mE ODD OF THE PI KAPPR FRilTER NITY

ALL-OUT WAR II[(A S uprem e Council CLOSER TO U. S. STREAMLINES ttte FRATERNITY By OWEN L. SCOTT NOVEMBER, 19 4 1 Badges and Pledge Pins

PLA IN BADGES Order your official pledge pin s NOW. $6.00 TAN NE R per doze n in heavy gold-filled qu ality with latest No. 0 No. 1 No. 2 No.3 SPEC IAL Pla in Bevel Borde r, clutch-type button back. Miniature ______$3 .00 $4.75 $5 .50 $6.00 $8 .0 0 $7 .00 Nugge t ------5 .20 5.75 6 .25 B.75 7 .50 CROWN SET JEWELE D BA DGES Chase d or Engraved Bo rde r 5.25 5.75 6 .25 8.75 7 .50 TANNER Pl e dge Button ------Doz. 6 .00 No. 0 No. I No. 2 No. 3 SPECIAL Offic ial Recogni tion Button ------.50 ______$ Pea rl 9.75 $ 11.50 $ 13 .50 $ 19.00 $ 16.50 Sapp hire GUARD PIN PRICE LIST Pearl, Ruby or Double Po ints ------11 .00 12.75 14 .00 23.00 18.50 Single Le tte r Pearl, Em e rald Points ______13.50 15.25 16 .50 25 .50 2 1.00 MEDI UM SIZE Lette r !Staggard l PI a in 2.00 $3.00 All Em e rald 18.50 2 1.00 23 .00 3 2.50 29.50 ------·------$ ------Hand Engraved ------·------2.50 3.75 Pe arl and Sapphire Close Set Pe arl (Half Pe a rls) ·------4 .00 6 .50 Alternating ______14.50 16.00 17 .50 24.00 21.00 Crown Set Pearl. ______5 .50 9 .00 Pe arl and Ruby Alte rnating 14.50 16.00 17 .50 24.00 21.00 Pearl and Em e rald Send Official Release and I0 "/o deposit to avoid Alte rnating ·------15.50 17.50 19.00 29.00 26.00 delay in shipme nt. 0 . C. TANNER COMPANY " One of the fastes t growing jewelry man ufacturers i n Ame rica." O NLY ONE DAY 'S DISTA NCE BY AIR MAIL 44 W. 2nd SOUTH SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH NOR MAN C. TA NN ER, Alph a-Tau, '37

Bu'f EHCO ad. 'lou ~ the ~~ PI KAPPA ALPHA BADGES • JEWELRY • NOVELTIES PROGRAMS • STATIONERY • FAVORS

SURPASSING ALL PREVIOUS DISPLAYS 1942 SHOWING OF COAT OF ARMS

Rea.~ ~ ifO.U NOW SEND FOR YOUR FREE COPY TODAY The Perfect Guide to Fine Rings, Jewelry and Novelties for Gift or Personal Use

EDWARDS, HALDEMAN AND COMPANY O ffi cial Jewelers to Pi Kappa Alpha FARWELL BUILDING DETROIT, MICHIGAN

EDWARDS, HALDEMAN & CO., Farwell Bldg., Detroit, Mich. Address IlK A I am interested in the following. Plea se send data and literature free. Na me ------·------·--·------

Book of Trea sures·------·-·-··-----·--·------< Street ------·----· ------·------·------Favors .. ------·------·----·------·( City ------·---·------··------Programs ------·----·- ·------·------· (

Sta tionery ------·------< Fraternity ---·------·-·- --·--- ..... --- -·-·------·-

THE SHIELD AXD D TA:>.CO ND is published six times a yea r at 11-t Ea!!t econd t. , Little R ock , Ark., in eptember, ~ ovc mb e r , j a nuary, ~l a r c h . ~la y , and July by the Pi Kappa Alpha Fraternity. Entered as second cia s mau cr, ct. 1-', 193 i, at the Postoffi cc at Little Rock, Ark. , under Act of .March 3, 1 9i. Acceptance for mailing at special rate of postage p1ovidcd for in Section 11 03, Act of Oct. 3, 19li, authori zed june 16, 1918. The Shield and Diamond NATIONAL OFFICERS S UPREME COUNCIL National President-Roy D. Hickman, B..'i . Ala­ EDITORIAL STAFF bama Engraving Co. , Birmingham , Ala. National Vice Pres ident-S. Roy Smith, A~· . 6 1 How About 1AT IO NA L EDIT OR- N. Mountain Ave., Montclair. N. j . N ational T reasurer- L. Brooks Ragen . BN, 275 K. D. PULCII'H F.R, BH, 302 Fisher Road, S. W . Riverwood Rd .. Portland , Ore. Grosse Pointe Farms, Mich. National Secretary- Leo A. Hoegh, r 1 , First Stale Bank Bl dg .. Chariton . Ia. taking a CONTRIBUTING EDIT OR- N ationa l Alumni Secretary- Howard B. Arbuckle , R ICHARD G. BAUM HOFF, BA, 79 14 Gannon Jr .. B. McKinnon Bldg .. Charlotte. N . C. Ave., niversity City, Mo. OTHER NATIONAL O PPICERS Honorary Life P resident-Robert A. Smythe. A, ASSOCIATE EDIT OR- IIKA Vacation '11 0 Commercial Exchange Bldg .. Atlanta , Ga. ]. BLANFO RD T AYLOR, AA, 3708 H ycliffc National Counsel- j ohn L. Packer . BA. 1603 Law Ave., St. Matthews, Ky. & Finance Bl dg .. Pittsburgh. Pa . N a tional Editor-K. D. Pulcipher, BH , 302 Fisher A SISTAN T EDIT OR- Roa d , Grosse Pointe Farms, Mich. in 1943 ~ R oBERT W . CY ES TER, AP, 39 Oakview N ational Historian- Or . Freeman H . Hart, I. N 'ltional Chaplain- T he Rev. Dr. U. S. Gordon . Drive, R . R . 7, Dayton , 0 . 9 . Firs t Presbyterian Church . Gainesville, Fla. Yes, it's a little early to be National E ducational Advisor- M . C. Huntiey, PRODUCTIO 1 MA 1AGER- thinking about a vacation for ~~ i an: ~~ 7G aCitizens & Southern Bank Bldg .. C. ARM ITAGE H AR PER, AZ . 114 East Second 1943-some of us haven't been St., Little Rock, Ark . Na tional Publicity Cha irma n-Wm. S. Lacy , 9 and I. News Leader Bl dg .. Richmond . V a. able to wangle one for 1941 yet. N ational Rushing Cbairman-Stamon M. Peter­ Change of address should be sent to T I-n~ son , r '· P . 0. Box 362. Iowa City. Ia. SHIELD AN D D I A~ !O N D , 114 East Second St. . Executive Secretary- Freeman H . Hart, ]; T ravel­ But for all IIKA's t here's one Little Rock, Ark ., or to Dr. Freeman H. ing Secreta ry, Char'es L. Freeman , BA , General outstanding vacatio ;, attraction H art, Executive Secretary, Pi Kappa Alpha . O ffi ce. 77 1 Spring St .. Atlanta , Ga.; telephone, Atwood 1868. 771 Spring St., Atl anta, Ga. Both old and for 1943 and t hat's the new addresses shou ld be given. COMMISSIONS Pi Kappa Al pha Endowment Pund T rustees­ Articles and photogra ph for T HE SI·HELD Cha rl es K. Dunn. !l, 105 Colorado Build ing, AN D DI AMON D are cord iall y in vited and W ashington. D. C.. Chairman; Weldon U. DIAMOND JUBILEE How ell , DZ; W ill iam G . Nash. AA . should be addressed to the National Editor at 302 Fi her R oad , Grosse Pointe Farms, Shield and D iamond E ndowment P und Trustees­ D. C. Powers, Z, Cha irman and Treasurer; L. i\ l ich. Brooks Ragen . DN, Sec'y; Dr. W . D. Haden, A. CONVENTIO N Chapter House Commission-E. E. McKeen, BB . Subscription prices- Life Sub cription, Chairm an; Everett M . Oxley, A!l; P . D . Chris­ ti an . j r .. Bl(. 10; per year, 2; special alumni rate, Aug. 17-24, 1943 per year. Address subscriptions to the N ational Pledge T raini ng Committee-) . Ha rold Johnston . A 'i', Rutgers Univers ity, New Bruns­ Executive Secretary at the address above. wick . N. J .. Chairman; Robert H . Cherney. r n; Dona ld H. jones . BZ and AN. University of Missouri; Dis trict President Harvey T . in Old Virginia Volume LI, No. 1 November , 1941 Newell. Jr .. AI ; j ohn H. Reisner, Jr .. B. Diamond j ubilee Commission- K. D. Pulcipher. BH . Cha irma n; LeRoy Hodges. TI , co-Cha irman; It wi ll b e a gre at o ccasion f or Pi CONTENT S john L. Pa cker, BA; G . A. Borkey, 0 ; Clifford Ka ppa Alpha-her 75th birthday. A j . Cook, 13A . week of e nte rtainme nt , renewal of old + Our De f en se E ffort 1913 Nominating Committee-Elbert P . T uttle, a c quaintan c e s, cementing o f IIKA 89 ; joseph A . Sheehan , AN . friendships, v isits to the Founde rs' Room All-Out War Closer to U. . ------8 Robert A. S mythe Trophy Committee-H. A. a t t he Univers ity of Virginia , excursions Fraternities and Defen e ------I I Smith , AT; j . P ike Powers. Jr .. Z; John C. t o Williamsburg and Jamestown, a re a l Food Will Win the War ------12 Lilienthal. rz. Southe rn Plant a t ion party, unveiling of L ure of the U niform Snares P retty Executive Committee of Mothers · a nd Wives' Portraits of the Founde rs, a nd a cli­ Coeds ------·------I 7 Clubs of TI KA-Mrs . Howard C. Hartman. 6707 matic banquet in Washington, D. C. We Still H ate H itlerism ------·-- 18 South Merrill Ave.. Chicago, Genera l Cha ir­ 'H ello Bill' Becomes ' H ell o America n' 22 man; Mrs. j oseph Trinner , 666 East Drive . (with many IIKA notables present ) a re Memphis. T enn.; Mrs. S. Roy Smith , 10 1 Fair­ only a few o f t he high s pots on t he Many IIKA's in Military Service ...... 33 v iew Ave .. South O range. N. J.; Mrs. j ohn j . Kennett, 2519 Eleventh W est. Seattle, W ash. ; progra m . IIKA Business Mrs. E. C. Locklea r . Prescott. Ariz .. Regional + Co-Chairm en. W hy not make your plans now to toke Supreme Council Streamlines the your fam ily ond jo in in celebrating 1/KA's Fraterni ty --·------·------·-··· _ 5 75th Anniversary? Wont more informa ­ Buy Defense Stamps for Endowmen t tion? Just fe ar off the coupon below Fund -·------···------·-········ ...... 2H and moil today! 3 New Ch iefs Join D istrict Office rs .... 35 Streamlined )fagazine Heads 'ew IIKA Publicity Drive ______36 Chairman, Dia mond J ubil ee Commission, • T HI ISSUE of Tt·IE HI ELD t\ N I) Pi Kap pa Alpha, 771 Sp ring St. , + Spotlights DI Ao\IOND marks another [orward step in ITKA progress ivenes . Streamlined from Atla nta, G a . John Lloyd Newcomb ----·------4 co,·er lO cover, the new HI ELD AND DI A­ Please send me information C~n Observi ng the Wash ington Scene ______9 ~ I O N D presen ts new type fa ces, new format, Pro g ram for Diamond J ub il ee C onven­ IIKA's R ank High in Who's Who ______10 new ill ustrative trea tmen t and renewed ef­ tion Two ITKA 's Head Colleges _____ 20 fort to bring IIKA readers an in teres ti ng, How to org anize an a lu mni party to Texas Legislature' Gavel Pounder .... 29 attend alert and up-to-date magazine on Fraternity Vacation attractions in Virg inia fo r Snake Snagger ------·------·-·····-·········· 30 a fEa irs. Heads New Youth Fell owshi p ...... 39 my family H eadlines are se-t in the new Onyx 40-1 How I can help in your Diamo nd Jubilee pla ns Of Gen eral Inter est and Sw ing Bold type fa ces. T ex t ma tter + is se t in Baskerville type, recentl y se lected All America Turn to Football ...... 15 by the edi tors of Fo1·tune for u e in that N ame Challenges Fraternity Magazines ______24 magazine as the mos t readable of the mocl ­ Chattanooga's Safety Lesson ...... 27 et n type faces. Chapter . Yea r T he Horse of the Year ······----·-···-----·- 4 1 Tt is hoped that readers will find TH F. Address Di1·ectories a.nd R egular DejJm·tmen ts ~II ELD A 'D DIAMO ND easier to read , as well will be found on pages 2, 37, 40, 42, a ~ even more interesting than in the past. 43, 45, 47, 3rd cover. - T he Editors.

1 Alumni Chapters Alumni Chapters AKRON, 0 . LINCOLN, NEB. Bob Evans. Dime Savings Bank. LETTERS Merle Loder. 207 Funke Bldg. Luncheons on third Monday. University Club. Meeting:; on ALBUQUERQUE, N . M . Small IIKA World first Tuesday. 6 :30. same p 1ace. Deacon Arledge. 2 11 orth 2nd St. EDITOR. III EI.O AN D D IAl\ IO ND: LITTLE ROCK, ARK . ASHEVILLE, N . C. Howard Park , Travelers Ins . Co. A. 0. Mooneyham. Mooneyham's Drug Store. An interesting incident which shows tha t the friendships of coll ege fra ternity days LOS ANGELES, CALIF. ATHENS, GA. J. W . Moorehead. 242 1 S. Figueroa St. W. Lee Bradbury. Sou. Mutua l Bldg. do not die wi th grad ua tion took p lace in ivlid land, Tex., not long ago. H . S. Clark, LOUISVILLE, KY. ATLANTA, GA. R. H . W a rren. 2120 Douglas Bl vd. Dr. joe Eberhart. Doctor's Bldg. Luncheon. AK , ' 18, was dining with ;-..J . 13. La rsh , AlC Friday, 12 :30. Davison· Paxon Co. T earoom. ' 19, L. ' 19. MACON , GA. "·hen in walked R. 1\fa rston , AlC Chas. Edwards. Shi v ley Hills . BATON ROUGE, LA. \\lhile the three sa t remm• sctng they J. M. Barnett. 7 11 La . Na t'l Bank Bl d g. M EMPHIS, TENN. were joined by a fourth brother. J. H oster­ Dr. Pa lm er Moss . Columbian Mutua l T ower. BIRMINGHAM , ALA . man. Clark being from Fort Worth, Larsh Meetings on first Friday each month , Theta Allen Tower. B'ham Southern College. from /\ I idland, Ma rston fro m Dall as, and Chapter House. BLUEF IELD. W . VA. Hosterman from T ulsa. Okla .. each was MIAMI. P LA. J. T aylor Frazier. able to con tribute a bit of news about Clyde E. Pendley. 807 Olympia Bldg. Luncheons . BOSTON. MASS. btothc rs of mutual acqua inta nce. Sma ll Wed. 12:30 p. m .. W a lgreen's. 200 E. Flagler. H. A. Smith. 285 Manning St .. Needham . Mass. world ' MILWAUKEE, WIS. BOULDER. COLO. W . H . CLARK, AJC. E . D. j ohnson. Loomis Sayles & Co .. 411 E . Mason St. Meetings every other month. Edison H. Cramer. University of Colorado. R oll a , lvlo . BUPPALO. N . Y . -- fiiC A-- MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. G. L. Word. Jr .. Otis Elevator Co .. 775 Main. Dona ld T empleton. 253 E. 4th St .. St. Paul. Rushing Issue Handy MONROE, N. C. CH ARLESTON, W . VA. Pra nk Redfe rn . H . H . Smallridge . 140 4-A Virginia Ave. EorTOR, S 1-11 FLD AND Dt AMO~o : MUSKOGEE, OKLA. CHARLOTTE, N . C. Your July iss ue of T 1-11:: SHn:LJ) AND DIA­ Ja mes D . Booth . Jr .. 41'1 Manhattan Bldg. J. Murray Atkins. c/o R. S. Dickson & Co. ~ t O N D is at hand a nd the contents have NASHVILLE, T ENN. CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA. been thoro ughl y no ted. Let me congratu­ Dr. J. Herman Head. Benn ie Dill on Bldg. Dr. W . D. Haden. National Bank & T rust Co. late yo u (or an outsta nding is ue and some NEWPORT NEWS, VA. W . R. V an Buren . Jr .. c/o Daily Press. C HATTANOOGA, TENN. rea l rushing tn ateria l. I a n1 certa in many Shelby Brammer , c/o Success Portra it Co .. NEW ORLEANS, LA . 1301 McCallie Ave. prospect ive fresh men will he grea tl y in­ Foster Fournier, 514 Camp St. I'Ju enced toward ta king out a Pi Kap bid CH ICAGO, ILL. NEW YORK, N . Y . Emil G. Stankey. 20 E. Delaware pl ace. Lun­ this fa ll. As a high sch ool instructor, I Joseph A. Cangalosi. 1533 RCA Bl dg .. 30 cheons. Fridays, Hardings . 7th Floor . T he Pair . have it on m y desk and wi ll continue to Rockefe lle r Plaza. Ada ms a nd Dearborn Sts. have it in a conspicuous p lace among m y OKLAHOMA C ITY, OKLA. ! . Edwin Garre tt . 505 Concord Bl dg. CINCINNATI, 0. books. ' ·Vhen a boy comes in to talk abou t William J. Schmid. F irst National Ba nk. Lun­ coll ege a nd li fe at a higher institution of OMAHA, NEB. cheon. 12:30 Friday. Cuvier Press C lub. Ga r­ Alexander Mc Ki e. Jr .. 805 1s t Nat'! Ba nk Bldg. field place. learning, the July iss ue wi ll be handed to ORLANDO, P LA . him. Ha rry W. Bo we r. 33 N . Brown St. CLARKSBURG, W . VA. H. R. LeMasters. 417 S. 3rd St. H OR ACE GUNN, PENSACOLA, PLA. Dixie Beggs . Jr .. Bl ount Bldg. CLARKSDALE, MISS. Cedar City High School, P HILADELPHIA, PA. Hugh B. La ndrum. J r. Cedar City. Utah De Haven Develin , Bryn Mawr Trust Co . . Br yn CLEVELAND, 0 . --- flKA --- Mawr. Pa. Paul C. Hopkins. 1215 Leader Bl dg. Luncheon . PHOENIX, ARIZ . first Monday, Hotel Winton. Meeting same Spread the News R. M . Hess. 601 E . Jackson St. pl ace. 8 p. m .. 1709 E . !1 5th St. PITTSBURGH, P A. EDITOR, Sr-u F. r.n AN D Dt AMO ~ o: COLUMBIA, S. C. W . Carl yle Dague. 1535 Park Bl vd. John A. Wells . 253 1 Canterbury Road . R ecently JlK.\ la unched an a m b itious PORTLAN D , ORE. Carl S, Johnson. C ity Ha ll . COLUMBUS, 0 . progra m- the multi-tho usa nd doll ar mem ­ C. Wilbert Pcttegrew, Ohio State Universi ty. orial program. J ts · uccess will of course RALEIGH, N . C. depend on the response that the members W. C. Bowen. 6 11 Commercia l Bank Bldg. DALLAS, TEX. RI CH MOND , VA. Weldon U. Howell. Mercanti le Na t' ) Bank. g i1·e. It is a good idea because l have had Chas. H . Robertson. Alberma rle Pa per Co. DENVER, COLO. the pleasure of visiting· some 30 or more SALISBURY, N. C . C. E. Mitton. 1625 Broadway. ITK A chapters in m y time a nd I know what W. M. Snider . 130 W . Fisher St. DES MOINES, lA. the potentialiti es of the Fraternity arc. SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH . Herbert Miller . Office 10 15 T uttle St. ln order to put the program over we Prank E. Moss. 1404 E. 13th St. Meetings firs t Thursday . Alpha-T a u House 8 p. m. DETROIT, MICH. must ha1·c that .. Dea r o ld Rutgers" spirit R. M. Sanderson. 182 10 Pra irie Ave. SAN ANTONIO, TEX. manifest in the alumni of the fra ternity Robert L. Bowma n , Sec'y. lt 33 Ma jestic Bldg. DURHAM, N. C. for their own fra ternity. SAN F RANCISCO, CALIF. L. D. Kirkland. Jr .. 2 14 W Main St. Some brothers graduate a nd become so j . C. Simpson . Attorney. Standard Oil Bldg. EL PASO, T EX. a bsorbed in other things and other or· SAVANNAH, GA. Ben R. Howell . 71 0 Basset t T ower. ganiza ti ons 1hat they look back on their Prank M. Exley. 519 E 40th St. Dinne r . first and third Monday. Y.W.C.A. Grill. FLORENCE, S. C. coll ege fraternity and coll ege days much L. A. McCall. 11 6 W . Cheves St. SE ATTLE, WASH . the sa me as we looked back on high school Dr. W. A. Hooper . 15 14 W estlake. PQRT WORTH, T EX. people and high sc hool days when yo u and SHEBOYGAN, WIS. Lewis Meekins, 124 E. Exchange. 1 were in coll ege. They sort of (eel that Otto P. Ka ufman . Jr .. 2 19 Security Ba nk Bldg. GAINESVILLE, PLA. they have o ntgTown it all. SHREVEPORT , LA . Dr. U . S. Gordon. First Presby. Church. Before the life membershi p plan of the J. G . Hoyt. 2-!7 Vine St. GEORGETOWN, KY. S. · D., many members of JlKA went out SPRINGFIELD , O . Kenneth G. Gi ll aspie. Highland Court. Wm. G . Fischer. 2090 Lower Che lsea Rd .. into the world without any th read of con ­ Colum bus . 0 . HATTIESBURG, MISS. tact with the organiza ti on. Perhap some Allred Moore. 202 Citizens Nat'l Bank Bldg. ST. LOUIS, MO. HOUSTON, TEX. of these fell ows ha e made good but they Russell Brya nt. 1234 Oakley. Dr. P. H. La ncaster. 4•109 Fa nnin St. just don't feel tha t they owe their fra tcr· ST PAUL, M INN. See Minneapo lis. IN DIANAPOLIS, IN D. n ity an yth ing beca use they have lost con ­ SYRACUSE, N. Y . Jack E. Reich. C. of C .. Board of Trade Bl dg. tact. Then there are o thers who hav e n · ~ Chas. Love. 741 Euclid Ave. JACKSON, MISS. !,een a~ success fu l as they hoped to be­ TAMPICO, MEXICO. J. D. Mullen . j ackson Tower Bui lding . Lun­ ye t it i the p urpose of brotherhood to give S. A. Grogan. Mexican Gull Oil Co. cheon. last Thursday, Chastain T earoom. them a helping hand- enco u ragement a nd T UCSON, ARIZ . )ACKSO VILLE, PLA. M. H . Ba ldwin . 928 . 1s t Ave. Meetings . Bankhead \Varren. Strachan Shipping Co .. Bar­ inspiration such as Dea n J\fassey did in his first Monday. 1025 N. Park Ave. ne tt Bl dg. Lunch. last Tuesday, Univ. Club. fa tewell article. TULSA, OKLA. KANSAS CITY, MO. Jf we want to p ut over the p rogra m p ic­ L. V . Dennis. 2907 E. 5th St. Leland Gradinger. Dierks Bldg. Luncheons . tured for a JlKA Memorial we will have to W ASHINGTON, D . C . Thursday noon. English Grill. Hotel Phillips. Sam McCart. 923 15th St .. N. W . KN OXVILLE, T E N . appl · !he psychology back of advertising as it i being used toda). W IC HITA, KAN. Prank K. Fulton. Fulton Sylphon Co. W. A. M cKinney. 123 N . Fountain Ave. LEXINGTON, KY. T he onl y rea l means of communica tion WILMINGTON, N . C. j ohn U. Field. Court House. tha t we have for this is T HE SH tELD ND Lenox G. Cooper . 122 Princess St. 2 DI AMON D. Thro ugh it we can b uild u p the mittee. T he i\ IC. who has the u lti ma te existing mem bership into a more close! 'Caught in the Draft' re pon ihi lil) of ca rrying o ut the chapter unified and pride-con cious group, a well project and functions, shoul d. of cotii" C, as inspire the undergradua te a t the a me appoint the a rious chai rmen. The chair­ time to the real mea ning o f the fu nda­ ma n o [ the com miuec sho uld thereafter meni a l idea ls of the fraterni ty a nd as a have complete a nd persona l responsibi li t •. result make the goa l of the endowment The ~ ,\.I C sho uld a t each weekly chapter plan mo re easil y a tta ined . meeting a k for the report· of the indi­ T HF. SJJJ ELo AN I> DI A,\10;-.D could vid ua l commi ttees. The MC should no t full subscriber membersh ip of the ask " Arc there an y Committee R eports?" nity if member now enjo) ing and ap pre­ but ra lher should sa •, " \ Ve sha ll have the ciating 'T J-I E III ELn .-\ NO DtAl\ TO['; D sent in Report of the Fina nce Com mi ttee." e ither li fe o r yead y subscriptions for some A plaq ue for o ut tand ing service. to he one tha t the) know does no t now receive placed conspicuous!)' in the chapter hou e , the m;1g;17i ne. In case they do no t know of mig ht record the na mes o f a ll those who a brothe r who is not a su bscr iber they ca n serve the ir cha pter well. send in a dona tio n in the way of a su b­ T here should be no limit lO the number scription tha t ca n be pooled with o ther or na mes vo ted to be ad ded to the plaque. such undesignated su bscriptions and these for its very p urpose i · to have the sa me divided b l' the number o f non -subscriber . effect as a n incentive to work as Pro fit is Why not make a fell o"' n K A happier by a n incentive towards work in Business. giving him a su bscripi ion to T HE SHI ELD l t is essentia l to the success of the cha p ­ 1\ N D DI A 1\I OND, e ither now or for a Christ­ tel· tha t a ll work w wa rd the unity, wi th a nl as gi fL ? commo n p u rpose a nd common .ideals. CARL D . PORT Z, Newcomersto wn, Ohio. One u rgent need of every ch a pter is a Committee on P ro pectus and Foresight. BROT HFR PORTZ sent in his subscription + S. & D. ( K. D.) P LCIPHER \ Ve a rc a ll awa re tha t chapters move in gift! T ha nk ~· o u .-T HE E DI TO R. cycles, successful tod ay, but down to morrow. -- O K A --- W acles into olcl editori(ll job (lg(lin T he Committee on Prospectus woul d there­ New IIKA Shipbuilder fo re be one co m posed of the three o u t­ EDITO R, S J~I F LD AN D DI AMON D: • T HE S PR E M E COUNCIL sta nding men o f the chapter, whose d uty 1n June 1 got nl )' sheepsk in [ro m the a t its m eeting in A l b u que rque, . l\lf., wo u ld he lO look a t the fra ternil) a bstract ­ University of Ka nsas wh ere 1 was a member last June accepted the resig n atio n o [ ly, finding wha t is good here. and bad of Be ta-Ga mma. R ecently 1 h ave been there, wha t will be helpful lO the cha pter Rich a rd G. B a umho H, BA, as Editor o [ take n on as a junior eng ineer a t the Rich ­ in three o r five years if done toda •. If mond Shipbuilding Corp. a t Richmond, THE SHI ELD AN D D IAMON D. Bro ther the cha pter is sli pping, the Committee must Cali f. T his pla nt is a ma ritime commis­ B a umho [f r esig n ed due to the pressure ca ndidl y reali ze it and break the fall. T hus sion place LUrning out o il ta nke rs fo r the o f his n ew dutie with the St. L o uis will the peaks and d epths be regul a ted. a nd the success of the cha pter pl aced on a British. Altho ugh the work is a fa r cry Post DisjJatch . Dic k is b e ing r e ta ined from my training as a jo u rnalist , 1 enjoy level plane. .\le m bershi p on such a Com ­ it and believe tha t I a m o n the ground o n the m agazine sta ff as Contributing mittee sho uld be deemed the highest honor fl oor in a compan y which p romises a real Editor so we w ill n o t lo se the b e n e fit or the cha pter, for the mem bers of the ruwre. of his ex p e rie n ce. H e did a m agnificent Committee reall y pla n the de tiny or the chapter. ~ r y fa ther, Col. Karl F. Ba ldwin, C. A. C., j o b o f editing the m agazine during his has recentl y come here fro m the niversity R . DAL E VL E IT , BO. of Ka nsas where he was Profe sor of ~ l ili ­ year as Natio n a l Editor. O kla homa City, Okla. tary Science and T acti cs . H e is in com ­ The Supre m e Council pre va iled upo n -- OKA -- ma nd here of the H arbor Defenses of San p ast ' a tio n a l E ditor K . D . Pulciphe r , Francisco and the Six th Coast Artil lery R egiment, the largest Coast Artillel')' R egi­ BH, to ta ke over during the e m e rgen cy 0. K. Rushing Issue which h e h as ver y gracio u sl y agr eed to ment in continenta l nited Sta tes, consist­ E otTOR 1 S HLELD AND DI A~ 1 oNo: ing of about 7,000 men . d o . This o ffice a lo n g w ith the C h a ir­ \ Ve think the rushing iss ue of T H E Fo rt Winfield Scott adjoins the P resid io m a n sh ip of the Dia m o nd .Jubilee Com ­ HIELD AND DI A\I OND is a wond erful piece of Sa n Francisco (Presidio meaning fort in mittee wi ll certa inly m a ke him a ver y of work. \Ve ha,·e been laking copie of panish). T h e Presidio itself is H ead - the i\!ay iss ue a long with us in o ur persona l quarters fo r the 1inth Corps Area while busy m a n a nd the Counc il asks a ll n a­ co n tact r ush ing here in the Chicago area Fort con i H eadqua rters fo r the H arbor tio n a l, district a nd c h a p t e r o ffi cers and have fo und them ex tre mely helpful. Defen es of the l'acific. Scott i considered to coop e ra te w ith E ditor Pulcipher Now we shall have somethi ng even better. the prettiest milita r reservation in the pro mptly in a n y reque t h e m ay m a ke. R USS KOHR, rP, nited State but behind all the bea uty Northwestern n iv., Evanston, Ill. a re the mighty g uns tha t g uard the city of The Fra te rnity a t la rge wi ll a ppre­ Sa n Francisco. ciate the sacrifice m a d e b y Bro the r Today l received m y July SHI ELD AND T his milita ry fo rt is located a t the Sa n Pulciphe r a nd the m agazine is assured Fran cisco end o f the world fa mo us C olden DI A,\I ON D and tru ly I was a matcd a t its o f continued su cces thro u g h his a ble Gate Bridge a nd is the headq ua rtei'S for elabora te la)•Oul. We a ll feel tha t it is the Fo rts Ba rry, Baker, a nd Cro nkite which editorship. best in trument we have lO convince o ur a re across the bridge north of Sa n Fran ­ ROY D. HJ C KMA N , rushees tha t Pi Ka ppa Alpha a t T ul ane is the best on the campus. cisco. Fort Funston and t\ lil ey south of NATIONA L P RE IDENT. Scott a long the coast are a lso wi thin thi J AY W E lL, JR., H. j uri diction . -- ri 1\ A -- T ul a ne Univ., New O rleans, L a. Yesterday I dro pped in on the boys over Lon Keller's Cover a t the University of California. T hey a re 1t indeed is a very effecti ve rushing overflo wing outside of the chapter hou e i\ loRE than half the foo tball program ;tgent, a nd l should like to p rocure ome a nd seem to h ave a fine ch a pter. covers in the coun try this fa ll carry the more copies. colo rful a rtwork of: Lon Keller , AX, w hose JOH T R . BALDWIN, Br . R O BER T J. NADA LI N, A P. pa in ti ngs have done much lO enhance pro­ Fort Winfield Scott, Cali f. Ohio ta te, Columb us, 0 . gra ms in recent yea rs. T he color pla tes -- O K A-­ fo r th is issue were fu rnished th rough h is Responsibility Fot· All courtesy. T h e r ule ca lling for the issuance of such E DI TO R, SHI ELD AN D DIAMO •D: Although Keller is a specia list in foo t­ a n edition certa inly was one tha t will make historv. Even ·where I go I hear most ha II covers, he a Iso does the cover art work ~ ! a n y of o ur cha pte rs find a forced cen­ hJvora'b ie com ,.;1ents on the issue. I'm sure tra li za tion of the la bor in the S ~l due to for a ll Ya nkee tadium a nd Po lo Grounds figh ts, as well as the recen t World 's erie tha t in succeeding years the Jul y issue wi ll the inactivity of o ther offi cer and mem ­ be even b igger and better. bers o f the cha pter. pt ogram covers. CLE L. BOWE R B A. A solutio n wo uld be to make every mem ­ Keller is ma rried a nd has one son . T hey ber of the chapter a member o f on e com- li ve in New York. ta te Coll ege, P a. 3 John Lloyd Newcomb --Ai. new. p~ du4

The IIKA president of the Unive r­ sity of Virginia and Honorary Chair­ man of the Fraternity's Diamond Jubilee celebration in 194 3 receives further honors.

