of secondary impOl路tance (although we did win) as both "teams" gained a better insight of each other. Cmig Vermie

Johns Hopkins Fall semester found the Johns Hopkins "dumen" faced with many problems. One problem has been the upkeep of a large house by a relatively small brotherhood. Another has been the overall decline of interest in fraternities on the Hopkins campus. Despite the adversities, interest within the brotherhood has remained very high. A reevaluation of the chapter strengths and weaknesses resulted in several new programs. The first program initiated was a little sister program with neighboring Notre Dame College. Another major change was the establishment of an active alumni committee. The committee consists of Buzzy Budnitz '53, William Levy '54, Dick Little '67, Geoff Berlin '68, John Kelly '69, Bob Swann '69, Tom McCaffery '73 and John Park '73. The annual Christmas party for underprivileged children has been reinstated. The active brothers and some alumni decided to split the expenses among themselves. Despite the loss of such potential stars to varsity sports as Roberto Arguerro, Brad Braden, Vince Nigrelli, Jay Fortner, and Tom McCaffery, we finished third in B.I.A. football. The outlook for basketball season promises the best team in recent memory. Mike Boyd

Kansas Achieving house unity through removing the distinction between the acti ve chapter and pledge class has been the goal of the University of Kansas Chapter over the past year. Beginning the school year with a pledge class of 36, our 65-member chapter has shifted the responsibility for house duties from the pledge class to the chapter as a whole. This change is well exemplified by the initiation ceremony which took place October 24-thus reducing the formal distinction. This program has been greeted with a generally favorable response, with only the incidental problems to be solved which face any new system.

Kansas State The Kansas State Chapter of Delta Upsilon pledged 25 new members over the summer. Starting with the new members' formal pledging, many

Janua.ry 1972

activities have helped these men orient themselves into the DU way of life at Kansas State. Some of these activities have been presentation of a carnation to each sorority, receiving pledge fathers and pledge mothers, intramurals, and pledge-active football game. Homecoming this year was a real success. Besides winning first in decorations and the annual alumni party, we celebrated our fifteenth year on campus. The Founders Day banquet was highlighted by the keynote address given by Mel Baughman '55, first K.S.U. DU president, and the active chapter's presentation of the Alumni of the Year Award to Don Hill '68. Although involved in many, socalled, "Greek" activities, our newest program is membership development. This idea has created an increased awareness of the potential of college living and has sparked many on to a more diverse education. Joe Grinstead

Kent State Through the leadership of the .new officers the fraternity is remaining the most organized and functional Greek organization on campus. They are Terry Rubino, president; Terry O'Connor, treasurer and Sam La Nasa, secretary. Last year we won the all-dash sports trophy again and have started this year in the winning form by capturing the football championship. Such outstanding players as our quarterback Terry Thompson, backs Bruce Walker, Bob White, Bill Truby, and Mike Griffin have perfonned faultlessly in aiding to capture the football trophy. Our chapter has started what looks to be another successful year by remodeling the house. Also the rush program has been quite successful again. We have 15 enthusiastic pledges who have the incentive and willingness to serve the fraternity. Under the newly appointed officers our programs of working with orphanages and old age homes have skyrocketed the eagerness of the brothers in helping and bettering the community.

Lafayette The Lafayette Chapter of Delta Upsilon has been very active socially, athletically, and academically this fall. Highlights of the fall social season included cocktail parties after home football games, parties for Homecoming and IF Weekends, and

21


"DU Santana" live, in the parking lot. Fourteen DUs were members of the Leopard Varsity Football Team. However, it was the intramural football team that was really successful this fall. They went all the way to the finals only to lose by one touchdown. On September 25, 13 men became brothers of Delta U at the Parents' Weekend ceremony. And despite all the extracurricular activities of the chapter we can still boast about our academic standing. We now await an equally successful and enjoyable spring semester and look forward to the 1M Bowling Team "racking" their opponents. Jacek Herchold

Lehigh The Lehigh Chapter is alive and prospering. Brothers Hoerner and Gadkowski, captains of this year's Varsity Hockey Team, are looking forward to a very successful year. Brother Cicale enjoyed a fine season with the soccer team, who were the MAC champs this year. Brotherhood and enthusiasm for intramurals has also been high. At the present we are in the midst of rushing. This year virtually all rushing restrictions were abolished at Lehigh. The brotherhood seems to have adopted the new system very well. We are also in the process of revaluation of our pledge program. Hopefully we can make it a more worthwhile experience. At the present we are enjoying the luxury of having a full house with 21 sophomores living in. Scholastically we retained our rank of eleventh out of thirty-one fraternities. This semester we have cut back on our "party budget" and have instigated such activities as car rallies and Sunday afternoon "beer football games." As the year progresses we hope to be able to continue to improve upon our high standards of fraternal living. John Clement

Louisville Fall of '71 saw the Louisville DUs engage in concentrated rush. The DUs were rewarded with 19 new men, second-highest total on campus. With these additional 19, the Louisville chapter has come one step closer to its goal-campus superiority. In intramurals, the Louisville DUs suffered a near unheard of setback -a second place finish in football after two years of winning the title. Louisville also finished second in horseshoes while pledge Lee Wilburn

22

took first place in the fraternity divisions singles tennis competition. Thanks to the combined efforts of alumni Carroll Lurding, Stephen Ishmael, Doug Mann and Ryan Halloran (not to mention the cal'p entry of Doug Jones and Sherm Minton), our new house has added a beautiful fireplace to its decor combined with the recently finished Barrel Bar in the basement. Homecoming '71 provided us with the only fraternity to build a house decoration. The Active-Alumni celebration turned ou t to be one of the high points of the year.

wire, we once again destroyed the opposition, but the ensuing get together made up for hard feelings between the two factions. Also we are pleased to announce the initia tion this year of a speaker program. '\IVe have heard talks about football and drugs and also a member of the Winnipeg Morality Division. Our Initiation Formal on January 22 should prove to be the sQcial highlight of our fraterni ty year. L. Gregory

Maine

The men of the new Mankato State Colony are very happy and proud to join the fold of D elta U. We are just beginning to build our fraternity with most of our efforts centered around organizing the group. We were able to sponsor the Homecoming Queen, which was the first successful Greek candidate in four years. In addition to this we are in the process of sponsoring a clothing d.rive for migrant workers in the area. We play an active roll in intramural sports with a team in every major sport. As this is basically our first year in Mankato we are very small with only 15 brothers, but we were able to pledge 10 men this fall and hope to initiate most of them. It is our goal to get our Charter by the fall of 1973 and to have 40 brothers at that time. To reach the goal of 40 brothers we will need the help of all the DU Alumni in the Southern Minnesota area. We need to begin to build an Alumni Association. Al Peterson

Beginning its second year of existence, the Maine Chapter now has 23 brothers and will initiate 15 more men in December. The brotherhood is still supporting an orphan, eightyear-old Randy Gene Bogle who is a Cherokee Indian from Park Hill, Oklahoma. This fall, the chapter was honored by being awarded the 1971 Fraternity Sportsmanship Award by the Physical Education Department. We were awarded Thh'd Place in the 1971 Campus-wide Snow Sculpture Contest during 'Vinter Carnival Weekend. As a result of the "Response '71" Leadership Conference, the DUs at Maine have shifted their thoughts to personal development. The chapter has had various "Film Nights" during whim educational and sometimes controversial films were shown. Also, the brotherhood has hosted various speakers, such as political candidates, draft counselors, military recruiters, insurance salesmen , and prominent men from other fields of in terest. DU is completely revolutionizing the Greek System at Maine and is looked upon by other local fraternities as the future fraternity power on the Maine Campus. Donald G. Raymond

Manitoba The Manitoba Chapter is proud to announce the pledging of 25 men this year. 'Ve feel our active chapter worked hard on rush, and our pledge class verifies this. In sports thus fal' this year our chapter is still maintaining a high caliber of play, Our football season was fairly successful, but we lost in the finals. One of our alumni, Leon Desolets suffered a fractured shoulder during the fin al game, and this was a greater loss than the game. Future sports hopefully include hockey and basketball. In our annual DU-DKE ttlg-a-

Mankato Petitioners

Ma?'ietta Delta Upsilon is having another good year, much in keeping with its past 101 yean at Marietta College. 'Ve owe a large part of this success to this semester's officel's-Bob Levy, President; Bob Hoffman, Vicepresident; Bo Gillespie, Treasurer; and Secretaries Rob Barbee and Gary Stroemple. "Ve are also f01'tunate to h ave Dr. Richard T. Huling as our advisor. Once again we are proud to have several of our members prominent in college activities. J eff Gilar is President of the Interfraternity Council. Scott Runkle is N ews Editor of the MaI'colian, the college newspaper. Day Bodd01'ff is captain of the Soccer team. Two of our members are starting' on the college football team. Don Gluth and John Foster are starting at fullback and tackle.

DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY路 JanuaT,),

1972

) j


DU has a large contingent of crew men. Led by Captain Wiley Wakeman, we have Brooks Laudin, Woody Stines, Jim Conzen, Frank Neczypor, Don Gluth, John Foster, Doug Eastwood, Bob Hoffman, and Mark Hill. On this year's wrestling team is Gary "Tipp City" Field. This year DU captured the Intramural Football crown as well as Cross Country and Golf. For the Christmas season we have planned a party for retarded children. This party has become an anIlllal event. Another annual event is the fireside reading of The Christmas Carol by Dean Merrill R . Patterson.

lVIarquette This past semester has brought a new awareness to the Marquette Chapter of Delta Upsilon. While maintaining the finest social calendar at Marquette, we amplified our involvement in community oriented projects and our leadership in campus activities. Brothers Bob Burg and Tom Westerheide were elected to the ASMU, the student senate at Marquette, and Brother Terry "Tunes" Kearney was elected Judicial Vice-president of the IFC. This semester we not only assisted Ford in their Punt, Pass and Kick contest but also participated in a marathon football game to raise money for the Toys for Tots Program. Earlier in the semester we sponsored an alluniversity party to raise 'money for the Alpha House, a remedial institution for narcotics addicts. Our unblemished intramural football record was maintained this semester although one opponent failed to show up for the game. Fear has not been ruled out as the probable cause. This semester we will initiate eight new brothers who have more than proven their value by the house improvements on the first and second floors. Timothy R. Keary

1

Nla?-yland PetitioneTS This is Alpha Delta Upsilon at the University of Maryland. This year we were the only Greek house or organization to have a float for Homecoming. We are also one of the most active hou~es in the small house section of the Interfraternity Council. The Interfraternity Council has acknowledged us as one of the most active houses on campus. Housing is still a problem at the University of Maryland and especially for a small group such as ours. DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY·

We do not have a house as yet, but we are still looking and saving for one. We are doing well in rush; in fact, better than most houses. W' e have ten new Junior Actives this semester, and this is one of the largest fraternity pledge classes on campus. John Warren Smith, III

Miami The Delta Upsilon house at Miami University has taken on a new look during the past few months because of a massive improvement p.r ogram initiated by the brothers last spl·ing. The entire building, inside and out, has been painted. A remodeling program has transformed the basement into an area suitable for any activity. In conjunction with this improvement, plans have been for an all-out winter quarter rush. There are already more brothers living in the house this year than there have been since 1968-69. Social highlights included the "Yard·and·a-Half" party last spring and the "Captain America" party this fall. The social aspect of the chapter activities was complemented by a greatly improved chapter grade average of 2.9 last spring.

