Summer, 1967 - Delta Tau Delta Archive [PDF]

The Rainbow of Delta Tau Delta for Summer, 1967. 7. Steve Garman, Idaho. Above, Dale Fincher, of Sam Houston. State; bel

3 downloads 24 Views 22MB Size

Recommend Stories


of delta tau delta
We may have all come on different ships, but we're in the same boat now. M.L.King

Beta-Delta or Tau-Delta?
Goodbyes are only for those who love with their eyes. Because for those who love with heart and soul

The Sigma Tau Delta Rectangle
Everything in the universe is within you. Ask all from yourself. Rumi

Delta (.) OR Delta (.)-Wye
You often feel tired, not because you've done too much, but because you've done too little of what sparks

Delta 1D, Delta 6D, Delta 7D
We must be willing to let go of the life we have planned, so as to have the life that is waiting for

DELTA®-PLUGS & DELTA®-TERMINATION BAR
Raise your words, not voice. It is rain that grows flowers, not thunder. Rumi

Delta-Marin
Don't count the days, make the days count. Muhammad Ali

Delta Smart
The wound is the place where the Light enters you. Rumi

Trinity Delta
Nothing in nature is unbeautiful. Alfred, Lord Tennyson

Delta Energy
Don't ruin a good today by thinking about a bad yesterday. Let it go. Anonymous

Idea Transcript


h

RApBpW Vol. XC

Summer, 1967

No. 4

RAINBOW

THE OF

DELTA

Vol. XC

TAU

DELTA No. 4

Summer, 1967

Contents The President's Page Tennessee's New Shelter

2

Gamma Eta's "Odd

4

1

Job"

Delt Diamond Stars, 1967 The New Majority

5 9

Traveling (?) Salesmen First Hugh Shields Memorial

13 Fund Awards

14

Transatlantic Solo

Undergraduate

16

Personahties

17

Recommendation Time

Dabney Lancaster,

18

Educator

19

Babeoek's Third Term, 1897-1899 Ahimni News

20

Al Porter's Project :\lumni Chapters

32

Obituaries

.35

The

Chapter

Hugh

27 34

Eternal

36

Shields Memorial Fund�Recent Donors

37

Directory

45 COVER: The

new

A QUABTERLY MAGAZINE devotcd to Fraternity and college interests. The official organ of Delta Tau Delta Fraternity. Subscription

rate, $3.00 per year. All

36

The Delt Initiates

chaptee

eeports,

alumni notes, alumni

Jack A. McClekny, Editor,

3665

Shelter at Tennessee

chapter reports, news stories, photographs, manuscripts, subscriptions and death notices for publication should be sent to the Central Office of Delta Tau Delta Fraternity, 3665 Washington Blvd., Indianapolis, Indiana 46205.

Washington Blvd., Indianapolis,

Indiana 46205

Second-class postage paid at Fulton, Missouri. Published at 1201-05 Bluff Street, Fulton, Mo. 65251, and issued four limes during the year.

The President's

Here I Am in

Page

Hong Kong�

Mary and I are on a retirement honeymoon around the world, returning about October 1. We left Tokyo a week ago, and go to Singapore tomorrow. Then to Kuala Lumpur�India� Afghanistan� Iran� Turkey� Greece� Italv� and HOME! We have seen several Deits on our journey so far� and all have been read ing about our new programs, especially the President's Council. Thc Honolulu Delts are organized in a new alumni chapter with over 50 men, and in Tokyo there are seven Delt.s who are going to start a club for visiting brothers. Our President's Council had a great meeting in May. The attendance was 100 per cent and the work was intense our Saturday meeting going for some ten hours. Among tlie important resolutions adopted was one con demning "hell week" and other forms of hazing, which the Council unaniniotisly passed, urging that only constructive pledge education practices be employed. The Council also supported steady but selective expansion of tlio Fraternity at desirable institutions, recommended that a study be made of the possible use of a computer to process financial data for the chapters, and called for preparation of a directory of pertinent data on all chapters which vvould be distributed to every chapter president. At the subsetiuent meeting of the Arch Chapter, these and other recommendations of the Council �

Mere

approved.

Our expansion program is

on like wild fire. Since my last message colonies groups at the University of Texas at Arlington and at die University of Southwestern Louisiana, giving us four colonies which are rapiiJly developing and will probably be qualified for chartering as Delt chapters during thc com ing school year. We get a steady stream of inquiries from local groups and college administrators, and many good opportunities are being investigated. Alumni chapters, too, are springing up all over; in addition to the reactivated Honolulu group, new charters have been issued for the Eugene (Oregon), Albuquerque, and Corpus Christi-South Texas Alumni Chapters, and reactivation has taken place at Casper (Wyoming), Jackson (Mississippi), and Mem phis. In each Di\'ision an officer is working on expansion, and vve hope soon to cover the United States like the dew. Soon after my return we arc going to have a meeting of the presidents of all the fraternities at the meeting of thc National Interfratemity Conference in Nevv York, We hope to work up a joint national piogram that will enlist the support of all the fraternities and sororities in America, An all-out efloit to improve the Greek image is in the making and should be under way hy the beginning ot the New Year. Unfortunately, I will not be available for fall rush, hut I send my best wishes to each chapter for the best season ever. I know that the new crop will measure up to our expectations and will carry on in the great tradition nf Delta Tau Delta. I look forward to meeting them on my visits with the chapters after my return.

to

you,

we

have recognized

catching as

See you in October! Tom C. Cl.\rk

Euitob's Note: After sending the above message for publication in Tut: Baivhow, President t^lark became ill with He was flown from Bangkok to Washington, D. C. and is now under treatment at Walter Beed Hospital. We know that all Delts join in wishing him a speedy recovery.

hepatitis.

The Rainbow of Delta Tau Delta for Summer. 1967

2

The Fratemily Park at the University of Tennessee. Delt Shelter is the hollow square design, second from right in

picture.

Tennessee's New Shelter By

Dklta Delta Chapter

versity of Tennessee

the Uni

at

main campus in

Knoxville will officially "warm" a new $305,000 Shelter this fall quarter, when the Dclts expect for the flrst time to

enjoy full

home. The Shelter

use was

of their

new

fully occupied

January 2, 1967, with the opening of the winter tj^uarter; however, it had not been completed until this summer. This is the very first Shelter which Delta Delta has occupied as a build ing planned for a fraternity home. The chapter's four earher homes have been converted residences. Delta Shelter is one of 13 fully airconditioned fratemity houses just completed at the University of Ten nessee, In the unique Fraternity Park on

arrangement developed

at

Robert E,

Lee, Jr., Tennessee,'51

the Tennessee

Shelter

was

Brother

Bullock, Kentucky, '54, and Georgia Tech, '55. When Brother Bul lock was presenting his model of the

The

patio

concrete-paved

is

over

W, Glenn

most

proposed building, he recalled

small formal garden planting. Several planters with evergreens are also placed around its perimeter. A por tion of the concrete has a rough-tex tured surface, while most of it has

lack of own

in

undergraduate days,

gested

large open plete privacy a

the

his and sug that the house be built around

privacy experienced

inner court where

could be

com

enjoyed. The

exciting features of this design

were

enthusiaslicaOy adopted by members of thc undergraduate chapter as well as by members of the Knoxville Alum ni Chapter,

been

of thc aiea, but does contain

poUshed

for

a

dancing. Sliding

doors open onto this patio from the front hallway and the adjacent

glass

living- and dining-room the

area

is

opened,

proximately 3,000 tertainment

it

areas.

When

provides

square feet of

ap en

area.

A unified modeiTi scheme is carried

Knoxville,

each of the fraternities participating in this initial construction project was assigned a small lot within an 18-acre area. Each lot was the same size.

Each fraternity wa.s permitted to se lect its ovvn architect and house de

sign. in the Frater used in common all fraternities. This common prop

Certain other

nity Park

by

are

areas

being

erty includes walks, recreational

areas,

streets, and ample parking areas. The University has retained ownership of the houses and of the land, but an nual rent fees to the University pay for use and for the maintenance of all house exteriors. Total cost of the

Fratemity Park

was

in

excess

of $3

million.

Selected

Groundbreaking for the Fratemity Park. Fraternity representatives Gov. Clements

to

design

and

develop

(white hot, center) and UT Presiilent

(black hat).

were

Dr. Andrew Holt

ioined by Emory '27

The Rainbow of Delta Tau Delta for Sununer, 1967

Left, the formal living

throughout

room

features customized

the Shelter in construction

feamres and furnishings. The struc ture is concrete, steel, and brick, and is

as

nearly fireproof

as

possible.

The main floor houses the dining room and kitchen, the formal living room, a suite for the housemother, the girls' powder room, and five men's bedrooms and one men's bathroom. The top floor contains 15 two-man bedrooms and two bathrooms. The main telephone alcove is on diis level; however, the main floor has another telephone alcove, with extensions off

the main hues on tlie top floor. The housemother's suite is served by an additional private line. The dining room seats 48 regularly, but can be re -arranged quickly to seat up to 64

viced by

an

comfortably.

It is

ser

electric kitchen equipped

hen, llw ticing

room

with foot

stereo

system;

right, the dining

all -stain less-steel

an

47-cubic

refrigerator, 47-cubie-foot freezer,

ice-cube maker, two stain less-steel ranges and ovens, a dccpfat fryer, industrial-type mixer, large walk-in closet, and cook's closet and automatic

toilet. The housemother's suite features

room

a

large walk-in closet off an Lshaped room, where the sleeping quar area

by

a

separated

from the sitting

fioor-to-ceiling accordion

door. Student beds are about two feet ofi the floor. Storage drawers are beneath built-in, plastic-laminated study desk.s which have overhead li brary shelves containing built-in study lamps. There are also built-in closets for each man. Another design feature is the large

of housemother's suite; right,

a

typical

persons.

basement which was blasted from solid rock. In this basement are located a convertible meeting room, a large lounge area, and the equipment room. The equipment room houses the electric furnace and air conditioning

very

ters can be

easily accommodates 64

two-man

system, the electric hot-water heater, and the main amplification system for the house- wide inter-com. This

announcing visi paging for phone calls. The lounge area of the basement is equipped for bihiards, bridge, table tennis, and television viewing, A new intcr-com tors

is used in

and in

color television set will be installed before the opening of fall quarter. This

area

receive

prior

to

is to be

panelled

and is to

vinyl-asbestos floor covering the opening of school in Sep

a

tember,

(Continued

bedroom-study

on

room

page

15)

Gamma Eta's ''Odd Job' By

In

January of 1965, Gamma "adopted" a child and joined die

Larry W.

Eta con

stantly growhig number of foster par ents throughout thc nation. Coordi Parents' Plan, the care, maintenance, educa tion, training and well-being of our clcvcn-year old Korean boy is accom plished. The chapter's contribution of nated

$180

through

a

year,

or

the

Foster

vvas

a

Sei.f, George Washington, '67

huge

sum.

Through Plan's help

the family's living condition has much impro\'ed, but much more needs to be

done

to

provide

a

comfortable

home. However, the standard of hv ing and morale of the entire family has been raised because the learning

�15 per month, has

only relief for our adopted child and his family, but continuing satisfaction and reward for the chap ter. The Plan also operates in Italy, Greece, Vietnam, Hong Kong, the brought

not

Philippines, Colombia, sending each adopted

a

of the mother was not enough buy food for tbe family, much less begin to meet the school costs for the chil dren. Our aid to Hyo Sung assures him of his chance to get an education. It reaches the whole family with a basic measure of security and so, in directly, makes it possible for his sis ters to attend school also.

The Lee family was li\ing in a small room in a slum. Rent for the unheated shelter was only !S1.00 a month, but to Hyo Sung's family it 4

to

a

Job"

have

developed

a

warm

pressing his appreciation to us for our support fo]' Hyo Sung and his family

and education. Hyo Sung, affeetionateh' nick named "Odd Job" by thc brothers, was eight years old at the time of his adoption. His father had died of cere bral anemia in 1959, leaving a bereft widow and children in destitution. Our Hyo Sung bas an older brother care

Lee

to

trip. Hyo Sung was day he'll never forget as well as being presented with a bicv(le, his most cherished possession. It IS impossible to convey the personal grarification that the visiring father .IS well as Hyo Sung received The monthly letters received from treated

shown to anv \Tsitor. A letter from tbe Cliief of Public Health and Social .^fairs from Chungnam Province ex

contin

and two sisters. After the father's death, Hyo Sung's mother couldn't earn enough to sup port the family, so she was forced to move to a widows' home where the family was provided with food and shelter. The home became overcrowd ed, and the family had to leave in 1964, The $10,00 a month earnings

business

a

on

and Ultimate feeling for him at the Shelter. His picture hangs proudly on our wall and is one of the fust things

uing supply of brand new clothing, blankets, and bnens, and providing medical

Simg's

"Odd

and Ecuador, child

have been kept abreast of Hyo many activities, and he of ours. We were fortunate enough to have a brother's father visit Hyo Sung while vve

recentb- received

was

The

feeling

one

by

the brothers.

gets from this

as

sociation can't be

expressed in writing, long-range plan for Gamma Eta somehow bring Hyo Sung to the

A is to

United States for a visit. The tremen dous psychological effect on Hyo Sung at

his age would

not warrant

such

a

trip now; however, when he becomes older, every effort will be made to Hyo

Sung

proudly dhplays bicycle.

his

new

from schooling and vocational train ing has been put to practice. While in the fifth grade of primary school, Hyo Sung ranked first among liis 67 classmates, his favorite subject being mathematics. He is novv in the sixth grade and continues to rank high among his classmates. He hopes hi.s studies wOl lead him to be a priest in the future. As to his personality, he is of upright conduct and makes good

adjustments

with

others,

a

trait

anv

good Delt upholds. Through monthly correspondence

materialize our plan. If any Delts wish to knovv more about the Plan or "Odd Job," please contact us at the Shelter or write to the Foster Parents' Plan, 3.52 Park

Avenue, South, New York, New York 10010. vvould utmost

The

material

aid

pro\Tde through the

that

you

Plan is of

importance, but just

as

sig

nificant is the he art- warm ing reahzation that a friend cares and wants to help. All his life, Hyo Sung wfll re member us and treasmc our friend

ship tion

with



a deep and grateful affec perhaps some dav' he ean help

others as we have helped him. And this, after all, is the finest wav of saying "Thank you."

Delt Diamond

Stars, 1967

By Jay Langhammer, T.C.U., '66

The All-Delt B.^seball Teams First team

Second

Bill

Pitcher

Keith Slilwell, 0/i/o State

Catcher

Tom

Mark Marquess,

First Base

John

Jimmy Duffey, Texas Christian

Second Base

John Bryson, Sewanee

Steve Gar man, Idaho

Shortstop

Harold

Ned

Scherer, George Washington Andy Fisher, Michigan

Third Base

Doug Heiser, Western Reserve

Outfield

Franklin

Outfield

Stanford

the Big Ten

the top performers on thc 1967 All-Delt base baU team. As on the All-Delt football teams, the emphasis is on youth, with only three seniors named to the flrst and second teams. Comprising the

batting champ

rest of thc two teams

man.

seven

Five

are

are

seven

jun

sophomores, and (me fresh of our eight first-team se

game, hm^led VMI,

a

two-hit,

1-0 win

over

Another leftv', Ohio State's Keith Slilwell, pitched in 17 games as a relief specialist and posted a 1.23 ERA for the

third in conference 0,89 ERA and 2-0 record, Keith also pitched in thc College World Series, season.

He

Big Ten pitching with

Tom

Staack,

Iowa

was

a

right-hander,

lections hit over .300 for the season, while two others batted over ..300 in conference play.

had a 3-3 record and a 2,25 ERA, while Ed Bickel of Pennsylvania had

Eighty-three Deits from .37 chapters make up this year's squad with three

Peterson of South Dakota

captains: Jimmy Christian; Tom Kin caid, Illinois Teeh; and John Parisi of men

serving

Duffey,

as

team

Texas

Stevens, For the third straight year, Stevens had seven men on their school's team, whfle Iflinois Tech had six. Pitchers

College baseball's unluckiest pitcher this season probably was left-hander Bill Pacella of George Washington, who had a 4-5 record and a 1,27 eamed nin average for 70fii innings. Bill lost two games b;- a 2-0 score to Pittsburgh and Richmond and a 1-0 game to The Citadel in extra innings. He also lost a five -hi Iter to West Vir ginia in which he allowed only one earned nm. Despite such bad luck, he still pitched a three-hitter to beat Syracuse, and, in his final college �



Kincaid, Illinois Tech Rallis, Brown

Phillips, Brown Rickey Copp, Ohio Slate Bill Brunton, Westminster Mike Maznicki, Brown Dick Briden, Lawrence

Outfield

Sam Houston State

Thomas,

An All-Amemcax fiist baseman and

iors,

team

Pacella, George Washington Dale Fineher, Sam Houston State

a

1.98

ERA

in

eight

games.

Rich

pitched

iu

games than any other hurlcr on his team. The college debut of Brown's more

Marty

Fefler

was

noted in newspapers

the countrv since he is the son of Hafl of Famer Bob Feller. Rick Nefus of Stevens led his team in strikeouts. Other hurlcrs who saw action this year were Mike Akers, Wabash; Ok lahoma's Rex Boudreau; Dennis Carl son of Washington; Dave Cramoy, Colorado; Bruce Ford Lind Don Shar butt of Baker; Willamette's (Jib Gil more; Jim Kenning of Kenyon; Ron McRobbie, Tufts; Stu Mathewson, Illinois Tech; Robert Oliver of Texas; Oregon's Andy Bossen; Keith Walker of Ohio Wesleyan; and Ned Woolacross

folk, Florida, Catchers Sam Houston State soph Dale Fineher had a flne ,303 batting mark.

Bill

Pacella, George Washington

and among his hits were 8 doubles, 3 triples, and 3 homers. He knocked in 26 runs, the highest total of any man on the first or second AII-Dclt team. Dale caught all of the Bearkats' 22 regular season games and several playoff games and only made one error afl year, Tom Kincaid of Illinois Tech hit ,255, led the team in runs scored and putouts, and was named as the school's "Athlete of the Year," He was re elected captain for next year. 5

6

The Rainbow of Delta Tau Delta for Summer, 1967

from Brown: from the left, John Rallis, Mike Maznicki, and Harolo A trio

Phillips

^^^

The Rainbow of Delta Tau Delta for Summer, 1967

7

Steve

Dale Fincher, of Sam Houston State; below, Michigan's Andy Fisher

Garman, Idaho

Above,

^^^^^_ j.^^^,^ j^^^^^^ Doug

^^^^^^. j,^,�^^ Reserve

Heiser, Western

Above, Keith Stilwell, Ohio Statu; below, Neo Scheher, George Washington

The Rainbow of Delta Tan Delta for Summer, 1967

8

South Dakota's Bay Bylance, though hampered by a broken linger, stfll made the All-North Central Confer ence team for the second straight year. Also seeing ser\ice behind die plate were John Adams of Kansas; Kay Cohlmia, Oklahoma; W, & L.'s Skip Jacobsen; Bob Knight, Illinois Tech; Duke's Bob MiUer; Hank Perry of Raker; Bon Shearer of Wabash; Jack Tyrell, Stevens; and Dave Wil

hams, Kansas State. First Basemen

The top player is Mark

Mark

lege

on

the '67 Afl-Delt

Marquess of

Stanford. named to the National Col Basebafl Coaches All-American

squad

was

first

team and The Sporting News AllAmerican team. The switch -hitting soph led the Indians to thc Pacific-8 title and a berth in the College World Scries by collecting 43 hits in 32

games for a fabulous ,413 average. His hits included 5 doubles, 4 triples, and 4 home runs. He led tlie team in

total bases (70), runs scored (36), and didn't make an error in 182 chances. He vvas rated by tbe coaches as the country's top defensive college first-sackcr. Brown's

left-handed

Raflis, also

hitting John

batted .262 and led his team in runs batted in. Lcc Pollock of Albion hit .250 and didn't

make

soph,

a

an error.

Also plav'ing first base of Wesleyan; Ed and Purdue's Carl

Jeff Camp Shook, Kenyon; were

Shortstops were few who deserved AU-Delt hon ors, wc took the liberty of putting Steve Garman of Idaho at short, Steve was prhnarfly a second baseman this year but had played short as a fresh Balti man and vvas drafted by tbe more Oriole.^ as a shortstop. He started every game for the Vandals and hit .258. He led the team in walks and was fourth in BBI's with 14. He was superb ui the field vvith a fine .987 fielding average and took part in 16 double plays,

Due to the fact that there

drove in die winning run in the ninth. In another contest, be had two bits, three walks, and three BBI's.

shortstops

Phillips of BrowTi, while hitting for a high average, did a good job in the fleld and led the team Harold

not

in

runs

scored and most at bats, Allen

Clements of Texas

shortstop

savv

and also had

some a

dutv'

l-I mark

Brash of

sylvania;

Wabash;

were

and three -time AllDelt choice, played in his thud straight College World Series. He appeared

during the regular sea Durhig his varsity career, Rickey

in 43 games son.

action at three hifield spots and the outfield. Another senior. Bill Wise of Purdue, hit .271 as a partsaw

in

time

regular.

Other third sackers vvere four-year lettcrman Jay Burns of Illinois Tech; Steve Coplen of Wabash; Andy Marchese of Stevens; Wesleyan's Ned Preble: Gary Shank, Baker; and Lee Spencer of ^Vllitman.

at

Bob

Ken Dunn of Penn

Oklahoma's Ron

Frank; and

D'Arcy LeClair, Wesleyan.

Outfieldehs

After being a reserve outfielder and pitcher last year, Andy Fisher of Michigan recovered from illness early in

as

season to earn first team AUTen honors. He bit .459 to rank

the

Big

the top batter in conference

Western Reserve's

named

George Washington's Ned Scherer, who hadn't played baseball in two years, went out for the team, and woinid up with a .341 batting aver age, second best on his team. Against he had

three hits

Schneider.

and

play.

For the season, he had 27 hits in 35 games for a .286 average.

Thihd Basemen

Georgetown,

Copp, Ohio State's versatile

infielder

on

the mound. He was drafted and signed by the New York Mets. Stevens' Walt Doyle led his team in stolen bases. Also playing shortstop

Rickevsenior

Doug Heiser

vvas

the All-President's Athletic Conference team for the second straight season. He batted .328 in 17 games and hit his team's only home run. Franklin Thomas of Sam Houston State, who also saw action at third base, batted in the elean-up spot for the Rearkats and bit .320 with 2 homers and 25 BBI's. Bill

Second B.^semex

to

Brunton

of Westminster had

fine year, hitting .350 and stealing JO bases. Mike Maznicki of Brown

a

TCU's Jimmy Duffey hit ,308 in conference play and vvas named to the Conference second All-Southwest team. He led the league in walks with 28 and had a .257 season mark for die conference co-champs. In a TCU

victory

over

run, two

oiJv'

hit .231 but was a defensive standout from bis center field post. Dick Briden was one of Lawrence's top hitters once again. Bichie Deats a starter for Pennsylvania as a soph. Michigan's John Arvai only had five hits as a soph reserve outfielder, but was

be had a home and four RBI's, He

Baylor,

doubles,

also had three hits

in

a

win

over

Texas A, & M.

John Bryson of Sewanee had 22 hits for a .234 mark, scored 13 runs, and drove in 13. He also saw some action in the outfield. Jim BroviTi of

four

Illinois Tech won his third letter. Other second basemen were Gene Cagle of Oklahoma; Ton\' Forde of

Andrews of Kansas State, a three-vear lettcrman; John Breitenstein and Paul Torre of Stevens; Lee Brundage and Jim BoUins, Wesleyan; Dave Eyrich,

Western Reserve; son;

Tim

Kenyon;

John

Parisi of Stevens; and Mike Saunders, W, & L,

for

extra

bases and

Lyle Graff

account

of South

Dakota baited .294 in a reserve role. Also playing the outfield were Norb

Idaho's Dave Gip

McEhoy.

went

ed for five RBi's.

Westminster's Bill Brunton

Ohio Wesleyan; Doug Fell of Texas; Ronnie Klatt of Sam Houston State; and Tufts' John Boccio.

THE NEW

MAJORITY By

Ward L.

Quaal

Michigan, '41

W'ARn

Si^uutLNLY

of young people. becoming because some of them grow their hair

EVERYONE

IS

aware

This isn't only longer, sing protest songs, burn draft cards, experiment with LSD, or indulge in tribal dances. It's because of The Statistic. of thc most intriguing statistics, if not the in the history of our free nation: by 1970 over 50 percent of tbe population of the United States wiU consist of people twenty-five years of age and under. It is

most

one

intriguing,

Horrors! That's

people

only three

here will be

.\o wonder

a

years

away.

Some of you

part of that statistic.

Bobby Kennedy

wearing his hair bouf

is

on skis. The meek least that part of it bastion of freedom,

fant, climbing mountains, and duffing indeed inheriting the earth or rep ic sent ing the world's greatest are



at

America.

This imminent catastrophe has riifHed the smoke at the council campfires of the elders. Secretary of Defense McNamara has urged universal military conscripdon for service. Secretary of Labor Wirt^ has proposed an absolutclv unbehevable program of establishing local "oppor tunity boards" where all youths, male and female, would register at the age of 18, be examined, and consigned to all on a volun certain vocational or edueational futures tary basis that would appear to be about as optional as �

minimum income. This would be

enforced,

.

.

scheme echoes in a chilling way the concepts of other YcHith Corps in other nations at other times. But there's even more. How delightful to be young! Thc National Commission of Technology, Automation and Economic Progress, established by Congress in 1964, made its report early in 1966 to thc President, What did it recommend? Simply that tbe govemment would guarantee to everybody, regardless of whether or not he worked, could work, or resisted the whole idea, a

absolute guaranteea new principle of

Henry Hazlitt, the economist, commenting on this pro posal, suggests a situation in which the minimum per family guarantee would be $3,130 per year. If you made 52,500, therefore, thc government would send you an annual check for $630 to bring you up to fhc guarantee. Those

making

over

$3,130 would be paying thc chit, of

course.

Now in such a dunderheaded economy, who would vvork $2,500 worth to get $630 when he could get $3,130 for not working at all? And have plenty of time to blow it at the races, go hunting and fishing, and sit at the window watching bis nutty neighbors trudge off to work!

Well,

No youth would be compelled to go to college or join the Peace Corps or accept any other specific recommenda hut he would have to tion of his opportunity board accept one of the several opportunities offered. This

an

suggested by "essentially

it is

jurisprudence."

taxes.

.

QCAAL

Editor's Note; Ward Quaal is one of Ihe Fraternity's best "newsmakers," but this time we are not reporting yet another accomplishment or honor. Here we are proud to reprint Mr. Quaal's message to the graduating class at Northern Michigan University. Mr. Quaal, president of Chicago's WGN and Continental Broadcasting Company, received the honorary doctor of laws degree from North em Michigan. The line drawings are reproduced through the courtesy of The Michigan Alumnus.

roses.

my

youthful friends, everytliing is coming up one baffling problem: ff nobody's work

There's just

ing, nobody's producingi And if nobody's producing there or sales and the in guaranteed guaranteed come to the guaranteed loafers and free loader.s. No won der the French economist Bastiat said, "Thc State is thc great fiction by which everybody tries to live at the ex pense of everybody else,"

is

nothing

there's

no

to

tax� production revenue

or

income



to pay

I'm rather glad to see the young people coming into the ascendancy. Certaiiily your elders, or some of them, need to be rescued before they bottle themselves up in an economic vacuum where progress will be suspended for all time. 9

10

The Raixbow of Delta Tau Delta for Summer, 1967

Nothing War

on

is more

provocative of this

Poverty. "The big

money is in

norion than

poverty,"

some

tbe wag

recently observed. The local poverty organization in \Vashington, D. C, thc United Planning Organization, was launched with a staff of 676

people.

One of

seven

of these



or

97

employes

paid $10,000 year Forty of the 676 had police records of one sort or another. � In Jamestown, Rhode Island, seven youngsters were paid $1.25 an hour by the Neighborhood Youth Corps were



to

teach

a

sailing.

or

more.

The youngsters

or

their parents owned

the boats, �

In

hi the latter

part of the 18th centmv- and the early part of the I9th, poverty payments in England comprised a sixth of the total public expenditure. What happened? Of course, a new law vvas passed -an oppressive one, reafly, for the simple reason that povertv- bad become so fashionable that fewer and fewer people wanted to work. There's a short cut to fighting poverty, but it's a hard way to go. Those among our progenitors who came to this country when it was a wilderness knew this way. It took fortitude, strength, faith, determination, and a free spirit to conquer adversity then. Y'es, and a good axe too to cut thc thnber and hew it for homesteads. The cure for poverty is work, or, to put it another way, production. This is the causal factor in a chain of events vvhich has distinguished the United States among the nations of the world. We have produced. Our people have been industrious. Our people have been rewarded for working at all levels of endeavor. Occupying six percent of the land area of the world and with less than six percent of the populaUon, we account for one-third of the w orld's gross national product. It vvas Capitalism that induced the Industrial Bevolu �



Boston, one-third of the

600 teen-agers

employed

by the Neighborhood Youth Corps a summer ago re ceived Federal income tax W-2 forms showing more in come tlian they actually received, � In Johnstown, Rhode Island, investigators found that 73 out of the 83 parents whose sons and daughters were enrofled in and paid by the poverty program were tax payers who owned 58 homes and 113 cars, � An unemployed Detroit auto worker, Ozie Bulock. who once took home S104 on his most productive work weeks, reported that since losing his job he clears $106.23 a week, tax free, from tvvo Federal anti-povertv' programs.



tion. It is pure

has

pohtical

pap to contend that

Capitali.sm

not erased

poverty in vast areas of our nation in a manner unmat(;hed by any other socio- govern ment system known in the world today. And you can take that survey from the starving people of India and China dirough the Soviet states to thc sophisticated realms of the French and the Enghsh, What has our system done for us all of us? Let's look at it from the standpoint both of the employer and the wage earner. In 1950 profits were 10.3 percent of the national income. By 1965 tlicy had dropped to eight �

percent. In 1950 wages

were 64.1 percent, and in 1965 70.3 percent. Furthermore, while the wage earners' share has grown about ten percent, his piu-chasing power has grown about 33 percent, despite inflation. .\nd

they

Robert G. Wingerter, president of Rock in a recent speech, among the first 16 group leaders hired under Phfladelpbia's antipoverty program to work with youngsters in the Neighbor hood Youth Corps, 13 were found on investigation to have arrest records wliich included larceny, assault and battery, and morals counts involving minors. This gives you some idea of the moimring domestic problems you will inherit when you take over the majority. We seem to be breaking out in reform movements like kids with the measles. Take this poverty program, for example. One gets the impression that no thought had been given to the problems of the poor until the last few decades of the Square Deal (Theodore Roosevelt), The New Freedom (Woodrow Wilson), the New Deal (FDR), the Fair Deal (Harry Truman), the New Frontier (John Kennedy), and the Great Society of contemporary times. �

According

well Standard

to

Corporation,

There were "poor laws" in England before the time of Queen Elizabedi, A statute in 1536 provided for the volun tary collection of funds to assist those unable to work. As a matter of fact, a dozen years later this voluntary process became compulsory by law throughout England. Indeed,

rose

to

this is tbe situation despite thc Viet Nam war, extra ordinary and sometimes questionable foreign aid expendi tures, and endless social reform programs here at home. Capitalism has worked in tiiis nation. The question we face now is whether or not, in our zeal, we are going to overwork it and see it disintegrate. Witness the destruc tion of thc system that guarantees the greatest social and material benefits of any ever knowTi at any time in the history of the world. Can it happen here? It happens, usually, when tbe people trol and we may be in the process of on the false assumption that wc are owed .

than A

.

an

.

relmquish con doing just that something more

opportunity,

major newspaper organization in America (Copley

Press of

California) recentiy reported the results of an interestmg survey. There are now 2,400 Federal depart

ments, bureaus and agencies concerned vvith regulating our national economy. Forty-two separate agencies are involved m education programs. One dollar out of every five and one job out of every flow from tbe Federal

eight

govemment, not counting local and State governments. In 30 of our 50 States there are more civfliau employes of die Federal payroll than are employed by thc State. Actually, our unemployment rate in this country now is about four percent� and yet we are constantly engaging

The Bainhow of Delta Tau Delta for Summer, 1967 and more of our resources, money, and manpower in the creation and operation of government-sponsored pro grams designed to make work. But tiy to find someone to wash the car, mow the lawn, clean the windows, or, in many cases, fill attractive junior executive jobs. If you have a work record, you know, the welfare payments are in jeopardy. To some, then, work ean be a threat to

more

There's plenty of vvork. Our problem is that wc driving the workers from the fields to tbe fireplaces. Our social reformers^and these

generations of

man

are

not

that the delicate balance of

are

to

pay

the bills of another wbo

won't."

the first in the

presume that tbe economy will



tinue sound whatever the cost of tiieir assume

as Dr, Sollitt also has said, we should be doing talking about justice than equality. We are equal before the law, but the nature of our equality depends upon what we do with our opportunities, given equal chances. Justice is indeed utterly disregarded when the relationship between effort and reward is obliterated, or reversed, "as when under the banner of 'equality' the man

And,

more

who works is robbed

security.