• PORTRA IT Of J ohn Ll oyd Charlottesville, seat of the University, Uniforms of both Arm y and Navy Newcomb, r and A, pre ident of the a nd founding place of Pi Kappa Alpha, were conspicuous throughout Finals, for University of Virginia, painted by the during the convention, whose sessions man y yo ung alumni now in ervi ce were di tingui shed American artist, H enry P. will be held in Richmond. on leave of abse nce to retll rn for re­ Rittenberg, was presented to the uni· unions. Largest graduating class in University versity at the June Finals. of Virginia hiswry, numbering 52 1 men Un.il!ersity of Jlirgin.ill Rotunda The portrait presentation was made and women from 36 states and three in behalf of a group of alumni and foreign lands, received degrees last fri ends by R obert C. Taylor, of New spring Within less than an hour after York, and acce pted by R obert Gray degrees had been presented by Presi­ 'ii\Tilliams, of Hinches ter, rector of the dent Newcomb two groups of graduates university, who praised Dr. Newcomb were inducted into the nation's armed [or his direction of university affairs forces. Twenty-four men stood on the during his 10 yea rs as pres ident. steps of the R otunda to be sworn in as Dr. 1ewcomb is chairman of Pi midshipmen in the Naval Reserve, whi le Kappa Alpha's Diamond Jubilee hon­ at the sa me time, in the amphitheatre of orary committee. The Fraternity's 75th the Medical Building 17 young doctors birthday wi ll be ob erved in 1943 in took the oath as first lieutenants in the Virginia. A p ilgrim age wi ll be made to Army Medica l R eserve Officers Corps.

4 The Shield and Diamond Official Magazine of the PI Krtppn Alpha Fraternity, f ounded a l. the Univer­ si tY of Vlt·glnla on Marc h 1. 1868. by 1-"' rederick Southg ate Taylor, Little ton Wa ller Tazewell. Julian Edward Wood. J nmes Benjamin Sclater , Jr. , Robert.. so:-~ Howard. and William Alcxan~cr. a ll m embers o f lhe Chapter Eternal . • • c •·

Executive Secretary Hart [JOint s out ITKA chapters to President Hickman on the map in the new General Office.

- Photo b)• Ever e/le R. Pri11dle, A ..I. Pt K~ IJ/plta g~ e~ STREAMLINES t~te FRATERNITY + D u RING the last days of The Chapter House Commission also work out rules o( procedure and plans June the Supreme Council held its an­ met to consider the new powers set up for the future_ nual meeting in Albuquerque, N_ M., for it at the Chicago convention a nd to As usual the eastern representatives the college wwn of ational President on the Council a nd Commission thought Hickman-a gesture in sentiment that they were goi ng W est until they found COUNCIL AT WORK that the Pacific Coast Pi Ka ppa Alpha's was amply rewarded, not o nly in revived Around the table at Albuquerque alumni interest in that part of the rvere, left to right: Counsel John L. had come farther than they had. lbu­ United States, but as well in delightful Packer, Alum-ni Sec'y H. B. Arbuckle, quo-que, they insisted, was just where hospitality and in a profitable five days Jr., President Roy D. Hickman, Secre­ the West begins! tary Leo A. Hoegh, Exec. Sec'y F. H. of constructive work on Fraternity prob­ Hart, Treasurer L. Brooks Ragen., anti The Council p lanned ahead to avoid lems. J'ice President S. Roy Smith. the press of work that has packed pre-

5 vious meetings inLO a week-e nd in which Master's six years later. H e was presi­ man maintains a n interest and acu vny there was little time for Jeep and con­ dent o[ OAK, president o f the student in an unusuall y wide variety of affairs. tructive thought. The lbuquerque body, president of a~P and a! o of the H e is qualified to counsel with chapters lumni had thoughtfully prepared a Panhellenic Association. H e was active on man y problems and to advise them round of parties, dinners, trip and gen­ in Little Theatre productions, was ecre­ sympatheti ca ll y and intelligently. eral em en ainment that left the im­ tar y of the YMCA, served as sports Council action of most widespread pre sion of ew Mexico h ad swlen the writer on the tudent paper and be­ interest to alumni and undergraduates thunder of the Old outh's traditional lo nged to 4>A4>. alike was the se lecti on of Richmond, hospitality. Mason, Kiwanian, membe1· of the Va ., as the site of the 75th Anniversary The Council's five-day meeting was Junior Chamber of Commerce, and Convention in 1943 and delegation LO full and busy for the rna jor portion ol elder in the Presbyterian Church, Free· the Diamond Jubilee Commission of each clay, but the cordiality o f the lbu­ full powers LO proceed 'with its plans LO q uerque hosts was a real inspiration to make this the greatest assemblage of w leram cli scu sions a nd full y delib­ Pi Kappa Alpha's ever held. erated acti on on the severa l probl ems Diamond Jubilee plans include not that confront the Fraternity in these Pledge only a minimum attendance of a tho u­ critic a I days. sand ITKA 's but likewise a program that Threats o f war and the present Na­ will make first page news in all pans ti onal Defense emergency caused the to the Nation of the country. The Commission is strea mlining of man y Fraternity activ­ headed by N ational Editor Pulcipher ities. T hese a ll added up to eli mination + FOLLOWtNG the a C t i 0 n of 600 and Col. Leroy Hodges, Comptroll er of of lost motion, closer supervision of IIKA delega tes and representa· Virginia, who is generally reckoned by chapters, moving of the General Office tives at the national convention of the state's newspapers as one of the LO quarters providing greater effi ciency, Pi Kappa Alpha in · Chicago Ia t ablest public men in Virginia. employment of a Traveling Secretary to year, pledging support of Selecti ve With the fond hope that busy Di · maintain constant personal contact with Service, the Supreme Council at its trict Presidents may have more time LO hapters, stricter economy and revision lbuquerque meeting, voted its com­ help troubled chapters, the Council of geographica l districts to give District plete approval of the Nationa l De­ divided five of the larger districts of the Presidents more intimate contact with fense program. Fraternity in to two districts each. By chapters. The Council adopted the follow­ large districts the Council had in mind Perhaps the most important work of ing resolutio n : both large areas to cover and districts the Council meeting was the crea tion That our Frat ernity, with its 25 ,000 with five or more chapters. of the o ffi ce of Traveling Secretary. members and 81 tmdeTgraduate chap­ On this basis, the district divided This po ition ca ll s for a yo unger a lum­ ters loca ted in the vaTious states, were the onh Carolina-South Carolina, nus who has been out of coll ege long pledges its full suppo·rt of the Na­ the G eo rgia - l~ l orida , the fississi ppi­ enough to develop a more or less mature tional Defense program. and that we Lou is ia n a, th e Arkansas-Oklahoma­ grasp of the problems of an undergrad­ stand read )> to serve ouT count1j> , as T exas, a nd the Kansas- 1ebraska-Colo­ uate chapter, but who is nea r enough to we have in all previous erneTgencies, rado. Perhaps later the Kentucky­ his coll ege yea r to have a full appre­ for the presemation and promotion Tennessee D i t r i c t and the Pacific ciati on o[ these problems. During the of tnte p.,-incijJles of Democracy. Northwest may be divided. c.o ll ege yea r he will spend most of his To maintain the sec urit y and This dividing of eli tricts will save time with the various chapters of the fin ancial stability of the Fraternity the District President much time and Fraternity, particul arl y where he is most during the prese nt emergency, the expense in travel as well as permit him needed. Council voted: more time with each chapter. It is the After consid ering a sizea ble number I. Strict econom y. hope of the Council that the divided o[ appli ca nts, Charles L. Freeman, BA, 2. Closer supervision of chap· districts will keep their mutual interests high sc hool instructor of Bell eville, I ll. , ter . in uch things as rushing and district and District President of No. I 0 was 3. Avoidance of war h ysteria. conventions. selected for the important Traveling 4. Immedi ate development of a Former N ational President Hart, who Secretary post. plan of operatio n for the is still N ational Historian, was appoint­ Freeman i we ll known to JlK .t 's who Fraternity in event o f war ed Executive Secretary for the next yea r have attended recent HKA national con­ to maintain its in tegrity and after having erved as Acting Executive ventions. H e was an acti ve ITKA while continue its national exist­ Secretary for the past session. The at 'vVashington U niversity and ha been ence on the bes t practical Council sent a resolution of thanks to an active alumnus ever sin ce. He has basi . former Executive Secretary R obert M . been teaching economics and coaching survey of fraternity operation McFarland, Jr., who left his Fraternity dramati cs at Bell eville Hi gh chool for post LO accept active duty in the Army two yea rs, fo ll owing five yea rs of Leach· during \1\lorld War I will be made by Executive Secretary Hart. and as a ca ptain in the Quartermaster De­ ing at St. Charles, Mo., High School. partment. where he was born, and at I emper Mili­ N ationa l Counsel Packer was in­ structed to draw up definite plans Because o f the prese nt uncertainty tary School, Boonville, J\ifo. He con­ a nd the threa t of decreased coll ege en­ ducted two European tours for fi eld for the preservation of the property and life of Pi Kappa Alpha's chap­ rollments, the Council instructed tlie work for Kemper and during two sum· Executive Secretary, THE SHIELD AND mers was clirecLOr of intermediate boys ters, as \\'ell as the national organiza­ ti o n, should the United States be DIAMOND staff, and others administer­ at Camp Chi ef Ouray, Granby, Colo. ing the affairs of the Fraternity in both H e had supervision of 170 boys ra nging drawn into a shooting war and col­ lege en rollments drastica ll y curtail ed its national a nd chapter workings to from I 0 LO 19 years of age. use every economy in their administra­ r\t W ashington U., Freeman had won and/ or fraternity houses taken over by the U. S. Government as was the ti ons. This was to be accomplished by a [our-yea r scholarship. H e received his ase in 191 8. a careful budgeting of expenditures and A. B. in 1929 and wem o n to take hi s by insistent coll ection of all accounts, 6 Chapter a nd individual fina nces a they affect the national Fraternity as we ll as complete and accurate report New Home of IIKA General Office were given se rious thought. The Coun­ cil was unanimous in its stand that de­ + LARGER AND :\LORE UP-TO-DATE Q ARTER for the General Office of Pi Kappa li nquency must be reduced to a mini­ Alpha were occupied by Executive ecretary F. H . H art and his tafE on mum a nd chapters are to be notified Se pt. 25. The new offi ces a re in the Crum a nd Forster Insurance Building at by the Executive Secretary that a mem­ 77 1 pring t., t- ber is not to be all owed to co ntinue in lanta, Ga. the chapter ho use if delinquent in For ye a r, the board, room or dues payments. General Office have Considerable time a nd though t was been locate d in a give n to the troublesome jewelry prob­ downtown office lem. Definite action was deferred pend­ building. The new ing further inves ti gation. One idea quarters are in a dominated the discuss io n of this ques­ semi-subu rban ec­ ti o n : that the bet imerests of the under­ tion near the Geor­ graduate , who buy most of the jewelr y, g ia Tech camp u s. must be sa feguarded. one block from the The Council empowered National famous Atl anta Bilt­ President Hickma n to appoint a ra­ more H ote l and ti o nal Publicity Ch

REGIONS, DISTRICTS &.CHAPTERS

REGION LEGEND Ion •m•wov ~

7 all-out WAR CLOSER to U.S.

H itler ruill need to defeat British­ Russian forces in the Caucuses; will need to over-run the ear and Middle East; will need to gain Mediterranean ea control before he can hope to reap rich rewards out of Russia . Even then: it's going to take from two to five years of development to rea l­ ize returns from Russ ian industry and agriculture. + ALL-OUT war edges closer Hitler now holds sruay over 400,000,- and closer to U _ S. 000 people. H e controls all of Europe War at sea is on in eamest. Hitler and European Russ ia. But: His people drew first blood in torpedoing of U. . S. are li ving o n a lower standard than Kearny. But: that' onl y the stan . ever. Promised riches are not appear­ There is much more acti on to come. ing. Much of Europe is bordering on anarch y. A fight with ]ajJa n, again at sea, is Ahea d is the effort to break out of nearer; is go in g to become inevitable the shackles that sea po wer creates. unless J apan changes her mind and her co urse. The Teason: otherwise she will Any idea of a let-down in U. S. de­ ex plode internall y as U. S. tightens the fense effO!"t sh ould be discarded. economic warfare screws. Rather: the heat is about to be put ln fact: torpedoing of U. S. S. Kearny the resources of the world; are able to o n all around to sp eed production. and what's happening in J apan may use the seas as broad highways to mar­ Roosevelt says that m eans labor, too. be very cl osely related; may be part of kets. He's not ye t specific about methods. the sa me pan ern in this trange war. R esu lt is that these two sea /JOwers But: in industry, the W all ace-Nelso n That's because H itler is despemtely are gradually gathering strength, after SPAB is insisting o n a speed-up; is start­ anxious to induce ]ajJan to fight. If he a late start, whi le land power are grad­ ing enforcement of priorities; is moving ca n convince Japan that the U. . N avy uall y using up their strength. They are toward a sys tem of rationing that will wi ll be bu y in the Atl antic, maybe the drawing on reserve of ma npower and reward companies giving defense results J apanese wi ll ri sk a fight with U.S. in ma teri als, while U.S. is buil d ing them. and penali ze others. the Pacific, maybe they'll lend a hand. This is se1·ious business. It's going to Vi ctory over Russ ia wo n't so lve Hit­ It's fJart of an intenwtional squeeze be a mistake to under-e timate the ler's probl ems; won't end this war. jJlO)'· power wi elded by W all ace or to ques­ Inside and informed view is that this As be t informed offi cials of this Gov­ tion determina tion to ge t results. ernment see the picture .... is to be a very long war; that it is to A lways Temember: o n c e shooting become a war of endurance, with even­ Stalin will il eep up the fight even if starts the public will hold industry to tual sea control a the stake. Hitler's annie press eastward from Mos­ account for an arms productio n big R ight now: Europe is bottled up and cow; wi ll provide plenty of work for big enough and rapid enough to assure a slowly starving for raw materials. J apan German forces in the peri od ahead. victory. i bottl ed up and is starving somewhat TheTe won' t be much sympathy for faster; is in ve ry bad shape. th ose who feel an official aackdown. At the same time: . and the Biggest immediate R oosevelt problem British Empire are drawing on most of By OWENL. SCOTT i ~ that of labor. 8 As MATTERS now stand ... It's just as well for th e college student to look forward to a job in the Army or avy, to expect to learn much about Observing the Washington Scene military life in the period ahead. Last generation thought it learned + \ 1\/ HE Gene H owe wrote fr. Lawrence that has continued to the a ll there was to learn. But: the 1917- his book of advice on how to judge to­ present time. day's commentators, he observed that 1918 experi ence probably was no more Owen Scott was graduated from the than a primer war course. the best informed of W ash ington corre­ University of Wiscon in in 1920 after spondents wa David Lawrence, column­ editing The Dail)' Cm·dinal, the uni­ Not that a big fight is imminent. l o t ist, editor and publisher. versity publication, and after being in­ tha t a n army is to be in battle a ny time H ead of an o rgani za ti on in vVashing­ strumental in esta bli shing the Pi Kappa soon . A East moving development of ton at the center of our national li fe, lpha chapter there. His first job as a tha t type isn't in the ca rds. Mr. Lawrence publi hes and is editor of reporter o n the Spn·ngfield (Mass.) R e­ The United States News, a week I y publican, wa rather quickly followed magazine of national a ffairs that by an offer of a job with the s ociated " Tornorrow," f eaturing simplifies, interprets and analyzes Press in Chicago. There he fo und K. "a look ahead" in U. S . events for its readers. H e writes a D . Pulci pher, BH, already at work a nd News, flows weekly front daily colu mn that is syndicated to a ve teran of a year in the organiza tion. the informed typewriter more tha n 100 newspapers. He op- of Owen L. Scott, n;:;, Leaving the Associated Press to head shown h ere at his Wash· erates a group of legal and the Chicago offi ce of the Consolidated in.gton editorial desk. labor a nd patent and Pre ssociation, he remained there un­ tax serv ices for til 1933 when he moved to W a hington busines men. with the New Deal to join the editorial In this la r ge staff of The United States News. While scale o pera­ in Chicago, Scott wa in trumental in tion , Mr. bringing into the Co nso lidated Press, Bertram G. Zilmer, n;:;, who now is editor of the 1orth American N ews­ paper lliance in ew York. In his present job, Owen Scott is in intimate co nta ct with W ashington events. T he staff tha t he heads covers the principal news sources of the city. This staH is supplemented by another staff of lawyers, labor experts and economists who a nalyze the mass of rulings and decisions that flow out of Government departments. Perso nal contacts with key policy-making officials play a vital part in any appraisa l of developments in vVashington a nd it is in that field that Lawrence and Scott play their part. Emphasi in their reporting is placed o n determining trends and on fo llow­ R ather: the struggle that is shaping Lawrence has as his assistant, in active ing the develo pment of underlying up will probably be low in developing. charge of editori al work, Owen L. Scott, poli cies. It probably has quite a course to run B;E;, '20. Scott is associate editor of The In \1\/ashington, The United States before U.S. takes her turn. Afte1· that: United States News. H e is editor of News is the o ne big information fac­ It's to be a case of the best man winning The R efJoTt for the Business Executive, tor . Those who correlate the mass of in a free-for-all fight. a se rvice that goes to several thou and informa tion that comes from the staff The reason is that this struggle, down business men . He also is a columnist of reporters and editors and from the deep, is one for future world control. in his own right as the writer of a Sun­ reports of lawyers analyzi ng Government B1·itain and this country have made day dispatch that is syndicated through actio ns probably know more about what and enforced the 1·ules for everal gen­ Consolidated N ews Features. is going o n than any ingle group in the eration . Now: they're chall enged by David Lawrence has spent more than Gove rnment itself. This information is Hitler, with a new strategy. 30 yea rs in \1\/ashington as a correspond­ organized and merch a ndized for many ent, a owner of a press association, and 1y pes of readers. If you want early action: the place to as a publisher. H e started as a reporter Th e United ta.tes ews, with its 150,- find it first is in the Ta vy, which now is lor the Associated Press on graduation 000 sub cribers, is edited for the business fi ghting a war; next in the 1r Corps, from Princeton and after a period of man reader who wants to be informed which soon may be. reporting and settling revolutions in on igni fica n t developments and sig­ I f you're interested in longer mnge: fexico he became correspondent for nificant Government actio ns. then the rmy has possibilities. the N ew York Evening Post. In 1919 Other services are more speciali zed for Pro bable ba ttle grounds of the future he organized his own press a sociation readers concerned with detailed informa­ are these . . . and began yndica ting his own daily tion on particular subjects such as taxes, In the Philippine : U. S. troops there dispatch. Five years la ter, in the pring prices. priorities, labor, wage a nd hour today are on a 100 per cent war footing; of 1924, co n bega n the association with controls. court decision or patent rulings. CoxT rN Uf:u O s PAGf; 10 9 IIKA'S Rank High in IJ.t/lro:d. IJ.t/lw

• FORTY- F IVE ME 1\!B E R S o( Pi Ka ppa Alpha ha had a sizeable HKA " ·ere named in last year's li t of delegati o n of o utstanding m e n listed in Who's 1-Vho Among Students in Ame r­ each year's issue of the book. L ast ican Un ivenities and Colleges. Pi Ka ppa yea r's list follows: Alpha was ninth in the number of men J ames Carl yle McCu ll och- labama Poly- recognized by ll'ho's ll'ho a mong 355 technic Institute. · national a nd local fraternitie whose J ames Kirk Newell , J r.-Aiabama Poly­ members were included in the boo k. technic Institute. Co nrad Murphy Fowl er- niversity of Published an nua ll y, 1Vh o's IVho is in­ Ark ansas. te nded to bring to the a ttention o( the J oe Wi lso n Smith- ni ve rsity of Arkansas. business world the outstanding men and Garvin Fitton-Uni versity of Arkansas . women gTaduating or about to grad­ MISSOURI WHO'S WHO A. Les li e Brews ter -Uni versity of Cin- ua te from American co ll eges. C. H. Dicus (le ft) aiUl Freel R exf ord cinnati. John Ray mond Jones-Da vidso n. Emmett L. Robinson-Emory. ~Wm . P e tro Tomasell o- Uni versity of florida. A. B. Rudy-Georgetown. All Out War Closer to U. S. Frank Parker Hudson-Georgia Tech. Edward Schley Parks, Jr.-Georgia Tech. CONTI-NUED FHOl\1 PAGE 9 wi ll be more over-a ll directio n a n d more Paul Tulane Craddock-Hampden-Sydney. are in the pa th of J a pan. who is itching pla nning from the top; less p lay for the Theodore Gray Offterdinge r-Hampden- for a chance to strike. W itness latest rugged individua list of the p ast. Sydney. · cabinet cha nge last mo nth. If U. S. comes out o n top: the world Thoma Lawrence Ogle-Howard. I n W est Africa: Hitler's eyes a re on may be this country's oyster. Then : Stewart Marion ' Vin ton- Howard. the African coast which can be used to U. S. college students may find oppor­ Sam R. Ewi ng, J r.-University of Ken­ lll cky. cha ll'enge U.S. domina tion of the South tunities in ma n y la nds. J o bs wi ll fol ­ J ohn Ed Pea rce-University of Kentucky. Atla ntic. A move by him in tha t direc­ low the dollars that the n would fl ow tion a nd it"s better tha n a 50-50 prospect T heodore Ernest J ackson-Uni versity of into the business o f rebuilding the J\1ian1 i. that this country wi ll act. world 's trade a nd of developing unde­ Roy Clyde Clark-Millsa ps. In England: Invasio n a nd a ttempted veloped areas. Charles "'fill er Murry, J r.-Millsa ps. co nquest are basic if Hitle r is to have If U. S. doem 't come out on top: Clarence Howard Di cus, Jr.-University the victory he wants. All the thinking the n there wi ll be the task of organizing of Misso uri. o( those who direct U. S. strategy is that a nd regimenting the country from the Fred Wm . R exford-Uni versity of i\ lis· a n invasio n a ttempt will see this coun­ inside so tha t it can get alo ng within so uri . try's Navy and Air Corps in acti o n . itse lf. Then the big opportunities prob­ Fabius Monroe Clements, Jr. - North Ca rolina State. And: ve ry pro bab ly its Army. a bly would be in Government service, in Willard W. Holdcrhy-Oklahoma A. & i\1. A[te1· that the struggle jJmbably would the agencies of Government tha t would Chas. Holl and Carman, Jr.- Rensselaer be of long duration: probably wou ld be ordering peop le around. Polytechnic Institute. stra in every resource of this na ti o n to As ma n y coll ege stude nts have found Donald Raymond Knuebel - Rensselaer '"' in . in the past eight years ... Polytechnic Institute. Frank John Sherry-Rensselaer Polytech­ T he a rma me nt boom a nd the draft T here is an attraction in a Govern­ ni c Institute. a re cutting deeply into coll ege enro ll ­ ment job, if that jo b is conce rned with Wm. Bateman Fitzhugh-University of ment. policy ma king, if it centers near the top. Ri chmond. Some slate univenities refJo rt a cut of J ames Beth ea Ga ll oway- Uni ve rsity of But : a Government jo b ca n be very So uth Ca rolina. 20 per cent in stude nt numbers. hum drum, ca n be very unexciting if T homas Clark Liddell , Jr.-University of It's probable that this trend will con­ it's no t o ut o f the ro utine. So uthern Ca li fornia. tinue; that the attractio n of what look J ack Chas. Tobin-Uni versity of Southern Cali forn ia. li ke high paying job wi ll con tinue to One o ther thing: George Harry Stopp- T ransy lvan ia. Top oHicers, who run this country's draw o ff potential students. Harry Eugene Hea th-Uni ve rsity of T ul sa. Y et : tha t is a tre nd the Government milita ry and naval esta blishments, are Baskett Pershing ~ I o s s- Uni versity of doesn 't e nco urage or want to see con­ enthusiastic over the degree of toughness Tulsa . Robert R. McKay-Uni versity of Utah. tinue. It looks to co ll eges for its mate­ a nd sta mina of U. S. youth. Val J oll ey Sheffield - University of Utah. They 1·eport: all the stories about rial for officers a nd specia li sts. John Richard Morris, Jr.-University of A college degree is lih ely to 1)(1)1 big softness in this genera tio n are r efuted \ 'irginia. dividends in the jJeriod ahead. by experi e nce in this yea r's army ma neu­ Charles i\ layherry-\Vake Fores t. vers a nd by today's war service at sea. George T homas Watkins-Wake Forest. And after thi war ... CeTtainl)l, the youth of today w ill have Henry Lederer Roediger, Jr.- Washington & Lee. The only certainty is that things w ill n eed fur toughness. Nathaniel Edward Adamson , Uni ­ be vastly diffe,·ent. .Jr. - There's very little of security, a nd versity of Virginia. There's going to be Big Government. very much of cha nce-ta king in the life Ralph Hunter Ford- niversity of Ala­ bama. There's to be a lmost no cha nce of a that seems now to be cut o ut for the Robert Cochran Hobson-, Vashington & return to the ways of the past. There prese nt college genera ti o n . Lee. 10 and FRATERNITIES DEFENSE

+ BISHOP H E ' RY ST. GEORGE T CKER, A , will wi ll represent N IC. Friday afternoon, a joint meeting give the invocation at the joi nt formal banquet of the National of the two organizations will be held when reports Interfraternity Conference and the Iational Pa nhell enic Con­ on policy, defense, fin ance, and philanthropic work gress on Friday, evening, lov. 28, climaxing the a nnual sessio ns will be heard. R ound table discussion wi ll continue of the two nati o n-w ide men's and women's Greek letter o n Saturday, followed by committee reports on rushing, organizations. classification of societies, etc. "Fraternities and Defense " will be the theme of this year's Pi Kappa Alpha delegates to the co nference wi ll dinner. include President Roy D. Hickman, Vice President " Our country needs, as never before, a sociali zed yo uth of S. R oy Smith, Executive Secretary F. H . H art, 1ational high ideals and unquestioned patriotism," decl ared L. G. Editor K. D. Pulcipher, Frank H . Neaer, Bll, vice pres i­ BaHour, 2:X, pres ident of the Conference, in announcing the dent of the Flintkote Co., ew York, and Fletcher D. din1ier program. Richards, A P, president of the Campbell -Ewald Com­ "So far as college men are co ncerned, the fra ternity is the pany, ew York. only agency on the ca mpus devoted to the inculca ti on of the principles of right li ving with one's fellowmen. The Ameri ca n

College fra ternity is the most significa nt yo uth movement in - N C"& York Times Photo. America and is approaching its era of greatest use fulness." The defense ba nquet will be held in the main ba ll room of the Commodore Hotel, New York City, where the IC wil l hold its annual three-day conference Nov. 27-28-29. Bishop Tucker, representing Pi Kappa Alpha on the pro­ gram, will be fo ll owed by a lengthy list of notables. Lowell Thomas, radio commentator, wi ll be toastmaster. Dr. J ohn E. Bowmen, cha ncellor of the University of Pittsburgh, and Dr. R obert G. Sproul, president of the University of Ca li fornia, wi ll be guest speakers on "Education." H. \V. Prentis, Jr., past president of the National Associa­ tio n of Manufacturers, wi ll speak for "Industry. " National Commander L ynn Stambaugh of the America n Legion, wi ll speak as a representative of national affairs. Tentative ac­ ceptances, dependent on national a nd international conditio ns, have been received from two interna ti o nall y-known spea kers who are slated to discuss na ti o nal and interna ti o nal a Hairs, but permis io n to announce their names has no t yet been granted. The Cornell University Glee Club and Instrumental Clu b of 150 men wi ll feature the entertainment program which also includes such nationall y- known artists as JVI iss J ean Dickenso n, Alexander Gray, R einald vV errenra th, Bruce Boyce, and Richard Bonelli, l'vfetro politan Opera Star. On Thursday, the opening day, Panhell eni c Congre s will give a tea da nce at Beekman Tower, and that night round table groups wi ll disc uss fra ternity problems. Pi Kappa Alpha representa ti ves will meet at R o und Table A together with , , , Kappa Alpha Ordet·, , Epsil on, , and . Fo ll owing routine business The Right R everend H enry at the Friday morning session, S t. George Tucker, Presiding Bishop of the Protes tant the IC will tender a luncheon Episcopal Church in the to members of the National United States, recent recipient Panhellenic Co n ference, a t of the Masonic m edal for dis­ which three members of each tinguished achievem ent, h igh­ est Masonic honor, who w"ll sorority will be present a nd give the invocation. at Inter­ one member of each fraternity f ratern.ity Conference ba11quet. FOOD WILL WIN THE WAR + "Fooo will win the war This man trul y is "Generaliss imo of the was featured on the cover and the better and write the peace." U. S. Forces in the Battle of Food," a part of four pages of t y p ~ was devoted That is the opinion held by Claude title given him by T ime and Life maga­ to the "Battle of Food." The August R. Wickard, B<~, Secretary of Agricul­ zines. I l issue of Life carried six fu ll pages of ture, and that is the goal which he is A few yea rs ago vVi ckarcl was an text and pictures, some m ade by Wick­ seeking. Indiana farmer, doing a better-than­ ard himse lf, as his hobby is photograph y. Wickard's task, as igned by President average job tending his land and rais ing Honors as we ll as work have come R oo evelt, is t feed the United States tock. But today his name is almost a to Wickard. I n June he was one of four a nd Great Britain during the defense house hold word, so important have his ill ustrious persons receiving honorary emergency and the war. duties become almost overnight. degrees from his alma mater, P urdue To accomplish this, vVickard has an Hardly a day pa es tha t Wickard is Un iversity. The citation on his degree elaborate et-up of 101 ,000 agents who not mentioned prominently in the a­ of Doctor of Agricu lture reads as fol­ can personall y reach 6,000,000 farmer ti on's pres. In the July 16 issue of the lows: "Bachelor of Science in AgriCLd­ in the United States within 48 hours. news magazine T ime, Wickard's picture ture, class of 1915, cultivator and con- 12 ~erver of the good earth of Indiana; gry will be proof that Democracy has trusted Secretary of Agriculture of the a heart."