Michigan We would like to take this opportunity to apologize to the QUARTERLY readers, especially Michigan alumni, for the lack of review in past issues. We plan to be more verbose in future issues. The Michigan Dud Chapter is one of the strongest on campus, with the unique situation of owning two houses. In Greek intramural athletics the Duds enjoy a solid lead and have no intention of losing it. However, our real strength lies in our large membership with a wide diversity of interests and activities ranging from varsity sports to honorary societies. We had a good Homecoming this fall with the members and the many alumni enjoying together the fine weather, game, food and drink. We hope to see all the Duds on the West Coast in January when the Wolverines invade Pasadena and the Rose Bowl. M.ichael Thoits

Michigan State The lVIichigan State Chapter of Delta U is currently 19 brothers strong and has started a massive rebuilding program. Financial strains fmced us to close and subsequently

Jan.uary 1972

sell our house. The remaining brothers now reside in an apartment complex, occupying six different units. The formal rush planned for this month Qanuary) will be an aggressive one. Prospective pledges will be offered the unique opportunity to mold their own chapter; almost from scratch. We have envisioned for next fall the opening of a country·club style fraternity house. Requiring no more than five actual live-in brothers, the house will serve as a meeting place for fraternal activities. It will be equipped with a study room and library, also pool tables, ping· pong tables, tennis courts, weight rooms, etc. Brother Jim Irons '69 is currently drawing the plans. Over 75 brothers migrated to their old alma-mater for the homecoming festivities. We urge all DU alums from MSU to let us know where you are as we lack many addresses. We may be reached at 1688 E. Grand River Ave., Apt. 103, East Lansing, Michigan 48823. The Michigan State Chapter of DU is not dead. After falling prey to circumstance, we are now ready to restore Michigan State's vast DU brotherhood. Nick C. Stout

Middlebury The Middlebury Chapter is work· ing hard to retain its dominance in athletics as 58 varsity letters were awarded to members last year. There are currently seven brothers on the varsity hockey team, while five others are playing oasketball. Senior Joe McNulty, an All·American in both Cross Country and Cross Country Skiing, will probably represent the U.S. Olympic Ski team this winter in Sappora, Japan. The school intramural sports trophy was won for the fifth consecutive year and appears to be a cinch again this year as the touch football team went undefeated. Fi ve members from the class of '73 are distinguishing themselves as Junior Fellows on the Campus. They will undoubtedly increase our chances for a good pledge class. The new officel's under the leadership of President Peter Nestler are: vicepresident, Jay Flickinger; secretary, Bill Burke; treasurer, Rick Hayes; steward, Bart DeSalvo; social chairman, Herb Treu; and house manager, Bob Hanbury. Hanbury has already built a marble top bar, and is in the process of constructing a sauna bath.

Minnesota This year started off with a big bang for the Minnesota DUs. Most

23


exciting of all was the addition of 12 new members this past summer and fall. Academically the chapter has continued to excel. In the past year the Minneapolis DUs averaged almost a 3.4 out of a possible 4.0 for the year. But, as we say, "all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy." We have been busy making the most of the social advantages that fraternity membership provides. This fall's social calendar was filled with house parties, stags, exchanges, an Italian dinner, and the annual Dream Girl Party. No doubt one of the most rewarding activities was a Thanksgiving Party given with the Gamma Phi Betas for a group of underprivileged children .

Missouri The year 1971 was successful for the Missouri Chapter. We have 35 pledges, enough to cause us to build an extra room in our basement just to house everyone. Rush has not slowed hom a good summer either, as we have pledges living outside the house until room is available for them to move in. We are again lucky this year to have living with us Honorary Brother Janos Muller from Hungary. Janos advises us of the weak points he sees as well as making all our days here a bit more interesting and enjoyable. A new person in our house is Jeff Ritow, who is \vOl'king on his Ph.D. in Clinical Psychology here at MU. Jeff began living with us this semester through an agreement between our alumni and the university. Jeff has an opportunity to live in a new environment, giving us the opportunity of his advice and friendship. With the introduction of a Little Sister's organization and a more intensified pledge study program, we are improving our social and academic development, making the year so far a progressive and prosperous one. Jim Kontras

Nebraska No chapter letter received.

North Carolina The North Carolina Chapter's efforts will have to be redoubled this year in an attempt to prevent any complacency caused by our winning the Sweepstakes Award. With a class

24

of 15 seniors soon to graduate and elections in January, the main thrust of concern will be aimed at fully acquainting the younger brothers with the responsibilities, workings and successful traditions of this chapter. This fall we have tried to reevaluate our existing p~'ograms and replace the aspects that seem to be worn or disfunctional. Socially, meaningful participation in an atmosphere that allows a choice of activities helps cement together the diverse elements of our chapter. The pledge program has earnestly taken strides to create in the pledges a sense of self awareness and responsibility. Alumni response was good at Homecoming. This chapter is thankful for its alumni's help. In the light of future building plans and programs, increased alumni-undergraduate cooperation and collaboration will be needed. Michael A . Bullock

time to cook meals in the house all year. When school started this fall , the brothers rushed extensively with formal and informal rush. Rush in turn was successful in that we pledged 12 new brothers, making our total 44. Fall quarter for the DUs at NDSU has been very busy and fun. Such events include our annual exchange with the Alpha Gamma Delta sorority in which we take pumpkins and candy to children in the hospital, the game where the NDSU Bison, with their 35 game winning streak, lost to the UND Sioux, to the surpl'ise of the UND DUs. To finish the quarter on a success, we held our annual Founders' Banquet and Sweetheart Ball on November 5. Lynn Luckow, DU from UND gave an inspiring keynote speech and the brothers chose Miss Janice Frye to be our sweetheart for the coming year.

North Dakota

Northern Illinois University was proud to be host to "Response '7 1." We have received many comments on how well our International Brothers represented us to DeKalb. This year's fall rush brought ten pledges into our chapter. Tim Jones served as rush chairman. Jack Houston joins his twin brother, Bill '74,

This year marked the Tenth Anniversary of DU on the North Dakota cam pus. A successful Alumni Reunion-Founders' Day Celebration our Homecoming complemented '71 weekend. Chapter scholarship was once again rewarded through reception of the Fraternity Scholarship Awal'd. Cultural and intramural activities are abundant throughout the chapter. Many brothers attended a Gordon Lightfoot concert as part of a cultural trip to Winnipeg, Manitoba, and our Third Annual Art Show is presently in the planning stages for the spring semester. DUC Club is also active, including a discussion with newly-appointed Vice-President for Student Affairs Russell Brown. DU intramurals is presently in the top ten teams on campus with an impressive beginning for the year. Campus leadership is very much in evidence. Brothers have an active part in all areas of campus government. The DUs are presently anticipating final approval for new housing on campus. With active alumni support, the plans need only be passed by the university administration. With cooperation, construction can begin in Spring '72. Brad Ewren

Northern Illinois

North Dakota State The Men of North Dakota State Chapter of Delta Upsilon started the year out with a new paint job on the house and hiring a cook for the first

NORTHERN ILLINOIS-DU victory in Homecoming tugs of war.

DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY路

January 1972


and I-ecent alumnus, Bob '70, on the NIU chapter rolls. A recent social membership was given to Russ Aiken for his contributions to our chapter activities. House decorations for Homecoming took second place in all-school competition, while the "Duck" tug team took an impressive third. I-M spmts continue strong with DU. I-M basketball appears strong with new talent Dave Heap, John Beuink, and Jack Vogel. Our first service project of the year took place during the last week in October. The brothers took the mentally disturbed children from the University Lab School on a picnic and "Trick or Treating." The political scene at Northern brings Brothers Tom SC\lafer, Kim Moline, and Rick Trump as newly elected members into the Student Senate, while Tom Melzer is on the University Council. Michael Maibach, Eldi Deschamps, and Gordon Nuber Teceived awards fm having a 3.5 average or better. Tony Contos

Northern Iowa Fall 1971 has seen the Delta Upsilon brotherhood at Northern Iowa add 17 fine men as pledges. UndeT the leadership of President Mike Siepmann, work on a library and officers headquarters on third floor was completed. Highlighting social activities this semester was Homecoming and two private concerts by San Francisco folk group Gaberzack. Recently initiated programs this semester include a regularly published alumni newspaper, taking children from poverty areas trick or treating and a football game with children from the Big Brother program. Our sister organization, the Bee Gees, has been extl-emely active this past year and and an awards dinner is planned to honor them.

Northwestern The Northwestern University Chapter of Delta Upsilon has found itself engaged in a variety of activities this year. The chapter is rapidly advancing itself to meet with modern day fraternity standards. For the first time in the histmy of the chapter, pledges were allowed to vote at chapter meetings. Other accomplishments include the chapter's distribution of candy in the children's ward of a local hospital for Halloween. The chapter continued to grow this year with the addition of 14 new pledges, to make the total house DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY路

strength 60 members. These figures proved to be one of the largest on campus. In athletics, the house found itself with ten varsity football players, II freshmen football players and three varsity basketball players who will contribute to the success of this year's teams. In intramurals, the house proved to be one of the dominating powers in all sports. Donald Holm Mitchell Kahn

Ohio Brothers returning for the fall quarter were greeted by new carpeting throughout the house. Work was soon transferred to brothers and pledges as many gallons of paint and new shutters were added to the house. We initiated our eight pledges from spring quarter 1971. Our fall rush was heightened by six pledges and a new ruling which allowed freshmen to rush and pledge during their first quarter. Homecoming and Dad's Weekend were enjoyed in Athens for those who attended. A football challenge was held between the Marietta and Ohio chapters as a result of the Ohio's DU flag mystel-iously disap pearing. Our football team lost hold on its all campus championship. Other teams competed in cross country and tennis, but now attention has been turned to basketball, hockey, broomball and bowling. Tom Mistak and Kevin Cahill are divers on the varsity swimming team. They both placed in the Mid-American Conference meet and earned the right to participate in the NCAA championships. Dave Bricker, Tom McKee and Larry Theiler are members of the Ohio University Marching Band. Tom McKee

Ohio State Last winter the brothers of Delta Upsilon at Ohio State radically changed Hell Week. In its place we have incorporated an active-pledge retreat into our procedures of informal information. Last spring quarter the retreat involved a canoe trip and camp out. The informal pledging ceremony around a campfire was considered very successful by the entire chapter, providing everyone with a highly emotional experience. This fall we had our retreat at a brother'S farm, again with the same successful results.

January 1972

OHIO-A ferocious serve is the' trademark of Bmthe?- Ron WTight during the fall quartel- of this year. We think that this experiment is a step in the right direction in meeting the changing attitudes toward the fraternity system here at Ohio State. We are discussing each aspect of the retreats and are constantly looking for improvements. Our ultimate goal is not a concrete program, but in fact a progressive one that will continue to change with the times. Phillip J. Cykon

Oklahoma Rush Week 1971 was not what the chapter had hoped for, however, the chapter has bounced back with a strong on-campus rush and the pledge class has grown to 20 men. With the new pledge class, came a ten-week pledgeship. The number of alumni visiting the chapter house has increased due to the number two nationally I-an ked Oklahoma Sooner football team. Founders' Day was held in conjunction with Homecoming on November 13, with approximately 250 alumni, undergraduates and guests stopping by the chapter house. With an excellent cultural program, the brotherhood has been exposed to a three-week sex seminar, attended fine art presentations by big brother-little brother teams, participated in a seven hour film festival at the chapter house, along with various other activities. Larry L. Lawhon

Oklahoma State Since DU was chartered here II years ago, tremendous steps have been taken, and the OSU brothers have planned to make the '71-'72 term no exception. The returning members greeted 19 pledges thanks

25


OKLAHOMA-The bTOthel's of the Oklahoma chatJteT gathel' outside the ehatJte?' house. to the efforts of summer msh chai;rman, John Booth. Recently elected president, Larry Williams, has a new executive staff consisting of Gary Poffenbarger, vice-president; Doug Crews, treasurer; and David Cooper, secretary. The DUs are particularly proud of the gains of the football team this season. For the first time since its establishment at OSU, Delta Upsilon was put in the top fraternity football conference on campus. Although first place was not achieved, Brother Roger Robertson was named "All University" and "All Fraternity" in football. Tennis, volleyball, and bowling have also been keeping the DUs busy in the intramural program. Several alumni and the DU Sisters Auxiliary joined the chapter in celebrating Founders' Day in a dinner on November 4. After dinner, the Sistel's held their initiation ceremony which brought in seven new women to the organization. R. G. Jacobs, JT.

Robert MacVicar, president of the University. 'Ve have taken our league in football this year, and it was reo cently announced that we took third among fraternities in points for in路 tramurals last year. We are looking forward to a good year. Ridge Pittman

Oshkosh No chapter letter received.

Pacific In sports at Pacific, Delta Upsilon was a well known name among coaches as well as students. Bill Archbold, Joe Deitrich, and Randy Sneider are All-American swimmers. DU is well known for its composition of

the Pacific waterpolo, football, and baseball teams as well. DU was awarded first place in intramural sports. Spring rush was equally successful. Under the organization of Larry Harms and Marty Becker, DU took more new pledges than the other fraternities combined, in which 27 new brothers came into the chapter house. Brother Chris Johnson was elected president of the University's Interfraternity Council, while Bill Archbold was voted vice-president, and Tom King representative. The school event of Band Frolic had its DU participation in the one act play "Noah's Arc Is Worse Than His Bite." This coming spring already has its plans being made, with "Mom" Moore's testimonial dinner being at the top, after her 22 years of keeping the house in order. Tim TTicas

Pennsylvania No chapter letter received.