II

con

pet projects. They

production

and

con

sumption will be maintained in the absence of incentives. This, as The Freeman says, is a patent flight from reality. Our system works because the energy of man is fed into it. When that feeding halts, the machinery stops.

The carburetor of our system is profits. Consumer behavior determines the success of business and that's why we constantly see shifts of ownership from the less efficient to the more efficient. The consumer controls the profit system. The consumer cannot control a non-profit system, for non-profit institutions� such as government are sovereign unto themselves in a system where there is no freedom of choice. �



One is reminded of the fable of Alexander the Great when he became, virtually, ruler of the vvorld. He came upon a philosopher who was lying upon his back in a

meadow and meditating. Having become powerful, Alexander had also become a patron of the arts and tlie intellectuals. He stood before the philosopher and said:

"Name your wish. It will be granted, I culture and will may select,"

gladly

underwrite any

am

a

patron of

project which

you

a

moment

me.

Your

and

responded Highness, Please :

step aside� you arc standing between me and the sun," Do not let power, which may come to you in the masquerade of beneficence, stand between you and the

"Being

forced

to

and a himdred other virtues which the idle will know." Our welfare bfll

today

is

never

$52 annually for every

man,

and child in the United States. Ry 1970, when diere will be more of you than there will be of the rest of us, that wfll be $103 ff the recommendations of Econo woman,

That

Keyserhng

are

followed.

that some of you here wifl be vi'orking and paying the bill whfle some others of you will be going fishing. Unless somebody- some time-somehow stops all this nonsense! means

Friends, there

is no conceivable way that you can be for very long after you leave this institiition if you want to be employed and I except those who might be drafted for other dutj'.

unemployed

sun.

disposition of

your lives henceforth you will have

the choice lo make that has been the historic lot of man: whether you would ]i^�e as an individualist or a collectivist. We have

Russell Lowell put it this way;

mist Leon

The philosopher thought "You may do one thing for

In thc

James

work, and forced to do your best, vi'ill breed in >ou tolerance, seff -control, diligence, sUength of will, content,

an

individualistic society, based upon freedoms

which are safeguarded against usurpation. But do not be deluded that collectivism is the privately patented con dition of non -demo era tic lands alone. We are in constant struggle against collectivist programs here at home tempting programs contrived to lure us from the way of free action. The Reverend Dr, Sollitt, Pastor of the First Baptist Church in Midland, Michigan, put it this way: "Ours is a phflosophy of freedom that says a man ought to be free �

to do as he pleases up to the point where what he pleases interferes with his neighbor's equal right.

thirty-five years now another en phflosophy of freedom has been evolving

"However, for

some

tirely different the philosophy that freedom is no longer for something like 'life, flberty, and the pursuit of happiness," but free dom from almost everything, like 'want, worry, and v^'ar' and work, too, if possible,"





Never has there been greater one

barrier

to

enterprise



one

opportunity.

But you face

terrible temptation. It

was

clearly described in an example given by Thomas J. Shelly, who was for thirty-five years a teacher of econom ics and history. He told a Yonkers High School class: "John, you made a grade of 95; and yours, Dick, was 55. I shall now take 20 points from you, John, and give them to Dick. Thus, each of you has 75, adequate for passing, 'Tlere 1 have applied the socialist-communist principle set forth by Karl Marx: 'From each according to his ability, to each according to his need.' "Now, let us examine this in practice. You, John, won't work because you have had your incentive removed. And you, Diek, won't vvork because you are getting something for

nothing.

"We can't exist unless wc work or produce. Thus, in order to get the work done, we'll need someone with a

whip trols."

or

a

gun. Socialism must lead to authoritarian

con

The Ratnbow of Delta Tau Delta for Summer, 1967

12

illustrates an economic and social plan from the original blueprint for America that it is almost unbelievable that we should have embraced any of its concepts. The Jeffersons and Franklins and Masons did not say, "We wiU have a free enterprise system." They said, "We will provide for the freedom of men." It was the men themselves, thus liberated, who created enterprise in this nation through exercise of their ovvn freedom, .\nd Govemment didn't ha\e much to do with this, except to stand by and be properly representative of the people^and to pass and administer appropriate laws, and to levy taxes to support itself, and to provide for the defense, Govemment had so little to do with the wellsprings of the free enterprise plan in this countrv- that, for example, it was unheeding, except for the routine patent procedures, when Charles Goodyear learned how to vTilcanize rubber, when Oliver Evans vvas talking about a road vehicle that would run under its own power, and when John B, Dunlop, the Scottish veterinary surgeon, developed an idea for an air-filled rubber tire. And Government knew not a thing at the time about the first oil well ever brought in at TitusviUc, Pennsyl vania in 1859 by Colonel E. L, Drake, The free enterprise program rolled along, gathering This of life

example

far removed

so



momentum, and every now and then Govemment yawned and expressed mild surprise, as in 1844 vs'heii Henry Ells worth, Commissioner of Patents, said in his annual report: ", the advancement of the arts from year to year taxes our credulity and seems to presage the arrival of that period when human improvement must end." ,

.

dihgently and bufld one for himself, by example assuring that bis own shall be safe from but let him work

thus \'io-

lenee when built. I take it that it is best for all to leave each man free to acquire property as fast as he can. Some will get wealthy. I don't believe in a lavv to prevent a man from getting rich; it would do more harm than good." If in your present temper as a graduating senior v'oii find reference to our predecessors as something less than "cool," remember that what you will be doing throughout hopeful b' will become the pattern of your lifetimes �



reference for future generations. Please try to be diligent� to be honest� to be mdustrito be decently proud to be charitable to the needful ous to be faithful� to believe in something. Please remember your greatest heritage of freedom and clasp it closely, guard it jealousb-, for yourselves and for all who follovv �





you.

And work. Do your part. Do more than voiir part ff aspiration bless you, Bemember: the difference between the vvorld's gieatest miler and the second best is measured in feet and fractions. You don't need to appear before an "opportunity board" to find out where you are going. Let your heart and your mind tell you; there's nothing to stop vou, and ne\-er will

health and

be unless you build the banicrs yourself. Just before Adlai Stevenson died he was in New York prior to embarking for Geneva. On his bedside table was a printed page vvhich he had marked. It was entitled Desiderata and was found in Old St. Paul's Church, Balti more, dated 1692. I can think of nothing more appropriate for you of this generation, three centuries later, than this passage from

found

Desiderata: "Go placidly amid the noise and tbe haste and leam what peace there maj' be in silence Speak your truth quietly and clearly; and listen to others, even the dull and If >'ou compare ignorant; they too have their story ,

,

,

yourseff with othcis for always there will

vou

,

.

.

may become vain and

bitter;

be gieater and lesser persons than

yourseff. achievements as wefl as your plans. Keep however humble; it is a real possession in tbe changing fortunes of time. Exercise cau tion in your business affairs; for tbe world is full of trick ery. But let this not blind you to what virtue there is; many persons strive for high ideals; and everv'where life is fufl of heroism.

"Enjoy

your

interested in

Progress has been the product of labor at afl levels of endeavor. If labor stops, enterprise stops; if the deshe to work is smothered by the removal of initiative, the fights of a free America are beginning to flicker and fail.

We may have been many things as this country was up which vvere looked upon with skepticism by others brash, boastful, and perhaps a little rough around

growing



the

edges

were

one

admired as a

when it

tiling for

us

came sure

to



the social amenities. But

we

industrious; and all the world

for it. It has been

one

of

our

greatest truths

people.

As Abraham Lincoln said to the Workingman's Associa how long bas it been since one of our

tion of New York



Presidents said something like this to a labor union; "Let not him who is houseless pull dovvTi tlie house of another.

your career,

"Be yourself. EspeciaUy do not feign affection. Neither be cynical about love; for in the face of all ariditv- and disenchantment it is as perennial as tbe grass. Take kindly the counsel of tbe jears, gracefully surrendering the things of youth. Nurture strength of spirit to shield you in sudden misforUme, But do not distress yourself with imaginings. Many fears are bom of fatigue and loneliness. Beyond a wholesome disciplmc, be gentle with your.self. You are a child of thc universe no less than the trees and the stars; you have a right to be here. And whetiier or not it is clear to you no doubt the universe is unfolding as it should. "Therefore be at peace with God, whatever you con ceive him to be. -'\nd whatever your labors and asphations in the noisy confusion of life keep peace with your soul. With afl its sham, drudgery and broken dreams, it is still a beautiful world."

Traveling (?)

Salesmen Beverley Twitchell

By

Two

State

Michigan

University

Delts, puppy, and a 1941 trailer took off for "California or Bust" this a

summer.

Chapter ASMSU

president

Myers,

of

Iota

of Delta Tau Delta, and Pete

chairman

vice

Ellsworth,

Student

of

the

Michigan

Board,

State's all-University student govern ing group, spent a rushed two weeks following June final exams building a rubber stamp shop in the trailer for a long-awaited trip to California.

slowly work their plan to California, selling nibber vvay stamps in small towns along the way and making them at night. Thus they planned to combine business with a pleasure trip to fill the summer. Thc

Beverley Twitchell,

of this story,

is

a

student

at

the author

Michigan

State University and a first-rale staff member of the Michigan State Daily,

was

to

Why the dog? "She's a travelling compaiiion," Pierce said. "I'm going

a story for the Daily on the planned trip of Pete and Pierce which was brought to your editor's attention. When we requested permission to re

tion

print. Miss Twitchell graciously under took

to

rewrite and

update

the

ac

count, which appears here. brothers to the

owner

largest stamp shop,

of the world's

says we'll

flop,"

he added, "and I think they're all

crazy," The 3, 300 -pound trailer was to have been pulled across tbe country and through tbe Rockies by Pierce's 3, 000- pound Falcon sports coupe. Finally, after tbe weeks of prepara

and

a

several -times -postponed two left East Lan

starting date, the

to head West, And then the setbacks began.

sing

She did

And busted. Pierce

Miss

"This is

unbelievable," Pierce said,

"The whole thing is." First of all, their puppy died, the second day on the road. Stricken with distemper, she had to be put to sleep. They hadn't gone 200 miles before a trailer spring gave out and the trailer had to be left at Joliet, III. They went on to Pierce's home at Moline, 111., to search for a spring, but 1941 trailer springs are hard to locate. When they returned for the trailer thc next day, it

had

a

flat the. With that

two-by-four .spring

as

served

the two

(Continued

as

a

pulled on

page

fixed,

a

makeshift the trailer

33)

get sick of Pete." The 1 94 1 hailer, a stamp press, type, type-trays, ink. stamp mounts, to

and all the necessary equipment was purchased and the monstrous green

trailer

was

The

redecorated. of

exterior

the colors

trailer was with signs

painted fraternity reading: "Michigan State University, Delta Tau Delta, Pete and Pierce," "Calffornia or Bust," and the Delt crest.

One half of the trailer

was

com

pletely remodeled. Thc sofa, shelves and

a

out,

an

chest of orange

cefling papered, bench

drawers

carpet a

buflt, and

were

was

wrap-around the

tom

laid, tbe work

type cabinet,

stereo, fluorescent lights and fraternity paddles and composite added. "It's probably the plushest work shop anyone ever bad," Pete said. press,

a

"Everyone,

from

the

fratemity

Pete Ellsworth,

"Lover." and PlEHCE MvF.ns,

in

front of "Ye Olde Campus Stamp

Shop" 13

First

Hugh

Shields Memorial Fund Awards

Five Delts Receive Resident

This

fall

five

Delt

chaptehs

will

be the initial beneficiaries of the res ident scholarship adviser program. Authorized this year by tbe Frater nity's Board of Duectors, this pro gram will be jointly financed by the Hugh Shields Memorial Fund and the five local house corporations. In each case the Fraternity wfll provide a cash grant of $500 to be applied toward the scholarship adviser's tuition, and the house corporation of the chapter which be serves will provide room and board, making the value of these awards from $1,200 to $1,400, These awards represent another great step forward in local chapter and national Fratemity co-operation in the promo tion of scholastic excellence. These resident scholarship advisers will provide scholastic guidance and counsel to undergraduate members and pledges on an individual basis. They will also work with chapter of ficers and the scholarship committee

Scholarship

Adviser

developing improved chapter pro grams in the area of seholarsiiip. Ex chapter average may be anticipated where chapters have sought such help and where qualified resident scholar ship advisers have been made avail able, Buflt

entirely

voluntary

on

contri

butions from alumni and undergradu ate Delts and friends, as this Fund grows it is expected that in the future the Hugh Shields Memorial Fund will be able to provide an increasing num ber of resident scholarship grants to qualified Delts, and in many other ways to further scholarship improve of undergraduate chapters. Among the many possible uses of income of thc Fund, one of ment

the

programs

in

assisting

to

facilities for the

chapters

to

exciting

mo.st

provide

is

take advantage of the electronic sys tems

avaflable on manv' closed -circuit TV lectures,

becoming

campuses



"dial-a-lecturp,"

etc.

The resident advisers

are

all

grad

Delts continuing their studies. They have been chosen from those who applied, on thc basis of their own academic proficiency and their quali fication to work with others in coun seling, IjCt's meet these men, tlie first "Class" of Delta Tau Delta's nevv res ident scholarship advisers; Senior member of the class is F, Warde Brand, Jr., who eamed his uate

B.S,

degree

vvith

a

from U.C.L.A. in

banking and finance. As graduate he participated

an

under

in

varsit\'

elected to Beta Gamma Sigma, commerce honor society. De spite having been out of school for so long, Warde ranked abo\e the 98th percentile in the U,C,L,A, Law School entrance examination. While study ing for his LL,B,, be will work with the men of Delta Iota Chapter, crew, and

14

1949,

major in insurance and minors

in

F. \V.4nnE Brand, Jb.

After being

in

perience has shown that improvement both in individual performance and in

was

Appointments

iu

from West-

graduated

CoUege with

mmster

B,A,

a

degree

1965, Gary G. Forrest eamed the

M.Ed, degree from Missouri in 1967. His major fleld

as

an

undergraduate

and he has special ized in counseling and guidance in (Sraduate work. At Westminster Gary was a varsity athlete, and served Delta Omicron as intramural chairman and was

psychology,

the social committee. He is novv his Ph.D. at the Uni versity of North Dakota, where he wfll counsel the brothers of Delta Xi on

working toward

Chapter,

Enghsh WTiting Lamar

V.

was

LeMonte

the at

major of

Pittsburgh,

vvith a minor in political science. He received his B,A, degree from Pitt in April, In addition to being Gamma

Sigma's scholarship chahman,

Lamar

director of the campus radio station, WTGH, and a member of the vvas news

varsity swimming

team in

The 1965-66 school year

1963-64-65. was

spent

The R,.uxBow-

15

of Delta Tau Delta for Summer, 1967

School of Joumalism, Lamar is work ing for the M.S, degree in that field. He wifl assist Beta Pi Chapter to its

strengthen

T.

Joseph

scholarship. Pandy, Jr.,

is

a

1967

graduate of Illinois Tech, where he earned the B.S.M.E. degree, majoring in mechanical engineering and minoring in gas technology. He has been housemanager, sports chairman, and president of Gamma Beta Chapter, ran

varsity cross-country,

was

Senior

Class

secretar}'. Publications Board secretary, and sports editor of Tech News. Joe has been admitted to the Ohio

University

school,

graduate

where he will study for the master of business administration degree. Beta Chapter members and pledges will have thc benefit of his counsel and assistance.

Joseph T. Pandy, Jh.

abroad,

at

the University of

travels

(Lamar's appeared in the Winter, 1967,

issue of 'The at

Basel,

account of bis

Switzerland.

Rainbow.)

Northwestern

Now enrofled

University's

Medill

Tennessee Shelter (Continued from Remaining basement

page

.3)

area

is

a con

vertible meeting or party room. It features a large stage with dimmercontrolled spotlights. Helping to make the Tennessee Shelter a desirable place to live is its location directly across the main boulevard from the nevv campus

$1,800,000 Student Aquatics Center. This Center has an Olympic-size out door poo! which was opened at thc end of this past spring quarter. An other all-weather pool inside the Cen ter will open at the beginning of fall quarter. Both pools arc over 150 feet by 50 feet; each accommodates 800 students.

Other

facilities

at

tliis

Aquatics

Center include a separate indoor div ing tank, table tennis, year-round sun

all area, and a weight room inside. Outside the building are lo cated softball, tennis, badminton, bas ketball, and track areas for inter- and intra-mural competition. Thc new Men's Physical Education Building is also planned for this general area.

bathing

Washington and Lee conferred the degree on Roy A. Tyler in 1966, His major was history, with joumalism as his minor. Roy was Phi Chapter's pledge trainer, alumni secretary, and

Roy A. Tiler

A.B.



rush

assistant

chairman, and edited

the rush book. He vvas editor of the school magazine and assistant editor of the campus newspaper, as well as

Newest student dormitories close to the Delta

rising

.ire

also

Shelter,

which places Delta Tau Delta in a central position for thc expanding campus. All living and recreational ac tivities are being concentrated in this

general area. Planning for this new Shelter was begun under the direction of tbe Alumni Chapter, was at the time. A,

Knoxville

president er,

Jr.. Tennessee, '34.

At

whose J, Fish

meeting Dent, Jr..

a

held in thc home of H. M. Tennessee, '43, the late Hugh Shields attended a presentation made by the then-Executive Dean of Student Af fairs. Dean Charles Lewis. After hearing Dean Lewis' presen tation of tbe details, Hugh Shields told the more than 30 Delt ahimni present that it seemed to him manda tory for Delta Tau Delta to be rep resented substantially in this buflding program

sponsored by

the Universitv'.

gested

this time that Shields sug the 40 -bed capacity for the

house bv tbe

a size immediately adopted membership in attSTidance.

It

at

was



Committees to carry the

completion

were

project

appointed

spot. The co-chairmen

were

on

M,

to

the E,

president of the Glee Club. Roy is beginning his second year at the Indi ana

University School of Law, and

vvill work Beta

with

the membership

of

Alpha Chapter.

"Squiz" Green, Tennessee, '28,

and

G, Henson, Brown, '28. Secretary for thc campaign was II. M. Dent, president of Delta Delta Chap

Dr,

George

(house corporation).

ter, Inc.

Handling negotiations with the versity for financing, planning, construction

of

the house

was

board of directors of the house

Uni and thc cor

poration. The initial board included Dent; Vice-President Thomas

H. M.

Tennessee, '23 (a charter Secretary Robert E, Lee, Jr,, Tennes.'^ee, '51; Treasurer Beauchamp E, Brogan, Tenne.ssee, '57, and Kentucky, '57; and Assistant Treasurer Fred G, Kitts, Ten O, Barnett,

member of Delta Delta);

'52. Lee

nessee,

was

also

appointed

spokesman for tbe house cor poration in handling details with the University, the architect, and the con contract

tractor.

Shelter for Delta Delta culminates several years of planning and fund-raising. It forms the realization of many dreams and reflects admirably to the glory of This

new

Chapter

Deltism. All Dclts

are

encouraged to Chap

visit thc brothers of Delta Delta ter in

their

new

Shelter.

Flying Frogs

France

to

Transatlantic Solo By Jay Langhammer, T.C.V., '66

"Delta

Charles very

Tau

Delta's

Lindbergh"

easfly

is

describes

answer

a

term

different jobs, from San Francisco

to

which

23-year-old

to

Europe. He retumed to Texas

Paul

and, with

a

Radial, Texas Christian, '67, In com memoration of the 40th anniversary of

friend, formed his

Lindbergh's historic New York-toParis flight of May 20, 1927, Rachal left New York's Kennedy International Airport on May 23, 1967, and followed tbe same Great Circle route flown by Lindbergh. The airplane, a Mooney Mark 22 Mustang, was the first singleengine private airplane with a pres surized cabin. The turbocharged en gine allowed Paul to fly at 21,000

the company, he flevv six trans-Atlan tic fiights to such places as Johaimesburg. South Africa; C'ambridge, En

feet most of the way. After 15 hours .59 minutes, and 3.610 miles, Paul landed at Paris' Le Bourget Airport, cutting in half the time it took Lindbergh to make the same trip, Paul's cargo, in addition to 320 gallons of fuel, included five homed frogs, representing the TCU school mascot, which were to be de hvcred to a Paris zoo, Tbe flight, sponsored by the U, S, Department of

Beta Since

Chapter

Dclts

as

Ccmimerce and Mooncy Aircraft, vvas also in connection with the opening of die Paris Air Show, where the air craft vvas put on display. In addition to the national publicity he received, Paul also

appeared

on

tbe Truth" TV show. Actually, the flight

the "To Tell

Trans International.

Pacl Rach.'Vl

tvvo

brothers always

their father took

a

went

plane

along

when

up. Several

later, Paul's father took over Mooney Aircraft, a struggling firm in years

Kerrville. Texas, which Snaneial difficulties

was having manufacturing a

small single-engine plane. Paul and his older brother spent much of their time

instafling

new

engines

in

the

entered the University of Texas, but dropped out after two semesters. Dur ing the next two years, he worked at

16

practically father,

was

not

unusual

an

giew up in

a

in

and

the

crash, he

sons

that

same

semester.

then, he bas served tbe TCU

social chairman and scholar He vvas named to Who's Who in American Colleges and Universities for the 1966-67 school year, was constantiy on the Dean's List for tbe School of Business, and was also a member of Beta Alpha Psi accounting fratemity. Following his flight, he retumed to Fort Worth for TCU's commencement exercises, where he received bis degree. This fall, he viill enter Harvard Business School to work toward a master's degree. For his flight, Paul was honored by the Texas Senate, The Senate resolu tion read: "Resolved that tiie Senate of the State of Texas by this resolu tion commends Paul Rachal of Mid land, Texas, and tbe manufacturers of the Mooney Aircraft, for their out standing contribution to modern air craft transportation,"

ship chairman.

planes,

Midland, Texas native.

partner

decided to return to college. Paul entered TCU in the fall ol 1 964 and was pledged by Epsilon

cockpit.

His

a

a

after a bout with malaria death of his partner in a

attorney' and private air base over a Midland took pilot, after World War II and Paul and bis

who

Paul,

As

company, Air-

gland; Zurich, Switzerland; Salisbury, Bhodesia. and Luanda, Angola. Then,

Paul first started taking flying les at 16 and made his first solo flight in 1960, In the fall of 1961, he

for

own

UNDERGRADUATE PERSONALITIES

this year he had a time of l;51,3, third best in the Big Eight Confer ence, Few that know him vvill bet against his winning tbe conference

Beta Tau's Les Hellbusch By

Robert B, Ensz

title next year, Les is

Nebraska, '68

ticipant

In eveuy Delt chapter certain indi viduals stand out as symbols of what every DcIt hopes to achieve. At Beta Tau Chapter at the University of Ne braska, Leslie C, Hellbusch, '68, is .such a man. Since pledging Delta Tau Delta in the fall of 1964, Les has put forth continued eflorts toward liis goals of becoming an outstanding athlete and an excellent doctor. He is well on his way to accomplishing both. He car ries in

a

3,8 average

(on

premedical studies,

ber of Phi Eta

a

4,0

and is

system) a mem

Sigma scholastic hon

orary and Theta Nu

premedical

hon

orary.

athlete. Les has lettered in both cross-countrv' and track. As a As

an

be set a new school soph record in the half-mile, and

an

active par

the Fellowship of Chris tian Athletes. Les has worked hard for Delta Tau Delta and the fraternity system. As a freshman he was pledge class repre sentative to Junior IFC and served as a committee chairman. Follovving mitiation he has held several positions in the chapter, culminating in the oflice of president to vs'hich he vvas elected this spring. He also serves as IFC

in

regular all

crown

eome

in

"tackled"

for membership into tiie Society, senior men's hon probably thc highest honor a

Imioccnts

Through

can

his

receive from fel

efforts, Les Hellbusch fine image of bis Fra

sophomore

has presented

omore

ternity to the campus and commu nity. It is men like him who have

a

Delta Tau Delta top among fraternities.

helped bring

to

the

dual meets he defeated so the MAC diving

the fulfillment of

an

out

season.

To add to all this

there is to this story. Several years ago Bandy broke his back, and periodically now his back "goes out," Iu fact, several of his opponents in the past few years have been startled to see Johnson do a ncar-perfcct one and a half, hit even

a

glory,

human interest side

thc water, and then not come up. Several of his teammates, however, feel that this is merely an act to gain the judges' sympathy, A junior,

has

response to Les' work for the school and the fraternities. In May he vvas

Nebraska man low students.

was

standing

representative.

Campus recognition

orary,

season

opponents,

Johnson

is

looking

forward

another record-breaking season next year. He is a chemical engineering major from Valley Forge, Pennsyl vania, At thc Shelter, he is one of the more socially active members, and for the past tvvo years he has been the chapter's chugging champ. The night before an "away" meet on a party weekend be can be heard lamenting to

his

plight. Randy is

L.

a

Club, and

scholarship

member of the Varsity serves

on

the

chapter's

committee.

Randy Johnson Champion Diver Randy

Johnson, a Nu Chapter (La Delt, became the -Middle Atlantic Conference diving champion at the annual MAC swimming cham pionships held at Johns Hopkins Uni

fayette)

March 2-4, Twenty-five and universities were repre sented in thc competition, with John son copping the trophy ui the univer sity division. His point total for the five required and six optional dives broke tiie championship meet record. Earlier in the season against arch rival Lehigh, he broke Lafayette's longest standing swimming record. In

versity

on

colleges

Lli. Ill

Randy

Johnson 17

RECOMMENDATION TIME It's that time once again. Delta Tau Delta's success depends upon its new members. It who measure up in character and ability to the high standards of the Fratemity,

must continue to initiate men

We again ask for your co-operation in contributing to the future strength of Delta Tau Delta, Fill in the recommendation blank below and send it at once to the Central Office, Delta Tau Delta Fratemity, 3665 Washington Blvd., Indianapolis, Indiana 46205, Date From

Year

Chapter

Address

I recommend for consideration the

Name

following

young

men;

,

Address Graduate of (High School)

Scholarship rating

Expects

to enter

Date

Activity

interests

(College)

Finances

Bemarks

,

Name

Address Graduate of (High School)

Expects

to enter

Activity

interests

(Coflege)

Seholarship rating Date

Finances

Remarks

Name

Address

Graduate of (High School)

Expects

to enter

(College)

Scholarship rating Date Finances

Activity interests Bemarks

Name

Address Graduate of

Expects

(High School)

to enter

Activity interests Remarks

18

(CoUege)

Scholarship rating Date Finances

Dabney Lancaster,

Educator

By Roy C. Petty, Cincinnati, '18

How

go about

a

State Board of Education, In 1929 he

Harvard and Leland Stanford did it the obvious way, but Dabney S. Lancaster achieved it witii no thought or expectation of such recognition. For him it came after a life devoted to education and unselfish dedication to the cause of opening the doors of college to many who otherwise could never have crossed the threshold. When I first knew Dabney Lancas ter he was Dean of Men at the Uni versity of Alabama. There, be encour aged a young Delt chapter, eager, but at that time with the unique dis tinction of being without a single member from the Yellowhammer State. This was some 20 years after he had graduated from the University of Vir ginia where, as a member of Beta Iota Chapter, be helped complete one of the most beautiful and desirable houses on Fratemity Bow, Unfor

Dean of Men, he contrib uted much to the University as well as to Delta Tau Delta, During this period he served as President of the Southern Division and proved quite an asset to the Arch Chapter. While 5,000 male shidents present quite a challenge, there were three attractive daughters yet to be edu cated (his oldest had ju.st been grad uated from Alabama), Salaries being what they were, Sweet Briar College with just 500 shidents proved too tempting when he was oflcred thc job

DOES

A

MAN

college named

having

in his honor?

took his

John

this

chapter is now inactive. After getting bis A,B, at Virginia came his Master's at Virginia Poly tunately,

Institute, then research at the University of Missouri. His first major technic

assignment

was

a

professorship

at

V.P.I,, which led to this appointment as Acting Secretary of the Virginia

where,

family to Tuscaloosa, Alabama, as

Executive Secretary of their Board, and he continued there until 1941. Back in his native Virginia the Gov as

summoned him to take over as of Public Instruction for the entire state. This assignment culminated in the presidency of ernor

Superintendent

Longwood College at Farmvflle, Vir ginia, in 1946. He promptly cut tbe enrollment almost in half, hired more faculty, and strengthened entrance and graduation requirements. Soon Longwood College gained proper rec ognition and Dabney Lancaster could well be proud of the results, A

man

of such

stature

must inev-

Dabney S, Lancaster

his talents and become the entire Common wealth of Virginia, In 1956 he be came chairman of the State Council of Higher Education, Thus he round ed out his career untfl his "retire ment" in 1964. Now, Dabney and his charming wife lead an idyllic life in Millboro

itably

return

the servant of

Springs, Virginia (Bath County), land his father

bought

in

on

1883, and

where he himself has graduafly built a commodious country home on a high cliff. Cow Pasture Biver surges below and the Allegheny Mountains dominate the horizon many miles away. To reach his daughter's amaz ing "A-Frame" cottage nearby lequires an exciting walk over a swinging bridge 200 feet long and some 50 feet above the creek below, Dabney 's talents are still in de mand and well utilized as chairman of Bath County School Board. For this, as well as for his many other accom plishments, the college at Clifton Forge. Virginia, is more than proud The campus of

Dabney

Lancaster

Community College

(Continued

on

page

32) 19

Babeoek's Third Term. 1897T899

Kendhic Babcock succeeded in estab lishing his authority as President of Delta Tau Delta in fact as well as in He did

hesitate in asserting his leadership when the occasion arose, \Vhen Edwin Holt Hughes, as editor of The Bainbow, unwittinglv' used some of tbe esoteric terms hi the magazine, Babcock called him to task rather abnipth'; Hughes respimded in good temper, however: "I am ready to take whatever blame at taches to myself in regard to the mat ters you mention," Others had similar experiences. Al name.

not

Duerr wrote Stuart Fufler, Pres ident of the Westem Division, "You had much the same experience vvith Babcock that I had my relations

Bhuck Returns

.

.

.

pleasant to

.

.

,

business

[but]

.

.

I have

.

when

it

comes

got along I have con

never

with him very well, cluded that in our contioversies 1 have either always been in the wrong or else that Babcock never backs water whether right or wrong." ...

Robert Churehfll

came

in for criti

least twice. When he nom inated a Beta Xi man to fill The Rain. BOW editorship, Babcock snubbed the cism

on the basis that Beta Xi had two of the nine members the Arch Chapter. Later, when

already on

Churchill, as Ritualist, was experi menting with an expanded form of the Ritual, Babcock criticized him bit terly. Churchill effectively himself, but

no

apology

defended from

came

spite of these occasional out bursts, Babcock vvas the leader of the Arch were

Chapter. The other members unanimously for his re-election,

saddened by his departure in 1899, and would have welcomed him back in later years. He always had the sup port and admiration of Lowrie Mc

Clurg, 20

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

The

nomination

Hayden

had

.

late,

too

came

the

already accepted

as

po

sition. As

into harness in

inclined

another story. wrote Bruck in Septem it

Karnea,

McClurg

was

to

cient, tho

great shape.

think not

we

a

have

more

...