United States; wise crusader for the bet­ TIMETH E \\'"EEKI.Y ~' EWSMAGAZ I ' E Wickard warns tha t Hitler's down­ terment of rural life throughout the fall does no t mean the end of Amer­ Nation.'' ica' domes tic problems. H e decl ared Wickard's long-range plan embodies that merica n participa ti o n in world a world peace written on term of the affairs must be o n a permanent and United States by the formation of a pro fi table basis. H e urged support of "sort of International Triple- , based Federal programs fo r the protecti on on world-trade agreements. H e further of agriculture in order to ca rry o n thinks that this Peace of Plenty can be post-war trade with o ther countries. enforced by a club of threa tened U. S. T he 1942 farm program ca lls for production and subsidies," Time said. the largest productio n in the history "The struggle to give away whea t, of America n agriculture. It is de­ cotton and other rea l wealth is just as signed to improve nutrition in this senseless as wo rld wars," according to country a nd to meet the needs of na­ Wickard. "If natio ns are willing to ti o ns that still sta nd between this negotiate in a reasonable war, they country and Hitler. might agree upon a division of markets ecretary \•Vi ckard has set a goal of in certain interna ti o nal commodities." 5,760,000 fa rm gardens for next year, In calling on farmers for a record compared wi th 4,43 1,000 in 194 1. His production of cro ps in 1942, Wickard department is plann ing a campaign said the idea was to build "stockpiles" of .food to fe ed this country a nd those for home gardens, accompa ni ed by a resisting aggression. drive to get house wi ves in town and " It is perfectl y plain no w that it's o n farms to go back to the old habit Hitler or us," Wickard said. H e added of home canning. Every farmer in the Time magazine gave its July 16 front cover that the "stockpiles" would serve no t United States will be co ntacted by to General Wickarcl in The Battle of Food. onl y to feed the United States and Great state and county agents for a complete Britain but "give the conquered people mobiliza tio n of America n agriculture. health and trength and the Bri ti h will of Europe omething to hope for, so me­ " Food productio n in general is in need tremendous quantities of cheese. thing that will spur them o n in their good balance, but greatl y increased su p­ evapora ted milk and d ri ed skim milk. resistence to the aggres or. plies of some commodities will be need­ T o reach the productio n goals of 1942, "I know if I were a Dutchman or a ed," the food general declared . " In this the greatest effort will be required in Frenchman and I looked across the emergency I have fo und it neces ary to dairying. ·· Channel and sa w the British were eat­ encourage the expansio n of the produc­ Wickard is convinced that farmers as ing good America n food while I was tion of hogs, eggs, evaporated milk, dry a whole do not want inflation. lost of living on cat meat as somewha t of a skim milk, cheese and chicken , and ac­ them realize, he says, tha t infla ti on is a delicacy, I'd be inclined to rise up and cordingly I have made a fo rmal public bubbl e and that like all bubbles, it try to get some of that good American a nnouncement that the Department of burst . food." Agriculture will support prices for these \•Vickard favors the Administra ti o n' Wickard h as just begun a se ries of commodities until December 31, 1942, at Price Co ntrol Bill. decl aring tha t while conferences in which he will suggest not less than 85 per cent of parity. recent increases in farm prices have crops to various sections of the nation " \

14 All America FOOTBALL

Barnett of Duke and Sinkwich of Georgia Lead IIKA Prospects for Big Time Football Honors. CAPT. BOB BARNETT Scores of IIKA's on Varsity and Intramural Teams.

+ CANDIDATES for All -Amer­ \1\fatkins, tackl e, as ca ndidate for the Bill •faginnis, quarterback, a nd tan­ ican and just ordinary football players N ew Mexico team. ley Asbury, tack le, are Eta's ca ndidates -you 'II find wearers of the Garnet a nd Coach L ynn 'Naldorf, AX, earl y this for the Tulane team "which doesn't Gold in each category. year signed a three-year contract at fi gure to lose five games like the 1940 Among them is that tall , handso me, lorthwestern. Known to his men as squad," according to the experts. rangy G eorgian, Bob Barnett, who is "Pappy," \1\fa ldorf was o ne of the Bill H ogan and Gerald Hightower captain of Duke's Blue Devil s. Bob's coaches of the Coll ege All-Stars which stand a n excell ent chance of eeing rise came rapidly-in o ne afternoon, in played the Chicago Bears in August. much se rvice on the L. S. U. team, a fact-when Coach vVallace 'Wade gave George Maggos, guard, who saw little dark horse this yea r. A ew Orlean Bob a trip to Atlanta with the team to action last year, and Steve Kopcha, who sports writer says " Hightower puts see some homefolk. Unexpectedl y, Bob won his freshman numerals last year, speed a nd fin esse in deep reverses from was se nt into the game to stem a are representing Gamma-Rho on the wingback" and H ogan is "a swe ll block­ Georgia T ech rall y. He intercepted a \1\fi ldca t squad. Tonhwe tern' sched­ er a nd fi eld general. " Both are of pass that might have mea nt a T ech ule this yea r is regarded as tough, co n- Alpha-Gamma. touchdown. The fin al score was Duke idering gradua ti o n took almost the \ 1\f hile Beta-Xi has no pro pecti ve 7, Tech 6. entire line. ca ndidate for the Badger eleven, the Barnett was named on most of the The Army a nd the Navy have re­ chapter is anticipa ting a n active intra­ All-So uthern teams last year. moved some of the ca ndidates from the mural season. Duke is picked by Street a nd Smith's colleges. A typica l loss is Gene Snyder, Davidson boasts the return of 13 football yearbook as the Southern team An, who left Ka nsas State College early lettermen and several likely sophomore . most likely to pro ve supreme in its area. in the summer to join the lavy. Also in the South is Frank Sinkwich , Beta claims ?viorehead a nd Sh annon as Georgia, regarded as one of the natio n's ends; Bell , tackl e; and R ainey, guard. out tanding tai lbacks. As a sophomore 1 n the backfi eld are Spencer a nd Fred­ last yea r, he was chosen by the United ericks. R eserves are H enderson, guard; Press on its All-Southeastern team and Maxwell ,' tackl e; and Brinso n, end. was being mentioned as a n All -A meri ca n Nick Dennis, last yea r's se nsational prospect before he clo es his coll ege blocking back, a nd I Schafflc, end, career. are Alpha- Psi's co ntributio ns to Rut­ Georgia al o is ra ted nea r the top in gers' eleven. the conference circles, provided that Tommy R o blin, last year' leading Sinkwich goes well. A nother ITK A ca n­ scorer for the University of Oregon didate for the team is Earl Marshall, team, and Cur't 1\fecham, leading co n­ who is out for guard. ference ground ga iner, are expected to Coaches, too, figure in the nation's hold down the halfback positions thi gridiron scene with Big Bill Dwye r, ear. Cliff Griffin, star of the fro h Bll., returning to his alma mater as eleven of last year, co m pI e t e s the freshman coach. Dwyer was an out­ Gamma-Pi trio on the squad . sta nding back on the Lobo eleven in Joe Schwaneng. rangy end, is Beta­ 1938 when New Mexico won the border Mu's only contender on the Longhorn conference. of the Un ive rsity of T exas. Beta-Delta will have Arnold Loken, Southern California is doped to finish end; Mickey Miller, cem er; and Bob GANGWAY! in the top bracket without the help of 15 a Gamma-Eta member and Gamma-Xi is without a candidate for the ' l\lashington Outstanding R. 0. T. C. Cadet State College team. + JAMES JosEPH DIMEL, r:::: . '42, i making a spectacular reputation Alpha-Chi at Syracuse boasts of Leo in his studies at the University of Pitts­ Canale, fullback, who wa the leading burgh for the military career he has ground gai ner last yea r against Colum­ chosen. bia and Cornell ; Leland "Bunky" Mor­ At the close of the 1940-4 1 school ris, junior tailback; and Richard W eber, year, he had made the biggest coup pos­ junior guard. sible in the R . 0 . T. C. unit- he was The Ohio Univer ity Bobcats will captain o f Pitt Rifles: Captain (presi­ have four men from Gamma-Omicron dent) of Scabbard and Blade and was in the line and a t least one on the chosen the outstanding junior in the bench. T hey are: Freddie R auch, R. 0. T. C. unit. H e ra nked as a Marty Leppalau, Marshall Smith and cadet colonel. Jim Lemunyo n as linesmen, and vV ya tt H e was further honored during the Chadwell on the bench as junior man­ summer when he r e c e i v e d a Sam a ger. The University of Kansas roster in­ Browne belt as an award "to the out­ Alpha-Epsilon wi ll be represented on cludes the 217-pound sophomore tackle, standing cad et during the six-weeks the North Carolina State team this year Warren H odges. J oe H odges also rep­ with J ack Huckabee, Pea nut Doak and rese nts Beta-Gamma. Dick Call oway in the backfi eld, and Ken Cheeley, BH, is a center on the C hick Doak and J ohn Culp in the line. Illinois team; while Bill Maddox, Max Oklahoma A. & M. lost some pros­ Fisher, L. G. Fredricks and Bill Camp­ pects to the armed services, but expect­ bell, all of Beta- Omicro n, are out (or the ed to be a contender in the Missouri University of Oklahoma eleven. Valley Conference. Gamma- Chi's con­ tribution to the Cowboys are Ken H old­ Ken Simmons, a passer, and J erry erman, end, and Lonnie J ones, blocking Kathol, end, both of Gamma-Beta, are back, both se niors and both havin g been on the Cornhusker squad at Nebraska. awarded two football letters. Bob Riddell , of Gamma-Gamma, is Delta-Alpha, TIKA 's baby chapter, o ne o f four veterans in the University boasts of W alt Fedora, fu ll back on o f Denver backfield, and Don Carlson the G eorge v\Tashington University is a prospect for the team. Colonials. In hi s two yea rs as a regular, Emmett Boylan, AA, is quarterback Fedora has shown a great amount of o n the Georgetown Coll ege team while driving power. At least two profes­ Gamma- u offers Dick Anderso n and sional teams-W ashington R edskins and Dwigh t Hoover to the University o f the New York Giants-like Fedora's Iowa team. looks and next yea r may find him in professional circles. Kenny Gibson, of Gamma-Upsil on, is CADET COLONEL DIMEL honorary co-ca pta in of the University Monk Keyser and Ed Lawson are Honorecl by Brig. Gen. Litton (le ft) of Tulsa team. Beta-Pi's offering to the Un iversity of training period of the U niversity of 's eleven after the chapter's Pittsburgh R . 0 . T. C. at Fort Mon­ best prospect, Eddie Allen, had been roe, Va." drafted. Born June 8, 1920, in Columbus, 0 ., Dime! was graduated from Central Cath­ Beta-Phi has two men on the fresh­ oli c High School before entering Pitt. man team at Purdue, but none on the H e is a ca ndidate for a B .S. degree in varsity. For the first time in history Aeronautical Engineering next June. Alpha-Eta is not represented on the His hobby is to " putter· around" in his U niversity of Florida team. Alpha-Rho, workshop making model airplanes and which has given Ohio State · so ~e o f its other mechanical d evices. H e intends most outstanding players, is not repre­ to seek a commission in the U. S. Army sented on the first team th i yea r. at the close of school. In addition to his military work, Forrest J essee and Walt Spry, of Iota, Dime) was vice president, last yea r, of are out for the Hampden-Syd ney eleven. Omicron Delta Kappa, is a member of Ben Moyer and Jim Collier, o( Mu, are Sigma Tau, Phi Eta Sigma, Pi Tau seeking berths on the Presbyteri an Col­ Sigma, American Society of fechanica l lege eleven . Engineers and the executive committee of the Newman Club. Omicron has Joe Mack and R obert - - TTKA -- Erickson with the Un iver ity of Rich· LLOYD fA UST, rrr, has resigned his monel gridders. J ack H aggard, H enry post as instructor in journali sm at the Newman and J ack Smith, of Alpha­ U niversity o f Kansas to take up new Sigma, are out for the U ni ve rsity of GALLOPING FRANK SINKWICH duties in Washington. D . C., with the California squad. Figures to clo well with Georgia Federal government. 16 t P1 KAPPA ALP HA's youngest cha j1ter, Delta-A ijJha, sets a j>recedeut that all other IIKA chajJ­ Irrs cottld well fo llow. Meu iu mili­ tary service today are making a real saaifice for their cowtt l)'· They are 1·estricted in their social COII­ ta cts by loug train ing hours and low fJay. H ere is au idea that will aid soldier morale. I t w ill extend the hand of rea l fraternity to fellow Americans w ho 111a y even be fellow Cree lis. IIJ\A clwf>lers, OjJeu your doon to the 111 e 11 nf the Army, the Navy llllcl the Marin e CorjJs! You youT­ selves may be joining their ranks o 11 e of these da ys ' LURE

Clusterecl around Corp. Wallace Drew lit the D elta-Alpha party for solcliers are Patty Hunt, KKr; Pat Farrell, TIB; Margaret Floech er, Xf! ; an.d Faith Hamilton., ALl.II . UNIFORM SNARES PRETTY COEDS

• l N THE COOL of the eve­ ning of Sept. 6, two hc;l\·y, ca nvas­ covered a rmy trucks tumed off Massa­ By BRYANT LANE chuse tts !\venue into the driveway at Delta-Alpha 2448, the former L <~ tvian lega tion, a nd discharged about 40 me n in uniform at the Delta-A lpha chapter house of Pi leave took a chance o n hitch-hiking later .-\ t a time wh en the country is USO­ Kappa Alpha. back to the Fort in order to get in a few consc io us and the general public is be­ Carrying out a completely novel idea more dances. coming more and more interested in the in so far as coll ege fraternities at George The selectee social id e<~ , suggested by a1·my of draftees and their needs for \IVashington University are concem ed . W aldemar N eilso n, BX and AN, at din­ entertainment and recrea ti o n while on Delta-Alpha entertained with a dance ner one evening, was planned and uc­ lea ve, this social was give n by Delta­ for 40 selectee from the E ngineer Re cessful ly ca rried out by a committee Alpha with the thought of inspiring placement T raining Center at Fort Rei­ consisting of Fred Stevenson, chairman ; similar affa irs in fraternities throughout voir, Va. Forty girls representing four Hugh Willis, SMC; and H arold Minor. the country. differen t sororities coopera ted in making The invitation was made poss ible with H <~v in g lost a number of its members the affair a complete success. · the help of Lt. CoL F. H. Kohloss, to the Arm y and the avy during the The so ldiers, in command o f Capt. Corps of E ngineers, ' 1\iar Department, past yea r, the chapter fee ls more than Alfred ' "'- H aines, arrived hortl y after president of the Washington Alumnu a patriotic duty discharged in providing 8 p. m. , and dancing in the dining room Chapter. wherever possible the opportunity for or chatting under the J apanese la ntern> CoL Ko hloss, Mrs. Kohloss, Charl es K. so ldiers o n leave to find wholesome in the garden just outside were in order Dunn. counselor of Delta-A lpha a nd amusement. As one of the selectees until eleven. A ll of the dancers wore Chairma n of the E ndowment Fund remarked during the dance, "It's the name-tags and the formali ty of introduc­ Trustees; Mrs. Dunn, and Sam Mc­ nearest thing to da nces back home I've tions was waived for the evening. T he Cart. vice president of the '"' ashington so ldiers joined in the party readily a nd Alumnus Chapter, were also guest at een. Most of the dances we go to are appeared to enjoy every minute of it. the party. Reporters a nd photographers too crowded. They try to accommodate \IVhen the trucks made read y to leave, from the three leading '"' ashington too many people, a nd there are u ua ll y Capt. H aines had difficulty in getting newspapers were o n h;111d ror stories rour men to every girl. T here's no per­ hi men a b o<~ rd . Several o n week-e nd and pictures. ce ntage in that. " 17 • Commander Warner T ells American Legion America Must Build Up D ef en se to R esist Attack of Dictators - Without or Within

+ A~ I E RI CA's " important task" at the moment is to give "all practicable aid to Great Brita in and at the arn e time build u p our force so tha t no nation, no group o f dictators, wi ll ever clare run the risk of attacking these United State ." That was the decl aration of M il o]. \•Varner, AP , N a tio nal Commander of the American Legion as he opened the 1941 convention of World vVar I veterans at Mi lwau kee, Wis., in September. "vVe sti ll hate 1-Iitlerism. \1\fe sti ll hate communism and all that it implies," V\1a rn er asserted . "Stalin simply i cl e[encling his country [rom attack b y H itler. \ 1\lhatever aiel Stalin can give in resisting is incidentall y o f benefit to sincere peoples everywhere. That doe not ca ll [or an y change of attitude toward the Communist Party in the United States. \!\farner sa id President Roosevelt, in his order to the 1 avy to shoot first upon a ny Axis war hips found i n American defense waters had spoken "cl early and pla in ly" conce rning the Government' policy in regard to pro tection of our com­ merce a nd shipping. "As a united nati on, it is our duty to back the Pre icl ent and Congre s to the utmost," he a sertecl. Commander V\larner read to the com ·e ntion a me sage from Pre icl ent R oose- ve lt in wh ich the Presid ent tres eel the danger to the n itecl tates from the · present war. It wa foll owing \•Varner's o pening address that ecretar y o f the avy Frank Kn ox appeared before the con vention and, in an eventful speech, m ade the startling announcement tha t the U .. Navy would hence forth pro tect all lea e­ lencl cargoes on th sea between the America n co ntinent and the waters around Iceland. Knox's announcement came nea r the end of h is address and a fter he had declared that, sin ce U nited tates occupatio n o f Iceland on J ul y 7, " Hitler and the Nazis were palpably lo in g the Battle of the Atlantic" a nd therefore were forced to attempt to break clown the bridge o f hips carrying supplies to Rritain. "If they did not sw iftly take succc [ul measures to break cl own this bridge," Knox sa id, " the defeat o[ England, the prime purpo e o[ the war, would become impossible. H they d id make such an all-o ut eHon, they would add the United States Navy to their numerou foe . " It was a grim cho ice, but Nazi acti on in the last few cl ay ha left 'liLO J. WARNER, AP little room for doubt of what they R etiring ational Com.mcuu ler of the A m erican Legion wi ll do." ln di cussing defense acti vities within o[ prompt deli very to Great Britain of acti vi ti es and leader hi p of labor and the co untry, Knox praised the American the material tha t will be helpful to incl u try, and the morale of the people Legion for its hare of promo ting arma­ her in the terrific truggle in whi ch he and the armed fo rces. men t preparati on a nd gave it credit fo r is engaged. " \ •Ve met with the British Legio n, an bringing about enactment of the IS­ "That mea ns deli very now," he de­ organiza ti on similar to the merican month Army service extensio n law, clared. "It mean deli ve ry when and Legio n, and ob erved its activitie 111 which Co ngress recently pa sed. where delivery will be of so me benefit. war time. \1\Te were privil eged to meet T he Secretary brought the delegates It does not mean the delayi ng o[ ai d to Prime Mini ter W in ton Churchill, and to their feet when he assail ed the Amer­ Great Britain. It means the actual de- were deeply impressed by his great lead­ ica First Committee. Later he paid ersh ip a nd ability." tribute to the ve tera ns and their repre­ • • • ome f the impression we received senta ti ves a t v.ra hington. were: vVhen Commander W arner turned ~eftuue P~t,wenU 'Wevt "The Briti h have made remarkable over affairs o[ the merican Legion to P E A CE and hannon)' with all na­ recovery [rom severe punishment la t the newly-e lected Ta tional Commander, tions is our sincere wish; but ... it is [all. ... They reali ze the eriousness of L ynn U. Stambaugh, one of the most our fi-rm belief that effectual measU1·e the present situation and are deter­ important yea r in Legion hi tory had of defense will tend to inspire that mined to win . ... T he morale of both been brought to a close. national self-resfJec t and confidence the civilian populati on and the armed The lilwaukee conventio n pledged at home which is the unfailing sou-rce forces is excell ent. ... T hey sore! y need support to the Government, President of respectability abroad, to check ag­ wa r ma teri als, munitions a nd certain Roosevelt and the W ar and avy d e­ gression and prevent war. food supplies ...." partments. The delegates ca lled [or re­ - THOMAS J EFFERSON. "Should E ngland fa il , our combat or pea l of the Teutrality Act. They asked po tential task will be all the harder ... for abolition of restrictions on the use • • • our need for con tinual maintenance of li ve ry of every re ource we posess which of meri ca n troops outside the nation's larger armies and navies will not only ca n be of help to Great Britain without bo undaries. They declared the defeat be necessary but absolutely essential for crippling our own nati onal defenses." o[ Hitler of prime importance. They self- preservatio n . . . the need and a ked unity in na tional defense affairs. As a result of W arner's declaratio ns, danger of se nding many of our armed But they refu sed to indorse con criptio n based o n his mi io n to E ngland last forces into the face of a blazing war and of ca pital and labor. pring, the Legion is now on record a actual combat will be much greater." The conve ntio n rand undoubtedl y favoring " the delivery of all practi cable The mission arrived in a British resulted largely from act1 v1tl e during aid to Great Britain and those ali gned coastal town late o ne afternoon and, the year Commander W arner was in with her in their fi ght for freedom con­ after some delay, reached Lo ndon after offi ce. si tent with the building of our national blackout time. At the ho tel first in­ T he Legion 's participatio n in H ome defense," the elimination of bottlenecks structi o n were what to do in case o[ Defense units was one of the most im­ in defense industries, the feeding of an air raid warning. A Sunday stroll portant activities of the year. A the people in German-occupied countries, d isclo eel people bu tling off to church, Legio n pla n for \ 1\To rld v\Ta r veterans' and is opposed to profiteering in de­ merry window-shoppers walking around participatio n in the move was outlined [ nse work. to President R oo evelt, . W arner cau­ bomb cra ters in the street and idle T he Legio n's a ti o n a I Executive tio ned against complacency concerning curiou wa tching workmen raze a bomb­ Committee praised Warner and the aircraft warning and air raid precaution struck building. commissio n "[or the se rvice they have se rvices. rendered The merica n Legio n a nd the T he mi sion obse rved : "This is practi cal working insurance Ameri ca n people, a nd for the valuable against disaster when it threatens," he T hat the average E nglishman has the and first-ha nd informatio n they have said. H e added that E ngland was slow arn e privileges today as he had ten years brought u ." in etting up such services at a time ago with very few exceptio ns. For the when "bombing was considered a prac­ The miss io n left lew York, February mo t part he is going abou t hi busines , tica l joke," but when the ra ids began 5 and returned farch 6 after an 18-day talking and enjo ing himse lf as much as it was rea li zed tha t air raid wardens and visit in E ngland. po ible under the circum ra nees, with­ [ire fi ghters "were reall y the fro nt line " \1\Te went as fact gatherer and ob­ o ut government interference. servers for T he Ameri ca n Legion," boys." T he oap box orator is still perched W arner's ob ervation o[ the British W arner said. " Our purpose at all times o n the street corner, but what he has was to serve the Legio n's intere t and situati on resul ted from fi r t-hand in­ to ay seemingly does not in tere t many. the interests of the nited rates. formatio n as he was head of a special Man y young couples were dancing in a commiss io n ent by the Legion to E ng­ " \ 1\Te visited Coven try and Birming­ large Lo ndon hotel corresponding close­ ham in the M idl ands. Bri stol on the la nd to obse rve methods of civili ans in ly to night cl ub of the U ni ted rates. defense work. west coast. Portsmouth, outhampton, The movies are well fi lled and merica n En trance o[ Soviet Russ ia in to the war Bournemouth, Folkestone and Dover on comedies eli cit gales of laughter. brought fo rth the following omment the cha nnel coa t. \ 1\Te were with the Tran porta tion faci litie have slowed from \Va rner: rmy, the Navy a nd the R oyal Air "\1\T hatever aid Stalin ca n give in re­ Force. \ 1\Te inspected the Home Guards. clown co nsiderably, es peciall y at night. sisting Hitleri sm is incidenta ll y·of bene­ W e studied air raid precautions. \1\Te Ga oline for privately owned cars is fi t to in ere peoples everywhere. But visited factori es engaged in the produc­ rationed and peed i curtail ed. that does no t ca ll for a cha nge in the tion of defense need . \ l\1e inspected T he Home Guards trai n several nights a ttitude toward the Commun i ti c Party ob erva ti on po ts, air ra id helter , com­ a week after doing their respective jobs in the U nited tates." munal feeding, anteen se rvices, the fire d ur ing the day. These men repre ent Commander W a rner sa id it was im­ briga de , some of the shipping docks, in grea t proportions the men of the materi al whether or no t we enter a and met with numero us officials of the Ia t war. Some, who were ra ther high

hooting wa r bu t stre sed the urgency Bri ti h Governmen t. \1\Te ob en •ed the CoxT~:~.. - eEn ox PAGE 38 19- Two IIKA's HEAD

Dr. llarmon's family in their living room. Le ft to right- Mrs. Harrnon, llen.ry An­ rlretv an.cl Norma Jean., Jeannette ancl Dr. llllr­ "ton. On opposite page-Dr. Hartnon (le ft) ancl President S mith.

• DR. H EN RY GADD HAR­ the Un iversity of Ohio, he received the J ea nn e tte, II ; No~ma J ean, 7, and i\!ON , K, has been elected president of Carnegie award which specifi ed that he H enry Andrew, almost 2. Drake Un ive rsity, Des Moines, Ia., and study under Dean H aggerty at the Uni­ Active in footba ll , basketball, debate H arli e Lawrence Smith, K, was chosen ve rsity o f Tviinne ota. H e was awarded a nd drama ti cs whi le in college, Dr. president of William W oods Junior Col­ his doctor of philosophy degree at H armo n keeps his weight at 180 for his lege, Fulton, Mo., to fill the vacancy i\linnesota and since has been recalled height of 5 feet, II inches, through out­ left by Dr. Harmon. Both men assumed four times for conferences o n curriculum door sports. H e is a Phi their new duties with the beginning of reorganization a t the university. and a Mason. the fa ll term. Dr. Harmon lived a year in China Dr. Harmon is Drake's seventh presi­ Se lection of Dr. Harmon, a speciali st wh ere he taught Engli sh and Ancient dent. The school was founded in D es in university admin istrati on and edu­ His tory at the Sixth Provincial Normal ioines in 1881 , when two men seeking ca ti onal psychology, was made after School, Anhwei. He also has traveled an appropriately beautiful site for the months of ca reful consideration of more extensive ly in J apan and Mongolia. new school, ca me upon a huge elm, than I 00 ca ndidates, the Drake board H e was elected head of the depart­ sy mmetrically formed, which stood in of trustees announced foll owing his elec­ ment of educa ti on at Culver-Stockton the midst of a wooded tract two miles tion. Dr. H armon succeeds the late Coll ege, Canton, Mo., in 1925. Being from town. Dr. Daniel \ 1\1 . Morehouse, who had highl y successfu l there, he became presi­ One of these men, Dr. George Car­ been at the Des Moines school for nearlv dent o[ William Woods in 1934. Dur­ pem er, later C h a n c e II or of Drake, 40 yea rs. ' ing his tenure at \1\ii lliam Woods the climbed the great tree, found the sur­ rounding land to his liking and ex­ Only 40 yea rs old, Dr. H armo n was enrollment grew from 196 to 313, new cl aimed to his companion, "Here we born in St. Paul, finn ., the son of Mr. buildings and equipment were added will build our university." and Mrs. A. D . H armon. The elder and bonded indebtedness retired. Today " Chancellor's Elm," o-named H armon was president of Cotner Col­ Dr. H armon was married in 1925 to a fter Dr. Carpenter, stands a a land­ lege, Lincoln , Neb., and Transylvania Helen Bernice Sherman, a graduate of mark on the university campus. The Coll ege, Lexington, Ky.; Mrs. Harmon Cotner. They ha ve three children, o netime " town" of Des Moines has was professor of sociology at Cotner become the ca pital of Iowa and the and later cl ean o f H amilton Coll ege, at Lexington. ci ty has grown so that it surrounds the • • • university. Dr. H armon was graduated [rom Cot­ "To PRESERVE and transmit that The important busines firms which ner in 1924· and received his master's which is known, to discover some of have developed in Des Moines are degree at Transylva nia the foll owing that which is not known, and to avail able to Drake tuclents for observa­ yea r. H e attended the graduate school ·et man in his proper relati on to tion and study a nd also offer oppor­ at the Univer ity of Chicago for four his fellow man and his God is the tunities for employment. Sixty per cent summers where he was the first student purpo e of educa ti on."- From the of Drake student work for part of their to compl ete a major in university ad­ President's M essage of D r. H enry expense . Drake' employment office ministra ti on. In addition to fellow­ Gadd H annon ufJon being elected functions the year round and places ships at the University of Chicago and head of Dral< e University. both student and graduates. 20 COLLEGES

Drake University Calls Dr. Henry Gadd Harmon; Harlie Lawrence Smith Succeeds Him as President of William Woods College

ln I 882 , a t the close of its first year, urba nity rather than sophisti cati o n and mini trati on at Tran ylva ni a for se veral Dra ke University had fo urteen grad­ students from aero s the country gTow years. u ates. June of 1941 fo und 207 student ro feel more at home o n D rake' cam­ Leaving Cul ver-S tockton, mith was receiving degrees fro m Dra ke' se ven pus than they did " back home." executive secretary of the board of high­ coll eges: liberal arts, fin e art , commerce In football , Drake's good. he's not er education of the Di ciples of Christ, and fin a nce, Bible, educa tio n, law a nd in the Big T en, but every season she with offi ce at Indianapoli , until ca ll ed pharmacy, a nd the Graduate Di vision. ta kes a shot a t o ne or two of the big to William ·w ood . Drake offers its tudents specia li zed time teams and gives them so mething mith was acti ve in aHairs of the work in a vari ety of fi elds. pioneer tO think a bout. fra ternity whi le in sch ool, serving as in the fi eld of radio educa ti o n, the mi th, 4 1 yea rs old, is a na ti \'e of president of Kappa chapter. He is a Dra ke sc hool of radio wa s the first of Maryville, Mo. H e was educa ted in p ast governor of the Kentucky-T enne - its kind. Dra ke students broadcast more Central High School at Kansa City and see District of Kiwa nis Internati onal. than 500 programs each yea r over com­ received his bachelor's degree at Tran­ His ho bbie of horse back riding and mercia l statio ns a well as a number of sy lva nia in 1922 and his master' at the rea ding come na tura ll y from his under­ coast-to-coast broadcasts over NBC, CBS same schoo l three years la ter. graduate acti vities of basketball , debate a nd 1\ lutua l. Following Dr. H armon's foo tsteps, and student organizatio ns. R ed hair Drake is a school which has reached Smith was head of the educa tion de­ and fa ir complex io n, he is 5 feet 7 a ha ppy medium in most things, but partment of Culver-Stockton from 1936 inches ta ll and weigh 155. H e is mar­ excels grea tl y in one thing- the Drake to 1939 after he had been connected ried a nd the father of a boy, Harlie L., R elays. This annual track cl assic is with the department of busine s ad- Jr., 14. known coast-to-coast a the "America n Olympics, " and puts Drake U niver ·ity prominently in the news each A pri 1 when it is R elays time. Drake is neither toddling with yo uth nor moss laden with age. The school is 60 yea rs old with just enough tradi­ ti on to make it interesting. " Old lain" for insta nce, (the administratio n build­ ing and most venerable of the 14 ca mpus structures) is ivy covered . But Drake also has a Student U nio n completed in 1940 and a new aviation labora tory which ho uses the government-spo nsored C ivili an Pilo t Training program. Students come from practi ca ll y all of the 18 states, a nd there's alwa ys a few from H awa ii or so me fo reign country. But the hometowners like Drake, too, a nd there are everal hundred Des •Joine name found in the enrollment li st of between 1,500 and 2.000. Drake is known as the " fri endly Famecl .schoo l. " I ts tudent bod y tends toward Drake R elays ~HELLO BILL'

J n d g e J o h n S. McClelland, Ai\I, n ew l y - e l ec t e d ~Hello Elks' Grand Exalt­ e d Rul e r , ge t s riotous welcome home. Center­ His family: Left to right, Spence McClelland, Mr s. McClelland, Judge American' McClelland, Mr s. John E. McClel­ land, and Lt. John E. McClelland.