Penn State The Delta Upsilon Chapter at Penn State continues to be one of the biggest fraterni ties on campus. Recently the chapter was rated among the top five both socially and athletically out of the more than 50 fraternities at Penn State. Homecoming weekend was the high point on the social spectrum. Both brothers and alumni agreed that "old time hospitality" made this homecoming weekend one of the best ever. Michael Rost

OTegon No chapter letter received.

OTegon State This year has brought the brothers of the Oregon State Chapter an excellent pledge class of 21 men. Informal rush is progressing very well. We are receiving much support, participation and encouragement from our alumni here in the state. On November 4, we celebrated our Founders' Day Dinner, commemorating Delta Upsilon's foundation at Williams. Many alumni ate dinner here for the occasion with honored guest,

26

OKLAHOMA STATE-How sweet it is fO!' the fiTst place fraternity confeTenee football team at Oklahoma State. DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY'

January 1972


Platteville No chapter letter I"eceived"

Purdue Alumni, thank you for your help! Our new house is really shaping up. If you could not make it during Homecoming, be sure to see us at our new 10cation-lI7 "West State. Sunday, November 7, was a big day for eight men. Ken Bartoszek, Eric Bryant, Dan Lindamood, Dick Mohler, Larry Pankau, Mark Querry, Bob Steiger, and Jim Udell were initiated. We are now taking junior members. Brother Jim Udell, rush chairman, has done a great job. We have had two men accept bids already-Tom Gilbert and Gary Frost. Lan)' Pankau

Ripon The Ripon Chapter of Delta Upsilon came back to school this semester with an unusually small contingent of only 26 men. The brothers who didn't transfer or graduate got right to work to make up for their lack of size. Our brothers were inspired by an incredible jump, from the depths of mediocrity, to third place among all campus living groups in semester grade point. Ripon's DUs have been active this semester as: presidents of the college Union Board, and of the junior class, varsity football players (we had two), soccer (one co-captain and three starters were DUs) , and as elected members of two powerful faculty committees. At Ripon, pledging doesn't start until second semester, but each fraternity initiates its rushing activities with an open house in the fall. The DU's effort was a tremendous success, with the entire house decorated like a Chicago speak-easy, and all the brothers puffing cigars and dressed like gangsters.

Rochester No chapter letter received.

Rutgers Each year the Rutgers Chapter of DU tries to progress in every phase of brotherhood, campus activities, and schOlarship. This year the house even improved physically. Under the leadership of President George Massey and House Manager Frank Garcia the warm dorm was converted into three spacious bedrooms that remain to be dedicated. The living room now features a new rug and DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY路

an entire new set of furniture is expected momentarily. Unexpectedly, DU jumped way up in the fraternity academic standings at Rutgers. Moving from 23rd to ninth out of the 29 fraternities is an accomplishment for our 55 brothers. Athletically, our four team captains and four school recmd holders are being cheered on by the 32 other varsity athletes when they're not in season. Intramurally, DU is making a strong bid for the Keller Trophy once again after third places in football and cross country with our strong sports remaining. Richm"d Momn

San Diego State The DU chapter at San Diego State has come on stronger than ever this year. Boasting the fine pledge class of Randy Alderson, Neil Baffoni, Brad Cheatum, Jett Crouch, Ted Meyer, Steve Plagman, Kermit Reich, Kurt Schorr and Gary Pelzer; the DUs have strengthened considerably. Under the leadership of pledge trainer Jerry Muncy, the pledges are well into an innovative new pledge program stressing unity within the entire house and requh"ing a much shorter pledging period. Among the major personal, campus, and community accomplishments of DU this semester to date are: the repainting of the house, attaining the position of second in overall scholarship of the houses on campus, winning our league in IFC football and presently on the way to the campus championship, and donating blood to the San Diego Blood Bank. The brothers, alumni, and fantastic little sister mganization at San Diego assure DU of a very successful and progressive future. Tom Dm-cy

Simpson After completing the move to their new home on the corner of Buxton Park, the Simpson DUs have found a sense of unity within the house never before experienced. Although we are only fourteen, the spInt has skyrocketed and we are now a far mme cohesive group. House improvement projects, a long-sought break from anything resembling the traditional pledge system , and many friendly and most rewarding exchanges have helped in bringing about what is commonly regarded by everyone as the most progressive fraternity on campus. Frisbee football has been the most

January 1972

popular house sport, and has added a new dimension to the traditional character usually associated with Greek units at Simpson. Apparently our new approach is appreciated, for we have many alumni and college administrative friends to thank for their large part in our new life. R. Michael Dolan

South Dakota South Dakota DU launched into its first full academic year as a chapter with enthusiasm. For the third consecutive time, we received the highest all men's grade point average. The 2.89 average was for second semester of last year. This year brought our largest junior active class. However, the guys weren't the only ones growing in numbers. The Little Sisters organization is adding many new members and planning an ambitious calendar. The Founder's Day banquet, held November 13, brought back many alumni including several of last year's graduates. The chapter helped spearhead an IFC drive to raise money for Muscular Dystrophy. Members canvassed Vermillion and nearby Yankton for donations. In other community service, plans are being drawn for our second annual Christmas party for Vermillion's under-privileged children. JefJ1"ey N . Logan

Southern Illinois The Southern Illinois Chapter of Delta Upsilon started the new school year with a strong rush of 23 men, leading all other Fraternities at Southern Illinois. We initiated 10 girls into our Delta Upsilon Little Sister program. This quarter the Little Sisters have sponsored car washes and several parties. We have just finished with our homecoming weekend. Returning Delta Upsilon Alumni include Mike Goss, Rick Se~"p one and letters of greeting from Rick Bassuck, Mike Kerr, and Brian McGinley, who all are in South Vietnam. Coming up is the Annual Red Cross Blood Drive. In the winter quarter is our Annual Bicycle Marathon for the Easter Seals Foundation. In our marathon, brothers from Southern Illinois bicycle from Carbondale to Chicago soliciting money along the route. The Southern Illinois Chapter has a new Chapter House. The brothers came to school a week early to remodel, paint and to refurnish our house. On May 7, our first anni-

27


versary as a chapter, the house will be dedicated with alumni, University and town officials invited. Soon we will be entering our third year at Southern Illinois University. We are now the largest fraternity in membership at Southern Illinois and growing stronger. We are looking forward to a bright and profitable future. Robel·t Skowron

games this summer, and is currently captain of the Stanford team. Brother Rick Dickinson, who is chairman of Stanford's annual Big Game festivities, and President Tom Hazlehurst, the backbone of the InterFraternity Council, also deserve recognition. David B. Jackson

designing a special program for them. We were happy to have most of our alumni back for homecoming and hope they had a good time at our first big party of the year, which we've heard had quite an im· pact on the Tal'kio Campus.

Swarthmore

Southwest Texas Colony

Despite a disturbing anti-fraternity sentiment on the Swarthmore campus, Delta Upsilon provides an enjoyable and progressive social alternative. Currently, DU is the strongest of the school's fraternities. The football team is captained by Ben Kalkstein, along with seven other brothers, who also handle the tasks of managing. Basketball is also an activity favored by some of the brothers, as is wrestling. A half dozen brothers serve as dorm proctors; other DUs dabble in the facets of student government. There are DUs on the school sail-boat team, and one even endeavors to excel in waterballet-"everything in DU and a DU in everything." Thanks to strong alumni support, the lodge has undergone several striking changes. New living room furniture, and a new paint job in the meeting room have made things pleasant. Another alumni gift-a sound system has made the house pleasant to an extreme. We make great efforts to provide a progressive social program. Recently it has included visits to rock concerts in Philadelphia, picnic attempts, and pastry or munchie pal:: ties. Dave Kalkstein

Technology Chapter of Delta Up· silon was off to another fine start this year. During MIT's fall rush week, DU gave out 17 bids and received 14 pledges, the best percentage pledged for our school's 26 fraternities. The term has gone well also. An outstanding social season has fea· tured, among other events, an island party off the coast of Plymouth, Massachusetts. In addition, we are proud to announce the engagement of Chapter President Douglas Breeden to Miss Josie Pian of Lexington, Massach usetts. However the term has been partially marred for us as Brother George Herman was involved in a serious car accident, suffering a broken neck. George is presently in Colorado General Hospital and it is hoped that he will be able to return in February. His absence is felt by us all at DU.

"We have only just begun," was the slogan for the SWTS 1971 homecoming. It was also the rallying cry for a nine-man pledge class, that led the way with phenomenal improvement in grade point averages. The fastest moving part of our program is Chapter Relations, with a brother from our colony appearing on Austin television and discussing the accomplishments of DU. The Southwest Texas DU colony became the first Greek organization on campus to take on a community service proj ect for the 1971 year. Colony social chairmen Jon Sondergaarcl and Larry Borchers have been responsible for an active social calendar including ten parties highlighted by an all night barge party and numerous parties with our brothers in the Texas Chapter. In interfraternity relations our colony played a major role in helping shift IFC regulations to a complete open rush system both semesters, as well as having joint functions with other SWT Greek organizations. At the political level pledge Don Reynolds Was' named platform Chairman for the Texas State Young Republicans. Other accomplishments include a 15 member Little Sister Club and the naming of pledge Trippe Brotherman as the first and only male proctor to a women's dorm at SWT. La1'l'y Borchers

Stanford Bolstered by 21 pledges from spring rush, we are off to a fine start this fall. Our house is full to capacity, and several house renovation projects have been completed. We have strengthened our alumni pro· gram this fall, with particular emphasis on the Stanford-California football game, and we hope to see an increase in interest on the part of the Bay area alums. We are especially proud this year of Brother Rick Massimino, who played on the United States' water polo team in the Pan American

28

Syracuse No chapter letter received.

Tarkio Petitioners The Tarkio colony of Delta Upsilon has been working hard on re-organizing the colony after losing half our membership through graduation last spring. In this re-organization period, we sent out questionnaires to all our alumni in preparation for a newsletter which we plan to send out in late January or early February. At the same time, our Alumni Counselor, Dr. Robert Davis, has been busy organizing an alumni club. We're also looking forward to a large pledge class next semester. Our Rush Chairman, Barry Musto, says he'll have it for us and our Pledge Education Chairman, Bob Smith, is

Technology

Tennessee The improvement of our chapter relations program has been an important goal during the last year. Last spring we initiated a pennant trading program with the other DU chapters and colonies in our province. With our Province Five collection almost completed, we are beginning to send out Tennessee pennants to other DU chapters around the country. Even· tually we hope to build a complete collection of the school pennants of all the DU chapters. An attractive display is being planned for the chapter room. The response has been enthusiastic and many other DU chapters have indicated that they too are starting a collection. We hope that pennant trading will prove to strengthen the fraternal bond between all chapters and colonies. This summer we painted the interior of our house and paneled the chapter room. We would like to in· vite the alumni who haven't already seen our "new look" to stop by and make suggestions. During fall rush we added five new junior actives to our roster, and as we stand to lose many of our present brothers through graduation this June, rush during the coming months will be especially important. James C. Trame

DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY.

January 1972


Texas

Tufts

Texas has experienced a rewarding and productive fall semester. A great deal of enthusiasm was generated af路 ter the chapter received the Trustee's Award for Chapter Excellence at the International Leadership conference in August. Fall rush produced an outstanding pledge class of 25 men. One of the high points of formal rush was a visit from Brother Darrell Royal, head coach of the Texas Longhorns. The chapter sent flowers to the new pledge classes of many sorol"ities on campus. Dr. Stephen Spurr, newly ap路 pointed president of the University of Texas, was honored at a dinner given at the house. A Halloween party for the mentally retarded was given with the Alpha Zeta Delta Sorority. A football game against the Sigma Nus was played in Memorial Stadium, the benefits will go to the Darrell Royal Workshop for Cerebral Palsy. The chapter has remained in the top five fraterniti es in the area of intramural sports, after finishing second last year. D U is still dominant in campus politics and h as maintained its excellent scholastic record. Mike Hutchison

When, in recent years, fraternities started to decline on a national basis, Tufts was no exception. Our brotherhood had dwindled to merely a third of its former strength when we decided that something had to be done. The resultant extensive rush campaign paid off. Last year saw an excellent pledge class, the largest on the Tufts campus. Not being content to sit back after this early success, we redoubled our efforts with excellent results. At the conclusion of our recent Rush Week we had signed a 23-man pledge class, with prospects of more to come; once again the best on campus. As for the brothers, this fall's Jumbo football campaign saw excellent representation by DUs, led by Co-captain Pete Watson of New York, a pro prospect at running back. Competing for Tufts on the basketball court will be DU Dan McLaughlin, captain of this year's squad. On the intramural front, despite a heartbreaking loss in sudden death overtime during the touch football playoffs, this chapter hopes to make a strong bid for the All-College trophy, based on championship basketball and softball teams. In spite of slow times in recent years, DU is once again making a firm claim for eminence on the Tufts campus. Daniel F. Coughlin

Toronto The summer and fall at the Toronto chapter have been successful seasons. House operations during the summer were a financial success, with the result that most of our outstanding debts have at last been liquidated, so that this approaching year will see extensive plumbing repairs and new furniture for the house. The fall season produced seven new pledges with several more intending to pledge this spring. The busy rllsh season was highlighted by several smokers, football parties, and work projects. Much hard work was required, due to adverse campus and community opinion. Alumni affairs were centered around Homecoming and Founders' Day. The annual Alumni-Initiate dinner is to be held Dec. I, and promises to be a memorable occasion. Community efforts have focused upon, and are planned for campaigns for Canadian Save the Children Fund, underprivileged boys, and organizing and helping run a casino night for a national charity. The Toronto actives hope they might see or h ear from their many alumni whenever they are nearby, as well as any of their American brothers. DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY路

wintel" season of interfraternity athletics.

