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GAMMA BETA CHAPTER CHARTERED 30th SUPREME CHAPTER MEETS REPORT FROM PAKISTAN

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Page 1: 1964_4_Nov

GAMMA BETA CHAPTER CHARTERED

30th SUPREME CHAPTER

MEETS

REPORT FROM PAKISTAN

Page 2: 1964_4_Nov

FRATERNITY'S NEW OFFICERS

p

vj t

dent . "1 Into

B l<ap ~er8 frat ed t: h SJ •hi

'" Left to Right, Jepson, Steward, May, Henderson. Deimler and Metcalfe.

any· long

"]

The National Council I ~a!u ltnb

alon .'I' IllS .. ,

Pi Kappa Phi's Officers thro WilJ Usc not

B frat

M EL METCALFE, Alpha Gamma '25, was elected na­

tional president of Pi Kappa Phi at the 30th Supreme Chapter

Other N a tiona! Council offi­cers elected at the fraternity's national conclave are Charles Tom Henderson, Chi, treasurer; Kim Jepson, Alpha Theta, secre­tary; Jack Steward, Alpha Zeta, historian; James L. May, Jr., Omicron, chancellor; and John W. Deimler, Alpha Upsilon, past national president.

Brothers Metcalfe, Henderson and Jepson have served on the National Council before. Broth­er Metcalfe was elevated to his new post from that of historian. Brother Henderson moved from the position of chancellor to treasurer. And Brother Jepson was re-elected secretary.

Retiring from the National Councilor were J. AI Head, Alpha Zeta, who had served since 1962 as past national pres­ident, and chancellor Frank Hawthorne, Alpha Iota.

The new National Council members have varied back­grounds. Brother Henderson is assistant attorney general of Florida. A graduate of Stetson University, he was one of the prime movers in the creation of Beta Eta Chapter at Florida State University, served for sev­eral years as president of the fraternity's District VI and has been active in Pi Kapp alumni circles.

Brother Jepson, a graduate of Michigan State University, heads his own advertising and public relations firm in Lansing, Mich.

·onil1 hist. Before joining the NatibeeJI Council in 1962, he had it1's he~ president of the frater~ tot hea< District IX and had serve t of the several years as presiden ot!l' l:I Alpha Theta's Building CorP l>hi tion. dtJ!lte befo

Brother Deimler, a gra ret'S A of Drexel, is a manufacttl }lille Wor representative for a r;}aJ~}li!l• ~ar1 supplies firm in Phila e rnitY iatn Pa. He has served the frat~jofl!ll busi as national president, ~a gild , A treasurer, national historHl~ Jil' Ser" chairman of the Ritual an l94• signia Committee. stew· ~eJc~

New Council members e!llt~ WifE ard and May also bring a ~n fl I>re1 of interest and activitY: 1

05ts· B Kappa Phi to their counc~l ~rsitY his

Brother Steward is UniV tol'· ~ap of Oregon personnel direc ?V.I

(Continued on page 5) Sine

Page 3: 1964_4_Nov

T!:_e Editors' Column

PRESIDENT MEL

vALENTINE'S DAY holds more than the d usual significance for new national presi-ent Mel Metcalfe, Alpha Gamma '25.

. "That was the day Pi Kappa Phi really came 111to :my heart," he said. . l( Brother Metcalfe explained he pledged ~1

appa Phi's Alpha Gamma Chapter at the Um­Versity of Oklahoma in December 1924 on the fraternity's 20th birthday. And he was initiat­ed the following St. Valentine's Day. llh~ince that day, his relationship. to Pi Kappa

1 has been a life-long love affa1r. "The fraternity has meant more to me than

f11y other organization to which I have be­onged, even though I am a Presbyterian elder.

"I think spiritual values are the greatest ?alues of life, and because Pi Kappa Phi does ~rbue its men with spiritual principles it ranks

ong with my church," said Brother Metcalfe . . The fraternity, he said, has a great future 111 store. th "With the educational institutions expanding

.roughout the nation, Pi Kappa Phi definitely W1ll play one of its greatest roles in supplying ~s chapters for those institutions where we are ••ot located now." f Brother Metcalfe assumed leadership of the

,Jl:ll h~aternity after serving since 1961 as national lstorian.

~fs h A graduate of the University of Oklahoma, fot he lives now in Port Arthur, Tex., where he of thads his own insurance agency representing

rll' t. United States Fidelity and Guaranty Co. Jl ~e had been active in the work of Pi Kappa b h1 as a Texas alumnus and a district president

~~: efore joining the national council in 1961. l!le w After graduation at Oklahoma in 1927 he

0tked on a newspaper in the advertising de-1!:; raart:rnent for 18 years (He had studied journal­.! 1 b tn. at Oklahoma). He entered the insurance 1111d lls1ness in 1946. ~- 8 A Riwanian for 30 years, Brother Metcalfe

terved as president of the Port Arthur Club in .w· ~942 and as lieutenant governor of the Kiwanis it~ 1\r~}(as-Oklahoma District in 1947. He and his p1 !life, Eleanor, are members of Westminster

resbyterian Church in Port Arthur. j~ h· Brother Mel is fond of pointing out that both

!(Is Wife and their daughter are members of appa Alpha Theta Sorority.

8. Magic has been Brother Metcalfe's hobby 1lice he was 13 years old.

~C) V~lt\BER, 1964

Tlu~ Slur and LHnlp of

Pi liappa Phi

NOVEMBER 1964

~· VOLUME ~liX NUMBER 4

CONTENTS

30TH SUPREME CHAPTER MEETS

PAKISTAN, UNDERDEVELOPED NATION .

2

8 TO COLLEGE ABROAD . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 0

GAMMA BETA CHAPTER CHARTERED .. 12

CARTREF-Y -MOR MEANS HOME . . . . . . 14

TRAIL OF TRADITION-CHI CHAPTER . . . 16

ALUMNI BRIEFS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18

NEWS & NOTES .................... 20

LETTERS ........................... 26

CHAPTER ETERNAL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27

COVER

OLD DOMINION COLLEGE is the site of Pi Kappa Phi's newest undergraduate chapter, Gamma Beta-see page 12 MEL METCALFE, John Deimler, Glenn Brock and Congressman George Grant (left to Right n Cover Photo) played important roles in the fraternity's 30th Supreme Chapter in Mobile, Ala.-see page 2 STREET SCENE in downtown lahore, Pakistan is part of the country and culture Davidson Professor Charles E. Ratliff describes in a special report to The Star and Lamp-see page B

Durward Owen Editor-in-Chief

Paul R. Plawin Managing Editor

THE STAR AND LAMP is published quarterly by the National

Council of the Pi Kappa Phi Fraternity, 11 East Canal Street,

Sumter, S. C., in the months of February, May, August and

November. The life subscription is $15 and is the only farm of

subscription. EDITORIAL OFFICE: National Office of the Pi

Kappa Phi Fraternity, 11 East Canol Street, Sumter, S. C.

PUBLICATIONS OFFICE: 1901 Roane Street, Richmond 22, Vir­

ginia. Second-class postage paid at Richmond, Virginia.

Changes in address should be reported promptly to National

Office, 11 E. Canal St., Sumter, S. C. All material intended for publication should be in the hands

of the Managing Editor, 11 E. Canal St., Sumter, S. C., 50

days preceding the month of issue.

Page 4: 1964_4_Nov

30th Supreme Chapter

2

Assistant Executive Secretary Ted Scharfenstein And His Pi Kapp Birth· day Cake A Convention Surprise.

ELEGATES to Pi Kappa Phi's 30th ~~t preme Chapter in Mobile, Ala. in Aug et ..

completed a number of major pieces of fr~t a nity business, enthusiastically j oiD:e~ . In at' whirlwind schedule of pleasurable activities ted ranged by Mobile alumni and dem~nstr; pi once again the strength of fellowshiP o Kappa Phi. nd

About 250 Pi Kapp undergraduates aetl' alumni attended the five-day national cMon~iJe. tion at the Admiral Semmes Hotel in °dele'

Important business completed by the . nal gates included the establishment of a nat10.Jll" housing corporation, a reaffirmation of the 1

3r ..

portance to the fraternity of quality scholtlll' ship, tightening of financial reporting bY }lat dergraduate chapters, initiation of a studY t ost could result in creation of the permanent P val of National Chaplain and a general apPtt}le of continuing the growth and policies o fraternity. · 111

A kick-off banquet Sunday night offici~ opened the convention. · }10

Rep. George Grant, Omicron, (D., Al3:.)' VIet, hasn't missed a Supreme Chapter meeting Y was the featured speaker. da)'S

He reminisced about his undergraduate eJll .. in the fraternity and called for renewed tbe phasis on high scholastic standards among undergraduate chapters.

3te

"We must go forward in our undergrad.~ve· chapters toward higher scholastic achl ment,'' said Grant. . p~

Grant called his experiences in PI J{afl11g Phi among "the most valuable and interes in my life."

(Continued on page 4)

THE STAR AND LAMP OF p~ I

PI KAPPA

Page 5: 1964_4_Nov

bl I(Apps REGISTER-David Mielke, Ronnie Latham, Chve Evans (Left to Right) Register for 30th Supreme

11Pter with Mobile Alumnus Robert F. Singleton and Mrs. Ella Browning.

AT HEADTABLE-Glenn Brock, George Grant and Leo Pou Finish Dessert.

1\l' "ith. EPASE-Ted Scharfenstein Chats

i Kapps Outside Chapter Meet­ing Room.

1964

ROSE OF PI KAPPA PHI-Mrs. John Deimler, Left, and Mrs. Mel Metcalfe Are Serenaded at the Final Banquet.

BUFFET LINE-The Fox Brunsons (Foreground) and the Tom Coopers

Start Down the Buffet Table.

3

Page 6: 1964_4_Nov

Mobile Convention

(Continued from page 2)

4

Glenn P. Brock, president of the Gulf, Mo­bile & Ohio Railroad, was toastmaster at the banquet.

National President John W. Deimler, Alpha Upsilon, opened the formal session of the Su­preme Chapter the next morning.

In his final report as president, Deimler out­lined some of the achievements of Pi Kappa Phi in the past two years, including the attain­ment of tax-exempt status by the Pi Kappa Phi Memorial Foundation; development and growth of interest on a nationwide scale in the fraternity's Voluntary Dues Program; estab­lishment of the position of assistant executive secretary for alumni relations (a post to be filled) ; production of a 20-minute, color film on the fraternity and a roll of 52 active under­graduate chapters.

As the week wore on, constructive work came to the floor of the convention from the various committees assigned on Monday, and a number of Pi Kapp speakers commented to the delegates on various facets of the frater­nity.

Upsilon alumnus and chapter advisor Tom Krizan urged the undergraduates to create good alumni relations for their chapters, main­tain a high degree of scholarship, and work diligently to pledge the best men they can.

John Carroll, chairman of the Pi Kappa Phi Memorial Foundation, encouraged Pi Kapps to continue to support their fraternity, declaring, "I think that you will make a great change in the Memorial Foundation, and you will not take a long time to do it. I would cer­tainly hope that you would keep in mind that the fraternity's foundation looks to you now and eternally for help."

Leo D. Pou, Omicron, told the undergradu­ates, "Men like you have, to me, always been the most interesting men in the fraternity. You are the hope of the fraternity, with all your ideals, all your traditions.

"Take with you to alumni ranks these same loyalties, same goals, the same enthusiasm that you have today," he said.

The 30th Supreme Chapter wasn't all busi­ness, though.

The delegates and their wives and girlfriends trooped off to nearby Dauphin Island for a day of sight-seeing and beach partying, whooped it up at a rustic buffet in a pine-paneled barn at Bayley's Restaurant where rockin', rollin', rhythm and blues music shook the walls, and celebrated in black tie and tux at the final banquet-dance on Friday night.

And Pi Kapp wives got several grand tours of Mobile high spots as the guests of host Alabama Gulf Coast Alumni Association wives.

I

PI KAPP WATUSI

CHAMPION CHAPTER MEN

GULF COAST PARTY

THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI p~l

KAPPA

Page 7: 1964_4_Nov

~I

FRATERNITY AWARDS AWARDS for distin­

guished achievements by various members and chap­ters of the fraternity were presented at the A wards Luncheon highlighted by the speech of Brother John C. Wilson, executive vice President of the American Red Cross.

The award winners were: District President's Tro·

phy-Bob Kuhlman of To­ledo, Ohio, district presi­dent of Pi Kappa Phi's District IX.

President's Plaque for Best Chapter Publication­M:u Chapter's "Mu Muses."

Theron Houser Award for Outstanding Achieve­ment by a Chapter-Beta Gamma Chapter at the University of Louisville.

National Champion Chap­ters-Mu at Duke Univer­sity, Tau at North Carolina State and Beta Upsilon at the University of Virginia.

Master Chapters-Lamb-

BOB KUHLMAN

da at the University of Georgia, Alpha Epsilon at the University of Florida, Beta Phi at East Carolina College, Alpha at the Col­lege of Charleston, Beta Iota at the University of

~ar ~al Council Continued from cot•er 2)

Co~ graduate of Oregon State West Coast district and served Of ~~e, where he was a member in that post until his elevation Ch .n Kappa Phi's Alpha Zeta to the National Council this fo apter, Brother Steward is a year. tb l'll1.er traveling counselor of Brother Steward is a member

e fraternity (1949-50). of the Pacific Northwest Person-he.\ native of Grants Pass, Ore., nel Management Association, i~ lntered Oregon State College the Oregon State Personnel Offi­'~~a ~42. On April 4, 1943, he cers Association, the College and a~3

11nitiated into Pi Kappa Phi University Personnel Officers

for eft the same day to report Association, and the Oregon 8eabactive duty in the Navy as a State University Alumni Asso-

li' ee. ciation. He is a member of the to ~lowing the war, he returned Covenant Presbyterian Church '~~o regon State to complete in Eugene, Ore., and is a captain '~~ithk for his B.S. degree and, in the U. S. Air Force Reserve. one six other Pi Kapps, re- He is married to the former ~h·lled Alpha Zeta Chapter, Carolyn Cramer, whom he met ~a~ch had closed during the when they both worked on the

· student newspaper at Oregon ~r!n. 1957 he was named district State College. She is a member

Sldent for the fraternity's of Gamma Phi Beta Sorority. ~()

VEMBER, 1964

Toledo, Beta Chi at East Texas State and Psi at Cor­nell University.

In his speech, Brother Wilson urged Pi Kapp un­dergraduates to associate themselves with worthwhile projects of service in their communities.

"A fraternity can find many opportunities to do some things in their com­munity to . prove this fra­ternity is for preserving the prestige and greatness of America," he said.

"The fraternity is the youth of today. And to­day's young men are better equipped on leaving college than the youth of my day.