+ J uDG E J oH , SPEN CE Mc­ CLELLAND, AM, of Atl anta, ele ted Grand Exalted Ruler of the Benevolent and Pro tecti ve Order of E lks in June, imme­ diately launch ed Ameri ca's 500,000 Elks inLO a war on Fifth Columnists and sa boteurs and into a training program for boy . Even the familiar E lk greeting " H ell o Bill" has been ch anged. H ereafter it will be " H ello Ameri can" the new ruler told a crowd of several thousa nd well ­ wi shers upon his return to Atlanta from the Philadelphia convention in June. "We put so-call ed Fifth Columnists a nd aboteurs o n notice that the 1,- 400,000 men- the fl ower of our ari on­ in tra ining in our Army camps have our full support," J ucl ge McClell and aiel in explaining the order's interest in Army trammg. " \1\le will brook no interfer­ ence with this program to protect and defend Ameri ca. " ny man or group of men who at· tempt to sa botage the sacrificial services of these meri ca n deienclers will be dea lt with promptly and firmly." Calling the European war a " whirl­ pool of madness," Judge McClell and sa id he was confid ent the world would be saved by the eternal virtues of char­ ity, justi ce, brotherl y love and fidelity. "I have appo inted a Committee on National Defense and public relati o.ns a nd we have organized a service for the recruiting and train ing o f young men for the rmy Air Corp . The boys we shall recru it are those who lack the re­ quired two yea rs of college. "These boy wi ll be ' known a Flying Elks and when they enter the servi ce they will continue to remain a se parate unit. "I am the father of two sons, so there­ fore I am greatly interested, from sev­ eral different angles, in the yo ung men e~ c#oLJd, FATHER-SON BANQUET of our country. + N EARLY 100 active mem­ in every 50 in the H ou e of R epresenta­ " To other time in the history of the bers of the Univer ity of Cincinnati tive and in the enate. world ha education been so neces ary Alpha-Xi chapter, alumni, rushees, a nd Todd Eilers, assi tant to the president and valuable as it is to the young man their fathers were present for the sixth ol A. P. treitma nn Bt cuit Company in of today. In these trying time when annual father-son banquet, Sept. II , Ci ncinnati , empha ized in his speech the cau e of Liberty trembles upon her most successful in the chapter's hi tory. the excell ent training in a fraternity for throne and we see the threat of the dic­ H eld in the Great H all of the U. C. success in busi ness. Every member, Mr. tators hovering a b ove our peaceful Student Union, fathers of ru h men had Eilers said, takes on as much responsi­ shores, we feel the need of the counsel, the opportunity to ask questions ami to bilit y as his abilities permit in a frater­ ingenuity and resourcefulness of the meet prominent alumni members. Later nity. Every job, ra nging from chair­ well-educated American yo uth and man­ they visited the Alpha-Xi chapter house. manship of a dance to the pre idency, hood. Headlining the li st of peakers was ca ll s upon a boy's best abilities in so und "I believe in the spirit of fraternity. Dr. Freeman H . H art, ational Execu­ budgetary planning, selling, publicizing, So-called statesmen and scholars through­ tive Secretar y, widely known for his persuading, and in general gives a world out all of the ages of the past have pre­ History of Pi K appa AifJha and a mov­ of va luable experience. dicted that the world was hovering upon ing speaker. Dr. H art pointed out that, E. R aymond Mos , former National the brink of di sas ter, but she never while less than l % of the population Secretary of IIKA, listed three most vital toppled then; she is always sa ved by of this country is affili ated with frater­ decision in a man's life: the choice of the eternal virtues incorporated in the his religion, the choice of his wife, and nities, more than 80% o f the coun try's principles of brotherly-love found in the leadership comes from fraternity men, the choice of his fraternity. H e ju ti ­ ritual of all American fraternities and fi ed the inclusion of fraternity choice and added that one in ten members of fraternal organizations." beca use that choice determines for many the President's Cabinet is a ITKA , two .Judge McClelland was born Feb. 2, yea rs, and possibly for li fe, the mold of 1891 , at Stone Mountain, Ga. H e at­ a man 's fri endships a nd associa ti ons. tended University School for Boys, was Mo s emphasized the gravity of the graduated from the University of Geor­ decision, w a rn ed against snap judg­ gia with a law degree in 1910, and was ments, and told what ITKA affiliation immediately admitted to the bar. had meant to him ever since he "arrived In 1917, .Judge McClelland was elect­ via freight train" at the University of ed to the Atlanta Board of Aldermen Florida from Texas. Because of his and two years later was elevated to fraternity affiliation, he said, he is a Mayor Pro T ern . In 1920, he beca me a stranger no place in the entire nation, member of the Park Board and the next for he knows that within a day or two year was named to the Police Board. he can find a fratemity brother. H e was elected Solicitor of the Criminal Toastmasrer Herbert Koch, executive Court in 1929 and appointed to the vi ce president of the Guardian Bank, judgeship ten years later. H e was elect­ mixed humor with seriousness in his in­ ed to a six-year term as judge in o­ troducti ons and headed a n able alumni vember, 1940. con1mittee including H arry C. Ander­ so n, ·general sales manager of the Globe­ A founder of the Lawyer Club of '\,Vernicke, Co. in Cincinna ti ; Todd Atlanta, he has long been a leader in Eilers; Earl W agner, pre iden t of the legal circles and the reli gious and civic TOASTMASTER KOCH Klapp ert Insurance Agency and of the life of his city and state. H e served the Mixed humor and seriousn ess Cincinna ti alumni; Ed W agner, of the Elks lodge in many capacities before '\1\lagner Bottling Co.; Dr. Irvin Straeley; being elevated to the exalted ruler's and Attorney H erbert Shaffer. chair. H e is a Mason, a Shriner, a mem­ Among alumni pre ent were: Curtis ber of the Atlanta Athletic Club and the Berre&ford, Cedric Vogel, R alph Yeager, Atlanta Alumni Chapter of Pi Kappa George Metzger, William Sc hmid, Allen Alpha. '\!\Then he has a few hours away Li hawa, H arry Ballman, Eri c Schultz , from his many duties, he plays golf or R obert Stadtler, and Dr. R obert M. · fishes. Schell. For three yea rs he was an officer of - - IT KA-- his Alpha-Mu cha pter, and in 1911 was v\1 I L L I A '[ .BARTLEY, Gamma- u's a District President of the Fraternity. alumnus counselor, has resigned his po­ .Judge McClelland married Miss Tina sition as editor of the University of Hadley in 191 5. They have two sons. Iowa News Bulletin in order to become one rece ntly graduated from Emory editor of the H awa1·den (l a.) Independ­ University and a second lieutenant in ent. f-Ie was graduated from the Uni­ the Army stationed at Atlanta. The ver it y of Iowa and received his Juris other, a graduate this year of the Uni­ Doctor degree from the law col lege. versity of Georgia, planned to enter -- fll\A -- medical school this fall. Pt K APPA ALPII A took over the top spot A brother, Judge Ralph McClelland, among the lawyers in New Orleans this is a member of Psi chapter, and .Judge year when Eta's H enry H ammett, '17, was elected pre ident of the ew Orleans Bar Ralph McClelland's son, John Harold. PRESIDENT WAGNER Associati on. H e is a former editor of TI-lE is a member of Upsilon. H eads JTKA's in Cincinnati SHIELD t\ NO DI AMON D. 23 + Bv CONT RAST with the ion of the ideals and objective of Greek-leu er orga nizations from which it the group it represe nts. sprang, fra ternity journa li sm in the 3. It is a permanent genera l record U nited States is relative ly yo ung and o f the activities and accomplishmems not very well known o utside its own o f that group, individuall y and col­ circle. Yet it has become an important lectively. fe ature of the nati o nal fra tern ity se t-up. 4. It facilitates the work o[ the na­ Quite a number of fraternity a nd so­ ti o na l fra tern ity and its officers as rorit)' magazin es. in fa ct, have a dis­ a n officia l channel of commun ica tion. tin ct! pro fe io nal fl avor a tO appear­ 5. It enables the seyera l chapters, a nce. contents. type dress a nd ge nera l or even va ri ous fraternitie . to make appea l. commo n ca use as the occasion w~r ­ On the whole. the fraternity press has rants. had les public a ttention than it prob­ ably deserves. This is largely because T his form o f fraternity activity is its circulatio n is necessa ril y confined tO na tura ll y quite ge neral by now. R e­ the po nsoring groups, consisting a lmost membering that the combined member­ wholl o[ a lu mni a nd undergraduates. ship of fraternities and sororities is es ti ­ Another reason , however, is that onl y in mated at more than 1,500,000, with more recent yea r. have these publica ti o ns than 100,000 undergraduate , it is ea y rea ll y come into their own. tO understa nd the tatement in Frat er­ nity Mont h that " the nationa l fra ter­ Sporadic attempts to launch the first nitie a nd sororities pend hundreds of such periodica ls were made during Civi l thousands o f do llars yea rl y for the vVar cl ay but none o f these survived printing of their magazines." more than a few iss ues. The B eta Theta Pi. published b y the fra ternity of that Figures based on an independent name, i generall y credited with bei ng check indica te a tO ta l of at least 230 e~e~ t!J-~aie~ M~ to GREATER SCHOLASTIC SERVICE the o ldest of the frilternity magazines. such publi cati o ns. man y o[ them with It was established in 1872. Pi Kappa B~ JAMES E. POLLARD, substa ntial circulati ons. As might be lpha's SHI ELD AND DtA ~ I OND is o ne of Alpha-Rho expected, fratern ity publica ti o ns are the o lder o nes, being in its 5 1st year. more numerous than those o[ sororities. The fraternity and sorority press, as Others published for 30 yea rs or more This is not only because there are more . it now [unctions, se rves a number of include these: R ainbow, Delta Tau fratern iti es, but doubtless because the rather definite purposes: Delta, 64; the Phi Gamma Delta, 63 ; men as a group are better able finan­ I . It provides a tangible bond giv­ Palm, Alpha T au Omega, a nd the cially a nd otherwi se to ca rry on such in g further un ity to groups frequently Shield, Phi Ka ppa Psi, 6 1; Della , Sigma enterprises. sca ttered from the Atlantic to the ' u, a nd the Quarlerl)', Delt a Upsil on, Pacific and [rom the Gulf to Canada. H ow general uch publica tions are to 58: Caduceus, Ka ppa Sigma, 56; Desmos, 2. It is a medium for the expres- the Greek world may be judged from D elta Sigma D elta , a nd the Ce ntau r, the fact that a ll but two or three of the Alpha Kappa Kappa, 46; News Leiter, 60 or m o r e fratern iti es comprising Phi Kappa igm a, 40; Quarter/)'· Phi ·• ]cun es E. P.ollard , .d irec tor o f the the a tional I nterfra ternity Conference C hi, 39; j ourna l, Sigma Phi Epsil on, Sch ool o f Journalism , Ohio S tate Uni- publish them. So do a t least ten other 38; Quarterly, , and the Ulli­ 1!ersity, was born in Chambersburg, " ocial" fraternitie which are not corn , , 37: and the H exagon, Pen n ., in 1 894. H e was graduated from O h io State in 1916, recei 1> ing his A. B. I. C. members. Simil arly, they are pub­ Alpha Chi Sigma, 3 1. ublication s m ul ath letics, bei.n g hard one. 17or example. within a few and b y seven no n-member groups. They marw ger of th e 1>a rsity track Learn in are also reported for these additional yea rs a fter its founding the spo n ors of 1916. H e won th e W ill!am J e rmi n.gs one of the older ones were ready to Bryon fJ ri:e in 1924. clas ifi ca ti o ns: Pro fessio nal In terfrater­ yi lei up its ghost. I t was taken over T-Ie is offiliatecl with ruunerou s jour­ nity Conference m e mb e r , 45; hon­ nalistic orgnnizations, ancl was natio nal temporaril y by undergnclu;ues a nd has oraries, seven ; and a ll other men's (or f>r esitlent irr 1939-41 o f Kappa Tau mi xed). 4 1; vVomen's Profe io nal Pan­ b een published regularly now for a ha l[ Alpha. century without seri ous interruption. lf Pu blished book s in clude sorne on hell enic As ociation members. 17; other this little epi sode mea nt anything, it r.ewS f>aper law, " H istory o f th e 47th women's profess io nal, six; all other U. S. lnfetl with women ·s, I 0. m ant two things: tha t there was a place i n. the Worlcl W ar, and " The Journal for such peri odica ls and. if they we re of Jay Cooke." Since 1934 h e has been Both men's and women's publication to ;11n ount to an ything. the must be editor o f " T he O h ;o Newspoper." groups have permanent editorial oro-a n­ m ore tha n a mere activity or plaything. M r. Pollord's hobby is collectin g auto­ graphs. T-I e is married arul th e father iza ti ons. These are obviously in recog­ A ncl so it has proved. o f two children. nitio n of common problem and com-

2-1 mon interests. C ha irman o f the orority Size and Vonnat-Ther vary in deta il s of ca~e of Phi Mu llelta this is 12, for Phi Editors' Conference is H e le n C. Bower, format ye t fal l loosely into two g-roups: Clli it is 15, and offer D e troit, a nd pre ide nt o f the College those whos<" page are 6x9 or thereabouts, a 'unive.,al or 30-year ubscription" for and tho e which are 7x l0 or larger. THE .. 10, or 15 for life. The Phi amma Delta Fra te rnity Editors' A sociatio n is Le land SH IELD AND DJ A~ J OND is in the Iauer group i~ $2 a year or 25 for life. TilE SH IELD AND F . L e la nd, 'l.'KE. The la tter group in­ and the Alpha Ch i igma Hexagon and DtA~ t O:-ID co ts onl )' 10 for life. cl ude 60 member magazines. the Phi Chi Quarterly in the former. For bulk, ·orne of the magatines run to Mauagemcnt-Responsihility for the in­ Considering the diverse groups they ra ther surprising site. do£en, taken clividu.d magatincs ts al most wholl in more or less at random, howecl an average alumni hands. Some of the editors are r epresent, it i no t stra nge that these full -time men or they combine the edi torial publications vary widely in a ppearance, of 80 pages, plus cover. mong the larger ones were the Desmos, of Delta Sigma job with some other, like that of national ·ccretary. in conte nt a nd even in a ppea l. For ex­ Delta, and the Phi Chi Qual/t•rl\• with 108 ample, the oldest fraternity, Phi Beta pages each. The largest examined was a lt would be difficu lt if not impos ible Ka ppa, is represented by the American 128-page iss ue of the Phi Gamma Della. to select the "best" fra te rn ity magazine cholm· w hich is as d.i stinCLive a the Contents- These I arr, LOO, with indi­ vid ual publications but for the most part becau e too m a ny factors enter into society it elL s its name indicates, are rather standardized. There i some what constitute "best." r ' ' erthe l es~

this is essentia ll y a scho larl y publicatio n feeling that they are too stereotyped ye t certa in m agazines a re clearly amon g the yet unlike other fraternity p eri odicals this may be inevitable from their very better o ne as to general read er-a ppeal. nature. They usuall y include sections de­ it also caters to a genera l circula tio n vo ted to news of the national fraternity, of The li t tha t follows is emphatically not outside of the actual m embership. Fo r ind ividual chapters, of alu mni groups or exha ustive b ut i based chie fl y o n those n ews of specia l interest to m em bers, the individual alumni, and vital statisti cs, in­ individua l copies examined for the pres­ socie ty a l o publishes the Key R ej1o1·ter. cluding births, death and marriages. Fre­ e nt purpose. Besides THE SH IELD A D quently also there are district reports, un ­ T he list oE special o r pro fessio nal dergraduate accompli shmen ts, and news of DIAMOND, these seemed to have m aga­ group publica tio ns is too lo ng to be prize contes ts or awards. zi ne " oomph": Alpha Chi igma H exa­ recited here b ut severa l o thers m igh t be The fraternity magazi ne lends itse lf par­ gon, lpha Tau Omega Palm, D elta C hi ti cularly to feature stories about individual Quarterly, D elta Tau D elta R ainbow, n a med by way o f illustra tion . Sigma Xi members who stand out from the crowd. ( cie nce) is repre em ed b y its Quarterly; There has been a marked increase in the Ka ppa Sigma Caduceus, Phi l a ppa Psi Phi D elta Phi (law) b y the B rief; a nd use of pictures of office r , members, alumni, Shield, the Phi Gamma Delta . Phi Tau Beta Pi (e ng ineering) b y the Bent. cha pter houses and co nvention scenes. Ka ppa Sigm a ews L eller, Phi Ka ppa Advertising-This is often con picuous by Tau LauTel, Sigma lpha Epsil o n R ec­ Fo r reasons of time a nd sp ace fur­ its near-absence. Fraternity jewelers arc a ther discussio n he re i limited to frater­ stand-by and now and then one finds pro­ ord, j ournal, and the nity m agazines. n examina tio n o f some fess ional cards of a few alumni, along wi th T he ta Xi Unicom, w ith perhaps an 30 or m ore sho wed the fo llowing· trends printers' ads probably taken in trade. added "star" for the B eta Theta Pi, the F1·equency-Man ' arc quarterli es, others Sigma u Delta a nd the and ch aracte ristics: appear monthly during the school year, Emera ld. A PfJenrance and T opography-Their gen­ and still others have odd schedul es uch as eral appearance has greatl y improved in three, fi ve and seven i sues annua ll y. o rn e of the professional fraternit recent years. The have undergone "strea m­ ubscrifJtions- lt is quite evid ent that publicatio ns de erve a special world. lining." They have more eye-a ppeal and these publi cations are large!)' dependent vVh il e they have much in common with are easier to read. Much of this trans­ l'pon membersh ip sub criptions. Annual formation ha been due to the adoption of rates range from , I to . 2.50 and up, wi th those of the general fraterni tie , occa- newer type faces . the me of more legibl e single co p)' prices even more va ri able. Many io na ll y they a re quite different. The body t)'pes and, in particular. to mC'rc de­ fraternitie' offer a lifetime rate as in the Alpha Kappa Kappa CentauT, for ex- panmen tali 7ation and be l tcr .illustration. case of T il E HtEt.D AND DtAl\ tOND. In the CoxrTI.xut:n ox PAGE 3 25 Long studied aviation at the Embry­ R icld le Fl ying School at M iami, takin g Cleveland Club Prexy He Fell With His Ship the C. A. A . course offered by the gov­ ernmen t. Completing this co ur e with a grade of 94, he entered the Marine Corps. H e was one of two in a class of l 00 who went through the course of training with " no downs" aga inst him. T he day before the accident, M iss E li zabeth As hworth, of Mi a m i, his fi ancee, had visited Long at Pensacola. Donald H . Sapp, r n, aviation cadet, first cl ass, also of the iarine Corps, was the official Naval escort from Pen acola to Mechanicsville, N. Y. , w h e r e the funeral, in c h a rge of the American Legio n, was held. --IIKA-- Chandler Exhorts Young Dems • SENATO R A. B. CHA NDLER, K and n, was one of the principal speak­ ers at the biennial natio nal co nvention of the Young Democra ti c Clubs of America which was held in Louisville C. A. C. PRESIDENT FINNIE PILOT HERO LONG in August. Dies trying to save plane A. E. F. Vet, Shriner, Accountant, T he Young Democrats adopted resolu­ Twice SMC ti ons lauding Pres ident Roosevelt and • CHOOS ING to stay with his Secretary Hull for their conduct of in­ + GEORGE DoNALD FINNI E, plane for a forced landing after a mid­ ternational affa irs and urged aid for BE and AP, recently was elected presi­ air collision with a nother training ship Great Britain, Russ ia and China. dent of the Cleveland Athletic Club. an in a nine-ship formati on, Lawrence ]. Senator Chandler upheld Congress organization composed of 1,600 men. Long, rn, aviati on cadet, first class, U . S. fo r ex tending the se rvice of men in the Finnie, a na tive of Youngstown, 0 ., Marine Corps R eserve, was killed in rmy and urged nati onal support of the has li ved in Cleveland for 27 yea rs. He training June 7 at the Pensacola (Fla.) Pres ident. is managing partner of the firm of Wil­ Air Base. "Failure to extend service of soldiers," so n, Finnie and Company, certified pub­ Governmental in vest igation labeled the Senator aid, "would have brought lic accountants. the accident "unavoidable." T he in­ u nea rer the wa r than anything Con­ Gradua ted from v\ies tern R eserve in vestigators learned that Long's plane gress could have cl one." 1917, Finnie spent 21 months with the and one pi I o ted by Lieut. (Junior Louisvill e alumni gave a luncheon 37th Division, A. E. F. After the war Grade) Donald vV. vVeller, of the Coast during the co nvention for IIKA dele­ he fini shed his educa ti o n at Ohio State. Guard, locked wings. The wi ng tip and ga tes to the meeting. H e is a 32d degree Mason, member of left wing co ntrols of Lo ng's plane were the AI Koran Shrine and AI Sirat --IIK A-- torn loose. W eller's plane plunged to Grotto. H e also belongs to Sigma Delta earth, killing him instantl y. Four in a Row Chi. H e is fond of golf, bowling, bridge T hrough expert maneuvering, Lo ng FouR YEA RS and fo ur national offi cers and billiards. ri ghted his plane a nd waved to the fo r­ is the record of Alpha-Io ta in E ta Sigma Married, he live at 18420 Kinsman mation that he was attempting a landing Phi, nati onal cl assical honor society. Road, Shaker H eights, Cieveland. on the bay. Although dipping se veral Shelton Key, AI and D. , was elected Finnie had the unusual distinction of times, Long brought the craft under president of the classical fraternity at a being president of two undergraduate control as he neared the water and ap­ recent meeting in St. Louis. Last year chapters, Beta-Epsilon in 1916-17, and peared headed for a perfect landing Carl Mi ll er, AI , of Moss Point, Miss., Alpha-Rho in 1921. H e a] o was under­ when he hit an air pocket. The plane was secretary. graduate delega te to two conventions, suddenl y plummeted to the shallow Two years ago William C. Wofford, J ackso nville and ew Orlean s." H e was water in the bayou ca rrying Lo ng to his AI, of Drew, M iss., was vice president. a member of the Panhellenic council death. Three yea rs ago Ellis Finger, AI, of and since leaving school has served as Born June 13, 1920, Long was the so n Aberdeen, M iss., was pres ident. president of the Cleveland A I u m n i of Mr. and Mrs. L. ]. Long, of Ball ston Key is a brother of D. M. Key, former Chapter. Spa, N . Y., and the grandso n of i\llr. and president of M illsa ps College. --ITKA-­ Mrs. W. S. Cassin, with whom he spent -- TIK A-- Heads Hotelmen Again a part of his childhood in New York. CHARLES DuFFY III, Be, was unani­ ROB ERT B. SHERWOO D, TN, is publicity H e attended school in M iami, Fla. , man for the vVar Department at the mously re-elected president of the New where hi s p a r e n t had their winter Iowa Ordnance Plant, Burlington. Since York chapter of the Cornell Society of home, and was graduated from Sa ratoga leaving the U niversity of Iowa in 1939, H otelmen last spring. Since leaving (N. Y.) High School. H e enroll ed in Sherwood had been city editor of the Cornell University he has been affiliated the U nive rsity of Miami in 1938 and A tla.ntic (la..) News- T elegraph. with many of the leading hotels in the was working on his B .. degTee. Initiat­ East and at Miami · Beach, Fla. Now ed into local, Lo ng was a --TIKA -- he is associated with the General Out­ ch arter member of Gamma-Omega and FLOYD Ho KENHULL, BT, is the edi tor of door Advertising Co., Inc., ew York Circulation Magazine in Chi cago. He for­ was initiated in May, 1940, into Pi merl y worked for th e Capper Publica ti ons, City, in the offi ces of the vice pres ident, Kappa Alpha Fraternity. Topeka , Kan . directing sa les.

26 read y in eptember, J 939, the whole ommunit wa read y to accept it. "nder enter' di recti on, the program wa complete in every detai l. I t ap­ proach wa made from a pra ti al, ien­ tilic angle. The obje ti,·e were as fo ll ow: (I) T o make the p ople of Chatta­ nooga "safety con ciou " and to impre s upon them that a cident are unnece­ sary and expensive. (2) Coune y a m o n g dri ve rs and pedestri an . (3) Lowering of insurance rates to levels of neighboring communities. ( 4) a fety cou r e for chool to be added to urriculu m. (5) Erection of sign on highway en­ trance to th e city, advi ing visitor and local people to drive and wa lk sa fely.

from 43rd to 1st + AVERAG I NG 25 traff ic The need for a planned program was deaths a year for a p eriod of 15 year , apparen t but the first obstacl e that Chattanooga, T enn., fo und itself 4-3rd threatened the idea was lack of funds among the 51 cities in the 100,000 to to prepare poster and other materi al 125,000 population cl ass whw the 1938 for the chools. Some 40,000 pieces of acciden t dea th rate wa announced. safety material were o I I e c t e d and analyzed. Safety informati on appli able This terrific toll taken by traffic acci­ William dents not only resulted in a 2,000,000 to near ly eveq l subject on the schools' R. Senter , llf, annual property Joss but caused in ur­ curriculum wa fou nd. who wea r afe ty ance rates to moun t to a prohibitive Most of the booklets, pamphlets, po - toga in Challanooga. cal e. ter , pl ays, poems, slogans, etc., were The Junior Chamber of Commerce obtained withou t cost and the Provi­ (6) ooperation of thea tre through- was arou ed. They made a thorough den t Insurance Company of Chatta­ out the city and county tO include short traffic survey and decided to launch a nooga agreed to fin ance the purchase afety fi lms in their program . year round sa fety campaign. To direct of other materi al on afety. (7) Establishment of an acciden t re­ its ca mpaign, they named a phys ical ' '\T hile pl ans were go ing forward for porting bureau for the general public; educa ti on director of the city schools, classroom in tructi on, a barrage of pub­ broadcasting of traffi acciden ts. William R. Senter, Jr., i\I, '32, a head li city wa being maintained through (8) rrangement of on tests to re- of the Safety Committee. Becau e safe­ radio broadcast , s o u n d truck , and ward sa fety minded peo ple, thereby ty consc iou nes ca n be t be built in newspaper articl es, to ell the com­ sti mulating man others to fo llow their children, empha is wa placed on the munity on afety and sa fety edu ario n. example. school program. B the time the sa fety curricul um was COX T I X \ "Eil OX P AG I!: tJ 2 27 vide adequate fa cilities (or effici ent t A PLA:-1 to (>IH.Iin Delense administration. Savin g> Bo nds through the accumulation BUY ·· w e propose that you organize yo ur of Defense Savi ngs Stamps by un de~­ dupter as a gift group so that every graduate chapter; o f the Fr ~ter ni ty wa; member cil n make a contribution to the placed before the chapter · m an open fund. Your contribution also ca n be leu er [rom the Pi Kappa lpha Endow­ made tO serve the interest o[ our coun­ m ent Fund thi month. DEFENSE try through aiding the prognm of Na­ T hro ugh easy weekl y ;;!V in gs o f De­ tiona l Defense. We. the peopl e of the fense avin gs Stamps, Ch:1rlc K. Dunn. nited States, are now engaged in a chairman o[ the Fund tru>l et:s. urged program [or the protection of our free­ undergTads to make mall regul ar con­ dom a nd sa fety. Our country need s tributions tO a Defense Savmgs ramp STAMPS the assistance o[ every citizen to pro' ide book which eventuall ' could be con­ the mea ns o[ defense. vened into a Defen e Bond. " You have before yo u now the op­ "" ' e have before us a tremendous portunity to make a contribution to the ta;k," Dunn declared. "But we ca n ~ Pi Kappa A lpha Endowment Fund and m eet the challenge and accompli ; h the to serve yo ur country a t the sa me Lim e. task through all -o ut cooperati on. " T he United State Treasury is offering Chapters were urged to take con­ ENDOWMENT to the public several se ri es of Defense certed action on the plan. Further 111 - Savings Bonds. The bonds are an ex­ formati on cil n be obtained by writing cell ent medium of investment, secured C harl es K. Dunn. '105 Colorado Bldg., FUND b y the full faith and credit of the 'N ashington, D . C. United States Government, and yield a "T he award will be admini tered by The leu er outl ining the Defense Sav­ [air interest return. a competent committee under regula­ ings Stamp plan foll ows: "r\ttractive Defense Savi ngs Stamp tions tha t will o ffer every undergrad­ "The Trustee o[ the Pi Kappa A lpha a lbums for accumu la ting the purchase uate member an opportunity to shil re in Endowment Fund beli e,·e th il t the un­ price o[ the U ni ted Savings Bonds are the awards. d ergril cluate members of the Fraternity now avili lable [or mounting Savings wa nt to have a part in the work o[ the "Then we pla n to establish Stamps in denominations o[ 10¢, 25¢, }'unci. a student loan fund to ass ist 50¢, 1.00 and 5.00. It is proposed "The benefit [rom the Fund will be­ 3. worthy and deserving under­ that yo u secure o ne o[ these albums for come ava il able onl • after the Fund has graduate members in meeting each member of yo ur chapter. Then, accumulated sufficient rewurces to do fin ancial obli gations incidental to the1r each member wi ll undertake to fill a n the job. The resources must ome from academic work. The administration of album with stamps by mounting a stamp the volun tary contributions of members the Joan fund will be by a committee of the des ired denominati on period­ who are inspired by their loya lty and function in g under regulations that will ica ll y. through their devotion to Pi Kap_pa Al­ ass ure equ itable and effi cien t use of the " Jf each member will add a stamp, pha to make the nece sa ry sacnf1 ce. [unci. even of the 10¢ denomination, to his "The aims and objectives of "Finall y, there are many a ids album at each meeting of the chapter, the Fund should be made clear ,, to undergraduate chapters that we wi ll quickly acqu ire a handsome addi­ f. to the members of every chap­ ,.,. • wi ll be of substantial benefit to ti o n to the Endowment Fund. The al'­ ter. F irst of all , we plan a them in the conduct of their bums when fi ll ed wi ll be ma iled LO the N ational H eadquarters Building to affairs. vVhen [unci are ava il abl e these Trustees to be used in the purchase of house the Genera l Office and make aids wi ll be developed and made ready United States avings Bonds. a vai labl e adequate facil iti es [or e[[icient to se rve the chapters. "It wi ll not requ ire great sacrifice on administration o[ the Fraternity's busi­ "The objectives set [or accom plish­ the part of an y o ne to fi ll a n a lbum at ness ilffa irs; to provide [or the preserva ­ ment through the Endowment Fund are the rate of say, one stamp per week. ti o n and display o[ the Fraternity's designed to build pre ti ge for Pi Kappa T he cumulative result will be amazing memorabi li a and to meet other housin g Alpha and to assist the chapters mate­ a nd it wi ll redound to the credit of our needs o[ the Fraternity. ri all y in their membership e EEorts. The l: raternitv. This idea will lend itself to "\•Ve propo e that the architectural incli iclua l benefits will be invaluable e xceptio J ~a ll y fin e pub I i c it y for Pi d es ign of the National H eadquarters rushing aids. The N ational H eadquar­ Kappa Alpha as a progressive fraternity Building will co mbin e dignity and ters Buil ding will a ttract favorable at­ and o ne a li ve to the needs for defense bea utv in a structure that wi ll create a tention to the Fraternity a nd will pro- of our country. You will do your bit in f avo r ~ b l e impression on those who visit this fine a nd patriotic cooperative ef­ it and a building to which every mem­ • • • fort, won't you? ber o[ Pi Kappa Alpha will point with S tudent awards for academic cx­ "You can include comributions from pride. lt wi ll add materi all y to the ccllc n cc, sch o lar sl1ips for wot·thy alumn i o f yo ur chapter in yo ur group presti ge o[ Pi Kapp a Alpha il ncl will be tnc mbcr a ncl e r ection of a Na­ gift and suitable recognitio n wi_ll be tio n a l H ca dt1uart c r s Memoria l a n impressive aid in rushing. Building arc projects which h o uld accorded each chapte•· that contnbu_tes " Next. we propose to pro­ e nlis t the s upport of ever y Pi ; J ,000 or more. Perhaps recogn ition vide a g roup o[ individual Kappa Alpha. Gifts of cash , prop­ for advance gifts ca n be incorporated e rty, securities, e ndown1c nts, insur­ in the architectural deta il of the build­ 2.. awa rds to undergraduate mem­ ance a nd o ther valuables a r c car­ ber who eli tinguish themselves n e tly sought. ing design. Contribution by chapters through high academic sta nding, b y For fm·thcr information, write to will accumulate toward the SI ,000 goal rendering exceptional ervi ce to their CHARLES K. D UNN, Chairmcm [or special recognition. The name of every comributor wi ll be recorded, re­ chapters, or through unusual participa­ Pi Kappa Alpha E ndowm e nt F und ti on in extra-curriculum activiti es that 405 Colo r a do Building gardle ·s o[ the amount o[ his contribu­ wi ll refl ect fa vo rabl)' on the chapter. Wa hing ton, D. C . ti o n."