Virginia The year started when 11 soon-tobe initiated pledges returned to campus five days early and, assisted by numerous brothers, cleaned up the house. Brother Windy Kidd must be commended for his leadership in organizing the workers and for his excellent ideas on improving the general appearance of the house. With 34 fraternities on campus and a five-week "rush" schedule, this year's fraternity rush proved most competitive. In past years, the university's Interfraternity Council has pretty much dictated the activities of "rush." This year, the fraternities were given a chance to do whatever they wanted. Much of "dirty" rush was eliminated. While these changes made rush less formal, they increased the pressure on the individual fraternities. These changes made rush more exhausting as well as more competitive. However, under the leadership of Rush Chairman Larry Kennedy Broadwell, the Virginia Cha pter pledged 11 men. The chapter's football and volleyball teams made it to the playoffs and, as a result, our chapter ranks among the top ten fraternities in athletics. The chapter is looking forward to this spirit to carry through to the second semester. Nat Boyd

Union

Washington

The nation's oldest active DU Chapter is once again anticipating a large pledge class. James Bolz, rush chairman, has done an outstanding job. In fall activities, DUs once again showed their mettle by having half the brothers in the house on the Varsity Football ;ream. Led by brother and co-captain, Pete Keller, the "Garnet" pulled upset wins over Middlebury and St. Lawrence on their way to an otherwise mediocre season (30). The annual H alloween Party to benefit underprivileged children turned out to be a big success. This year, orphans from the Schenectady Children's Home Society were treated to a fun-filled evening at the chapter house. In an unprecedented move at the chapter house, the brothers extended a social sistership to Chandler Ralph, a transfer from Skidmore College. The DUs at Union have members nn all of the Varsity squads at Union, and will once again be a top contender to take all the honors in the

Washington opened the school year with 22 new pledges. They entered the University of Washington with an overall GPA of 3.4, ranking first , scholastically, among fraternities at Washington. To meet the needs and wishes of the entering students we have continued the successful pledge program instituted last year. One aspect of this program was an all-member campout/retreat held in early October. It provided both actives and pledges alike an enjoyable atmosphere in which to discuss plans for the upcoming year. A similar weekend will be held in the spring to evaluate the programs implemented. Our programs, however, aren't our only successful accomplishments. Many of the members have been successful in their fields of endeavor. Among them are Ron Wilson, first administrative assistant to the A.S.U.W.; Borys Chambul, Canadian national junior discus champion and record holder; Scott Emory and Mike Gaines, Tau Beta Pi, National Engineering Honorary; Steve Parkhurst, political intern for the city of Seat-

Janua.ry 1972

29


WASHINGTON-B?'others convene for this scenic photograph at a local wate?·· fall. tie, and John Michael, instructor for U. of W. Scuba classes. Doug Hansen

Washington State With a fall pledge class of 23, the Washington State University Chapter now has 64 men. Our house seems to be in a state of change adapting to a more unstructured way of life. Our "Unpledge Program" and small discussion groups are examples of directions within the house. The Unpledge Program aims itself at be· ing functional instead of ritual and at giving the pledge an applicable ed· ucation of Delta Upsilon today and yesterday, plus an orientation to the college environment. The leadership has re.emphasized the importance of the four found· ing principles of Delta Upsilon.

Western Michigan The Western Michigan Chapter has had a very profitable and out· standing fall semester. With new of· ficers, new initiates, and new ideas we are looking forward to an even better win tel' sem es ter. Brother Tim Pressey did an excel· lent job on rush as membership chair· man yielding us eight excellen t pledges soon to be initiated. Plans are moving in the right direc· tion for a new chapter house with all of the brothers taking a strong inter· est. This long awaited move is finally taking shape. Fall activities included a weekend visit from the Oshkosh, Wisconsin Chapter followed up by our chapter driving up to Oshkosh a few weeks later. Both weekends proved to be a lot of fun and some good ideas on chapler operations were exchanged. vVe also put on a

30

Halloween party for a group of un· derprivileged kids. By turning the basement into a spook house and with the help of our little sisters this event proved to be very rewarding. Social Vice· Presidents Jim Forrest and Kevin Rowlinson packed in a very active social progra~ for the fall semester. Athletic chairman Rich Franke kept us involved in a busy intramural schedule. Although we did not finish in first place all the time we did have nearly 100% participation in all activities and we proved to be quite a challenge in football and soccer. Robert E. Baker

Western Ontario We at the Western Ontario Chapter have gained the full benefits of a successful spring and fall rush. The initiation ceremony of November 28 will witness the more than tripling of our active membership which is a contributing factor to the probable arrival at the position of the most successful fraternity on this campus in every aspect. The most personally gratifying activity among the brothers has centered around community relations. The true spirit of Delta Upsilon has been mirrored in our frequent, meaningful involvement with the more needy of our community, namely orphans and underprivileged children.

Western Rese1've No chapter letter received.

Wichita The International Fraternity has been of great assistance to the Wichi-

ta Chapter so far this year. We received a loan from them to eliminate outstanding debts and have received visits from DU staff members Bill Bried and Larry Mangin to help us keep our feet on the ground. . We have participated in intramu· rals to the utmost, winning some and losing some in all events entered. Our scholastics have improved greatly over the past year moving from last to third place. Socially we have been ex· tremely active in everything from our annual "Bottle Walk" to avid partic· ipation in Shocker Homecoming. Brother Mike Edwards took charge of the second annual Gold Fever Carnival which turned out to be a great success. Our Junior Actives went all out in building a beautiful float and erecting a booth in the Homecoming Carnival. With our Christmas Formal and New Year's dance up and coming we expect to keep busy for awhile. All in all it has been a good year so far and we expect it will continue to flourish. R. D. Ambmse

Wisconsin The DUs came back in the fall with a nucleus of 25 active members and a spirit of enthusiasm toward the fraternity unnoticed in recent years. The House Corporation "granted" us an ultimatum last spring of one year to show marked improve. ment in our membership and financial position or the house would be closed. We have responded to the challenge with a good summer rush program and an even stronger fall rush program. The house has been beautified with new carpeting installed and several other badly needed repairs completed. We filled the house to capacity last fall which has enabled us to greatly improve our financial position on house operations. This, in addition to our great (and improved) attitude toward DU this year, has seemed to begin to turn the tide of despair, frustration, and apathy which we, as a part of the vVisconsin Greek system, have been experiencing the past three years. In closing, let it be heard across the nation that here at Wisconsin, the Greek system is fighting back and DU is stepping forward to show the changing attitudes and ideals of fra· ternities today, both through inter· nal innovation and external public relations. ''''e hope to be instrumen· tal in the rise to returned prom· inence of the Greek system here on the Madison campus.

DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY.

January 1972


Vital Statistics Marriages ARLINGTON '70-Miles G. Bryant, III to Miss Mary Lyn Hebert at Arlington, Texas. CORNELL '68-Jack A. Foster and Miss Joanne Bruno at Niagara Falls, New York on August 20, 1971. CORNELL '69-William R. Shaw and Miss Gail Naylor at Ithaca, New York on June 12, 1971. CORNELL '70-Terry A. Louderback and Miss Marianne Ramsey at Stamford, Connecticut on July 12, 1971. CORNELL '70-Kenneth A. Snyder and Miss Charlotte Ann . Bruska at Hyde Park, Vermont on May 15, 1971. LEHIGH '70-Ralph G. Johnson to Miss Elaine M. Szabo at Bethlehem, Pennsylvania on September 4, 1971. MAINE '69-William L. Philie and Miss Linda O'Donaghue of Shelton, Connecticut on August 7, 1971. MAINE '69-Philip A. Leclair and Miss Diana LaBrecque of Waterville, Maine on August 14, 1971. RUTGERS '7l-Robert J. Wurm to Miss Nancy Magnani at Copiague, Long Island, New York on June 19, 1971.

Births BRADLEY '60-Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Schaeffer, New York, New York, a daughter, Laura Lee, November 7, 1971. BRADLEY '69-Mr. and Mrs. Paul D. Betters, Columbus, Georgia, a son, Matthew Douglas, November, 1971. BUCKNELL '61-Mr. and Mrs. Richard B. Boddie, Rochester, New York, a daughter, Erica Lynn, June I, 1971. CHICAGO '65-Mr. and Mrs. Michael A. Yesner, Des Plaines, Illinois, a daughter, Stad Dyan, August 21, 1971. CORNELL '60-Mr. and Mrs. Anthony S. Murray, a daughter, Erin, July I, 1971. CORNELL '62-Mr. and Mrs. Thomas W. Mikulina, LaCrosse, Wisconsin, a daughter, Deborah Ann, July 22, 1971. CORNELL '64-Mr. and Mrs. Peter Gogolak, New York, New York, a son, David, September 8, 1971. CORNELL '64-Mr. and Mrs. Anthony De Laurentis of Crofton, Maryland, a daughter, Leigh Allison, November 14, 1971. CORNELL '66-Mr. and Mrs. Martin Y. Sponaugle of King of Prussia, Pennsylvania, a daughter, Kerstin, October 27, 1971. CORNELL '66-Lt. and Mrs. William A. Tower of Hampton, Virginia, a daughter, Jennifer Lynn, April 4, 1971. CORNELL '67-Mr. and Mrs. Richard R. Fricke at Ridgefield, Connecticut, a son, Richard Louis, April 2, 1971. CORNELL '7l-Mr. and Mrs. Gary D. Erick of Winfield Park, New Jersey, a daughter, Kelcey Celia, April, 1971. CORNELL '71-Mr. and Mrs. Craig Schnuck of Manchester, Missouri, a son, Brian Craig, August 18, 1971. RUTGERS '70-Mr. and Mrs. Paul G. Nittoly of Belleville, New Jersey, a daughter, Melissa Beth, June 13, 1971.

Obituaries It is with regret that the QUARTERLY announces the death of the following brothers:

(Continued on page 34)

Hugh R. Barnard, AmheTst '29 DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY.

James Henry Turner, Arlington '71 Lester M. Bragdon, Bowdoin '12 John C. Carr, Bowdoin ,]) Frank A. Kimball, Bowdoin '10 Frank D. McKeon, Bowdoin '43 Howard B. Preble, Bowdoin '25 Cla~"e nce B. Rumery, Bowdoin '01 J. Russell Snyder, Bucknell '16 R. E. Blewett, Califomia '27 Fred S. Edinger, Califomia '23 Elston Wyckoff, Califomia '26 Harry D. Balsinger, Carnegie-Mellon '15 Nelson P. Rice, Carnegie-Mellon '22 Daniel J . Coyne, Jr., Chicago '09 Alan L. Schlude, Columbia '33 Frederick P. Bills, Cornell '14 Eric D. Schwarz, Comell '39 Leslie Miller, DePauw '16 Jesse Dwight Sallee, DePauw '06 T. M. Spelman, II, Harvard ,]) Charles B. Ferguson, HarvaTd '33 Reginald S. Altman, illinois '33 Henry E. Dralle, Jr., Illinois '60 Hans P. Greison, Illinois '16 Fred Henderson, Illinois '14 William Henderson, illinois '19 Dorie H. Connelly, Indiana '12 G. W. Landis, Indiana '22 Frederick W. Michael, Indiana '52 Louis F. Carroll, Iowa '27 William J. Dallas, Iowa '48 Arnette B. Chambers, Iowa State '12 Frank Evans Thomson, Iowa State '19 Robert L. Ingham, Johns Hopkins '53 Leigh H. Fischer, Kansas '37 Irving H. Hancock, Kansas '30 Marvin E. Jordan, Kansas '34 Elmer W. Renker, Kansas '33 Edwin T. Chase, III, Lafayette '33 Joseph I. Diamond, Lafayette '15 Guy B. Watton, Lafayette '22 Edmund V. Bennett, Lehigh '24 Parker Berg, Lehigh '35 Horace B. Maynard, Mm"ietta '12 C. L. Gault, McGill '25 ' Henry Hadley, McGill '06 John Millen, McGill '45 Judge G. B. Puddicombe, McGill '24 Harold E. Walker, McGill '07 James A. Warburton, McGill '43 James A. Falconer, Miami '38 Wallace Scott, Jr., Miami '56 Fred L. Black, Michigan '15 C. A. Brown, Michigan '65 C. L. Jerome, Michigan '22 William W. Ottaway, Michigan '23 Dr. Jesse L. Ginsberg, Middlebury '59 William R. Johnson, Middlebury '45 Album M. Gutterson, New York '23 C. L. Jennings, New YOTk '23

January 1972

31


THE DELTA UPSILON FRATERNITY Founded 1834 Incorporated, December 10, 1909, under the laws of the State of New York General Office-P.O. Box 40108, Indianapolis, Indiana 46240 THE PRESIDENT'S DEPUTY PROGRAM

I.

II.

III.

IV.

V.

VI.

JAMES C. McLEOD, INTERNATIONAL PRESIDENT PRDVINCE GDVERNDRS Eastern Region 407 Tucker Station Road Middletown, Kentucky 40243 (Maritime Provinces, Maine, New Hampshire, Massachu路 VII. (Illinois and Wisconsin) setts, Vermont, Eastern New York, Rhode Island, New Roger M. Fitz-Gerald, Illinois' 57 Jersey and Connecticut) Suite 2157, 135 S. LaSalle St. Bruce H _ Fellows, Wisconsin '50 Chicago, Ill. 60603 7 Haviland Dr. Scotia, N_Y. 12302 Western Region (Eastern Dntario, Quebec and Western New York) Robert W. Broad, Colgate and Syracuse '60 VIII. (Manitoba, North Dakota, South Dakota, Iowa and Minne4571 Meadowridge Rd. sota) Manlius. N.Y. 13104 Don ald E. Larew, Iowa State '63 724 North River Road (Maryland, Pennsylvania and Delaware) Fargo, Nortb Dakota 58102 IX. (Colorado, Kansas, Missouri and Nebraska) Central Region X. (A,rkan sas, Louisiana, New Mexico, Dklahoma and Texas) J. C. Grimes, Dklahoma '40 (West Virginia, North Cal'Olina, South Carolina, Tennessee, 2204 V ail Ct. Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Mississippi and Virginia) Arlington, Tex. 76012 R. D. Tucker, Georgia Tech '58 XI. (Arizona, California, N evada and Utah) 2388 Lake Capri Robert S. Wallace, Stanford '38 Lithonia, Ga. 30058 447 Landfair Ave. (Dhio) W est Los Angeles, Calif. 90024 Captain Frank L. Howe, Louisville '64 XII. (British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Dregon, Wash4795 A Kingshill Dr. ington , Idaho, Montana and Wyoming) Columbus, Dhio 43229 Robert G. Holdridge, Washington '54 (Western Dntario, Michigan, Indiana and Kentucky) Box 26 Stephen A. Ishmael, Louisville '66 Scappoose, o.re. 97056

CHAPTER DIRECTORY ALBERTA (1935), XII, 11142-86th Ave., Edmonton, Alta., Can. Deputy : Patrick M. Mahoney, '51 ARLINGTDN (1969), X, 719 W. Abram, Arlington, Tex. 76010 Trustee: Frank Sandford, DK '42 (73), 803 Red Dak La., Arlington, Tex. 76010 Deputy : David W. Tees, TEX 'S6. 218 Vvestvicw Ter.. ArJington, Tex. 76010

AUBURN (1961), IV, P.o.. Box 499, Auburn, Ala. 36830 Trustee: Robert W. Redd, '67 (72), c/o R I. Harrison, 1760 Crestline Ct., Atlanta, Ga. 30329 Deputy : Michael Carstensen, lAST '61, 3766 Pin Dak Circle, Doraville, Ga. 30040 BDWLING GREEN (1949), V, Bowling Green State U., Bowling Green, Dhio 43402 Deputy: Fred Hansen, '56, 1029 Charles St., Bowling Green, Dhio 43402 BRADLEY (1951), VII, 1318 W . F redonia, Peoria, Ill. 61606 Trustee : Fred Roberts. '71 (74), 238 W . Saginaw, Apt. 313, E. Lansing, Mich. 48823 Deputy: Joseph D'Errico, '70, 118 E . Hines, Peoria , Ill. 61614 BRITISH CDLUMBIA (1935). XII, 5780 Toronto Rd ., Vancouver, B.C., Can. Trustee: Donald McGill, '40 (73), 230 E. 73rd St., New York, N.Y. 10021 Deputy: Robert W. Bonner, '42, clo MacMillan, Bloedel Ltd_, 1075 W. Georgia St., Vancouver, B.C., Can. BUCKNELL (1950), III, Bucknell University, L ewisburg, Pa. 17837 Trustee: Milton H. Barish, '66 (73), 65 Did Mamaroneck Rd., White Plains, N.Y. 10605 Deputy: John F. Zeller, III, '41, West Lawn, Rt. 1, Lewisburg, Pa. 17837 CALIFDRNIA (1896), XI, 2425 Warring St .. Berkeley, Calif. 94704 Deputy : Redmond C. Staats, Jr., '33, 64 The Uplands, Berkeley, Calif. 94705 CALIFDRNIA PDLYTECHNIC (1970), XI , 450 Marsh St ., San Luis Dbispo, Calif. 93401 CARNEGIE (1917), III, 5031 Forbes, Pittsburgh, Pa. 15213 Deputy: Thomas S. Terpack, '65, 1122 Sheridan, Pittsburg-h. Pa. 15206 CENTRAL MISSDURI (1970), IX, Central Missouri State, Box 105, Warrensburg, Mo. 64093

32

CHICAGO. (1901), VII, 5714 Woodlawn Ave., Chicago, Ill. 60637 Trustee: Maurice S . Mandel, '55 (72), 14 Hillside Ave., Pt. Washington, N.Y. 11050 Deputy: George J. Krafcisin, '64, 5232 N . Dsceola, Chicago, Ill. 60656 CLARKSDN (1 96 1), II, 30 Elm St., Potsdam, N.Y. 13676 Trustee: F. William Fiesinger, '37 (72), 70 Main St., Potsdam, N.Y. 13676 Deputy: Richard A.Kenyon, '54, 57 Dil Forge La., Pittsford, N.Y. 14534 CDLBY (1852) , I, Colby College, Waterville, Me. 04901 Deputy: Cyril M. Joly, Jr., '48, 222 Main St., Waterville, Me. 04901 CDLGATE (1 865), II, Colgate University, Hamilton, N.Y. 13346 Trustee: F. W. Bradley, Jr., '50 (74), 715 Glen Ave., Westfield, N.J. 07090 CDLDRADD (1953), IX, 1012 University Ave., Boulder, Colo. 80302 Deputy: Glen E. Keller, Jr., '60, 2119 S. Zephyr Ct., Denver, Colo. 80227 CDLDRADD STATE (1971), IX, 113 Briarwood Rd., Apt. 1212, Ft. Collins, Colo. 80521 Trustee: Richard G. Luebke, '70 (74), 847 W. Harlem Rd., #ID, W. Seneca, N.Y. 14224 Deputy: Dr . Dawin Sprague, KS '56, 16 N. Parish Ave., Johnstown, Colo. 8053 4 CDRNELL (1869), II, 6 South Ave., ithaca, N.Y. 14850 Trustee: Harry M. Vawter, Jr., '42 (73), 320 South St., Morristown, N.J. 07960 CREIGHTDN (1 969), 'IX, 422 N. 31st St., Dmaha, Neb. 68131 Trustee: John D. Wells, DK '66 (73), Temple, Barker & Sloane, Inc., 36 Washington St., Wellesley Hills. Mass. 02181 Deputy: Richard Finnell, NEB ' 44, 11918 Leavenworth St., Dmaha, Neb. 68154 DAYTDN (1971), V, 110 Woodland, Dayton, Dhio 45407 Deputy: Daniel R Shell, DEN '59, 52 Ashley St., Dayton, Dhio 45409 DELAWARE (1970), III, 400 Wollaston, Building A, Apt. A-5, Newark, Del. 19711 Trustee: Thomas D. Henderer, SW '60 (74), 2802 Bodine Dr., Wilmington, Del. 19810 Deouty: William Jamieson, Jr .. PS '24, 7 Court Dr., Lancaster Ct., Wilmington, Del. 19805

DENISDN (1949), V, Denison University, Box 571, Granville, Dhio 43023 Trustee : Michael D. Eisner, '64 (73), 201 BEast 82nd St., New York, N.Y. 10028 Deputy: Rohert N. Wistne路r , MIA '58, 88 E. Broad St., Columbus, Ohio 43215 DEPAUW (1887), VI, 626 E. Semi,n ary St., Greencastle, Ind. 46135 Trustee: Arad Riggs, '26 (74), 50 E. 42nd St., New York, N.Y. 10017 Deputy: Milton S. T,rusler, '29, RR 3, Greencastle. Ind. 46135 EASTERN KENTUCKY (1970), VI, Eastern Kentucky University. Box 255, Todd Hall. Richmond, Ky. 40475 FLDRIDA (1957), IV, 1814 W. U niversity Ave., Gainesville. Fla. 32<\01 Trustee: Peter Bryan, '58 (73), 28742 Shire Daks Dr., Palos V erdes, Calif. 90274 Deputy: Melvin L Sharpe, II, '62, 99923 SW 16th Ave., Gainesville, Fla. 32601 FRESNO. (1968), XI, 507 W. Holland, Clovis, Calif. 93612 Trustee: Robert E. Falk, SJ '51 (72), 5185 N. Teilman Ave., Fresno, Calif. 9370 5 Deputy: Michael C. Thielen, IA '56, 1706 W. Barstow. Fresno, Calif. 93705 GEDRGIA TECH (1957), IV, 154 Fifth St., N.W., Atlanta, Ga. 30313 Trustee: Howard W. Watts, DAR '50 (72), 16 Wyndham Rd., Scarsdale, N.Y. 10583 Deputy : Monroe Edwards, '58, 1167 Lynmoor Dr., N.E., Atlanta, Ga. 30319 HAMILTDN (1847), II, Hamilton College, Clinton, N.Y. 13323 Trustee: John G. DeGraff, '34 (72), 18 Autenreith, Scarsdale, N.Y. 10583 Deputy: R A. Bankert, '43, 6Y, Allport PI., New Hartford, N.Y. 13413 ILLINOIS (1905), VII, 312 E. Armory Ave., Champaign, Ill. 61820 Trustee: Richard P. Donohoe. '55 (74), Leach Hollow Rd .. Sherman, Conn. 06,784 Deputy: Henry W . Lang, '59, 9026 S . Leavitt, Chicago, Ill. 60620 INDIANA (1915), VI, 1200 E. Third St., Bloomington , Ind. 47401 Deputy: Porter Murphy, '41, 7250 Steinmeier Dr .. Indianapolis. Ind. 46250 IDWA (1925), VIII, 320 Ellis Ave., Iowa City. Iowa 52240 Trustee: Jack T. Hunn, '55 (74), Smith , Sternau CompaollY, Inc., 1775 Broadway, Suite 427-8, New York, N.Y. 10019

DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY'

January 1972


Deputy: Gary R. Kurdelmeier, '58, 2923 Stanford, Iowa City, Iowa 52240 IOWA STATE (1913), VIII, 117 Ash Ave., Ames, Iowa 50010 Trustee: C. D. Prutzman, PS '18 (72), 166 Greenway, N., Forest Hills, N.Y. 11375 Deputy: Richard L. Cox, '54, 14947 Bramblewood Dr., Houston, Tex. 77024 JOHNS HOPKINS (1928), III, 4220 N. Charles St., Baltimore, Md. 21218 Trustee: Richard D. Bosse, '69 (72), 239 E. 79th, Apt. 12L, New York, N.Y. 10021 Deputy: John W. Peach, '31, 310 Ridge· mede, Baltimore, Md. 21210 KANSAS (1920), IX, 1025 Emery Rd., Lawrence, Kan. 66044 Trustee: Dale M. Flanagan, '58, Antell, Wright & Nagel, 230 .Park Ave., New York, N.Y. 10017 Deputy: Terry L. Bullock, KAS '61, Suite 1100, First National Bank Tower, Topeka, Kan. 66603 KANSAS STATE (1956), IX, 1425 Univer· sity Dr., Manhattan, Kan. 66502 T,rustee: Terry L. Bullock, '61 (72), Suite 1100, First National Bank Tower, Tope· ka, Kan. 66603 Deputy: Terry L. Bullock, '61, Suite 1100, First National Bank Tower, Tope· ka, Kan . 66603 KENT STATE (1948), V, 312 E. Main St., Kent, Ohio 44240 Trustee: Robert J. Casey, '48 (73), 206 Valley Ct., Pittsburgh, 1'a. 15237 LAFAYETTE (1885), III, Lafayette College, Easton, Pa. 18042 Trustee: Howard S. Conklin, '15 (72), P.O. Box 375, Plainfield, N.J. 07061 Deputy: Ronald T. Exley, '54, 38 Colby PI., Phillipsburg, N.J. 08865 LEHIGH (1885), III, Lehigh University, Bethlehem, Pa. 18001 Trustee: William K. Adams, '46 (73), 438 Center St., Bethlehem, Pa. 18018 Deputy: Mark Parseghian, Jr., '48, 20 S. Main St., Nazareth, Pa. 18064 LOUISVILLE (1949), VI, Belknap Campus, University of Louisville, Louisville,

Ky. 40208 Trustee: Hen.r y A. Federa, '37 (73), Raymond International, Inc., 2 Penn Plaza, 20th Fl., New York, N.Y. 10001 Deputy: Steven Ishmael, '66, 407 Tucker Station Rd., Louisville, Ky. 40243 MAINE (1970), I, University of Maine, Memorial Union, Orono, Me. 04473 Deputy: Dr. W. R. Dopheide, WM '52, 40 Jefferson St., Old Town, Me. 04468 MANITOBA (1929), VIII, 112 Wilmot PI., Winnipeg, Man., Can. Deputy: Gordon R. Fogg, '48, 129 Yale Ave., Winnipeg, lVlan., Can.

MARIETTA (1870), V, 223 Fourth St., Marietta, Ohio 45750 Trustee: C. F. Jennings, '31 (73), 50 Walthery Ave., Ridgewood, N.J. 07450 MARQUETTE (1970), VII, 3016 W . State, Milwaukee, Wis. 53208 Trustee: O. Neil Olson, OS '25 (74), 2435 N. 84th St., Milwaukee, Wis. 53226 MIAMI (1868), V, 400 E. Vine St., Oxford, Ohio 45056 Trustee: J. Paul McNamara, '29 (73), 88 E. Broad St., Columbus, Ohio 43215 Deputy: Everett Lykins, '59, Warfield Hall, Miami University, Oxford, Ohio 45056 MICHIGAN (1876), VI, 1331 Hill St., Ann Arbor, Mich. 48104 Trustee: Richard E. Meyer, '61 (74), el aware PI., Apt. 6803, Chicago, n~

J&6R

Deputy: J. C. Feldkamp, '61,3011 SA B, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich. 48104 MICHIGAN STATE (1949), VI, 1708 E. Grand River, Apt. 48, E. Lansing, Mich. 48823 Trustee: Kenneth Brummel, '57 (72), 225 North Ave., Westport, Conn. 06880 MIDDLEBURY (1856), I, Middlebury Col· lege, Middlebury, Vt. 05753 Deputy: S. S. Witherell, Sr., '30, Shoreham, Vt. 05770 MINNESOTA (1890), VIII, 1112 Sixth St., S.E., Minneapolis, Mi·n n. 55414 Trustee: Thomas J. Hayes, '60 (73), 50 Edgehill PI., Fairfield, Conn. 06430 MISSOURI (1924), IX, 711 Maryland Ave., Columbia, Mo. 65201 Trustee: Ted A. Murray, '72 (74), 440 iZs50t Home Dr., No.9, Ithaca, N.Y., Deputy: R. L. Schmitt, '30, 3 La Due Hills, St. Louis, Mo. 63132 DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY·

NEBRASKA (1898), IX, 1548 Vine St., Lincoln, Neb. 6850M Trustee: W. F. Jones, '27 (74), 49 Hazelton Dr., White Plains, N_Y. 10605 Deputy: C. J. Burmeister, '52, 7325 Lin· colnshi,r e Rd., LincoIn, Neb. 68520 NORTH CAROLINA (1953), IV, 407 E. Rosemary, Chapel Hill, N.C. 27514 Trustee: W. D. Watkins, '27 (74), Box 355, Liberty, N.C. 27298 Deputy: W. D. Watkins, '27, Box 355, Liberty, N.C. 27298 NORTH DAKOTA (1961), VIII, 515 Ox· ford St., Grand Forks, N.D. 58201 Deputy: Donald Larew, IS '63, 724 N. River Rd., Fargo, N.D. 58102 NORTH DAKOTA STATE (1970), VIII, 1420 12th Ave. N., Fargo, N.D. 58102 Deputy: Donald Larew, IS '63, 724 N. River Rd., Fargo, N.D. 58102 NORTHERN ILLINOIS (1966), VII, 1114 Blackhawk Rd., De Kalb, Ill . 60115 Trustee: Steven J. Gerber, '68 (74), 115 Old Short Hills Rd., Apt. 612, West Orange, N.J. 07052 Deputy: Mor,r is L. Ferensen, '67, 1633 Forest, LaGrange, Ill. 60525 NORTHERN IOWA (1968), VIII, 1927 College Ave., Cedar Falls, Iowa 50613 NORTHWESTERN (1880), VII, 2307 Sheridan Rd., Evanston, Ill. 60201 Trustee: Edgar F. Heizer, Jr., '51 (73), 1551 Old Mill Rd., Lake Forest, III. 60045 Deputy: William T. Bean, '37, 1420 Juneway Ter., Chicago, Ill. 60626 OHIO (1955), V, 32 N . College St., Athens, Ohio 45701 T,rustee: Joseph V. Ugran, '70, 447 West Heights, Youn,!"stown, Ohio 44509 Deputy: C. R. Hubbard, Jr., '58, 16 Jefferson St., Nelsonville, Ohio 45764 OHIO STATE (1904), V, 240 East 15th Ave., Columbus, Ohio 43201 Deputy: Thomas D. Badger, '56, 1219 N. Mulberry St., Mt. Vernon, Ohio 43050 OKLAHOMA (1927), X, 603 W. Brooks, Norman, Okla. 73069 Trustee: Bradley R. Thompson, '58 (72), 310 W. Butler Dr., Phoenix, Ariz. 85021 Deputy: Rev. John C. Powers, '58, 120 Burton PI., Edmond, Okla. 73034 OKLAHOMA STATE (1960), X, 311 S. Hester, Stillwater, Okla. 74074 Trustee: H. Allan Thomoson, OK '65 (72), 2720 Larkspur St., Yorktown Heights, N.Y. 10598 Deputy: Robert T. Hickman, 223 W. Connell, Stillwater, Okla. 74074 OREGON (1934), XII, Eugene, Ore. Trustee: M. M. Kufferman, '44 (73), 2170 Redding Rd., Fairfield, Conn. 06430 Deputy: Theodore W. Charles, '32, 817 West 38th Ave., Eugene, Ore. 97405 OREGON STATE (1922), XII, 235 N. 25th St., Corvallis, Ore. 97330 T,rustee: Jay L. LeMaster, '48 (74), 160 E. 48th St., Apt. 11K, New York, N .Y. 10017 Deputy: Paul R. Lorenz, IS '56, 1245 Kline PI., Corvallis, Ore. 97330 OSHKOSH (1970), VII, 1205 Graham St., Oshkosh, Wis. 54901 Deputy: Thomas L. Drummond, NEB '44, 3252 Old Orchard La., Oshkosh, Wis. 54901 PACIFIC (1959), XI, University of the Pacific, Stockton, Calif. 95204 Trustee: Kendall L. Dyson, '63 (74), 2789 Stacia Dr., San Jose, Calif. 95124 Deputy: Donald R. Smith, '61, 1107 Green Oaks, Lodi, Calif. 95240 PENNSYLVANIA (1888), III Trustee: Peter F. Way, '55 (72), P.O. Box 133, W. Falmouth, Mass. 02574 Deputy: Fred H. Kelley, Jr., '50, 213 Rambling Way, Springfield, Pa. 19064 PENNSYLVANIA STATE (1911), III, 229 Locust La., State College, Pa. 16802 Trustee: Charles D. Prutzman, '18 (72), 166 Greenway, N., Forest Hills, N.Y. 11375 Deputy: Warren F. Seubel, '30, Harvard Bldg., Apt. 1122, Wildman Arms, Swarthmore, Pa. 19080 PLATTEVILLE (1969), VII, 870 Union St., Platteville, Wis. 53818 PURDUE (1914), VI, 117 State St., W. Lafayette, Ind. 47906 Trustee: John P. Bradway, '59 (72), 2218 Newark Ave., Westfield, N.J. 07090 Deputy: Fred C. Wurster, '55, 3131 E. 71st St., Indianapolis, Ind. 46220 RIPON (1959), VII, Ripon College, Ripon; Wis. 54971 Trustee: James S. Steinberg, '66 (74),

January 1972

4017 Highland Ave., Brooklyn, N.Y. 11224 Deputy: Don F. Thomann, CG '39, Dept. s~9~fucation, Ripon College, Ripon, Wis. ROCHESTER (1852), II RUTGERS (1858), I, 66 College Ave., New Brunswick, N.J. 08903 Trustee: M. M. Johnson, '51 (74), 25 Balsam Pkwy., Sparta, N.J. 07871 SAN DIEGO (1968), XI, 5606 Hardy Ave., San Diego, Calif. 92115 Trustee: John C. Addleman, LO '58 (72), 6707 Bamnger Ave., San Diego, Calif. 92119 Deputy: Karl H. Griesbaum, PU '61, 1934 Bonus Dr., San Diego, Calif. 92110 SIMPSON (1964), VIII, 800 N. Buxton St., Indianola, Iowa 50125 Trustee: Laurence H. Kunstler, '66, 3710 Garnet, No. 102, Torrance, Calif. 90503 Deputy: Luther L. Hill, Jr., WMS '45, Equitable of Iowa, Des Moines, Iowa 50306 SOUTH DAKOTA (1971), VIII, 204 N. University St., Vermillion, S.D. 57069 Deputy: Timothy W. Shu minsky, IA '67, 3801 Orchard, Sioux City, Iowa 51104 SOUTHERN ILLINOIS (1971), VII, 705 W. Main, Carbondale, Ill. 62901 Trustee: John F. Falabella, '71 (74), 28-34 202nd St., Bayside, N.Y. 11360 STANFORD (1896), XI, 540 Salvatierra, Stanford, Calif. 94305 Deputy: James F. Coonan, '38, 176 Harcross Rd., Woodside, Calif. 94061 SWARTHMORE (1894), III, Swarthmore College, Swarthmore, Pa. 19081 Trustee: William F. Lee, Sr., '33 (73), 5 Guernsey Rd., Swarthmore, Pa. 19081 Deputy: Neil Aust,rian, '61, 53 Crawford Terr., Riverside, Conn. 06878 SYRACUSE (1873), II Deputy: W. B. Stark, Jr., '46, 5066 Skyline Dr., Syracuse, N.Y. 13215 TECHNOLOGY (1891), I, 526 Beacon St., Boston, Mass. 02215 Trustee: Charles A. Morton, Jr., '45 (72), Springwood Path, Laurel Hollow, Syosset, N.Y. 11791 Deputy: T. A. Faulhaber, '53, 14 Old Orchard Rd., Chestnut Hill, Mass. 02167 TENNESSEE (1969), IV, 1845 Terrace Ave., Knoxville, Tenn. 37916 Trustee: Albert R. Diehl, '68 (73), 10530 Cross Fox Ln., Apt. D-l, Columbia, Md. 21043 Deputy: N. Patrick Freesh, '70, 1509 Highland. Apt. 18, Knoxville, Tenn. 37916 TEXAS (1949), X, 2510 Leon, Austin, Tex. 78705 T,rustee: Henry L. Baccus, '50 (72), 2186 High Ridge Rd., Stamford, Conn. 06903 Deputy: Forrest C. Roan, Jr., '66, P.O. Box 896, Austin, Tex. 78767 TORONTO (1899), II, 182 St. George St., Toronto, Ont., Can. Deputy: W. M. Crossin, '55 TUFTS (1886), I, 114 Professors Row, Medford, Mass. 02155 Deputy: H. C. Young, Jr., '49, 31 Wing Rd., Lynnfield Ctr .• Mass. 01904 TYLER (1971), X, 406 W. Rusk, Tyler, Tex. 75701 Deputy: J. Alan Hay,nes, TEX '61, Tyler Junior College, Tyler, Tex. 75701 UNION (1838), I, Union College, ScheItlectady, N.Y. 12308 Trustee: William Wallace, III, '48 (72), 15 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. 10016 Deputy: Peter G. Herman, '59. 1021 Brierwood, Schenectady, N.Y. 12308 VIRGINIA (1922), IV, 127 Chancellor St., Charlottesville, Va. 22903 Trustee: Edward Evertz, '34 (72), 25 E. Salem St., Hackensack, N.J. 07601 Deputy: William C. Thacker, Jr., '54, P.O. Box 263, Charlottesville, Va. 22902 WASHINGTON (1910), XII, 4508 19th Ave., N.E., Seattle, Wash. 98195 Trustee: F. T. Van Dyk, '55 (73), 1224 17th St., N.W., Washington, D.C. 20036 WASHINGTON STATE (1933), XII, 1709 Ruby St., Pullman, Wash. 99163 Deputy: J. W. Gallagher, ORS '31, So. 3716 Sky View Dr., Spokane, Wash. 99203 WESTERN MICHIGAN (1956), VI, 620 W. South St., Kalamazoo, Mich. 49007 Trustee: Gerald A. Hale, '52 (74), 7 Winchester Rd., Summit, N.J. 07901 Deputy: F. M. Hilliard, ILL '33, 2320 Tipperary Rd., Kalamazoo, Mich. 49001 WESTERN ONTARIO (1931). VI, 294 Central Ave., London, Ont., Can.

33


Trustee: Dr. Melville A. Platt, '52 (74), 530 East 70th St., New York, N.Y. 10021 WESTERN RESERVE (1847), V, 10923 Magnolia Dr., Cleveland, Ohio 44106 Trustee: Dr. Ralph E. Stucky, '31 (74), 93 S . Highwood, Glen Rock, N.J. 07452 Deputy: G. S. Baldwin, 'IS, 1552 Bur路 lington, Cleveland Heights, Ohio 44118 WICHITA (1959), IX, 1720 N. Vassar, Wichita, Kan. 67208 Trustee: Lynn E. Ambler, '68 (74), 13 DeGarma Hills Rd., Wappinger Falls, N.Y. 12590 Deputy: W. Kent Kruske, '68, 6126 Rock路 wood Rd., Wichita, Kan. 67208 indicates year of founding indicates term expiration

WISCONSIN (1885), VII, 644 N. Frances St., Madison, Wis. 53703 Trustee : Bruce H . Fellows, 'SO (74), 7 Haviland Dr., Scotia, N.Y. 12302 Deputy: Paul D. Johnson, 'SO, 5301 Fairway Dr., Madison, Wis. 53705

Colonies and Petitioners ADU Pet., Houston, X (University of Houston), Student Activities Center, Box 225, Houston, Tex. 77004 Deputy: Miles C. Anderson, OK '59, Laguarta, Gavrel & Bolin, Inc., 2737 Buffalo Speedway, Houston, Tex. 77006 ADU Colony, Mankato, VIII (Mankato

State College), 526 S. Fifth St., Mankato, Minn. 56001 Deputy: Hadan Bloomer, MICH '66, 507 N. 5th St., Mankato, Minn. 56001 ADU Pet., Maryland, III (University of Maryland), P.O . Box 1762, HIatt.路 ville, Md. 20788 Deputy: Donald R. Heacock, NC '64, 4515 Willard Ave., Apt. #S-1419, Chevy Chase, Md. 20015 ADU Pet., Wilmington, IV (University of North Carolina at Wilmington), 4525 Market St., Wilmington, N.C. 28401 ADU Colony, Southwest Texas State, X (Southwest Texas State University), Box 1047, San Marcos, Tex. 78666 Delta Pi Zeta Pet., VPI, IV (Virginia Polytechnic Institute), 420 East Roanoke, Blacksburg, Va. 24060

(from page 31)

Obituaries Bruce R. Silver, New York '14 Ralph H. Donges, Ohio State '28 H. P. Rademacher, Oregon '28 Carol Denny, Penn State '20 William F. Wakefield, Penn State '32 George Bary, Pennsylvania '06 Alfred Leith, Pennsylvania '26 Fon'ester H. Sott, Pennsylvania '06 Raymond W. Mark, PW'due'13 George C. Ludolph, Rochester '14 Lazear J. Murphy, Rochester '21 Gradson P . Trimble, Rochester '27 Russell W. Gies, Rutge1"S '12 Arthur T. Tuttle, Rwtgers '42 S. M. Batterson, Stanfm'd '10 Harry R. Johnson, Stanford '06 Harold H . Dunham, SwaTthmore '26 Charles R. Griffen, SwarthmoTe '36 Ernest G. Champlin, Symcuse '12 Dr. George T. Hargitt, Symcuse '02

Joseph F. Clary, Technology '29 John F. Fishback, Technology '68 Perceil A. Shultis, TOI'onto '39 N. L. LeSueur, Toronto '09 Robert J. Jarvis, Tufts '37 Frank H. Daley, Union '03 G. A. O'Brien, Washington '34 Clyde W. Brokaw, Washington '16 Clair L. Anderson, Washington State '37 Richard P. Hatfield, Wesleyan '24 Douglas H . Tidd, Wesleyan '32 William T. Boyes, Western Ontario '30 George Thomas, Western Ontm'io '43 W. W. Tomlinson, Western Ontario '50 Eugene J. Congdon, Wichita '28 Laurence C. Bangs, Williams '03 F. W. Braasch, Wisconsin '12 H. H. Karrow, Wisconsin '08 Francis A. Roy, Wisconsin '34 G. W . Van Derzee, Wisconsin '08

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DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY.

January 1972


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ALUMNI CLUBS OF DELTA UPSILON (Asterisk denotes club is chartel'ed) Clubs are listed alphabetically according to states and provinces .

BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA- President, Phillips G. Auten, 320 W. Glenwood, Birmingham 35209. Secretary, Ernest W. Crates, Tor., 2337 Ivy Lane, Birmingham 35226 . PHOENIX, ARIZONA-Meets on call. Contact Charles W. Boyle, 11858 Thn.n derbird, Sun City 85351. TUCSON, ARIZONA-Meets on call. President, Warren D. Moon, 4002 E. Whittier, Tucson 8571L ' LOS ANGELES , CALIFORNIA (Souther.n California Club)President, Robert S. Wallace, 447 Landfair, West Los Angeles 90024. Sec"etary, James C. Asendorf, 7824 Sale Avenue, Canoga Park 91304. SAN DIEGO CALIFORNIA-Meets quarterly at the Kona Kai Club . P"esident, J olm C. Addleman, 6707 Balinger, San Diego 92119 . Secretary, K. Henry Griesbaum, 1934 Bonns Drive, San Diego 92110. ' SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA-Meets third Wednesday of January, March, :May, September .and November. at. the Garden City Hof Brau ill San Jose. P ·resz,dent, James GUVlll, 3S La Vonne Drive No. I, Campbell 95008. ' DENVER, COLORADO (Colorado Alumni Club) - Meets. first Wednesday of every month at the Oxford Hotel. Pres<dent, Glen E. Keller, Jr. , Phelps, Hall and Keller, 1145 First National Bank Bldg., 621 17th Street, Denver 80202. Secretary, Sam Redman, 330 E. Geddes, Littletown 80120. ' WILMINGTON, DELAWARE-P,-esident, C. Norris Harrison, Washington College, Chestertown, Maryland 21620. SeCl'eta,ry, Robert Roberts, 501 Wyndham Road, North Hills, Wilmington 19809. ' WASHINGTON, D.C.- Meets on call. President, Ralph E. Vandervort, Jr., Koppers Company, Inc., 1725 K Street, N.W., Washington 20006. Telephone: FE 3-8282. ' GAINESVILLE, FLORIDA-Meets regularly for luncheon at chapter hou se. President, Melvin L. Sharpe, 502-14 S,W. 34th, Gainesville 3260 L *JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA- President, John J. Wahl, 2246 Segovia Avenue, Jacksonville 32217. Secretary, Joseph L. Cullen, 1919 Muncie Avenue, Jacksonville 32210. • ATLANTA, GEORGIA (Alumni Club of Georgia) - Meets on call. President, R. P . Green, 2138 Sylvania Drive, Decatur 30033 . Contact Secretary, B. J. Powell at office, 711 Candler Bldg., Atlanta 30303. Telephone : 688-1788 . ' CHICAGO, ILLINOIS- Meets every Wednesday at 12 :15 p.m. at Toffenetti Restaurant, 72 W. Randolph Street. Secretm-y, Leon C. vVolfe, 111 W. Washington Street, Room 944, Chicago 60602. ' PEORIA, ILLINOIS- Meets on call at Howard Johnson Motor Lodge, 225 N . Adams Street, Peoria. Contact John J. Schad, 820 Loire Court, Apt. 210, Peoria 61614. *BLOOMINGTON, INDIANA-President, Donald E. Weaver, Service Bldg., Indiana University, Bloomin!(ton 47401. Secretary, Robert L. Cochran, 2511 East Second Street, Bloomington 4740L *INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA-Meets five times a year, September through May, President, Fred Carpenter, 5301 N. Delaware Street, Indianapolis 46220. *DAVENPORT, IOWA (Tri-Cities Club)-President, Henry N . N euman, 2846 E. Pleasant Street, Davenport 52803. Secretm'y, Kenneth Smith, 2540 E. Central Park Avenue, Davenport 52803. ' IOWA CITY, IOWA- Secretary-Treasnrer, S. Jack Davis, 329 Beldon Avenue, Iowa City 52240. ' TOPEKA, KANSAS- Meets for dinner regularly. P"esident, Don Hill, 2107 W. 29th Terrace, Topeka, Kansas 66611. Secretar3,-Treaslu'cr, DOll Pomeroy, 2015 Hope Street, Topeka 66604. To get on mailing list interested brothel'S should contact Ross

Freeman, Security Benefit Life, 700 Harrison , Topeka 66603. ' WICHITA, KANSAS-Meets third Thursday of each month at Hotel Lassen. P1'esident , W.

Benjamin

Grisamore,

1806

N

Edgemoor, Wichita 67208 . ' LOUISVILLE , KENTUCKY (Kentuckiana Club)-Meets first Tuesday of each month for luncheon. Secreta;ry, Thomas B . Murnane, Jr., 2306 Tuckaho Road, Louisville 40207. ' BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS-Meets at the Pillar House, Route 128 and Route 16, Newton. For information or to be added to the mailinll' list call Sec·reta.ry, Charles E. Cousins, 149 Goodman Hill, Sudbury 01776. Telephone: 357-9500. ' DETROIT, MICHIGAN (Michigan State Boosters Club)P1'Csidellt, Richard J. Monahan, 20310 La Crosse, Southfield 48075 . Secretary, Kenneth J. Stanick, 4869 Motorway, Pontiac 48054. DULUTH, MINNESOTA-P"esident, John C. Andersen , 3714 Greysolon Road, Duluth 55804. *KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI- Meets first Friday of each month at the Kansas City Athletic Club, Hotel Continental. President, Gary J . Ascamio, 11000 VV . One Hundredth Place, Overland Park, Kansas 66214. Secreta?,)', Bill Helvey, 11405 W. 72nd Terrace, Shawnee ~lission, Kansas 66203.

*LINCOLN, NEBRASKA- Weekly luncheon meetings at noon on Fddays at the University Club. President, \V. Howard Linch, 2935 S . 26th, Lincoln 68502. "NEW YORK, NEW YORK- Meets the last Monday of every month at 1 :00 p.m. at main lunchroom , 4th

DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY'

flOOf,

Chamber. of

.January 1972

Commerce Bldg., 65 Liberty Street. Preside lit, Charles F. Jennings, Bankers Trust Company, 16 Wall Street, New York 10015 . *ROCHESTER, NEW YORK-Meets last Wednesday of every month. President, Robert F. Hortsman. 6 1\1eadowlark Drive, Fairport 14450. 'SYRACUSE, NEW YORK (Central New York Club)-Secre· tary, Jack F. Sloane, 940 Comstock Avenue, Syracuse 13210. 'CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA-Meets on call qualierly. President, Peter H . Gemes, 815 American Bldg. , Charlotte 28202. Telephone: 377·6597. CINCINNATI, OHIO-Meets quarterly on the second Thursday night of 1\.{arch, June, September a.nd December. If not on present mailing list, please contact Secretary, A . L. Lammers, 3063 Portsmouth Avenue, Cincinnati 45208, or phone 321·2807. 'CLEVELAND, OHIO-Meets first Tuesday of every month at 12 noon at Midday Club, Union Commerce Bldg., 9th and Euclid. President, R. M. Cerrezin, 1004 Standard Bldg., Cleve· land 44113. ' COLUMBUS, OHIO-Meets every Thursday at 12 noon at University Club, 40 S . Thil'd Street. President, Ralph D . Dick· son, 1412 Clubview Boulevard, S ., Worthington 43085. Sec,·e· tary, James H . Stolzenbach, Jr., 1760 Upper Chelsea Road , Columbus 43212. KENT, OHIO- Meets on call. Secretary, John Simpson , 145 S. Prospect, Kent 44240. MARIETTA, OHIO-Contact Richard P. Kremer, 313 Putnam Street, Marietta 45750. BARTLESVILLE, OKLAHOMA-Meets on call. P"esident, John D. Liggett, 1319 Oakdale Drive, Bartlesville 74003 . ' OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLAHOMA (Greater Oklahoma Alumni Club)-Meets third Thursday of every month, 7 :30 p.m . President, James Robinson, 4220 Harvey Parkway, Oklahoma City 73118 . Secretary, John Kilbourne, 4801 N.W. 18th, Beth· any 73008. TULSA, OKLAHOMA-Meets informally once a month . Din· ner meetings on call. For irnformation or to be added to mail-

ing list, please contact either: President. Joe Fulton, 711 First National Building, Tulsa 74103; or Sec"ctary, John Sharr" 510 Oklahoma Natural Building, Tulsa 74119 . EUGENE, OREGON-Meets every Friday noon at the Colonial Inn. President, Robert Wren, 3265 W. 15th Street, Eugene 97402. Sec"etary, Otto Vonderheit, Route 3, Box 609 , Eugene 97401. *PORTLAND, OREGON-Monthly meetings first Wednesday of every month at Hotel Hoyt. Sec,·etary·Treamrer, William L . Bryant, Bryant Business Communications, 6116 S.\V. 37th Street, Portland 97221. SALEM, OREGON-Meets on call. President, Thomas P. Bays, 2865 Argyle Drive, S., Salem 97302. PROVIDENCE, RHODE ISLAND-Meets at University Club. President, Dr. Walter S. Jones, 165 Watennan Street, Provi · dence 02906. 'DALLAS , TEXAS-President, William Klingman, 3108 Bryn Mawr, Dallas 75225. FORT WORTH, TEXAS-President, Emil Friberg, 1708 Carl, Fort Worth, Texas 76103. Secreta,'y, Horace W. Millington, 4901 Bryce, Apt. 7, Fort Worth, Texas 76107. *HOUSTON, TEXAS- Contact Secretary, Thomas C. Gerber, 5706 Dumfries, Houston 77035. "SEATTLE, WASHINGTON-Meets on call. Secretac..y, Thom· as M. Solberg, 3222 Ogden Road, Olympia 98501. *SPOKANE, WASHINGTON- Meets on call . President, Lloyd H . Torgerson, Rt. I, Mead 99021. Secretary, Randall Johnson, 749 E . 23rd, Spokane 99203. *MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN-Luncheon meeting every Wednesday noon at Main Dining Room, Milwaukee Athletic Club, 758 N . Broadway. President, C. Morse PuIs, W. 140 N . 7943, Lilly Road, Menomonee Falls 53051. Secreta... )', E. S . Vinson, 930 E . Glencoe Place, Milwaukee 53217. RIPON, WISCONSIN-Contact Vice-Preside"t, Paul L. Kegel, 730 Odana Lane, P.O. Box 4214, Madison 53711. CANADA:

'CALGARY, ALBERTA-Meets on call. P""ident, Brian E. Henson, 229- 39th Avenue, S .W ., Calgary 8. 'VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA-Meets on call. Contact Secretary, Leo J. Dooling, 3903 W. 33rd Avenue, Vancouver,

WINNIPEG, MANITOBA- Meets on call at the Manitoba chapter hottse. President, Andrew Cnrrie, 1432 Wellington Crescent, Winnipeg. 'LONDON, ONTARIO (Western Ontario Alumni Association) - President, C. Ronald Hodgins, 692 Algoma Place, London.

EUROPE: ' DELTA UPSILON CLUB OF THE NETHERLANDS-Secretar:}!·Treasllrer . Paul A. Ten Hove , Bovensingel 214, Kam-

pen, The Netherlands.

35


BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY RESORTS CANNONS BY-THE-SEA_ Luxury family type cottages. Finest private Gulf beach plus complete boating and fishing facilities on Sarasota Bay. Open all year. 6051 Gulf of Mexico Drive Longboat Key, Sarasota, Fla.

PAUL D. MILLER, Ohio State '33 BAHIA LODGE. Right on Everglades National Park (our front yard) and Pennekamp Underwater Reef State Park (our back yard). Skindiving • Sport Fishing • Birdwatching • Shelling • Sailing • Boating • Swimming • Loafing • Sun watching • Cot· tages with screened porches in a palm grove facing Florida Bay. Write for brochure: Bahia Lodge, Box 537, Tavernier, Florida 33070 Phone: 305-852-2361 Special 10% Discount for DU's and Their Familiesl

CONSULTING ENGINEERS E. L. TENNYSON, Carnegie '47 Consulting Urban Transportation Engineer Economic and Traffic Studies 931 Woodbrook Lane Philadelphia, Pa. 19150

,1\

FOREIGN MARKETS ERIK W. WENTGES, McGill '60 Are you opening up a market in Europe? Transport, Stevedoring, Storage, Insurance Apply to C. Steinweg, P. O. Box 1068, Rotterdam, Holland

JOHNNY PRICE, Western Reserve '42

BUILDING CONTRACTORS

MANUFACTURERS' REPRESENTATIVES R. P. SPEAR, Manitoba '48

H. C. KRANICHFELD, INC. Builders-Engineers 1 Cbase Manhattan Plaza, New York 10005 H. C. Kranichfeld, N. Y. '17

W. H . Kranichfeld, Colgate '44

Automotive and Industrial Parts and Equipment Full Coverage Throughout Western Canada Winnipeg, Manitoba 885 Wall Street

DESIGN AND CONSTRUCTION ASSOCIATES, INC.

PHOTOGRAPHERS

Turnkey Building Construction Sites Available Box 368, Somerville, New Jersey (201) 725·3528 Dick Green, Rutgers '60 & Jim Redington, PE, Cornell '63

GIFTS AND INCENTIVE PROGRAMS

VALLEY PHOTO SERVICE P. O. Box 191 North Anrora, Illinois 60542 H. A. GUSTIN, JR., Missouri '49

RANDY TOBUTT, Rochester '40 Executive Gifts, Sales Incentive Programs, Premiums Promotional representative for prestige lines such as Gorham, Fostoria, Longines, Lenox, etc. The Certif-A·Gift Company Apopka, Florida 32703 130 Park Avenue

HOSPITAL BABY PHOTOGRAPHER George Blair, Managing Partner, Miami '37 The Original and Largest Worldwide

HOSPITAL PICTURE SERVICE COMPANY Box ,. 700

"Better Pictures for Proud Parents" Red Bank, New Jersey Phone: (201) 741·1123

ADVERTISING AGENCIES RUDY F. MOELLER, Louisville '47

FINANCIAL PLANNING

Fessel, Siegfriedt & Moeller, Inc. Advertising Marketing, and Merchandising Specialists P. O. Box 1031 Louisville, Kentucky 40201

LAWRENCE EDWARD ZEHNDER, UCLA '52

NEIL R. BERNSTEIN, Carnegie '58 Golnick Advertising, Inc. Campaign prog,r ams for car dealers, bank and savings & loans 1123 N . Eutaw St. Baltimore, Md. 21201 301-728·6800

Estate Planning, Capital Budgeting, Financial Analysis and Investment Counseling. Write for objective help with your personal financial planning. Mail $1.00 for next 5 issues of zehnder's letter, a weekly look at possible impact of events in investments. 2013 Veteran Avenue Los Angeles, Calif. 90025 Telephone 213·479·5688

INVESTMENTS DATA PROCESSORS

H. PETER SCHAUB, JR., Dartmouth '44 HARRY P. SCHAUB, INC. Stocks-Bonds-Profit Sharing and Retirement Plans Personalized Investment Programs-Mutual Funds 744 Broad Street Newark 2, New Jersey

36

CHARLES F. L. WEBER, C.D.P., U<;:LA '50 455 Gentry St.

Certified Data Processor Hermosa Beach. Calif. 90254

DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY.

213·376·5077

January 1972

' I


I,

BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY

INSURANCE

ALLEN G. BUTLER, Bucknell '51 Butler Agency, Realtors

S. ROSS JOHNSON, C.L.U., British Columbia '52 Resident Vice President New York Life Insurance Company Life, Group, Accident, and Sickness 443 University Avenue Toronto 2, Ontario, Canada

7 DeForest Avenue

Summit, New Jersey

CRes tview 3-7700

RICHARD D. PEEGE, Louisville '57 LOUISVILLE MORTGAGE SERVICE COMPANY

L EO H . McLAUGHLIN, C.L.U., T oronto '39 General Insurance

FHA- GI- Conventional and Commercial Loans 101 West Broadway

Life Insurance Group Insurance Torcan General Insurance Agency, Ltd. 220 Bay Street, Room 702 Toronto, Ontario 368-471 5

215 South 5th St.

Louisville

4050 Westport Road

K entucky

G ERARD D. SNOVER, Union '56

ROBERT B. HUGHES, Michigan State '59 General Agen t- American Community Mutual Life-Health-Disability Programming, Estate Planning, Business Insurance, and Pension and Profit Sharing 501 S . Capitol Ave ., Suite 645 Lansing, M ich. 4893 3 (517)372-5148 Qualifying Member of Million Dollar Round Table

S NO V ER & CO ., I NC ., REALTORS Residen tial, Commercial and Industrial Real Estate Appraisals, Mortgage Loans Babylon, L . 1., N. Y .

193 E . Main Street

516 MOhawk 1-2500 -01 -02

JACK E. RUCK, Louisville '63 JACK F. HOLMES, Indiana '41

THE RUCK CO., REALTORS

Life Insurance for Business and Estate P lanning 3703 Washington Blvd., #100 Indianapolis, Ind. 46205 Telephone: 317路924-1264

Resident ial, Commercial and Industrial Real Estate Member of Photo Multiple Listing Service 48 50 Brownsboro Center Arcade

Louisville, Ky.

CO VERAGE CONSULTANTS, INC. General & Life Insurance

TED HOUGHTON, Lehigh '51

RICHARD T. COFFIN, Dartmouth '36

Ranch & Industrial Real Estate

342 Madison Ave.

New York, N. Y.

Phone : MU7-8520

897-2 525

Central Texas , Houston Area

Box 9

La Grange, Texas

968-3123

LANDSCAPE NURSERIES ALAN P. HOWELL, Cornell '50 L. BENJAMIN PALMER, Pennsylvania State '36 Rose Valley Nurseries, Inc. Plans, Plants, Plantings, Maintenance 084 S . Middletown R d. Media, Pennsylvania 19063 TRemont 2-7206 LOwell 6路2480

REAL EST A TE AND MORTGAGES

Real Estate & Insurance Our photo files cover 13 towns in Suhurban New Jersey, including Ridgewood, Ho-Ho-Kus, Saddle River, Glen Rock, and Wyckoff. 14 N . Franklin Tpk.

Ho-Ho-Kus, N. J .

201 444-6700

Listings on these directory pages are $16 per year for four lines. Additio nal lines are $2 each. Please send your listings

ROBERT E. RONEY, Syracuse '22 Roney Realty Company Residen tial and Commercial Real Estate Appraisals, Mortgage Loan Correspondent 627 W. Genesee St. Syracuse, New York 13 204

to Delta Upsilon Fraternity, P.O . Box 40108 , Indianapolis, Indiana

46240.

QUARTERLY .

Make

checks

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Upsilon


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TO MOVE WITH YOU I The DELTA UPSILON QUARTERLY is anxious to go with you when you move. You can save us a lot of trouble if you will notify the D elta Upsilon Alumni Records Center before you move! D etach the entire back cover to indicate any changes and mail it to the headquarters.

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suffix (if any)

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DETACH THIS ENTIRE PAGE AND MAIL TO DELTA UPSILON FRATERNITY HEADQUARTERS Post Office Box 40108 Indianapolis, Indiana 46240

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