"Youth today is serious. It serves internationally " he said. '

"On the shoulders of fra­ternity men will rest in the future great responsibilities. We should give our mem­bers an early chance for service to our community."

They have a son, Scott, 6. Brother May is a native of

Mobile, Ala. He received both his B.S. degree and his law de­gree from the University of Ala­bama, where he was initiated into Omicron Chapter.

He attributes his first interest in Pi Kappa Phi to Brother Leo H. Pou, Omicron, who talked to the young Jimmie May before he left Mobile to enter the uni­versity.

From his sophomore year in the commerce school to his sen­ior year in law school, Brother May worked at the university hospital to pay his way-at first shoveling coal in the boiler room; finally graduating to the office as a bookkeeper.

(Continued on page 6)

5

Page 8: 1964_4_Nov

National Council (Continued from page 5)

He began his practice of law in Mobile in 1941 with the firm of McCorvey, McLeod, Turner and Rogers, which today is the firm of McCorvey, Turner, John­stone, Adams & May.

In 1942 he entered the Army, was assigned to the counter in­telligence corps of the military intelligence division of the Air Force and served in North Afri­ca and the Middle East.

A year after he left the serv­ice in 1945 Brother May mar­ried Patricia Booker of Mobile. They now have a daughter, Pa­tricia, 16, and a son, Jimmie, 12.

Brother May is a member of the Mobile, State and American Bar Associations. He has served as an officer of various Mobile civic organizations and helped

Mel Metcalfe Receives Applause of Delegates after His Election as Pres­

ident of the Fraternity.

organize the Goodwill Industr~;s in Mobile several years ago. Ile also is a director of the CoJtlf ~; munity Chest and Council 0 ''• Mobile County, Inc. and is ac· ~~ tive in the establishment of 11

"'t t ·on list public health and rehabilita I roe

center for handicapped personbs~ ~l' The Mays are members of t

Dauphin Way Methodist Chur?b~ 1

Brother May said his hobbled CA are fishing, hunting, golf anbe "doing yard work when in t 1

mood to do it." e co He has long been active in tf.

affairs of Pi Kappa Phi in ~~e n1! bama. He is a member of i 1 Alabama Gulf Coast Alurnnd 1

Chapter of the fraternity a~- ~L< has worked closely with the tr I

dergraduate Omicron ChaP GE through the years.

Looking For An Old Brother? ... Get:

ILL I

1~1

6

THE PI KAPPA PHI FRATERNITY

DIRECTORY

1964

The Pi Kappa Phi Directory 1964 Edition

This latest edition of The Fraternity Directory, 364 pages printed ill hardback and softback by Spaulding-Moss Co. of Boston, lists each mef11• ber of Pi Kappa Phi geographically and by chapter number. Find out who in your community are Pi Kapps .... Locate lost brothers from your Alma Mater ...• Order your Directory today .... Softbound, $2.50 .. · · Hardbound, $3.75.

Send check or money order or order C.O.D.

ADDRESS: Pi Kappa Phi NATIONAL OFFICE, 11 E. Canal St., Sumter, S. C.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------~~ USE THIS

ORDER BLANK

FOR YOUR

PI KAPPA PHI

DIRECTORY

TO: Natlonal Office, Pi Kappa Phi, 1 I E. Canal St., Sumter, S. C. MEMBERSHIP DIRECTORY ORDER

Please send me a directory as follows: ( ) Soft bound at $2.50

( ) Hard bound at $3.75

I agree to pay $ plus postage and handling charges when this directory is delivered. $ enclosed with this order.

NAME -----------------------ADDRESS CITY ZONE __ STATE

A 1o1

~

~~~ t

~I! G 4

1,~ ~ .. ,,

THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI p~l ~0

KAPPA

Page 9: 1964_4_Nov

1trie5 ,, IIe CoJJI· il of s ac· of 11

atioll sonS· f tbe llrcb· bbieS

and 1 the

n the ,A Ill'

' the umni and

e un· ;tpter

'

p~l

~d A Job?

EMPLOYMENT CO-ORDINATORS p· 'For t h e benefit of brothers w h o may be seeking employm en t, a.: l<appa P hi has compiled a list of e mp loymen t co~ordinators who

• eager to help . p l<ot every state is included yet but t h e list is growing. It is t h e

t-~tel' n i ty ' s goal io reach in to a ll 50 states i n order to serve fu11y. to .r You're interested i n securing a j ob carefully prepare five u8Dies of a resume about yourself a n d m a il t hem t o on e of the m en ,..,ted below. Don't forget to include persona l h istor y, emp loym ent r0t 0 rd, education a l experie n ce, military a n d marital status, r eason

seeking a new position , a n d type work desired. ~LABAMA

Edward E. Beason, 2126 Seventh Ave., S., Birmingham 3, Ala . CALIFORNIA

l<eith A. Johnson, 257 St. Joseph Ave., Long Beach, Calif. ~. E. Mumford, 1940 Franciscan Way, Apt. 318, Alameda, Calif.

COLORADO

Paul M. Hupp, 719 Majestic Bldg., Denver 2, Col.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

~~~ren E. Harpe r, Apt. 202, 5412 Eighty-Fifth Ave., Lanham,

~lORIDA ~ichard J. O'Mara, Room 222, Caldwell Bldg., Tallahassee, Fla.

GEORGIA

Jesse J. Thompson, Suite 320, 3390 Peachtree Rd., N.E., Atlanta, Ga.

ILLINOIS

Frederick H. Jost, 8709 Village Place, East St. Louis, Ill . ~~DIANA

1 Donald S. Payne, 106 Sunset Lane, West Lafayette, l'ndiana

ow A

~a~ne R. Moore, 430 Lynn Avenue, Ames, Iowa ( av,d C. Dailey, 3928 55th, Des Moines, Iowa 4NsAs Will· i •am Simpson, Maryville, Kansas

ENrucKy

l William T. Ransdell, 6844 Greenmeadow, Louisville, Ky. 0lJISIANA

William D Meadows, 1816 St. Charles Ave., New Orleans, La. ~ICiiiGAN .

Jerrold E. Timpson, 728 Keeler Bldg., Grand Rapids, Mich.

~ISSISSIPPI ~Obert T. Lowrance, P. 0 . Box 2006, Jackson, Miss.

~EBRASKA ~Floyd E. Mason, Jr., 130 S. Rose Lane, Columbus, N&b.

EW YORK

~Obert H. Crossley, Room 1500, 250 Park Ave., New York 17, 8. Y.

~ obby Thomas, 155 E. 34th St., Apt. 19M, New York 17, N. Y. O~Tii CAROLINA ~·

0 •chard L. Young, 2021 Ashland Avenue, Charlotte, N. C. ~10

0 G~orge Neimire, Jr., 4184 Elbern Avenue, Columbus, 0. ~EGON ~au( Lansdowne, c/o Eugene Hotel, 222 E. Broadway, Eugene,

reg on

'!flNSYLVANIA F

1 J · hArthur Tucker, 1518 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, Penn,

4° n L. Pottenger, c/o Westinghouse Elec. Corp., 306 4th

10 ~e., Box 1017, Pittsburgh 30, Pa.

lJTii CAROLINA l! ~Obert R. Scales, Jr., 22 Victory Avenue, Greenville, S. C. ~NESSEE or· ~ '"er E. Cathey, 694 Holly Street, Memphis 12, Tenn. ISCONSIN

;eorge C. Frederick, 6716 West Howard, Milwaukee 20, Wis. 'ou1t~tnnj in other geographic areas are needed to assist. Also, it ~'Q' be advantageous to have additional alumni to assist in the "tt lholready covered. Any Pi Kapp interested and able should con-

e Executive Secretary at the National Office in Sumter, 5. C.

1964

~MU MUSES'

TOP PAPER

· ~"-~ ' ~\'\) ~\~

~\ \) ~t. ~·\..,e ~

/..'

~a ir;:::;. c;_,-. ' "'

I

~ .

~

7

,.,.,\...,. • ..Jn ........ ~,.,.. " ' 14#·~'>

~ ... -,._ ... ~ PI KAPPS WIN AT THE POllS

MU Chapter's publication Mu Muses has won the P resident's Plaque for the best chap­

ter publication in Pi Kappa Phi for 1963-64. The President's Plaque is awarded each year

to the undergraduate chapter having the most outstanding chapter publication in the opinion of judges selected by Pi Kappa Phi.

Mu's Bob Sheheen accepted the plaque at an awards luncheon at the 30th Supreme Chapter at Mobile, Ala. in August. Thus it traveled from Alpha Iota Chapter at Auburn University to the walls of Mu at Duke University.

Editor of the winning publication was Broth­er Ken Wertz.

Judging is based on content, with no chapter penalized for the medium used, and general ap­pearance and journalistic excellence. The con­tent is expected to be dedicated to the enlighten­ment of the chapter 's alumni.

Judge for the 1963-64 award was Orville E. Priestley, Alpha Gamma, publisher of the Las Cruces (New Mexico) Sun-News.

Runners-up to Mu's Mu Muses were in the following order: The Alota of Alpha Iota Chap­ter at Auburn, The Woodbi1·d of Alpha Xi Chapter at Brooklyn Tech, The Cavalier of Beta Upsilon Chapter at the University of Vir­ginia, and the Beta B eta By-Line of Beta Beta Chapter at Florida Southern University and Kappa Kapers of Kappa Chapter at the Univer­sity of North Carolina, tied for fifth place.

7

Page 10: 1964_4_Nov

A Special Report

8

PAKISTAN Actualities Are Harsh

In Underdeveloped Nation By Dr. Charles E. Ratliff, Epsilon '48

Dr. Ratliff

(Editor's Note: Dr. Ratliff, an eco­nomics professor at Davidson College, is on a three-year leave of absence from the college while serving as an economics professor at Forman Chris­tian College in Lahore, Pakistan for the Methodist Board of Missions. Brother Ratliff, his wife, Mary Vir­ginia, and their three children have been in Pakistan since October 1963. Before they left the U.S., Editor-in­Chief Durward Owen asked Brother Ratliff to share his experiences and comments on life in Pakistan with The Star & Lamp readers. In this, his first report from Pakistan, Broth­er Ratliff writes of his initial im­pressions of the Eastern nation that rests on the northern border of India. )

F OR a full comprehension of the situatiof­here in the underdeveloped economy of Pa~)'

stan one must live in the culture, not oil Jl seeing it, but experiencing, feeling, and eve smelling it. d

We had read and listened to accounts aile looked at pictures of the situation, but the~­proved quite inadequate in conveying the a ~~iliM. ~

We have experienced two types of shoc.Jl First was the shock of being plopped down 1 f an entirely different culture in just a matted is hours after leaving New York. The secoJ:! ldY that we have been shocked as to how qu1c -.N we have become accustomed to things-bOat quickly things that appeared so abnormal for first came to appear somewhat normal, Jl' example : stepping over an open sewer to e of ter a shop, or even standing on one side oP the ditch to deal with a hawker squatted eP the opposite side with his wares, and worrt J11 gracefully scooping up fresh cow dung ~r~g the street with their bare hands and deposJtl it in baskets balanced on their heads. Jl'le

We have not and do not expect to beco·c}l conditioned to the poverty and squalor in wh1

11d so. ma~y,. particularly the refugees, live-:a pS th1s Withm the shadows of palatial manS10

of thC!se few who are ultra wealthy! tbe While in one sense it may be said that. jS

country is not clean, in another sense It very clean.

THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI KAPPA p~l ~Oy I

Page 11: 1964_4_Nov

Jl [-

1 Jl

d ,e

,. Jl ,f s 1 II 1t r I' ,f Jl !1 !1 g

e 11 d

e s

f q~ing to the lack of adequate aclhties for water purification

and sewage disposal, for exam­P~e, there are sanitary and hy­~~nic problems. But, in contrast 0

1 h the United States where a lJ.ed encounters junk piles, trash,

lJ. litter that to a large extent ~anifest our wasteful consump­Ion, here the countryside is ~~nerally neat and clean. Sweep­is 8 abound, but the major factor andthat practically every twig th scrap of paper, as well as toe dung, are gleaned by people u Whom these things are val­foable enough to justify the ef-

rt. I>; l'he major task for which I u;s11 ~nvited here. was to he~p set ~0 "v1A courses m economics at co rrnan, a 100-year-old mission lJ~l.ege that is affiliated with the Pl. 1Versity of Panjab and is sup­b~ed With some of its professors Pr the Methodist and United

esbyterian churches. Pt 'I'he university has now ap­th oved our application to offer gi~se courses and we shall be­te the MA program in Sep­l ~her. During this first year Pt ave .been busy planning and teae~~nng for this program, tr ~ lllg, studying Urdu, and thf'ng to learn something about dit~ developing economy. In ad­or~on to teaching economic the­ter at Forman, I taught for one tuttn at the university's Insti-

e of Education and Research,

Badshahi Mosque in Lahore

a teacher training institution, and for several weeks at Kin­naird College, a woman's college similar to Forman. (The girls, who had lost their regular teach­er, were most appreciative of my filling in. They even hon­ored me with a surprise party and gifts of Pakistani crafts.)

The teaching here has truly been a new experience ! Among the undergraduates are some really good students who are eager to learn, but most of them seem to be only casually con­cerned and then only with the

material covered in the some­what out-of-date syllabus.

I think an important reason for this lack of motivation and poor attitude toward study is the examination system used in this country. The paper or ex­amination, which is set by a professor. who is not teaching that particular course, consists of 10 broad questions, of which five must be attempted: 40 per cent is passing, and the students may walk out if they consider the questions to be too difficult. In all probability they will be allowed to take another exam­ination.

- When I arrived last fall, there was a:n announcement on the bulletin board giving the date of the examination for the "walk­out" students of the past sum­mer. Soon I gained first-hand knowledge: in the December house examinations held at For­man a large portion of my eco­nomic theory students staged a walk-out. They claimed the ques­tions were too difficult and too different (some questions re­quired thinking rather than rote). For them I simply sub­mitted grades of zero, but I was directed by the authorities to give another exam. I did it "un­der protest."

~ew Lucas Student Center at Forman Christian College.

Another factor in the situa­tion, and one that pervades all aspects of life here, is the almost

(Continued on page 25)

,~1 ~() ... EMBER, 1964 9

Page 12: 1964_4_Nov

TO COLLEGE ABROAD

Near the Habsburg Palace balcony (backgrou~d) from which Hitler harangued the Viennese after h•s troops marched into Austria in 1938, three U.S. students "!lse a map to chart an after-class tour of the Austrian

capital.

1 0

by boat, bus, plane, train ..... or thumb

,l s U. S. colleges braced themselves for r0e~0 ft ord enrollments this fall, some 20, American students were on their way:-b! boat, plane, train, bus and thumb-to unrve sities in 60 nations around the globe. nt

The exodus swells by an average 14 per ce S annually, about twice the growth rate of vi rs colleges. This year, our wandering s.ch~ ~es will be knitting their brows in such exotic ctti b as Baghdad (Al-Hikma University), in su~t romantic lands as India (for example, ) Visva-Bharati University, in Santiniketanp~ and in such ancient and honored cultural ca itals as Paris (for instance, at the Sorbonne~

The ambition to study abroad isn't ne among Americans. In colonial times, wealt~,~ Southern planters, disdaining New Englan us colleges, sent their sons over the dangero b Atlantic to European universities. All throu~e the 1800's, a final year of study in Euro dO put the finish on many a bright, well-to-young American. s-

But today our roving scholars aren't neceu­sarily listed in the Social Register. Mass ed J'l' cation, cheaper travel, scholarships and geed erally lower living costs overseas have helP change that. pd

Although specialized graduate study as. postgraduate research still draw many 1]. ·oJI students abroad, the most dramatic revolutJ d­in foreign study has been among underg~ars uates. At least 6,000 of them-mostly juni~i­and some sophomores-will attend foreign u re versities this school year. Their numbers t rs growing so fast that many U. S. educa 0 d­predict that study abroad will soon be a ~tail ard feature of American college education·

p~l THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI KAPPA

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Page 13: 1964_4_Nov

What motivates these young­sters? Wanderlust, perhaps? A Youthful yen for freedom? Much !tlore important, professors say, ~s the challenge today's students lld in dealing with new prob­

letrns, unfamiliar languages and s range cultures. And when our iar-flung scholars return home t\ finish college, they usually sa e their studies much more eriously, and many go on to

advanced degrees. One reason for their fresh

lnotivation is that they have been up against the "cream" of foreign students. European ed­~cational systems, for example, c~ rigorous examinations to de­s 1 e what types and levels of chools the student may attend.

f A. net result is that a mere four to seven per cent-a picked {W-of all 18-to-21-year-old \7 Uropeans get to attend a uni­l ersity. In contrast, U. S. col­Xges enroll 24.7 per cent of all .,...tnericans in the same age <;t'oup.

Our overseas students also 0 :nd. little "spoon feeding" in Y • qor~1gn universities. Teaching is

:-

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Utte specialized. "Survey" j0Urses summarizing broad sub­sects are all but unknown. In­ttead, European professors lec­aure in fine detail only on special 1

8Pects of their topics-and tha:re it to students to round out

e1r knowledge through inde­~en~ent research. In Europe, the t a:v1ng is, "know ledge is not aught but searched for."

8 A.s best he can, the European

bt~~ent selects those courses he t"h !eves will prepare him for in e long oral and written exam­th ations he must pass, after 0

ree or four years' work, in istder to get his degree. There ll no homework, and there are tn~ d quizzes, question periods, e~d -term or even, in some cases, It . -of-term examinations to t~lde and measure student prog­"ss.

' .\Does all this mean that the Of~!ican un~ergraduate is out lut Is depth m Europe? Abso­~ ely not, say U. S. professors. arut .he does need language prep­s at~on and, in nearly all cases, ll~ect.al guidance of the kind now 80 °Vtded in many U. S.-spon-

ted foreign study programs. Such programs try to "bridge

~I ~ 0 VEMBER, 1964

American and German students chatting in this modern student cafe­teria can look out over the medieval town of Freiburg, Germany to the 13th century cathedral tower and the hills of the Black Forest bey-::md. In­stitute students at the University of Freiburg live in private homes and Ger-

man student dormitories.

the gap" between American and foreign universities so that U. S . students can harmoniously fit a year or a semester of solid over­seas study into their college ca­reers. Intensive language train­ing, orientation, arrangements for rooms and meals, academic guidance, special instruction and examinations are among the services the better programs usually furnish.

This programmed approach is the prime cause of the dramatic e~pansion in foreign study. It has even given rise to an un­usual nonprofit U. S. institution devoted exclusively to study abroad-the Institute of Euro­pean Studies, now the largest sponsor of overseas academic programs for American under­graduates. Headquartered at 35 East Wacker Drive in Chicago, the Institute has four European university centers-in Paris, Vienna, Madrid, and Freiburg, West Germany-and currently assists 15 U. S. colleges and uni­versities in conducting their own programs in Europe. Th~ Institute's purpose is to

"immerse" the American stu­dent as deeply as possible in a European university and a Eu­ropean culture. Resident staffs assist students from every re­gion of the United States in preparing for European univer­sity courses in many major

fields. To round out American course requirements, European professors associated with the Institute conduct s1pecial courses that may not be taught at the appropriate level within the Eu­ropean university.

To afford students maximum familiarity with Europe and the local culture, the Institute houses them in private homes or Euro­pean student dormitories. Dur­ing university vacations, staff members conduct non-credit field trips with itineraries closely re­lated to subjects taken up in lecture courses.

The student contemplating overseas study should begin pre­paring early, even in high school the Institute advises. The sub~ jects to be concentrated on are the language and the historical and social background of the country in which the student hopes to study.

The cost of most programs is surprisingly low-actually in line with fees at private U. S. colleges. A year of study in Eu­rope may cost from $2,400 to $2,600, including round-trip ocean passage, tuition, room board, special language training and field trips. One-semester programs typically cost about $1,600.

The concensus of U. S. pro­fessors is that the results can be striking, academically.

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Page 14: 1964_4_Nov

GAMMA BETA

Pi Kapp's

Newest

Chapter

Gamma Beta Chapter House

12

President Mel Metcalfe Presents Gamma Beta Charter to Archon Lin BeverlY

GAMMA BETA Chapter of Pi Kappa Phi was char­

tered October 10 at Old Do­minion College in Norfolk, Vir­ginia.

Past National President John Deimler was installing officer, and an initiating team from the University of Virginia's. Beta Upsilon Chapter initiated 26 new Gamma Beta men into the fra­ternity.

Pi Kappa Phi's newest chapter began as a colony of the fra· ternity, the first formed by ana· tional fraternity at Old Domin· ion College.

The idea for a chapter at the co-educational college crystal­lized in April1963, when Execu­tive Secretary Durward Owen met with a group of interested Norfolk area Pi Kapp alumni and seven Old Dominion stu­dents led by Philip Meador, son of one of the alumni, to discuss formation of a Pi Kapp colony on the campus.

Colony Formed

As a result of that meeting, Kappa Phi Colony was formed. Alumni Jim Arrington and John Allsbrook, both Beta Upsilon Pi Kapps, became alumni advisors to the colony. By May, Old Do­minion College officials had ap­proved the status of the colony as a recognized campus frater­nity.

Members of the colony worked through the summer to bolster the group, and with the begin·

ning of the next school terlll the colony moved into its first hoy~j; Jack Wilson, Alpha, an Eng 18 e professor at the college, becSill Kappa Phi's faculty advisor. to

Membership continued 11 grow through a vigorous ;ui program and the colony qutck l gained a respected and proJ11e nent place on the campus seen r'

By the end of last surnrn~~ an alumni corporation had ... ~epP chartered by local Pi ~l:l 'II alumni for the chapter. The Jl~d chapter moved into larger. l:l ll more attractive quarters Ill se three-story Norfolk town hoUJcS in September just two weer· before the initiation and chll tering weekend in October.~ 1,

National President Mel e d calfe visited the new chapter a:r. was featured speaker at the cb tering banquet.

Charter Members

Charter members of Garnr!1: Beta Chapter are Philip :Mea~~1: Samuel Bryant, Thomas ce ron, Donald Dixon, LawreJ'lne Crum, Linwood Beverly, Eug~er Nicholls, William Bright, Wl:l es Sharp, Norman Chalmers, Jar!1il· Peterson, William Goodwin, ~ll liam Hampshire, James MjJn5' John Young, Darryl Col ~c~ Joseph Huntzinger, ChesleY

01alt

Ginnis, Paul Moses, David be/ Richard Percefull, Karl RJo }!Jl son, Thomas Sharpe, 0 nd Watts, William Jenkins l:l Wayne V eryzer.

THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI KAPPA ptl'

Page 15: 1964_4_Nov

OLD DOMINION COLLEGE 0 LD Dominion College, formerly a the Norfolk College of William dnd Mary, was established as an in-0~Pendent state institution by action

19 the Virginia General Assembly in

A 62 and received its new name in Ugust of that year.

t· 'l'he name "Old Dominion" is par­;c~larly appropriate for the desig­~t~on of a Virginia college, for Vir-

!rlY ~nla is proud of its heritage dating th the 16th and 17th centuries and ill e close ties with the English Com­

.be onwealth. ee• th Established in 1930 as a branch of ish I'V~ College of William and Mary in :Jle ~ :liiamsburg, the Norfolk college en­

r0 led 160 students its first year. a here were six full-time instructors ~d seven part-time instructors who

6 llltnuted from Williamsburg that ~st. Year. Even earlier, in 1919, ex­thnsion classes had been offered in

1 e afternoon and evening for teach­

~s and adult study groups.

['Ill

~I

~ 'From the handful of students who

1;Ported for classes in September rh~o. the college has grown steadily.

1 Is September, 6,378 persons were

~~~~lied. The faculty today number

a 'l'oday Old Dominion College offers j~ ~our-year collegiate program; a ~rnlor college and terminal collegiate h ogram; a Technical Institute pro­S am of a terminal nature under the ~~hool of Engineering and a graduate h ogram leading to the master's de-

ee.

th 'l'he college is fully accredited by an~ Southern Association of Colleges li Schools, and the Board of Educa­tio~ of the Commonwealth of Vir­lionla. It is a member of the Associa-

n of Virginia Colleges. s· ta lnce. 1953, the college has been en-

~fed m an expansion program in ~la h curriculum and the physical 'ndnt. A Technical Institute Building tat t~e Hughes Library were dedi­i~&'ed m 1959. The Fine Arts Build­~~ . Was completed in 1960 and the ~a~~ess Administration, Physics and ~~s ematics buildings, in 1963. Rog­~a IIau, the college's first dormitory, lr 8 occupied this September. The ~:t of the Engineering School build­'nds will be completed by December the construction will start soon on

College's Campus Center.

~() V EMBER 1964

Administration Building

From Past . ..

Hughes Library

To Present

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Page 16: 1964_4_Nov

Cartre{- Y-Jvfor

Jvfeans

Honte

WALTER R. Jones, Alpha Delta '24, lives today in what he describes as "a big old

house" on a big, seven-acre place amidst the picturesque landscape of British Columbia in Canada.

Before his retirement several years ago, Brother Jones was chief staff engineer for Lockheed Aircraft Corp. in California.

Now he spends almost all his time work­ing around his hilltop home and planning an around-the-world trip with his wife.

Brother Jones has long been an interested member of Pi Kappa Phi and has always con­tributed to the fraternity's development. In reply to a Christmas message he received from former national president W. Bernard (Bernie) Jones last year, he described his retirement life and noted he kept up with Brother Bernie by reading The Star & Lamp.

Because Brother Jones' Canadian life is rich with interest for all members of Pi Kappa Phi (It might even make some Pi Kapps envious), Brother Bernie offered to share his letter with the brotherhood. Brother Jones and His Welsh Terriers

14 THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI KAPPA ptl'

doi bo, doi est: ,, llre ho}: sar con !l"ar llte Ina· ab0 and cup dut llai Diu: and

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Page 17: 1964_4_Nov

II'

I

A VIEW FROM WALTER JONES' HOUSE

J Iiere are exerpts from Brother ones' report to Brother Bernie

Sn his life at Cartref-Y -Mor on :a e~~nus Drive in Saanich ton,

l'Ibsh Columbia: ''Y . ou ask to know, what am I

~Oing with myself? And with 0Wed head I must admit to

doing nothing but keeping this establishment going.

"In pre-retirement days I had ~tepared myself for numerous

8 °bbies which would be neces­

c ary to preserve me from ennui, 0llle der Tag. Of these none but

ll"ardening has received any ap­~eciable attention. I would esti­abate that gardening consumes

out 75 per cent of my time, ;nd. most of the balance is oc­duP!ed with various maintenance ll U~1es involving carpentering, a1nting and the less complex ~lurnbing and electrical repairs n,~ improvements.

li You will find it hard to be­a. eve, but this is a big place (7 '1\rcres) and a big old house. It 1' as in a frightful state of dis-epair when we took over and it

~ 0 V EMBER, 1964

has taken lots of hard work to get it back in shape. I think it is now fairly presentable, but there is no end to the improve­ments I keep thinking up. But I enjoy myself and seem to keep in good health.

"I have a small boat with out­board motor, but seldom use it. I have an accordion, can't really play it, but fiddle with it oc­casionally. And I fail completely to keep up with the continuous flow of foreign and domestic papers, magazines and books. Several attempts to become fluent in the Mother Tongue have come to naught except for the usual salutations and not forgetting Iechyd Da, which pre­cedes a libation.

"I should add that the garden was non-existent when we ar­rived here--just a mass of weeds, brambles and other wild growth. Merely eradicating this stuff was an Herculean task. I have done all the landscaping and practically all the planting myself, with rock walls (the

rock being found on the prop­erty) being constructed by a local Indian (Red) .... Took him over a year-including nu­merous absences occasioned by alcoholic indisposition.

"If I sent you a picture of the layout pre-1957, you wouldn't recognize it. At the moment it is a blaze of colour-thousands of daffodils, rock plants and shrubs in bloom. I am told it is the show place of this area, but that I regard as somewhat of an exaggeration.

"There has been no traveling of any consequence since our vi~it to Europe in '59. However, thmgs are now cooking in this depart111ent. I'm not too sure what the dish will be but it looks very much like an around-the­world trip (not a "cruise"). At one time it appeared that it would be a westward journey but an eastward direction is no~ in the ascendancy. At the mo­ment, but subject to violent change at any moment, my guess is that we would push off about the end of August by train to Montreal, then by Cunard to the United Kingdom. A few weeks in the British Isles and perhaps a short trip on the Continent· thence by Pacific & Orient through the Mediterranean and Suez to Australia and New Zea­land, with numerous whistle­stops at such outlandish places as Gibraltar, Naples, Port Said, Aden, Bombay, Penang, Singa­pore, etc. Thence home via Suva and Hawaii. We might stop off for a couple of weeks or so at Bombay, and/or Sydney. Know of any interesting Pi Kapps in any of these places?

"The rain having ceased, I must repair to my gardening chores, but I trust I have given you a satisfactory explanation of how I dispose of my time."

1 s

Page 18: 1964_4_Nov

Trail of Tradition

HEN Pi Kappa Phi's Chi Chapter at Stetson Univer­

sity was installed in May 1921, it marked the initial entry of the fraternity into the state of Florida.

Pi Kappa Phi became the sec­ond national fraternity to be established on the DeLand, Fla. campus.

The event also marked the culmination of nearly 10 years of activity of the chapter as a local fraternity.

The roots of Chi Chapter were planted during Stetson's spring term of 1912, when University President Dr. Lincoln Hulley called into his office students

Rupert J. Lottgstreet and Frank-lin M. Goodchild. Stetson, he told them, needed a third fra· terr1ity on campus, and if they would proceed with the organi­zation of a new fraternal group, they would have his hearty co-

• operation. Longstreet and Goodchild, to­

gether with fellow students Rob­ert S. Bly and Arius B. Prather, mulled over the president's sug­gestion. They agreed it was a good idea. And they further agreed among themselves to work on the project during the summer, eyeing the following fall as the time to complete their plans and charter their new fra­ternity.

So the fraternity began. It was nan1ed Phi Beta Psi. It grew slowly at first, but as it endured the test of time, the brothers of the new group de­veloped the favor and good will of the faculty and student body of Stetson.

The fraternity maintained a high standard of admission; stressed quality scholarship among its members. And the brothers played a prominent part in the athletic and campus life of the university.

During World War I, the brothers of Phi Beta Psi "did

1 6

their bit in every way," as a writer in The Star and Lamp of October 1921 noted. It was dur­ing this period that the chapter's alumni group's plans to buil<l a chapter house had to be aban­doned. By 1921 and its installa­tion in Pi Kappa Phi, however, the chapter's new house plans had been revived.

Phi Beta Psi's alumni, by 1921, numbered over 100. Most of them were located throughout Florida, but many then lived in other parts of the nation.

Also in 1921, Pi Kappa Phi's new Chi Chapter had its war heroes: Brother Carl Junius Ericson had lost an arm in France; Brother Earl B. Jacob­sen had been gassed in a sub-

Phi Beta Psi Badge

marine; and Brother Almer M. Felton of the Marines, had been wounded at Belleau Wood. All were installed as charter mem­bers of Pi Kapp's Chi Chapter.

By the time of its installation, Chi had become a well estab­lished social organization at Stet· son. Its members included the leading students of the univer­sity. It had its own house, a loyal alutnni organization and a val­ued fraternal spirit. And its meml>ers rated high in scholar· ship, athletics and other cam-

• • • pus actiVIties. On Friday night, May 21,

1921, 18 undergraduates of the Phi Beta Psi Fraternity were inducted into the bonds of Pi

Kappa Phi and thus became tbe charter members of Chi ChaP .. ter.

They were William E. Roe .. buck, William Clintock Graham, Paul Spaulding Williams, By­ron Lee Turner, Kirby Williatn Blain, Michael Joseph Shultfd Ernest Hatcher Dickey, Haro Alfred Schuliger, Joseph J.;eo Anderson, Stanley Dayton Sloan, George Kerfoot Bryant, Thomas J. A. Reidy, Richard M. BakeS' Walter E. Wilkins, James · Day Jr., and Ericson, Jacobsen and Felton. They came fr~tn hometowns in New York, W~s­consin, Illinois, Indiana, y~r­ginia, South Carolina, Flortdad New Jersey, Kentucky an Pennsylvania.

On the following afternooJl' 15 alumni of the old local frB" ternity came to DeLand to b~­come members of Pi Kappa Phl· Founder Longstreet, by no'W 9

resident of Daytona Beach, Fl8 ·'

was among them. Next the new Pi Kapps drove

20 miles to Sanford, Fla. where the installation banquet was held at the Hotel Montezuma· The banquet was a Pi KaPPa Phi event in every detail. .

11 According to an account 1

the Star and Lamp at the tirn~' "The dining hall was approprl .. ately decorated with the fra .. ternity colors and the flower was in evidence throughout the hal~ In addition a red rose was fo~n

11 at every place. The decorati~0 scheme was carried out evenpbi the refreshments, Pi Kappa d gold and white ice being serve with diamond shaped cake.

"The event was full of full from the start and there wal an abundant overflow of reatl enthusiasm. Everybody was Pi Kapp."

Yet another milestone in tbe history of Pi Kappa Phi was re; corded that day. Preceding td banquet, the newly instal e

THE STAR AND LAMP O F PI KAPPA p tfl

Page 19: 1964_4_Nov

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ALUMNI!!! Pi Kappa Phi

Is Counting On You

ALL alumni members of Pi Kappa Phi have received a request for contributions to the

£964-65 Voluntary Dues Program, and response o the program continues to be favorable.

But this year's voluntary dues program is not over. It's still very much underway.

Pi Kapps Claude Carr, Alpha Eta, president 0f. Rawlings Sporting Goods Co., and Herman lbpp, Delta, vice president of Liberty Life In­surance Co., are directing the 1964-65 fund campaign.

Says Brother Carr: "My Fraternity and Yours, Pi Kappa Phi, gave me many wonderful experiences as an undergraduate. As pleasant as these memories are, I have not always been Vble to properly recognize my debt. When the

oluntary Dues Program was first presented, I eagerly forwarded my check, along with many 0ther alumni. Each year since I have watched the progress of this program and am proud of lny Pi Kappa Phi brothers for their loyalty and &'enerosity.

. "This year I have an opportunity to not only &'lve but also to assist the Fraternity's leader­Ship in co-directing this nationwide drive. I assure you of: ( 1) Your Fraternity's need of ~ontinued and increased financial support from lts graduate members; (2) The Fraternity's Worthiness of your support.

"Here is your opportunity to participate. I

encourage you to respond by forwarding a check for your share of your Fraternity's fi­nancial needs."

And Brother Hipp says: "Our Fraternity is completing its 60th year, and continues to pro­vide young men the same fraternal opportuni­ties you and I enjoyed. It provides an op­portunity for spiritual and character develop­ment and the creation of lifelong friendships.

"As never before it needs your financial sup­port to further its traditions of excellence and contribution to the youth of our nation. This dues program is entirely voluntary; however ~t was. your volu!ltary act that brought yo~ mto P1 Kappa Ph1. Now you can continue this self-imposed obligation by supporting your Fraternity in this program.

"I thank you for your support in th~ past and look forward to your continued interest and overt participation."

Funds from the Voluntary Dues Program are used to further the development and programs of Pi Kappa Phi. The publication of a new pledge manual, chartering of new undergradu­ate chapters and production of a motion picture for the fraternity are recent examples of proj­ects completed with voluntary dues funds.

If you haven't mailed your voluntary dues for 1964-65 to Pi Kappa Phi yet, why not do it soon. You'll be doing a lot for your fraternity.

tuuunnuunuuuuuumuuuuuuuuumuuuulllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll

~llttnni members of Chi Chap­~eF tnet at the hotel to organize 1\s lorida Pi Kappa Phi Alumni

80ciation.

8 'I'he alumni there agreed that llch an organization would be

~ 0 VEMBER ' 1964

the best way to keep the alumni in active touch with the local chapter at Stetson, and further that this would be an effective way for the development of alumni chapters and for the ex-

tension of Pi Kappa Phi into other Florida colleges.

May 1921 in Florida marked th~, continuation of Pi Kappa Ph1 s progress on the trail of tradition.

1 7

Page 20: 1964_4_Nov

Presbyterian College ... JAMES W. MILAM is vice president of in charge of sales for the Massachusetts Mohair Plush Co. in New York City. Milam, his wife Marjorie and their daugh­ter, Kathy, live in Ridgewood, N .J. Furman University . . . FRANCIS M. HIPP, president of Liberty Life Insurance Co., received an honorary doctor of laws degree from the Uni­versity of South Carolina at com­mencement exercises last June. He was cited as a leader in educational efforts ... STUART B. SKADDEN has been commissioned a second lieu­tenant in the Air Force. He was to be assigned as a weapons controller . . . WALTER SIGMAN, '38, is a real estate broker for the Sunland Co. in Wilmington, N.C. Sigman reports he has a daughter at the Woman's College of Georgia, a son in the U .S. Marine Corps., and a son and daugh­ter in school in Wilmington . . . JOHN D. HOPKINS, '32, is a farmer in cotton and grain and also raises beef cattle in Greenville County, S.C. A past president of the Greenville County Farm Bureau and the Green­ville County Beef Cattle Producers Association, he also has served as chairman of the Greenville County Agricultural Committee and is direc­tor of the South Carolina Farm Bu­reau. Hopkins and his wife, Betty, have four children . . . WALLIS CARSON, '55, is a claims examiner for the Federated Mutual Implement and Hardware Insurance Co. in At­lanta, Ga. Carson has been with the company for three years, formerly at its offices in Jacksonville, Fla. Davidson College . • . LAWRENCE L. BOYD, '29, has retired from the Army after more than 33 years serv­ice. He is now living in Fayetteville, N.C .... 2nd Lt. BENJAMIN W . TROTTER JR., '63, is a platoon lead­er in Company B, 2nd Battalion of the Army's 7th Infantry Division's 31st Infantry. University of North Carolina . • . RICHARD L. YOUNG JR., '61, has been named director of public rela­tions for the Philco Corp. of Phila­delphia, Pa. Formerly managing ed­itor of the Charlotte, N.C. News, Young joined Philco in 1962 as as­sistant public relations director. The Youngs live in Doylestown, Pa . . .. DAVID W. MATTHEWS, '61, was to be commissioned an Air Force second lieutenant on completion of a training period this past summer. Matthews graduated in June from

1 8

ALUMNI BRIEFS

the University of North Carolina with a B.S. degree in industrial manage­ment. He is married to the former Lynda Ballard of Mt. Mourne, N.C. ... ALEX E. YOUNG, '15, retired in 1962 after spending 44 years in the office supply business in Rock Hill, S.C. and Orlando, Fla. His firm in Orlando, where he has lived for the past 40 years was the Orlando Office Supply Co. He sold the firm on his retirement. Young reports he and his wife Lydia are enjoying "every minute" of his retirement. University of Georgia .•• GERALD S. STONE JR., '61, will return to the University of Georgia following completion of his enlistment in the Air Force, stationed in Newfound­land. Jerry plans to complete his aca­demic work for a marketing degree when he returns. University of Alabama ... DWIGHT L. MIXSON, '21, has retired as pub­lic supervisor in the Birmingham, Ala. office of Southern Bell Tele­phone Co., where he was employed for 40 years. He was honored at a retirement luncheon given by the com­pany in June. University of South Carolina . . . GETTIS D. WOOD, '48, has been ap­pointed senior officer in charge of the Columbia, S.C. offices of the First

National Bank. He will supervise ~! bank's operations in the Colu!l'l ·e area, where six of its 26 offices J~ located . .. COL. JOHN M. CO .Mt TER, '36, recently received the p.n· Force Commendation Medal at ]ter drews Air Force Base, Md. Cou ·ce was cited for his meritorious serVI 5 as chief of a special weapons syste~. project. He is now director f~r 11he vance manned mission support In tcY Aeronautics and Space Agen (NASA) at Andrews AFB. S Purdue University . . . E. W . LINEn: '48, was promoted last year to tl'l~ne ager, market development for pi· Union Carbide Corp.'s Chemicals piS v1s1on in New York City. Ed, j]· wife, Margaret, and their three cnve dren, James, John and Nancy, ber in Morristown, N.J. Ed is a med 0{ of The Morris Township Boar pl· Adjustment and is active in ~ 0~11s her of clubs and civic orgamzat1

,6o, ... THOMAS A. JENNINGS, odS is employed by the General Fo Co. in Sacramento, Calif. J(. Unh·ersity of Wushington . · ·. Rd 8s "DOC" ROURKE, '24, has retn·e oJ11' assistant to the plant manager, ~ivi· poe, Calif. Plant of the Celite cts sion of the Johns-Manville Pro

0dJite

Corp. He had been with the e company for more than 38 yearS·

COL. COULTER, R ight, Wears Air Force Commendation Medal to H im by His Commanding General, Left.

THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI ~I

KAPPA p

Page 21: 1964_4_Nov

~I

~~versity of Florida • . • 2nd Lt. ce · VID H . STANFORTH, '59, re­extved the commander's trophy for ach~Ptional leadership and scholastic ti tevement, a letter of commenda­c011 and the Daughters of American lholonists award on graduation from Sch Air Force's Navigator Training n Ool at James Connally Air Force A.~se, Tex. He was assigned to an erlr Training Command unit at Math­to J\.FB, Calif. Stanforth is married D Che former Barbara Johnson of Pa ong, Ill .... Capt. GLENN A. th IL.LIPS, '48, has graduated from ate ~1r Force's pilot instructor course It andolph Air Force Base, Tex. ie~ tWi~l teac;h student pilots to fly

0 ramer atrcraft.

aoe~on State University . . • Maj. te ERT W. REEVES, USAF, '52, an~ntly attended the Army Command Le General Staff College at Ft. te avenworth, Kan. While there he hiP~rted renewing acquaintance with ~VJ, EARL TRABUE and Maj. a! J\.N TABBERT, also Alpha Zeta to UllJni. Reeves reports Trabue was hi enter service language school in beonterey, Calif. and Tabbert was to ~0 assigned to Viet Nam. Reeves re­on rted. his family has "stabilized at . e Wife, two fine boys and a dog." er · WILLIAM S. PHELPS, '39, vet­F'oan forester with the Oregon State llto~estry Department, has been pro­lis ed to the post of executive as­Of tant in the State Forests Division Or the Forestry Department at Salem, Pr ~ P~elps has been in the forestry ~..0 ess10n for 25 years. "Itch' AS tgan State University •.. THOM-a H. BAIRD, '47, is general man­c~jr for Pfizer Corp. operations in be 01ll~i~. Baird and his fami~y h:ave 1 9~n hvmg in Bogota, Colombia smce Pe l · .. JERRY MARTIN, '50, is Sprsonnel supervisor for the Chrysler Laace Division plant in New Orleans, ~Ji ·. · · KENNETH A. BELLING­I.ri hIs president of the Dearborn, tnac· · Shrine Club. He is a mathe­lonttcs teacher and counselor at Edi­an ~unior High School in Dearborn tad his associated with the Robert S. 6r P am insurance and real estate A. Ill there. a¥burn University ... JAMES L. Of CE, '55, is executive vice president sora newly created firm, Data Proces­~e s, Inc., in Birmingham, Ala. The in \V agency offers inventory account­llt~' doctor and dentist billing, state­Sern~ writing, sales analysis and other ai VIces handled on their computers. livce formerly was a sales representa­Cl{e.for the IBM Corp ... . 1st Lt. ba <>.RLES E. McDANAL, '57, is a ~.r:t~lion supply officer with the Third ~ l'Jne Division on Okinawa. tt\1111 State •.. WILLIAM SIMON capt '.59, recently was promoted to ten am in t he Air Force. He cur­lh tly is an instructor-navigator with s e 4017th Combat Crew Training ~~Uadron (SAC) at Castle Air Force these, Calif. Simon last year married Go former E lizabeth A. Sanok of .\t shen, N.Y. The Simons reside in ~~r:ater, Calif. Simon reports Alpha

alumni J OHN G. SCHMUCKER

~ 0 V E MBER, 19 64

LT. STANFORTH with the DAC Award Bowl.

and WILLIAM S. PANTLE also were promoted to Air Force captains re­cently . . . GORDON E . FRY has been commissioned a second lieutenant in the Air Force following completion of officer training school at Lackland Air Force Base, Tex. Brooklyn Tech •• . EDWARD .T. BUGAJ, '61, recently was commis­sioned a second lieutenant in the Air Force. He was assigned to an Air Force Systems Command unit at Norton AFB, Calif. for training and duty as an electronics engineer . . . CHESTER B. MAYFORTH JR., '38, is a consulting engineer for space­craft design engineering with the General Electric Co.'s Spacecraft De­partment in Philadelphia, Pa. May­forth and his wife, Virginia, live in Wayne, Pa. Iowa State • • • Capt. PAUL E. NEEDHAM graduated recently from the Air Force Command and Staff College at the Air University, Max­well Air Force Base, Ala. He also holds an M.S. degree from the Uni­versity of Syracuse. He is married to the former Mary Catherine Meng of Murdock Kan . . . . Capt. DONALD D. ALE'XANDER is a jet fighte.r pilot assigned to an Air Force Tacti­cal Air Command unit at Holloman AFB, N.M. Alexander is married to the former Julie Johnson of Colum­bus, Miss. . . . Lt. EDWARD E. COWGER JR., '59, is ~tationed at Camp Kaiser in Korea wrth the U.S. Army. He was employed by Allis Chalmers Manufacturing Co. of West Allis, Wis. before being called for ac­tive duty with the Army. He plans to return to the Allis Chalmers firm wh·en his Army service has been com­pleted. University of Tennessee ••• JAMES C. WALKER, '42, retired from the Air Force at the end of last year as a lieutenant colonel after 22 years service. He is now a field representa­tive in Massachusetts, New Hamp­shire and part of New York for United Services Life Insurance Co.

He is now living in South Hadley Ma~ ' Drexel • • . JOHN REMIAS, '56, is a systems programmer for the Gen­eral Tire and Rubber Co. in Akron 9hio. Remias reports he also is tak~ mg a correspondence law course from the LaSalle Extension University and hopes to earn his bachelor of 'laws degree. He was released from the Army at the end of last year. Illinois Tech ..• EDWARD A. KAS­CHINS, '57, is working toward his doctorate degree in economics at the University of Chicago. He resides in Chicago. University of Oregon . • . ALFRED G. RUEDY, '49, is a tariff compiler at Pacific Inland Tariff Bureau in Portland, Ore., where he works in transportation law. Last year he was elected secretary of the Lewis and Cla~k Chapter of D~lta Nu Alpha national. transp?rta t10n fraternity. Ruedy IS attendmg night school at Portland State College in prepara­tion for qualifying as an Interstate Commerce Commission practitioner 2nd Lt. JERRY C. JOSE after ~~~ c~iving his pilot wings, ha's been as­Signed to the Strategic Air Com­ma!ld's Lockbourne Air Force Base Ohto, f~r advanced training in th~ C-130 aircraft. Jerry is married to the former Julia Simons of Albu­querque, N .M. He received a master's degree in foreign languages from the National University of Mexico. Newark College of Engineering . • . MARIO MICHAEL DIMASI, '62 is a project engineer with the U.S .A. Electronics Research and Develop­ment Agency. Dimasi received his master of science degree in June from Newark College. He has been with the U.S.A. lab since 1958. Florida Southern • . . LESLIE A BILLIE is an agent for State Far~ Mutual Automobile Insurance Co. in Sarasota, Fla. . . . BOB CHAPIN has joined the Aetna Life Insurance Co. in Milwaukee, Wis. after com­pleting his. tou.r in the U.S. Army. Bob and hts wtfe, Sue, are living in Milwaukee . .. GUY D. CHAPPELL II, '56, reports he is married, and di­rector of community relations for the Mobile, Ala. Public Library . . . JOHN THOMAS RUSSELL '60 was married to the former Judith A~lene Friedman in September in Atlanta Ga. Tom, who received his B.A. de~ gree at the University of Georgia in 1963 after transferring there, has taken an M.A . in communications at the University of Illinois and cur­rently is working toward a Ph.D. while teaching at Georgia. Tom worked closely with Lambda chapter in its recent rebuilding program. University of Arizona ..• Lt. DEN­NIS K. ROBERTS, '57, is stationed on the Island of Crete with the U.S. Air Force as a security officer. Georgia State •.. FERRELL WAT­SON, '59, entered the Army ·as a second lieutenant. He now is assistant chief of staff (G-3) at Fort Leonard Wood, Mo. He is married to the former Linda Rhodes, who also is a graduate of Georgia State.

1 9

Page 22: 1964_4_Nov

INFORMATION OF

INTER!ST TO GRADUATE

M!MBERS OF PI KAPPA PHI

FRATERNITY

0

ro ers runson,

• • tstrtct a111e

Pi Kappa Phi's newest District Presidents are Fox H. Brunson Jr., Omicron '45, and Willard W. Young Jr., Omicron '43.

Brother Brunson, who is chief proc­ess control engineer for the Scott Paper Co. in Mobile, Ala., has been appointed president of the frate·rni­ty's District 15.

Brother Young, who is district man­ager of the Southern Bell Teleplione & Telegraph Co. in Nashville, Tenn., has been appointed president of Dis­trict 14.

A native of Elba, Ala., Brunson earned bachelor of science and mas­ter of science degrees from the Uni­versity of Alabama. He later at­tended Troy State College and Duke University for further graduate work. He holds a teacher's certificate from Springhill College, in Mobile, Ala.

Brunson served in the U.S. Army with the Dixie Division. He joined the Scott Paper Co. in 1952.

He is charter president of the Ala­bama Gulf Coast Chapter of Pi Kap­pa Phi and was the chapter's rep­resentative to the 28th and 29th Supreme Chapters. He is president of the Mobile Academy of Science, and also has served in numerous of­fices in a number of educational, sci­entific and professional societies in Alabama.

Fox is married to the former Jean Marie Rousselle of Mobile. The Brun­sons have four children, J eana Eliza­beth, 12; Deborah Lynn, 9; Richard Henry, 7, and David Rouselle, 2.

Brother Young is a native of De­catur, Ala. He entered the Univer-

NEW YORK ALUMNI

New York Alumni Chapter Luncheons, 3rd Friday each month, 12:30 P.M., LUCHOW'S RESTAURANT, 110 E. 14th St.

Brunson Young

sity of Alabama in 1943, left a year later to serve with the U.S. Army Air Corps in Europe, then returned to the university to graduate in 1949 with a BS degree in industrial engi-

• neer1ng. He joined Southern Bell Telephone

& Telegraph in 1949 at Birmingham, Ala. In 1951 he was recalled by the U.S. Air Force for 21 months serv­ice, then returned to Southern Bell in Montgomery, Ala. He became dis­trict manager for the company in Knoxville, Tenn. in 1961, and was transferred to his present post in Nashville this year.

Young is active in a number of charitable and civic organizations in Tennessee and is a past president of the East Tennessee Alabama Alum­ni Association.

Willard married the former Betty Byrd of Montgomery, Ala. They have four children, Candie, 10; Willard 8; Brenda, 4; and Bonnie, 2. '

TAMPA, FLORIDA ALUMNI

Tampa Alumni Chapter Luncheons, 3rd Friday each month, 1:00 P.M., THE TER­RAZO ROOM, Floridan Hotel.

0

0

'STAR & LAMP'

JOINS AD GROUP

OF FRATERNITY

PUBLICATIONS

College Fraternity Magazines, a ~~f national advertising medium, co~s e~ .. ing of some of the oldest, mos of elusive and most distinguished ab" American periodicals, has been estiotl lished to handle ads for inse~ es, in 27 national fraternity magaztn including The Star and LamP· e ..

The new ad organization was £~i .. ated by the College Fraternity u~l tors Association at its 41st afune· meeting in French Lick, Ind. i~ the

None of the publications It: slY new advertising group has preV1°u09e accepted advertising other than ~~rS· ads of official fraternity j ewe oOt Their total circulation is nearlY 6

000. ned Advertising executives have cv. g,pS

the fraternity publications ''per~Jlg" the most personal and most mean0 S· ful periodicals in the annals of · journalism." }eS

"Their readers adult U.S. JllB- s who are in the top brackets iJ?- te~ .. of income, education, occupation, det" vestments, social position and le1Jio11 ship are more than half -a-Jll1 whO graduate college fraternity men ence form a corps of influence and a~flv.ble unmatched by any other identl g,J1 group in America," according to otl< announcement released in New ~neS· City by College Fraternity MagaZl the

Under the plan approved bY of" fraternities, the magazines will b~sers fered to selected national advert\nes as a unit. The individual maga~g,siS will share the revenues on the of their own circulation.

20 THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI p ~ '

KAPPA

Page 23: 1964_4_Nov

I .•

~~eSOCIATION OFFICERS-Executive Secretary Durward Owen (Seated, Right), Who Was Elected Secretary-Treas­rrr/ kof the College Fraternity Editors Association, with Other Association Officers, Carl Gladfelter, Chi Phi. and

1\ Chinery, Phi Kappa Theta (Seated, Left to Right, next to Owen), and (Standing, Left to Right) Don Garle SAE; Harold Jacobsen, Sigma Pi; Harry Bird, ATO; and H. Duke Fentress, Zeta Psi. '

PI KliPP'S MOVIE STIIHS r: NATIONAL President Mel ,J all.d Metcalfe, Alpha Gamma, !· s· Sen. Olin D. Johnston, e ~1g"}na, are the "stars" of Pi ~ ,,,.\PPa Phi's new motion picture,

; Adventure in Friendship." ~t roduced for use by alumni te oups and undergraduate chap­it ts, the 20-minute color film had S~ Premiere showing at the 30th in Preme Chapter at Mobile, Ala.

August. a\r c.oPies of the film are now ~t a1Iable for showing by alumni te 0Ups and undergraduate chap-ts.

t10Brother Metcalfe, then N a­&r llal Historian, appears in the Siost half of the film in a discus­haJn of the values of the frater­all. bonds of Pi Kappa Phi with ~t Undergraduate Pi Kapp and a th 0SPective pledge. The role of ~; .Undergraduate is played by ~:distant Executive Secretary ~Ush Scharfenstein Jr. and the

ee is played by Wallie Jones, ~()

YEMBER, 1964

son of past National President W. Bernard (Bernie) Jones, Sig­ma.

Sen. Johnston (D-S. C.) ap­pears at his desk in his Wash­ington office and tells of what Pi Kappa Phi has meant to him through the years and how the fraternity can benefit a young man entering college today.

The opening scenes of the film are of Omicron's new chapter house at the University of Ala­bama.

The glee clubs of Chi Chapter at Stetson University and Omega Chapter at Purdue University provide the background musical score for the film.

Pi Kapp Woody Brooks, Pi, of Andrews, S. C., contributed a great deal of time, effort and money in completing the frater­nity film project, which was di­rected by Executive Secretary Durward Owen. Funds made available from the 1963-64 Vol-

untary Dues Program also made production of the film possible.

"An Adventure In Friend­ship" (16 millimeter, sound film) can provide an interesting pro­gram for alumni meetings, church and civic club programs, as well as for the undergraduate chapters' rush functions. Copies can be borrowed by writing the National Office.

21

Page 24: 1964_4_Nov

• wo UlllDl

• rottl tlltCron

ea tors

WO Omicron alumni today head one of the largest real estate man­

agement firms in Alabama. Louie Reese Jr., Omicron '28, and

James A. King, Omicron '32, are the principal owners of Reese-King Real­ty Co. and Reese-King Mortgage Co., Inc., in Birmingham, Ala.

The original firm was founded in 1907 by Brother Reese's father. In 1936, the senior Reese was succeeded by Louie Reese Jr. and King. The sons of the present owners Louie Reese III and James A. King Jr.­now also serve with the firm.

Brother Reese was born in Birm­ingham and received his B.S. degree in commerce and real estate from the University of Alabama. Since 1931 he has been engaged in management, financing, building, sale and appraisal of Alabama real estate with the Reese-King companies.

He has served in numerous offices in a number of real estate and finan­cial organizations in the state and in 1962 was national president of the Institute of Real Estate Management. He is the author of articles on the real estate field in several news ... papers and magazines, and is quali­fied as a real estate expert in state and federal courts.

Brother King was born in Wilming­ton, N.C., and received his law degree (LL.B.) from the University of Ala­bama in 1936. He has worked as a claims adjustor for the Travelers In­surance Co. and has 22 years experi­ence in real estate mortgages, sales, management, appraisals and devel­opment.

He has served as director of the Birmingham Association of Insurance Agents, president of the Mortgage Bankers Association of Birmingham and president of the Birmingham Real Estate Board.

The Reese-King Companies today have 19 full-time employes exclusive of salesmen and maintenance person­nel and own their modern office build­ing in downtown Birmingham.

22

BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA ALUMNI

1st and 3rd Friday, 12:00 noon, BRITTLINGS CAFETE­RIA, 309 N. 20th St.

OL. Harold B. Simpson, Upsilon, a history instructor

at Hill Junior College in Texas, has been designated a Fellow of the Company of Military Histor-• 1ans.

He was cited by the historical society "for his contributions to the history of the Civil War, particularly the role of Texas; by his books Brawling Brass­North & South and Gaines Mill to Appomattox; for his editor­ship of "Texana," the journal of Texas history; and for his or­ganization and leadership of Civil War Round Tables from Wiesbaden, Germany to Waco, Texas."

Brother Simpson became the lOlst member of the interna­tional history organization.

At present, Col. Simpson is writing a two-volume history of the Civil War, supervising the development of a special history section of the Hill Junior College library, and directing a group of students who are writing the history of Hill County, Texas during the Civil War and Re­construction periods.

Col. Simpson's book, Gaines Mill to Appomattox, has won three awards: the Award of Merit from the American As­sociation of State and Local History; the Award of Merit from the Texas Civil War Cen­tennial Commission and the A ward of Merit for best entry in the Civil War Division of History at the annual Writers Roundup of Texas authors spon­sored by Theta Sigma Phi, pro­fessional journalism fraternity for women.

He was appointed to the Texas Civil War Centennial Commis­sion in 1961. He is on the editor­ial board and also is book review editor of "Texana."

Col. Simpson holds three de-

• appa I e

novelist Thomas Wo i' Kappa '18, made at Purdue Vnb: versity in 1938, has . been pus lished by two Purdue prof~s~or ,;

Titled "Writing and Ltvtng~s the account of Brother Wolf~e views as a writer includes fst entire manuscript the nove 1tl .. prepared for delivery at the a et nual Literary Awards Banqu at Purdue on May 19, 1938. of

The e~itor:s and compiler~Til· the pu blica.tton are Prof·. ;,.. liam Braswell and Leslie of Field. Braswell, a professo~35 English at Purdue since 1 de~ was present when Wolfe rs livered his speech there 25 ye~c .. ago. Field is an English instr tor at Purdue. bas

Wolfe's Purdue speech d'' been called "a significant fill; us by literary reviewers. It con~!11g some added thoughts on wrt 1 0~ not included in his earlier ~oct, The Story of a Novel. In are parts of the Purdue speec~ "'~be revised and used later IDE ~e novelist's You Can't Go 0

Again. bli .. The editors of the new pu ive

cation had to make an intens·ng search for seven pages misS~cll from the original Purdue s~e tl1e manuscript. But they fou~ ill missing pages for inclusion their volume. inS

The 129~page book contatbe Wolfe's speech as delivered, ·Jed entire manuscript and a d~ta\be account of changes made tn manuscript by Wolfe.

·ty of grees from the Universt tbe Illinois and has attended the University of Alabama andvPi· graduate school of Harvard t of versity. He also is a gradu~\fege the Armed Forces Staff Co and the Air War College.

THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI KAPPA p ~I

Page 25: 1964_4_Nov

SCHOLARSHIP

BRINGS

KEY AWARDS

of 'b 'e, ~ ACH year one member of 1j, each Pi Kappa Phi under­

b- ~~aduate chapter is awarded the •5.

8 Udents Lamp Key Award for

· ,, tcholastic leadership in his chap­·' er. ~'s ne th:r'he names of key winners for st ls Year are listed below.

11• r l'~ese Pi Kapp brothers have et ~ce~ved their keys from the Fra-

i~~~~lty in recognition of their of th .lvidual leadership within il- e'X. en· own chapters in scholastic A.·

111 ceUence for the preceding se­

of ester or two quarters. . 5, CeiAn individual brother can re­.e- c Ve the key only once. He may rs ~try it always as the visible c- stark of distinction as an out-

anding scholar. as c .Scholarship always has re­f' ~~lVed great emphasis in Pi Kap­ns C Phi, and the 30th Supreme ~g tohapter this year again resolved J)( re continue this emphasis with t newed vigor. ~~ Of With the awarding each year 1e

0 the Students Lamp Keys to

te t~tstanding Pi Kapp scholars, lch fraternity serves notice that

i- ~h ol.ar~hip deserves first em­(e ~l' as1s m the life of an under-1g actuate. :11 'I'his year's key winners are: 1e ~tllenry Willis Strobel, Alpha; iJI )qal'les Walker Coker, Gamma;

~~~ltles C. Hardwick, Epsilon ; 1S ~aut M. Pittman, Zeta ; Charles :d ~· Nichols, Iota; Robert Groce,

t:PPa ; Eddy Ray Pinkerton, ,e b tnbda; Carlyle A. Clayton, Mu;

lq 11"id Clark Krohn, N u ; Ray· , )

11°lld E. Davis, Xi; Robert F.

1() ltlan, Omicron ; Charles Craw· )f C ~'d Bright, Rho ; Richard R.

1e ~00Per, Sigma; James Erving

1e b:ttl, Jr., Tau ; Michael Free· i- w~'ger, Upsilon; Franklin P. ,f ~est, Chi ; Blair Dewillis Sav· ·e 0~' Psi; Larry Edward Russell,

~h ega; Barry A. Benedict, Al­a Epsilon; Roger A. Turner,

1964

J ufius E Burges

Led U S. Bankers

PI Kapp Julius E. Burges, Alpha '32, recently headed the NABAC,

the association for Bank Audit, Con­trol and Operation, as its national president.

The NABAC is the world's second largest professional banking associa­tion, its membership of more than 6,800 banks representative of about 95 per cent of all U.S. bank resources and employes.

The association is primarily edu­cationally oriented and dedicated to furthering technical knowledge and proficiency in the fields of bank au­diting, controllership, operations and personnel administration. There are 211 local chapters in the Western Hemisphere .

Burges is a director and vice pres­ident and comptroller of the Citizens and Southern National Bank of South Carolina in Charleston, S.C.

He was elected national president of the banking association in 1963 and ended his one year term this past June. As immediate past presi­dent of the association, he will re­main on its board of directors for two more years.

Burges has long been active in the affairs of NABAC. He served the as­sociation at various times as a state director, district director, and direc­tor-at-large. He assumed the office of first vice president in July, 1962, and succeeded to the presidency in July, 1963. He had served on the faculty of the NABAC School for five years prior to assuming national office in the organization.

A graduate of College of Charles­ton, Burges also completed the school of banking at the University of Wis­consin imd has taught at the school of banking of the South at Louisiana

BURGES

Throughout his career he has held positions in virtually every depart­men! of the Citizens and Southern N atwnal Bank. He also is active in civic affairs in Charleston. He is a past president of the Kiwanis Club there, has been director of the Cham­ber of Commerce and treasurer of the local chapters of the American Red Cross a~d the National Foundation. He also IS a member and past treas­urer of St. John's Lutheran Church.

Burges and his wife, Margaret have three daughters, Anne, Gene: and Judy.

DES MOINES, lOW A ALUMNI

Des Moines Alumni Chapter Luncheons, last Wednesday each month, 12:00 noon, NOAH'S ARK RESTAURANT.

State University. llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll

Alpha Zeta; Jack McDonald, AI- Hock, Beta Alpha; Philip L. pha Eta; Robert C. Montgomery, Richart, Beta Gamma; Dennis Alpha Iota; Robert Lee Pur· Deardortt, Beta Delta; Frank D. die, Alpha Mu; Joseph E. Flah· Matthews, Beta Eta; John P. erty, Alpha Xi; Thomas Spen· Lindhuber, Beta Iota; John cer Baker, Alpha Omicron; Whitley, Beta Kappa; Michael James Carter Sparks, Alpha Aaron Zidek, Beta Lambda; Rob­Sigma; Robert Irving Mitnike, ert Brantley Cagle, Beta Mu; Alpha Tau; Michael C. Mick· John Shoberg, Beta Xi; William ley, Alpha Phi; William Sig· Heriot Thaxton, Beta Tau; Edgar gins, Alpha Chi; James M. Me- K. Browning, Beta Upsilon· Collough, Alpha Psi ; Stacy Allen David McLawhorn, Beta Phi : Goff Alpha Omega; Richard Winford Allen, Beta Chi. '

23

Page 26: 1964_4_Nov

A ttentitJn Alumni/

IS YOUR CHAPTER HOUSE earn I tian only ~ent:

!' l'l ton-

CALLING FOR HELP? In th are lhe stan] Pro c. lion~

University of Alabama Alumni of Omicron Chapter, University of Alabama,

please note that an alumni corporation of your chaptea· is soliciting funds for chapter housing and furnishings. These alumni and your undergraduate chapter needs your support. Won't you consider forwarding a check to the following: Mr. Emmett Dendy, 8 Parkwood, Tuscaloosa, Alabama. Make checks payable to: Uni­versity of Alabama-Pi Kappa Phi Fund.

University of Florida Alumni of Alpha Epsilon Chapter, University of

Florida, please note that an alumni corporation of your chapter is solici ting funds for chapter housing and furnishings. These alumni and your undergraduate chapter need your support. Won't you consider forward­ing a check to the following: Dean Frank Maloney, 1823 N.W. Tenth Avenue, Gainesville, Fla.

University of North Carolina Alumni of Kappa Chapter, University of North Caro­

lina, please note that an alumni corporation of your chapter is soliciting funds for chapter housing and furnishings. These alumni and your undergraduate chapter need your support. Won't you consider forward­ing a check to the following: Gen. F. Carlyle Shepard, 409 West Cameron Avenue, Chapel Hill, North Carolina.

University of Georgia Alumni of Lambda Chapter, University of Georgia,

please note that an alumni corporation of your chapter is soliciting funds for chapter housing and furnishings. These alumni and your undergraduate chapter need your support. Won't you consider forwarding a check to the following: Mr. Robert Knox, Thomas, Georgia.

University of Oregon Alumni of Alpha Omega Chapter, University of

Oregon, please note that an alumni corporation of your chapter is soliciting funds for chapter housing and

furnishings. These alumni and your undergradll~d~ afllli : chapter need your support. Won't you consider {orWF,asl 01b.ot ing a check to the following: Mr. Alan Graves, 72 not Broadway, Eugene, Oregon. a COt

North Carolina State e how Alumni of Tau Chapter, North Carolina State, pleBj, Vetgj

note that an alumni corporation of your chapt~r gs• date soliciting funds for chapter housing and furnislull ed lttan· These alumni and your undergraduate chapter 11:10 Ojr ti your support. Won't you consider forwarding a che31o7 !h b the following: Mr. Lemuel Shirley, Treasurer, '' Sussex Road, Raleigh, North Carolina. ~Sts

Newark College 0

( tl~nd Alumni of Beta Alpha Chapter, Newark CoJleg~joP e l

Engineering, please note that an alumni corporn jill ~~ t1 of your chapter is soliciting funds for chapter hod~att !ern~ and furnishings. These alumni and your undergra rd· lto.po chapter need your support. Won't you consider for:' 59 I ing a check to the following: Mr. Kort GorshkOD• Eastbrook Terrace, Livingston, New Jersey. ~S tc

I\ COl Howard College •t l

tea• oe ac Alumni of Alpha Eta Chapter, Howard College, P js f

note that an alumni corporation of your chapl~~~~·· oessc soliciting funds for chapter housing and furnish• eed ,r ec These alumni and your undergraduate chapter h~ U,S your support. Won't you consider forwarding a c 1111e, ~hat to the following: Mr. Ed Beason, 2126 Seventh Ale 1o: ~C t· S., Birmingham, Alabama. Make checks payab e t a l Howard College--Pi Kappa Phi Fund. ontt

Of sl 1l'ste ~rob lljg'

Georgia Tech ott Alumni of Iota Chapter, Georgia Tech, pleas': ~jill

that an alumni corporation of your chapter is soh.f11est funds for chapter housing and furnishings. yotlr alumni and your undergraduate chapter need 111e support. Won't you consider forwarding a check '(;ear· following: Mr. George Griffin, Dean of Students, gia Institute of Technology, Atlanta 13, Georgia•

~in g. l<'o

4tati ijUen are l

EXHIBIT DRAWS CROWDS ~0Ys' ~he ~the ~h ' ~ak~ ~OlJ~ Is F'

More than 100,000 persons visited the special fraternity and sorority exhibit in the Hall of Free Enter­prise at the New York World's Fair this past summer.

The exhibit, entitled "Young Part­ners in Free Enterprise," was spon­sored jointly by the National Pan­hellenic Conference and the National Interfraternity Conference in coop­eration with the American Economic Foundation, which erected the ex­hibit building.

24

Hosts and hostesses from the staffs of various national fraternities and sororities were assigned to the ex­hibit to explain it to visitors. Bro­chures explaining the values of fra­ternal life were distributed at the exhibit.

The exhibit was limited to a three­week period as the space was donated on a rotating basis among a number of other participating sponsors. Plans have been made to schedule the ex­hibit for a similar period during the

fair's final season next summer~dilln Prominent American and Can 'flteit

figures endorsed the exhibit. con· supporting statements for the cJifll' cept of fraternal life on college tlle puses and their portraits wer~nibit keystone around which the e was conceived. Jl'lotB

The exhibit pointed out that con' than 75 per cent of all funds

5 9nd tributed by individuals to coUeg~r11it1 universities are given by fra and sorority members.

,, A.t IV en tuud eing itost "'!l·s lion l !tlltn

,~,

THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI KAPPA ~Oy 1

Page 27: 1964_4_Nov

Pakistan (Continued from page 9)

~ ~?tnplete absence of the Chris-01~n ethic. Even here at Forman t Y eight per cent of the stu­ents are Christian. li l'he operation of the educa-1 onai system is quite unusual. a~ this developing society, things lh e somewhat "unsettled." In st e :words of one of my Paki­D ani friends : "We are in the 1{

0cess of making our tradi-lua'e amn~." Also, Forman, being an ,,rd· OllJ hated college, is not auton­£as1 ~otous. Thus a professor does

a know at the beginning of 0 course such things as exactly

lease ~~W. long it will last (the uni­:r is da~Slty announces examination inld ill es during the year), how ~~o 0 any holiday.s. will b~ declared 1101 e~ the authonties or simply tak-

~ by the students, how many nasts he must give, how he will

e 0£ lh ndle the course (at mid-year 1Jio~ ~pe university directed us to set tsilll le tutorials), and what the ex­uad'e j,_,rnal examiner will regard as ''59 ''1Portant.

as l cannot help but daydream it to what Forman could do if

ease ~could become autonomous and ,r j! re adequately supplied with pro­lnl'' Ofssors who have the philosophy ~eed u sducation that we have in the ~e:! lib · It could then demonstrate

1o: Qc ~~ can be done in higher ed­eo a l?n ~nd thus make a real orntr1bution to the massive task

001e ~~ tshaping up the educational

ti~~ hs em here, one of the many ftest in Oble!lls the country is deal­,~~~ ~~~g~Ith in its economic plan­eOr· li'

~tatt-man has an excellent rep-ijl! lo.n. Many important and in­at enhhal positions in the country 00e eld by F. C. College "old ~{s" ~s ~he alumni are called. oth Principal of a college in an­'''l:'her city remarked to me, ~ak~re are only two colleges in

li~P Co lstan : one is Government 1e1t is ~ege, Lahore, and the other ·oP' • C. College." ~J!l' \A.t partition Forman nearly t~: luien~ under," and it is yet re-

~ej ldn~g, with the present goal ore ltong Its pre-partition standing. ~;d ~1.8t of the older faculty mem­M !io 8 Who were not lost at parti-

!t,n have been bid away by gov-1ll'lent, and it is difficult to

THE RATLIFFS Katherine, Alice and John in Pakistan.

retain in teaching the superior products of the graduate schools. This is a major problem in ed­ucation here. In this culture the teacher is given a very low sta­tus. Many apparently believe that no one teaches except those who fail to get into the civil service, and the relatively low compen­sation offered teachers encour­ages such thinking.

As do colleges (and fraterni­ties) in the U.S., Forman at­tempts to develop a loyalty among the old boys that will result in, among other things, some sorely needed funds.

For the 400 students who live on campus ( 600 live off campus at home or with relatives and friends), life is oriented prin­cipally around the hostel. Each of the four hostels has its own courtyard, common room and dining room and each fields ath­letic teams for intramural sports. In the Spring each has a function that consists of a de­licious Pakistani dinner, enter-

TOLEDO, OHIO ALUMNI

Toledo Alumni Chapter Lunch­eons, 2nd Wednesday each month, noon, ANDERSON'S HERITAGE, Sylvania Ave. at Douglas.

tainment in the form of skits ~usually three, one each in Eng­hsh, Urdu, and Panjabi) and the making of awards similar to those made at, say a Pi Kapp Rose Ball.

The major difference: no girls except wives of faculty member~ who are invited. The sexual apartheid in this Islamic culture rules against mixed functions­the female parts in the plays and the Indian dances are per­formed by boys dressed as girls.

As for economic developments I ~ave been intrigued by th~ sociO-cultural factor in devel­opment. The values and institu­tions here seem to perpetuate economic underdevelopment.

It is most exciting to be here on the "front line" of economic development of underdeveloped areas, and to work with Pak­istanis and foreigners represent­in? various institutions to give th1s economy sufficient runway speed to take off on its own and provide the people with im­proved economic welfare and so­cial justice.

Serving with the Methodist Board of Missions, we are espe­cially interested in the work of others who are representing the Christian Church here: minis­ters, sociologists, agricultural­i~t~, engineers, architects, phy­SICians, nurses, technicians and teachers.

One such very fine family with whom we first became ac~ quainted during missionary ori­entation at Drew University and who are now our very good friends, is the Edward T. Gir­vin family. Ed, an engineer and former executive with Corning Glass, has come to Pakistan with the United Presbyterian Board to establish and operate a technical institute at Raiwind. We were delighted to learn re­cently, through The Star and Lamp, that Ed is a Pi Kapp.

We have found the Pakistanis to be a most friendly, cordial, and hospitable people, and indi­viduals have voluntarily ex­pressed to us their appreciation for our being here to work with them during this period of change and great expectations. They are struggling to do so much with so little.

25

Page 28: 1964_4_Nov

Letters To The Editor:

26

Dear Brother Owen: I am very glad that the film was

received by you in good condition and that you believe it will be adaptable to the total film.

To The Editor: bE Having been on vacation, I hll~:

just seen the current issue of Ton Star and Lamp with the article 5•

I also would like to take this op­portunity to express my deep appre­ciation for your sending me the Pi Kappa Phi Directory, which I shall keep on my desk.

the Owings Brothers. The lively pr~n entation has focus and facts, ow· achievement that pleases all the ings brothers. for

Enclosed is a recommendationh J1l prospective rushees, all of W

0

would make good Pi Kapps. Fraternally yours, •zS Marvin Owings, Zeta

'l 'l

'l

'] Hoping to see you again sometime

soon, I am, with kindest personal re­gards,

Fraternally, To The Editor: d

~(>; Olin D. Johnston, Sigma U.S. Senate The Owings brothers are deli.gh~e

with the article which appears m !P August issue of The Star and L~ b · ~ (Ed.'s Note: Sen. Johnston appears

in Pi Kappa Phi's new color motion picture, "An Adventure In Friend­ship." In the segment in which he appears, he speaks of his experi­ence in Pi Kappa Phi and what he believes the values of the fraternity to be.)

We think you did an exceUent J0 '8 1'. I trust that the convention W8f5.8•

success and the future for our 1 to1 ternity looks good in every way. Fraternally yours, Ralph S. Owings, Zeta '23 ~A Dean of the Graduate Schoof . j University of Southern MissJSSIPP LA

y 0 u R I D PI KAPPA PHI JEWELRY PRICE LIST

BADGES

JEWELED STYUS Miniature Standard Crown Set Pearl Border .... .. ... .... ..... $17.75 Crown Set Pearl, 4 Ruby Points ... ....... 19.75 Crown Set Pearl, 4 Sapphire Points . . ... 19.75 Crown Set Pearl, 4 Emerald Points ..... 22.75 Crown Set Pear, 4 Diamond Points .. . .. 37.75 Crown Set Pearl and Ruby Alternating .... 25.75 Crown Set Pearl ond Sapphire Alternating 25.75

$23.00 22.50 25.00 30.00 52.00 32.00 32.00

PLAIN STYLES Miniature Standard Plain Border . ... . ....... ... ..... . . .... . . $ 4.25 Chased Border . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6.50 White Gold additional on jeweled badges ......... . White Gold additional on plain badges .......•.... Alumnus Charm, Double Faced .... ..... .. .......... . Alumnus Charm, Single Faced . . .. ... ....... ..• .. . .. Scholarship Charm ....... ... .. . .... .. .. .. . ...... . . Pledge Button ..... .. .. . ..... . ........... . .. . ..... . . Official Recognition Button with White Enameled Star,

Yellow Gold-plated ..... . ... ... ... . .... ..... .. . Enameled Coat-of-arms Recognition Button, Yellow

Gold-plated ............................... . . . . Monogram Recognition Button, Yellow Gold-filled

$ 6.00 B.OO 5.00 3 .00

10.00 5.00 7.00 1.00

1.00

1.25 1.50

GUARD PINS Single Letter

Plain ... . .. . .. . ..•........ .. ... . . ... ... . . .....•.... $ 2.75 Crown Set Pearl . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7.75 Plain White Gold Guards, Additional . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . 1.00 Jeweled White Gold Guards, Additional . . . . . . . . . . 2.00 Coat-of-arms Guard, Yellow Gold . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.75

Taxes are additional ...

Extra Crown $29.75 31.75 31.75 39.75 B3.75 33.75 33.75

large $ 9.50

10.50

Double letter $ 4.25

14.00 1.00 2.00

10% Federal Excise Tax must be added to oil prices quoted, plus State Soles or Use Taxes, and Municipal Taxes, wherever they are in effect.

E N T I T y IS A VALUED POSSESSION.

YOUR NAME IS PART OF THAT IDENTITY.

YOUR BADGE IS ANOTHER VALUED WAY

OF IDENTITY. WEAR IT WITH PRIDE

OF YOUR MEMBERSHIP IN PI KAPPA PHI.

• • Your Official Jeweler

BURR, PATTERSON & AULD CO. 2301 Sixteenth Street

Detroit, Michigan 48216

OFFERS !-Quality second to none 2-Best values for the price 3-Service with reasonable time limits,

and a 4-DESIRE TO PLEASE

Write for your free copy The FRATERNITY GIFT PARADE

THE STAR AND LAMP OF PI

Page 29: 1964_4_Nov

3Jn ~ur C!Cbapter ~ternal ~lP}{A '29-Dr. William Carter Je­

ter, Anderson, S.C. hnve

r TM :le on

0ELTA '09-Robert Emmet Allen,

charter member of Delta Chapter ~~ Furman University, initiated ;;arch 19, 1909 with Chapter

surance, coal and real estate busi­nesses; postmaster, 1932-48; first football coach at Norton High School; member of the Norton Methodist Church. Wrote the edi­tor of The Coalfield Prog1·ess of Norton: "He was a man of com­passion and understanding. He loved his fellowman, and loved life itself. Jay took great pleas­ure in seeing and helping others enjoy life. . . . He accomplished much. He gave his best and his best was good. We are fortunate that the Good Lord blessed us by giving us Jay Litts to love and to love us."

and former Sunday School teach­er of the First Baptist Church in Tampa.

PSI '2~-Richard Wilbur Steinberg Chicago, III. •

pres· s, an e ow· .n for whoJll

,1

umber 1. , 0-c. E. Byrd, Darlington, S.C. 10-George Seaborn Sloan, Balti­

,1 tnore, Md. 28-John Earle Owings, Laurens,

.. c. 12-George Worth Campbell Jr.,

IIigh Point, N.C.

€£>SI5LON-Ben Geer Alderman, at 6, owner of Alderman Wood

Preserving Co. at Manning, S.C., at his home in Alcolu, S.C.

tl'A '15-James Wiley Griffith, Wind­sor, Ga.

to'l'A , 13-James B. Hutchison, Se-noia, Ga.

~APp A '16-Robert Lee Simpson.

LAM:BDA '26-Julian Cheatham Peel­er, Woodland, Ga.

11 ti '23 w·11 ·

tr

G - J 1am Ferree Taylor, ,4

reensboro, N.C. 6b-Manley S. Stockton, St. Peters­

urg, Fla.

'~9-Jay Casper Litts, at 64, at orne in his native Norton, Va.,

Where he had been active in in-

OMICRON '44-Paul W. Starnes, Guntersville, Ala., at 37, in Co­lombia, South America, where he had been employed as a school teacher.

SIGMA '28-William De Veaux Mc­Gowan, Charleston, S.C.

UPSILON '35-Edmund R. Blaschke, St. Louis, Mo.

CHI '33-Dr. Ned W. Holland, at 47, in Tampa, Fla., where he had been an eye, ear, nose and throat specialist since 1949, on the staffs of two Tampa hospitals, a con­sultant for the Florida Council for the Blind, member of numer­ous medical societies, chairman of the board of deacons, trustee

'32N.i.eter Robert Torti, Woodstock,

OM~GA '34-Roy W. Lindley, at 69, m West Lafayette, Ind., where ~e had t_aught freshman mechan­Ical _engmeering at Purdue Uni­v_el;"sity for 42 years before re­tirmg last year.

ALPHA ALPHA '24-Alton Paul Ho­gan, Marietta, Ga.

'28-Howard Burr Leonard, Annis­ton, Ala.

'50G-Hugh Kenneth Wall, Winder, a.

ALPHA EPSILON '47-Judson B Walker, Orlando, Fla. ·

ALPHA TAU '31-Howard Oakley Sharp, at 72, in Troy, N.Y., where he had retired after a ca­reer as a civil engineering pro­fessor at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, author of a number of texts, member of a number of honorary and engineering socie­ties, member and official of the Trinity Methodist Church in Troy.

ALPHA UPSILON '36-Willard Franklin Cook, Middletown, N.Y.

1Ltbtng ;ffltmortals M:ORE and more, nowadays, it is becoming te the custom for friends and associates of ~ cently deceased persons to make contributions th a Worthwhile cause or institution in lieu of

e usual floral tributes sent to funerals. lttoS~ch contributions are termed living me­a11dl'lals, as they are more lasting than flowers eo d can accomplish much as permanently re­~h ed tributes in the name of the deceased. ~e ese tributes finance services which create

nefits for others in the future. lttoG~fts of this kind to the Pi Kappa Phi Me­Itt l'lal Foundation can provide benefits for fu~ny Pi Kappa Phi brothers far into the bt Ute. Such gifts, in honor of a departed th other, may send the son of another brother Putough college, or permit another brother to

Gifts to living memorial funds usually range from $5 to $100. As a substitute for floral gifts, these funds can be particularly useful to an alumnus who, living in a distant community, belatedly learns of the death of a former chapter brother or alumni associate. Often it is too late to send flowers to the funeral. And it is often impossible to locate the names and addresses of survivors in order to write letters of condolence.

The living memorial pays a special tribute to the deceased, and at the same time, provides a means of getting word of the donor's sym­pathy to the breaved family through publica­tions of the fraternity.

rsue his education to an advanced goal. de 'l'he names of donors of such gifts and the t~eased brothers so honored are permanently

0 rded in the records of the fraternity.

Further, of course, such gifts provide the contributing brother a "plus" opportunity to give to the good cause activities of Pi Kappa Phi's educational foundation.

It is an opportunity to do much for many in the fraternity.

pfll lo YEMBER, 1964 27

Page 30: 1964_4_Nov

PI KAPPA PHI 11 E. Canal St., Sumter, S. C.

Founded at The College of Charleston, Charleston, S. C.-December 10, 1904

FOUNDERS SIMON FoGARTY, 151 Moultrie St., Charleston, S. C. ANDREW A. KROEG, JR. (deceased) L. HARRY MixsoN (deceased)

NATIONAL COUNCIL NATIONAL COMMITTEES President-Melville E. Metcalfe, 427 Adams Bldg., Port Arthur, Texas . Treasurer-Charles Tom Henderson, Asst. Attorney General, State of

Florida, Tallahassee, Fla. Secretary-Kim Jepson, 300 Stoddard Bldg., Lansing 23, Mich. Historian-Jack W. Steward, 437.5 Pearl St., Eugene, Ore. Chancellor-James L. May Jr., Merchants National Bank Bldg., Mobile, Ala. Past President-John W. Deimler, 1149 Green Tree Lane, Penn Valley,

Narbeth, Pa.

NATIONAL HEADQUARTERS 11 E. Canal St., Sumter, S. C.

Executive Secretary-Durward W. Owen, Sumter, S. C. Editor-in-Chief, STAR AND LAMP-Durward W. Owen, Sumter, S. C. Assistant Executive Secretary-Theodore A. Scharfenstein, Sumter, S. C. Traveling Counselor-William Dicks, Sumter, S. C. Managing Editor, STAR AND LAMP-Paul R. Plawin, 200 76th St., Vir­

ginia Beach, Va.

k oo· Trust Investment-Ralph W. Noreen, Chairman, P. 0. Box .5173, Jac ;ork

ville, Fla., exp. 12·31-6.5; Francis H. Boland, Jr., 180 Centra l South, New York 19, N. Y., exp . 12-31·66. 116

PI Kappa Phi Memorial Foundation-John D. Carroll, Treasurer, So~ flO·; Lexington, S. C.; Jack Bell, 6764 La Lama Dr., JackMso1 nhvi.lleL~~~rd L. George B. Helmrich, 32990 Lahser Rd., Birmingham, c ., ~ GD· Long, The Darlington, Suite 7, 202.5 Peachtree Road, N.E., Atlanf<l• /.

Scholarship-Or. Donald Come, 1.517 Shubel, Lansing, Mich.; Harold . Cowles, Iowa State University, Ames, Iowa. . flO·

Endowment-George Coulter, Chairman, 2210 Laurel Rd., Jacksonvoll•• 01.

Ritual and Insignia-H. B. Fisher, Chairman, Box 412, College Station, T•~ Architecture-(Advisory)-James A. Stripling, Chairman, 308 E. Park /.•'·'

Tallahassee, Fla. Alumni Relations-Leonard E. Blood, Chairman, 2719 Ashford Rd., jol.f.,

Atlanta 19, Ga.

DISTRICTS OF PI KAPPA PHI 6801 DISTRICT XIII-Robert Bourne, C

Woodstream Dr., Charlotte •• ~~ j13• Epsilon-Davidson College, ""

DISTRICT 1-Robert H. Crouley, Room UOO, 2SO Park Ave., New York 17.

Psi-Cornell University, 722 University Ave., Ithaca, N. Y.

Alpha Xi-Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn, 33 Sidney Place, Brooklyn.

Alpha Tau-Renuelaer Polytechnic Institute, 49 2nd St., Troy, N. Y.

Beta Alplla-Newark College of En­gineering, 249 High St., Newark, N. J.

DISTRICT 11-James Lloyd, 410 Apple Tree Rd., Camp Hill, Penna.

Alpha Mu-Penna. Stale University, Box 830, State College, Po.

Alpha Upsilon-Drexel Institute of Technology, 340.5 Powelton Ave., Philadelrhia, Pa.

DISTRICT 11-Raymond Hatcher, Am­herst, Va.

Xi-Roanoke College, 327 High St., Salem, Va.

lho-Washington and Lee University, Lock Drawer 903, Lexington, Va.

Beta Upsilon-University of Va., .510 Rugby Rd., Charlottesville, Va.

Gamma Beta-Old Dominion College, 3.52 W. Bute St., Norfolk, Va.

DISTRICT IV-Woody Brooks, P. 0 . llox 466, Andrews, S. C.

Alpha-College of Charleston, 19 Green St., Charleston, S. C.

leta-Presbyterian College, Clinton, s. c.

Zeta-Wofford College, Spartanburg, s. c.

Sigma-University of South Carolina, Columbia, S. C.

DISTRICT V-(No Di strict President) Iota-Georgia Institute of Technol· ogy, 719 Brittian Way, Atlanta, Ga.

Alabama Gulf Coast-N. D. McClure, 562 Dexter Ave., Mobile, Ala.

Ames, Iowa-Wayne R. Moore, 430 Lynn Ave., Ames, Iowa

Atlanta, Ga .-Jack P. Turner, 100.5 WM Oliver Bldg., Atlanta 3, Ga.

Birmingham, Ala.-Cecil A. Carlisle, 1611 Alford Ave., Birmingham 16, Ala.

Chapel Hill, N. C.-Carlyle Shepard, 409 W. Cameron, Chapel Hill, N. C.

Charleston, S. C.-Albert P. Taylor, 6 lialsey St., Charleston 16, S. C.

Charlotte, N. C.-Earnest Hunter, 231.5 Selwyn Ave., Charlotte, N. C.

Chattanooga, Tenn.-Lee Ryerson, .5.518 Spring Garden Lane, Chattanooga.

Chicago, 111.-Richard Grer.ory, 2741 N. Mildred, Chicago 14, II .

Cleveland, 0.-John H. Haas, 3492 West 1.5ht St., Cleveland, 0.

Columbia, S. C.-Richard C. Mims, 2337 Baxter St., Cayce, S. C.

De Land, Fla.-Ben Smith, North Col­orado Ave., De Land, Fla.

Omicron-Emmett 0 . Dendy, Tusca­loosa, Ala.

Tau-Laurence E. Poteat, Box .5.544, State College Station, Raleigh, N. C.

Upsilon-Ralph W. Sanders, Stoning­ton, Ill.

P•I-John A. Stone, South Otselic, N. Y.

Alpha Zeta-Edwin Kurt Engelstad, 1990 SW 139, Beaverton, Ore.

Lambda-University of Georgia, 930 S. Milledge Ave., Athens, Ga.

Beta Kappa-Georgia State College, 24 Ivy St., S.E., Atlanta, Ga.

DISTRICT VI-J. Martine Pearce, c/o Dept. of Chemistry, University of Fla., Gainesville, Fla.

Chi-Stetson University, 1241 Stetson, De Land, Fla.

Alpha Epsilon-University of Fla., Bax 27.56, University Station, Gaines· ville, Fla.

Alpha Chi-University of Miami, P. 0. Box 8146, University Branch, Coral Gables 46, Fla.

Beta Beta-Flo. Southern College, Box ~16, Bldg. 1-A, Lakeland, Fla.

Beta Eta-Florida State University, Box 308.5, Tallahassee, Fla.

Beta Lambda-University of Tampa, 30~ Plant St., Tampa, Fla.

Beta Tau-Valdosta State College, Valdosta, Ga.

DISTRICT VII-Jerry Willis, P. 0. Bax 1143, Baton Rouge, La.

Alpha Beta (Colony)-Bax 22.55, 31 McAllister, New Orleans 18, La.

Beta Mu-McNeese State College, Box 1 ~ 1, Lake Charles, La.

Beta Omicron-Northwestern State College of La., Box 431, Natchi­toches, La.

Beta Chi-East Texas State College, Commerce, Tex.

DISTRICT VIII-Donald S. Payne, 106 Sun•et lone, West Lafayette, Ind.

Upsilon-University of Illinois, 306 E. Gregory, Champaign, Ill.

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

Alpha Phi-Illinois Institute of Tech­nology, 3333 S. Wabash Ave., Chicago 16, Ill.

Alpha Psi-Indiana University, 317 E. 2nd St., Bloomington, Ind.

Beta Gamma-University of Louis­ville, 2216 Confederate Place, Louis­ville, Ky.

DISTRICT IX-Robert S. Kuhlman, 4901 Burnham, Toledo 12, Ohio

Alpha Theta-Michigan State Uni­versity, 121 Whitehills Dr., East Lansing, Mich.

Beta Iota-University of Toledo, 1702 W. Bancroft St., Toledo, Ohio

Beta Xi-Central Michigan University, SOB S. College, St., Mt. Pleasant, Mich.

DISTRICT X-Vernon A. Sodawauer, 909 Fleming Bldg., Des Moines, Iowa

Nu-University of Nebraska, 229 N. 17th St. , Lincoln, Nebr.

Alpha Omicron-Iowa State Univer­sity, 407 Welch Ave., Ames, Iowa

Seta Delta-Drake University, 3420 Kingman Blvd., Des Moines 11, Iowa

DISTRICT Xi-Jack W. Steward, 4375 Pearl St., Eugene, Oregon

Alpha Zeta-Oregon State University, 2111 Harrison, Corvallis, Ore.

Alpha Omega-University of Oregon, 1790 Alder St., Eugene, Ore.

DISTRICT XII-Rev. C. J. Tl.ler, 2003 E. 29th St., Oakland, Cali .

Gamma-University of California, 23.53 Prospect, Berkeley, Calif.

ALUMNI CHAPTERS Detroit, Mich .-Karl Jepson, 17881

Beechwood, Birmingham, Mich. Des Moines, Iowa-Harry Whitmore,

7309 S.W. 13th, Des Moines, Iowa . Eugene, Ore .-Aian C. Graves, Xl5 31st Ave. W ., Eugene, Ore.

Georgetown-Myrtle Beach, S. C.-Joe Shaw, 13 Meeting St., Georgetown, s. c.

Greenville, S. C.-Mac Adams Chris­topher, PO Box 3507, Park Place Dr., Greenville, S. C.

Houston, Texas-Harold F. Simpson, 15107 Calif. , 1!"13, Houston 6, Tex.

Indianapolis, lnd.-David Bibler, 401 East 37th Street, Indianapolis, Ind.

Jacksonville, Fla.-Rolph Saffy, 3451 Remington, Jacksonville, Fla.

Kansas City, Mo.-Milton S. Broome, 6210 N. Michigan Dr., Gladstone, Mo.

lakeland, Fla.-Gene Caufield, 213 Anne Morle Circle, Lakeland, Fla.

Lansing, Mich.-Kim Jepson, 5108 Ful­ton Place, Lansing, Mich.

Lincoln, Neb.-Marvin E. Stromer, 91.5 D. Street, Lincoln 2, Neb.

Louisville, Ky.-Rober! Schroader, 2403 Wallace Ave., louisville .5, Ky.

Memphis, Tenn.-Warren Cruzen, ~39 Cherry Rd., Memphis, Tenn.

Miami, Fla.-Richard 0. Whipple, 2921 Louise St., Miami, Fla.

Montgomery. Ala.-Marvin H. Killlns­worth, 3983 Thomas Ave., Mont­gomery, Ala.

New York, N. Y.-Howard Muller Wil­liams, 40 Adeline Place, Valley Stream, N. Y.

North Tex.-Rober! W. Wylie, 13327 Flagstone Lane, Dallas 30, Tex.

North New Jersey-Edward T. Keane, 2672 Hudson Blvd., Jersey City, N. J.

Orlando, Fla.-Peter C. Barr, 3316 Charow Ln., Orlando, Fla.

Philo., Pa.-Lawrence Barnard 31.5 Airdale Rd., Rosemont, Penna. '

Portland, Ore.-George W. Blinco, 10008 S.W., 56th Ave., Portland, Ore.

Raleigh, N. C.-L. M. Shirley, 3107

ALUMNI ASSOCIATIONS Alpha Mu-Ruuell W. Ingham,

Park Rd., Wyomissing, Po. 132 Alpha Omega-Alan C. Graves, 27.5

31st Ave. W., Eugene, Ore. Beta Alpho-Wm. G. Muldowney, 147 Carteret St., Glen Ridge, N. J.

Alpha Xi-Edward F. Schofield, .5.5 Grove St., Montclair, N. J.

Alpha Omicron-Kenneth J. Thompson, Box 373, Ames, Iowa.

Alpha Phi-Bennett A. Hudson, Jr., 521 S. Ninth Ave., LaGrange, 111.

Alpha Psi-Ronald Smith Timmons, 2601 S. Cole, Indianapolis 4, Ind.

Beta Gamma-Ed Dienes, 4839 Can Run Road, Louisville, Ky.

Beta Delta-c. Ray Deaton, Route 5, Des Moines, Iowa.

Beta Eta-Charles Thomas Henderson A.s~'t. Attorney Gen., Statutory Re: vrsoon Dept., Tallahauee, Fla.

Davidson, N. C. 206 Kappa-University of N: C., c. Cameron Ave., Chapel Holl

68, ~ · [)Ilk'

Mu-Duke University, Box 4 ' Station, Durham, N. C. frail'"

Tau-N. C. State, 2401 We1s1t

8 SIO"

nity Court, N. C. State Co eg lion, Raleigh, N. C. 1:!01

Beta Phi-East Carolina College, E. Sth St., Greenville, N. C. Mark•'

Pi Sigma Mu Colony-3901 St., Wilmington,. N. C. yout'l9•

DISTRICT XIV-Wollard W. ho"' & Jr., c/ o Southern Bell Telep , Telegraph Co., Nashville, /'f.~oe•·

Alpha Sigma-University OK ~·ill•• see, 1800 Lake Ave., no Tenn . St•''

Beta Omega-East Tennessee Johfl' University, 515 West Poplar, son City, Tenn. col·

Beta Psi-Tennessee Wesleyan lege, Box 172, Athens, Ten."· St•''

Kappa Phi (Colony)-Memphh•! stol8

University, Box 1352, MemP 15

Univ., Memphis, Tenn. Jr., DISTRICT XV-Fox H. Brunson'/o.lo·

27.51 Ralston Road, Mobile, 312 Omicron-University of Alabolf1Aj0• J

University Ave., Tuscaloosa~t" 25 Alpha Iota-Auburn Universt 1"

College St., Auburn, Ala. eo~ Alpha Eta-Howard Col leg~· gh•"''

1032, Howard College, Bir"''" A~ ~

Gamma Alpha-Livingston SIACI~~ lege, Box 411, Livingston, '

Sussex Rd., Raleigh, N. C. 0

efD Roanoke, Va.-W. J . La"''c"' 'R.,o·

Lawrence Trans. & Stg. 0 "' sO noke, Va. If 1

Salem, Ore.-Richard Sha er. Ratcliff Dr., S.E., Salem, OrMe"phert•~·

Seattle, Wash.-Harold V. Wc h 1 3043 East 203, Seattle ss, "r, · 11

Sumter, S. C.-Edwin B. BaY C 1 Mason Croft Drive, Sumter,bS. n · t6 Tallahassee, Fla.-Jerry Do sofia·

Grenshaw Ave., Tallahauee, 3,01 Tampa, Fla.-Gerold Bobier,

Sierra Circle, Tampa 9, Fla. 3313 Toledo, 0.-Richard SmalleY•o

Anderson Parkway, Toledo 6, "13~ Tri-City, Tenn.-S. Nell HoY•'~n·

Pineola Avenue, Kingsport, T~ 26J8 Tucson, Ariz.-Robart T. Franc.:,

Avenida Carolina, Tucson, Ar:l · 1110 Valdosta, Ga.-Charles Pow• '

N. Lee Street, Valdosta, Ga. Mitch•11

Washington, D. C.-CaptE. Vit~~·· Disney, 608 Niblick Dr. S. ·• Va.

.;323 Beta Iota-Robert Dale ConleY• Garrison Rd., Toledo, OhiSo To"'P""

Beta Lambda-304 Plant t., •• A Fla.

0 ,,....

Beta Rho-Frank T. Roman ' Madison Ave., Utica, N. Y. John'~~'

Beta Sigma-Randolph ScoCt~ 1,0go ' 4610 W. Patterson Ave., Ill. •"• Jr·•

Beta Upsilon-LeRoy R. Ham~ Vo· P.O. Box 3184, Charlottesv '

Page 31: 1964_4_Nov

asedl

N.f.,

._,.

Hard Working Pi Kapps ..... . . At Ease Js:~:~ Delegates to the 30th Supreme Chnpter Take a Little Sun at Dauphin Island on the Gulf of Mexico

col·

St•'' St•1'

, .. jl.

,.,

YOUR BADGE -a triumph of skilled and highly trained Balfour craftsmen is a steadfast and dynamic symbol in a changing world.

Plain Badge Crown Pearl, 4 Rubies Monogram Recognition . Pledge Button, gold plated . Pledge Pin gold plated

Miniature

$4.25 19.75

$1.50 1.00 1.25

Regulation

$6.00 22.50

Add 10% Federal Tax and any state or city taxes to prices quoted.

Insignia listed above is carried in stock for IMMEDIATE SHIPMENT.

REGULATIONS: Approval necessary on orders tor official badges. We will obtain approval for you.

Write for complete insignia price list

OFFICIAL JEWELER TO PI KAPPA PHI

Page 32: 1964_4_Nov

RETURN REQUESTED Postmaster:

Second Class Posta9' Paid at Richmond, 'Ill·

Please check cause of non-delivery and notify

PI KAPPA PHI

0 Unclaimed

0 Unknown

0 Deceased

0 Moved

11 E. Canal St. Sumter, S. C.

RETURN REQUESTED

0 Refused

0 No. P. 0.

0 No Address

0 BeHer Address

ABOUT

T0

~OVE

SOON? P. 0. Box lSSS,

57 Evc.n::ton, !11.

--------------------------------------------, If you're moving soon, let us have your new address so we can keep

up with you.

Present Address:

NAME:

STREET:

CITY: STATE

New Address:

STREET:

CITY: ----------- STATE

ZIP CODE: ------­

MAIL THIS COUPON TO THE NATIONAL OFFICE PI KAPPA PHI

1 t EAST CANAL ST. SUMTER, SOUTH CAROLINA

~--------------------------------------------