28 1~exas Legislature's GAVEL POUNDER

Homer Leonar d , Brilliant Lone Stat• Political F igure, Guides House with Ability, Wit and Diplomacy

School of Mines where he became a lll ember of Pi Kappa Alpha. I fe la ter gradua ted from the Uni versity uf i\ Iis­ so uri with a B. . itt engin eering. Afu·r graduati on he tauglu science and matl,e­ ma ti cs in high ;cho<> l a nd in his alma ma ter. Fo ur years he worked as a genlogi t for oil compa ni e , then beca me edi tor a nd publi sher of the M cA llen ! T exas) Monitor. ince he ha been in the legis­ lature he has studied law a nd pa,sccl his bar examination in I 939. H e is a man of many trades, good at all of them, and Horne r Leonard, AK, ancl h is wife , yo ung enough to Jearn a few more. a native T exan, Leo nard live with his wife a nd two with their daugh­ young daughters, Barbara Mae a nd Mar­ ters, Barbara Mae cia Fae, in an a partment in the T exas and Marcia Mae. Sta te Capitol a t Austin; a nd when he ca n spare time from his many duties he By ma y be fo und o n a ll fo urs, playin g­ " hoss" for the Barbara and Marcia, or shooting a fi lm record of their live . W. E. LOWRY H e enlisted in the army for the dura­ Alpha-Omicron ti o n of the war before he was 20 and is now a member of the Ameri ca n + IT ts NOT by a ny accident Legio n. H e is also a faithful and co n­ that Homer Leonard, AK, Speaker of the sc ientious fason, Baptist, and R otaria n. cell ent presid ing offi cer, he wen t in as T exas House of R epresentatives, is re­ H e is known as one of the best info rmed Speaker of the H ouse unopposed o n his garded as one of the outsta nding young men in public a Hairs in Texas, and is forty-second birthday last J anuu y. politica l figures in the Lone Star State. probabl y more po pular with fell ow Ever ince he started on h is va ried As Speaker of the H ouse in the 47th legislators than any speaker in recent ca reer as railroad telegrapher, coll ege Legislature, his leadership is man ifes ted yea rs. professo r, editor and publisher, geologist in the important bills which have been H omer Leo nard is regarded by all and lawye r, he has been impressing passed by the House. An omnibus tax who know hi m as a real human being, people with his ability, kee n wit, and bill providing '22,000,000 in new taxes, versed in the rule of the game, uncon­ knack of getting along with eve rybod y. a n educa tion hi ll providing much need­ sciously promoting himself into the feel­ H omer Leonard began his political ed ex pansio n fo r Texas co ll eges, provi­ ing a nd fr iendship of everyo ne. career by doing the impossible, succe s­ sio n f01· funds fo r a momentous social H e wa given the R otary Club's medal full y running for the legisla ture o n a security and teacher retirement measure as the outstand ing citizen of his home "Good Government League" ti cket in -all these and numernus small items city, fc lien, in 1940. T exans expect suppo edly airtight Democra tic Hidalgo have gone aero s the H ouse calendar to con fer man y more honors on h im County in the Lower Rio Grande Valley expeditiously, with H omer Leonard a t before he is done with publi c li fe. of T exas. Since that first ele tio n in the helm. A key to the deep a Hection h is col­ 1930 he has represented his d istrict with­ H e is probably wi thout a u peri or a leagues feel for h im may be fo und in out interruption . a parliamentarian . H e ha a cl ear, pre­ this expression of his faith in them: His abilities and popularity made him cise voice, a j udicial a ptitude, a nd a way "Of all the hundreds of representa­ a valuable member of the legisla ture and of oftening the shock of deci io ns so ti ves with whom I have se rved in six won for h im the assignment as ch airman that there are no hard feelings. terms. I have found very few who were of the powerful revenue and appro pria­ Born in Licking. T exas Coun ty, Iis­ no t abso lute! sincere in thei r de ire to tions commiuee. R ecognized as an ex- ouri, J an. 14, 1899, he attended R olla se rve the folks back home."

29 Inspect Big Guns By John R. Baldwin , Br + CO NG RE Si\f EN John J. Sparkman, rA, and Ezeki el C. Gath­ ings, AZ , in peered the harbor defense of San Francisco on Sept. 7 a nd 8. Sparkma n was chairman of a committee of four which also included Cli fford Davis of T ennessee and Dewey Short (rom fi ouri, the onl y Republica n. Foll owing a dinner in their honor at the St. Francis Yacht Club give n by Gen. Ernes t D. Peek, Chief of StaH for the inth Corps Area, the Congressmen in­ spected the Pres idio of San Francisco, headquarters of the inth Corp Area; adjoining Fort Winfield co tt, coast ar­ tillery fort at the so uth end of the Golden Gate Bridge; and Forts Baker, Barry, and Cronkite north of the bridge but under the juri diction of the Fort Scott reservation. r\ ccompani ed by high ra nking army officer , the congressional party vi sited the barracks of men of the 6th, I 8th and 56th Coast Arti ll ery R egiments and inspected the arti ll ery of each of these orga nizations including the 16-inch gun , the most powerfu l batteri es in the United tate . Prior to their arrival at San Francisco the committee had visited harbor de­ fenses so uth of the city and following their vi it to the Golden Gate proceed­ eel north to vVashington and Oregon before rewrning to the nation's capital. JTKA 's wi ll note the coincidence that Snake Snagger two Pi Kaps should make up half the personnel of one of these special com­ mittee and more interesting till, that 11 S~e Strvu, alJ.o.ui .Memplu~ Balded. they houlcl be Sparkman and Gathings, for J ohn J. Sparkman is the man who initiated Ezekiel C. Gathings into the t OP EN SEASON o n snakes ill By KENNETH D. MOFFETT bonds of the Fraternity. Memphis this year ended only after Promotion Editor --TIKA -- Dudley D . Dumas, Z, the "St. Patrick of The Memphis Press-Scimitar Cotton R ow," had hung up anothe• Fights Sabotage snake- nagging record. Nine yea rs ago, Mr. Dumas and are­ • LT. FRANK J. S!i\!JNGTON, As a snake-s nagger, Mr. Dumas' fame porter were chatting. The reporter rr, has been ca rrying o n highly confi­ has spread far and wide. The farther suggested Mr. Dumas ought to turn one dential instructional duties in the In­ it spreads, the more concern it causes, of hi cotton snakes into mi lk. That ternal ecurity In telligence Bra nch of for most folks wonder why any sane he ought to dona te one to The M emjJhis the Canadian Army. H e i a former ma n would go in for chasing s n :.~kes in Press-Scimit01·'s Cynthia Mi lk Fund. H e i\ IC of the Tulsa chapter. such a big way. did. That started his snake drives. The But Mr. Dumas doesn't beat the fir t drive netted II snakes. His second A native of foose J aw, Sask. , he left bushes and bottoms of the 'liss issippi brought 30-odd nakes. His third gath- the university before graduation to as­ and W olf Rive r basins for r ea l reptiles. sume duties at Lethbridge, Alta., an im­ The snakes he catche are made of cot­ Dudley Dumas displays cotton portant center for both army and air samples just rnked up from the ton. In every cotton firm·, sample force training, with a large foreign ele­ Duntas cotton finn's sarnple room rooms waste I itters the flnu1. But it's floor. S till good cotton, but it ment, requiring co ntinual watch against still good cotton. This rutton has been won't bring to price, so it's snaked abotage. torn from the big bale:. as samples a nd off to be reconditioned and re­ bated. Dumas is flanked by two "I am giving in tructi on which in­ even tuall y finds it way as waste into fair employees, Thelma Thompson cl ucl s training in Thompson sub-ma­ bags, 10 or 12 feet in leng th, fo ur or (left) and Thelma Ruth Duffel. chine gun, the famous Bren li ght ma­ fi ve feet in diameter. When one is Little Ruth Crawford, 7, (at chine gun, certain types of poisonous filled with cotton waste they " ·nake" it right) stands by two snakes do­ gase and a trenuou cour e in phy ical to market. That's how cotton men ga ve nated by h er daddy, who was King Cotton in la s t yea r 's Cotton training," Lt. imington reports. it the name of " nake." Carnival. 30 eredup50-o dd nakes. Thisyearheended three who are vitall y concerned in hi hi s snake drive with 143 sn;ke dona ti ons every cl ay life-Blair Wright, 17; Don Quits Far East Post from Memphis cotton men a nd firm III, 16, and Bet y Loui e Duma, 5. + R EsiG • ATION of Hugh throughout the Cotton Belt. These sold ncl Ret y Lo ui se bring to mind an Gladney Grant, All, minister to Thai­ for 1,775.92 which mea ns, at 10 cent example of the Dumas love for children. land and former mini ter to Albania, a quart, the nakes bought up 17,759 Betsy wa a n orphan of the great flood was accepted in Augu t by ecretary

-- 111\ .1 -- Social Pay1nents • UP !LON CHAPTER, at Au­ devised a plan by which the members can enjoy a max imum number of ocial function at minimum financial inconven ience. Every month each mem­ ber and pl edge pays an extra 50 cen ts to the ThC. This money, ca ll ed the "social activitie fee ." is et a ide to be used as payment for social function . T hus no one ha to go around every time the chapter plan a party to collect 25 or 50 ce nts from each man to cover the ex­ penses. The plan has proved o satis­ factory that Upsilon recommend it to other chapters.

--IlK A-- , 2,000 BALANCE in the Treasury of ln ter[raternit Conference was re­ cently inve ted in defense avings bonds. 31 The Haywarcls found that an .En gli sh­ Back from the Or·ient Turki dictionary was not of much Outstanding Music Senior phoneti c value so l\Irs. H aywa rd under­ + THE R t:v. Harold Dewey By Dick Metcalf, -~ 7. Haywa rd, BA and BB who has been in took the task of revi sin g it. + Pr KAPPA ALPHA was we ll the Orient 14 of the pao r 15 yea rs, is in Vi sitors we re infrequent he s:t id. " A represented this year in the music de New York doing graduate work at the yo ung Euro pea n who made his way partment at the Un iversity of Arkansas Biblical Seminary of N e" · York. across southern Sinkia ng visited us in when Jack Borroughs, AZ . was named After being gradua ted from Ridge­ J anuary. During March a visitor came ''outstanding sen ior" in rhe music school wood High School in 1917, he entered to see the Caves of the Thousa nd and received the Tovey Award. Buddhas .. . and in April some Tien ts in For fo ur yea rs he has been Men's Glee Penn State, later tra nsferring to the business men paid u a call," be reca ll ed. Clu b accompan ist and solo ist. H e toured Uni ve rsity of \ 1Va shington where he recei vecl hi s B.S. cl egTee. H e took post T he R ev. Mr. H ayward is speaking Arkansas in 1937 as so lo ist in severa l a lmost continuously in the N ew York area whi le workin g o n his doctora te. H e plans to return to the Orient some­ time after his studies are completed. --IIKA-- ' Pay As You Go' Policy + Pt KAPPA ALPHA 's po li cy of strict economy in the present emer­ gency a nd th e Fra ternity's continuing principles of fa irness and equality are given point in its insistence tha t e,·ery man bea r hi s share o f fina ncial respon­ sibility in his chap te r. Carrying out its duty as the governing bod y of TIKA, the Supreme Council has been forced to expel a number of mem­ bers on acco unt of failure to pay just PIANIST J ACK BORROUGHS debts. The li st follows: Publicizes IIKA on. the pian.o A lpha-Charles A. 'N inclholz, Jr., and of the larger cities of this state a nd of Francis L. H arrell , Jr. Louisiana and Oklahoma. Theta - Ches ter C. Carden. Borroughs helped work his way MISSIONARY HAYWARD AlfJha-E ta-H. erbert H . Boltin. Gor­ through school by being selected as R e turns to America with his wife don F. Belcher, and H atton B. R ogers. Popular Organist at the Palace Theatre A lfJha-Sigrna- Jose ph . Darracq. in Fayettevill e. His arrangements o£ graduate work at Cornell Medica l Col­ A lfJha -Cli i- Paul W. Wilcox and Rob­ Stawlust and Bob Wills' San Antonio lege and was g-raduated in l\•fay, 1926, ert B. Perry. Rose have won acclaim throughout the from the Northern Baptist T heological state. He has advertised TIKA exten­ Bela -EfJsi lou- Louis J. Buonomo and Semin ary, Chi cago, and, accompan ied by sively by his playing of The DTeam GiTl Ford A. Hickl as. his wife, departed for China. at theatre rush parties that Alpha-Zeta Beta-Zeta- Russell L. Davies, Jr. The first seven-yea r period with the has given. China Inland Miss ion, which is both Bela -Eta-Albin Williams, S. H. R oss, --IlK A-- interdenominational and in ternational J ohn D. Turney, rthur Franks, Stanley Handles 15 Millions In R ealty H . Young, George W. Wyeth, J ames and is the largest inla nd m iss ion in HENRY F. CHADEAYNE, B8, ' 18, who Dowling, and Kenneth J. Moss. China, the Haywarcls Ji ved and traveled for severa l yea rs has been secretary of in many parts o[ Chin a proper and the Beta -Psi-W iII i s S mith, J ohn M. the General American Life Insurance frontiers of Tibet and Mongoli a. Keiser, J ames Balkcom, Dr. Walter E. Co., St. L ouis, has been promoted to the Bland, and J ack f. Richards. During the second seven-year period, position of second vice president. Ex­ from which they returned recently, they Gamma-iVIu- R obert McAllister, H. E. cept [or the acld i tion of the work of were in the Central Asian sphere. McG inley, Romeo J. Bucknam, R ona ld perso nnel director, his duties were not Parisea u, J oseph St. John, Richard Kid­ greatl y changed. "Only 5 per cent of the people in this der, Donald Sm ith, Harold R . Derby, H e has charge of the administra tion sphere are Chinese-speaking," the R ev. Lewi s Cheever, and Virgi li o Corti. of about $ 15,000,000 worth of city real Mr. Hayward sa id. "At least 70 per Sin ce the men listed above have been estate sca ttered a b o u t the country, cent of them are of Turk stock. So far ex pell ed [or fin ancial clelinquency onl y, which is continuing to show an excep­ have we been removed [rom things that any of them may be reinstated on pa y­ tionall y good return of more than 4 per our journey out to Sha nghai took us ment of the ful l amount clu e. cent. fi ve months. - - OK A -- -- O KA-- "It is good 10 get back a fter li ving A LFRED MITC HELL, rN, '33, has been Art Day, Afl, is with the DuPont under the pressure of the totali tarian named publicity director for the Iowa plant at J oli et, Ill. He was graduated system in our particular part o f the tate Coll ege athletic department. He from Kansa State College at the end world. The amaz ing thing is that the also is featured on the college's radio o( summer school. Chinese Church sti ll persists in growin g station, WOI, in a da ily sports review. --riKA-- and our fri end over there often demon­ Before going to Ames, M itchell was Dr. Harley Frank Davis, AM , of stra te by their li ves that first century sports editor of the Ma son City Globe­ Miami, Fla., was call ed into the ervice Christi anity a nd martyr spirit are very Ga ze ll e and announcer for KGLO, recently. The physician i stationed at much a li ve. " l\ lason City. Fo rt Bragg. 32 Ma~Uf IIKA's m MILITARY SERVICE ca lori es. The noon meal weighs 8 !1:! ounce; it co ntains 1,012 ca lories. Weigh­ ing 9.6 ounces, the upper canon con­ rains 1,316 calories, and include a Pemmica n biscuit, a piece of chocolate bar or standard "D " ra tion, condensed meat (cervelat) , one package of orange powder (parachuti t puts this into con­ tai ner of co ld wa ter for refre hing bev­ erage), a nd a sli ce of gum. George Nissen , rN, '37, gave the fl y­ in g cadets at San Antonio a new kind of wi ngs when he i n trod u c e d his trampoline, a gymnastic device of hi own invention. The trampoline is a resilient pla t­ form to give added mu cu lar pring in tumbling and o ther gym feats. issen, former ca ptain of the University of Iowa gym team and three yea rs national + IN THE eve r -w ide nin g sphere of defense acti vity-the armed intercoll egiate tumbling champio n, de­ services as well as the allied assignmen ts ve loped the idea whi le an undergrad­ - ITKA's are contributing everythi ng ua te a nd perfected it after graduati o n. from "shirt-pocket meal " to trampo­ issen 's performances in May o n the lines. a device to supple the muscles of trampoline a t R a ndolph a nd Kell y ir Corps cadets. Fi elds resulted in the Air Corps plac­ Dr. Ancel Keyes. A~ . of the Uni­ ing a reg ue t for five of the devi ces. ver ity of M innesota, has developed the J ohn Maloney, 6A, has visited a hii-t-pocket meal. W eighing only 28 score or more of Army ca mps speaking -o unces and con taining 3.200 ca lo ries, before audiences of officers a nd men on _., ix soldiers at Fort Snell ing, Minn .. re­ the need for rea I defense efforts. -ce ntly tested the diet for three days and " I am afraid that Ameri ca ns are found no ill effects from it. going to be so slow in recognizing "The ration sa ti fi ed our appetites, danger that the battle wi ll be lost be­ but left our stomachs feeling empty," fore we get o ur po tential abilities into -o ne of the soldiers said . A typical noon actio n. My alarm ari ses from connec­ meal incl uded a tube of boulli on, spe­ DR. ANCEL B. KEYES tions wi th the German arm y and party -cial cookies, a tin of prepared meat, Substitutes pep tablets for meals officers who eem to understand Amer- -dextrose to make lemonade a nd chew- ing gum. Dr. Keye has also been instrumental in developing a canon of three com­ -plete meal , weighing a few ounces each, easily slipped into a soldier's pocket, a nd chock full of vitamins and minerals. T hi new ratio n is primarily designed for parachute u-oops, but the Army l10pes it will also be sui table for air­ plane pilo ts and drivers of armored ve­ hicles. T he r ation includes a vitamin­ ized "pep" tablet, a fruit ca ke o[ -dehyd rated apri cots. peaches, prunes, -a nd raisins, and a Pemmican cracker -co ntaining foods that ca n withstand ·every extreme in temperature without ·spoiling. W'hile the ration is still in its experi ­ mental stage, e ncouraging results are 'being noted a t the Army Subsistence Research Laboratory in Chicago, a nd at the U niversity of l'vfinnesota. T he breakfa t in a box has a total net GYMNAST GEORGE NISSEN -weight of .9 :Un ces, and contains 983 Entertains Randolph Field air cadets on the trampoline, his own invention

) ) ica ns beuer than we oun,e lve a t times," a id i\ laloney. Draft Defers Students The Tennessee- born war correspond· t Po TPONEMENT of Selec­ ent. world trave ler and former R ed tive en ·ice inducti o n of coll ege students Cross publi c relation offi cer. rerom· imo the . armed forces so that they mends J o eph C. H arsch ·s new book, may finish partially-completed semes ter l~a/l e m fm· Conquest for e\'ery Amer­ and quarter terms without undue hard­ ican. i\•faloney' own book, Let Th ere ;h ip before starting mi li tary tra in ing Be M ercy, is just off the press. wa s announced recently. Maj. Frank 1-1. R eed. Jr.. AZ a nd Bll , '27, 1i•ho ea rl y thi yea r wa construct­ Emphasizing the difference. between a ing quartermaster for the 6,300 .000 postpo nement o f induction and a n ac­ tual deferment of a student, the neces· Cit mp J o eph T. R obinso n, a t Little Rock, Ark., an nounced in i\ lay the com­ sity of deferring individual student in pletion of another huge post, Fort preparati on for occupati o ns essential to Leonard \1\lood, in i\ lissouri. T hat the national defense and public welfare project completed, R eed was recently was reiterated. appointed Constm cting Quartermaster Short postponements may be granted for the 40,000,000 ] ll inois Ordnance to a farmer to harve t a crop, to a law­ P lant near Mari on. Ill . ye r to try a pending case. to an architect to complete a se t of plans. Senator Charle Andrews. A l l , of CHIM EY CHASER McFARLAND F lorida, introduced a bill to prohibit Former IIKA Exec. Sec'y in Un if orm 1t was ruled that "a student might be the use of the America n F lag in ad­ granted such an extension in order to vertising matter. 20 mi les from a ra ilroad. The o perator prepare (or and take an examination, George \IV. Strong. r~ . '36, first lieu­ "just hadn't tho ught" o f bidding on or to complete a coll ege term which he tenant in the Coast Artillery. was ca ll ed Quartermaster jobs, Capt. McFarla nd tarted in good faith after ascerta ining to active duty June 10. one day before discovered. that his induction would not normall y the Graduate School o f the niversity R obert F. Fackl er, newly-e lected SMC occur until a reasonable portion of uch of Pittsburgh conferred upo n him hi s of Alpha-Rho, wa accepted by tl1e term had expired." doctorate of philosoph y in socio logy. Army Air Corps a few days later. Postponement of inductio n should no t Col. J ohn D . Langston. AA , Chair­ Aviation Cadet S. E. King, who is in be gTa ntecl to permit a student to begin man o f the P lanning Council of the training at J acksonvi ll e, F la., eli closes a new term if his induction would Se lec ti ve Se r vice that six o ther SMC's of Gamma-Pi in normall y take place prior thereto, ac­ System, i a mem­ the last few yea rs are now in the armed cording to N a tional Selective Service ber of the newl y­ services. H e says J ohn Currier is a H eadquarters. c r eated Executive First Li eutenant in the Arm y; Bob -- llKA -- Council of Ia ti ona! Zurcher is il l o in the Army, Stittio ned H ea dqu arte r s of a t Portland, Ore.; Bi ll Pi erson. in the Professors In D ef en se Se lec tive Service. Army. Camp Rob e rt s, Calif.; Don By Rich ard S. l erria m , BIT Co l. L a n g ton, a Tower. fl yin g cadet at Kell y Field; • N EXCEL LENT INDEX of successful attorney Courtney La sell e, o n duty with Army the sort of training Pennsylva n ia men . of G o lds boro, (was a cadet colonel), it ncl H arvey . fc­ 1 eceive is the number o f pro fessors who C. , was co nn ecte d Kee is fl ying cadet at Sa nta Mari e, have been summo ned to come to \1\l ash­ with th e \1\l o r ld Ca li f. ington to a iel our National D efense War Draft Board. effort. When a Congres- Col. J. D. Langston One of the best-known is Dr. Conyers siona l committee of R ead , assi tant professor of English hi s­ fi ve recently visited Fort Benning, Ga. , tory, appointed to the taff of the Co­ San Francisco and other army po ims, ordinator of Intell igence a nd I nforma­ to in ·pect construction work, two o f ti o n, headed by Col. '"' illiam ]. ·'Wild the members were J ohn J. Sparkman, Bill" Donovan. rA, of Alabama, and E. C. "Took" Gath­ R ecently ca ll ed to the natio n' ca p­ ings, J'A and AZ, of Arkan as. ital was Dr. J ames F. Bogardus, formerly \1\lilli am 0. Carver, Jr., 0 , '23, a mem­ of the industry department, who has ber of the news staff of The Louisville been appo inted Associate Price Execu­ (Ky.) T imes, haA been appo inted ca p­ tive· of the lumber building materials ta in of Company,. C, Louisv ill e Bat­ and furni ture section of the OPM. Dr. tali o n, o f the Kentuc ky Active filitia. R eavis Cox, erstwhil e professor of mar­ Capt. Carver has been active since the keting, is now se rving as executive of· outset in building up the organiza tion. ficer in the OPM Division of Civi lian Capt. R obert •f. McFarland, A..l. , [or­ up ply. mer ITK A Executive Secretary, now with Engaged by the Treasury Department the Quartermaster Procurement Plan­ to make a study of the problem of na­ ning District, at Atlanta, turns out to tional taxation, Dr. Gordon Keith, a be a "chimney-chaser." Harvard man, formerly of the finance "chimney-chaser," investigati on dis­ department, will be away for a year. closed, is a man who finds plants to Dr. Edward R . H awkins. previously as· utilize in defense work. recent Me· SMC FACKLER I N AIR CORPS sistan t p rofessor of marketing, is now Farland find was a Tennessee factory Alpha-Rho head leaves for army with the Department of Commerce. New elue!f '' JOIN DISTRICT OFFICER'S

Prescott, Ariz. Born June I , 1907, in Democrat a nd i pres ident of the Utility Charlo tte, N. C., the o n if Richard F. Consumers League. and Ellen H enderso n Arledge, the new H e married H elen J ea n Floyd, ITB , District 15 chi ef moved to Albuquerque Nov. 3, 1938. with his parents in 19 17 and was edu­ rl edge counts la ti onal President cated there. Hickman, B..'> , a · o ne of his close friends H e entered the U ni ve rsity of Ne1 a nd has kept in touch with him ever M ex i co in 1925 and immediately since their first meeting in 1923. pledged Pi Kappa Alpha. Student ac­ tivities included varsity cheer leader, Splitting District 6 into two section , member of the debating team, work on one comprising the state of Georgia and student publications, member student the other the state of Florida, District President Dea n Boggs, of J ackson vi ll e, LA~fYE R DEACON ARLEDGE council. H e served as MS a nd I MC Takes over South border states Fla., will co ntinue to se rve the Florida section as head of District 6-B while