I

am

effi faitliful Sec a more

retary than before." an example of Bruck's direct and ability to express his ideas forcefuUy, here arc excerpts from a letter to an alumnus; "While I ac knowledge that as Secretary I am a servant of the FratciTiity, I am far from being a servant of the individual members. My duties are confined to

As

ness

wefl

certain

defined

which I promise as

At the

the time

at

to

limits

act

as

within

promptly

disposal permits.

my

Outside of these limits all 1 do is done purely as a matter of courtesy. "If you had answered promptly the ...

.

ber, 1897, "There

wire-pulling

vias no

for you, There were a number of Mal men with bghtning rods out, vem of Cornell would have been will ing to rattle around in thc Secretary's ,

.

.

,

.

.

chair. But the members of the Arch Chapter pulled together very well,

Babcock,

Hughes,

united for you,

,

,

,

Hodgdon Everything

through smoothly and there hard feeUng whatever," Soon

'T do

after,

not

were

went

was

continued:

McClurg

beheve you will have any

but none of them obstructionists,

blocklieads or Besides they are the harness. .

not

new

to

.

are

.

a good deal of a stickler for the authority of his oflice and the etiquette pertaining, but no more than

"Babcock is

I

was

myself."

A month later: "Don't you Ihid it

a

different Fraternity from the one we worked on 20 years ago? It seems to me Delta Tau Delta occupies a posi tion I

"It

when

never

hoped

pays

to

things

to

see.

.

.

.

Kendric Babcock spoke of Bmck in letter to Churchill, October 27, 1897. "The old war-horse is getting back a

.

sent to there you would have been no necessity for this call on my time and patience. Until such time as you have withdrawn the

offensive expressions in your favor of thc 5tii instant I shall decline to pay any attention to your

requests."

The C-alifornta Petitioners As Kendric Babcock was a faculty member at the University of Califor nia, his knowledge of tbe petitioners was first hand. "The men as a whole are good students," he reported, "ac tive and

even distinguished in college They are bright, earnest, genricmanly, well dressed, vi-ell balanced fellows. Thayer is president of

affairs.

.

,

.

associated students, Bector was edi tor-in-chief of last year's Blue and Gold, Dolman is president of the Sophomore Class, Hue is captain of the football team. ,

.

.

"They have sensible ideas as to the objects and purposes of a fratemity.

.

look back sometimes look dark. ." .

.

communication

no

misunderstandings with the members of the AC, They have their own ideas,

Babcock. In

Arch Chapter

.

.

at

suggestion

to

When Lowrie McClurg heard that .\lvan Duerr had resigned as Secretary in December of 1895, he wrote Pres ident Babcock, "I am going to try m\ hand again as an adviser and sug one who has proven himself gest as the best Secretary Delta Tau Delta Henrv' T. Bruck has ever had a knack for fratemity work ahead of ." any other man I have ever known.

van

with him personaUy have always been

Ohio, '16

F. Dahbell Moore,

By

"Tbe fight for

a place at the front California is going to be hard and long. The men who carry it on must have grit, courage, perseverance, and

at

patience, and thev-

must

enlist for the

The Rainbow of Delta Tau Delta for Summer, 1967 whole campaign, cadets, but as orders."

not

as

militia

or mere

and

regulars

imder

Beta Iota Re-established In March of 1897

D. M. Anni-

J. stead, a charter member of the re cently established chapter at Wash ington and Lee University, reported to President Babcock, "With regard to the University of Virginia matter,

has not made satisfactory settle of the local indebtedness, and also if it shall not have revived thc interest so necessary to the mainte nance of a chapter, thc charter shall be declared withdrawn," Babcock commented to Duerr, "Tid well is an expert in keeping a chapter the condition must be really going bad. So far as I know, it is the first ter

ment

,

case

of

,

a

,

Division President

proposing

Blaui and Fenner, who are there to the conclusion that it would not be wise to attempt the revival of the chapter before next term fraternity Iffe does not amount to much there, social clubs having usurped the true fraternity's place to a large extent." The petition did not emerge until March 29. 1898. Henry Bruck made tbe investigation. He did not find it .

.

.

came

.

.

.

.

in

all

men

college

E, of

date.

."

.

.

,

a

Beta Delta Chabteb Wtthdhawn

year

as

current

amounts

were

only

if at all. Most of (he correspondence was with an Atlanta alumnus. A, L, Tidwell, who became President of the Southern Division, After devoting much time and concern to the chap ter, and even undertaking to pay off its indebtedness to the Fratemity, Tidwell at last became discouraged. On February 14, 1899, he presented a motion to the Arch Chapter: "That if by April 18, 1899, Beta Delta Chap

partially paid,

for which Defla

errors

made by

again.

,

,

men

hmg

gone

will see Delta Delta is deserted

we

many years ,

,

Febniarj'

chapter.

Kendric C, Babcock

the

chapter

lege. rent

.

.

failed to pay annual

dues,

Failure to pay the accumulated resulted in seizure of the furni

ture. Though Atlanta alumni paid this debt, and the furniture was released,

the effect on thc chapter was a state of apathy. There was no meeting place, therefore no meetings. Membership was down to two graduate students and three undergraduates; there were also three Dclts from other chapters, who had not been affiliated,

"Beyond

their

condition and their

present

comatose

inexplicable

lack

.

.

1898, VV, that

were

At the

R,

Cai-pen-

discouragement

increasing

the

in

of the next college year he WTote further: "The only actives will be Greenleaf and Beattie. ." He suggested the ap pointment as adviser of Dr, Warren W, .

,

of

Hodgdon

and apathy

and its local debt vvas small. Over the summer, however, the rent piled up, and leaders in the movement to get tbe bouse did not return to col

senting the Arch Chapter.

ere

power

In

the Treasurer, other members of the Arch Chapter, and Beta Delta Chap ter, concerning the balances due thc Fratemity and the local debts of the chapter. The total debt grew each

installed April .'50.

.

ter told

.\ voluminous correspondence con tinued all during the 1890's between

vvas

,

were

old initiates thus far there are two promises of help and one 'cussin' out of l.iO initiates and afliliates."

the withdrawal of one of his chapters, and that chapter his own, It looks as tho the chapter, in spite of all our coddling, has simply petered out." Henry Bruck was sent to investi gate. During 1897-98 the chapter had leased a house for three years. Things went smoothly the first year, although

Beta Iota

f. Ware reported in December

by her

of

1898, With Thomas J. Farrar repre

straight path.

a

1897, "The

suffers

affairs.

wise to

my

worthy

in

Delta's Troubles Continue

return next fall.

opinion the petitioners are a charter, and it would he grant the petition at an early

In

chapter

hnquent

mover.

Eight of tbe

basis before November 15, with suitable rooms, and a workable budget for the next college year. Tidwell and the otiier Atlanta alumni were to keep

ing

to pay the deannual dues before August first, as required by the Arch Chapter, and Bruck informed Duerr on August 3 that the charter had been forfeited.

.

"They appear to be a quiet, selfrespecting, clean body of men. all alive to what is going on about them, .

of time. He called for a prompt settlement of the annual dues. paying off of the balance of thc local debt (which was not heavy), reorgani zation of the chapter on a good work extension

Beta Delta failed

known. Of the petitioners, four were in tbe academic course and five in medical studies. H. M, Blain was the

and interested

of business methods," reported Bruck, "I can see no reason for the with drawal of the charter," After his tafli with the members, tiiey re(]uested an

the

necessary to go into consideration of the University, as its position was well

prime

21

beginning

.

Florer, professor of German and

an

alumnus of DePauw and Cornell. On November 2, A, W. Wier wrote Hodgdon that thanks to Florer, along with George Taylor from Stanford and Andrew Clark from Colorado, "we novv have an excellent chapter at Ann Arbor" and the Detroit alumni were enthusiastic. Sherman Arter re ported that the consensus of a meeting he had with Florer, Wier, Taylor, and Clark was that Delta should affiliate the ten or 15 Delts from other chap ters who were attending Michigan, but the chapter was opposed. Ware wrote Bruck November 13 that Delta, having been tried by fire, "comes forth like a phoenix Delta is on her feet again." The alum ni would raise funds to wipe out the old debt. .

,

,

Dr. Florer became

and

,

,

,

dangerously ill,

able to work vvith the chapter; however, George Taylor, who reported this, stated that there had was

not

The Rainbow of Delta Tau Delta for Summer, 1967

22

Babeoek's position

been several meetings of the Delts in Ann Arbor, and an amalgamation of all Delts on campus had been effected, .\n initiation had been held

real demand for furtlier subtrac tion; but on the other hand I do not think that the Beta will ever be a source I vvill take no ac of strength to us, any

Detroit under alumni supervision, "The antagonistic feeling that hereto fore existed between Delta Chapter and the chapters of surrounding small colleges, will soon be wiped out, The chapter now numbers about 15 in

.

,

...

part against any single chapter, except for some new and flagrant

tive

I am sick of the sight and offense. ." smell of the blood on my hands, McClurg WTote other members of the Arch Chapter, presenting his views. "I have favored tiie withdrawal of every charter that bas been taken, but novv I think vve have gone far ...

.

,

active," He

of whom 10 or 12 are then discussed rushing prospects, ...

Tvvo

months

that

later

that the

Hughes

Taylor

chapter

wrote

had voted

night, Febmary 15, 1899.

to

sur

enough

render the charter. He gave as the cause lack of interest and tlie more

than

list,

Alvan

the

opined

some

live

largely responsible

men,

.

Dr, Florer gave thc reasons,

as

he

them, for the chapter's collapse: the reputation of the chapter, the lack of harmony between tbe initiates and the transfer Delts, and tbe lack of a leader to unite the chapter. His ill bis seeing the ness had prevented members for over three months. He reported, however, that the meeting where tbe vote to surrender the char ter took place had not had a quorum present, and that only six votes were for withdrawal. In the words of Henry Bmck, however, whether the charter surrendered or eons itu tion ally was saw

not, tbe chapter was dead. After outlining the story of the .surrender of Delta's charter, Bruck told Carpenter that Delta could not expect any financial assistance from the Fraternity. "Delta has had more in money and more consideration other than matters chap any money ter, and probably than all the rest of it would the Fraternity combined have been infinitely better for the chapter and for the Fraternity if Delta had been made to stand on her own feet from the start." ...

Agitation

fob

little more pruning is necessarv-, before we lay down our scepters next a

.

.

Beta should have gone

long

strong on

colleges from which

Defense ago, and Epsilon is almost the next vve might as well case in order .

,

of

proval "I

the

would

,

.

retracting

proceed

at

,

we may try I would make the

,

movement;

once

Beta, Later .

against

some

others,

ground only

the standing of the sehool," On September 10, Hodgdon wrote Hughes, "Alvan and I talked it over, I moved against Epsilon, he ,

.

.

against Beta, Sorry

to

be active in the

but I thought something ought done," Bruck reacted to these motions in a letter dated October 5, 1898: "I would most certainly refuse to vote for the withdrawal of Beta. 1 shall oppose tbe Epsilon motion and hope matter to be

I

can

.

.

carried.

prevent the

.

.

,

,

motion

being

It is about time to stop

charters on account of tbe position of the colleges."

withdrawing As

be

might

expected,

Lowrie Mc "As

and Epsilon it is a matter of the greatest injustice that their char ters should have been attacked at all, 'Bear and forbear' apply even more to a fraternitv' than to ordinary indi viduals these chapters have not sinned against Delta Tau Delta," .

,

,

"As

University in the

"It

our

we

Epsilon

next

to

the

State

wTote Lowrie

college McClurg.

in

the past

it is

state,"

has

of

Albion,

to

,

.

pick the careless chapters in prefer ence to those that are making magnifi cent efforts to keep their affairs in we are fighting for good condition progress and not for an opportunity to make up for the laziness and in difference of others within our ranks." Hughes voiced to Duerr his ap

to Beta

.

Thc

.

is

college

causing weakness."

of

Clurg agreed, writing Babcock,

Betuaction

On August 26, 1898, Duerr wrote, "I think that most of tlic members of the Arch Chapter are agreed that

August.

,

for the pres

of affairs."

ent state

Fraternity

l.OWRIE McClCRG

Onr vacfllation has

been

.

tiic

...

to

.

.

to carry every

.

have vvithdravMi have bad no future 1 believe in that was apparent. exclusiveness but not to the extent

Ducrr

chapter, Hughes and Hodgdon, "I think tlic only thing to do is to let it die entirely, then get a charter from against

,

.

.

enough

thousand dollars of old debt

one

somewhat

was

sunilar, "I do not believe that tiiere is

as

good

largely,

grown

as

any

ten years. A fevv years ago our chap ter fell off a little in quality, but that

has been remedied now."

Sherman Arter defended Epsflon in letter to Westem Division President Stuart Fuller. "I visited Albion last term. They have some of tbe best men in Delta Tau Delta in their chap ter and have a good body of alumni, I vvfll vote to retain Epsilon, as I can name several schools that in my opin ion arc no better and they are not all

a

.

.

.

in my Division

either,"

Babcock commented that Epsilon during the last five years had been several times on the verge of dissolu tion, "once from the worst sort of internal rows and several times from careless management and in difference." ,

,

.

Surprisingly, tbe most effective arguments for tbe retention of Epsflon came from Delta alumni. A. W. Wier wrote Hodgdon. "In the past Delta has drawn some of her very best men from Albion, some of whom are now only held in line by their original chapter, and who will be lost entire ly to thc Fratemity should thc mo tion carry. These men. Delta less than tbe Fratemity perhaps, can ill afford to lose. ." Hodgdon passed the letter to Hughes with comment, "It is reafly amusing lo think of Delta our old .

.



The Rainbow of Delta Tau Delta for Summer, 1967 aristocratic Beta and

Delta



that

petitioning

be retained in the

Epsflon

Fratemity." act

above tbe average in and the coflege stands next to the U of M in if \'ou pifll Epsilon now, the state you cripple Delta." Charles Warren Her

men

our

small

are

.

.

that

alleged

Epsflon

the only

was

the state whose alumni enthusiastic supporters, and were withdrawal of tlie charter would cost the Fraternity stiong support in Michi

chapter

in

gan.

Henry Eberth conducted the

in

though perhaps

more

than

hopeful

warranted. "The new president is a man of ability and may do good ser Whatever may vice to the school. be thc outcome of this motion let us .

use

.

.

bring Epsilon

it to

to time in her

relations vvith the Fraternity." When Ihc final vote was taken onh' four of the five general officers voted for withdrawal, all the Division Presi dents opposed, and the motion lost five to four.

coUege

Ag.ainst Beta

1898, Frederick Hodgdon wrote Babcock, "I spent two hours this moming with Ed Hughes and we talked over the Beta and Ep silon motions and Bmck's opposition October

On

...

it

as

it is

12,

apparently

be well

might

Beta.

energies seff, and myseff on

to

to

be

a

concentrate

Duerr, Hughes, are

fight,

agreed

our

your

that Beta

should go, It seems to me that if the Division Presidents understand that four of tbe five members are in active favor of withdrawing Beta's charter, as opposed to one member who is a recent addition to the AC, ...

they vvill join our ranks." Lowrie McClurg joined the battic, writing Bmck on October 14, "I have

already

written Arter

possible votes.

.

to .

obtahi

...

more

,

.

past."

is

Fuller that "the main support for colleges is given Obio State Uni wrote

versity

at

Columbus

so

that OU does

not prosper as it might. In fact there is not much outlook for the future

there. I'd vote

I have not decided how

...

the letter McClurg sent out contains much good sense. What hurt can diey do? How will it help .

.

.

drop tliem?" Babcock stated

to

not

vvas

inclined

that the

Hodgdon

to

argue

general "Already

'Big Five'

that he

tliat an

the

action

officers thought there is an idea

were

running things

themselves, and that the Di vision Presidents were just used as suit

to

tools," To Fuller, Babcock gave his views Beta: "The chapter has been once before on tiial for its existence, and on

the fight, putting up a good But while it is, and has been, prompt in the perfonnance of its regu lar duties, it has not seemed to draw men of great strength or force, Tliis is not wholly the fault of the chapter the institution has been left be hind in tbe grovvth of new institutions and it wifl never recover." Sttidents were largely drawn from the vicinity of .i^thens, "a distinctly rural part of Ohio which is curiously spattered with smaU colleges." A voice from the past, former Presi dent Lucius Hoyt, joined the discus sion. "To my mind the Fraternity has no right to withdraw a charter wbere the standing of the institution is as high as it was when the Fratemity granted the charter, and where a chapter is maintained which performs its Fratemity obligations. It is unfair and shoddy, because wc think we are prospering, to cut off a chapter we

won

case.

.

than

two

."

.

.

.

,

.

.

.

that obscures their future

only thing

the continued uncertainty as whether they vvill be permitted ." carry on.

to

Despite tbe favorable report by

the

is

.

to

.

investigator, the

vote

six to three

vvas

withdrawing

Beta's char

ter; Bmck had convinced Southern Division President T id wefl to vote

against the motion, and of

Ar

course

joined them. Since a seven-ninths majority was required to withdraw a charter, the motion lost. ter

Babcock directed Bmck to make the official announcements as to the re sults of the motions on Beta and Epsi lon. "We have eliminated all the chap ters upon which there was any thing like a general sentiment for withdrawal. If any more attacks are to be made along tlie fine of the standing of the college, rather than the defects of the chapter itself these should be made only after ex plicit instmction of a Kamea." .

.

.

.

.

.

.

glad to establish perous days," were

in

our

less pros

Gamma Alpii.4 Chartered A

bearing

petition

11

signatures

presented by members of the Black Dragon Society of the Uni versity of Chicago, and was warmly endorsed by the Chicago Alumni As

was

sociation. In his report to the Arch Chapter, L, K, Malvem stated that

President Harper of

Chicago

was

es

fraternities, FinanciaUy the petitioners had made sure that they would go tluough their first year free of debt. All members were able to bear their share of the

peciaUy friendly

to

expense. With

the high standard of scholarship of tiie membeis, thc nu-

cleus of a very strong chapter was in dicated, Malvem was very favorably impressed with tbe men their ap pearance, their records in scholarship and athletics, and tiieir spirit. �

Abter's Repoht

on

Beta

"Well 1 hardly thought .Arter would around for Beta," Hodgdon

swing

Stuart Fuller acknowledged a copy of McClurg's letter of October 19 to Babcock. "From what

.

that rustic appearance that character ized so many Beta men in thc past they wifl compare with the personnel of any chapter in my Division. They have the greatest interest in the chapter and the Fraternity, and the

in favor of to

Division Presidents support

because the it advisable.

FoUowing his investigation, Sher Alter reported: "These men are the best looking lot of men I have ever seen at OU. They don't ha\'e man

.

it should be

receiv

ing

.

Northem Division President Arter

.

Attempt

.

...

vestigation of Albion College and Ep silon Chapter, His report stated that the men were good, and fuOy up to the Fraternity's standard. "We have the picked men of tbe College," Hodg don vvas skeptical of Eberth's report, but Hughes thought it to be true,

.

am

college chapters

,

regarding Ohio University

rather inclined to vote against tbe pros withdrawing the chapter pects of the state institutions are in the day of the small general good I

.

Henry Bmck, "Do hastily, Epsilon is all right.

Ezra Ware wrote not

I leam

23

Gamma

Alpha Chapter

\vrote

ly installed

that

possibihty

cial."

Hughes, 'Tt is very unfortunate Arter vvas the Phonarch Espe

on

May 13,

was

formal

1898. The

of a chapter at Chicago had been discussed since 1892. and

The Rainbow of Delta Tau Delta for Summer, 1967

24 seven

fraternities

when

our

Pkoblems

After

Beta Pi

at

visit to Beta Pi in Novem

a

ber, 1S98, himself

there

already

were

chapter entered,

Lovvrie

McClurg expressed

thoroughly indignant and a rough house in the chapter ball, and be said the chapter's rushing vvas a failure, as

Ho had witnessed

disgusted. Babcock

the letter and

sent

ordered.

was

investiga

an

McClurg advised

Bmck the

seemed to have "to be willing to gone to die rather than run the risk of The chapter making au initiation. will have only five or six men next

chapter sleep and

.

.

year

,

.

Fraternity

of

.

.

.

,

.

with .

.

McClurg defended Bruck Babcock. "1 find Bruck is not popu lar with Duerr and Hodgdon and that they have entered into a combination

.

far

as

.

.

.

.

debt. had always good ac tive upperclassmen to do the rush Novv that these have gone. ing. those left being bashful or lazv.

.

.

,

.

Again

.

over,

fellow. on

find the

sport into and be is so initiating good men companionable that he can induce the other kind do them to join not know good men. Beta Pi is at pres ent made up of second rate students .

.

,

.

.

is not in very

.

.

chap chap

good shape.

.

not

care

.

to

,

.

of themselves

year's

subscribe

AC

to

with

Hogdon

general principles is of

.

.

.

more

or

but in value ,

,

.

talk with Bmck before you any ultimatum, and you wfll a

same

platform large enough

Hughes

.

.

against him, taking Hughes with them. These three say they wifl ff Bmck is elected,

.

tude shows

.

...

any

a

and is

.

.

not

a a

that

the men

I do

ticket

serve

Aside from

have, this

ine

,

valuable better than To

.

feel

particularly

.

.

atti

great lack of Fraternit\ a kind of sandbagging

Duerr is not a dignant. ticularly valuable officer and is not a pleasant fellow to have ings with, Hodgdon is much .

.

,

any faufls Bruck may

.

next

.

Frederick C

which makes

AnCH Chapter Politicking

.

.

tor you both to stand on."

.

they have practically given up mshing of men and expect the to come to them for admission,"

"As to

issue

loyalty,

Their standard of membership is they have such peculiar one;

good opinion

.

quarrel

fob

President

a

and third rate preachers." Henry Bmck discussed the ter's condition with Fuller: "Tlic ter

no

Delta Tau Delta than either.

sonnel in writing Babcock Februarv' 7, 1899, "To take a crowd of religious muckers and make gentlemen of them is I fear more than Delta Tau Delta ,

Fratemity politics. "I

in

opinion Bruck

Have

.

frighten

May,

.

to

can

in

Hughes

had gathered the idea that you, Hodg don, and Duerr did not wish to con tinue in any capacity. You will make an ideal President and 1 most sincereb' hope you vviU take the ofiiee, Hodg don and Duerr arc good fellows but there is too much business and too little fraternal regard in their I wish that you and make-up. Bruck could come together and talk

otherwise incapacitated cannot ." make good rushers. McClurg discussed Beta Pi's per

do. Yon

,

writing

meddle

lo

my

or

can

.

,

1899. McClurg disavowed any desire

Duerr

.

.

.

"I have

,

.

,

,

genial

chapter

.

to

to my

...

in

arc

for this year.

no

"The

rise

give

may

"I hope that for the good of Delta Tau Delta you four men can come to an agreement, for Bruck makes, I I have think, an ideal Secretary, known him intimately 20 years and have always found him the same

Lind so told the boys the dignity of thc chap

good shape

There is

.

matters

.

is concerned, "Tbe books of the chapter

Epsilon

...

ter

veiy

,

Lowrie

to

McClurg, so

,

.

regarding

re-elec tion, I am interested in tlie work, but do not think 1 wiU make any toncession for the sake of re-election, McClurg replied that he believed the opposition did not amount to much "and I think Babcock and Hughes by a few well placed letters can stop it,"

.

gate, and he reported to Babcock De cember 7. "I talked with the various members to learn the true state of the chapter, Personally 1 agree .

"Babcock

course

considerable opposition

,

.

McClurg, my

"

sent to investi

was

that

,

ly gone." L. K. Malvern

wrote

me

Beta and

DueiT's opposition to Bruck was stated UI a letter to Hughes in Febru "The Bruck matter was ary. 1899, mentioned to me first in July. 1897. and I opposed it from the first. It was Babeoek's idea. 1 hope be is satisfied with the experiment,"

the best material has entire

.

Bmck tells

today."

,

Chapter members, tion

other Arch

to

which contains the name of Bruck," Frederick Hodgdon wrote Babcock in October of 1898. "Bruck is a good fellow undoubtedly but I think he is too much out of touch with the

and there is

Hughes," Hughes, McClurg

wrote

,

no

in

par ,

he

deal more (me

that he

understood that there was some op position fo the re-election of Bruck, which he termed iU-adviscd. "It would be a setback to the Fratemity if he were

side-tracked."

The announcement of Kendric Babcock's intention to resign the presi

dency because of tend the

unanimous Holt

liis

approaching

inability

to at

Kamea caused

endorsement

of

Edwin

fill the vacancy, with Hughes the clear intent to elect him to the office again at the Kamea, Alvan to

Duerr definitely removed himself again from consideration, and Sher man Arter, who had been iTimored seeking the office, warmly endorsed

Hughes for the position, Henry Bruck requested the priv ilege of placing Hughes's name be fore the Arch Chapter for tbe vacant post, and Babcock agreed. This move Bruck's part probably did much

on

to

placate Hughes.

The Rainbow of Delta Tun Delta for Summer, 1967 Duerr's Success

as

In January of 1899, Alvan Duerr Edwin Hughes, In addition to urging Hughes to be a candidate for President, he expressed his ovvn inter wrote

est in

continuing

as

Treasurer,

"I am tiie father of the movement to infuse a healthier attitude into our chapters on the financial question it was at my suggestion to make re ductions m the matter of the very old debts. I actually collected most of tbe back dues coUeeted in the last two years of Hines's term. Hodgdon carried on the work ably, better than it was ever done; then I became the Treasurer. At the end of my term the finances will be in the kind of condition that we never I did dreamed of five years ago. the dirty work; why then, just as the ,

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

,

.

.

,

work becomes easy, should I give it over to some one else, when it is decidedly to my taste? If I stay on the Arch surer.

Chapter

...

shaU step

it must be

as

If my policy is too out entirely,"

Confusion

in

hshed at

Bab cock's Final Beport to the k.4knea

Tbeasuheh

Trea

bard,

I

Although his resignation as Presi dent had been effective July 1, Ken dric

In 1898 the Western Division Con was amended to provide that the Division President be elected by the chapter entertaining the next Con ference, At the 1899 Conference, held June 6, Beta Gamma was chosen to

stitution

presented

a

stated,

more

than

$1,500

unpaid.

was

Under the pressiue exerted by Hodg don and Duerr, nearly every chapter had developed "at least a rudimentary business conscience." "The

Rainbow," he stated, "always needs superior qualities, and these Brother even

Hughes

better

than

demonstrated .His before.

has

.

.

earnestness, enthusiasm, kindliness, and vvisdom have been as subtly po have been

acceptable," praised tbe Chapter Manual, mostly the work of Alvan as

Babcock

they

also

Duerr, which had been issued during the term, describing

it

as

an

excel-

one,

individual chap

Malvem was appointed to fill the position of President of the L.

K.

Westem Division.

Edwin

Holt

Hughes

made

three

important recommendations on Fra ternity policy. The first was that the Arch

Chapter,

its finance commit

or

tee, have some supervision over the local finances of a chapter; he referred to the troubles of Delta and Beta Delta, caused by mismanagement of local finances. His second recommendation was for adoption of a definite policy vvith

the

regard

to retraction. The 1897 Karnea had indicated that the Arch C'haptei

should review the list of chapters and act to withdraw charters where it would benefit the Fraternity. Motions in furtherance of this policy, against Beta and Epsflon, failed to carry. "The whole question of retraction is a deli

one," said Hughes, "and gives

cate room

on

charity .

,

both

and

sides for the utmost the highest conscience.

The standing of the coflege, the of the actives, and thc loyalty ,

.

third recommendation was that there be some control given the

Arch

Chapter over the initiation professional students. The trend

of in

that direction had been marked, over recent years, and the effect was in

jurious, Secretahy's Report "It is now 12 years since I have bad the honor of presenting a report to tbe Fratemity and I must tender mv,

,

,

the immense sttides and the commanding position assumed by our beloved organization in thc Greek world. Pursuing the

congratulations

tutionality of thc Western Division election provision, McClurg ruled that it was the in tention of the Fraternity Constitution that the Division President be chosen

to an

Interim

Hughes's

all this, and said he bad asked Lowrie McClurg, the Fratemity's Judicial Officer, for a mling on the consti

elective powers ter,"

as

PllESinENT

of the alumni all enter into the ele ments of decision, ."

Hughes

in open Conference. "At any rate, no Division has tbe power to delegate its

Apri! 30, 1898;

Hughes's Report

.

Westem Division Pies ident,

Alvan Duerr wrote President

on

quality

host the next Conference, thus was to elect the President, but the chapter would not meet again until college re opened in the faU, Since the Fratemity Constitution stated that a Division President assumes office fifteen days after the adjournment of the Con ference at which he was elected, there was a question of who, if any was

V'irginia

and Gamma Alpha at Chicago, estab lished May 13, 1898. Petitions from Penn Stale and Maine had been vvitiidrawn.

compre

hensive report for his third term to the 1899 Karnea. He found it par ticularly gratifying that year by year an increasing number of older alumni were renewing their activity in ser vice to the Fraternity, Babcock praised Alvan Duerr and Ed Hughes for their Arch Chapter ser vice. The collection of more than 52,500 current dues was an unparal leled achievement. An earher year, he

tent

Western Division

Babcock

2,S

upon

.

Alvan E, Duerh

lent piece of vvork which would sup ply needed information for all officers of the Fraternity "from the highest to

the lowest."

reported: chapters Omega at California, established February 5, 1898; Beta lota, re-estabThree

Beta

new

were

middle

.

.

betvveen tbe conserva tism of the Eastern fraternities and the course

lavishness in the distribution of char ters of certain Western and Southern fraternities, we have a well balanced

chapter list which has proven a source of strength in all our undertakings. .

.

." However, special mention would to be made of four chapters;

have

The Rainbow of Delta Tau Delta for Summer, 1967

26

due of $107,

Alpha Discussed

the trouble at Alpha, that few men had graduated, compared with the num ber initiated. In consequence the chapter had developed a general ane mic condition, with a lack of biovvledge and interest in Fratemity affairs and a poor local reputation. After a rousing banquet, the alumni initiated tbe leader of the neuttals, a man of In

analyzing

Bruck pointed

out

turned

over

die task vvas com 1 would be per

so

paratively easy. sonally at fault

...

if

penny of debt.

successor .

.

single chapter a single

a

its

to

The many ills

.

arising from dehnquency, the grad

decay of chapter enthusiasm and of fraternity zeal have convinced me that my only course was to insist upon the Fraternity's and the chapters' and this I have done." rights ual

.

influence in tlie coUege, In Bruck's words, this marked a nevv era, but the reorganization of the chapter was stiU to be made.

.

.

EDrrOK Hughes's Beport four per cent of the Fraternitv''s

Only

received The Bainbow, ac to the editor's report to the Karnea. He presented a breakdown by chapters, and chided se\'eral chap ters for thc poor showing of their ahimni. alumni

cording Delta's Condition "Affairs at Delta culminated in the total demoralization of tbe chapter," Bruck reported. The charter has been surrendered. The ttouble was largely the heavy debt against the chapter; if this were paid, there would be no

estabhshing Michigan. in

difficulty ter at

a

good chap

Evil effects attending admission of professional students into the Frater nity were evidenced at Lambda, Bruck reported. The different departments were scattered over the city and thc hours conflicted, making close associa tion impossible. The local alumni were

fairly

lumbia was still under consideration, but all interests would be reeoncfled

before any definite step

Lambda's Weakness

taken.

plenary

powers,

long

as

Bruck stated,

necessary.

Beta Delta

the University of Georgia situation closely followed his Bruck's report as

on

commissioner.

Though

some

of the alumni bad offered to pay the debt to the Fratemity, Bruck stated that suspension of the Arch Chapter motion withdrawing Beta Delta's charter would not be wise. "If Delta Tau Delta re-enters the University of Georgia, it should be with an entirely new set of men." Possible Return

to

Officers

Thc report of the Committee on was accepted, and its slate of officers elected, unanimously. President Edwin Holt Hughes, Mu, '89. Secretary Henry Bruck, Rho, '78. Distiibution



Treasurer

Alvan E. Duerr,



A conscientious

weeding of tbe list

of alumni chapters but one Chicago, had been dead for chapters had been �

Francisco and

would have left New York City three years. New organized in San

Philadelphia.

Bruck

on

Retbactiox

BiTick recommended that a charter be withdrawn only where the circum stances

surrounding

such

to

the

chapter

our entrance into insti upon v^'hcn tutions of higher rank depended upon .

.

.

cutting off chapters at the lower end of the list." This factor having been eliminated, the standing of the our

college, should tovvard

except

in

extreme

longer be withdrawing

no

a a

cases,

consideration charter.

A Financial "First"

"Probably of

for thc first time in the the Fratemity," Alvan

Duerr's report as Treasurer stated, '"The Treasurer is able to report every chapter is out of debt to the General

Fratemity. don

Former

reported only

Treasurer a

small



Frederick

Hodg balance

Sigma,

Hodgdon,

Reta

Mu, 94. Editor�Frank F, Rogers, Beta Bho, '99. Tbe Committee proposed the abo lition of the offices of Catalogue Agent and Historian, turning their duties over

to thc

Secretary,

Constitution Changes

Amendments to the Constitution abolished the offices of Phonarch General for the four Divisions, Di vision

Presidents, henceforth, were to biennaUy. Membership in professional schools in die universities could be limited by a two-thirds vote

be elected

of the Arch Chapter, in tlie individual chapters. Imphovements

Edwin Holt

in the

case

of

Ritual

had been ap to head a coinmittee for the revision of the Bitual as ordered by the 1897 Kamea, In his report to the 35th Kamea, he stated that the body of the old Ritual had been retained, the foundation having been so splendidly laid by Ed Curtis. More than 330 changes had

Hughes

pointed by President Babcock

Since

history

'93, Bitualist

are

make thc existence of the chapter prejudicial to the general wel fare of the Fraternity. "The policy of withdrawal on account of the stand ing of the institution vvas determined as

Columbia

the last Kamea, Columbia University had received some con sideration from the Arch Chapter as a field for expansion. Rho Chapter had opposed, feeling that the cost of estab lishing a competitive chapter on that campus would be too great, while a poor chapter vvould be harmful, Co-

of



numerous, but inactive, A com

to remain as

report

was

Alumni Chapters

missioner should be sent to Lambda

with

Election

Henry T. Bruck

(Continued

on

page

.33)

ALUMNI NEWS Aboard bombers

of the the first

uated June 12 from the Army War College. The course prepares him for a top-level armed service or govem

Stratofortress

one on

bombing

mis

U-Tapao Royal Thai AFB, Thailand, was Capt, Bruce E. KeUy, sion out of

ment

high

altitude bombing strikes

on

awarded

to

Capt,

der, Carnegie Tech, '36,

Viet

Mr.

land,

as

an

of

manager WTAE Badio,

William F.

Lt.

Navy

as

chairman.

vice-president and

is

Snyder

eral

Balfanz, Baker, '-59, and Kansas Stale, '60, in ceremonies at Bear Cat, \'iclnam. The recognition was for merito rious service

Pittsburgh Better Business Bu directors elected Frank C. Sny

reau

Cong jungle targets. The Army Commendation Medal was

position.

The

Alabama, '60. An electronic warfare officer, Capt, KeUy will fly precision

gen

and

WTAE-T\'

Frank

C,

Layng, Jr.,

awarded the Bronze Star for heroism while serving in Viet-

DePauw, '61,

was

during Operation Suitintelligence and civil af-

Lt. Gary S. Kitchen

and courage on important missions under hazardous conditions. First Lt,

Gary S. Kitchen, Butler, '65, has been awarded the Air Medal at Naha AB, Okinawa, A navigator. Lt, Kitchen is assigned to Naha as a member of the Pacific Air Forces, Having completed a 10-month course of instruction, Lt, Cob James L.

Hayden, California, '44,

TlHS Is Capt.

William F, Balfanz

fairs officer with the 5th Cavahy, The captain has since been assigned to the InteUigence Section of the 9th Infan

try Division,

Major Robert M. Collier, Bowling Green, '54, and Major John P. Gee, Bending Green, '55, were graduated from the Air Force's Air Command and Staff College at Maxwell AFB,

Alabama, marking the end of

more

of study. Major Colher, a veteran of service in Viet nam, has been assigned to Head quarters, USAF, in the Pentagon. Major Gee has been reassigned to Southeast Asia, Cited for outstanding airmanship than nine

months

was

grad-

ExPEfilMENT

AN

Alumni News has heretofore been listed in the alphabetical or der of the last name i>f the alumnus. Several readers have sug

gested that the listing be by chap ters, so that they might readily find items on their chapter broth without a long sirarcb. In this issue, therefore, listings are in al phabetical order of the sehools; ers

where one

a

man

was

chapter, he where

school This

he

arrangement

adopted

as

a

in

than

initialed.

was

has

not

permanent

yel the decision will reader reaction. �

more

is listetl under the

been

one,

as

depend

on

WHICH WAY DO YOU PREFER IT?

Lt. Col. nam.

tar

Wounded

shell,

ovvn

James

Dr.

injuries

by

L. Hayden

an

exploding

mor

Layng disregarded to

his

attend others in the

He continued, even when tiie hut in which he was working caught fire, until it vvas necessary to evacuate. The presentation of the award at Newport, Bhode Island, Naval Staarea.

ticm,

made by another Delt, Vice Robert B. Brown, Alle '29, Surgeon General of the

was

Admiral

gheny, Navy,

Colonel Richard G, Banks, Flori da, '34, has been awarded the Legion of Merit

by

President

Johnson

for 27

Tlie Bainbow of Delta Tau Delta for Summer, 1967

28

leadership, sound judg ment, and aggressive dedicated effort" in his duties as Professor of Mifltarv' Science at the University of Miami from 1964 through 1967. A combat veteran of World War II and Korea, Col. Banks bas also served in various

Boyal Thai AFB, Thailand, First Lt. Rodney C. Riem en Schneider, Iowa,

posts in Europe. He

.^ir Command,

"consummate

Delta Zeta

Chapter

was

president

'63, and Florida Slate, '63, has Medal,

on

assigned

ol

in 1934.

at Tan Son Nhut

His last

315tb

Air

assignment

Division

at

as a

with

Tachikawa,

Japan. Pacific Mutual Life Insurance Com pany has named Thomas R. Hines, Jr., Florida State, '62, assistant man-

Loring

at

Strategic

Outstanding

Pro

curement

Officer Certificate has been

awarded

to

Lt,

Col,

Thomas

0.

Townes, Kentucky, '50, by the Chief

AB, Viet was

was

member of tbe

Tbe Air Force's

air

duty

nam,

Presentation

AFB. Maine, where the lieutenant is

operations officer with the Pacific Air Forces, Major Fred D. Bartleson, Jr., Florida, '52, is now .\n

re

ceived the Air Force Commendation

Dee j,

Hubbard, Koiisa,? State, '62, re captain's bars from Brig. Gen. Glenx j, Collins. Capt. Hubbard was ceives his

attending School

the

Medical

at Ft. Sam

Field

of Staff for his outstanding proficien cy. The colonel, a member of the Pa cific Air Forces, received the award at Kadena AB, Okinawa. He is now

assigned to Headquarters, USAF, Washington, D. C.

in

Service

Houston, Texas.

The directors of

Washington

Water

Power Co. named

George M.

Brun-

zell, Idaho, '36, the firm's president. be chief executive officer, Mr. Bnmzell began with the company as to

electrician in 1936. He was one of distinguished alumni receiving thc initial Alumni .'\chievement Awards an

five at

the 1966 Kamea. D.

Wayne HaUstein, Indiana, ',39,

and Purdue, '39, bas been elected president of Ingersofl Band Company, Mr, Hallstein has been with the firm since 1940, and had been an execu tive

vice-president

since 1961,

For meritorious achievement

as

an

aerospace munitions officer at Takhli

MajoT

Fred D. Babtleson,

Ll. Col. Thomas O. Townes

Jb,

commander

the Keesler is 2d Lt, Donald L.

Appointed

ager of the firm's Tampa-Levy agency, .\ throe-time member of the com

3394th Student Squadron

pany's

sales honors club since joining the firm in 1964, he assumes respon sibility for selecting and training nevv

AI-'B, Mississippi, Wagoner, Kentucky, '66. The squad ron, comprising 500 personnel, is

PML

part of the world's largest technical

representatives, H. Woodward, George Washington, '34, has retired after 40

training

Everett

years of federal service. He

was a

Mr.

\\"oodward

is

T. Tisdale, Jr., M.I.T., '50. president of Treesdale Labora

per

division of Susquehanna Cor was eleeted to the corpora tion's board of directors. Mr. Tisdale joined Treesdale in 1960 as executive vice-president, and has been a vicetories

poration,

currently

vice-president of the Tidewater Col lege Corporation, which is engaged in

establishing leges on the

several liberal East Coast.

arts

col

now on

dutv-

at

Pleik-u .\B. Vietnam.

of 1966.

president smce

A transport pilot, Capt. Dwight M. Sheftall, Georgia Tech, '61. has been assigned to the Pacific Air Forces, and is

center,

Norman

sonnel administrator with thc scientific and technical laboratories of the

Navj.

of

at

thc

parent corporation

A group supply officer with a Ma rine air group. First Lt. Bruce F. Kostad, North Dakota, '64, is sta Everett H. Woodwaiu)

tioned

at

Chu Lai, ^'ietnam,

The Bainbow

of Delta Tau Delta for Summer, 1967

national

sales manager. Ex lieutenant in the

general

cept for service

Navy from

29

as a

1941 to

1945,

Mr.

Hopkins

has been with General Motors since 19.36, when he joined Chevrolet as a time keeper. He came to Cadfllac in 1961, as assistant general sales man ager of the western half of the United States, Alvin

W.

Jones, Ohio, '27,

was

elected to the national board of trust ees of the Order of Symposiarchs of

America,

national organization

a

coflege fratemity alumni, formed education

higher

promote

fraternity

movement,

Mr.

and

Jones

of to

is

manager of the C:iiiflicothe branch ot

Columbus and Southern Obio Elec tric

Pittsburgh

Another graduate of the Air Com mand and Staff Coflege is Major Bomain F. Krzmarzick, North Da kota, '53. Thc course, which covered nine months, was for officers of all the services and .\ir Force civflian emand prepares for mand and staff positions. In D.

a

ceremony

in

higher

com

Washington,

C, Larry Colbert, Ohio. '62, in

States

Foreign Service.

as

Cadillac

an

was

officer in the United

sworn

Motor

Car

Division

.Motors Corporation named Fred T. Hopkins, Ohio,

C.

Ludlum, Ohio, '57,

form assistant in the division. Miller Freeman Publications named Philip D. Allen, Ohio Wesleyan, '33, as

publisher

of has

'36,

and

vice-president.

Mr.

Allen wfll publish magazines in this country and in Europe. He heads the firm's New York

office, and wfll have

Eiuopean headquarters in Brussels, After nearly 39 years of service with

Nationwide

Insurance

Com

panies, W. Edgar West, Ohio Weslcn/an, '23, has retired, Mr. West was senior

General

National Bank has elect

assistant secretary in the retail bank ing division. He was previously plat

Philip D. Allen

plov'ees,

Alfred

eleeted E.

vice-president

as

Dr. Malcolm

Phelps, Oklahoma, '26. Dr. Phelps,

charter member and past president of the American Academy of General Practice, has headed the Physicians for Vietnam voluntary program for the a

Company.

ed

James Abbey, left, with brother Bill

the

vice-president, treasurer,

and

contioller of several Nationwide In surance companies. He has served Mu Chapter for many years as house cor poration treasurer, and tbe Fraternity as chairman of thc Columbus Karnea in 1950 and on the Arch Chapter as Secretary of Alumni, Treasurer, and

past year, Bien Hoa Air Base, Vietnam, was scene of a brief reunion, when Army Capt, Charles W. Abbey, Penn State, '.59, and Navy Lt, James R. Abbey, Penn State, '62, got together. "Bfll" is a helicopter pilot attached to the 11th .Armored Cavalry, who has

the

won

Soldier's Medals for heroism

two

arriving in Vietnam in August of 1966, Jim arrived in March, 1967, and

since is

current

operations

officer

has

joined

thc Los

A. Clark

Daugherty,

Pemi

board of

&

Angeles pub

Anthony.

Mr. An

thony had operated his own firm, George Anthony & Associates, for four years, and before that was with Foolc. Cone & Belding. An infantry veteran of World War 11, Mr. Anthony was

president of the Oklahoma City ni Chapter of the Fraternity. Crest

William

Alum

Engineering, Inc., has named S. McC ready, Oklahoma,

'40,

a

with

Crest,

vice-president. an

He

has been

engineering consultant

firm, since 1965 as a design en gineer and administiative manager. Fbed T. Hopkins

The American Medical Association

State,

of thc Council of Advancement, Tbe

trustees

Technological

lisher's representative firm formerly known as Cole & Sweeney, as a princi pal and owner; the firm is now called

Cole, Sweeney

the

'44, president of Rockwell Manufac turing Co,, has been re-elected to the

Secretary. George G. Anthony, Oklahoma,

'43,

to

Commander Naval Forces, Vietnam.

WiLLuvM S, McCbeadv

The Rainbow of Delta Tau Delta for Summer, 1967

30

serving

engineering and

in field

man

agerial positions. The new director of marketing for Eli Lilly y Compania de Mexico is Jack M. Langston, Purdue, '53. Since joining Eli Lifly International Cor poration in 1958, Mr. Langston has served in Puerto Bico, Brazil, and

England, as wefl as thc corporation's Indianapolis headquarters, A partnership for the practice of law has been formed by Oscar G. Beck, South Dakota, '33, and John D. Gubbrud, South Dakota, '63. Mr.

Beck has practiced lavv in Alcester, South Dakota, for 30 years, and Mr.

Gubbrud

was

Beck

&

practice

in

firm is known

as

in

formerly

Elk Point. The

new

Gubbrud.

Hubert G. Stokely, Stanford, '51. has joined Almianson Bank and Trust

Company John J.

Ghove

council conducts research in the nomics of

eco

capital goods.

The West Penn AAA Motor

Club,

second largest in Pennsylvania with than 145,000 members, has elect ed John J. Grove, Pittsburgh, '34,

more

as

president.

Mr,

Grove is

assistant

Allegheny Conference Community Development,

director of the on

President of the Pittsburgh Botary Club is the new assignment of James B. Ludwig, Pittsburgh, '47. Mr. Lud wig is a leading florist in the cit>-. The

ternal

Pennsylvania Society of In Medicine

has

elevated

as

president,

Mr.

courage in

carrying

out

important mis

Dr.

is

Biily

P.

significant

science. Mr.

working for his Ph.D. degiee Columbia University, and in his re

developed the theory which be in bis thesis.

setting forth

Johnson of

Mississippi appointment of Ike P. LaRue, Jr., Texa.s, '39, to the Governor

has

announced

Agricultural LaBuc is

a

the

and Industiial Board. Mr, director of Larco Drilling

Company,

leader vvith the 504tb Mihtary Police Battalion, stationed near Pleiku, Voters of Fort Worth elected Wil toon

Sarsgard, Texas, '48,

liam R.

two-year

Sarsgard son,

an

to

a

mayor pro tem. Mr. is president of A. B. Culbcrtteim

as

investment firm

in church

specializing

financing.

Arthur H. House, Tufts, '64, has been named assistant to the dean nf Fletcher School of Law and Diplo macy at Tufts University, and wifl be responsible for student afi^airs and ad missions, Mr, House has just returned from a year of research and study in the Congo, and is completing his doc toral dissertation at Fletcher this sum

special engineer,

Robert E. King, Purdue, '47, has become manager of Western market ing for Square D Company, supervis ing operations in 13 states in thc Southwest and Pacific Coast, Mr. King

1947,

at

geological

to

a

The Bronze Star was awarded to First Lt, Lamar E. Lawson, Texas, '65, for outstanding meritorious ser vice in Vietnam. Lt, Lawson is a pla

sions.

tbe

has been with tbe firm since

at

Bien Hoa AB, Vietnam, to First Lt. Travis E. Vanderpool, T.C.U.. '64, for meritorious achievement during mflitary fiights. Lt. Vanderpool was cited for outstanding airmanship and

FMG

a

contribution

search

The Air Medal has been awarded

Corporation, manufacturer of food processing equipment and railroad freight cars. Mr. Becherer received one of the five Alumni Achievement Awards presented for the first year at the 1966 Kamea, Named division superintendent of the power and fuel division of U. S. Steel Corporation's Gary plant is Averill C. Colby, Purdue, '38. Mr, Colby joined U, S. Steel in 1941 as

Glass, Tennessee, '62, for

ica.

Link-Belt, Robert C. Becherer, Pur due, '23, has been elected a director of

Scientific articles in Saturday Re view and Time have featured

Glass is

M. Minno, Pittsburgh, presidency, after a year as president-elect. The recently-retired chairman of to

HuBEnT G. Stokely

Lafayette, '25. Mr. Thore is president of Life Insurance Association of Amer

Alexander

'44,

Stokely

had been with United Calffornia Bank in Los Angeles since 1955, The golden plate award of thc American Academy of Achievement Foundation has been presented to Eugene M. Thore, Stevens, '25, and

mer,

Thc Grand

Fratemity Jack

M. Langston

Chapter of Theta Chi has voted the Citation of

Honor to Joel W. Reynolds, Tufts. '23, for his services to the fratemity

The Bainbow of Delta Tau Delta for Summer, 1967

Distinguished Service Chapter Cites

the Interfratemity Research and Ad visory Councfl. Norton Star

TO

MEMBEBsmp

Col.

performance

commander

in

the

Distinguished Service Chapter was presented to Levvis Deschler, Miami, tbe Founders Day dinner of tbe National Capital Alumni Chapter,

'26,

Lt.

to

at

Viet

the

was

presentation of the Bronze Robert

U.S.C, '46, Col, Mix

nam,

A ciT.'VTiON

AFB, California,

site for the

his

Lewis Deschler

31

as a

at Phan

W.

was

Mix,

cited for

squadron deputy Rang AB, Viet

in mihtary operations against Cong forces. The colonel is now

assigned

Norton AFB.

to

E. R. Squibb & Sons has Thomas C. Bash, W. ir J.,

appointed '55, plant

systems manager. He wifl be in the New

Nevv

Brunswick,

head

Jersey,

Mai. Cen. Campbell dLsjilays decoration ju.'it awarded to Lt. Col. Robert W. Mix,

quarters. The

national

new

marketing

man

ager for beer and ale for Continental Can Company is James K. Cooper,

W. ir J., '48. Mr. Cooper has been with Continental for 16 years. John G. been

Kreuer,

promoted by

Products

the

to

W. &

J., '50, has

Du Pont Consumer

position of national

manager. Mr. Kreuer was with Du Pont in Chicago prior to this new assignment which takes him to account

Dallas,

Texas.

his work for a cations, Ed W. & L., '51, vvill

Having completed Ph.D. in Lew

Deschleb, citation

left,

receives

from President

D.S.C.

Clark.

April 21 at the National Press Club. Actual presentation was made to Brother Deschler by President Tom Clark. The text of the citation reads held

as

follows:

truly dedicated Delt for more than forty years; his Iffe personifies the principles enunciated in the Delta Creed. He served bis chapter wefl as an undergraduate, distinguishing him self on the football field and in extra curricular activities. His service to his country has been outstanding, having been Parliamentarian to the House ol

tige adds

to

since

"Brigadoon"

was

1927; his

pres

the luster of the Frater

nity,

J.

Fielder

W. . '70, Grand Rapids. Mich. 1193, Louis A, Arvai. '70. Dearborn, Mich. 1194. John B. Synhorgt, II. '70, Des Moines. Iowa.

J, Collins, Rapids, Mich,

Jr�

'70,

phia. Ohio. THET A�B ETHANY 282. 283, 284. 385.

288. 289, 290. 291. 292, 293,

Charlei A. Ferryman. '70, Pittsburgh, Pa, Frank J, Gerratana, '70, Trumbull. Conn, Richard E. Lee, '70, Weirton, W. Va. Timothv J. Snodgrass, '70, Weirton, W, Va. George D. Magurn, '70, Danbury, Curm, Norman D, Orlandi, '70, SmiUiton, Pa, Stanford M, Bastacky, '70, Munhall, Pa, Marcus C, StBulIer, Jr., '70, McKeesport, Pa. James M. Liddle. '70. Butler. Pa. John E. Stroud, *69. Steubenville. Ohio, Glen R, VVade, '70, Williamsport, Pa, Dennis C, Lake, '70, Indianapolis. Ind, IOTA� MICHIGAN STATE

798. Arthur

890, Robert G, Heplet, '68, Youngwocjd, Pa, 891. Edmund M. Taylor, Jr.. '68, Springfield,

1195, Jobn

84H. Dale H. Cadwallader, '69. Pittsburgh, Pa, 846. Michael A. Cyphert. '70, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla, 847, Robert G, Dai'is, "TO. Ithaca. N. Y. S48, Anthony A, Forde, 'B9, Girard, Ohio. 849, John W, Hyland, '70, Longmeadow, Mass, 850. James E. Lock. '70. Tallmadge, Ohio. 851, John F, Manchak, HI. '70, Cleveland. Ohio. 852, Dennis K, E, Pittman, '70, Pittsburgh, Fa, 853, Thomas A, Ports, '70. Brecksville. Ohio. 834. Gregory D. Schillo, '70. Ashtabula, Ohio. 855. B. Peter Scotf. '70. Shaker Heights. Ohio. S56. Richard F. T. Seaman. Jr., '69, Shaker Heights, Ohio. 857. David K. Smith, '69, Cleveland, Ohio. 858, Douglas H. Viels, '70, Windsor, Conn. 859. Howard W. Weaver, '70, Ashtabula, Ohio, 860. Lewis M, Winston, '69, New Philadel

286. 287.

BETA� OHIO I33S. Jan H. Larson, '69, Fremont, Ohio. 1339, Kenneth E. Sinarski, '69, Seven Hills, Ohio, 1340, C. David Johnson, '69. Red Lion. Pa. 1341. Orrin E. Henry, Jr., '69. Cortland, Ohio, 1342, WiUiam D, HiUer, '69. Uayton, Ohio, 1343, Daniel G, Lilsch, '69. Momoe. Ohio, 1344, Mark L, Rutkoskie, '69, Athen?, Ohio,

East

Grand

1139,

ZETA�WES TEBN RESEBVE

pre

class,

A.

Goslanlinu,

N. T.

799.

John

L, Barlow, '69,

'69,

Grosse

Manhasset, Pte,

Farms.

Mich.

800. Gary E. Sbirk. '68. Okcmos, Mich, 801, Richard A. Vorris, '69, Alexandria, Va. 802. Jerri- K. Edwards. '70, Oklahoma Citv, Okla. 803. Jack R. Ahell. '69, Chagrin Falls, Ohio, 804, David W. Culver. '70, Hart, Mich, 805. Lee E, Edmundson, '70, Ludjngton Mich, 806, Gerald H. Moffat, "70, Soulhfleld. Mich. 807. Edward E. Potter, '68, Commg, N, Y, 808, Donslfls R, Cook, '70, Spimg Lake, Mich, 809. Gary H, Shaw, '70, Livonia, Mich. 810. William S. Blakeslee, HI, '70. Grosse Pte, Farms, Mich,

Phillip B, Ohio, 1140, Steven P,

MeCluggage, McKeever,

'70. Coshocton, "70.

Greenwich,

Conn, 1141, John D, Flack, "70, Maiimee, Ohio. 1142. Frank P. Beal, III, '70, Simsburv, Conn. 1143. Jeffrey M. McCrone. "70. Warren, Ohio. 1144. Stephen C. Anderson. '70, Gincinnali.

Ohio. 1145. William A. Mos5, '69. Granville. Ohio. 1146. Vincent J, Cohen, '70, Cincinnati. Ohio.

Bowlns. '69, Perrysburg, Ohio. Jackson, '70. Pound Ridge,

1147, 1148.

lames T.

1149,

Philip W. Eide, '70, Pepper Pike, Ohio,

A.

Slephen N. Y,

NU�LAFAYETTE P. 752. Stuart B.

748. Joseph

Hagy. '68. Westfield, N. J. Robinson, '68, Attleboto FaUs,

Mas^. 753. George J. Avril, '68, Valley Stream, N. Y. 734. Edward M. Basile, '69. New Hyde Park. N. Y. 755. Peter A. Talman, '69, Bcrwvn, Pa. 756. Larry R, Bittner, '69, Bethlehem, Fa, 757, Cregg E. Mayrosh, "68, Easton, Pa, 758, Jonathon P, Lynn, '69, Harrington, III, 759. David P. Bambev, '69, Locnst Vallev. N. Y, 760. Warren A. McGuire, '69. Freeport. N. Y, 761. Charles M. Stephenson, Jr., '69, New town Square, Pa. 762. Jack R. Cavalcant, '69, Freeport, >,'. Y. 763. Paul N. VanLoan, '69, Bedford, N. H, 764, Chatles A. Golden, '69, .\ew Hyde Park, N. Y. 765. Scott H. Eaton. '69. Glenmont, N. Y. 766. James G. Gannon, '69, Ehi'ahefh, N. J. 767, Paul T, Edgar, '69, Murray HiU. N. J. 768, Robert A. Channov. '69, West Orange. N. J. 769. Tohn W, Olver. '69, Ilonesdale, Pa. 770. John A, Delfausse, '69, Rocki-ille Centre, N. Y, 771. Martin J. Knrtvka, '69, Wvckoff, N, J. 772. William G, Khein, '69, New Brunswick, N, J, 773, Glenn D, Johnson, '67, West Hartford, Conn, 774. Bruce D. Carpenter. '69. Plainfield. N. J. 775, John C. Moyer, '69, Fullerton, Pa, 776. Elbert H. Ros^, '69. Malvem. Pa, 777, Peter L, Hunvitch, '69, Chestnut Hill. Mass. 778. George B. Harvey, '69. Trenton. N. J.

OMICBOK�IOWA 953.

939, 960, 961, 962,

Stephcir J. Walker, '70, Keokuk, Iowa, Robert E. Heggestad, '68, Spencer, Iowa, James T, Lawson, '69. LoudonviUe. N, Y, Tohn G, Wright, '69. Davenport, Iowa. Richard A. Stilley, '(59, Red Oak. Iowa.

Hamburg,

744,

James G, Mulligan, '67. Leonia, N, J,

1004. James R. Grawmer, H, '68. Atlanta, Ga. 1005. John F. Shape, '68, Warren, Ohio. 1006. Charles C. Waldschnlidt, '70, Pitts

697,

KAPPA�HILLSDALE 1003, Irving

N,"Y.

G.

Ginney, Jr., '68,

RHO�STEVENS

burgh. Pa. 1007, Kim E. Jelferv. '70, WilmeHe. III.

1008, Robert A, Shenrer, '69, Elgin. IU. 1009, James A, Fronk, "68, Balavia, K, Y, 1010, David B, Owen, '63, Rochfslcr, N, Y, 101 1. Daniel J, Chnger. '67. Miiton, Pa, MU�OHIO WESLEYAN

EPSILON�ALBION 1135.

Douglas P. Newlon, '70, Cleveland Hts,, Ohio.

1063, James F, McCarley, '60, Albion, Mich, 1091, Thomas E. Black, '6S, EasI Lansmg,

1136. William M, Marks, '70, Woosler, Ohio,

Mich, 1092. Peter E. Booth, '68. BinninghaTn, Mich, 1093, Bruce A, Badger. '69, Dover. Mass, 1094, Lee D. Pollock, jr,, '69. Golf. III.

1138. Jeffrey Ctqwl.ird, Ohio,

1137,

Michael Ohio.

D,

Holmes, '70,

'70.

Sandusky,

Sheflield

Lake,

TAU� PENN STATE

Timothy G. Woods, '68, Oil Gity, Pa, 698, Jnhn D, Lauseh, Jr. '68, Lancaster, Pa, 699. William R. Milliken, Jr '69, Bethel Park, ,

Pa, 700, Thomas E, Paisley. Ill, '69, Broomall. Pb, 701. Steven J. Sfriffler, '69, McKeesport. Pa, 702. Richard �. Gorace, '69, Bethel Park, Pa. 703. Lloyd L, Dahlem, '69, Pittsburgh, Pa, 704, Robert N, Miller, '69, Allison Park, Pa, 705, John E, Wilhams, '69, Hahvlon. N, Y, 706, Howard D. Schult!. '69, I.ansdale, Pn. 707. Timothy J. McFaddeii. '69. Philadelphia. Pa. 708. Henrv S. Zawila, '69, Venetia. Pn. 709, James R. Wilson, '66, Bcihcl Park, Pa. 710, Philip A, Myers, '69, Chamhershurg, Pa,

37

The Rainbow of Delta Tau Delta for Summer, 1967

38

BETA BETA�DePAUW

UPS ILON�RENSSELAER

Rancourt, '68. Troy, N. Y, George A. Herman, Jr,. '69. Walhngford,

909. John H. 910.

Conn.

911, Bairv W, Wessels. '69, Glen Cove, N, Y, 912, Harris T, Luscomb. Ill, '70. North Haven, Conn, 913,

Stephen R. Grant, '70, Atlanta, Ga.

914, Richard L, Ogden. '70, Chittenango, N', Y, 913, Xeal C, Rose. '70, Ogdensburg, N. Y. 916. Paul H. Bobinson, '70, Middlebury, Conn, 917. Paul J. Kolenberg, '69. Troy. N. Y. 918. Paul A. Polakos, '70, Brooklvn, N. Y, 919, Jessup D, Lowe. Jr., '70, Arlington, Va. 920, Dale M. ThuiUez, '70. Trov, N. Y. 921, Robert A, Meadowcroft, '70, Fulton, N, Y, 922, Dean B, Wells. '70, Scarsdale, N, Y. 923. Bobert J. Lukas. '70. Levriston, N. Y, 924, Michael V. Bergamiri, '69, Lake Placid, N, Y, 925, Richard C, Haverlv, '70, Central Islip, N, Y, 926, Jeffrey A, Swan, '70, Springfield. Mass, 927. Robert M. Zwolak, '70, Bristol, Conn. 928. Barrv L. Cassidy, '70. Scoltsdale, Ariz. 929. Geoffrev A. Bass. '70, Warwick. N, Y. 930, Edward F, AUen, '70, Bethpagc, N, Y, 931, Peter ]. Hargraves, '70, Stamford. Conn, 932, WiUiam llnyckyj. '70, Amsterdam, N. Y.

P. Holton, Jr., '67, Indianapolis. Ind. Thomas G. 983. Rogers, '70, Ashland, Ohio 984, George D, Voges, '70. St, Louis, Mo, 985. Harold N, Kirby, 70, Evansville, Ind. 986. William D. Johnston, '70, Noblesville, Ind, 987, Burke T, Lewis. '70. Birmingham. Mich. 988. John F. Lcichty, '70, Evanston. III. 989. Robert C. Oliver, Jr., '70. Winchester. Ind. 990. Paul W, Maddrell, H. '70, Sandusky, Ohio, 991, Dwight S, Woessner, '70, Daylon. Ohio. 992. Thomas D. Hohman, '70, South Bend. Ind. 993. Gletm E. Ross, Jr., '70, Indianapolis, lud.

982. John

994. Stuart E. White, '70, Birmingham, Mieb, 995, C, David Armstrong, "67, London, Eng land, BETA GAMMA�WTSGONSIN

998, Bichard L. lieggelund, '68, Beloit, Wis, 999. Mark L, KoreU. *70. Fond du Lac, Wis, 1000, Samuel J, Perrone, Jr,, '68, Worcester. Mass, 1001. Donald A. Schaefer, '69. Lewistown, Pa. 1002. Donald R. Mnhr. '69, Morton Gro^e. III. 1003. Barry F. Sumner, '67. Vancouver, B. C.

Canada Pin- W, & L, 674.

Logan M. Bullitt, !V, '67, Philadelphia, Pa.

673. Hugh B. Foshee, '70, Louisville. Ky, 676, Spencer B, Gay, '70, Washington, D, C, 677, WiUiam K. McDavid. Jr., '68, Simsbur;', Conn. 678. Peter M. Pillz, '70. Middletown. E. 1. 679. Walter B. Simmons. 11, '70, Richmond, Va. 680. John W. Thomas, HI. "70, High Point. N. C.

OMEGA�PENNSYLVANIA 959. Bohert H. Odell, Jr., '69. Wayne, Pa. 960. James T. O'Malley, "69, Rumson, N, J, 961, Frank A, Savage, HI, '69. Glenside, Pa. 962. C. Kenneth Dunn, '89, Cherry Hill, N. J. 963. WiUiam S, Chadwick, ]r� '69, New Or

leans. La. 964. Paul E, Dellevigne, '69, Broomall. Pa. 965, Baymond F, Duffield, Jr,, '69, Pilmau, N,

J,

966, Allen

E.

CoUins, Jr.,

'69. Philadelphia,

Pa. 967. E. Jonalhan Welsh. '69. ViUanova. Pa, 968, Boger W, Lipics, '69. Aquashicola, Pa. C. 969, William Pinkerfon, Jr., '69, Phila delphia. Pa. 970. Charles T. Fish. '68, Princeton, N, J, 971. .\ltred J. Bacon. '69, East Greenii-ich, R. I. BETA ALPHA�INDIANA 1119. DaUas E. Mulvaney, '70, Indianapolis. Ind. 1120. Bichard W, Butler. '68. Marion, Ind. 1121. Edward E, Ferguson. '69, Kentland, Ind, 1122, Bmce L. Pierce, '69, Leeiburg, Ind. 1123, Michael R, Johns. '69, South Bend. Ind, 1124, Jeffrey B, Fisher, '70, IndianapoUs, Ind, 1135, H, Gregory Faust, Jr,, '70, St, Louis, Mo, 1126. Michael A. Hawley, '70, Indianapolis, Ind. 1127. Philip H. Ireland, '70, Brazil, Ind, 1128. Harold J. MUIi, '70, Indianapolis, Ind, 1129. Bradford L. Warren, '70, Indianapolis, Ind, 1130, David V, Corbin, '70, IndianapoUs, Ind. 1131. Lawrence N. Youse, '70. Indianapolis. Ind. 1132. Douglas L. Givens. '70, Anderson, Ind, 1133, Lewis J. Meyers. '70. Indianapolis. Ind. 1134. Har\'ey R. Sullivan. '70, Indianapolis, Ind, 1135. Stephen B. Arnold. '70, Binningham. Ala. 1136. Wilham S. Buschmarm, '70, Indianapolis,

Ind, Tbomas A. Cory, '70. Indianapolis, Ind. 1138, Daniel B. Duncau. '71, Indianapolis, Ind. 1139. Bichard D. Kiovsky, '70, Indianapolis. Ind. II37,

1140.

Kodney

M.

Heisberger, "70, Auderson.

Ind,

1141. Thomas A. Voigt, '70. Indianapohs, Ind, 1142. Stephen F. Paige, "70, Indianapolis. Ind.

1004. 1005. 1006. 1007. 1008. 1009, 1010, mil, 1012.

Robert B. Mever, '69, Neenah. Wis. Michael B. Isermann. '68. Kenosha, Wis, Mark R, Meiners, '69, Sheboygan. Wis. Michael Steteer. '70, Princeton. >. J. William I. Pasco, '69, Hinsdale, IL. Tohn H, Bermau, '70, New York. X. Y.

bai-id G. DougaU. '70, Racine,

Wis,

Toel J,

Frank, '70. Long Beach. X. Y.

James

M,

Alien, '70, Neenah, Wis.

BETA DELTA� GEORGIA 646, George C. Aleiauder, '69, Canton, Ga, 647. Andv A. Bond, '69, Columbus. Ga. 648. E. Wa>Tie Boston, '67, Garlersville. Ga. 649. Thomas M. Craven, '67, Warner Robins, Ga, 650, WiUiam M. Harden. '69. Athens. Ga. 651. WilUam K. Kane. '69. Athens. Ga. 652. J. Bobert Myrick, '68, Savannah, Ga, 653, James M. Budder. Jr., '68, Atlanta, Ga. 634. John F. West. '66. Fitzgerald, Ga. 655. Frank D. Boffa, '68, WeUingtoB, New Zealand 656. Bergon F. Brokaw, II, '68, Leosburg, Fla, 657. WiUiam C. EUis, '68. Cordcle, Ga. 658. John D, Feltman. '70. Hartwell, Ga, 659, David F, Furr, '68. Concord, N, C660. Frederic C. Morse, III. '69. Austin, Teias. 661. Charles M. Nelms, "69. Doraville. Ga. 662. Wallace B. Shuman, Jr., "68, Savannah, Ga. 663. WiUiam P. Tipton, II, '68. Tampa, Fla. 664, Douglas A, Brooks, '68. MidviUe. Ga. 665. Tack P. Cook, '68, Macon, Ga. 666. Harry E. Johnson, Jr., '67, Forest Park. Ga. 667. William C. Lee. III. '70. Atlanta, Ga. 668. James B. Payne. Jr., '69. Yorktown, Va. 669. James E. Boberts. Jr., '68, Pinehurst, Ga. 670. Robert B. Seagraves. '70, Atlanta, Ga. 671. WiUiam H. Taylor, HI, '68, SateUite

Beach. Fla. BETA EPSILON�EMORY 838.

Wesley

839, William 860.

H. H,

Brown, '70. Darien, Conn. Butler, Jr,, '70, Savannah

Beach, Ga. Stephen S, Byram. '70, Temple Terrace,

Fla, 861, William C, Caruso, '70, Moss Point, Miss, 862, Michael W. Clifford, '70, Miami Shores. Fla, 863, William A, Daniels, '70. West Palm Beaeh. Fla, 864, Donglas N, EasterUng, '70, Orlando, Fla, 863, Terry L, Hamilton, '70, Albany, Ga, 866, Dan E, Hammer, '70, Chattanooga, Tenn. 867. Peter L. Henderson, Jr., '70, Ale:?andria, Va. 868. Julian R. Johnson, '70, Pulaski, Tenn. 869. Victor E. Kane, '70, Indialantic, Fla. 870. Lewis E. Kauffman, Jr., '70. Houston. Tesas 871. Michael S. Keen, '69, Palm Beach, Fla. 872. Joseph M, Kova?., '70, Fort Lauderdale, Fla. 873. WiUiam W, Lewis, '69. Tulsa, Okla, 874, Daniel M, McBae. '68, McRae, Ga.

875. Aaron L. Mahr, '69, Winter Park. Fla. 876. Royal K. Mann. II, '70. Gay, Ga. 877, William J, Montgomery. '70, Gatun. Canal 878. Michael A. O'.Neal. '70, Lake Wales. Fla. 879. Robert S. Smidi, Jr., '70. Potomac, Md. 880. Thomas E, Staats, '70, Oak Ridge, Tenn. 881. Anthony M. Tarlagha, '70. Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.

883. John G. Werner, U, "70. Warrington, Fla. 883 Stanley M. Woo, '70, Savaimah. Ga. 884. Douglas M. Martin. '70, Asheville. N, C. 885. Henry A. Moye, '70. Atlanta, Ga 886. Robert L.

Troup, '69. Butler, N. J.

BETA ZETA�BUTLEH 882. Gregg A. Bryant, '70. Wabash. Ind. 883. Charles R. Burress, III, '70, ClarksviUe, Tenn. 884. Robert P, Davis, 70, IndianapoUs. Ind, 885. Robert E. Devine, Jr.. '68, Indianapolis. Ind. 886. Ivan M. Kaplan. '70, Gary. Ind. 887, Charles G, Kneese, '70, Anderson, Ind, 888, Charles L, Mitchell, '70, Rushville. Ind. 889, Dennis P, Xichols, '70, Floral Park. .V. Y.

890, Joel K,

SchiUing. '70. Brookfield, 111,

BETA ETA�MINTv-ESOTA

883, James A, Rodin, '68. Minneapohs, Mmn. 884. Keith O. Atwood. '68, St. Louis Park, Minn.

885. Ronald W. Hatch, '68, Vermillion, S. Dak. 886. Randolph B. Rajala. '68 Bigfork, Minn. 887. Robert A. Slandke. '70, Escelsior, Mmn. 888. Dana W. George, '70. Richfield, Minn. William Shoemaker, '70, St, Paul, Minn, Terrance M, Mullins. '70, Pipestone, Mmn, Larry C. Larson, '70. Mirmeapolis. Minn. Alan L. Edelmann, '70, Edina, Minn. Scott M, Anderson. '70, Edina, Minn, James G. Robin, '70. Minneapolis, Minn, Allan I, Rubonslem, '70. St, Paul. Minn, Thomas C. '70, Minnetonka, Simon. Mirm. Jack E. Nugent, '69. Minneapolis, Minn. Gregory G. Peterson, *69. Gaylord, Minn.

889. H. 890, 891, 892. 893, 894 895, 896,

897. 898.

BETA THETA� SEWANEE 704. WiUiam N. Yang. 705. John C. Solomon,

'70, ChiUieothe. Ohio. '70, Buenos Aires. Ar

gentina Randolph G, Charles, Jr,, '69, BennettsviUe, S, C, 707, WiUiam D, Cathrae, '68, Sarasota. Fla, 708, Winston B, Charles, '70, BennettsviUe,

706.

S. C.

709. David J. Remick, '68, Houston, Teias 710. Charles M. Meadows, Jr., '70. Waco, Tesas. 711. Jon L. Jaenicke, 713. Paul E. Logan, 713. Paul T. Green, 714. Donald J. EUis,

'69, Camden. S. C, '70, St. Petersburg. Fla. '70, CanersviUc, Ga. Jr., '70, Decatur. Ga.

BETA KAPPA�COLORADO 1225. Timothy S. Borden, '69, Darien. Conn. 1226. Clifford J. DeVries, '69, CURon, N. J. 1227. Kennedi M. Knowles, '69, Denver. Colo. 1228. John N. McNamara, Jr., '69, Denver, Colo. 1229. Dale A. WaUcer, Jr., '69, Flagler, Golo. 1230. WiUiam R. Arbeni, '68. Winnedia, Calif, 1231. Robert A. DiU, '69, Denver, Colo. 1232. John D. Francis. '68, Denver, Colo. 1233. Joseph I!. Herrera. Jr.. '67, Santa Fe. N. Mej. 1234. Rnssell C. Klein, '69, Denver, Colo. 1235, Robert S. Pinkerton. '67, Nesvport Beach, Calif. BETA LAMBDA�LEHIGH 625. James T. Schaffer. Jr., '68, York, Pa, 626. Frederick S. Zappia, '69. Endicott, N. Y. 627. Thnothy N. Kleiner, '69, Dnneilen. N. J. 628. Ronald A. Matalavage, '69, Port Carbon,

Pa, 629,

Gary A, (3etto, '69, Union, X, J.

630, David J, DcFalma, '69, Hamden, Conn, 631, Riehard E. Roberts, H. '68, Radnor, Pa. 633. E. Peter Sorensen, '69. New York, N. Y. BETA MU� TUFTS

1029. Edward L, Coon.

GOIette,

Jr..

'69, Prospect,

The Rainbow of Delta Tau Delta for Summer, 1967 1030. Amos Chan, '69, Kowloon. Hong Kong 1031. Charles N. Jordan. Jr.. '69. Cleveland,

Ohio, 1032, David D. Swplt, Jr,, '70. Westport, Corm, 1033, William C, Murphy, '69, West Hartford, Conn. 1034. Anthony A. Armstrong. '70, Cape EUia-

beUi. Me. 1035. Paul E. 1036. Thomas

Conn. 1037.

Eugene

Driedger. '70, Closter. N, J. E. Turner. '70, Deep River, J,

'Zimon.

'70,

New

Bedford,

Mass.

908, Thomas

Calif, 911. John A. 912. .Icihn A, 913. Mark E. 914, Malcolm

Calif.

Canada 1040, Steven V, Caty, '70, East Hampton. X. Y. 1041. Corvis S. Catsouphes, '70, Eastchester N,

y,

1042. Austin

H,

Farrar.

'69.

East

Wmthrop

Me,

1043, Robert W, Fitts. '70, Concord. N. H. 1044, William J. DeBarba. '70. North Andover, Mass, 1045. Robert L.

Hurley, '70, Ridgewood, K. J.

BETA NU� M.LT. 646, Richard C, 647, Thomas H, Pa,

Walleigh, '70. Bethesda, Md. Dcrbv, III. '70, Bryn Mawr,

648. Douglas T, Dalton, Jr,, '70. El Paso, Tesas. 649. WilUam L. Nnffer. '69, Hills. Minn. 630. Karl

H.

Overbeck. PhUadelphia. Pa,

BETA XI� TULANE

579, James D. Johnson, '70, Ft, Worth. Tesas. 580. William H. Torkildsen. '70. Houston, Tesas. 581.

John W. Lewis, '70, Memphis, Tenn. 382. Morris W. Talley, '70, Bogalnsa, La. 383. Sam J. I'raser, '70. Shreveport, La, 584, Michael D, Blasi, '70, River Forest, 111, 585, GUffurd N, Fleming, Jr,. '71, BeUiesda, Md, 586, Elmo J. Soignier, Jr,, 587. Gerald L. Schroeder, leans, La,

'69. Metairie, Jr., '69. New

La, Or

BETA O \nCRON� CORNET,!, 859,

John C,

Warner. '69,

Soudi

Milwaukee,

Wis,

860, Jonathan C, Emmons, '68, Crf-ncseo, N. Y. 861, Nonnand B. LaMarche, '69, Hartford, Gonn, 862. 863. 864, 863. 866. 867. 868.

869, 870. 871. 872. 873. 874. 875, 876, 877. 878. 879, 880, 881, 882,

William F. Kaufman, '69, Johnstown, Pa, Dean B. Brodie, '69, Huntington, N', Y, Bruce B, Naglee, '69. Smartville. Cahf. Robert L. Conlev, '69. Sodus. N. Y. Robert R. Leedy. '69. Silver Spring, Md. Carl H. Rush. Ill, '69. Stamford. Conn. Michael H, Cole, '69, West Hartford, Conn, Peter Eainsford. '68. New Rochelle. \'. Y. Alan G. Britten, '69, Mesa, Atiz. Craig E. Tufts, '69. BrieUe. N. J. Robert C. Cushman, '69. Ithaca, N. Y. David I. Drout, "69, Neptune, N. J. Lawrence W. Scotf. '69. Snyder, N. Y, Charles H. Sherwood, Jr., '69. Byram, Gonn. WiUiam R. Hopping, '69, Littleton, Colo. Malcohn J. Tom, '69, Honolulu, Hawaii. John M. McMahon, III. '69, Fairpcrt, N. Y. Frederick S, Reardon, '69. Longmeadow. Mass, James M. Stilwell, '69. Montour Falls. N. Y. Thomas R. Copeland, '69, Mount Pleasant, Pa, WiUiam J, Kelly. '69, Broni, N, Y, BETA PI� NORTHWESTERN

1061. Jeffrey W. Libby, '69, Elgin, IU. 1062. John G. Postweiler, '69. Blue Island, III,

Calif. 916. Robert S. 917. Gene A.

904, Kenneth M. Calif,

903, Raymond

V,

Amaudo.

'69,

Mountain

View, Calif, 906, John 8. B, Arnold. '69, Long Beach, Calif, 907. John M. de la Forest. '69, Santa Rosa, CaUf,

B.

McKenzie, '69. Long Beach,

Thomas, '69, Bend. Oreg. Washington, '69, Long Beach,

Calif,

BETA TAU� NEBRASKA 954, James A, Bcinhardt, '68, Omaha, Nebr, 953, Stuart C. Metcalfe, '69, Dewitt. Nebr. 956. D.miel W. Peterson, '69, Brookings, S, Dak, 957, Bruce G, Rauscher, '69. Lincoln, Nebr. 958. Larry B. Goodenough. '69, Beatrice, Nebr. 959. Donald R, Geier, '69, Lincohi, Nebr. 960, Bruce A. Ghrislenscn, '68, Fremont, Nehr, 961, David M. Minette, '69, Columbus, Nebr. 962. Stephen W, Robertson, '68, Beatrice, Nebr, 963. Jerry D. Fbwer, '69, Fairbury, Nebr, 964, Tom L. Rozmarin, '69, Lincoln. Nebr. 965. Terry R. Clementson, '70. Columbus, Nebr. 966, William R, Palmer. '70, North Platte, Nebr. 967. Michael J, Ley, '70, Lincoln. Nebr. 968. Calvin L, Schuk, Paston, Nebr, 969, Lary D. Moeller, '70, Wisner, Nebr, 970, James K, Huebner, '70, North Platte. Nebr, 971, Roger C, Fairchild, '70, North Platte. Nebr. BETA UPSILON- ILLINOIS 1021. Derek L. Sanford, '69, Chicago, 111, 1022. John D. Jagoe, '70, Owensboro, Ki-. 1023. Michael ]. Condill, '70, Barringtcn, III. 1034. Alan F. Nude, '70. Harvey, IU, 1025, Jeffrey L, Vandersteeg, '70, Gariiciitersville, 111, 1026. Howard H, Owen. '70, Bedford, Ind. 1027. Craig D, Malawy, '70, Carpentersi'iUe, 111, 1028, James E. Jorgensen, '70, Arlington Heights, III. BETA PHI� OHIO

1119.

STATE

James R, Aspinwall, Jr,, "69. Cincirmati. Ohio.

1120, John B. Krupko. '69, McDonald, Ohio. 1121, Tbomas E. Boyle, '69. Columbus, Ohio, 1133, Jchn V, Spalla, '69. Dayton, Ohio. 1123. John W. Halley, '69, VermiUon, Obio. 1124. Steven A. Frowine. '69. Portsmouth, Ohio. 1125. Peter W. Wolfe, '69, New Hyde Park. N, Y, 1126. Dennis M, Burkey, '69. Colmnbus. Ohio, 1127, Daniel E, never, '68, Cincinnati, Ohio, 1128, Robert G, Lowry, '68, Warren, Ohio. 1129. Ronald R, Seward. '69, Circleville, Ohio. 1130. Joseph H, Gallant. '69, Delaware. Ohio. 1131, Thomas P. Matrka, '69, Chagrin Falls, Ohio, 1132, Douglas R, Dunkel, '67, Circleville, Ohio. 1133, Bobert W, Hallei, Jr,, 'B9, Bay Village,

Ohio, 1134, 1135. 1136. 1137. 1138, 1139,

1140, 1141, 1142, 1143.

1143,

Ambrose, "69, San Leandro,

Thousand

'69.

918, Richard H, Werschkul, '68. Portland, Oreg. 919. Timothy P, Duffy, '69, Stanford, Cahf,

1144. BETA RHO� STANFORD

Giallonardo,

Hodges. Jr., '69, Kailua, Hawaii. Lee, '68, Fresno, CaUL Marquess, '69, Stockton, Calif. S. McElwain, '69. Piedmont.

915. Douglas

1038.

James E. Larson. Jr., '70. Scituate, Mass, 1039, Thomas G, Finck, '69. Weston, Ontario,

M,

Oaks, Calif, 909, Donald B, Grifiin. '67, Oakland, Calif, 910, Robert E, Heffeman, '69, Santa Ana.

Michael E. Banta, '69, Lewi.sbnrg. Ohio. Terence G. Jones, 'B8, Maumee. Ohio. Parker E, Phillips, '69, Lakewood, Ohio, Thomas E. Carper, '68, Columbus. Ohio, B, Seven John Sommer, '69, Hills, Ohio, John F, Gullen, Jr., '70, Cincinnati, Ohio, Michael E, ArUn, "72. Lima. Ohio, Gary M. Ringer, '70, Bryan, Ohio, John G, Frank, '71, Columbus, Ohio. Philip L, Sanne.s, '70. North Canton, Ohio. Bruce A. McNicI, '70, Xenia, Ohio. Henry A, Van Hala, Jr., '70, Rocky River. Ohio.

1146, J.

Gary

Ohio. 1147. Vincent Ohio. 1148, Keith H, 1 149. Thomas Ohio,

Gen.sheuner, M.

Doria,

'70, '70,

Coshocton,

Youngstown,

Brooks, '70, You ngslo^'n, Ohio. M,

Walker.

'70,

Barberton,

39

1130. Jerold D. Abrams. '69, Cleveland, Ohio. 1131. Stephen V. A. Torsell. '69, Tampa, Fla, 1132, John M, Walker, '69, Miami Fla, 1153, Thomas C, Forster, '69, Sanduskv. Ohio, 1154, Jackson F, Moses, II, '69, Huntington, W, Va, BETA CHI�BROWN

857. 858. 859. 860, 861.

863. 863. 864. 865, 866, 867, 868, 869. 870. 871. 872. 873. 874, 875,

876, 877, 878.

Bobert G, Davis, '69, Falmouth. Mass, WiUiam H, Dean, Jr., '69, Geneva, N, Y. George A. Gerdls, '69, OradeU, N, J. Bichard J, GraUa. '69, Arlington, Va, WiUiam J. Hager, Jr., '63, Trenton. N. J. Edward F. Hand, '68, West Warwick, B. 1. Gary W. Kaufmann. '67, Wantagh, N. Y. Craig M. Keats, '69. Rivet Edge, N, J. William A, Kowalsky, '68, Uniimdale, N, Y. Charles J, Lang, Jr� '69, Hicksville, \. Y. Joseph A, Lawless, '68, Chnton, Md. Thomas B, Lloyd, '69. Pahnettun, Pa. Michael F. Maznicki, '68, West War wick, B, 1, Charles S, Modliszewski, '68, Cranston, B. I, Bruce D. Moger, '69, Riverside, Conn. Harold E. Phillips. '69. River Edge. N. J. Bruce W. Pierstorff, '69, Sarasota, Fla, John G, Rallis, '69, Warwick, B, I, Stephen D, Rees, '69, Wayzata, Minn, Bruce P, Richards, '69, West I-jng Branch, N, J, Frank A, Scofield, '69, Levittown. N. Y. Frank A. Tucker, Jr.. '69, Cra\vfordsville,

Ind,

BETA PSI�WABASH 763, Ronald B, Shearer, 764. John H. Wheeler,

Ind.

'68, Rochester, Ind, III, '70. IndianapoUs,

763.

Joseph M, Katienberger. '70, Mt, Car roll. Ill, 766, Jerry S, Merriman, '70, Carmel, Ind, 767. David P. Vogt, '70, Camp Dennison, Ohio.

768. James C, Swayzee, '70, New Castle, Ind, 769. David A, Ault, '70, Rochester. Ind, 770, Gary P. Piles, '70, West Pahn Beach. Fla. 771. Richard A. Sobolewski, '70, Calumet City, 111, 772, John H, Thomson, '70. Evansville, Ind. 773. Steven L. Martin, '70, Evansville, Ind. 774. Boben F. Leshe, '70, Muncie, Ind. 775. Timodiy W. Sulhvan, '70. Carmel, Ind, 776, Bobert M, Pollom, '70, Kissunmee, Fla. 777. David T. Obergfell, '70. IndianapoUs,

Ind, 778, Robert J, Ind. 779. Louis J.

Hedding. Jr., '70, Indianapolis.

Ruwet, II. '70, Torrington. Conn,

BETA OMEGA�GALl FORNIA 784, Peter Kagel, '66, Berkeley, CaUf, 786, Delwin P, Henry, ]r,, '68, Merced, Calif, 788, John II, Aleiander, '69, Piedmont. Cahf. 789. Thomas A. Baumbach, '68, Mountain View, Calif. 790. Stuart S. Drange, '68, San Rafael. Calif, 791, Robert S. McConaughy. '68, Redwood Gity, GaUf, 792. Diedrich J, Meinkcn, III, '68, Daly City, CaUl, 793, Kenneth V, Todd, '68, Long Beaeh. Calif,

GAMMA BETA�ILLINOIS TECH 816. Joseph F. BeUegarde, Jr., '69, Rensselaer, N, Y, 817, Rohert M, Hhiz, Jr., '69. Bellwood, IU, 818, Rohert E, Nowak. '69, South Bend, Ind, 819, Rohert L, Caryer. '68, Columbus, Ohio. 830. Jonathan E. Sweer, '70. Pittsburgh, Pa. 821, Robert T, Knight, '70, Laurence Harbor, N, J. 823. Steven F, Kammeyer, '70. Denison. Iowa. 823. Nickolas S. Kokoron. '69, Barrington. IU. 824. David E. Tubbs, '70, Springfield. HI. 825. Robert G. Engclhardt, '70, Huntington Station, N. Y. 826, Timothy H. Sloan. '70, Ferguson. Mo. 827. Mark S. Davis, '70, Columbus, Ohio. 828. Larry A. Hoeksema, '71, Madison, Wis, 839, Michael H, Davis, '70, Columbus, Ohio, 830, James R, D, Sellar, '70, Phoenix. Arij,

The Rainbow of Delta Tau Delta for Summer, 1967

40 GAMMA DELTA�WEST VIRGINIA

Pa,

897. Vance L, Smilh, Jr,, '68, Lemovne. L. H98, Bonald Buckley. '68. Parkersburg. W, Va, 899, Daniel j. Humphrey, '69. MuUens, W, Va. 900. Dominick J. Romino, II, '69, Fairmont. W. Va.

George A. Chandler, '69, Spencer, W. Va. Gwynne, '69, Morgantown. James R.

901. 902.

W. Va. 903. Steven P. Lindsey. '69, North Ohnsted, Ohio. 904. Jeffrey G. Dver, '69, Morgantown, W, Va. 903, Thomas L, Siover. '69. Pnghtowu, W, Va, 906, Roger A, Okey, '69, Weirton, W. Va, 907, David C, McCue. '69. Clarksburg, W. Va. 908, Baker E. Brown, Jr., '69, South CharlesIon, W. Va. 909, Stanley R. Smith, '68. Spencer, W. Va. 910. WilUam T, Harless. '69, St. Albans, W. Va, 911. Thomas A. Smusz, '70, Chester, W. Va. 912. George W, Vetter, '69. Leechburg, Pa. 913. John G. Stansbury, '69. South Charles ton, W. Va, 914, James D, Grav. '69, Sutton. W. Va. 915. Garlan E. "69. LooneyviUe. MiUer, W. Va. 916. Michael S. WaUier, '69. Ripley, W, Va. 917. Leon B. Rccd. II, "69, Glenvillc, W. Vs. 918, Charles E, King, Jr,, '69. Charleston. W. Va. 919. David L. McCormick, '69, Logan. W, Va. 920- Sammv Lavin. Jr., '69, BlueKeld. W, Va. 931. Michael J. Laputka. Ill, '67. Hazleton. Pa, 932, Dean F, Arnold, '69. Weirton. W, Va. C. 923. Frederick Hardman. '69. Spencer, W. Va. 921. John D. Martin. 11. 69. Clarksburg, W. Va. 923. Steven L. Browm. '70. Morg.-mtown. W. Va. 926. Thomas A. McCullough. '69, Fairmont, W, Va. 927. Steven L. Nii, '68, New Cumberland. Pa. 928. Rohert BrowTiing, Jr.. '69. Pineiilie. W. Va. 929. Robert H. Rupp. '69, Balboa Heights. Canal Zone. 930. David M. Skaff, '69, South Charleston. W. Va. 931. Thomas B. Stealey, '69, Clarksburg. W, Va. 933, Bevy V, Golden, III. '69, Bridgeport, W, Va, 933, Marshall S, McKirmey. '69. Clarksburg, W, Va, 934, Guy M, Page, Jr,, '68, Camp Hill, Pa.

94.5, 946. 947. 948. 949. 950. 951. 952. 9,53, 954, 955. 95fi. 957.

958. 939. 960.

Ronald

�.

(iwiazda,

'67.

New

Kans.

Britam.

Conn, David R, Farrar, '69, New Londim, Conn, Timothv P. Martin, '70, Lewisburg. Pa. Koss H. MuUins, '70, Demarest. N. J. Lewis S. McCreaiy. '70, Cleveland. Ohio. Russell H. Bradshaw, Jr., '70, Nen Ca naan. Conn. James S. Jensen, '70, Manhasset, N. Y. George B. Ward, 111. '70. WQmington. Del. John D. Ketcham, '70, Westfield, N, J, James G. McEhov. Jr., '70, Westfield. N. J. Robert M. Slone. '70. Chester. Pa. George C, Durbin. '70. Kingston. Pa. Marc B. Piekard, '70. Mamaroneck, N, Y, Robert D. Carter, '70. South Orange. N. J. MarshaU C, Webb. '70, Shelbume, Vt. Thomas C, Buford. '70. Fairview Park. Ohio. Pan! J. Mack. "69, Wilkes-Barrc, Pa.

GAMMA ETA� GEORGE WASHINGTON 687. John K. Baska, '70, Alesandna. Va, 688. David R. Greenberg. '69. Merrick. N. V. 689. Roger T. Hughes, '69, FaUs Church, Va. 690. Larry R. Zebrak, '70, Valley Stream. N. Y. GAMMA THETA�BAKER 849. Donald S. Coleman, '69, Kansas City, Mo, S30, Garv L. Shank. '69. Prairie Village. Kans. 851, James H, Turner, '69, Baldwin, Kans, 952, J, H, Kreighbaum, '70. Baldwin. Kans. 853. Ronald E. OdeU, '68. Fredonia. Kans.

872, George

Kans. 839. I.arrv D. Barnett, '70. Sedan. Kans, Tonganone. M. Huebner. '70, 860. David Kans. 861. Charles E. Killinger, '70. JopUn, Mo. 862. David R. Hartis, '69. Shawnee Mission. Kans.

GAMMA IOTA�TEXAS

Chereck, '70, Dallas, Tesas.

1219. Robert A.

1230. Robert C. CZhristy. '70, Houston, Teias. 1221. Barry A. CUnc, '68. Amarillo, Tcias. 1332. Thomas P.

Curtis. '69, Hillsboro, Tesas.

Tesas, 1225. KeDey A. Guest, '70, Clarksville. Tesas, Worth, 1226, Gregory W. Ingram, '70, Fl, Texas, Richardson. 1227, Joseph D, James, Jr.. '70, Tesas. 1228. Wallace K, Law, '70, Eelion, Tesas, 1329. Samuel B, Lee, '70, Coleman. Tesas. 1230. David A. Lord. '70, Austin, Texas. 1231. WdUam C, Lovell, '70. DaUiart, Tesas. 1233. Thomas B, McGregor, "70. San Angelo, Texas, 1233. Clavlon D. Monzingo, '69, Del Bio, Tesas. 1334. WiUiam D. Rich, '70. Corpus Christi. Tesas. 1235. James G. Raney. Jr.. '69. San Antomo. �

Tesas.

H. Smith. '70, Ft. Worth, Tesas. 1237, Michael D. Stargei. '68, AmariDo, Tesas, 1238. Peter C. Taaffe. '69, Arhngton, Tesas. 1239. R. I^mbeth TowTisend. '70. Paris, Texas. Tesas. 1240. J. Mack Wondfin. '70, Paris,

Gregory

Julius

'69.

Smyrna ,

.

Mills.

.

Maine. 69, Rumford, E. Hodsdon, III, Maine. Moorestown, Harrie B. IV. '69. Price, N. J. Leigh N, Peters, '69, Portsmouth, N, H, Damariscotta, Allen Corson, '68, J, Maine, David F, Thompson, '69, South Dafl-

R,

Kemmling,

Jr.. '68,

St.

Louis.

Mo.

,

876. Albert 877. 873. 879,

880.

mouth. Mass. G. '69, HaUoweU, 881, Michael Madden. Maine. Maine. 882. Pabrick R. Malnon. '69, Bath, 883. Paul A. LeBlane. '69, WaterviUe, Mame. L. 884. Raymond Pomerlean, '69. Auburn, Maine. GAMMA XI� CINCINNATI 934. 935, 936. 937. 938,

James F. Basa, '68. Sl^ Clairsville, Obin, Terrell D. Ebright. '70, Clayton, Ohio, Robert G. Ferguson, '71. Marietta. Ohio. Paul J. Hartsock. '70, Cincirmati, Ohio, Thomas H, Humes. Jr., '70. Cinciimati. Ohio.

939. Robert R. Hunter, Jr.. '69. AUiance. Ohio. 940, Jack H. LeGrand, "7i. Shaker Heights, Ohio. 941. Joseph N. Murdock, '72, Toledo, Ohio, 942. WiUiam H. Pedersen, '69. Midland. Mich. 913. Robert C. Peter, '70, Steubenville, Ohio. 944. Richard J. Saalfeld, '69, Ft, Mitchell. Kv, 345. Raulie W, Schnee. '70, Cincinnati. Ohio. 946. David J. Shindollar, '67, Mendon, Ohio. 947. CSiarles A. Stevenson, Jr,, '70. West Car rollton. Ohio. 948, Maris M. Vikmanis, '71, Kettering, Ohio. 949, Craig S, Zachnch. '71, Defiance, Ohio, GAMMA OMICBON� SYRACUSE 504,

G,

Philip

Kennedy,

'69,

Wethersfield,

Conn. 505, Edward T. 307. 508. 509.

McKeon, '69, Trov, N. Y. Jellrev .\. Mandel. '70. Oceanside, N. Y. Bohert J. Young, '70, Annandale, N, J, Douglas R. Starr, *70, Toms River, N. J. Angus G. Saunders, Jr., '70, Watertown,

510.

George

506,

GAMMA KAPPA�MISSOURI 756,

Sawyer,

Philip

1323. Jack Gonrley, Jr.. '70. DaUas, Tesas. Amarillo. O. Guleke, 11, '70. 1224, Janies

1236.

A.

Maine L.

Blood, '68. Bangor, Maine 874. David A. Murphy, '69, Aubum, Maine Biddeiord, '69, Leo 875, G. Dumouchel. 873.

.

Munger, "70, Overland Park,

858. Timothy J.

N. Y. GAMMA MU�WASHINGTON

962. Gary F. Wood. '69, Kirkland, Wash. 963. William R. Merriman. Jr., '69, Spokane, Wash. 964. James D. Stansfield. Ill, '69. Seattle, Wash. M. BosfwTck, '68, Honolulu. Ha waii. 966. Michael J. DodeUe, '69, Lake Stevens, Wash, 967, Douglas M, Eggers, "70, Pullman. Wash. W. 968. David Batchelder, "70, Clearfield,

965, Barik

GAMMA ZETA�WESLEYAN 944

B. Guthrie, '69. Shawnee Mis sion, Kans. 855. James O. Selzer. '70, Baldnin, Kans, 856. Terry ]. WjTiek. '70. Tongauosie. Kans. 837. Kenneth W. Eppert. Jr.. '68, Baldwm, 831. Richard

Utah. 969. Thomas E. Avery, '70. Bellevue, Wash. E. 970, Bussel Hammond. '70, Longview, Wash. 971. Blaine R. WaUier. '70, Tacoma, Wash. H. 972. Thomas Burkhart. '70. Olympia, Wash, 973, Peter H, Covev. '70. Seattle. Wash. 974. Charles T. CfiaSee, '70, Seatde, Wash, 975. Douglas A, Engel, '70, SeatUe, Wash, 976. Jeffery E, Fitzthum. '70, Shelton, Wash, 977. Steven L, Lumbard, '70, Seattle, Wash, 978, N, Pasadena, '70, Wayne Omokawa. GaUf. 979. Kurt F, Stephan, '70. Longview. Wash. 980. Stephen C. Wilkie. '69. Seattle, Wash, 981, Joseph D, Keenan, '69. BeUevue, Wash, 982. Edward L. Sfav. '70, Seattle, Wash. 983. Donald B, McGregor. '70, Tacoma, Wash, 984. Steven B, Vigna, '70. Seattle. Wash. 985. William W. Braun, '70, Spokane, Wash, 986, William N. Patterson, Jr,, '70, Seattle.

Wash. 987, Michael A, James. '70. Tacoma. Wash. 988. Bobert R, Gering, '70, Bellevue, Wash. 989. Douglas A. Collins. '70, Des Moines, Wash. 990. Richard S, MeClain, '70. Grand Cnulee. Wash, 991. Daniel W. Wash,

Vradenburg.

'70,

Seattle,

Michael Maine,

GAMMA PI� IOWA STATE 812. Gregory I.. Lorimor, '70. Farragut, Iowa, 813, Gary M, Johnson, '70. Avoca, Iowa. 814, Thomas J. Evans. "70, OHumwa, Iowa, 815, Stewart J, Bosworth, '70, Rockford, Dl, 816, Douglas B, Langer, '70, Hancock, Iowa, 817, Craig V, McCarry, '70, Fort Dodge, Iowa, S18. Bussell G. Scott, '70. Farragut. Iowa. 819. Eichard W. Cfldfrcy, '70, Henderson. Iowa, 820, Ricky R, Elliott, '70, La Porte City.

loiva, 821,

Ragan O, Nelson. '70. Nesvton, Iowa. GAMMA RHO�OREGON

774. Craig V. Johnson, '69, Eugene. Oreg. 773. John T. Davis. '69, BrookviUe. Ohio. 776. Niels G. Brownlow. '69. Portland, Oreg. 777. John W. Davis. II. "69, Portland. Oreg. 778. Roger C. Limdeen, '69. Portland. Oreg. 779. Robert C. Stocks, '67, Portland, Oreg, 780. Mark S, Schivelev. ",0, Sunnyvale, Calif. 781. Gary C. HaU, '69. Albuquerque, N. Mei. 782. Rodney E. Martin. '70, Idaho Falls, Idaho. 783, Andrew S, Rosson, '69, Menlo Park, CaUL 784. Arthur D. Curtis. '70, Lake Oswego,

Oreg. GAMMA SIGMA� PITTSBURGH

1037. John W. Jeffrey, '69, Ir^vin, Pa. 1038. 1039.

GAMMA NU�MAINE 871, P,

E. Dutkwall, '70. Youngstown, N. Y. 511. Emest A. Curto. '70. Niagara FaUs. N.Y. 512. Edward M. Pereida, '70, New Canaan, Conn.

Giftos,

'69, Cape

EUzabedi.

Regis A. Wolff. Jr.. '69. Pittsburgh. Pa. Ralph M. Verdier. IU, '70, WavTieshoro. Pa.

1040. Frederick A. Hauber. '70, Pittsburgh, Pa, 1041, Carl L, Manley. '68, SeUinsgrove, Pa,

The Rainbow of Delta Tau Delia for Summer, 1967 1042, Thomas

W.

Barnes, Jr,.

'69,

FrankUn,

Pa. 1043, J. Daniel Frisina. '70, Meadville Pa, 1044, Richard G. Bickel, Jr., '69, Glen Cove

867. David A. Randall, '70. Dayton. Ohio, 868, Nicholas D, Lappos, '70, Bridgeport, Corm, 869, Robert

N. Y. 1045. Richard B. White. '68. Lansdale Pa, 1046, Anthnny G, DeCaroUs, '69. Pittsburgh.

1050, Jerry G, Rabold. '69. Wemetsvdie, Pa, 1051, Joseph A, Bums. '69, Pittsburgh Pa. 1052. Thomas W, Braun. '69, Pittsburgh, Pa, 1033. Timothy E, Finnerty, '71, Pittsburgh,

Pa.

1034. John A. Sunner, '69, Pittsburgh, Pa, 1035, William J. Schaaf, Jr.. '70, Pittsburgh Pa,

GAMMA TAU� KANSAS

1005. John

Stephen

980. Steven

B. R.

Smith. '70. Lamed, Kans. Hohn. '70, Prairie Village,

1009.

1010, 1011, 1012, 1013,

1015,

Kans,

Orleans.

Jr..

'68,

Whittier,

Keown, '70, Norman, Okla,

W, Correia, Jr,, "70. Midwest City, Okla. J, Michael Wise, '70. Pampa, Tesas. Dan A, Vann. '70. Oklahoma Cit>, Okla, Steve K, Sherrod. '70. Lawton. Okla. John L, Gregor\'. '70. Midwest Gitv, Okla, T, Michael McGaughey. '70, El Reno, Okla. Patrick R, Phillips, '70, Lawton, Okla, Wilham D, Fundcrburk, Jr, '70, Okla homa Citv, Okla, J, Daniel Ganntt, Jr,, '69, Oklahoma

Fla,

1020, George

W,

City. Okla. 1021.

Roark,

Jr� '70,

Okla. 1022. David A.

Kans. 986. Harold M. Goss. '70. Leawood. Kans. 987. J. Michael Holder, '70, Kansas Citv, Mo. 988. James T. Morgan, '70. Overland Park, Kans. 989. James T. Webb. '70, Russell, Kans, 990. Robert J. Bowen, '70, Leawood, Kans.

1023, Arthur G, Alexander. Jr., "70, Durant, ^ Okla, 1024, David M. Armstrong, '70. Midwest City, Okla. 1033, WiUiam A, Gibson, '70, Oklahoma Gity, Okla, 1026, Bruee K, Barrett, '70, Oklahoma City.

GAMMA UPSILON-^UAMI 941. Herman G, Keiser, Jr,, '69, Barberton, Ohio. 943, L, Ncii Timson. '69, Vandalia, Ohio. 943. Harry G. Eiline, '68. Shaker Heights,

Ohio, 944, Robert A, Hargis, '68. Lockland. Ohio, 945, Timothy J, O'Reilly, '68. St, Marvs, Ohio, 946. Joseph G. Mader, '68, Chagrin Falls, Ohio. 947. W. Roger Welch. "68. Westfield, N. J. 948. Wilham M, Mayhall, "69, Springfield. Ohio. 949. Anthony D. Maunus. '69, Norwalk, Ohio. 950. Dennis J. Beed. '69. Kettering. Ohio. 951. Thomas J, Wunderlieh. '87. Cleveland

Heights, Ohio. 932, Henry M. Burt, "68. LouisviUe, Ky. 953. David H. Cook, "68. Sherman Oaks, CaUf. 954. WiUiam 0. Kinnard, '69, Springfield, Ohio. 955. David M, Wassum, "69, Pittsburgh, Pa, 936. Jack C. Butler, "69, Bucyrus, Ohio, 957. Thomas S. Kasych, "68, Parma Heights. Ohio. 958. James R. Ferguson, '68, Dajton, Ohio, 959, Johnnie J, Hrenko, '69, Warren. Ohio. 960. Gregory Chubbuck, '69, Hudson. Ohio.

961, Terry L, Neale, '68. Hollywocd. Calif, 962, James O, Keever, Jr,, '69, Lebanon. Ohio, 963, Terry M. FTorosby, '69, Harrison, Ohio. 964. Ted W. Cooke, '69, Westlake, Ohio. GAMMA PSI� GEORGIA TECH 851, 8.52, 853. 854. 855.

Thomas M, Dyer, "69. Atlanta, Ga, James E. Barrow, Jr,, '70, Jonesboru, Ga, Jackie M. Dooly, '69, Decatiu^. Ca. Jason G. Bisler. '69, Tucker, Ga. Edward P. Sheehan, '69. Birmingham, Ala.

856. Craig

R. Lentzsch, '70, Charlottesville, Va. 857. Edwin W, Cheek. '70, Pittsburgh. Pa, 858. Tynis L. Moore, Jr., '67, Atlanta, Ga, 859, Lee A, Rrown. '70. Malvem, Pa,

860. Douglas R, Barr, '70, Oreland. Pa. 861. Wayne P. Webb. '70, New Orleans, La, 862. Herbert R. 863, PhiUip H. 864, Donald T, 865, Charles R, La.

Lewis. '70, Middletown, Ky, Mills, '70, Kirkwood, Mo, Glenn, Jr� '70, Hampton. Va. Eysler, Jr., '70. New Orleans,

866. Charles W, Grant, '70, Jacksonville, Fla,

Dearing, '70.

Sand

Springs.

Okla.

1027,

John

F.

H, S. Dak.

McDoweU,

Aberdeen,

'70,

DELTA DELTA�TENNESSEE

Snced,

'70.

Oklahoma

Cit\'

Okla.

606, Michael A, Storm, '69, HuntsviUe, Ala, 607, Waller M. Valenline, Jr,, '69, Chalta nooga, Tenn, 608, Joseph C, Davis, Jr,, '70, KnoxviUe, Tenn, 609, William A, Bird, '69, KnoxvUle. Tenn. 610, Thomas R. Yoklev, '69, Columbia. Tenn. 611, Gary M. Bailey, '70. Oak Ridge, Tenn. 612. Stuart W. GUI, Jr., '70, Signal Mountain, Tenn. 613. David D. WUson, '70, Jefferson City, Tenn. 614. Robert B. TucciUo, '70, Scarsdale, N. Y. 615. Stephen D. Doyle, '70, Memphis, Tenn. 616. John Brandt, Jr., '70, Oak Ridge. Tenn. 617. Dennis L. Stohler. '68, Johnson Citv, Tenn. 618, Preston A, Weaver, '70, Pearisburg. Va, DELTA EPSILON�KENTUCKY 896. James K. Alcorn, "69, Lesingtun, Ky. 897. Phihp W. Block, '69, St. Louis, Mo. 898. John R. Groves. Jr., '70, Lexington, Ky, 899. A, Clyde Hefim, Jr., '69, Winchester, Kv. 900. Jcrrv L. Horn, '69, Midway, Ky, 901. Mack H. Hunter, Jr., '70, Winchester, 902,

Ky. Hugh A, James, "69. Lesington, Ky, S, Kirk, Jr,. '69, East Lansmg,

903. Robert

Mich. 904, Steven F, Lakamp, 905. A. George Mason,

'68. Cincirmati. Obio. Jr., '69, Shelby^-ille,

Ky.

DELTA BETA� CARNEGIE TECH 669, Bernard W. Flynn, 670. John P. Waszczak,

604, Charles T, Brtce, '70, Montgomery, Ala, 605, Robert H, Payne, III. '69, ArUngton. Va.

Oklahoma

John F. Fisiher, II. '70, Midwest Cif,; Okla,

John

Kerran, "69, Oklahoma City,

983, 984.

Douglas G, Gibson. '70. Salina, Kans, John L. Wolfe, '70, BosweU, N. Mex. W. 983. Charles Chowins, '70, Leawood,

811, Ronald P, Jarman, '69, Huron, S. Dak, 812, John P, Wagner. '70. Ida Grove, Iowa. 813. Kenneth D. Cloud, '70, Sious FaUs, 814.

City, Okla, 1017, James W, McStay, '69, BeUaire. Tesas. 1018, Stanley D, Burmau, '70, Owasso. Okla, 1019, James K, Atkinson, '70, Ft, Lauderdale,

Kans.

981. James M. Waring. '70. Wichita. Kans. 983. Richard J. Nininger. '70, Hutchinson,

H,

1008, Edward

lOlfi,

Kans.

Douglas,

Okla. 1007. Allan

1014.

979.

C.

Cahf. 1006. Michael L,

Jeserich, '70, Overland Park,

N,

Kans,

New

809, Barry S, Thompson, '70. Kiogsley. Iowa. 810, Tames C, Johnson. '70, Cherokee, Iowa.

S, Dak,

977, Stephen D, McGiffert, '70. Oklahoma Gity. Okla. 978. Albert W. G. Schubert. '70. Great Bend.

976, Gerald

'70,

DELTA ALPHA�OKLAHOMA

Pa.

1047. J. Bradley Hildt, '69. Gates Mills, Obio. 1048. David H. Bradbury. '70, Pittsburgh, Pa, 1049, William J, Btowm, "70. Pittsburgh Pa,

Crowder,

B,

Lb.

41

Jr., '69. Verona Pa '69, West Mifflin. Pa.

DELTA GAMMA� SOUTH DAKOTA 775. Warren G, Schumacher, '69. Eureka, S. Dak. /76. Terrenee E. Hendrick, '69. Woonsocket S. Dak. 777, John J, Doss, '68, Sious Falls, S, Dak. 778, Richard G, GilUs, '69. Mitchell, S, Dak. 779, Cecil R, Hcdger, '69. Rapid City. S, Dak, 780, Steven W, StiUe, '69, Storm Lake, Iowa. 781. Lyle R, GrafF, "68, Centerville. S, Dak. 782, Wallace B, Marker, '69, Sious Falls, S, Dak, 783. John S. Manolis, '70. Huron, S, Dak, 784. Drew C. Johnson. '70, Gniton, S. Dak. 785. James F. Wessman, '70, Sious Falls, S. Dak. 786. Richard A. SlaMery. '70, Vermillion. S. Dak. 787, Rohert E. Oltman, "70, Aberdeen, S, Dak, 788, Thomas J, Graf, '70, Vermillion, S, Dak, 789, Thomas P, Sious Dunn. '70, Falls S, Dak, 790, Michael L. Cady, '70. Sioux Falls, S. Dak, 791, Dan C, Hanson, '70. Pierre, S, Dak. 792. John G. Stemquist. '70, Centerville, S. Dak. 793. Howard C. Bainl, '69, Aberdeen, S, Dak, 794. William N. Guddal, '70, Watertown, S. Dak. 793. Patrick J. O'Brien, '70, Sious Falls, 8, Dak,

796, Ronald J, Knnst, '70, Artesian. S, Dak. 797, Stuart L. Tiede, '70. Woonsocket, S, Dak, 798, Carrie L. Saylor, '70, Sious City, Iowa, 799, Donovan D, Rypkema. "70, Rapid City S, Dak, 890, Robert A, Knutson, '69, Huron, S, Dak, 801. Gregory A, Twedt, '70, Sioni Falls, S, Dak,

802, Robert C, Riler, Jr., '70, Pierre. S. Dak. 803. David R. Olson. '70. Huron, S, Dak, 804, Richard J. Ballsrtl. '70. Burbank, S. Dak. 805. Donald A. Drake. Jr., '73, Mitchell, S. Dak.

806. David M. Johnson, HI, '69, Sioux FaUs. S. Dak. 807, Howard P, Lein, '70, Rapid Cit>-, S, Dak, Soe. Bruce W. Lyon, '70, Huron, S, Dak,

906. Mark McGammish. '69, Winchester, Ky. 907, John M, Patterson, "69, LcxiTigton, Ky, 908, S, Dudlev Taylor, '68, Winchester, Ky. 909, David C, Witte, '69, Bellevue, Ky. 910. Janies A. Steele, "69, Madisonville, Ky. 911. Michael G. Baldwin, '70, Madison viUe,

Ky. 912. Charles K. Hatfield, '70, Lesington. Ky. 913. John W. Hdlenmejer, '70, Lesington. Ky, 914, Rohert M, Jones, '70, East Lansing, Mich. 915. John G. Ledford, '70. Mt, SterUng. Kv. 916. Jobn E, McCullough, '70, Mt, Sterhng,

Ky,

917. Clark

L.

QuisenbeiTv,

'69,

Winchester.

K>. 918. Robert E. Sergent, '70, Lesington, Ky, 919. John S. Shropshire, '70, Lexington, Ky, 920. Gary L. Shultr, '70, Normal, III. 921. Edwin F, Struss. Ill, '70, LouisviUe, Ky. 922. Job D. Tumer, III. '70, Leiington. Ky. 923, James A, Wade, '70, Lesington, Ky. 924, Frank L, Wilford, '70. Lesington, Ky.

DELTA ZETA�FLORIDA 980. Robert

B,

Bamhart. Hi,

Beach, Fla. 981, David C. Bentlev. 982, Ronald K. Ciani.

SatoUito

'69,

N,

Y, '67, Buffalo, '70. Ft. Laudendale,

Fla. 983.

Ralph E. Eriksson. '69, New Smyrna Beach, Fla. GaUagher, '69, Miami, Fla, 985, Richard F, Granat, "68, Miami. Fla. 986. Mark E, Kellogg, '69. Ocala. Fla. 984. Robert

987. Jchn T. P. Luzzo, '68. Ft Fla,

Lauderdale.

988, Harley W, Miller, '69, Miami, Fla. 989, Bobert L, Morgan. '68, Eustis. Fla, 990, Frederick D, Peel, '69, Cbipley, Fla, 991, Dan R, Roach. '70, Miami, Fla. 992, Charles W, Shaw, '68, Perry, Fla. 993. James D. Simians. '68, Shalimar, Fla, 994, Don B, Smith, '69, Evinston, Fla. 995. Edmund T. WooUolk. HI, '67. Jackson.

Miss. 996. John M.

Barley,

II,

'67, JaeksonviUe,

Fla. 997. David Bogue, '70, Jupiter, Fla. 998. Russell F. Burr, '68, TitusviUe, Fla. 999. Clyde 11. Cansler, Jr., "71. Tampa Fla, 1000. David E. Crawlord, '71, Tampa, Fla. lOOl. WiUiam R, Downey, "68, Miami, Fla.

I0O2. Philip C. James, '70, Miami, Fla.

The Rainbow of Delta Tau Delta for Summer, 1967

42

T, Koch, IV. '71, Ft, Lauder dale. Fla, 1004, James D, Larsen, '70, Miami, Fla, 1005. SteiJien D. Marlowe, '70. Tampa, Fla. 1006. James G. Maslauka, "70, St. Petersburg 1003, Urban

Beach, Fla.

1007. S. Daniel Ponce. '70, Miami, Fla, 1008, Guy T, Rizzo, '70. Miami Shores. Fla, 1009, John N, Ropes, "70, South Miami, Fla, 1910, David M, ScuUy, '69, Miami Sprmgs, Fla,

1012. Dannv Spivey, '70, Goshen, Ala, 1013, PhiUip E, Venn, '71. Miami, Fla, DELTA ETA�ALABAMA 627. Michael D. Cook. '69, Lanett, Ala, 628, Timothy L, Dillard. '68. Montgometv. Ala, 629, Brewer D. Latham, '69, Fairfax, Ala, 630. Hayward B. Roberts. Jr., '69, York. Ala, 631. Marvin A. Seales, '69, Pell City, Ala. 632, Samuel S. Stallworlli, Jr.. '69, Manches-

635, 836, 637. 638. 639, 640. 641. 642. 643. 644,

tor, N. IL David W, Stuart, '68, Birmmgham, Ala, Thomas H. Alexander. '70. PeU Cit>-, Ala. Crawford G, Badham, '70, Birmingham, Ala, Bmce C, Brookshire, '70. Meridian, Miss. James 1. Ford, IH, '70, Birmingham, Ala, John G. Galloway, '70, Birmingham, Ala,

John Ivins, '70, Birmin^am, Ala. Gary L. Jordan, '71. HuntsviUe, Ala. Michael W. Kittrell "69, Mobile, Ala. Glen M. Langley. '69, Birmingham, Ala, Edward L. Moseley, '70. Eutaw, Ala, WiUiam S, Poole. Jr., '70, Birmingham, Ala,

045, Ronald F, Roddam, '69, Birmingham, Ala, 646, WiUiam H. Ross, '68, York, Ala. 647.

James W.

Ala, 648, Thomas G,

SeUers, Jr,,

'68,

Monroeville,

Oreg,

Canada. 507. Roderick D.

CaldweU, '69, OakviUe,

On

tario, Canada,

Christie,

D.

'70.

Toronto,

On

tario, Ctmada. 509. Bonald B.

Keeler, '70, Islington, Ontario,

Canada. 310. WnUam

tario.

Dongas

G. Harris, '70. Canada. F. Caldwell. '69,

On

Islington,

Oakville, On

tario, Canada. J. Cuff, '70, North Bay, Ontario.

512. Williani

Kuykendall.

'69,

Eugene,

Pendleton. Oreg, '69, Portland, Oreg. Eugene, Oreg, Burleigh J. Stokes, '69. Eugene. Oreg. Michael E. Vollmar, "68. Salem. Oreg. GaldweU. Woodward, '69. Gregg F.

Robert S, Lerfald. '69, Richard J, Shnnoiuura, Steven D, Sibley, "69.

Idaho. 648. James W. 649. Alan C,

Dolan, '68. Corvalhs, Oreg. Bellanca. '68, Los Angeles,

631. 032. 633. 654, 633.

636. 637, 638.

Jon M, Greene, '68, Boise, Idaho. Walter R, Kosich, '69. El Cemto. CabL Frank S. Lathrop. '69, EUcnsburg, Wash. Brian E, Stecher, '68, Pendleton, Oreg, CUfford J. Bradshaw. '69, Ashland, Oreg. Michael S. Calef, '70, Eugene, Oreg. Gregory M. Cox, '70. North Bend, Oreg, George A. Dirk, '70, Long Beach. Calif. Manhattan W. David '70, Ferguson.

Beach, Calif.

659. 660. 661. 662. 663. 664. 665,

666, 667.

668. 669.

Bruce E. Fontame, '70, Milwaukie. Rohert M. Johnson. "70. MUwaukie.

Oreg, Oreg.

Michael G. Kahnan. '71, Portland, Oreg.

Robert A. Larsen. '69. PorUand, Oreg. Andrew J. Leisinger, '69, HeUs, Oreg. Larry D. MUler, '69. Salem, Oreg, Gary K. More, '71. Englewood, Golo, Jerry L, Reeves. '69, Salem, Oreg, Jerry A. Roniiti, '70. Garden Grove, Calif, Grant B. Schroeder, '68. Medford, Oreg. John H. Taylor. "69, Portland, Oreg.

DELTA MU�IDAHO

Idaho, 570. Dennis E.

5'i'l. James

Lyons, '69, Boise. Idaho.

E, Dokken, '69, Nezperce, Idaho. 572. Charles L. Cottier, '69, Galdssell. Idaho. 573. liharles R. Sams, '70, Gooding, Idaho. 574. Ron W. French, '70, Payette, Idaho, 375, Stephen P, Evans, '70. Sandpoint, Idaho. 376. Roger A. Sciber, "70. CaldweU. Idaho. Meridian. 577. Gordon J. DeWaard, '70. Idaho. 578. Eric A. Kueneman, "70, CaldweU, Idaho, 579, Robert J, Bush. "70, KeUogg, Idaho, 580. Mark R. Torgerson, '70, Nezperce, Idaho. 581. Jimmy E, Hall, '70, Caldwell. Idaho, 582, Gary S. Johnson. '70, Meridian, Idaho, DELTA Xir-LAWRENCE

Gaines, '70, Toronto, Ontario.

Canada, 514, Carl

Tuira, '69,

A.

Echo

Bay. Ontario,

Canada. 515. WUham

H.

Jennerich, '70. Toronto, On

tario, Canada. E. Mathew, "70, Toronto, On tario, Canada. 517. David W. Craig, '70, Cobble HUl, B, C�

654. WiUiam M, 655, Joseph F.

DELTA IOTA�U,C.L,A, 636. Alan W. Birket, "69, Solana Beach, CaUf. 637. John A. Garagliano, '69, San Carlos, Calif. 638. Jack R. Gelzlafi, '68, Westmmsler, Calif. 639. Mark S. Pash, '68, Garden Grove, CaUf, 640. Jeffrey J. MiUer, '69, San Marino, CaUL 641, Dennis F, Rickman. '68. Detroit, Mieh. 642. Rey P. Hariu, '68, Garden Grove, Calif. 643, James B, Wentink, '70. Garden Grove. Calif, 644, David A, CarroU, '68, Pasadena. Calif. 645. Gregory J. Kanne, '70, Los Ang Galif. 646. Michael K, Walker, '69, San Marino,

GaUf. 647. 648.

James C, Miller. '68, FuUerlon, CaUf. Gregory J, Pawlik, '69, Monterey Park, Calif. DELTA LAMBDA�OREGON STATE

630. Scott S. Calif.

Abdon,

'69,

Garden

Grove,

DELTA OMICRON�WESTMINSTER Mo. 464, Phvlos I, H. Sandison. '69. St. Louis, Mo, 463. Richard F. Houser. '69. Baytown, Co BarranquiUa. 466, Sven H. Digranes. '68. lombia.

.�

.,

,,

Mo 407, Richard E, Hotchkin, '69, Maryvdle, Lakewood, 69, Mischnick. M. 468. Mark WilUam E. Brunton, R Whitehurst,

470'. John

'70, EvansvUle. Ind.

11. "70, Middletown.

471. Peter H. Barker, '70, WeUesley, Mass. 472. 473, 474. 475,

Stuart T.

Bobb, '70, Wayiata,

Minn.

Richard W, Stockton, '70, Glenview, IU, Donald J. Tomnitz, '70, Mesico. Mo, Charies C, Richards, "70. Jefferson City,

Mo, 476 John W, Clement, '70, HarrisonviUe, 477, Robert J, Blair, '70. Kansas City, Mo. Ind. 478. Michael J. Naylor, '70, Plymouth.

Baird, '69, Decatur, III, Pattorson, '69, Cleveland,

DELTA PI�U.S.C. Calif. 656. MeU M. Barton, '68. Balboa, 69, Arcadia, Davidson, 657. Lawrence II, Ha658, Jobn E, Fitisimmons, '69, Honolulu,

659, 660. 661. 662, 663. 664.

ids, Mich, Karl A, Hickerson, '70, Iowa City, Iowa, John B, Laing. '70, Glen EUyn, IU. Thomas A. Maki, '70, LaGraoge, III. Bmce C. CampbeU, '70, Barrington, IU. Tbomas C, Goeldner, '70, New Berlin, Wis, 666, Chfford M, Asmuth, '70, Milwaukee, Wis, 667, Frederick D, Bardett, '70, MUwaukee, Wis. 668. David L. F. WUson, Jr., '70, Ehn Grove, Wis.

661, 662. 663. 664. 665.

DELTA XI� NORTH DAKOTA

332, Jeffrev J, Peterson. '70. Velva, X, Dak, 333. Dennis G. Storhaug. '70. Zahl, N, Dak, 334. EusseU W, Pettv, '70. Fargo, N. Dak, 335. WiUiam L. Nybo, "70. Grafton, N. Dak, 336. Richard L. Melvin. '70. Buflalo. N. Dak, 337, Gordon L, Reetz. "70, Bertha. Minn, 338, Gary L. Mayer, "70, Anamoose, N. Dak. 339. Douglas G. Gandmd, '70, Detroit Lakes, Minn.

Paur

,

668. 669 670, 671. 672,

Gurtiss Hayden, III. '68, Ross, Cahf. Bichard L, Houston, '68, Anaheim. Calif. W, Roger Lus, '68, Downey, Calif. H. Daniel Omer, "69. Burbank, Cahf. Michael F. Rowe, '68, West Covma, CaUf.

673, Tumer B. 674. Gary

Smilh, III, '70,

L,' Sparks.

'68,

Los

Los

Angeles,

Angeles, Calif,

DELTA RHO�WHITMAN 252. Brent L. Northrup, '68, Seattle. Wash. 253. Richard II. Blaker, '70, Vancouver, Wash. 334, Mark H, Brodersen, '70, Auke Bay, Alas ka, 235 Erik C. Woodhouse, '70. Oakley. Idaho. 236. Theodore E. Noble, '70, Langley. Wash. G. 257 Douglas Brownlee. '70, Hamdton, Mont 258. Boderic D. Fife, '70. Echo, Oreg. 259, Stephen P, Demaris, '70. WaUa WaUa. Wash, 260, Donald F. Graf, '70, Redmond, Wash. 361, Grant K, H, Lau. '68, Honolulu, Hawau, 362. Llovd B, OdeU, '70, Issaquah, Wash, 263. GUbert D, Weber, '70, Northridge. Calif.

(riiilumhu, '69, Fort Jameson, Zambia, Africa,

657. Edward M, Felhofer, '69, Sturgeon Bav, Wis, 658. Jeffrey O. Leach, '70, Portsmouth, Ohio, 659, John N, Borgh, '70, Milwaukee, Wis, 660, Charles C, Galhneyer, '70, Grand Rap

Calif. Spencer W. Hoopes, '70. DowneyTexas. James B. Lawrence. '70, DaUas. Cahf. Tiburon, S. Mather. '69, David Cahf, John F. Porter, '69, Santa Ana. Robert J. York, '68, Lynsvood, Cahf Robert K. Brizius, '68, Huntington Beach,

L. Gahbert, '69. Playa Del Bey. Cahf. 666. Grover G. Gauntt, IU, '69, Itasca, IU. 667. J. Michael Gciger, '66, San Francisco,

663

Ohio, 656. Chiuzii C.

316. Richard

Canada,

'70, Gary, Ind.

CaUf. 630,

Canada. 513. Gordon R,

340. Karl R. Hardiman,

469 E,

568, Dann J, HaU, '69. Sandpoinf, Idaho. 569. Michael J. Johnson, '69, St. Maries,

50,5, John W, Carmon, '68, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, 306. David P. Dixon, '70, IsUngton, Ontario,

508. Robert

643, 643, 644, 645, 646 647.

Turner, '68, Wetumpka. Ala.

DELTA THETA�TORONTO

511.

634. Robert V, Eiislow. "66, 635. Donald E, Forbes, '69, Salem. Oreg, 636. Alfred P. GrapoU, '69. Tacoma, Wash. 637, Jonathan W. Gray. '69, Eugene, Oreg. 638, Sam J, Haley, '68. Salem, Oreg. 639, Rodney A, Hoiseth. '68, Corvalhs. Oreg. 640 Mark L. Holloway, '69, North Bend, 641, Wallace

Ky.

634,

San Mateo, Calif.

Smith, Jr., "70, Owensboro,

1011. Bernard J.

633,

Clark, '68, Lake Oswego, Greg, Ckioley, '69, Salem, Oreg. j. Deggendorfer, '69. Milwaukie,

631. Bruce R. 632, Craig L, 633. Frank

DELTA SIGMA�MARYLAND

317. 318. 319, 320. 321. 322.

323, 324, 325.

Frank V, Tedesco, '70, Oaklvn, N. J. Frederick P. Birks, '69, Bethesda, Md, Henry N, Doyle, Jr,, "70, Washington, D, C. Richard W. Sutkus, '68. GreenbeU, Md. Earle S, Humphreys, '69. Glen Buraie, Md, Rohert T, Oinzales, '70, Clinton, Md, David E, Jersev, '70. Bowie, Md. Richard E. (iingher, '69, Baltimore, Md.

Stephen J.

Mahaney, '63, Silver Spring.

Md.

326. James T, Bupasd. "70, Bethesda, Md. DELTA TAU�BOWLING GBEEN 447. Ronald L. Fawcett, '68, Troy. Ohio. 448. Jack C. Wilson, '68. West Concord. Mass, 449. Michael L. Decker, '68. Canton, Ohio. 450. Bradford G. Rogers. '68, Ashtabula, Ohio, 431. John W. Shinkle. Jr., '69, Cincinnati, Ohio. 432. Dennis V. Ruhe, '69, Ottawa. Ohio, 433, Eichard B, Bond, '69, Columbus. Ohio, 454, Gregg D, KeUey. '69. Fostoria, Ohio. 455. Thomas D. Brian. '69, Berea. Ohio. 4S6. Lynn K. CliTuer, '69. Napoleon, Ohio. 457, T. Andrew Detling, "68, Sheljojgan, Wis,

The Rainbow of Delta Tau Delta for Summer, 1967 DELTA UPSILON�DELAWARE 316. Mvmn G. Cole. '69, WUmuigton, Del. 317. Gregory E. Stambaugh. '69, Hanover. Pa. 318, David L, von Kleeck, '68. Horsham. Pa. 319, Glen R, Hampton, '69, Wilmmgton, Del.

320, Earl E, MikoUtch, Jr,, '69, Newark, Del.

321. Richard M. DeL 322, Robert T,

Del,

Haylord, Jr.. '69, New Gastle.

103. James S. Webb, '70. Aubum. Wash. 104. Terry G. Dahlin, '71. Yakima. Wash. 105. Gregory S. Lenhart, '71, Oh-mpia. Wash, 106. Tbomas K. Bond. '70, Tacoma. Wash. 107, Michael I, Aral, '71, Tacoma, Wash, 108, James L. Pasinetti. '70, Tacoma, Wash. 109, Kenneth E, Elder. '70. Everett. Wash, 110, John H, Morgan. 111. '69. Inglewood, CaUf.

Hartiim, Jr� '69, WUmington.

323, Bmce A. Northrup. '69. Sealord. Del, 324. Robert E. Bleile, '69, Seaford. Del. 325. Albert A. J. MUler, IU. '69. Newark, Del, 326, Gary C, Robinson. '69, Suminil, N. J, 327. Bmce D. Roberts, '69, Wilmington, Del. 338. Eugene S. Bucher, Jr., '69. Newark, Del. 329, John S, Brown, II. "69, Wilmington, Del,

DELTA CHI�OKLAHOMA STATE 246. Richard O, Morris, '70. Oklahoma Gity, Okla, 247, Dale E, Atherton, '69. Enid, Okla, 248, Lonnie T, Lamprich, '70, Tulsa. Okla. 249. Duane H. Buckner, '70, Oklahoma City, Okla. 250. George D. Vogler, '70, Oklahoma Citi-. Okla. 251. Daniel P. Wujack. '69, Short Hills, N. J, 252. Michael R, Holdridge, '69, Oklahoma City, Okla, 253, Stephen E, Reel, "70, Tulsa, Okla. 234. William J. Perkins, '70, Oklahoma Citv. Okla. 255. Tony L. Prater, '70, Hurst, Tesas. 256. Donald L. Ferguson, '70, Tulsa, Okla. 257, Steven K. Williams, '70, Tulsa, Okla. 258. Steven M. Roney, '70, Mulvane. Kans. 259. Bonald E. White, '70, Oklahoma City.

Okla360, Chester A, Thaver, TI. '70, StUlwatec, Okla. 361. Robert A. Branch. '70. Tulsa, Okla. 262. Michael D. Bartlett. '71, Tulsa. Okla. 263. Michael D. Bell. '70, Ft. Worth, Tesas, 264, Jack T. Bergmann. '70, Oklahoma Gity. Okla. 265. Erich W. Sippel, '69, Tulsa, Okla. 266, Richard L, Earns, '70. StiUwater, Okla. 267. John D. Osbome, '69. Ilartland, Wis.

EPSILON DELTA� TEXAS TECH 290. William H, Hamm. '70. ChUdress. Tesas. Russell T. Kelley, '69, Stamford, Tesas, John H, Burchfiel, '69. Arlington, Tesas, Kenneth P, Urban, '68, Abilene, Tesas, Norman E, Botmer, '69, Dumas. Texas, Lory J, Absher, '69, Midland, Texas, James A, Hester, '69, Ft. VVorth, Texas. David A, PoweU, '69. Seabrook, Texas. Harry D, Gilpm, Jr,, '69, ChiUon, Texas, Larry G, Strickland, '69, Amarilki, Texas, Michael H, KeisUng, '70, Sunray, Tesas, Kenneth A. Jones, '69, Stamford, Tesas. 302, Michael E, Skaggs, '69, Plainview, Tesas. 303, Gavland L, Ward, '69, Hereford, Texas. 304. James W. Downum, Jr., '70, Midland, Texas,

291. 292, 293, 294. 295. 296, 397, 398, 299, 300, 301.

EPSILON EPSILON-ARIZONA

Knudsen. "69, El Cajon. CaUf, R. Hammond. '69, Northridge, Calif. 133, Thomas D, Morron. '69, Tucson, Ariz, 134. James S. Clark. '70. Tucson. Ariz. 133, William V. WeUier, '70, Tucson, Ariz, 136, Geoffrey T. Lawrence, '69, Litchfield 127, John S, 132. Denton

Park. Ariz. 137. Gregory C. Murphy. '68. Springfield, Mass. 138. William H. Seewald, '70, AinariUo, Texas. 139. Richard D. Keye, '68, Pleasant Ridge, Mich, 140, Karl A, Tinghino. '70, Park Ridge, IU. 141, Bobert E. Haugen. '69. Tucson, Ariz. 142, Bodnev K. Corson, '70, Fairbaven. Mass. 143. Larrv A. Forschler. '69, Van Nuys. CaUf. 144. Christopher W, Clark, '70, Van Nuys, Calif, 145, David N, Freed, '70, Drexel Hill, Pa,

DELTA OMEGA�KENT STATE

EPSILON ZETA



431. Timothy L. App. "69. Akron, Ohio. 433. Michael N. Cohen. '70. Rochester. N, Y. 434, Robert A, Caprctto. '69. Westlake, Ohio. 433. Philip B. Simon. "69. Pittsburgh, Pa. 438, Robert B, Pulvino, "69, Lockport, N, Y, EPSILON ALPHA�AUBURN 226. 227. 228. 229. 230. 231, 232. 233. 234.

H. Andrew. Jr., '68, Perry. Ga. George H. Dorer. Jr.. '68, Columbus, Ga. Harry B. Gibb, '69. Birmingham. Ala. Michael E. Gilham. '69. Albany, Ga. Stephen W. House. '69, Birmingham, Ala, Frank B. Kroh. '69. SilverhUI, Ala. Patrick J. Lamb. '70, Tierra Verde, Fla. WUliam L. Lambert, '68, Newnan, Ga. James M. VanHoose, HI, '70, Mobile, Ala, 235. James D. Richardson, '70, Enterprise, Ala.

Charles

EPSILON BETA�T.C.U. 232, Tames B, Duffey, '67, DaUas, Texas, 233. Lewis J, Chase, Jr,, '70, AhUene. Texas, 234. Paul M. CoUins, '70, Easterly. Texas, 233. Cecil C. Dopson, Jr., '73, West Monroe, La, 236, Tom W. EUison, '69, Denison, Tesas. 237. Darvl R. Faris, '70. Fori Stockton, Texas, 238. Michael P, Fauks, '70, Oklahoma City, 239, 240, 241. 242, 243.

Okla, Dennis D, Fmge, "70, Houston, Tesas. James L, Gruning. '69, Maplewood, N. J. Jon R. Reid. '69, Cedar Hill, Tesas. Richard E. Roark. '70. Dallas, Tesas Michael M. Sisler, '69, Bound Brook, N. J. Stephen D, Smith. '69, Oklahoma City,

244, Okla, 245, Steven J. Watkins, '70, Botger. Texas, 246. Rnssell A. Werme, Jr., '70, Houston. Tesas.

SAM HOUSTON

190, Ronald D, Klatt, '70, Waco. Texas, 191, Frankhn C, Thomas, '67. Corpus Christi. Teias. 193. Chauncey F. Webb. '68. Bay City. Tesas, 193. Joseph Y. Walker, '69, HuntsviUe, Texas. 194. Gary VV. Gayden. '68, Groesheck, Tesas, 195. Kirke N. Bridges, '68, Liberty, Texas. 136. Thomas M. Luker. '68, Sloukdale, Texas, 197, Jim G, LiUard, '68, Frioua, Tesas, 198, Robert W. Thompson. '69. Waiahachie, Tesas, 199. Raymond P. Dyess, '69, Wasahaehie. Tesas. 200. Robert L. Woodinu, '69, Cameron, Tesas. 201. Royal G. Lock, '69, Houston, Tesas, 202, Roger R, Read, '69, Houston, Texas. 203. Jesse D. Miller, '70, Galveston, Texas, 204, Samuel F, MarshalL Jr,, '69. Houston, Texas. 205. Mark D. Zimmer, '70, Ft, Worth, Texas, 206. Berry W. Langford, '69. Houston, Texas, 207. Kenneth J. MarshaU, Jr., '70, Beaumont, Texas.

EPSILON ETA�EAST TEXAS STATE

81, Sanlord M, Kawana, '70, Honolulu, Hau'aii. 82, Kimbal R, Logan. '70, Condon, Oreg. 83, James H, Moore. '70, Chico, GaUf, 84, Keith J, Bauer, '69, Gladstone, Oreg, 85. Rohert L. Suanson, Jr., '70. Honolulu, Hawaii. 36. Rohert W. Boal, '70. San Francisco. Calif. 87. AUen D. GiUnore, '69, San Mateo, Calif, 88, Douglas L, Heathertngton, '69, Lake Os wego, Oreg, 89, Michael G, Smidi, '69, Salem, Oreg, 90. WiUism O. Thomas. HI, '68, PorUand,

Oreg, EPSILON IOTA�G.M.I, 237, James A. Sliker. '70, Rochester, N, Y, 228, Gerald J, Wrohlewski, Jr., '70, Farmington, Mich, 339, Phillip A, Reismiller, '71, Alexandria, Ind. 330, Mark G. Doherty, '71, Anderson, Ind, 331, John M. Frossard, '71. Anderson. Ind. 332, Terry J. Pahls, '71. Anderson, Ind. 233, H. Craig Tunget, '71. Anderson, Ind. 234. Lloyd H. Gooding, Jr., '71, Alexandria, Ind. 333. Bonald W. Ulrich, '71, Lockport, N. Y. 236, Jerel W, Tilton, '71. OrtonviUe, Mich. 237. Frank M. Taylor, '71, Anderson. Ind. 238. Albert R. Takach, '71, Warren. Ohio. 239. Jobn P. Steines, Jr., '71, Warren, Ohio. 240. Mark E. Phelps, '71. Warren, Ohio. 241. Robert T. Nicholson, '71. Marion, Ind, 242, Lawrence C, Pederson, '71, Farmington. Mich, 343, Edward P, Leiss, '71, Lebanon, Pa, 244, John B, Easlerby, '71. Lockport, N. Y. EPSILON KAPPA�L.S.U. 43, Bohert M. Semple, '63. Baton Rouge, La. 43. Jeffrey R. Goodlett, '70, West Monroe, La, 44, Michael R. Connelly, '70, New Orleans, La, 45. David G. Gaar, '70, Baton Rouge, La, 46, James D, Cloppas, 70, APO New York. N, Y. 47. Dan L. MeKibben. '70. Shreveport. La. 48. Darrell A. Posey, "69, Henderson. Ky, 49, Robert W, Saak, '69. Chestor, III. 50. Richard T. Blizzard. '69, Westminster, Md, 51, Louis J, Maurin, III, '70, Reserve. La, 52, Raymond D, Myers. Jr,, '71, New Iberia, La. 53. Robert F. Stephens. '71. OberUn. La. 34. Robert B. Lank, Jr.. "69, Baton Rouge, La. 55. Gaty M. Gnodling, '69, Calhoun, La,

EPSILON LAMBDA�TEXAS A, & 1, 29, H,

Euler. '66.

Bonn,

Ger

many.

101. Richard C. Skordal, 102. Chatles G. Shaw, Wash.

'69, Yakima, IH.

'71,

Wa5h.

Pullman,

'68.

Kingsville.

G, Zey, '70, Missiun, Tesas.

EPSILON MU�BALL STATE 37. 38, 39. 40. 41, 42. 43, 44. 45, 46, 47, 48, 49, 50.

Gary M. Tumer, '66, Forest. Ind, Robert D, Witt. '69, Gary, lud. Richard A. WeUs, Jr., '68. Palatine, IU. Edward G, Schott. '69. Whitesboro, N. Y, Richard L. Maswell. '68. Kokomo, Ind. William C. Bussell, '69. IndianapoUs, lud, Richard |, Pawlowski, "69. Mishawaka, lud. Richard E. Coble, "68. BcookviUe. Ind, Russell H. Heffley. Ill, '69, Ft, Wavne, Ind, Stephen D, Alesander, '69, Muncie Ind Robert E, Mohlke, "69, Wanatah, Ind, James C, Sharp. '68, Indianapolis, Ind, Carl D, Toth, '71. Indianapolis. Ind. Douglas C. Richards. '69, IntUanapoiia,

76, Bichard T, Howslcy, '70, Medford, Oreg, 77. Edward L. AUis, '70. San Marino, Calif, 78. John M. Iludkins. '69. Salem. Oreg.

31, 32, 53, 54.

79, Gregory W. Pierce. "70, Portland, Oreg, 80, Daniel H, Moore. '60, Portland. Oreg,

Stephan P, Macy, '69. Lynn, Ind. John E. Merrill, Jr,. '70, Ft, Wayne, Ind. Robert E. Philbert, '69. Marion, Ind. Victor F, Hitz, 11, '69, Versailles, Ind.

55, Thomas L, 56, Stephen M,

Danny W. Ellison, '70, Longview, Texas. George L, Flynn. Jr., '70, Dallas, Texas, Derrell M. Foi, '70, Wasahaehie, Texas, H, Sherman Hiekey. '68, HUlsboro, Tesas, Jeffrev h. Jeffus. '70, Paris, Texas, Dennis D, McAdams, '69, Dallas. Tesas, Ronald H, McKeown. '68, Blo�om, Tesas. Charles R. Randolph. '67, Idahel, Okla. 178, John K. Sterling, '69, Dallas. Tesas. 179. Bobby B. Winstead. '70. Dallas, Texas. 170. 171, 172. 173. 174, 175, 176, 177.

EPSILON THETA�WILLAMETTE

West

Jr,,

"C,

168, Wendell B, Ashby, '70, DaUas. Tesas, 169, Donald W, Crum, '70, Haymarket. Va,

lud. 75. Warren

A.

Stakes,

Tesas, 44. Charles

EPSILON GAMMA�WASHINGTON STATE 100. Hatald

Carlyle

Texas, 31, Edward D, Hodge, HI, '69, San Antomo, Tesas. 33. Frank A, Falvella. '68, Kenedy, Texas, 33, John E, Zey, '68. Mission, Texas, 34, Stephen A, Anderson. '69. HarUngen, Texas. 35. Johnny D. Copeland. "68. Dallas, Texas. 36. WUham A. HuHo, '69, Bobstown, Texas. 37. Terry H. Nance, '69, Nison, Teias, 38, Douglas K, Hyatt, '70, Austin. Tesas, 39. Danny C, Porter, '68, KingsviUe. Tesas. 41. William K, Price, '70, San Benito, Tesas, 42, Clendon M, Bobinson, '70, Corinna, Me, 43, Hoy D, Sprague, Jr,, '68. San Antonio,

166, George E, Angle, '70, Ft, Worth. Tesas. 167, Mickev L, Arrnstrong, '70. Greensboro, N,

43

G. Holmes. '70, Vancouver, Wash,

Golba, '69. South Bend. Ind,

Yancey, '70, Indianapolis, Ind.

The Ralvbow of Delta Tau Delta for Summer, 1967

44

57. Gregory M, Walsko, '79. Highland, Ind. 58, Terry N. Lewis, '70. Indianapolis, Ind. 59. David E. Koehler, '70. Aurora. Ind. 60. James B, Freeman, '70, Lciiston. K, Y, 61. John S. Hefner, '70, Decatur, Ind.

EPSILON NL'�U.M.R. 1. Bonald R. Smith, '67, Clatkton, Mo. 2. Thomas J, Fritzioger. '67. BeUeviUe. IU. 3. Michael R. Hoff, "69, Kansas City. Mo. 4. Donald C. Searpero, '67, RoUa, Mo, 5, Peter A, Dunkailn, '69. Charleroi, Pa, 6. Eric D. Aschinger, '69, St, Louis, Mo, 7. Leroy E, Kraske, '67, BeUeviUe, III, 8, Kenneth K. Hammann, '69, Webster Groves. Mo, 9, Bytun N. VermUlion. '69, Kirkwood, Mo. 10. Kenneth G. Mavhan, '36, ItoUa. Mo. 11. Eflun L. Park, Jr, '3S, Rolla, Mo, 12. Herbert A. Brase. '66, RoUa, Mo. 13. BiUy E. Turley, '53. Holla. Mo. 14. Edward T, Lilhe, '65, West Helena, Ark, 15, Jerry L, Fortner, '66. Vilonia. Ark. 16. Gerald B. MiUer. '67, Rolla, Mo. 17. Beniamin D. Stewart, '67, CardwcU, Mo. 18. David N. Smith, '67, St. Louis, Mo. 19. Jack W, Davis, '67, St. Louis, Mo. 20. tiary M, Woodard, '67, Kennett, Mo. 21, David A. Herold, '67, Kirkwood, Mo. 22. James C. Cowles, Jr., '68, SpringUeld, Mo, 23, Virgil A. Desbazer, '68, RoUa, Mc, 24, David D, Beardsley, '70, Glendale, Mo, 25, Dale L, Ricks, '69, Campbell, Mo, 26, Charles R. Bick, '69, St, Louis. Mo, 27, WiUiam F, Bridge, '69, Kansas Cit>-, Mo, 28, John G, Janes. 69. Richardson, Tesas. 29. Floyd W. Sherfield, '71, Fort Smidi, Ark, 30. Walter D. Dietrich, '69, HeUeviUe IU. 31. James T. Williams, '70, Campbell, Mo. 32. John 11. Braaf. '70, Kirkwood, Mo. 33. Stephen L. Byerly, '70, St, Louis, Mo. 34, Tommy A. Paullus, '70, Sikeston, Mo, 35, Thomas O, Hoppe, '70. St, Louis. Mo. 36. Anthony A. Mack. '70, Pittsburgh. Pa, 37, Richard A. Campen, '70, Montgomerj-, III.

EPSILON XI�WESTERN KENTUCKY !. Oliver W. 2. Joseph E.

Pa,

Aho, '69, LouisviUe, Ky, Alvarez. HI, '68, Burgettstown.

3, 4.

Gary E, Berger, '68, Oaklyn. N. J. WiUiam H, Brandenburg, '66, Elizabethtown, Ky, 5, David F. Broderick, '69, Bowling Green, Ky. 6. Robert S, Bugcl. '69, Munhall, Pa, 7, Craig Combest, '68, Jeffersontown. Ky.

Henderson

8,

B,

Ends.

Jr,,

'65,

MonticeUo,

Ky, 9. David L, Feldkamp. '69, LouisvUle, Ky. 10. Tommy J. Fridy, '68, Onton, Ky.

Stephen

II.

L.

Garrett,

"69, Bowhng Green,

Ky.

12. Norbert P. Gettis, '68. Erlanger, Ky. 13, Robert P, Gettys. '68, Erlanger. Ky, 14, CJeorge D. Gregory, '67, SpringBeld, Ky. 15. Christopher T. Grinstead. Jr., '68. Glas gow, Kv, X6. John W. HaU, '67, Henderson, Kv. 17. William R. Hcbum. '68. LouisviUe, Ky. 18. David A, Hicks, '69, Henderson, Ky. 19. Bruce L, Higgins, '69, LouisviUe, K>. 20. Ronald E. Hoerter. '68, Jeffersontown, Ky. 21. Charles W. Hom, Jr., '68, VaUey Station, Kv. 22, Thomas J, Matuch. '69, Matawan, N. J. 23, Bichard K, McClure, II. '67, LouisvUle, Ky. 24, Harold L, McGuffey, '67, Smiths Grove, Ky. 25. Mebin E. Moms, '68, Shepherdsi-ille. Kv. 26. Thomas J, Moser, Jr,, '69. LouisviUe, Ky. 27. John fl. M, Pampalone. '69, Irvington, N, J. 28. Kenneth W. Palten.on, '69, BowUng Green. Kv. 29. MarshaU S, Peace, '68, Hopkinsville, Ky. 30. Johnny N, Pinson, HI, 69. Pikcville. Ky. 31. Rodney W. Reams, '68. LouisviUe, Ky. 32. Fritz H. Eiley, Jr., '68, LouisvUle, Ky. 33. Michael E, Rodgers, '68. LouisviUe, Ky. 34. John Saranchak, Jr., '68. Bowhng Green.

Ky. 35. Janies A. Sexton. Jr., 36, Michael E, Skomsky, 37, KeUy D, Thompson,

'66, Louisville, Ky, '68, Louisville, Ky, '68, Boss'Ung Green.

Ky, 38, WiUiam

B,

VanMeter.

"70,

Owensboro.

K>, 39. Ed�i�d L. VaoMetre. '66. HopkinsviUe. Kv. 40. David F. White, '69. Simpsonville, Kv, 41, Paul J, Wiser, "68. Fishcrville, Ky. 42. Jacob H. Barnard. Jr., '62, Bowling Green.

Ky. 43, Thomas T, Beetem. il, '67, Lesington, Ky. 44, James R, Bnmer, "67. Pleasure Ridge. Kv, 43, Balph L. Boldrick, '66, Springfield. Ky,

46, Rohert E, Bush, '67,

Louisville. Ky.

47. Jesse L. Castillo. '6M, .San Antonio, Tesas, 48, Robert G. Cochran, '47, Bowling Green. 49.

Ky. Tommy L. CovuiHtoD^ '61^ O^venshoro, Ky.

Complete

K>.

55. Glenn S. Leach, '63, LouisviUe, Ky, 56. Rov P. MiUer, '63, HodgenviUe, Ky. 57. E. "G. Monroe, '41, NashviUe, Tenn. 58. W, Morton Napier, '40, Bowbng Green, Ky. 39, Robert M, Pearce, "48. Bowling Green. Ky. 60. Michael A, Perry, '69. VaUey Station. Ky. 61. Sam C. Poller. '31, Bowling Green, Ky. 62. Robert L. Proctor. '49. Bowhng Green, Ky.

Ridley, "43, Pro\'idence, Ky, Boss, Jr., '61. Lafayette. Tenn. Boss, '66, Campbells vi He, Ky. John S. Smith. '63, CampbeUsviUe, Ky. Robert II. Tavlor, '66, Bowhng Green, Ky, Alvis H. Temple, '25, Bowling Green, Ky, j, Douglas Turner, '64, LouisviUe, Ky.

63. Waj-ne H, 64. 65. 66. 67 68, 69,

Alton

David A.

EPSILON OKUC BON�C.S.U. 1. 2, 3. 4.

5,

Lawrence W. Zeidler, '68. Colorado Springs, Coki, Frank Y, Bamert, '68, Lakewood. Colo, Charles T, Leverett, Jr., '69, -Aiimra, Colo, Dennis A, Baker, '6S. Fort ColUns, Colo, Gerr\- C. McKim, '66, Windsor, Colo, Martin F. KusseU, '67, McCook, Nebr.

6, 7. Michael R, KeUy, '68. Grand Island, Nebr, 8 Stanwood E, Lehman, '69, Fort CoUins, Colo, 9, Harry M, Holdredge, '69, Boulder, Colo, 10. RaudaU M, Wilson, '68, Los Altos HiUs, CaUf. R, Townscnd, '69, Orchard Park, II, Gar> 12.

Douglas

R,

McCarths-,

15. Donald F. 16. Rohert L. 17, Samuel E, Dennis

Form

Class Year:

ZIP:

(Tear address

,

label off this issue of The Rainbow and

OR fili in old address below)

enclose,

:

ZIP:

Send

DELTA TAU DELTA FRATERNITY, 3665 Indianapohs, Indiana 46205, to

ColUns,

Colo. C. Roberts. '70. Boulder. Colo, David G. AUen. "75. Denver, Colo. Neal L. Johnson. '69, McLean. Va. Bichard D, Blake, '70. Fort Colhns. Colo, Michael S. Foster. 70, Longmont, Colo, James D, Johnson. '68, Fort Collins, Colo. Thomas E, Andrews, '70, Fort CoIUos, Colo. 25. Tunoth)' R. Spoeneman, '70. Brule, Nebr.

18. 19. 20. 21, 22. 23, 24.

New Address :

Old Address

Fort

Owens, "68, LitUelon. Colo. Deters. '69. Fort Collins. Colo, Van Whv. '70, Fort CoUins,

Name:

Chapter:

'69,

Colo.

13. Mark M, Subv, '69, Fargo, N, Dak, 14, Robert S. Johnson, '69. Newton. Iowa.

26. Kent E. Johnson, '70, Wheatridge, Colo. 27. Tertcnce D. Jander, '70, Kirkwood. Mo. 28. Barrv M. MiUer, '70. NorfoUi, Va. 29. Robert F. Connor. Jr., '70, Denver, Cob. 30. Kenneth J. Fanning. '69, Jacksonville. Ill,

CHANGING ADDRESS? Please

Ken D. Given, '34, Bowling Green, Ky. Michael T, Giien. '65. Atianta, Ga Gar>- M, Haves. '65, Circlevdic Ohio, Bobert D. Kiliiian. '67, LouisviUe, Ky. 34. Robert M. Kyle. Jr.. '67. BowUng Green. 50. 51, 52, 53,

Washington Blvd.,

Delta Tau Delta

Fraternity

Founded

at Bethany College, Bethany, Virginia (now West Virginia), Febmary, Incorporated under the laws of tlie state of New York, December 1, 1911 Charter Member of the National Interfraternity Conference

1858

Founders BirnARD H. Alfred (1832-1914) Eugene Tahr ( 1840-1914) John C. Johnson ( 1840-1927) AlexandehC, Earle (1841-1916)

WlLUAM R, CU.NNINOHAM (1834-1919) John L, N, Hunt (1838-1918)

Henry K, Bell

Arch Mr. Justice Tom C. Clark, TS, '22 Robert L. Hartford, B. '36 W. H. Andrews, Jr., TO, "20 DeWitt Wilhams, TM, '29 William P, Raines. PZ, '48 Frederick D, Kershner, Jr,, BZ, '37 Wilham J. Fraering, BS, '46 Robert W. Kroening, AO, '45 Edwin H. Hughes. HI, BR, '43 Donald G. Kress, N, '58

Lowe

Jacobs,

(1839-1919)

(1839-1867)

Cliapter

Presiclent 2101 Connecticut Ave., N. W., Washington, D. C. Vice-President 1213 W. 3rd (Room 625), Cleveland, Ohio Second Vice-President Box 749, Oeensboro, N, C, Treasurer 6543 N. E. Windermere Rd., Seattle, Wash,

20008 44113

27402 98)05 31 Pumpkin Hill, Westport, Conn, 06880 Secretary ,106 Morningside Dr., No. 51, New York, N, Y, 10027 Supervisor of Scliolarship President SouUietn Division 16 Wren St., New Orieans, La, 70124 President Western Division 420 Graeser Rd., Creve Coeur, Mo. 63141 President Northern Division 710 Indiana Bldg., Indianapolis, Ind. 46204 President Eastern Di\-ision 7 Chestnut PI,. Ho-Ho-Kus, N, J, 07423 .

,

.

Division Vice-Presidents Carl E, Stipe, Jr,, BE, '43 J, Carlisle Myers, Jr., AE, '43 Bradley W. Becker, AS, '62

Southern Division. Southern Division Southem Division

William O. Hulsey, PI, '44 Harold F. M. Tattan, Jr., AI, '45 Phil R. Acuff, TK, '53 Thomas J. Barron, AT, '37. Darrel L. Johnson, AT, '40, PP, '40 Robert P. Stapp, BK. '34 Richard F. T. Seaman, Z, '36 John G. Harker, BH, '46 Rohert N, Craft, P, '50 C. Douglas Cherry, N, '58 .

Western Division Westem Division .

Janies R. Dunne. E, '51 John C. Adams, Jr., BN, '48

Western Division ..Western Division Western Division

.

...

Northem Division. Northern Division Northem Division. Eastem Division Eastern Division Eastern Division Eastern Division

Committee of the Francis M, Hughes, M, '31, Chainnan G, Herbert McCracken. FS. '21 C, T, Boyd, rn, '21

,

74 Marietta St., N.W., Atlanta, Ga. 30303 725 Beechmont Rd,, Lexington, Ky. 40502 3206 Casdeleigh Rd,, Box 262, BeltsviUe, Md, 20705 510 S. Ballinger St., Fort Worth. Texas 76104 527 S. Alandele Ave., Los Angeles, CaM. 90036 4402 W. 93rd Terr., Prairie Village, Kan. 66207 .637 S. Dakota Ave. Sioux Falls, S, D. 57104 527 Pacific Bldg., Portland, Ore, 97204 Office of Publ,, General Motors Inst,, Flint, Mieh. 48502 3U0 Chadbourne Rd., Shaker Heights, Ohio 44120 4908 Queen Ave., S., Minneapolis, Minn. 55410 2351 Lambeth Dr., Upper St. Clair Twp., Bridgeville, Fa. 15017

.Sprathn, Harrington & Co.,

.

.

.

.

.

.

199 Prospect St., 2104 Niskayuna Dr..

Coffin

&

PhiUipsburg, Schenectady,

N. J. 08865 N. Y. 12309

Richardson, Inc., 141 Milk St., Boston, Mass. 02109

Distinguished

Service

Chapter

710 Indiana Building, Indianapolis, Ind, 46204 Scholastic Magazines, 50 W. 44th, New York, N. Y. 10036

.

Box 127,

Greensboro,

N, C. 27402

Central Office Alfred P, SiiEnrpr, III, P, '49, Executive Vite-Picsident Frank H. Pkice, Jr.. BA, '59, Director of Program Development

Jack A, McClenny, AZ, '49, Editor Croth, Ae, '66, Field Secretary ChahlivS Singer, A8, '66, Field Secretary F, Darhell Moore, B, '16, Historian

Douglas E,

3665

Washington Blvd., Indianapolis, Ind,

46205

Telephone; 924-4391 4,5

The Rainbow of Delta Tau Delta for Summer. 2967

46

Alumni For

information

time and

to

as

of meetings for the officer listed.

chapter,

any

place

contact

Fairmont�Howard C, Boggess, PA, 222 Locust Ave. (26554)

(Omo) Edwin (45840)

FiNTJLAV

1728 E. Stamer, Z, Thirteenth St., Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio

Akron�Warren 44223

Chapters



L.

Heminger,

M, Route 2

Omaha� Douglas C. Stock, Bedford Ave. (68104)

5048

County�Ouen H. Riclieheu, 700 Laguna Rd., Fullerton, Calif,

Orange All

92632

Flint�Robert C, Morgan. A, 3224 Circle Dr. (48507)

Palm

John D, Hartman, BK, Poudre Valley National Rank (80521) Fort Wortb�Kenneth L. Barr, f:B. 241 W, 13th St. (76101)

Philadelphia

HoNOLUi.u Felix A. Maciszewski, BK, 1401 First National Bank Bldg. ( 96813)

Pittsburgh� Rohert

Fort Collins

Vll,

Beaches

Arthur



Allen.

J.

3338 Broad wav. Riviera

BB,

Beaeh, Fla.



,\LBUQUERQtiE

L,

William



10801 Prospect,

Dye,

BZ,

(87112)

N,E.

AsHTABLT-A-Peter A, Manyo, A.Q, 6410

.\ustinburg Bd. (44004) Athens

D.

(Orao)�John



Dowler, B, 39

(45701)

Briarwood Dr.

.\tlanta�William M. Faekler, BE, 1515 Markan Dr., N. E. (30306) Ai'cusTA

Fiske, (30904) F,

(Georoli)�Julian

Jr., r*. 2330 Redwood Dr. C. P*, Fears, Baltimobe� Charles R.F.D, 2, Hidden Point, Annapolis Md. 21401 Rouge� Anthony I. Clesi, BS, 170 St, Louis St, (70801)

Baton

Battle Creek�Eugene H,

I, 43 Christ;- Rd.

Jr.,

(49015)

33rd St,, Nederiand, Teiias 77627 Boise Vallei-� Michael J, Morgan, AM,

(83706) BosTo.N�Rudolph L. Helgeson, Jr.,

(Mississippi)

Jackson



Frank L, Bowron,



(82601) Charleston� Stanley H. Wilson,

Miller,

F.

Louis F. Hekhuis. I, Off. Dean of Men, Mich. State Univ.

Lexington



Craig F. Devine, TZ, 3235

WestbrookDr. (45238) W. Burnside, (26301)

Jr.,

Kratt, M, 1158

Seventh St., Lorain, Ohio 44052

Lincoln S. 3l5t

Brake. B*.

Corpus Christi-South Texas�Garth B. Slater, PT, P. O. Box 6123 (78411) A.

Smith, AO, 4539

Aicady (75205)

(68502)

LoMC Bfjvch

80302 Moines�C.

Robert

Brenton, rn,

Iowa 50063

Dallas Center, Detroit� Paul A. Mever, .i, 15944 12 Mile Road, Soulhfleld, Mich. 48075 Eugene

K, Reed Swenson,



(97206)

E, Henderson St.

rp, 4304 S,

Rochester R. Frank Smith, I'H, 6 Del Rio Dr. (14618) Sr.

l.ouis



Frank W,

Mnnro, Jr., AE, Mo.

Bmmley Dr., Bridgeton,

63402 St.

Paul



(See Minnesota.) J, Stanley Francis. III.

St. Petersburg AZ, The 300



Bldg,,

300 31st St,

N,

(33713) Salem ( Oregon )�Wilbur G, WUmot, Dreamerie

Jr., PP, 2950

E.

Ln., N.

R. Stanley Jung, PI, 1010 (78209) San Dieco County NeU A. Fowler, PA, 8441 Camino-Dcl-Oro, La JoUa, Calif. San Antonio



Wiltshire

Edwin S. Thomas, AT, 60

63rd PI, (90803)

John R. Bradley, (90017) (Wisconsin) Gordon �

man,



All. 630 E, Hat-

BP, 752 E. Gorham St, (5,3703)

Choctaw.)

Nickles Causey, AA,

Memphis�J,

N,

(Oregon)�Robert M, Brownell.

rp, 750 East ]4th, Apt. 11-A (9T401) Evansville� Joseph W. Steel, 111, T, 1520 Redwing Dr. (47715)

1706

Parkway (38112)

villa Ave. (33134) Mn.wAUKEE� John M. Protiva, BP, 2040 W, Wisconsin Ave, (532,33) Minneapolis

(See Minnesota,) Kristensen, BH,



MiNNE,soTA Benno L, 2001 E, Skyline Dr,, 55378 �

Burnsville. Minn.

Montgomery John T, Wagnon, AH, 822 Felder (36106)

Ji,, EA,

National Gaplfal ( Washington, D, C. ) �Robert E, Newby. PH, 7515 Radnor Rd� Bethesda. Md. 20034, NAtional 8-8800 or OLiver 2-4046 Orleans

Samuel M, Rosamond, Nashville Ave, (70115)



2401

New York�Charles A, Keyser,

Washington Ave., Rutherford,

�1, 153 N.

J.

07070

as,

Ronald E. Wihnot, A*, 3109 Argonne Circle (93105) SEATTI.E�James C. Flint. PM, 7541 37th, N.E. (98115) Sant.a Rareara^



S. Rhinehart,

Sioux CrrY� Richard 520 Security Bldg. Sioux Falls 808 E. 34th

Stark County A, 151 21st, 44709

(Omo)

Syracuse�John

James

St,

AP,

(51101) Richard C. Erickson, AF,

N.



Dan M.

Belden,

W., Canton,

T.

PO,

Deegan,

Ohio 770

(13203)

Tacoma� Eugene Riggs, PM, 10615 Lake Steilacoom Dr,, S, W. (98499) Tampa� Edward W,

Netscher, AZ, Rt. 1, Box 47, Odessa, Fla. 33556 Toledo�Frederick W. Hibbert, M, 3301 Ravenwood

(43614)

Topeka�Frank F,

Hogueland, PB,

1530

MaeViear (66604) ToRONio� Barry

D,

MitcheU,

AO,

679

Danforth Ave, Tucson David N. Montgomery, EE, 759 W. Orange Grove Rd. (85704) �

Tulsa� Paul H.

Northern Kentucky ner, AE, 25

San Francisco�H. J. Jepsen, BP, PA, Mills Buildmg, Room 963 (94104)



^�}IAMI�Marion C. McCune, AZ, 950 Se

Jr,. BS.

92037



Los Angeles W. Sixth St,

New

Dean Denver� C. Graves, EK. 335 UMC, U. of Colorado, Boulder, Colo. Des

(Oregon)

(97303)

Neff, Jr., 3124

Benjamin C.





Dallas� Richard

of

Evangelos S. Levas. AB, 332

Meaditlle� (See

Columbus (OhioI� Larry C. P.O. Box 8562 (43215)

Ai,

Jr.,



2,5177 Cihcaco�Paul H, Fricke, BN, 620 Villa .\ve., Addison, 111. 60101 Choctaw- Robert B. Dornhaffer, A, 459 Jackson Park Dr., Meadville, Pa. 16335

Cleveland� George E.

Dr,

Clinton, Tenn. 37716 La Jolla ^(See San Diego County.)

Madison

Clarksburg-Lester PA, 250 Carr Ave.

Clin-

B,

Park

Kansas Crrv- Billy G, Wright, Pe, 10010 W, 91, Overland Park. Kan, 66212 Knoxville Harrv 383 N. Main St.,

15017

Pa.

Bridgeville,

12615

TO, 1509 Shelton Dr., St, Albans. W. Va,



Alton

OlHce

(39206)

Lansing

N, Craft. P, 2351 Lambelh Dr., Upper St, Clair Twp.,



BM.

276 North Ave., Weston, Mass. 02193 Buffalo Frederick H. Parsons, PS, 156 Roycroft Blvd., Snyder, N, Y, 14226

Cincinnati



4551

Jr,, EA,

gan,

Pa,

Jenkintown,

Ave.,



Chinoe Rd. (40502)

1104 Manitou

Casper (Wyoming) PH, 132 Beech St,

BA,



W'illard E, Fichthorn, T.



211 Summit 19046

Porti.and



Evans. Jr,, PI, 415

Beaumont�John E,

506

EB,

Indianapolis Stephen K. Miller, 401 W, Sixty-diird St, (46260)



McKay, Jr,,

Roch.

Houston�Rohert H. Briar Hill (77042)

33404

William S. Wag



Trinity Place, Ft. Thom

Ky, 41075

Oakland�C, Richard Miller, X, 1 Cal vin Court, Orinda, Cahf, 94563 Oklahoma CrrY Roland M. Tague, AA, 2329 Belle\'iew Terr. (73112) �

Mindeman. AA, 5848 S. Sandusky (74135) Washington, D. C. (See National Cap ital.) Wichtfa James B. Devlin, FT, 2 Lynwood (67207) �



Wilmington

(Delaware)



Warren

A.

Beh. Jr., AT, Montchanin, Del. 19710

of Delta

Tlw Rainbow

Alabama^Delta Eta

(Southern)

ter

Epsilon



(Northem)



Box

(Eastern)



1008 Por

607 (Eastern) Highland Ave.. .Meadville, Pa, 16335, William F. Reichert, A, R, R, 2 ( 16335)

Arizona

Alpha



Epsilon Epsllon



(Western)�

1625 E, Drachman St,, Tucson, Ariz, 85719 Epsilon

Alpha

(Southern) 423 W, Magnolia, Auburn, Ala, 36830, Capt. Arthur L, Sclater. EA, Box 1062 (36830)

Auburn



Cornell

Beta

OincRON





1

Campus Road, Cornell Umversity, Ithaca, N, Y. 14850. Malcolm J. Free born, BO, George Junior Republic, Freeville, N, Y. 13068 Delaware� Delta Upsilon (Eastem) 158 S, College, Newark, Del, 19712, Robert W, Johnson, AT, 121 Warwick Dr,, Windsor Hills, Wilmington, Del, 19803



Sharp, E, Bt, 3 (49224) �

DePauw



Reta

GreencasUe.

46135.

Ind, 46204

Delta Kappa



Box N. C.



Edwin H, BB, 710 Indiana Bldg,,

Indianapolis, Duke

( Northern )

Beta

Ind,

Hughes, Hi,

��

(Southem) P. O. 4671, Duke Station, Durham, 27706, Dr. Robert H. BaUant>-ne,

0, 2510



Wrightwood (27705)

East Texas State Epsilon Eta (West ern) Box Z, East Texas Station. Com merce, Texas 75428. Dr. Robert K. Williams, EH. 2611 'laylor St. (75428) �

Gamma Theta (Western) 604 5th St., Baldwm City, Kan. 66006. William W. Eddy, Jr., Pe. 616 Sea brook Place, Lawrence, Kan, 66044

Baker





(Northern) 257. Student Programs, Ball State

Ball State

Epsilon Mu



Box



Univ., Muncie, Ind, 47306, Walter R,

Khnge, BZ, 225 Alden Rd, (47,304) Betiuny�Theta

(Eastem) W.



P. O. Box

26032. Dr. Rohert A. Patsiga, O, P. O. Box 117

Bethany,

445.

Va.

(26032) Delta Tau ( Northem ) �Bowling Green, Ohio 43402, Dean WaUace W, Taylor, Jr,. AH, EE, 1

BowLLNG Green

Leitman Dr, Brown



(43402) (Eastem)



Box

1160,

Brown University, Providence, R, 1, 02912, Paul F, Maekesey, BX, 42 Dartmouth Ave.. Riverside, R. I. 02915 Butler�Beta Zeta (Nortbern)^340 N. Haughey Ave., Indianapolis, Ind. 46208. Bruce D. Jones, AO, 3287 Moller Rd. (46224) California

Beta Omega (Westem) 2425 Hillside Ave.. Berkeley, Calif. 94704. George A. Malloch, Jr., BO, Chickering & Gregory, 111 Sutter St,. San Francisco, Calif. 94104 �



Cahnegie Tech Delta Beta (Eastern) �5006 Moorewood PL, Pittsburgh. Pa, 15213, James P, P. Craig, III, AB, 136 �

Colson Dr. (15236) Cincinnat^-Gamma

Xi (Northern) Jefferson Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio 45220. James R. Hyde, FS, 1108 Im print Lane (45240)



3330

Coi/)RADO�Beta

Kappa

(Western)-

1505 University Ave., Boulder, Colo. 80302. WUham A. Fairchild, Jr., BK, 4405

Chippewa

Colorado

State

Dr, �

(80302)

(80521)

Emory

Beta Epsilon Drawer D D, Emory �

(Southem)



University. At Judson C, Sapp,

lanta, Ca, 30322,

106-B Crescent Comt catur, Ca. 30030

BE,

Dr,,

De

pLOHroA Delta Zkta

(Southern)� 1926 W. Universitv Ave., Gainesville, Fla. 32601. Charles M, Fonda, AZ, Arnold and Wright, 904 South Main St,

(32601)

Epsilon

FLORmA State Delta Phi (Southem) BoK 6636, Florida State University, TaUahassee, Fla. 32306. CorneUius W. Cline, A*, 2510 McElroy St. (32304)

Omicron

47

111, 60616, Kenneth 242 Franklin. River Intjiana

N,

Folgers. FB,

Forest, III, 60305

Beta Alpha (Northern) 1431 N, Jordan Ave,, Bloomington, Ind, 47403, Chris C. Dal Sasso, BA, Ath �



letic Dept., Indiana Umversity (47405) iowA

Omicron (Northern) 724 N. Du buque St., Iowa City. Iowa 52240. Robert B. Anderson, BIT, 715 W. Park Rd, (52240) �

Iowa



State



Camma

2121 Sunset Rev. F. Paul

Pi ( Western ) Dr� Ames, Iowa 50012.



Goodland, 0, St. John's Episcopal Church (50010) Kansas Gamma Tau (Westem) 1111 W. 11th St., Lawrence. Kan, 66044. Dr. WUliam P, Smith, BH, 1107 W, �



Campus Rd. (66044) Kansas State Gamma Chi (Western) 1001 N, Sunset Ave,, Manliattan, Kan. 66502. Ward A. Keller, PX, 713 Harris Ave. (66502) �



Ken-t-Delta Omega (Northern)� 223 E. Main St., Kent, Ohio 44240. Rnn ald G. Rice, AH, 7628 Holyoke Drive. Hudson, Ohio 44236 Kentucky- Delta Epsilon (Southern) �1410 Andubon Ave., Lexington, Ky, 40503, J, Carlisle Myers, Jr,. AE, 725 Beechmont Rd, (40.502)





Geobce

Washington Gamma Eta (Soudiem)- 1915 G St., N. W., Wash ington, D. C. 20006. Lawrence R. Rojahn, BN, 1838 Connecticut Ave., N. W., Apt. 304 (20009) �

Georgia Tech Gamma Psi (Southern) �227 4th St.. N, W,. Atlanta, Ga, 30313, Eugene J, Donahue, PS, 4800 Huntley Drive (30305) �

( NorUiern )� 1210 Flint. Mich, 48504, Harry P. McKinley, Er, C.M.I., 3rd and Chevrolet Ave. (48502)

G.M.I.� Epsn.ON Iota

St..

Hillsdale�Kappa

( Northern )^207

Hillsdale St., Hillsdale, Mich, 49242, Robert N. Watkins, K, Cold Springs, Hamilton, Ind, 46742 Idaho

Delta Mu



(Western)� Moscow

Idaho 83843, Dr. A, W, Helton, M, 1237 Walenta Dr. (83843) Beta Upsilon ( Northem ) 302 E. John St., Champaign, IU, 61820, Neil O. Dahlman, BT, 2313 South FiLst St. (61820) �



Tech Gamma Beta ( North ern)�3349 S. Wabash Ave,. Chicago,

Illinois

( Nordiern)� Leonard Hall, Gambier, Ohio 43022, David L, Cable, X, 5826 Briarwood Lane, Solon, Ohio

44139 L,S.U,

Epsilon

Kappa { Southem ) DT, University Station, Baton Rouge, La, 70803, Maj, Joseph W. Detyens, EK. 9023 Kingcrest Pkwy, �



Drawer

(70810)



Dr, Richard K, Noles. AZ, 286 Creenerest Dr, (30601)

Dupont

Kenyon�Cm



Georgia Reta Delta (Southern) 545 S. MUledge Ave., Athens, Ca. 30601,

Illinois

(Westem) 1583 S, College Avenue, Fort CoUins. Colo, 80521. Louis G. Wood, EA, 7055 Washington, Apt. 303 �





Beta Cih

1967

and Advisers

St., Albion, Mieh. 49224, John C,

Allegheny

for Summer,

Undergraduate Cliapters 1455, University, Ala, 35486, Paul C. Vining, AH, 1702 Ninth St., Tusca loosa, Ala. 35401 Albion

Tau Delta



Lafayette Nu (Eastern)�Easton, Pa. 18042. C. Douglas Cherry, X, 199 �

Prospect St., PhiUipsburg, N, J, 08865 Lawrence�Delta Nu (Northern)- 218 S, Lawe St,. Appleton, Wis. 54911, Kelland W, Lathrop. AN, HortonvUle, Wis, 54944 Lehigh

Beta Lambda (Eastem) Le high University, Bethlehem, Pa, 18015, James V, Eppes, BI, BO, Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineermg, Lehigh Umversity (18015)

Maine







Camma Nu

(Eastem)

sity of Maine, Orono, ward H, Piper, FN, Ave,



Univer

Me, 04473. Ed 21 Mainewood

(04473)

Maryland

Delta Sigma (Southem) Fraternity Row, College Park, Md. 20740. Robert E. Newby, FH, 7515 Radnor Rd� Bethesda. Md. 20034 �



3

M.l.T,-Beta Nu (Eastern)^16 Beacon St,, Boston. Mass, 02115. Dr, Charies D. Buntschuh, BN, 2 Ten Acre Dr, Bedford, Mass, 01730

The Rainbow of Delta Tau Delta for Summer, 1967

48

Gamma Upsilon (Northern) 220 N, TaUawanda Rd� Oxford, Ohio 45056, William W, Armstrong, M, 1067 Park Lane, Middletown, Ohio 45042

Miami





PiTTSflURCH Gamma Sicil* (Eastern) 4712 Bayard St.. Pittsburgh, Pa. 15213. Nomian MacLeod, FH, 314 Chatham Center (15219)

TuLAN t� Beta

Purdue Gamma Lambda (Northern) 400 Northwestern Ave., West Lafay ette, Ind. 47906, Robert J. Tam, FA, 1701 Maywood Dr. (47906)

U,C.L.A,�Delta Iota









Michigan

Delta (Northern )^1928 Ceddes Ave,, Ann Arbor, Mieh, 48104. James B. MitcheU, A, 1031 Claremont, �

Dearborn, Mieh. 48124

L'psilon (Eastem) 3 Sun Terrace Extension, Troy, N. Y. 12180. James R. Dunne, E, 2104 Niska yuna Dr., Schenectady, N. Y. 12309

Rensselaer





330 Michigan State Iota (Northern) N. Harrison, East Lansing, Mieh. 48823. Dr. Theodore R. Kennedy, Iii-, BF, 817 Beech St, (48823) �



Minnesota Beta Eta ( Northern) 1717 Umversity Ave,, S, E., Minne apohs, Minn. .5,5414. Ronnie P. Erhardt, BEI, 3143 Holmes, S, (.5,5408)





Missouri

GAM^tA Kappa



923

Marj'land, Columbia, James C, Butcher. PK,

(Westem)



Mo, 65201, 4

R.F,D.

(65201) Nebraska Beta N. 16th St.,

( Western ) 715 Lincoln, Neb. 68508. Benjamin C. Neff. Jr., BT, 3124 South 31st St, 168502) North Dakota�Delta Xi (Westem) 2700 University Ave,, Grand Forks, Tau







N, D, 58201, Gordon W. Bennett, 511 23rd Ave., S. (S820I)

A3,





Ohto�Beta (Northem) 32 President St., Athens. Ohio 45701. Alexander V. Prisley, B, 40 Grosvenor St. (45701) �

Ohio State�Beta Phi (Nordiern) 67 E, 1,5th Ave,, Columbus, Ohio 43201, O. Allan Gulker, K*, 51 N, High St, �

(43215) Omo

Wesleyan



Mo

( Northem )



20

Williams Dr� Delaware, Ohio 43015, Dr, Lauren R, Wilson, 1-e. 1 13 Crandview Ave.

Epsilon Zrta (Westem) Sam Houston State College, Hunts vUle, Texas 77340, Samuel C, lo cum, EE, 6238 Deerwood, Houston. Texas 77027

(43015)

Oklahoma Delta Alpha (Westem) 630 Elm Street, Nonnan, Okla. 73069. Freeman D. Crabttee, A A, Lawyers Bldg., 219 Couch Dr.. Oklahoma City, Okla, 73102 �

�-





Bei-a Theta (Southern) Umversity of tlie South. Sewanee, Tenn, 37375, Bishop Frank A, Juhan, BH. Director of Development, Univer sity of the South (37375)

Sewanee





South Dakota Delta Gamma (West ern) 114 N, Pine St., VerraUhon, S, D, ,57069, Lee M, McCahren, PH, �

AP. 202 N, Kne St, Stanford



Beta

Rho

Juan Hill,

(57069) (Western)

Stanford

650



L'niversit>',

Calif. 94305. James W. Bradshaw, BP, 305 Cervantes Rd., Portola VaUey, Calif. 94026 Stevens�Rho ( Eastern )�809 Castle Point Terrace, Hoboken, N. J, 07030. William A. Pepper, P, 43 Homestead Rd.. Metuchen. N. J. 08840 Syracuse

Camma



Omicron

College PI.,

�115

WUliam 11. Maryland Ave. 13210 13210.

(Eastern!

Syracuse,

Johns,

N.

PO.

Y. 939

Beta T.C.U.� Epsilon (Western) P. O. Box 29326, Texas Christian Uni versity, Fort Worth. Texas 76129. J. Luther King, HB, P. O. Box 2260



(76101) Tennessee Delia Delta ( Soudiem) �1844 Fratemity Park Dr., Knoxville, Tenn, 37916, John L. Banta, AE, P. O, Box 231, Oak Ridge, Tenn. 37830 �

Oelahom.\ State Delta Cm (West ern) 1306 University Ave., Stillwater, Okla, 74074, Dr. lohn H. Venable, AB, AX, 2136 Admiral Rd. (74074)

Texas�Gamma

Oregon�Gamma Rho

Texas A, & I. Epsilon Lambda (West ern)� P. O. Bos 2227, College Sub-





(Western)� 1886

University Ave., Eugene, Ore, 97403, Janies St,

C,

Walsh, FP,

1840

Patterson

(97401)

Oregon State Delta Lambda (West em )�527 N, 23rd, CorvaUis, Ore, 97330. Theodore H. Carlson, AA, Dept. of Joumahsm, Oregon State Uni �

versity (97330) Pennsylvania Locust St.,

Omega

(Eastem) 3533 Philadelphia, Pa. 19104. Conrad J. DeSantis, Jr., U, 323 S, 18th St. (19103) �

Penn

State�Tau



(Eastern)�100

E, Prospect Ave,, State College, Pa, 16801. WUham S. Jackson, T, P. O. Box 678 ( 16801 )

B3:,

La.

70118,

8203

Zimple

(Western)�649

Los Ajigeles, Calif, 90024 Harold F. M. Tattan, Jr., AI, 527 S. Alandele Ave. (90036)

Gayley Ave,,

( Western )�Route

U.M.R.�Epsilon Nu

309A, Rolla,

Box

4,

Kenneth

G.

Mo.

65401. Dr, 1008 E,

Mayhan, EN.

Tentli St, (65401) U,S,C,�Delta Pi (Westem)� 909 W, Adams Blvd,, Los Angeles, Cahf, 90007. Jame H. Bowersox, AH, 1822 West SUverlake Dr. (90026) Wabash�Beta Psi ( Northem 1�506 W.

Wabash

Ave.,

CrawfordsviUe,

Ind.

47933. Lawrence L. Sheaffer, B*, 915 W. Main St. (47933) Gamma Mc (Westem) 4524 19th Ave., N. E., Seattle, Wash. 98105. Janies B. Mitchell, PM, Box 157, Lake Stevens. Wash, 98258,

WAsraNGTON







San

NoRTHivESTEHN Beta Pi (Northern) 2317 Sheridan Rd., Evanston. IU. 60201. L. Edward Rryant, Jr., 1007 Greenleaf (60202)

Phares A, Frantz, St, (70118)

set

Sam Houston

(Soutliern) �835

Xi

Broadway, New Orleans,

Iota

San Jacinto Blvd., 78705, Rudolph C. 3311

(Western)� 2801 Austin,

Texas

MueUer, Jr., PI,

Jefferson (78731) �

staHfm,

Kingsville,

Tesas 78363. Stan 519 Scale

ley C, McFarland, BK, (78363)

Lubbock, Texas 79408. WUliam M, Higgins, ri, 4509 15th St, (79416) Toronto Delta Theta (Eastem) 28 �

Madison Ave., Toronto 5. Ontario, Can. Seeley, Ae, 195 Kirk Drive.

\\'illiam H.

ThomhiU, Ontario, Canada (Eastem)�98 Profes sors Row, Tufts University, Medford, Mass. 02155. Joel W. Reynolds, BM, 113 Broad St., Boston, Mass. 02110

Tufts�Beta Mu

Epsilon



Gamma

(Western)� 906 Thatuna Ave,, PuUman,

Wash,

W.

&

99163.

Dr.

C.

Gardner

312 Howard St. 99163

Shaw, M.

J.�Gamma (Eastern)� 150 E. St., Washington, Pa. 15301,

Maiden Robert

N,

Graft.

I',

2351

Lambeth

Dr., Upper St. Clair Twp,, Bridgeville, Pa. 15017 & L.�Phi (Southern) Lexington, Va. 24450. Robert E. R. Huntley, *. Assoc. Prof, of Law, W, & L, Univ,

W.



(24450) Wesleyan Gamma Zeta (Eastem) 300 High Street, Middletown, Conn. 06457. Frederic H. Harwood, FZ, 33 Bellevue PI. (06457} �



Western Kentucky Epsilon Xi ( Southern)- P. O. Box 254, College Heights, Bowling Green, Ky. 42101. Dr. E. G. Momoe, ES, 832 Codington (42101) �

Western Reserve 11205 Bellflowci

Zeta



(Northem)



Rd., Cleveland, Ohio 44106. Dr. Glen G. Yankee, BT, 12000 FairhUl Road, Apt. 410 (44120)

Westminster

Delta Omicron ( West Box 636, Fulton, Mo. 65251, Robert W. Kroening, AO. 420 em

)�P.

Graeser



O.

Road, Creve Coeur, Mo. 63141

West Virginia- Gamma Delta (East ern)� 660 N. High St., Morgantown, W. Va. 26505 Whttmak- Delta Rho

Texas Tech�Epsilon Delta (Westem) �Box 4660, Tech Station, Texas Tech,



State

Washington

(Western)� 210

Marcus St.. \\'a!la Walla, Wash. 99362. Rieh,ird B. Morrow, AP, 206 N. Un derwood. Kennewick. Wash. 99336 Willamette�Epsilon Theta (West em)� Box 115, Willamette Univ., Salem, Ore. 97308, WUbur G. Wil mot, Jr., FP, 2950 Dreamerie Lane. N. E, (97303) Wlsconsin- Beta Gamma (Northern)� 16 Mendota Ct., Madison, Wis. 53706. Dwight G. Norman, Jr., BP, 1812 Peacock Court, Sun Prairie, Wis. 53590

Index of Volume XC Numbers L 2. 3, and 4 of THE RAINBOW

A! Porter's Project

4-32

Hartford and Raines Return

AIl-De!t Football Team (1966)

2- 2

Helping

1-38, 3-46, 4-34

Alumni Chapters

1-40, 2-3S, 3-31,

Alumni News Babeoek's Second Term, 1895-97

Babeoek's Third Term, 1897-1899 Beta

Check

Beta Omicron

.

.

.

Heritage

Chapter Eternal

1-45, 2-34, .3-56,

Nation

3- 2

Shields Memorial Fund

1-44, 2-9, 4-36

4-20

Jim Berry Joins Field Staff

1-37

3-37

Jungle Rescue

2-30

1-39

Kamea Calls

4-36

Dabney Lancaster, Educator

4-19

Stars, 1967

Llewellyn

4- 5 3- 6

Delt Dunkers, '66-'67

2-47, 4-37

Delt Initiates

3-48

...

Justice Tom Clark

to Be

E.

Thompson,

1- 6

Ambassador

2-24

Delta Upsilon Dedicates Its New Addition

2-26

Delts Are Scholastic Pace-Sctteis

1-12

1-50, 2-50, 4-45 3-20

Divisions Meet in Biennial Conferences

Epsilon Occupies

Epsilon First

a

3-24

.New Shelter

Mu Installed at Ball State

University-

2-10

Awards

4-14

Hugh Shields Memorial Fund

1- 8

Alumni Achievement Avvards

3-27

Four Campus Presidents

Fiaternity

Experimentation

Faces the Future

.

3-27 3-13

Gamma Zeta Rises from the Ashes

3-16

Gamma Eta's "Odd

4- 4

Job"

Gradv Hatton, Astro-Pilot

Scholarship

2-29 2-33

Interfraternity

Conference

2-28

New

2-25

...

Majority

....,,

New York Alumni

1-15

4- 9 3-18

Speakers Program

1-46, 2-35, 3-56, 4-35

Kentucky

Home

3- 4

Pacific Northwest Karnea

1- 2

President's Council

3- 9

President's Page

...

1-1, 2-1, 3-1, 4- 1

Ramsey Clark, Attorney General

3-12

Reverend Orilas G, White sbr

A Fine Delt and



.

.

,

.

4- 2

Touring Europe by Thumb

....

Transadantic Solo

Undergraduate University of Welcomes

...

Missouri at

Washington's Willing

Nu

4-13

2-31, 4-17

Personalities

Epsilon

2-13 4-16

Salesmen

Traveling (?)

2-27 1-11

Top Journalist Retires

Tennessee's New Shelter

Five Prominent Dclts Receive First

Four Years of

3-19

New Home for Delta Rho

Our New

Directory

to Russia

Modern Fraternity

Obituaries

Delta Pi's New Shelter Wins AIA Award

2-30

Two New Colonies

MiUard Romaine Endows Memorial

1-16, 3-28

....

Award

Twenty-Eighth President

National Delt Diamond

a

Introducing

3-10

....

Rebuild

to

2-18

Colorado State Welcomes No. 97

Chapters

1- 7

Chapter

Hugh Shields "Top Ten"

2-17

Delt

Arch

4-27

Mu Observes Centennial

Chapter

Hugh

to

RoU^ ...

Wheelhorse

2-15 1-14

Centennial Celebration

KAPPA CHAPTER will observe its 100th Hillsdale

at

Anniversary

College

this October

Two New Colonies

AEGEIDAE University

of Texas

Arlington,

at

Arlington

Texas

and a new

group

formed for the purpose

University

at

of Southwestern Louisiana

Lafayette, have been

Louisiana

recognized

as

colonies of

DELTA TAU DELTA

Smile Life

When life gives you a hundred reasons to cry, show life that you have a thousand reasons to smile

Get in touch

© Copyright 2015 - 2024 PDFFOX.COM - All rights reserved.