• M EET T HREE NEW District J ames M. Thurman , B'l', has been Presidents. named District President o[ the Georgia They are: J ames V. Le Laurin, H, District 6-A. whose assignment is the newl y-created T hurma n, an insurance man o[ At­ District 11-B; R . F. Deacon A rl edge, lanta, Ga., was initia ted into the i\Iercer B.6. , new chief of District 15; and J ames chapter in 1933 but transferred to the M. Thurman, B-1' , who wi ll supervise E mory cha pter, Beta-Ka ppa, the fol low­ a nother newly-created district, lo. 6-A. ing year. H e se rved Beta-Kappa both Le Laurin's d istrict was created by ~ h e as SC a nd IMC before being elected Supreme Council to reli eve the pressure SMC, an office he held for two yea rs. o n D istrict ll's supervisor. District I I H e is a member of Phi Eta Sigm a formerly included six chapters-three in ho nor society a nd while at Emory was Mississ ippi and three 111 Louisiana. president of the local interfraternity H arvey T. N ewell , Jr., AI, who had co nference. both sta tes, co ntinues as District ll-A As an alumnus, Thurman has served President ( 1i ss iss ippi) a nd Le Laurin for two years as chapter advise r of Beta­ takes over ll-B (Lo uisiana). Kappa. H e is married and has an eight­ Le La urin wa born June 4, 1919, a t months-old daughter. His office is at Pine Bluff, Ark., attended Ieee Fortier 1510 Rhodes-H averty Bldg., Atlanta. High School at ew Orleans and Ten­ JIMMIE LE LAURI N nessee Mili tary Institute before entering New Orleans IIKA counsels in Louisiana Tulan e's College of Commerce a nd Business Administrati on in 1936. of Beta-Delta a nd represented the chap­ Initia ted in March, 1937, Le Laurin ter a t the 1926 co nvention in Atlanta. was elected SC in October of the sa me Arledge gradua ted in 1930 wi th yea r and S 1IC in Februuy, 1939. H e ma jors in h istory and poli tica l sc ience. served four terms a SMC. H e was a delegate to the conve ntions at Los From 1927 to 1933, rledge se rved on Angeles and Chicago. the edi tori al staff of Th e A lbuquerque Finishing school in June of this year, ] our11a l in va ri ous ca pacities from sports he entered the life insurance busines editor to political writer. H e was ac­ with his fa ther a nd brother in New tive in the [ormation of the Border Orlea ns. Drafted in ·March of this yea r, Conference. he was deferred until the end of the Going to W ashington , D. C .. in 1934 school year when he was inducted, but to a ttend George W'ashington Un i­ disch arged becau e of his eyesight. versity Law School, he was o ne of the At Tulane he was a member of the charter members of the Alumni ch ap­ W hi te Ele pha nts, freshma n honor ter there. H e was employed in the society; Phi Phi, honor society [or pro­ legal d ivision of the ati onal Park motion of interfraternity relati ons; Service and erved o n the George W ash­ Greenbackers, society for promo tion of ington Law R eview, graduating in 1937 school sp irit; and the I nternational R e­ with a Juris Doctor degree. lations Club. Si nee 1937. rledge has engaged in Arledge, an attorney of Albuquerque, the general priva te practi ce of law in GEORGIA CHIEF THURMAN 1. M .. succeeds E. C. Lockl ear, BK . of Albuquerque, where he is an active H eads n.erv split district in. South 35 Region Chapters Meet Heads New II KA Publicity Drive + FI NANCES and alum ni af­ fairs predomin ated the r e s o I u t ions + H EADI 1 G the Fraternity' close friendsh ip of the two men wi ll ado pted at the Regio nal Con vention of pub licity activitie fo r the coming ea r facilitate their related wo rk fo r the Districts 6 and 9 held in April at the is a veteran p ress association and news­ 1943 con ve n tio n . Alpha- Mu chapter house in Athens, Ga. paperman , W ill iam S. Lacy. Jr., e and Lacy attended the 1928 conve ntio n I, who was appointed Natio na l Pub­ at E l Paso a a delegate from Iota and Delegates were presen t from th e ten li city Chairman at the Ia ·t Supreme a t Troutdale, Colo., as D . P. cha pters-Alpha-Delta, Alpha- Eta, Al­ Council meeti ng. " 1 would not wa nt to be disloyal to pha-i'vl u, Beta- Ka ppa, G amma-Omega, Now 33 years of age, Lacy has been old fri ends o f T heta, no r to J oe D ean Beta-Psi, D elta, Upsilo n, Alpha-Pi, and a member of P i Kappa Alpha fo r 16 of Mem phis," he ays, " bu t 1 sti ll think Gamma- lpha . year and a working newspaperman that those Texan gave us a mark to R esolutio ns ado pted by the conven­ in Virginia for the past 12 yea rs. hoot at, with their over-the- bo rder con­ tio n fo ll ow: ventio n facilities. We had to work too I. T hat the active cha pter be noti­ hard at Evergreen , bu t we won't make fi ed befo re fina l actio n is taken o n ex­ that m istake in Virginia . No, sir, p u lsio n of members. Colo nel!" A so n of Dr. a nd Mrs. W . S. Lacy, 2. T hat in event of war a mortgage of Batesvil le, Ark., he ha two bro thers mo rator ium be declared by the natio nal who are Pi Kaps. T hey are Lewis, now loan committee. in North H oll ywood, Calif.. and J oe E. 3. T hat all c h a pt e r s o bserve a Lacy, of Rusto n, La., both of Iota. Mother's D ay cele bratio n . Two baby daughters are his principal 4. T hat a dream girl be selected each ho bby. Judith , a red-haired fireball of yea r by each chapter. two yea r , and Eliza beth, a ca lm and 5. T hat all rushing be clo ne o n smiling blue-eyed blo nd o( eleven recommendati o n secured from alumni mo nth. and acti ve brothers. --ITKA-­ 6. T hat the con ve ntio n express ap­ S igns With Chicago B ears preciatio n to Alpha-Mu fo r acting as + A v ERY M oNFO RT, B.U , hosts to the conve ntio n . U n ive rsity of New Mexico quarterback, Di trict 6, comprising G eorgia an d All -Border Conference and All-IIKA F lo rida, held a separa te meeting and pick, has signed to play pro fessio nal agreed to suspend the Beta- Psi charter football with the C h icago Bears after at Mercer U ni versity, subject to ap­ receiving several other o ffers. pro val of the Supreme Co u ncil. T he - Foster Studio portra it. During the last three years Mo nfo rt chap ters of the district, which include NEWSl\'IAN BILL LACY has been o u tstanding o n Lo bo team. Georgia, E mo ry, G eorgia T ech, Florida, Will tell the world aboa t IIKA R eached his peak last season when he and Miami, agreed to pro-ra te the debts led conference in cor ing and passing. H e was ini tiated by T heta in 1925. " Mo nte" a lso has been o utstanding o f the fercer cha pter in o rder that a t he yea r before Southwestern Presby­ fraternity man and campus leader as good spirit wou ld be present at the terian ni ve rsity was transferred from well as an athlete. H e was SMC o f University if at some fu ture el ate the Clarksvi lle, Tenn ., to Memphis to be­ Beta-D elta and president Junio r Class. cha pter cou ld be re-estab lished . {;Ome Southwestern U n ive rsity. H e we nt E ntertainment began o n Frid a~ n igh t -- IT K A -- to H ampden-Sydney Coll ege a nd Iota when Alpha- 1lu, headed by President chapter in the fa ll of 1926, taking his ON OPPOSITE PAGE Tom R ogers, welcomed arriving dele­ A B. degree there in June, 1929. B eta-Gamma s t a g e s a S urrealistic gates wi th a stag party and refreshments. N ine clays after receiving his d iploma, Party at K ansas (1) with Dr. Jek yl and Sa turday mo rning D . P . Boggs pre­ h e began work as a reporter [or The M r. H yd e, th e d a o-sex alar /taman, and the Datch lanclt. sided over the business session while Richmond Tim es-Dispatch, and he says, ( 2 ) A t the B owe ry Ball of Soath Sa turday afternoon D . P . Knigh t han­ " has been steadi ly at the b u ine s of C?rolina's X i chatJt er are sh own George d led the va rio us committee reports. news ever since wi th the exceptio n of Ltttle, Evel,-n Baker, Jam.es M ills, and S a zanne W ilson. T he con ve n tio n banquet started the time taken o u t for vacati ons a nd that ( 3 ) M iss Foy S mith, 1941 Dream evening's fun a turday n ight while a required for paci ng hospital fl oors upo n Girl o f Zeto, senior in the University dance given in the chapter ho use after­ t he arriva l in this world o f two Southern o f T ennessee ch ool o f Home Eco­ wards furnished the climax. Dr. H art's belles. " nomics, wh o wears the JTK A badge of Doaglas B oles. speech o n "Ideals o f P i Kappa Alpha" fter three a nd a half yea rs wi th the ( 4 ) . Dan. Gibbes, Jr., :=;, editor o f sp arkled with the Scotch wit fo r which Times-Dispatch, he spent two yea r in U n. w erstty of Soath Carolin a yearboo k. he is so famo us. ( 5 ) Ch arles M arry, AI, M ill s ap s C harlottesvill e. Va., as city editor of a -- D KA-- dail y there. H e ha been with the s- B. M . 0. C. _(6) Clark W . M cCants, Jr., SMC o f l F YO wa nt to continue to serve yo ur ociated Press a t Richmond for the Ia t X t. (7) Track star B illy M ullican ~ fra ternity in a va ri ety of desirable wa ys. six years. H e prefer Virgin ia and its at Jl anderbilt. ' ' why not project yo ur personali ty together ho pi table people. (8) Pled ges, m embers, and dates with so me of yo ur time, energy and en­ thusia m, into an alumnae chapter?-The Lacy served two year as District gather o n. the Alpha-Gamma steps at Lou isiana S tate. A lpha Xi Delta. President o f o. 4, covering chapters in . (9! Kermit K ram.er, rP, (rig ht) -- IT K A-- Virginia and ' l\lashington, before turn­ wtn.n•ng the centary in. the Northtve& tern " FRATERNITI ES are like all other things in ing the work over to G u y Borkey, pres­ Intramural Track M eet. life. They ca n be good if they are man­ aged hy good men or they can be very bad e nt D . P. and mem ber of the Diamon d (10) High-div ing champion of the Southeastern Conferen ce is Letelle Ste­ if managed by bad men.''-Dr. Frederick B. J ubilee Commiss io n . T he lo ng-time phen son, fl. R obi, son, New York. 36 (!)ntltee~ wah PI KAPPA ALPHA We Hate Hitler II KA Picnic at Detroit Challenges Frat Magazines COXTIX UEI) FHQ ~\ 1 P I\ G ....: 19 COXTI XUED Fn Q ;\1 P 1\ G I ~ 25 • DETRO IT llKA's ga thered for ranking officer in the last war, are serv­ a fami ly picnic a t the suburban home of ample, not o nly ca ters to the usual ing as priva tes a nd no n -commissioned C. N. Woodruff, BE, in Franklin Hills, near fraternity interests but publishes articles officers. They care no t what their rank. Detroit, on Sept. 13. Hot dogs, hamburgers. by members o n medical a nd o ther scien­ They ca re on ly for their ri ght to serve. coffee, pop, baseba ll , horses hoes, and cro­ q uet, were on the program. tific subjects. T his magazine has a par­ King George Vl received the mi sio n Pi cni c groups included (left) back row, ticularl y professio nal fl avor no t only as in Buckingham Palace a t a ceremo n y at Arlie Reagan, AA ; Richard B. Ball ard, AX ; to contents but in arra ngem ent a nd ap ­ which 250 were decorated fo r distinctive Ray D. You ng, Br. eated-Fi oyd T. Scher­ peara nce. service. After the cere mo n y the miss io n merhorn, 1\X; Dudley Newton, BT; L. C. re tired to the King's private oHice where Lempke, BJL . To o ne whose first-ha nd impressions a n informal con versation was held with Center: Detroit Alumni Pres ident Rus­ of such things go back more than 25 sell i\•!. Sanderson, BT; Mrs. Sa nderson, and yea rs, the present-day frate rnity maga­ the King a nd Comma nder ·w a rner baby daughter. Ri ght, standing-Mrs. Bal­ doing most o f the talking. lard, i\ lrs. Sa nderson, i\ lrs. Lempke. i\ lrs. zine is greatl y improved. The stiHness chermerhorn. Seated-i\ lrs. H. \ V. Simp­ a nd stodg ines of two decades ago have In the m idst of roses and brickba ts son (BT). i\ frs. Young, Mrs. Roy A. Hun­ la rgely give n way to liveliness a nd in­ for G en . Be n Lear's disciplina ry action tel (AA). fo rmali ty. T here is mo re a ppeal to the fo r troops who "yoo-hooed " girls in -- fl 1\A --·- eye as well as to wider interests. Pic­ shorts in M emphis. Commander ' 'Varner Charles K. Payne Honored tures a nd the use of colo r have helped. suppo rted the rmy officer. CHARLES K. P AYNE, E, one of Pi Kappa ln sho rt, the fra ternity magazine has " From what I know persona ll y of him Alpha's most loya l ve terans, was honored become ;dive; it has achieved a more (G en . L ea r) there is no a b ler ma n in by the Charles ton , West Virginia , Na ti onal professio na l air. A fri end who is a close the America n Army when it comes to J~ank at a dinner on July 17 on the co mple­ ti on of 50 ' ears as a director of th e bank . student of natio nal fra ternity affairs i building mo ra le in the yo ung America n i\ 1r. Pav ne has been active in busi ness and sharper a nd mo re specific in his criti­ soldier a nd insti ll ing the hi gh traditio ns financia l circles in Charleston for many o f the service." years. He is a graduate of Virginia Poly­ cisms o f the m agazines. ] n substa nce. technic Institute, class of 1880, and was hi o bjectio ns fo ll ow: these magazines Whe n the L egion reached a n a ll -time ini tiated by the now defunct Eps il on chap­ a re sti ll too much in the " rah-rah" vei n ; · hig h in membership o f 1,082,868 o n ter. He has traveled wid ely and three yea rs they read too much like a fra ternity ugust I, ' !\fa rner said : ago, at the age of 81, made an automobile trip from Ca iro to Capetown, outh £ri ca . IVho's IVho: they are too self-centered "]n reaching a new all-time high mem­ He was an interested vis itor at the Chi cago a nd lack vision beyond their own circle; bership ma rk, 1 [eel tha t the American convention of Pi Kappa Alpha las t yea r. they are pitched too high ly in the Legio n is ind ica ting a re newed fa ith in -- fiKA -- g la mor key; a nd they are not practical o ur country, the indi vidua l rights of e no ugh. o ur peop le, a nd the eager desire of those Precious Packages who fought in the last war to preserve To J A~ I F. S L. H AYS , r'l'. and ;\Irs. Virg-inia H e argues that they could be o f much a nd fi ght fo r them again if necessar y. " Gundlach Ha·ys , ITB . of St. Angelo, Tex., more use, fo r example, by publishing a daughter, Sharon Virginia Hays. On a five-day fl ying trip to A laska, mo re constructive a rticles that would To OR . KARL DONALD MAC MILLAN. ]' ~. Comma nder \!\fa rner visited a defe nse and t\lr . i\ lacMi ll an, of Piusburgh, a so n, help the active chapters run their ho uses insta ll a tio n nea r A nchorage a nd fired Donald Alexander Mac i\ 1ill an. better, improve their methods, raise the Arm y's new Garand rifle. l-I e sho t To NDRE\V H . KNIGHT , All. and i\ lrs. scho larship sta ndards, a nd so o n . H e a core of 39 out of a possib le 40. Kni ght, of 3307 Montevall o R oad, Binning­ a lso has the stro ng con victio n that no t For a n "old soldier" he did ve ry good ham., Ala.,?. son, Roy Finklea Kni ght, born June 2-1, 19-11 . and named for Na ti onal e nough fra ternities are using profes­ o n the rifle range, in the o pinio n of Pres ident Roy D. Hickman. sio na ll y trained editors. r\rmy o ffi cer . So Ge n. Bruckner, in To F'. i\ IAR IO'= STOCKTO N, rX, and i\ [rs . Since his be li ef in fraternities is be­ charge of the Al askan defense, suggested rock ton, 41, \\'est 35 th Street. Kansas yo nd questio n , there is a good deal in tha t Commander vVarner ta ke a pilots' ity, Mo., a daughter, Robyn Lou, June wha t this o bserva nt critic has to say. test. A fter 15 minutes in a Link tra in­ 4 . 19-ll. Concedi ng tha t the present ub criber er. a machine with controls which imu­ To S. D. CA~ IP BELL, Ar\ . '39. and i\lrs. Delight Ca mpbe ll , a son, Daniel Sco thorn , gets more for his mo ney a nd that the la te actual fli ght, the o Hi cers decided ea rl y this yea r. publica tio ns' usefu lness has expanded . \•Varner should sti ck to his o ld branch, To H o~ I ER LEE \ VR IGI-I T. BK. and i\!rs. there remains a cha ll e nge to still higher Field Aniller . They said he plunged Wright, a daughter, Na ncy Dyer Wright. his tra iner several hundred feet into the ept. 25 , 19-11 . Mrs. Wright \\·as the former goals. -- TIK A -- earth, did a few o utside loop . a cou p le Katherine Van wddiford of St. Loui s. \\'right is working on his doctorate at of fl at spins, ground looped a nd went Was hington ' niversity. Address: 5900 i\ lc­ CoURAGE consists in ha ngi ng on one min­ into a fu ll ta il spin. Pherson Ave., St. Loui s. tile longer.- Aibert Pa yson T erh11n e. 38 +CooRDI NATI NG yo uth ti an fe ll owship wi th soldiers, draftees groups of the fethodist Church in a a nd con cien tiou objector in work na ti o n-wide movement, the ational camps were other item in the social Conference of the Methodi t Youth Fel­ creed which wa adopted from the re­ lowship was organized a t Baker U ni­ port of the Youth Projects Committee. versity, Baldwin, Ka n., over the Labor Other sectio ns of the adopted report Day week-end this fall. asked for better interracial condition .J. Kempton J ones, AA, junior pre­ both within and wi thout the hurch medic at Duke U ni ve rsity, was elected and a campaign again t anti- emitism; presidents and 23 regio nal st ud e n t the establishmen t of a labor a nd rural movement heads who ga thered for the work m in istry in the Church; u rged presidents a nd 23 regio nal s tu de n t youth to patronize o nl y tho e estab­ movement heads who ga thered fo r the lishmen t which do not sell alcoholic first meeting of the new Methodist or­ beverages; call ed attentio n to the need ganiza tion . for ex periments in producer-consumer Since young people's organiza ti o ns, cooperatives; recommended a Christian like the former Epworth League, of the yo uth preaching miss ion, and u rged three Methodi t bodies that united in personal a nd group disciplines as fun­ 1939 were not uniform, the new Youth damental in Christi an growth. Fellowship was the result of an en­ Adopting a recommendation of the deavor to create a national society for Yo uth Commi sio n, the a ti onal Con­ the youth of the new denomination . · ference will soon issue a call, jointly YOUTH FELLOWSHIP J ones, whose home is Salisbury, N. C., tending the atio nal Con fe rence, urging with the Council of Bisho ps, to all is president of the W estern N orth that this na tion turn to the pa th of youth of the 43,000 l\ Iethodist churches Carolina Annual Conference a nd the p eace. to join in a Communion Service of Sou theastern Jurisdiction youth orga ni­ R epeal of the Selecti ve Se rvice Act, Commitment o n next N ew Yea r's Eve. zatio ns. H e heads 2,000,000 Methodist protectio n of civil liberties fo r draftees, This W atch Tight Service will provide yo ung p eople, 15 to 23 yea rs of age, in a program for securing absolu te ex­ a formal dedication of the Methodist their national program for the next two emptio n for "absolutist" co nsc ientious Youth Fellowship o n a nation-wid e years. So significant did the Nati onal o bjectors, and the maintenance of Chris- sca le. Broadcasting Co m p a n y consider the election of this youth leader, tha t they put .Jones o n their "Call to Youth" pro­ gram over the R ed network, Se pt. 20. National Interfraternity Conference "N ever before in the history of our Church have yo ung peop le had the o p­ Principles of Democracy portunity we now face, to work toward making the world truly Christi an," the THE CoLLE GE F RATE R N ITY OF T H E U ITED S T A TES A N D C ANADA yo ung president sta ted in his accepta nce speech, " toward bringing men to see Which was conceived in the atmos phere of a struggle for tha t the Christi a n wa y is the o nly true politica l independence, and came into being as an ex­ pa ttern for life." pression of se lf-government; Elected to work with J o nes in direct­ Adheres steadfastly to social, religious, political, and economic ing the you th progTam are the fo ll owing democracy as the only sound basis for a satisfyino· perso nal offi cers: Margarita lrle, Tacoma, \1\l ash., and national life; vice president fo r the student presi­ dents' group; Phil Steer, Chittenango, Defends the individual's r io·ht to liberty and the equality of N . Y., vice president for the Con fe rence opportunity; presidents' gro up; J anet Metzger. lew­ Inculcates a sense of res ponsibility to self, to college, to coun­ port, Minn., secretar y; a nd Thomas try, and to society; Mitchell, H omeland, Fla., treasurer. Stresses the spiritual va lues of life as the foundation of the 1 n ado pting a social creed tha t calls truly democratic way of living; fo r the uniting of 2,000,000 Methodist yo ung people in a peace movement to Supports our country's championship of the cause of democracy; keep the United Sta tes out of war, the Condemns all activities tending to subvert the principles and delegates voted to hold a peace demon­ process of democratic government; stratio n on next Armisti ce Day. Jn the meantime, a n o pen letter to the Presi­ Pledges unqualified loya lty and devotion to country. dent and all members of Congress is to be ent in the name o f those at-

39 \ VILLIAM i\1. T HI GPEN, J R. BK. and Miss He is in the advertising depa rtment of Charlotte Behm, da ughter of R aymond A. Procter & Ga mble Co .• Cincinna ti. Mrs. Behm and the late Mrs . Behm, in the Little \ Veaver, Morta r Board, was na med out­ Chapel of the Glenn Memorial Church , a t standino· se nior woma n a t University of Atlanta, July 26, 194 1. At ho me: Ridgewood Cincinn°a ti, where she was graduated in Drive, Atlanta. Mr. T higpen, who is con­ .Ju ne. At home: 3169 Bracken W oo d ~ Lane, nected with the Procurement P lanning Dis­ Cincinna ti . trict of the Q uartermaster Corps. a t Atlanta, FLOYD FRANK LIN J EN KI NS , r , '18, and Vir­ served as assistant executive secretary of ginia Belchee, July 24, First Ba ptist Church, the fraternity in 1940-4 1. Brack P erkins, Was hington, D. C. At home: Franklo n, Va . AH. was be t ma n. Ushers included Capt. Robert M. McFa rland, A ~ . and R ay G. jOH N CHARLES H AWKI NS , B . '40, and lleh m, brother of the bride. Nairn a Smitt, Ill'. Pu rdue '4 1, Aug. 23 , in Ga ry, I ncl ., the ho me of the bride. During MARM ADUKE GRES HAM BAYNE Ill, Z. a nd the preliminary music, D e l ta Gam m a Mi ss Sibyl Louise Drake, both of Norfolk, Sweet hea,-t and D,-eam Girl of II KA were Va. T he ceremon y was performed May used . At home : 822 E. 11 th St., New 30, 1941, in Knoxvill e. Bay ne is employed Permanently Pinned Alban y, Ind. by the Tennessee Vall ey Authority. At home: Knoxvill e. W ILLI ,HI F ERD Jo HNSON, B, '41, and Consta nce Pleasant, Sept. 5, a t Merom, R Oil ERT L EE SUFFR IOGE, Z. of Knoxville, • O N SUCCESS IVE Sa turdays a t Ind. At ho me: J ohnson farm, near Me ro m, and 1\!iss Li bby McEwen, Al!IT pledge, of the identical time, 3:30 p. m., two members Incl . Nashvill e, May 6, 194 1, in Knoxville. Suff­ of Alpha-X i cha pter were married . Each r idge was All -America n footba ll guard and o-roo m was a n usher in the o ther's wed ­ R OBE RTS CoSilY MOO RE, r , '28, and Dor­ received the Knute Rockne trophy awarded d ing. othy H a rr ison Garrett, June 7, First P res­ byteria n Church, Norfolk , Va. He i · as­ annuall y to the o utstanding linesman. On July 5, Charles 0 . Clark was married sistant cashier of the Nati onal Ban k of to Miss Dorothy Lo uise Chase. T he cere­ GLENN Sco·n- OsBORNE, Ar . of Atl anta Commerce of Norfolk. and J ackson, M iss., and Miss Sada Frances mon y was per fo rmed by the bride's bro ther, Norris, of Atl an ta , May 10, 194 1, a t Deca­ the R ev. Herbert Tracy Chase, in the ALB ERT VERNON R ICE, r , '30, a nd Audrey tur, Ga. Osborne is with Delta Airline . Highlands Methodist Church in Fort J osephine Swift, July 24, Richmond, Va. T homas, Ky. Music included two ITKA At home: 119 North P arkside Ave., Chi ­ J OHN FREDER ICK MA LONE, BO, and Miss songs, H oneymoon and llKA Gi·rl. Clark cago, Ill. i\fae Lo uise Sa lter, July 15, 194 1, in Atla nta, was acti ve in intra m urals and was I MC. Ga., in the Little Chapel, Glenn Memorial Mrs. Clark formerl y a ttended Eastern RoBERT CUTC HIN R OWLAN D, r , '39, and Method ist Church. R eception was held Sta te Teachers Coll ege in Richmond, Ky. Dorothy Helen Sease, ~ll.ll. , Aug. 2, Chapel afterwa rd a t the ho me of the bride's of Fi rs t Baptist Church, Richmond, Va. parents, Mr. and Mrs. Clements Leon Sa lter, T he foll ow ing Sa turday, Willia m W . At home: 1049 Chesapeake Ave .. South Nor­ 1009 Forest Road , N. E. Malone was for­ T homas, and Miss Doll y R oehm, Kll.. were folk, Va. merly ass istant executive secretary of the ma rried at the Mar iemont Chapel, in fraternity. He is now in the extension Mariemont, 0 . T he R ev. Sidney Mc­ DA NIEL BURR BRADL EY, r , '41, a nd Eliza­ division of the Un iversity of Oklahoma. At Ca mmon perfo rmed the ceremony. T ho mas beth ;\ lorton Wood, April 19. ho me: Norman, Okla. was a member of the U. of C. va rsity wimming team a nd was on the staff of ENSIGN \'VILLI AM J. RILEY, JR., .A A, '39, LT. ARVIN H UME NoRTI-1 P , Ar . and the University News R ecord. H e was an and Adele F. Lavington, KKr, Duke, '40, Miss Ell en Stover, June I, 194 1, a t Chest­ acti ve mem ber of Ulex, men's honor ac­ on J une 25 a t Hingham, Mass. R il ey re­ !l Ut Hill , P enn. Lt. Northup. fo rmer tivity society. Both T ho mas and Cla rk Ge ived his commission -- in the U. S. . R . president of Alpha-Gamma, is with Com­ a re associa ted with the P roctor and Gamble on ' March 14, 1941, upon completi on of pan y K, ! 14th Infantry, Fort Dix, N. J. Compan y, Cincinna ti . the midshipman train ing course a t orth­ wes tern Universitv. H e is now in active J OI-1 LOOR ' "' Ell ER, r o . and Miss Cath­ CHARLES GAGE, AN . '4 1, and Miss Chris­ duty, a ttached to the U. S. S. Overton. a rine T homas, Xl!, da ughter of Mr. and tine Shults, Fe b. 16, in Blue Mound, Ill. Prior to her marriage, Mrs. R iley did g-rad­ Mrs. W. E. T homas, Wellston, 0 ., at Wells­ At home: Fort J ackson, S. C. ua te work a t N. Y. U. and was on the ton, June 7. 194 1. At home: McA rthur, [acui ty of the East H ampton, L. 1., High 0 ., where vVeber is editor of the Democrat­ ALBE RT W AMSE R, AN, '41, and Miss Ruth School. At home: Brightwaters, L. I. l nquireL Both a ttended Ohio Uni versity, Stoltz, . Bucknell , '41, LT. FRED R EXFO RD , AN, '41, of G rand da ughter of Mr. a nd Mrs. Edwin Wigh t j AY C. NELSON, K and !!, and Miss Betsy Ra pids, Mich., and Miss Barba ra H ar­ G und)'• of Altoona, Pa., a t Altoona, Sept. Wilson, ~IX . da ughter of Mr. and Mrs. ba ugh, KKr . of St. Cha rles, Ill., J une 14, 20. Stephenson, a Pitt graduate, is adver­ T ipton H . Wilson, of Mt. Sterling, Ky., a t a t St. Charles. At home: Fort Sill , Okla. tising manager of Stephenson & Son, Al­ i\ l t. Sterling, May 16, 1941. 1 elson is con­ nected with Household Finance Corpora­ RICHARD D AUG HERTY , AN, '39, of St. toona. tion in Evansvi ll e, Ind. Mrs. Nelson a t­ Louis, and Miss Betty Wire, Ll.r. of Bell e­ ville, I ll., Ma y 31. \'VILLIA •\1 \'VARF IELD WINN, r , '36, and tended Stephens Coll ege, Columbia, Mo. Lelia Fra nces Ba rnett, J une 28, Wren At home: 24 E. Chandler, Evansvi ll e. Jn c. \ VALLACE PAlTERSON, r~ . of Clairton, Cha pel, Willia m and Mary College. At the wedding party were W yma n Bishop. Penn., and Miss Betty J ane Garre tt, KKr. ho me: Will ia msburg. Va. !!; Andre B. Bowne, l! and ~ ; Gentry of Edgewood, N. J .• at Edgewood , June 14, Shelton, K; and Frank J ones, J{. 194 1. Ho RACE GRAY D YER, r . '38, and Doris Germain, June 2, First Baptist Church , _J A,\I ES T HOMAS D AN IEL, BZ, and lVIiss L EE EVERETT HI NES, JR., Z, a nd Miss Vir­ ivlartinsvi ll e, Va. Li ll ian Audrey McKinley, ll.r, daughter of ginia Childress, both of Knoxvill e, May 30, Mr. and Mrs. W. M. McKinley. at Long­ 1941, in Knoxville. Hines is instructor in FRED BR EWER T REDI NN ICK, r~ , '4 0, and view, Tex., June 28 , 194 1. Mr. Daniel the Civilian P il ot T raining Corps a t Knox­ Bessie J eannette Behm, da ughter of Mr. a ttended Texas A. a nd M. Coll ege and vill e. a nd Mrs. Will iam L. Behm, of Wilkinsburg, Southern Methodist University. Mrs. Dan iel Pa., a t W il kinsburg, Oct. 4. Mrs. T redin­ a tten led S. M. U. At home: Dan iel's P. T . H o R ~IUT H , Br. and Miss Ma ry J ane nick completed training a t West Penn Hos­ Ranch , Garden City, Tex. T he wedd ing Cole, both of Glendale, Calif., June 6, 1941, pital in 1939. party in c I u d e d T homas G. T higpen, a t G lendale. Ho rmuth is connected with Charles H . Cha pman a nd O liver Daniel, the Southern Cali fo rnia Gas Co., a t Glen­ RALPH LAC K APP EL, r~ . '37, a nd P a tricia J r., all of BZ . dale. Ashley Elmer, Z'l'A. '40, da ughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ma n uel C. Elmer of Edgewood, H ERNONDON S. HILL, Bll.. a nd Miss Peggy JOl-IN G. WEAVER, rz. '37, and Miss Betty Pa., a t Edgewood, P a., Aug. 9. At home: Fawell , of Spokane, Wash., a t Coeur 'd J ane Angert, KKr. June 26 , a t the summer Beechwood Bo ulevard, Pittsburgh, Pa. Ap ­ Alene, Idaho, August 2, 194 1. Hi ll , con­ home of the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. pel was a cha rter member of Gamma-Sigma nected with the Booneville Power Adminis­ W. L. Angert, in Fores tville, 0 . Weaver, and former SMC. H e is now alumni ad­ tra tion at Portland, Ore., was graduated son of Mr. and Mrs . R . E. Weaver, of viser. Mrs. Appel was pres ident of the by the University of New Mexico in 1940. Columbiana, 0 .. was I MC of Gamma-Zeta Pitt Wo man 's Sw dent Governing Associa­ At ho me: E. 9 17 Miss ion, Spokane. and me mber of lllue Key a t Wittenberg. ti on in her senior yea r. 40 ince his Kentucky Derby victory tamped him a probably the be t three­ yea r-old, Whirlaway ha had two et­ backs. H e got his fir t in the rlington Cia sic-often a jinx for favorites-when he wa beaten by Attention. The son of Blenheim ll-Du twhirl. dropped an­ o ther race in mid-September, losing the Iarraga n ett pecial to \IV ar R eli c by four and a half lengths. But few horses ca n go to the post as often as \IVhirl y has without co ming a cropper now and then. . nd hi s de­ fea ts have not hurt his reputation as the best of the three-year-olds. vVhirl has won w much money in purses this year that \IVri ght ha deci ded to send him o ut after eabiscuit's record. the all -time turf winning· hi gh of 437,- 730. Whirl y's victory in the Lawrence R eali zation take , worth S23,050. boost­ ed his winning to $347.66 1. Thi fig­ ure, hi September 20th total. is just 90,069 short of Seabiscuit's mark . And it too Seabiscuit a long racing career, climaxed by a remarkable comeback last yea r, to reach tha t total. The chances are that with good hea lth and Unpredictable Whirlaway t U, PRI::DI CTA llLE, wacky il y of a llKA. \IV arren Wright's son, racing luck \1\lhirlaway ma y se t a new Whirlaway, the screwball of the turl, i> Warren, Jr., rr, gnduated from the record early next yea r. racing's hor e-of-the-year. University of Denver last spring. \1\lhirly has had two jockeys, Eddie lo one-owner, trainer, jockey o r H e attended the Chicago convention Arcaro and Alfred R o bertso n. For starter-could ever tell just what this of Pi Kappa lpha a year ago last fall awhile it seemed that only Arcaro-who speedy colt would do. Sometime he'd and was acti ve in Denver IIKA circles. rode him in the Derby, Preakne a nd run out; so metime he wouldn't. Some­ The colt has brought Warren vVright Belmont among other events - could times he'd win by a nose or so; some­ joy but he's caused him trouble, too. ha ndle \IVhirl y. But, when Arcaro was times he'd romp home lengths ahead. "\1\lhirlaway was regarded as the best two­ not available, Robertso n too k over and Sometimes he'd move along with the year-old last season, although he had showed he could win with him too. field; sometimes he'd let them get far fat· from a perfect racing season, and vVhirl y used diHerent approaches to ahead and then turn on the gas and pass was early tabbed as the future book win each of the crowns in the triple: He them as though were standing still. favorite for the Kentucky Derby. ·ran around 'em in the Derby, tlu-ough Unpredictable, wacky Whirly, a flop R acing fans began to quit on Whirly 'em in the Preaknes and ahead of 'em in the spring, a fl ash in the summer. last spring, however, when he had a in the Belmont. As Arcaro said, a bout That's the colt Warren Wright rai ed couple of bad races clown in Florida. the Belmont, "The pace was too low, The two who stuck with him, still con­ tO become the world's outstanding three­ so I turned tO the other jockeys when year-old, the fifth thoroughbred in his­ vinced he could win at Louisville, were we were bunched up there as we came wry tO win racing's coveted triple- The his owner, "\!\fright, a nd his trainer, wi e out of the first turn and I sa id to them, Derby, The Preakness and The Bel­ Ben Jone . Jones kept training and 'the hell with this, £eli as, I'm leaving'." mont. conditioning the colt and had him Most races, however, found \1\lhirl­ The first thing yo u think about in ready. connection with vVhirlaway - even be­ Everyone know how he flashed to away adopting a none-too-fast pace at the tart a nd soon left behind, but when fore you recall his great burst of speed triumph a t Churchill Down . A week he was read y to run he had the strength - is that big, bushy, long tail that reaches later he copped the rich Preakness at and speed to overhaul them. down tO his ankles and, when he begins Baltimore and then added the Belmont to step down the stretch, tands out and tO become the fifth hor e to win the H e's the hor e of the year-Whirl­ undulates in the breeze he kick up. triple, joining ir Barton, Gallant Fox, away, the top three-year-old, the winner Whirlaway, when compared with hi Omaha a nd "\1\lar Admiral. of the triple-all records tha t will never riva ls, is a mall hor e, but he's bigger be erased from turf's history and with than the 1937 tandout, War elmira!. luck next year he may write ano ther Whirlaway is perhaps the first grea t By DILLON GRAHAM line-biggest money winner. H ere's luck, thoroughbred to be owned by the (am- Associated Press S ports W riter Whirly. 41 Heads Salt Lake Alumni Three Win Fellowships Chapter Etm·nal + THREE of the five stu­ • R ECEN TLY elected city d ents designa ted a winners of fellow­ TH0 l\1AS A. MAG ILL, Z judge o f Salt Lake City, Frank E . 1\lfoss, T1- 1 0~1A A. MAG ILL, z. '30, and his wife, ships at Union Theological Seminary, Mrs. ' 'l'illamara i\finton ;\fagill , died in AT, '33, h as just been named pre ident Richmond, were members of Pi Kappa May at Knoxville, Tenn., of food poisoning. o f the Salt Lake City a lumni organiza­ Alpha. Magill took his undergraduate work at the tion. They are: sh by a nd Clifford R . Univer it)" of Tennessee, receivi ng hi B. S. degree in 193 1. Holding a fellow hip, he Judge Moss' duties during 1941 will J o hnson, M, '36, and .J ohn Osman, i\I , tudied for his ma ter's and received that be confined to the poli ce court. H e '33. degree the following year. He had been a will occupy the bench in the other three The .J ohn on brothers, na tives of Co­ member of the f a c uI t y. teach ing bac­ lumbus, Ga., were graduated from Pres­ teriolog)', si nce 1932. He wa Zeta's faculty advisor, acti ve in club and ch·amatic and byterian College with .B. d egrees a nd was an officer in th e Reserve Co rps. worked o n their m aster's a t the Uni­ --HKA -- versity of Richmo nd. During his un­ WEBSTER HALLETT, A1 dergraduate days, C lifford was active in " ' EilSTER H AL LElT, 40, Ar , prominent literary work and the glee cl u b. H e 'evada, Mo., attorn ey, wa killed in an was assistant to the R ev. A. B. Shiflet, automob.i le accid ent l\J ay 18 near Boonvill e, l\ lo. Hallett was known widely in political of Gap Mill , W. Va., in the summer o f circl e and formerl y had been a Depart­ 1939. ment of Justi ce agen t in Kansas City. He This is the first time two bro thers served a term as county attorney and made have graduated at the same time from an unsuccess fu l race last fall for circuit judge. Union a nd the first time fellowship --TIKA -- have been awarded to two bro thers in ROBERT JACKSON RHODES, BO the same year. RonERT J ACKSON RHOD ES, 19, BO, died Osman, of Cl inton, S. C., a lso is a April 6 in Denver of an illn ess which forced graduate o f Presbyteri an College. H e him to abandon his tudies last year at was acti ve in athletics and was a leader the University of Oklahoma. He was the so n of G. R . Rhodes, former Tulsa oil lease in other campus activities. H e was win­ man, and l\£rs. Rhodes. ner of the 440-yard cl ash and 880-yard --fli(A -- run at the Southeastern Olympic tryo uts DR. MILES PARKER OMOHUNDRO, r in 1932 and was captai n of the track DR. !\ I lLES PARKER OMOHU NDRO , r , on J UDGE MOSS team. H e edited the college magazine, July 28 , 19•11 , at his home in Wash ington, City jutlge arul TIKA presitlent took p art in forensic a nd dra matics a nd D. C. Dr. Omoh undro received his medica l degree from the ni versity of Virginia and served as a lumni ecretar y of the col­ divisions of the city judiciary during his had three and half yea r training at the lege before entering the seminary. H e Mayo Clinic. He was a member of the next three years in o ffi ce. se rved as assistant to the minister at Ameri can i\Iedica l ssociation, and th e Moss was graduated from the U n i­ Grace Covenant Church, Richmo nd, in U rologica I Association. T hree sisters sur­ versity of Utah in 1933 with high vive. the summer o f 1939 a nd the fall of 1940. --llKA-- honors, having m a jor e d in political H e is a member of Blue Key fra ternity. DR. J. W. TIDMORE, T science and history. H e was a member --llKA -- DR. ]. ·w. Tm~ I ORE, T. head of the de­ of Phi Kappa Phi, Beehive, Skull and LT. EcKFORD H o DGSON , AA , a fl ying partment of agronomy at Auburn and as­ Bones, Owl a nd Key, and was active in officer a nd comma nder o f the 53cl Bom­ sistant director of the tate Agricultural debating, student government a nd pub­ bardment Squadron, statio ned at Bow­ Experiment tati on , was ki ll ed this pring lications. near elm a, Ia. , in an automobile acci­ man Field Air Base, Louisville, K y. , left dent. The ca r in which Dr. Tidmore and H e studied law at George W ashington in September for gunner y practi ce at two other teachers at Auburn were riding, University and received the d egTee of maneuvers at Camp Skeel, Oscoda, co llided wi th a truck. He is survived by his wife and two chi ldren. Juris Doctor in 1937. Following his Mich. ___ 11 K A __ --llKA-- graduation he worked as an attorney Chattan ooga S afety L esson WILLIAM DUNLAP, rT for the SEC and for the Civil Aero­ CoxTIXU I·: o J;- HO:'It P AGE 27 nautics Authority. WILLIAM DUNLAI', ITKA pledge at th e The keynote of the entire campaign Univer it)' of Tulsa, was ki ll ed April 30 in R eturning to Uta h in 1939 as law was a constant reminding of the public an automobi le accid en t near T ul sa. Dun­ cl erk for the Supreme Court of Utah, to " ma ke Chattanooga safer." lap was president of hi s fres hman class and a fine intramural athl ete. he is a member of the bar of the State The resu lts of ·william Senter's Safe­ --llKA-­ of Utah, the District of Columbia, and ty Committee were amazing. Fa talities in Chattanooga in 1938 were 25-equal JOHN V. DENSON, T the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. H e J OH N V£RN ON D1:: NSON, T, died at hi to the yea r! y average for the previous 15 i also a member of the honorary inter­ horne in Opelik a, Ia., on J an. 15, 194 1. year . D eaths during the first six months l\fr. Denson was graduated a lawye r from natio nal legal fraternity, Phi D elta Phi. of 1939 (before the ca mpaign) were 12. labama Polytechnic Institute in 1905, and Always acti ve ly interested in TIKA The last six months sa w only [our. received his master's degree in 1906. He acquired his LL. 13. degree at the niversity even after graduation, Fra nk Moss was Car insurance rates have been re­ of Alabama in 1908. After practicing law the first president of the \.Yashington, duced from 59 to 34. Non-fa tal acci­ in Lafa)eLLe, Ia., for six month , be went D. C., alu mni organizati on, which he dents have been reduced. Au tomobile to Opelika to make his home, where his damage and persona l injury suit have brother, N. D. Denson, J r., "C , wa his was instrumental in organizing. partner. been reduced. H e married Phyll is Hart, University During his lifetime he was a director of During 1940, Senter's record showed the West Point l\Ianufacturing Company, of Utah Delta Gamma orority member but six traffic d eaths. By December, ptesident of the Rotary Club, the Chamber in 1934. They have a d aughter, Maril yn, Chattanooga pointed with pride to it of Commerce, and a member of the Board of Trustees at Alabama Polytechnic Insti ­ and reside at 1404 East 13 South, Salt poslllon as o. l city in the 100,000 to tute. l\Ir. Denson was a loya l fraternit • Lake City. 250,000 populatio n class. man, as we ll as a beloved citizen of Opelika. 42 •!• I ' J NE, while Iational President •!• B ELI EVE IT OR NOT, Granville harpe Roy D. H ickman, B~ , was o n a vi it to Patterson H olland, T, 57 car old, ce le­ New i\Iexico for the JIKA Supreme brated his fir t binhda on Easter un­ Council meeting after attending the day, 194 1. lL was a "Beli eve It or 'ot" Rotary Convention in Denver, he was by Ripley a nd appeared in all new - accorded his mo t recent honor in the IlK A . pa pers ca rrying this feature. The rea­ way of a name-sake. And1·ew H . Knight, so n : H e was born Easter Sunday, April AIT. and irs. Knight named their so n, 13, 1884, and that date in 1941 was the RO)' Fin/ilea Knight. first time April 13 had fall en o n Easter Sunday since. Three w ee ks previously President Hickman had been honored by the •:• R OBERT . \1\'00D , B, '23, who for the 1 egro office boy at the labama En­ PARADE la;r l'our years has been vice presi dent graving Co. (Hickman 's "sideline") nam­ and agency manager of the onh Amer­ ing his son R oy Bernard W atters. + ALTHOUGH defense activ­ ica n urance Society, of Ri hmo nd, tlles fJr edominate the scene these da ys, The office wag immediately remarked Va ., has been elected executive vice behind this sjJec ta cula1· and fast chang­ that Roy Hickman now had his name presidem of the o iet y b the Board of ing scenery are th e jJeople and events copied in black and white. Director . M r. fl' oods also is a member !hat cony on routine affaiTS. Some of of the Board. th e IIKA's playing an important fJart iu •!• DR. C. DwtGHT TowNES, AA, con­ /h e " behind-the-scen es" events and their cluded a yea r's term in September as •:• R OBERT B ELL BROWNE, Bll , '32, direc­ jJ01'/ icula1· jobs aTe listed he1·ewith. president of the Eye, Ear, Nose and tor of the Divisio n of University Exten­ Throat Section of the Kentucky i\ led­ sion, has been elected to the new Board ica l Association. of Directors of the University of Illinois thleti c Associa ti o n. The old board •:• THE R Ev. HAROLD J . D UDL EY, I, pas­ re igned in the comroversy involving tor of the First Presbyteri an Church, Football Coach Robert Zuppke and Birmingham, Ala., received the degree Athleti c Director ' •Vendell Wilson. of Master of Theology from Union Theological Seminary, Richmond, Va., •!• BLAK E TYLER N EWTON . JR., r, has In lay. The R ev. Mr. Dudley was been appointed director of the securities graduated from Union Seminary in 1929 di visio n of the Virginia Corporati on a nd ha done post-graduate work since. Commiss ion, th e reby becoming th e His thesis was written in the field of the yo unge t di vision head in the sta te gov­ Text and the Canon of the New Te ta­ ernment. ment, in two parts, the first deali ng Newton is the on of Blake T yler with the Canon ana the second with Newton, r , a nd is a native of vVestmore­ the Greek T ext of the ew Testament. Jand County, Virginia. ' 'Vhile at col­ lege he was o ne of the most outstanding tudents on the ca mpus. H e is a mem­ •:• D ENEEN . \ 1\TAT ON , BH, of Chicago, ber of Omicron Delta Kappa and was recently chosen vice pre idem of the the first chief aide to the pres ident of Alumni Association at the University of MEDIATOR MORSE the coll ege. H e wa president of his Illinois, is chairman of an alumni asso­ Seeks to avoicl rail strike enior clas . ciation committee drafting plans for •!• WAYNE LYMAN ifoRSE, B.=;, dean of R eceiving his law degree in 1938, he closer cooperation between the alumni the University of Oregon Law School, returned the foll owing yea r as instruc­ and the university. Methods of making headed the special five-ma n board set tOr in law while, at the sa me time, prac­ more effective and more frequent co n­ up by President Roosevelt to investi gate ticed Jaw in Warsaw. J n 1939 he was tacts with alumni everywhere have been the dispute between the 1a tion's rail ­ made assistant director of the ecurities discussed. roads and their employees. division of the corpo ration commiss io n, lVatson recently was se lected by Gov. Authority for the board of inquiry, rhe positio n he held at the time of hi s Green of lllinoi to swdy taxation a a nnounced by the Tational Media­ recent promotion. problems. tion Board, is co ntained in the R ail way Labor Act. This statute provides for •!• Rov G. RY LANDER, Bfl, of the R y­ •!• DR. \1\TYNm-JA r BoLLI NG BLA t TO N, I at least a 60-day postpo nement of any lander Co. recently was elected vice and A, associate professor of medicine strike ca ll ed by railroad employees. president of the Chi cago Mail Adverti - in the Medical Coll ege of the University Dean Morse holds degrees from "Vi s­ ing ervi e Association. of Virginia, spoke on "The Bedside consin, Minnesota and Columbia. H e fanner" at the commencement addre5s has been dean of the University of •!• H oRAe£ STA N JF£R CLEVEl.A t D, K, '2 1, before the graduates of the ifedica l Col­ Oregon Law School since 1932. H e is recently was elected president of the lege of the State of South Carolina in the author of authoritative works o n Producers' Live tock Marketing Associa­ June. courts and crime surveys and was Ad­ tion, Louisville, Ky. The as ociation ministrative Director of the ttorney last yea r handled 83 ,540 head of li ve­ Most patients will be "in search of an General's Survey of R elea e Pro edure stock ent to market by some J 0,000 o ptimist for a doctor," Dr. Blanton sa id. in 1937. members in 54 l enwcky and Southern Self-confidence of just the right degree India na counties. was termed indispensa ble to the success­ •!• DR. LuciEN . L EDoux, H , ' 17 , of ful doctor, he declared, adding that the New Orleans, has been elected to the Cleveland, of Franklinto n, K)'·• is a "self-co nfidence I am urging upon yo u executive committee of the Southern former treasurer and general manager is the genuine article-the kind that Medical Associa ti o n for a three year of the Kentucky Sta te Fair, was a n un­ 5prings from knowledge." ~ rm. successful ca ndidate for Kentucky Com- 13 mi ss ioner of griculture, and is a mem­ •!• THE DISTRICT AND CouNTY ATTOR­ ber of the University of Kentucky Board NEY'S A SOC IATIO of T exas recently of Tru tees. elected as its pre iclent j ames K. Evetts, In taking over the helm of the mar­ BZ, '31, of Belton, Di trict ttorney for keting association, he is faced with the three T exas counties a nd former vice charge of assisting members in keeping president of the as ociation. A ection their herds and fl ocks healthy and thus of the State Bar, the association is cam­ provide adequate meat for a n <~t i o n po eel of all state and Federal prose­ which might soon be faced with an cutors of T exas, the Attorney General's emergency. staff and the state pro ecuting taff be­ fore the Court of Criminal Appeals. •!• E ATOR A. B. CHANDLER, lC and n, Evetts, who already is being talked of who was graduated from Transy l v<~ ni a as a likely ca ndidate for Governor in Coll ege, at Lexington, Ky. , in 1921 , is the future, has been City Judge in Bel­ heading a na ti onal ca mpaign among ton for two years and County Attorney alu mni of the school to raise an addi­ of Bell County. H e was unopposed for tional endowment fund o[ $350,000. a third term as Distri ct Attorney for •!• DR . .J AMES 1-1 . RI CHi\ JOND, Z, pre ident the Twenty- eventh Judicial District. of lV[urray (Ky.) State Teachers Coll ege, H e has been president, vice president is chairman of the State Coll ege Coun· and treasurer of the Belton Rotary Club, cil , an ad visory group cooperating with president of the Belton Little Theatre lYA in aiding approximately 2,000 stu­ and of the Belton Athletic Association, dents in 32 Kentucky co ll eges. At a chairma n of the Bell County R ed Cross, recent meeting of the Kentucky council , vice president of the Belton Chamber D1·. Richmond interpreted decisions a nd of Commerce and for the last four years disc ussions of the national council meet­ PITTSBURGH'S BIDDLE director of the widely- known Belton ing, which he attended in ' 1\T ashington. Takes over Pitt clean's job White H or e Ba nd. H e is married and has a yo ung son. The famil y resides at + DR. WiLLIAM v. HOLLOWAY , AO, '25, + THEODOR E M. BIDDLE, r:::: , acting dean 717 College Ave. associate professor of political sc ience of men at the University of Pittsburgh •!• H . A. W EISS, Z, '30, was appointed at Tulane, h as been elected a member since 1929, has been appointed clean. a sistant general p assenger agent for the of the Southern Political Science Asso­ Dean B iddle takes the place of Dr. Long Island R ailroad in May, with of­ ciation. Vincent W. Lanfear, who became dean fices in the Pennsylvania Station at •!• R EU BEN FLOURNOY BURCH, .JR., AM, of the School of Business Administra­ New York. tion. ' 13, who in two years as Commissioner •!• RoY J. L EFFINGWELL, AN, '29, is as­ of N atural R e ources in Georgia added Born in Donora, Penn., Biddle was sistant manager of the Shreveport (La.) 50,000 acres to the state's 5,000-acre park graduated from Pitt with a bachelor of Chamber of Commerce. H e lives at system, has returned to the atural R e­ sc ience and a mas ter of education de­ 3112 Alexander Street, Shreveport. sources Department as head of the Divi­ grees. A member of the ational Asso­ sion of Parks. l-Ie became affiliated with ciation of Dea ns of Men, Eastern Asso­ •!t WILLIAM V. H urr, JR., AN, '30, is the R esources Department in I 937, but ciation Deans of Men and the National advertising manager of the Pine Bluff resigned in 1939. His goal is "the fin est Interfraternity Conference, he h o I d s (;J1·k.) Gmphic. H e lives at 1117 W . state park system in the South." membership in Omicron Delta Kappa, 5th , Pine Bluff. Druids and Scabbard and Blade. •!• j . MAXWELL \oVJ LLJ ;\i\ IS, H, '40, of ew •!• BEN H ENNEKE , 1'1', dramatics director at Orlea ns, is sa iling as sh ip's doctor on a the Un ive rsity of T ul sa, has been elected •!• JoHN V. NEFF, A~, associate editor of Ca ribbea n cruise. vice pres id ent of T heta Alpha Phi, nati onal honorary dramati cs [raternit)'· the America n Chamber of Commerce ]ounwl, in Manila, P . I ., has returned to his home in Los Angeles after three yea r in the Far East. In the Ia t few months he was there, Neff and Dana Todd, Bll, of the U . S. farines stationed in the Navy Yard, Cavite. met se veral times for dinner and to talk about things American. While in the Islands, Neff added hi s doctorate to his bachelor and mas ter's degrees, it being taken at R oyal and Pontifical University of San Tomas, (Dominica n) founded in 1611. San Tomas is the oldest university under the Ameri ca n fl ag. Because of the war care Neff ent his wife and 2-year-olcl so n, Eric, to the States early in 1941. H e followed as soon as business permitted.

•!• H ERNDON HiLL, Bll. is work ing with the Bonnevi ll e Powe r Admin istration as an en­ gineer and will be loca ted at Pullman, JOHN V. NEFF ... Finest stale park system \oVash ., for the nex t few months. Dons Dominican robes 44 Mr. Sinkwich Goes to Town Militant Chandler o MA ' Y things have been happening THo E presem are keeping mum about la tely ... that we have onl y just got around IIKi it, but Administration leader almost had lO sending up three hear ty editorial cheers Lo call out the riot squad to get the enate for that gentlema n and scholar who pla yed Milita ry Affair Committee to report out a lot of halfback Ia t year for Georgia, the Wa r Department' "draft property" bi ll. Frank Sinkwich, [Alii ]. This yo ung Ohioan Two Democrats, hericlan Downe , Cali ­ seems to have reached the a mazi ng conclu­ SCRAP BOOK fornia's "yes and noer" on foreign affairs, sion tha t be is at coll ege for some reason a nd " Happy" Chand ler, (K and !1), militant o ther than footba ll , and although he was anti-isola tionist Kentuckian, a 1 m ost d id a bout the t ba ll -toter in the So utheast be Hall Hits Illiteracy throw punches. last fall , he told the whole crowd of foot­ DR. SIDNEY 13. H LL, [r ], State Superin­ It started when Wa yne Coy, head of the ba ll coaches, handlers, and rubber at tendent of Public Instruction sa id today he Office of Emergency Management, came Georgia, tha t he wasn 't going to spend the regretted to learn that lack of educa ti on rest of the winter, not to mention most of fro m the White House with a draft of the had become a principal cause of rejection property-seizure bill , which, it developed, the spring, practi cing. So he moved out of for Virginia's Selective Service registrants the special do rmito ry at Athens, wherein wa a virtual facsimi le of the W a r De­ and expressed the hope tha t the Legisla­ partment's dras ti c original bill. There was the holders of football "sc holarships" are ture of 1942 would enact the law that " will a brief pause after the bill was read-and ho used, a nd told the athle ti c authorities he ma ke it possible to elimina te illiteracy in then the battle began . would not take part in " spring" practice. Virginia." Such temerity is so astounding in this H e referred LO a report from State Selec­ All the R epublican members a nd three day a nd age, tha t it ca ll s for something tive ervice headquarters yes terday show- Democrats, including Downey, jumped from more than routine mention. Whether l\•lr. their chairs hotly charging tha t the War Sinkwich would have pas eel up his foot­ Department was trying to put over a fast ball scholarship, if his parents had been one, and dema nding that Co ' take the bill unable to fina nce him through coll ege, is back to the White House. a question we can't a nswer, but at all Senator tyles Bridges of New H a mp­ events, he bad the guts to tell the rah-rah shire, a no ther G. 0. P . a nti-isola ti onist, hoys where to get off. He ought to be e:-.claimed : elevated to the status o f a national hero, " If the President wants na ti onal unity in .consequence. and support from R e publica ns, he'd better Plenty of other young college men feel g ive this bi ll back to the W ar Department." just as Frank inkwich does about the foot­ Downey and several others also joined ball racke t, with its " pring" practice open­ in the a ttack . i\fea nwhile Chandler, in ing in Januar y, its rigo rous regimen, its charge of the legislation, kept shouting a t interference with studies, not to mention the Lop of his o ice: its virtual elimination of all opportunity " Property is no more sacred than human for relaxation. But they Jack the courage life. If the Pres ident has power to draft to speak out. Like sheep, they conform to men for the Army, he also sho uld have the preva iling ca mpu nw,.es, and are herd­ the right to draft property. " ed hither and yon. The big blowoff came when Downey So there is no use being optimisti a bout yell ed, "This hill means revolution." the example set by Mr. Sinkwich. The " 1' m surprised," shot back the trucul ent dormitory which sta bled him, along with Chandler, " that a responsible member of the other brawny yo ung men rounded up the Senate would make such a wholly ir ­ in many sta tes for the greater glory of responsible and a bsurd sta tement. I don't Georgia, is still well-filled with boys who think a ma n of yo ur pos ition sho uld be either are unwilling or unable to chuck DR. SIDNEY B. HALL loosely predicting revolution . Such rema rks their scholarships, and spend a li ttle of Labors for three R's stir up unrest, and there's already too much their time on the campus doing something agita tion in the country." besides kicking pigskin around. At the ing tha t lack of education was responsible same Lime, Frank Sinkw ich ought to be re­ for the rejection of approximately 25 per 'Til say what I please," screamed Dow­ me mbered. H e said when he tossed his cent of the men turned clown at army in­ ney, blazing with fury, " and I'll have yo u know tha t I have the interest of this coun­ gridiron career into the ashcan tha t he duction stations in the state's thirteenth try a t heart as much as yo u." wanted more time for study, for da tes with call. his girl , and for the ordinary amenities ''The fact tha t educa tion is the greates t " Yo u haven't when you make sta tements which he says are denied football players. fa ctor in eliminating selectees is not clue to like that," retorted Chandler. Here's hoping h e finds that the noble ex­ lack of educational faci lities in the state," Then Downey sat cl own and the commit­ p t> riment is worth it. We believe he wi lL­ Dr. Hall said , " but to the failure of having Lee voted out the co mpro mi ~e bill favored Richmond (Va.) T imes-Dispatch editorial. a law which would make those children .by Chancl ler.- lf'ash.inglon M erry-Co-Round not willing to attend school to attend." by Drew Pem·son a11d Roberl . A lien . -- fi KA -- The State Board of Education in co­ --fil(.\ -- operation with the local school divisions New Book on Indians has been trying to deve lop a n instructi onal Beaircl Lazulecl for Forensics program that would be interesting, effec­ "SIXTY YEARS OF I 'DI AN AFFA IRS" by EvERY YEAR a t Na ti onal Conve ntions di­ George Dewey Harmon , [rA), associa te tive and profitable to all the school chil ­ dren, Dr. Hall declared, but in spite of this rectors of speech from a ll pans of the professor of history and government, has United States ask J.h e questi on : '' Wha t is effort there a re many children who a re not just been p ublished by the University of the explana ti on of Oklahoma's tremendous ' orth Carolina Press. attending school regularly or at all in some instances.-Richmond (Va.) N ews L eader. success in forensic work?" H aving heen connected with the forensic program in The volume is concerned with the rela­ -- IT KA-­ tions of the federal government with Indian Oklahoma in high school anrl coll ege for tribes li ving within the United States dur­ Purvis Visits " P" Men eleven years, I have observed the opera tions ing the period from 1789 to 1850. DUANE P URV IS, (B) , one of Purdue's All­ of this prog ram with a great deal of inter­ American football a nd track greats, spent est. I have come to the conclusion th a t the lt treats in pa rticul a r of the Indian rights a part of the summer va ca ti oning on the answer is simply this- T ed Bea ird, [BO ]. to the o il , the federal support of Indian ' ·\'est Coast. H e sa w many of his letter­ I have seen the Oklaho ma High School trading houses, and the federal policy re­ men friends, including Johnny Drake, '37 , Public Speaking League a nd the Oklahoma garding the removal of the Indians from powerhouse Purdue fu llback of a few their old ha bitats to the west of the .Junior Coll ege Forensic As ociation become years back and now tops in the professional Miss iss ippi. in creasingly significant in the speech edu­ circuit. Purvis declare tha t Drake is C

45 ence , that is, six or more chools organized Colonial Tomes Lost into a unit which hold contests and qualify HA~ti'IJ E -SYDNEY , VA., (AP)-Fire today contestant for the state tournament. swept through the 125-year-old librar In the stale final , winners are qualified building at H a mpden- )'dney Coll ege, de­ for the national tournament. stroying 20,000 vo lumes and one of the few coll ections of all United States Government That the system ha worked successfull y periodicals printed since 1776. is auested by the fact that Oklahoma high schools have won six of ten na ti onal cha m­ The loss , es timated by P . T. Atkin on, pionshi ps in debate. Individual contestants [1), chool treasurer, at 50,000, included a from Oklahoma have won a vast array of number of vo lumes a utographed by James honor. in na ti onal tournaments almost 1ad ison and Patrick Henry. eq ua ll ing the success in debate. n additional 10,000 volumes a nd many o ld records a nd paintings in a new fire­ This is no accident, nor is it due to the pt oof wing were not damaged.- Detroit f;tcl that the directors of forensics in Okla­ N ews. homa a re superior to directors in other states. In m y opinion it is due la rgely to --IlK .\ -- the fact tha t Ted Bea ird has formulated W ickard Urges Seaway an organiza tion which provides max imum training· and educa tional benefits. H is en­ vVASI-II'IGTO N- Secretary of Agriculture thu iasm a nd tireless work have been con­ Claude Wickard, [B), toda y urged con­ tagious. His philo ophy is so und and he struction of the St. Lawrence Seaway, de­ has kept the machine ry moving· which pro­ claring that a broad marine highway from vides th e utmost in speech tra in ing. the Great Lakes to the tlantic would aid MUNICIPAL EXPERT EGGER meri ca n farmers to regain world markets Each year this progra m becomes increas­ Attends South Am erican confab after the e mergency. ingly signifi ca nt, becau e the man behind "Some people, while admitting the St. it has a vision of ever greater achievements. Delegate to S . A . Congress The success story of forensics in Oklahoma Lawrence seawa y would reduce the cost o f might well be written in a story of the DR. R owL1\ ND EGGER, [BZ). Virg·inia's sh ipping farm products abroad," Wickard vision, tireles work, and enth usiasm of budget director, went to San tiago, Chil e, sa id, " have aid tha t our farm ex port mar­ Ted Beaird.-£. E. Bradley in The Forensic in September as a delegate to the second ke t is gone forever. The truth is tha t of Pi KafJfJn Delta. Inter-American Congres of i\funicipalities. what wi ll happen to the farmers export Announcing Dr. Egger's appointment, market after the war depends on who wins --IlK .\ -- Gov. Price sa id he had instructed the bud­ the war. Jn any event we should be pre­ get director to accept and that he had a u ­ pared to compe te for world ma rkets when 'Peace From Justice' thorized Dr. Egger' absence from the the war is over."-The Associated PTess. M ONTREAT, N . C.-Dr. Fra nk C. Brown , Capitol for the necessa ry period. (1), Dallas. Tex., retiring moderator, plead­ " This appointment," the Governor said , --TIKA-- eel for " Christia n leadership" and unity to " is an honor not onl)' to the director of Lions Lose Jack Johnson face the world 's proble ms in his sermon to the budget but to the Commonwealth the opening session of the General Assembly which he serves. It comes to him in such W BEN JACK JOHNSON, (AT), signed the of the Presbyte rian Church in the nited terms, and so forcefull y urged by a num­ o ther day as coach of Pueblo Junior Col­ tales. ber of people high in the nation's co uncils lege in . Colorado, the De troit Lions lost their last cha rter me mber of the club tha t Clerical and Jay commtss10ne rs fro m in \·Vash ington, that a fai lure to respond introduced National Profess io nal League throughout th e church territory poured would not be worth y of the traditions of football to De troit a nd Michigan. Si nce into J\l o ntreat fo r the annual meetinu·, Virginia." 0 1934, when he reported as a recruit fre h which will las t six days. The experience of se rving as a delegate o ut of the U niversity of ta b , J o hnson has " We recognize the world today to be in with an inte rnational group was not new to Dr. Egger. He was a ppointed by Secre­ been a powerful tackle in Detroit fot·ward a n emergenc •," Dr. Brown sa id . " Peace is walls. wa nted , but perhaps we have been th ink­ ta ry of State Cordell H ull as a delegate to ing too much in terms of the fruit instead the Interna tional Institute of Adminis­ Coach George (Potsy) Clark and a closely of the roots of peace. R eal peace comes trative Sciences which met in W arsaw, knit combina ti on cf stars from J>ortsmouth, from righteousness and justice. T his is Poland, in I 936, a nd was a delegate to 0 ., whence the club was moved to Detroit,· where the church enters o ur thinking a nd the International n ion of Local Author­ found in Johnson a stalwart teamma te. the world's program."- The Associated ities Congress in Berlin the same yea r. Johnson played seven seasons in Detroit Press. He was a member of the American Ad­ and even last year it was a voluntary tes ti­ visory Commission which cooperated with monial of his opponents tha t "Jack sti ll the C uban government in o rganizing the plays a lot of tackle."-The Det roit New .~. first Inter- merican Congress of ~ lu ni c ­ ipalities in 1938 a nd was a delegate to the congress in November of tha t year. From 1935 to 1937 , Or. Egger was on leave from th e niversity of Virg inia as the executive offi ce r of an International J oint Commiuee 0 11 Adm inistra ti ve Coo per a t ion, with headquarters in Brussels.-Hich111 ond (Va.) T i 11/ es- DisjJal ch. --Ill\ A -- Nab Burglar in IIKA House H ERi\ t AN ( P ETE) T ti\IPERi\t.A N , '42 , of New !han) . star tackle on the varsity footba ll team , got some out of cason practice earl y in August and ca ught a n all eged fta ternity house burgla r. fter police reported a co lored man had looted the Delta Upsil on house members of Ka ppa Sigma Fra te rnity decided to e t a u ap just in case the thief paid them a visit. few hours later the ma n entered the house, but fl ed across the lawn to the Pi Kappa Alpha ho use with T imperman in p ursuit. The big tackle nai led the prowl er in the basement but cut one of his fee t severe! y on broken glass. MODE RATOR FRAN K C. BROWN Timperman turned the ma n over to the FOOTBALL'S J ACK JOHNSON Pleads f or Christian justice police.- P11 rd ue Alumnus. Inven ted hinged knee grtards 16 + o. 1 /\ IA N o n Univer ity FoR 111-.TTER cholastic average . a commit­ Cu~tAXING three ear of journali ti of lew Iexico golf team last year was tee at the recent conventi on of Districts 6 activity at niversity o f T e nnes ee, Bill and 9 suggested the following: Lewi i\Iartin, Be lta-D elta i\ l C. H e Holder, Z, is n ew edito r-in-chic[ of the A . R equired tudy halls fo r all pledges. was rated one of the best a mate ur golf­ Orange and IVhite, stude nt semi-weekly. B. £nli t a id of such groups a the er in the Southwe t. i\I a rt i n was Yi\1 r\ to wtor delinquent students. H o lder is a junio r a nd has been as o­ m a tch ed recently with i\Ii P a tty B erg C. A fil e of all old e:-.ami nati on ·hould cia te editor in ch a rge of news a nd m a ke­ in a n exhibition match in Albuquerqu e. be kept. up o n the O range and Jlfhite for p a t R e presenting the Universit , h e com ­ D. Acti ve brothers hould be stimula ted year. Also treasurer-elect of the e nior p e ted in rizon a, Texas, Colorado and to stud y more. cl ass, a nd secretary of cabba rd and lew i\•Iexico. £ . i\lore time should be pent on swdies Blad e, nation a I milita r y fra ternity. and less on intramurals. Martin learned his golf o n the B el­ E ditor hip of O range and JVhite is high­ mont Hills course a t St. Clair ville, 0 . F. Rewards, in tead of penalties, ·hould est jo urna li tic ho no r University can be give n for improving scholar hip. There h e was matched in a n exhibitio n be tow. gam e again t L awson Little, U. S. Open --llK A-- Champion. Fo ll owi ng the match, Little A CO LL EGE ~ IA N'S ROO~! may be decora ted aid, " M artin is a fine a mateur a nd I on the with anything from andiro ns to zebras, but hope h e rem a ins a n amate ur for a whi le; Alpha-Psi claims the wall s of his room rep­ resent a fe ll ow's personality, and where two this golf ompe titio n is tough e noug h men room together it is often hard to without boys like him coming up to strike a happy medium. ch alle n ge the pros." One room boasts an organized coll ecti on --111\A -- of colorful tobacco tins ca rried around the room by scarlet banners, evidently indi­ NIQ E OCI \I. FUNCTIONS to provide en ­ campus cative of two pipe smokers-loyal Rutger tertainment and to generate publicity for men both. Downstairs are two football the chapter was urged upon delegates to players with teammate's picwre vyi ng for the spring convention of Districts 6 and 9. with space with friends of the female sex, and in L.. C. Burch , BK. chairman of the socia l the next room li ves a man with a half­ acti ities commiuee, reported that each dozen pistols, revolvers, and rifles h anging chapter should be g iven adequate space in PI KAPP A ALPH A from precarious pos i lions. the campus publica tions. H e stressed the Another room ex hibits lacrosse sti cks, golf importance of reponing the chapter's social T11E PRA CTI CE o f filing old examination clubs, and a lone tennis racket, whi le over­ functions to the newspaper and urged head hang two T -squares in dismal sta te. unique and unusual acti ities to obtai n suc­ questions for the possible enlightenment cess in attracting publicity. o[ future students in the fraternity chapter The third fl oor front room provides a has frequentl y been the subject of deba te numerous and varied display of bottles, Suggestion included: ·'out-o f-date" Easter while around the room in every conceiv­ Egg hunts, hobo parties, street car panics, as to it~ ethics. Opponents of th e sys tem ca ll it cheating, defenders plead that fil es able space are pia tercel Petty drawings and stea k fries out-o f-doors, poss um hunts, barn other tudies of anatomy. dances, masq uerade functions, functi ons in are valuable and , anyway, all the other coordination with ororiti es , kid panics, fra tern i ti e do it! --- TIKA -- and parties for under-privileged ch ildren. \Vhether hone l or dishone t, there are con iderati ons of practica l va lue: (I) Is the TREASURER PA UL BRt-n-, '43: Social - - 111\.1 -- system of examina tion fil es ethica l? (2) If Chairman John Syka, '43; D elegate-with­ RALPI-I 'iN'ILDE , r~ . '44, is n ew prexy so. have the files any practi ca l utility? o ut-po rtfolio D a n 1I ash , '4·3, and Pledge­ of D e lta ch apter of Druids, n a tional (3) And even if useful , is it the fraternity's m aster Ralph Wilde, '44 , all of G a mma­ job to do it? Sigm a, attended fraternity officer's tra in­ ho n o ra r y activities fraternity for soph­ Wha t is JTK A 's ex peri ence? What do o more . Pled gemaster \!\Ti lde b ecom e underg raduates say abo ut it? ing chool, Purdue. June 7-13. third presicle m in famil y. Gustave \>\T. --111\ A-- --TIKA-- \1\lilde, '43, is chapter I C. Mrs. Gus­ ONE SATURDAY NIGHT in the Gamma-Tau DON McLEoD, l" r , ha been selected by tave A. 'i•Vi lde is president of Gamma­ chapter house (Rensselaer Pol ytech) all but the f( enda//abnwt, swdent yearbook, as the Sigma's i\Iothe r's C lub. niversity of T ulsa's " Typical Junior." two of the members were absent. The two - - HKA -- had ca refull y locked all doors before com­ H e is \'ice pres ident of the Student Coun­ mencing their home work, but when the IT TOOK twenty )Ca rs, but Beta-Phi chap­ cil ; only man in Alpha Rho Tau, honorary door bell rang and one of them answered. ter fin a ll y \\On the interfraternity partici­ art fraternity; a member of Sword and Key, a man, well over 6 feet in heigh t and large pation point troph). It is awarded for the senior men's honorar , for 1941-·12 . eno ugh to frighten Carnera, ca me lunging most points in interfraternity athletic com­ into the house, swinging a big lumber ax. petition. Participati on in a sport is worth H e glowered upon the timid underclass man 25 points, while a first place is only worth who had admitted him and then thun­ 5 points. The chapter participated in all dered , thick ly: ''I'm tired of being ke pt of the even ts and won first place in clas awake by yo u fell ows and I've decided to t\ basketball and in the rifle meet. murder the whole lot of you-and l 'll start The trophy i a large cup surmounted in wilh ·ou ." with a track shoe. Arou nd the ba e are He sw ung once with the ax but the four figures representing base ball, track, underclassman had alread y left for parts basketball , and tennis. T he trophy is the firther removed . The ax man began to permanent po scs ion of the winner. pursue him about the ho use and the fri ght­ - -TIKA-- ened sophomore was fina ll y forced to seck refuge by jumping from a window. Luck­ K E:--JNETl-1 H EN DERSO • , ch arter m ember il a few older men happened along j ust o f G a mma-Chi, h as returned to Okla­ at that time and rescued the frightened homa A. a nd M. campus to do S] ecia l ·oph. T he inebriated would-be bm chcr work in en gin eering. H e holds a com­ was taken into custody and the two JTKA 's merce d egree. were left to fi n ish their work. -- llK .\ -- --111\ A -- ROilFRT EDDI,, rx . appeared on the Fred j FSSF L. PF.RR\', JR ., 2: , was named the Allen radio program in June as a member olllstancling JTKA b the anderbilt )ear­ of the Cowboy Quartet of Oklahoma A. and book last spring. A Phi Beta Kappa, he M. Coll ege. Russe ll H owell , rx, is man­ T LSA'S TYPICAL McLEOD won a scholarship to the graduate school ager of the musical unit. ]rLn ior man liUOrLL cll rnpus of busin ess administration at Harva rd . 47 DETROIT AL MNI organized a commit­ ADVA CE REPORTS from ITKA ch a pters tee this summer to obtain n am e of o \·er the country indicate that the num­ men in ifichigan w ho were entering ber o[ m en re turning to ch a pters this colleges where ITK A h as chapters. [a ll compa res favorably with last yea r a nd tha t the number of pled ges may Fred H enrick, BT , was ch a irma n of slightly exceed tha t of 1940. the committee, which also included Dudley ewton, BT, a nd Orville R. lnte nsive rushing progra ms o n the ronson , BT. p a rt o f m a n y ch a pters during the sum­ D etroit a lumni were asked to urge m er, gen ero u s u e o f the rushing issue young m e n to continue their educa tio n of THE SHIELD AND DIAMON D, a nd since m o re a nd m o re skill ed m en ar e numerou s well-o rganized ch a pter pub­ n eeded fo r the D efense progra m a nd licity campa ign s a ll a ided in keeping for the p eriod to follow the pre e nt HIC A enro llmem s a nd ple clgings up. em ergen cy. - -nKA --- --nK A-- To MI N I ~ ti ZE the confusion crea ted ll\ Twi·:LVF. 'I F.MBERS of Beta- Delta chapter \ arious types of ca mpus organiza ti ons us in ~ 1 ecently held a get-together at the Floren­ Greek-letter names certai n distinctions have tine Garden . H ollywood, Calif. Attending been set up by Baird's ;vranual of American were: Merrell Duncan , Richard English. Coll ege fraternities on recommendation of Willis Pennington , Lew is i\fartin, Jack 1h e National As ocia ti on of Deans and Ad · O 'Grady. George Vi atts. Arnold Loken, visers of Men and the Associati on of Honor Dea n Young. Everett Clayton , vVilliam Societi es. Snyder. William Kas tl er, Lenhart Sai ler. and Russell Young. Also in attendance Fmtemity . for instance, will he limited "·as i\liss Ann Bachelor, X!!. to social and profess ional organizations of both men and women. Further distinction - - nKA -- limits the name fratemity for organilations THF. JoF. COI.LF.GF.S become kings for a of men and sorority for organiza ti on of day at the annual Mortar Boa rd party at Rushing takes on real glamour women. the University of Nebraska. as Delta-Alpha provides ple nty of All other group , however, will be ca ll ed Each member of the se nior women's hon­ sex appeal at a beach party on societies, under the follow'ng ca tegories: orary in vite a man to escort her-or vi ce Chesapeake Bay not far from Wash­ scholarship honor socie!y, n-;e mbership re­ versa. ington, D. C., the chapter's home . stricted to highest 20% in scholarship; T he perfect escort is the girl who wait' Above are Otlell Lewis and Bob lraderslr.iJ1 honm· society, eligibilitv based plarship stands in a line of seething femininity to B elow are ThC Paul Foley, Rushee ranking in the highes t 35 % ; ?'l'Cognition check his overcoa t, carries a shaving kit Fred B elen aml their dates. society, membership conferred usuall y in or over-night bag in lieu of the co mpact recognition of a studen t's interes t in a re· he usuall y ca rries, and finall y looks a t the Various means of transportation are used . stricted field , but with less insistence upon check for a steak dinner without flinching. including horse and wagon, model T trucks scholar hip as a requirement. The term and even tandem bicycl es. No one fail s honorm-y will no longer be used. On the other hand there is the girl who to have a good time, consequently the ends her date a corsage of onions, arrives The distincti on betw ~e n a social and a Fais Dodo ranks high in the wa)' of enter­ p10fessional fraternity is that the former an . hour la te driving a hearse, and when ta inment on the Tulane campus. eating time arrives asks, "" ' hat kind of a ma y select its membership from the genera I coke wo uld yo u li ke?" student body and maintains exclusive mem­ Cadet Col. James }. Dimel, r1:, One girl arrives in horse and buggy, an­ bership in its category of organizati ons, of the University of Pittsburgh R. while th e profe sional fraternity limits its oth er drives an ambulance, and another 0. T. C., sharecl hon.ors with Miss pushed her date to the party in a wheel mem bership to students in a speci fi c fi e l ~l Charlotte Harris, fJr esitlent of the of coll egiate, profess ional, or vocational chair. Delta Delta Delta chapter at Pitts­ --nK A-- education, and mainta ins exclusive mem­ burgh and Coed Colonel of the R. bership in tha t fi eld . EW EDITOR of the Tulsa Collegian, stu­ 0. T. C. Col. Dimel won. distinc­ dent newspaper a t the niversity of Tulsa, tion in military circles at Pitt and - -TTKA-- for the 194 1-42 school yea r is J . W . Vickers. Col. Harris was also Coed Captain LEHI Gl-1 now has a basketball court trul y Gamma-Upsil on pledge. Vickers succeeds of the Pitt Rifles mul Sc(lbbard worthy of co ll egiate games. The newl y­ P i Kaps H arry Heath and Baskett . rosse, and Blatle. constructed 350,000 structure, donated by 1\·ho se rved as co-editors las t year. E ugene G. Grace, affords a standard court, --nKA -- lockers and showers for visiting teams and the very best in modern eq uipment. The EvERY SPRI NG, when other types of enter­ bleachers wi ll accommodate 2,500 for bas­ tainment pall, the ITKA 's at Eta (Tulane, ketball games and approxima tely 3,250 New Orleans) set a date for the Fais Dodo. for wrestling ma tches. A. any Sllldent in French ca n tell yo u, ''fais dodo" mea ns simply "go to sleep." On the top floor of the fo ur-story stn tc­ but any Caj un in the land of the bayous ture is a drill and dance floor of approxi­ will tell yo u that in So uth Loui iana, mately 10,000 sq. feet to be used during so the story goes, the folks aren't always the winter by the R . 0 . T. C., and for able to go away from home and leave Lehigh's future dances. The R. 0. T. C. someone in charge of the younkers. So also has cia srooms at either end of this tup when a dance is held in Caj un co untry. fl oor, with rifl e and uniform storage room .. they bund le up the kids and bring them band uniform storage rooms, and offit e< along. n e"tra room is supplied where of the military men. the ch ildre •1 are left to " fais dodo" or go to sleep. The others go into the nex t room - -ITKA-- and " fais whoopee" or someth ing. LOREN I-IlCK ER ON, TX , '40, has been Th is time-honored custom of So uth Lou­ named alumnus co unselor of Gamma- u isiana has become a part of Eta's tradition. chapter to succeed William H . Bartley, rN , Costumes include anyth ing from a typical '37. Hicker on , a member of Phi Beta " Mayor of Bayou Pom Pom" to full farm ­ Kappa, Delta Sigma Rho, honorary speech, ing regali a. Signs on the walls advertise and Sigma Delta Chi, honorary journalism, fresh eggs and cows for sa le, while horse­ is editor of The Daily Iowan, student news­ shoeing and va ri ous cure-ails remind one paper at the Unive rsity of Iowa. H e is a of the inside of a barn. graduate studen L. 48 ALPHA, 4. University of Virginia. University BETA-MU, 14b. University of Texas. Austin . Tex. Va. fii\A House. 513 Rugby Road . M. J. 111\ A House. 1712 Rio Grande St.. john Czarniecki. AC. Dr. Rowland Egger. Gov­ Roberts. AC. Arthur P. Ba gby. Littlefield ernor's Office. Richmond . Va. AUTIVE UHAPTERS Bldg .. Austin . Tex. BETA, 5. Davidson College, Davidson. N. C. llKA Lodge on Campus. Edgar E. Scott. The numbtr following chapter name is the BETA-X!, 12 . University of Wisconsi n . Madison . Box 232. dislrict in which located. \Vh ere P. 0. Box is Wis. IlKA House. 661 Mendota Court. Max gwen use Ihot for moil. Firsr name given is of M. Smith. AC. Kenneth C. Corlett . 17 S. GAMMA, 4. William and Mary College. Wil­ Fairchild. liamsburg. Va. 111\A House. John P. Feaster. SMC. AC mdicates alumnus counselor. AC. Dr. I. E. Pa te . William & Mary College. BETA-OMICRON, 14a . University of Oklahoma . DELTA, 9. Birmingham-Southern College, Bir­ Norman, Okla. TII\A House. 578 Boulevard. mingham. Ala. IIKA Room on Campus. Bir­ ALPHA-TAU . 16. University of Utah. Salt Lake Charles E. Wright. AC . J. F. Malone . Univ. mingham-Southern College. Forrest Little. City, Utah. TII\A House. 51 N. Wolcott Ave .. of Okla .. Norman. AC. Dr. I. Allen Tower. Birmingham-Southern Robert R. McKay. AC. Floyd U. Goates. 340 BETA-PI, I . University of Pennsylvania , Phila- College. University St. delphia . Pa . lii\A House. 3900 Locust St.. ALPHA-PH!, 12. Iowa State College. Ames. Charles I. Utt. ZETA, 8, University of Tennessee. Knoxville. Iowa. llK A Ho use. 2112 Lincoln Way . Ken­ Tenn. Ill( A House. 1305 W . Clinch Ave .. neth W . Brooker. AC . Guy Martin , 501 6th BETA-SIGMA, 2. Carnegie Institute of Technol­ William j . O'Donnell. AC. Thos. A. Magill. Ave., S. W .. Independence. Iowa. ogy. Pittsburgh. Pa. Ill(A House. 5010 More­ Univ. of Tennessee. ALPHA-CHI. I. Syracuse University. Syracuse. wood Pl .. I oseph Henry. AC. I ohn R. Fox. ETA, lib. Tulane University. New Orleans. La. N. Y. llKA House, 720 Comstock Ave., Wil­ 178 Seminole Dr .. Mt. Lebanon . Pa. II KA House, 1-170 Joseph St. . Jay j . G. Wei!. Jr. liam Schutt. BETA-UPSILON, 13 . University of Colorado. AC. Dr. Arden Howell . 1'130 Tulane Ave. ALPHA-PSI, I. Rutgers University. New Bruns­ Boulder. Colo. lTKA House. 1919 S. Broadway. THETA, !I a. Southwestern Univers ity. Memphis. wick. N. j. llKA House. 126 Coll ege Ave .. j ohn V . Condon. Tenn. 111\A Chapter Room . john L. lies. Wm. S. Tremmel!. AC, Alan E. j ames , BETA-PH!, 7. Purdue University. W est Lafayette. AC. Dr. jell A. Hanna. East Drive. Hein Park. Rut~ers Univ . Ind. Ill(,\ House. 149 Andrew Place. john H. IOTA, 4. Hampden-Sydney College . Hampden­ ALPHA-OMEGA, 13. Kansas State College . Loom is. AC. j. P . Gira rd. Jr .. c/o Purdue Sydney. V a. IIL(A Lodge on Campus. Wil­ Manhattan, Kan. fiKA House. 331 N. 17th Univ . liam S. Trinkle. AC . P. Tulane Atkinson , St.. john P. Ransom. AC. Merton Otto, GAMMA-ALPHA, 9. University of Alaba ma . Uni­ Hampden-Sydney College. Kansas State College. vers ity. Ala. 111\ A House. P . 0. Box 1213. KAPPA, 8. Transylvania College. Lexington. Ky. BETA-ALPHA, 2. Pennsylvania State Coll ege. Joe Cobb. AC . Dr. J. P . Montgomery. llKA Room on Campus. Glen C. Routt. State College. Penn. 11 KA House, Glenn L. GAMMA-BETA, 13. University of Nebraska . Lin­ MU, 5. Presbyterian College, Clinton. S. C. IIKA Bowers. Box 579. AC. Stanley N . Roseberry, coln. Neb. c/o University of Nebraska. Ken­ Room on Campus. Walter G. Larson. Pero Dairy Prod. Co. neth L. Simmons. AC . Dr. Richard Garling­ XI, 5. University of South Carolina, Columbia. BETA-BETA, 18. University of Washington. house . 1037 Stewart Bldg. S. C. fiKA Room on Campus, Clarke W. Seattle. Wash. fiKA House. 1804 E. 50th GAMMA-GAMMA, 13, University of Denver. McCants. St.. Dean Bigby. AC. R. AI Osborne, 4412 White Bldg. Denver. Colo. fiKA House. 2001 S. York St .. OMICRON, 4. University of Richmond. Rich­ Ja mes B. Hellon. AC. Eugene C. Black. 471 BETA-GAMMA, 13 . University of Kansas. Law­ E. T ennyson St. mond. Va. 111\A Room on Campus. Edwin B. rence, Kan. fll\A House. 1200 Louisiana St .. Brooks. I r. , Box 198 . AC, M. D. Nunnally. GAMMA-DELTA, 15. University of Arizona . Tuc­ Jr .. 900 E. Broad St. Wm. K. Matthews. AC . Robt. B. Oyler, Law­ rence. Kans. son. Ariz. lllLI House . Jack Ehrhart. PI, -4 , Washington and Lee University, Lexing~ BETA-DELTA, 15 , University of New Mexico. GAMMA-EPSILON, 16 . Ut ah State Agricultura l ton. Va. llKA House. 106 N. Main St.. Henry Albuquerque . N. M. fll\A House. 600 N. Coll ege, Logan . Utah. fiKA House. 290 N . L. Roediger, Jr. AC. Clayton E. Williams. University, Lewis M. Ma rtin . 2nd. East. Ha rold Steed. AC, Robt. Harrison. W. & L. Univ. BETA-EPSILON, 3. Western Reserve University, 245 S. I st St. SIGMA, 8. Vanderbilt University. Nashville. Cleveland, 0 . fiKA House, 2069 Abington GAMMA-ZETA, 3 Wittenberg College, Spring- Tenn. TII\ A House. 2412 Kirkland Place, Rd . . Raymond F. Campbell. AC. George F. f, eld . 0. Henry C. Gulmi. AC. john M. Richa rd Dona ldson. AC. Edward Kirkpatrick. Dalton 111. 2953 Essex. Setzer. 2834 Otterbein Ave .. Dayton. 0. 2525 Hillsboro Rd. BETA-ZETA, 14a . Southern Methodist University. GAMMA-ETA, 17. University of Southern Cali ­ TAU, 5. University of North Carolina, Chapel Dallas. Tex. llKA House. 3445 Haynie, Silas fornia. Los Angeles . Calif. 111\A House. 212 1 Hill. N. C . IIKA House. john L. Rogers. Winkler. AC. Weldon U. Howell , Mercantile S. Figueroa. Lucius Swanson. AC. Pa ul Moody. QPSILON, 9. Alabama Polytechnic Institute. Au­ Nat'! Bank Bldg. 5 18 Fidelity Bldg. burn , Ala. 11KA House . Joe C. Gandy, Box BETA-ETA, 7. University of lllinois. Champaign. GAMMA-THETA, !Ia. Mississippi State College. 470. AC. Dr. C. R. Saunders. Ill. fiKA House. 303 E. Armory Ave .. Henry State Coll ege. Miss. riKA House College OMEGA, 8. University of Kentucky. Lexington. Z. Gumm. AC. Rev. A. R. Cartlidge. 305 W. Drive. Mason E. W a lton, Jr. AC.' j . Cash Ky. fiKA House, 216 E. High St .. Frank N. Hill St. Bridger. Box 1032. Shy. BETA-THETA, I. Cornell University. Ithica . N . GAMMA-IOTA, !Ia. Univers ity of Mississippi. ALPHA-ALPHA, 5. Duke University. Durham. Y. fll\A House. 17 South Ave .. Frank Roth­ University, Miss. fiKA Lodge . Thomas E. well. AC, Cyril E. Hazell. Box 34, Etna. Morris. Jr .. Box 513. AC . Jack Gordon . Ox­ N. C. 111\A Dormitory . Henry H. Wilson . Jr. N.Y. ALPHA-GAMMA, li b. Louisiana State University. lord. Miss. BETA-KAPPA, 6a . Emory University . Atlanta . Ga. GAMMA-KAPPA, 18 . Monta na State College. llKA House , P. 0. Box 6548, Univ. Sta .. Baton llKA House . Emory University. Ga .. John M. Rouge. La .. Robt. Jemison. AC, H. Raymond Bozeman, Mont. TII\A House. 502 S. Grand. Morgan. AC. james M. Thurman. 128 Mt. Philip R. Wilson. AC. Merrill G. Burlinga me. Robinson, 1720 Broadway. New Orleans. La. Vernon Dr .. Deca tur , Ga. 8 12 S. Eighth. ALPHA-DELTA, 6a. Georgia School of Technol­ BETA-LAMBDA, 10 . Washington University, St. ogy. Atlanta . Ga. IIJ(A House. 674 Spring GAMMA-LAMBDA, I . Lehigh Univers ity. Bethle- Louis, Mo. llKA House, 61 17 McPherson Ave .. hem, Pa. llKA House. 306 Wya ndotte St .. St .. N. 'vV .. W a lter M. Penney. AC. Chas. E. F. A. Eldracher . Jr. Harry W. Jones, Jr. Lawrence. 1302 W. Peachtree St .. N. W. GAMMA-MU, 1, Univers ity of New Hampshire . ALPHA-EPSILON, 5. North Carolina State Col­ Durham. N. H. fiKA House. 10 Strafford Ave .. lege A. & E .. Raleigh. N. C. fiKA House. Daniel B. Hurley. AC. Geo. R. Thomas. Lawson J. Ingram, Box 5627, State College • • • Univ. of New Hampshire . Station. AC. john Pa rk , 224 Woodburn Rd. GAMMA-NU, 12 . University of Iowa. Iowa City. ALPHA-ZETA, lia , University of Arkansas. DISTRICT PRESIDENTS Iowa. Ill\A House. 71 6 N. Dubuque St.. C. Fayetteville. Ark. fiKA House, 418 Arkansas No. !-john F. E. Hippe!. Bll, 1418 Packard Arnold Carlson. AC. Loren L. Hickerson. 3205 Ave .. Charles L. Wayman. AC. Henry Warten, Bldg .. Philadelphia. Pa. C linton. 407 Main St.. Joplin, Mo. No. 2- Joseph R. Edmonston. A::! , 3601 Gulf GAMMA-XI. 18. Washington State College. ALPHA-ETA, 6b. Univers ity of Florida, Gaines­ Bldg .. Pittsburgh. Pa. Pullman. Wash. TIKA House. 604 California ville. Fla. 111\A House. John A. Madigan. Jr. No. 3-Ralph F. Yeager. A::!. University of St .. Kirk L. Athow. AC. Dr. U. S. Gordon, First Presbyterian Cincinnati (Ohio) Evening College. GAMMA-OMICRON, 3, Ohio Universi ty. Athens. Church. No. 4- Guy A. Borkey. 0 . Virginia Electric & 0. ll KA House, 18 N. Coll ege St .. William ALPHA-THETA, 2 . Wes t Virginia University. Power Co .. Richmond. V a. F. Kruspe. Morgantown. W. Va. 445 Spruce St .. James No. 5- Zeb V. Long . Jr .. B. Box' 983. Statesvill e , GAMMA-PI, 18. Univers ity of Oregon. Eugene. M. Martin. AC. E. H. Cubbon. 909 Brown St. N.C. Ore. 111\A House. 1436 Alder St. . james Rich­ ALPHA-IOTA, I Ia. Millsaps College, jackson. No. 6a- james M. Thurman. B'I' and BK. 1510 mond. AC . Don Owen. Rt. 5. Eugene. Ore. Miss. IIKA House. 424 Marshall St .. Louis J. Rhodes-Haverty Bldg .. Atlanta . Ga. GAMMA-RHO, 7. Northwestern University. Navarro. AC. Raymond McClinton. 202 W . No. 6b-Dean Boggs, AH. Ba rnett Nat!. Bank Evanston. Ill. fll(A House . 560 Lincoln St .. Capitol St .. Jackson. Bldg .. Jacksonville. Fla. Robert L. 'H a ley. AC. C. L. Hitchcock. 5653 Kenmore Ave., Chicago. ALPHA-KAPPA, 10, Missouri School of Mines. No. ?-Charles E. Craw, B~. 3 10 N . Fifth St .. Rolla. Mo. 111\A House. 9th and Bishop St .. Lafayette. Ind. GAMMA-SIGMA, 2. University of Pittsburgh. Harold A. Krueger. AC. M. D. Orten, Edwin No. 8- W. Russell johnson , z. 1250 Market St .. Pittsburgh . Pa. llKA House. 158 Bellefield St.. Long Hotel. Chattanooga. Tenn. Gus Wilde. AC. Ralph Appel. 744 Le land St. ALPHA-LAMBDA, 8. Georgetown Coll ege. No. 9- A. H. Knight. All. 1429 Brown-Marx GAMMA-TAU, I . Rensselaer Polytechnic Insti­ Georgetown. Ky. IIKA House, 455 E . Main Bldg .. Birmingham. Ala. tute, Troy, N. Y. TIKA House. 2256 Burdett St.. Harold Davidson. AC. Kenneth G. No. tO-Charles L. Freeman. BA . 200 McKinley Ave .. George E. Beers. Gillaspie. Highland Court. Drive , Belleville . Ill. GAMMA-UPSILON, 14 a. University of Tulsa . ALPHA-MU, 6a. University of Georgia , Athens. No. lla- Harvey T . Newell. Jr., AI. Jackson Tulsa , Okla. 1107 S. Florence Place. Harry Ga. fiKA House , 398 S. Milledge Ave .. Paper Company, j ackson. Miss . Heath. AC. L. V. Dennis, 2907 East 5th St. . Harold Tiller. No. lib- James V. LeLaurin , H . Whitney Bldg .. Tulsa. ALPHA-NU, 10 . Univers ity of Missouri. Colum­ New Orlea ns. La. GAMMA-PH!, 5. Wake Forest College. Wake bia. Mo. JIJ(A House, 920 Providence Rd., No. 12-Robert C. Hahnen, BX. 2177 Ra ndolph Fores t. N. C. Dona ld Bradsher. AC. Johnson Hagood. F. L. McHaney. St .. St. Paul. Minn. ALPHA-XI, 3. Univers ity of Cincinnati, Cin­ No. 13- Alexander McKie, Jr .. fB. 805 First Na­ GAMMA-CHI, 14a . Oklahoma Agricultura l & cinnati. 0. fiKA House. 2437 Clifton Ave .. tiona l Bank Bldg .. Omaha. Neb. Mechanical College. Stillwater. Okla. 240 Douglas L. Hoge. AC. Eric Schultz, 2437 No. 14a-Herbert H . Scott, BO . University of Knoblock St .. William F . Boone. Jr. AC . Fred Oklahoma. Norman, Okla. Tidwell. Okla. A. & M. Coll ege. AL~W~."pf.g~· Howard College, Birmingham. Ala. No. 14b-Nelson K. McFa rland. BZ, 1515 Mag­ GAMMA-PSI, !lb . Louisiana Polytechnic Ins titute . JlKA House. 7771 4th Ave .. S .. Chas. D. Mc­ nolia Bldg .. Da ll as. Tex. Ru ston . La . Tech Station. Pa trick H. Monag­ Eachern. No. 15-R. F. Deacon Arledge , D6. Santa Fe han. AC. Dr. I-1. E. Ruff , 603 W . Ga. Ave. ALPHA-RHO, 3, Ohio State University, Colum­ Nat!. Life Bldg .. Albuquerque. N . M. GAMMA-OMEGA, 6b. University of Miami , Cora l bus. 0. 111\ A House. 1943 W a ldeck Ave., No. 16- j. Grant Iverson. A'I'. 3 19 Continental Ga bles. Fla. 731 Univers ity Concourse , Rob­ Edward W. Shier. AC . Charles T. Campbell. Bank Bldg .. Salt Lake City. Utah. ert L. Rigney . Box 622. 19i3 W a ldeck Ave. No. 17-Arnold R. T ernquist. I'H. Nelson & DELTA-ALPHA, 4. George Washington Uni­ ALPHA-SIGMA, 17. Univers ity of California. Ternquist. 58 Sutter St .. San Francisco. vers ity. Washington. D. C. 2448 Massa­ Berkeley. Calif. llKA House. 2324 Piedmont Calif. chusetts Ave.. N. W .. Cha rles Ivy. AC. Ave .. Hubert B. Allen. No. 18-Francis E. Marsh . BD. McMinnville . Ore. Charles K. Dunn, 405 Colorado Bldg. CHRISTMAS GIFTS CRESTED GREETING CARDS Ar e a Campus Necessity .. . .. CRESTED G I FTS Mak e Dis­ CRESTED FAVORS Add Tha t tinctive Christmas P resents ... !any new designs in Chrisuna cards Individual Touch to Party Su c- this yea r-d ig nifi e d s t yl es at low cess ... • ...... A fin e crested ring is a gift long prices. Is YOUR chapter mailing list In vi ew of Government priorities on treasured and a good in ves tme nt. complete: Other fraternities on ca m­ Other fin e gifts are the new flower pus; other chapters of your frater­ metals and other supplies, we urge that you place yo ur orders for party pray pin , fobs, and lockets. nity; grand offi cers; parents; college favors NOW to cove r your yea rl y re­ Men wi ll like the ge nuin e sa ddl e o Hi cials; fa ulty; alumni; tradesmen and friends of the chapter. quirement . W e ca n then furnish at leather gifts shown in the Blue Book. the present low prices and you ca n Any girl will be delighted with one "\!\Trite for FREE Samples! be assured of delivery. of the new so ft Bab y Calf compact {{ There are man y new and interesting or purses. favors in a wide price range. '! ail post card for cop y of Blue Book! C r est ed S t a ti o n e r y Samples Write for 1942 BLUE BOOK! sent on request to Fraternity Men an d W omen . • ..•..•• Mail post card today. YOU R COPY OF THE EW 1942 EDITIO BALFOUR BLUE BOOK 'JAILED FREE FOR THE ASKING ~~~~~~ ~ C(6~~ ~~~~~ L. G. B A L F 0 u R COMPANY A TTLEBORO IN CANADA-WRITE OR CALL ...... i\IASSACH SETTS...... YO UR N EAREST BIRK'S STORE

* * JUJT Tti~ Vl2~JJ! * * -11w q.~ GIFT PARADE #u 194:2 • SMART • COLORFUL • COMPLETE • RINGS ~ COMPACTS • • JEWELRY • FAVORS • GIFTS FOR THE BOYS IN THE SERVICES • Be the FIRST to 1uute the LATEST! Mail the Coupon TODAY for Your Free Personal Copy of THE SMARTEST FRATERNITY JEWELRY CATALOG IN AMERICA

1r ------I Date ___ ·-·-·····-·······-·-·····----····---··-·-----·--··-·-·····-··-··· I Bu rr, Pa tterson & Auld Co. CLIP THIS COUPO N I Roosevelt Park I Detroit , Mich igan I I wa nt a pe rsonal copy of your Frate rnity Jewe lry Catalog­ I IJ.Jed/ I '7' • THE G IFT PARADE FOR 1942. Se nd it to: