Ji 1...1\appa Alpl1a FRATERNITY JEWELRY PI KAPPA ALPHA NATIONAL OFFICERS

MONOGRAM BUTTON GOLO FILLED (MG/11) $6.75

SUPREME COUNCIL LAVALIER William N. LaForge ...... • •. . .• ...... •...... •...... National President Vert ical Letter 10K E.J. "Ted" Grofer ...... •....•...... •.. ..•...... •...... • ...... Vice President EdwaJ·d A. Pease ...... •...... ••...... •...... Vice President Gold Charm with 18" Charles R. Barnes ...... • . . . .•. . .• ...... Vice President Gold Filled Chain. Thomas J . Turner . . . . • ...... • ...... • ...... Vice President (3LL/02V) $24.25 Eric Hills ...... •...... Undergraduate Vice President Neil Hardesty ...... •...... Undergraduate Vice President Daniel F. McGehee ...... •...... Legal Counsel

MEMORIAL FOUNDATION George W. Denton ...... •...... •...... President UTILE Joseph J . Turner, Jr...... ••...... •. . ..•....••...... Vice President SISTER PINS John J . Lux ...... •....•...... •...... •...... Treasurer Badge Outline with Michael House ...... ••...... •...... •.... •...... Trustee Crest. Gold Plate. Glen Weissenberger ...... • ...... •...... •...... Trustee Dr. William Nester ...... Trustee (LS/40) $10.00 Craig Hoenshell ...... •...... •...... •...... Trustee Wickliffe B. Moore ...... •...... •...... • ....•...... •. . .•.. ... Trustee for Life

REGIONAL PRESIDENTS BADGES Tweed Johnson ...... •• ...... • . .. . •...... Arkoma Joe Glass ...... •...... •.. .•...... •...... Carolinas Ronn Ross ...... •...... •...... •...... •...... Cumberland SIZE NO. 1 Doug Minor ...... •...... •...... Delta Plain Bevel Border 10K David Chandler ...... Dixie Yellow Gold. Andy Morse ...... • • ...... • . . . . • . . . . • • . . . • . . . . • . . . . • ...... Founders Charles Dow ...... • ...... •...... •...... Golden West (111) $45.00 Nick Shafor ...... ••...... •...... Great Lakes Lynn Mulherin ...... • . ...•.. . .•... .•...... Great Plains Don Bullard ...... •. ... •...... •...... Lone Star SIZE NO. 2 John Lis her ...... •...... Midwest Plain Bevel Border 10K Dr. Larry Lunsford ...... •...... •...... • . ... •...... •...... North Atlantic Yellow Gold or Gold Mike Nelson ...... • ...... • . . . . • ...... • ...... Northwest Tone. Bill Shaw ...... •...... •...... •....•...... • ...... Rockies (212) $6000 Gregg Ormond ...... Sunshine $8 00 Gold Tone ENDOWMENT FUND #3 Size Only Jack Lux ...... Chairman Virgil McBroom ...... Trustee Thomas Wilkinson ...... •....•...... •. . ..•...... Trustee SIZE NO. 2 Alternating Pearl & HOUSING COMMISSION Ruby. 10K Yellow Gold. Richard Ralph ...... Chairman (233) $105.00 James A. Wolff ...... Commissioner The Very Rev. Henry N.F. Minich ...... •...... ••...... •...... Commissioner

NATIONAL OFFICERS SIZE NO. 3 Dr. Jerome V. Reel, Jr ...... Historian Thomas Handler ...... Rush Director Attemating Pear1 & Gar­ The Very Rev. Simon A. Simon ...... Chaplain net. 10K Yellow Gold . Joseph L. Ott...... •....•...... •...... •...... Auditor (340) $120.00 George Zimmerman ...... Music Director

LIVING PAST NATIONAL PRESIDENTS CHAPTER GUARDS Elbert Tuttle (1933-38) C. Ross Anderson (1972-74) Roy D. Hickman (1940-46) Dr. Jerome V. Reel, Jr. (1974-76) Andrew H. Knight (1948-50) Richard F. Ogle (1976-78) PLAIN NO. 06 Ralph Yeager (1953) Dr. Will iam R. Nester (1978-80) 10K Yellow Gold. Garth C. Grissom (1968-70) Virgil R. McBroom (1980-82) 1 Letter $20.00 Gary A. Sallquist (1970-72) Joseph J. Turner, Jr. (1982-84) 2 Letter $27.50

MEMORIAL HEADQUARTERS STAFF PEARL NO. 08 Raymond L. Orians ...... •...... Executive Vi ce President 10K Yellow Gold. Allen Will iam Groves ...... _...... Executive Director 1 Letter $42.00 Louis B. Qu into ...... • ...... Director of Development/Editor 2 Letter $58.50 Patrick F. Haynes ...... • ...... Director of Educational Programming Todd William Mudd ...... • •...... Director of Chapter Development and Services Full color/complete price list available on request. Michael J . Moreland ...... •....•... . •. . .. Associate Director of Chapter Development and Services WadeL. Harper ...... Senior Chapter Consultant David Lloyd Anderson ...... •...... •....•...... Chapter Consultant J. Mark A. Robertson ...... Chapter Consultant o. P£JI!:=..AQ< co. Christopher R. Spivey ...... •...... •...... Chapter Consultant 1700 Irving Park Rd. • Chicago, IL 60613 Mark H. Veach ...... •... .•...... •...... Chapter Consultant (800) 621-1904 • (312) 477-2100 (IL)

Major Credit Cards Accepted Shield & Diamond VOL. 97"NO. 1 SEPTEMBER 1985

FEATURES

7 CHAPTER CAPSU LES

12 PI KAPPA ALPHA WELCOMES THETA OMEGA

The University of California at Davis is the home of 1I KA 's newest chapter

Ed Pease 14 PAYING ATTENTION TO PEOPLE: A R ECIPE FOR SUCCESS

Jac~ Reich has never forgotten the virtues of decency and hard war~ .

1 8 ~23 THE ANNUAL R EPORT

1985-86 Conf erence Schedule T op T wenty College Fraternities

THIS ISSUE is the Fraternity's Annual 1985 Alumni Awards Report for the 1984-85 academic year. As Norm Hulcher 24 PIKE PROF POCKETS PULITZER you read, you will see that it was another record year for Pi Kappa Alpha. T om McCraw's life hasn't been the same since. Undergraduate membership has increased 40 CHAPTER DIRECTORY as our chapters pledged and initiated more men; alumni gifts continue to support the 42 ALUMNI ASSOCIATIONS Memorial Foundation; and Pi Kappa Alpha continues to be a leader on college campuses across the country. Also listed in DEPARTMENTS this issue are the recipients of the Robert Adger Smythe Awards and Chapter 4 FORUM Programming Awards for 1984-85. 6 UPDATE

35~36 CHAPTER ETERNAL 36 ALUMNI NOTES

Cover Photo: The Rotunda at the University of Virginia.

SHIE LD & DIAMOND (ISSN 8750· 7536} is an educational journal published by the Pi Kappa Alpha Fraternity, 577 University, Memphis, TN 38 11 2·1689 quarterly in Septem· ber, December, March and June for $.50 per year. Send correspondence to the same address. Manuscripts are invited, but the publisher w ill not assume responsibil ity for return of unsohcited material. Change of address must be reported promptly by giving fu ll name, chapter, old and new address. Undergraduate copies are mailed to parents' home address until address change after gr~duation . Life time subscriptions MUST be renewed after eight years or with an al umnus gift to the Loyalty Fund. Copyright 1985 by Pi Kappa Alpha Fraternity. All rights reserved. Second Class postage paid at Memphis, T N and additional mai ling offices. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to SHIELD & DIAMOND, 577 University, Memphis, T N 38 11 2· 1689. -~---- Brothers Respond to Cure for Dying Chapters

I WANTED to thank the SHIELD & community service. They are all hard­ DIAMOND for featuring the article working, studious, and yet have time "What Is The Cure For A Dying for a plethora of extra-curricular Publish ed by Chapter?" in its June, 1985 issue. activities. I have had the privilege of P1 Kappa Alpha Fraternity I have long felt that there should be a serving as the chapter advisor at 577 Un1versity study of why chapters fail so that other Delaware for the past three years, and I Memph1s , 'fN. 38 112 chapters in trouble can see the danger can swear that nothing else in the (901) 278-7464 signals and treat them before the Fraternity matches the rewarding problems become so bad that a chapter experiences I have received in that becomes silent. I feel that the article is position. We have a strong Alumni Editor a fine examination of reasons that Association, House Corporation and LoUis B. E(uinto chapters fail and how some chapters Chapter Advisory Board and can have come back to life to become active therefore offer any interested alumni a Copy Edito r chapters of the Fraternity again. I only spot which will require only as much Barbara E. Per~ms wished that such an article had been work or time as they feel they can written and that there was such a contribute. I would encourage any program as the Alumni Receivership alumnus to contact the nearest chapter, Co ntributing W r iters Board twelve years ago. That was when and try to get reinvolved with Pi Kappa Ed Pease, orm Hu lcher. the chapter I belonged to went silent. Alpha. Gwen DeShaw Hopefully, this is a program that will However, I would like to end on a become another tradition in the word of warning. As much as we all feel C irculation Fraternity. If so, Jet's hope no more the bonds of phi phi kappa alpha, as }am 1e Dye chapters will ever go silent. alumni we can only advise. After all, Fraternally, the whole point of the Fraternity is to offer each brother the chance to grow A dv erti in g Tom Josephi and learn to the best of his abilities, and Contact Editonal Office Eta Larnbda '71 he cannot do that without doing things for himself. With the proper guidance, Execu tive V ice P resident each brother and each chapter will Raymand L. Orians grow quickly to their best potential. "WHAT IS The Cure For A Dying That guidance is the best gift any Chapter?" in the June issue has alumnus can offer as a PI KAPPA 1984- 6 Su pre me Counc il prompted me to write. I agree whole­ ALPHA brother. heartedly with the article and I believe P reside n t Fraternally, W1ll1am . LaForge it cannot be stressed enough that alumni must be willing to offer help Robert P. Tkachick Vice Preside n t and advice to the undergraduates. Delta E ta '75 Charles R. Barnes Meanwhile, the undergraduates must realize the valuable resource they have Vice Preside nt in their alumni brothers. Ej •'fed• Grofer As a refounding member of the Delta Vice P reside nt Eta chapter at the University of I WOULD like to congratulate the Edward A . Pease Delaware, I can attest to the devotion of SHIELD & DIAMOND for the excellent the alumni in the area to seeing our artiCle "What Is The Cure For A Dying V ice P residen t chapter r egain its pos ition of Chapter?" (June '85). One prime 'Thomas J 'fumer dominance on campus. The Alumni example was left out, however. U nde rg rad uate V ice President Association and House Corporation Undergraduates, Alumni, t he Enc H1lls worked with us in contacting new Chapter Advisor and the National rushees, and in keeping a roof over our Office are all reasons that Gamma Chi nde rg raduate Vice President heads. They were al ways available, and (Oklahoma State University) is not ell Hardesty when it was needed they were willing only a "living" chapter of Pi Kappa Legal Counsel to dip into their wallets to help build a Alpha today, but an emerging Dame/ F McGehee new house. And, as the article said, powerhouse. these were not only Delta Eta alumni. After a fire destroyed the Pike house The architect fo r the house was from years ago, the situation was bad at ..c-~.£'"~ Beta Sigma, and one of our first Gamma Chi. But now, after endurance ~ chapter advisors was from Beta Theta. by J .L. Sanderson (National Chapter MEMBER The Delta Eta chapter now has over Advisor of the Year in 1982) and the COllEGE ~RATU ... IT't EDITORS ASSOCIATION eighty brothers. They are recognized financi al support of many alumni, the leaders in campus government and Pikes at OSU now have a three-story

4 Shield & Diamond house complete with new library. The national office never gave up either and supported three Resident Counselors at Gamma Chi throughout the years. The result? Gamma Chi is SC9'D Spar~s Memories------approaching 100 active members, and its scholarship rank on campus has moved up from seventeen of twenty-one to three of twenty-one. For the 1984-85 IN SO far as Pi Kappa Alpha was such a With congratulations to the staff of year, Pikes were awarded the "Most meaningful part of my collegiate and SHIELD & DIAMOND for an excellent Improved Fraternity" and "Best post graduate life I always read the June, 1985 issue, and with best wishes Fraternity" awards at OSU. SHIELD & DIAMOND with great to other members of the management I believe that there is no finer interest. In my opinion this June 1985 team, I am example of teamwork and brotherhood issue was not only prepared but than has been expressed here. also quite timely. It reminded me of Fraternally, Congratulations to all involved. how much I would like to return the Moreau P. Estes V Fraternally, favors and benefits which the Alpha Xi '63 Fraternity extended to me in a more Pat McCulloch meaningful way than a contribution Theta Theta '79 each year-end.

I AM not swayed by Dr. Reel's concept Mas on-Dixon Line. Every writer is Conf ederate eleven, Kentucky and of history and the location of the pleased to know what he writes is being Missouri (both of which had strong Mason-Dixon Line in his fine article read - so many thanks. Now, I'll try to secessionist sentiment), and Maryland covering Alpha Xi Chapter. I believe answer their concerns as best I can. and Delaware. my esteemed brother Bauer is correct There are at least jour perceptions of Because Pi Kappa Alpha in the years in his letter to the editor (June, 1985- what the "Mason-Dixon line" -rneans so 1889 to 1909 was heavily influenced by Congratulations From One "Yankee" far as Pi Kappa Alpha is concerned. the "Southern view" as expressed above, To Another.) First, the surveyors M essers. Mas on the term was used to mean the fifteen I would like to shed light on the and Dixon had one view. Second, states. Consequently the charterings of Mason-Dixon Line in question. Americans during the Civil War had a Alpha Kappa (Rolla) and Alpha Mu The original Line, surveyed in 1767, slightly different view. Third, Pi Kappa (Missouri) were conceived of as chapters was the boundary between Pennsylvania Alphas during the 1890's and the first in "Southern" states just as the and Maryland. However, an article decade of the Twentieth Century had a chartering ofKappa(K entucky A&M­ from the Jefferson City, Missouri view. Finally, the alumni who have now at Transylvania) and Omega NEWS AND TRIBUNE (6 /2/85), kindly written have yet a different view. (Universi ty of K entucky) w a s explains the history and location of the Let's look briefly at each. considered. The debates in the Pi Kappa final termination of the Mason-Dixon The view of the surveyors Mason and Alpha conventions from the 1890 's on to Line at the junction of Missouri, Dixon was that they were establishing 1909 certainly confirm that such was Arkansas and Oklahoma. the boundary between Maryland and their understanding. the first chapter It would seem the leaders of Pi Pennsylvania, nothing more. If we were their understanding. The first chapter Kappa Alpha in 1905 were either to adopt that view the first chapter north across that imaginary line was Alpha unaware of the exact location of the of the line would be in Pennsylvania. Xi. Mason-Dixon Line or overlooked the A -rnericans, from the years of the The last view, held in different ways fine print in our Constitution, which Missouri Compromise up to the Civil by my Missouri and Rolla brothers, is limited the Fraternity to colleges south War, 11wst often used the term to that the Mason-Dixon line reached the of the Mason-Dixon Line. Perhaps the separate states that permitted slavery Missouri river and was extended south wisdom of our forefathers was such from states that did not. The Missouri along its southern border. This is cer­ that they recognized quality and were Compromise allowed Missouri the tainly different from the concept not confused by lines. choice as to whether it would be "slave or expressed in the Senatorial debates AK is first in my heart and many free" while all Purchase during the decades 1820-1860, and other significant areas. It also appears territory north of 36°, 30' would be different from the concept held by Pi that it was the first chapter north of the prohibited. When Missouri entered the Kappa Alpha leadership during the Mason-Dixon Line. Union (August 10, 1821), it entered as a decades 1889-1909, and different/rom slave state. Thus Southerners extended standard references such as Ency­ Fraternally you rs, the Mason-Dixon line east to include clopaedia Britannica (1962, article J. Richard Hunt Delaware and west along the to the Mas on-Dixon). Alpha Kappa '45 Missi ssi ppi and thence north to I hope that this, at best, explains my Missouri's northern border and then position, and again, I thank my brothers westward. The last view was, of course, for their interest. Editor's Note: First, I would like to modified in the Compromise of 1850 thank the Missourians who wrote and the Kansas-Nebraska Act. By the Fraternally yours, concerning which chapter of our time of the Civil War the "Mason-Dixon Jerome V. Reel, Jr. Fraternity was the first across the line" indicated fifteen states, the National Historian of Pi Kappa Alpha 5 Executive Staff Appointlllents

Pa t nc~ F. Haynes Loui1 B. ~uin to T odd William Mudd Wade Lynnwood Harper

EXEC TIVE VICE Preside nt at Arkansas State University. Haynes the Fraternity as its director of Raymond Orians recently announced replaces J eff Minecci who left the staff development. He will be replacing the promotion of Patrick Haynes to the in June to take a position with Coca-Cola David Rheney who is now working for position of director of educacational in Atlanta, GA. Bennigan's Restaurants in Greenville, programming, Todd Mudd to the After traveling as a chapter S.C. Quinto, an initiate of Beta Phi position of director of chapter consultant in the northeast region this chapter at Purdue, will also remain as services/ expansion, Lou Quinto to the past year Mudd will be assuming the the SHIELD & DIAMOND's editor. office of director of development, and responsibilities of director of chapter Harper will begin his second year of Wade Harper to senior consultant. services/ expansion. Mudd is an initiate traveling as the Fraternity's senior Haynes joins t he Fraternity's of Alpha Nu chapter at Missouri. He consultant. He is an initiate of Xi executive staff after traveling as a will be taking the place of Scott Bell who chapter at the University of South chapter consultant in the southeast left the staff to join Coldwell Banker's Carolina. region during the 1984-85 school year. real estate division in Orlando, FL. He is an initiate of Delta Theta chapter Quinto will begin his fourth year with

incoming national president of Seminole ready for distribution this fall. The group is Alurnni Spotlight Boosters, Inc., the university's athletic also planning a Founders' Day banquet for fundraising arm. Bill lettered in football, Thursday, March 6, 1986. basketball and baseball in college. His five Alu mni in the St. Louis area who are daughters all followed him to Florida State interested in joining the alumni association * where they became Tri-Delts; "A house," are encouraged to call Alan Darnell at ·Bill says, "where I used to spend a li ttle time 314/523-4388. myself." Jacksonville businessman John Smith ('63) is finishing his second term as national president of the Florida State University Notice of Alumni Association, Inc. His oldest son is headed for Tallahassee in a year. Foundation Meeting Both men are loyal ITKA alumni, and both AS IS required by the by-laws of the Pi are members of THE OLD GUARD, Delta Kappa Alpha Memorial Foundation, Lambda's alumni fundraisingorganization. notice is hereby given of the Annual Meeting of the members of the Pi Kappa Alpha Memorial Foundation. St. Louis Alumni Association The meeting will be held at the Memorial Headquarters in Memphis, Elects New Officers Tennessee on Thursday, October 3. THE PI KAPPA ALPHA Alumni Associ­ Raymond L. Orians ation of St. Louis recently elected new Executive Vice President Old Guard Going Strong officers and announced some new projects. DELTA LAMBDA Chapter is honored to The new officers are Alan Darnell (Gam­ NOTE: MembersoftheFoundationare have among her alumni the cu rrent national ma Omicron '67) president-elect; Kevin those w ho have contri buted a presidents of both of Florida State Enger (Zeta Phi '73) president; Mike Nelsen cumulative total of at least $500 to the University's most powerful alumni (Beta Eta ' O) secretary; and Ch ris Coyle Foundation. Also, all members of the organizations. (Zeta Phi '75) treasurer. Foundation on August 7, 1982 shall Bill Parker ('49), president of Crest Currently, the association is compiling a continue to be members. Chemical Corporation in Clearwater, is the new membership directory which will be

6 Shield & Diamond Chapter Capsules

1984-85 1984-85 Total Chapter/ School Founded Size Pledges Initiates Initiates Region Alpha (Virginia) 1868 71 23 14 1276 Founders Beta (Davidson College) 1869 110 27 56 1163 Carolinas Gamma (William C9' Mary) 1871 105 29 27 1165 Founders Epsilon (Virginia 'Tech) 1873 101 36 34 536 Founders Zeta ('Tennessee) 1873 113 31 36 1869 Cumberland Eta ('Tulane) 1878 75 31 27 1044 Delta Theta (Rhodes College) 1878 40 24 18 734 Cumberland Iota (Hampden-Sydney) 1885 39 14 12 1004 Founders Kappa ('Transylvania) 1888 21 11 6 808 Cumberland Mu (Presbyterian College) 1890 46 15 16 909 Carolinas Nu (Wofford) 1891 81 28 26 631 Carolinas Xi (South Carolina) 1891 52 18 19 919 Carolinas Omicron (Richmond) 1891 99 32 28 976 Founders Pi (Washington C9-' Lee) 1892 66 19 0 1018 Founders Sigma (Vanderbilt) 1893 86 26 24 1230 Cumberland Tau () 1895 71 21 25 1241 Carolinas Upsilon (Auburn) 1895 85 67 52 1994 Dixie Omega (Kentuclry) 1901 81 36 25 1384 Cumberland Alpha Alpha (Duke) 1901 91 64 34 1269 Carolinas Alpha Gamma (LSU) 1902 45 27 24 876 Delta Alpha Delta (Georgia 'Tech) 1904 63 33 23 1464 Dixie Alpha Epsilon (North Carolina State) 1904 64 22 18 1985 Carolinas Alpha Zeta (Arkansas) 1904 50 24 8 1706 Arkoma Alpha Eta (Florida) 1904 179 62 13 2281 Sunshine Alpha Theta (West Virginia) 1904 58 25 15 11 53 Founders Alpha Iota (Millsaps College) 1905 86 29 25 1267 Delta Alpha Kappa (Missouri/RoLla) 1905 85 37 29 1011 Midwest Alpha Lambda (Georgetown) 1906 16 17 17 934 Cumberland Alpha Mu (Georgia) 1908 75 42 37 1507 Dixie Alpha Nu (Missouri/Columbia) 1909 144 63 50 1382 Midwest Alpha Xi (Cincinnati) 1910 89 35 18 1363 Great Lakes Alpha Omicron (Southwestern) 1910 67 27 24 922 Lone Star Alpha Pi (Samford) 1911 21 9 10 978 Dixie Alpha Rho (Ohio State) 1912 56 9 8 1168 Great Lakes Alpha Sigma (California/Berkeley) 1912 69 20 19 968 Golden West Alpha Tau (Utah) 1912 69 40 29 2020 Rockies Alpha Phi (Iowa State) 1913 96 31 24 1190 Great Plains Alpha Chi (Syracuse) 1913 68 29 25 864 North Atlantic Alpha Omega (Kansas State) 1913 102 39 26 1172 Great Plains Beta Alpha (Pennsylvania State) 1913 71 29 23 1230 North Atlantic Beta Beta (Washington) 1914 30 17 14 768 Northwest Beta Gamma (Kansas) 1914 82 42 28 1099 Great Plains Beta Delta (New Mexico) 1915 24 9 8 1253 Lone Star Beta Zeta (Southern Methodist) 1916 88 38 33 1153 Lone Star Beta Eta (Illinois) 1917 105 35 46 1287 Midwest of Pi Kappa Alpha 7 Robert Adger Smythe Awards

Epsilon (Virginia 'Tech) Alpha Nu (University of Missouri-Columbia) Alpha Phi (Iowa State University) Beta Alpha (Pennsylvania State University) Beta Kappa (Emory University)

1984-85 1984-85 Total Ch apter/School Founded Si%e Pledges Initiates Initiates R egion Beta Theta (Cornell) 1917 91 28 25 1046 North Atlantic Beta Kappa (Emory) 1919 102 43 42 1109 Dixie Beta Mu ('Texas) 1920 121 46 55 1703 Lone Star Beta Nu (Oregon State) 1920 87 27 31 685 Northwest Beta Xi (Wisconsin) 1920 42 20 25 532 Midwest

Beta Omicron (Oklahoma) 1920 59 29 23 1469 Arkoma Beta Pi (Pennsylvania) 1920 91 23 23 1011 North Atlantic Beta Sigma (Carnegie-Mellon) 1921 71 29 4 997 North Atlantic Beta Phi (Purdue) 1922 130 39 34 1432 Midwest Gamma Alpha (Alabama) 1924 82 45 25 1324 Dixie Ga mma Delta (Ariwna) 1924 41 24 25 915 Golden W es t Ga mma Epsilon (Utah State) 1925 45 19 16 1615 Rockies Gamma Theta (Mississippi State) 1927 99 69 32 1537 Delta Gamma Iota (Mississippi) 1927 125 38 32 1430 Delta Gamma Kappa (Montana State) 1928 116 56 35 878 Rockies Gamma Lambda (Lehigh) 1929 37 10 9 565 North Atlantic Gamma Mu CN._ew Hampshire) 1929 94 31 46 977 North Atlantic Gamma Xi (Washington State) 1929 82 33 17 931 orthwest Ga mma Rho (Northwestern) 1932 31 21 13 866 Midwest Gamma Sigma (Pittsburgh) 193 4 85 38 36 1060 orth Atlantic Gamma Tau (R en sselaer) 1935 66 27 21 905 North Atlantic Ga mma Upsilon ('Tulsa) 1936 41 19 16 876 Arkoma Gamma Phi (Wa~e Forest) 1939 63 23 23 879 Carolinas Gamma Chi (O~lahoma State) 1939 78 47 34 1004 Arkoma Ga mma Psi (Louisiana 'Tech) 1940 55 52 26 1069 Delta Ga mma Omega (Miami) 1940 56 31 27 1130 Sunshine D elta Beta (Bowling Green) 1942 21 23 9 11 79 Great Lakes Delta Gamma (Miami of Ohio) 1947 78 36 4 1042 Great Lakes Delta Epsilon ('Tennessee/Chattanooga) 1947 33 18 10 644 Cumberland Delta Zeta (Memphis State) 1947 65 33 19 1028 Cumberland Delta Eta (Delaware) 1948 72 39 34 500 North Atlantic Delta Theta (Ar~ansa s State) 1948 93 50 29 966 Arkoma Delta Iota (Marshall) 1948 25 18 15 838 Founders Delta Kappa (San Diego State) 1948 97 64 56 952 Golden West Delta Lambda (Ftorida State) 1949 184 94 68 1218 Sunshine 8 Shield & Diamond Robert Adger Smythe Awards

Beta Pi (University of Pennsylvania) Beta Phi (Purdue University) Gamma Iota (University of Mississippi)

Delta Theta (Ar~ansas State University) Delta Upsilon (Stetson University)

1984-85 1984-85 Total Chapter/ School Founded Si~e Pledges Initiates Initiates Region

Delta Mu (Southern Mississippi) 1949 66 46 24 75 1 Delta Delta Nu (Wayne State) 1950 41 25 26 529 Great Lakes Delta Xi (Indiana) 1950 82 45 32 613 Midwest Delta Omicron (Dra~e) 1950 43 14 12 600 Great Plains Delta Pi (California State/San Jose) 1950 67 28 16 610 Golden West Delta Rho (Linfield College) 1950 29 22 22 445 orthwest Delta Sigma (Bradley) 1950 62 24 28 631 Midwest Delta Tau (Arizona State) 195 1 141 62 45 757 Golden West D elta Upsilon (Stetson) 195 1 68 24 23 554 Sunshine Delta Chi (N._ebras~a!Omaha) 1952 17 12 10 614 Great Plains Delta Psi (Maryland) 1952 59 57 18 527 Founders Delta Omega (High Point) 1953 47 31 33 409 Carolinas Epsilon Alpha ('Trinity College) 1953 39 19 19 484 orth Atlantic Epsilon Beta (Valparaiso) 1953 98 26 24 865 Midwest Epsilon Gamma ('Texas 'Tech) 1953 156 77 41 1024 Lone Star Epsilon Delta (N._orth 'Texas State) 1955 51 23 2 602 Lone Star Epsilon Epsilon ('Toledo) 1955 25 11 8 462 Great Lakes Eps ilon Zeta (Eas t 'Tennessee State) 1955 53 31 24 603 Cumberland Epsilon Eta (Houston) 1956 36 11 5 574 Lone Star Epsilon The ta (Colorado State) 1956 90 45 45 274 Rockies Epsilon Iota (Southeast Missouri State) 1958 83 33 18 754 Midwest Epsilon Kappa (Lamar) 1958 65 20 16 524 Lone Star Epsilon Lambda (Murray State) 1958 89 31 32 1024 Cumberland Epsilon Nu (Georgia State) 1960 68 32 24 538 Dixie Epsilon Xi (Case Western Reserve) 1960 60 31 22 416 Great Lakes Epsilon Omicron (Stephen F. Austin State) 1960 67 25 5 672 Lone Star Epsilon Pi (Sam Houston State) 196 1 58 34 4 535 Lone Star Epsilon Sigma ('Tennessee/M artin) 1961 83 62 33 660 Cumberland Epsilon T au (Eastern N.ew Mexico State) 1962 41 25 23 386 Lone Star Epsilon Upsilon (Gannon) 1962 63 23 18 459 North Atlantic

Epsilon Phi (Central Ar~ansas) 1963 91 31 15 747 Arkoma Epsilon Chi (Pittsburg State) 1963 30 15 17 407 Great Plains Epsilon Psi (Western Michigan) 1963 52 20 21 592 Great Lakes Epsilon Omega (East Central) 1963 59 34 25 417 Arkoma Zeta Alpha (General Motors) 1963 100 45 32 568 Great Lakes of Pi Kappa Alpha 9 Robert Adger Smythe Awards

Delta Tau (Arizona State University) Eta Alpha (Clemson University) Eta Phi (University of Central Florida) Theta Lambda (Creighton University) Theta Omicron (Indiana State University)

1984-85 1984-85 Total Chapter/ Sc hool Founded Size Pledges Initiates Initiates Region Zeta Beta (Delta State) 1963 70 42 25 525 Delta Zeta Gamma (Eastern Illinois) 1964 57 24 14 639 Midwest Zeta Epsilon (Western Kentuclry) 1965 34 26 14 441 Cumberland Zeta Zeta (Southwestern State) 1965 20 4 3 280 Arkoma Zeta Eta (Ar~ansas ! Little Roc~ 1965 45 21 15 428 Arkoma Zeta Theta (Southwest 'Texas State) 1965 97 34 31 520 Lone Star Zeta Iota (Old Dominion) 1966 23 16 3 350 Founders Zeta Kappa (Ferris State) 1966 50 38 31 546 Great Lakes Zeta Mu (Idah o) 1966 63 24 26 33 1 Northwest Zeta Xi (Western Carolina) 1967 49 22 23 326 Carolinas Zeta Omicron (Cal State/Northridge) 1967 111 35 47 459 Golden West Zeta Pi (South Florida) 1968 59 31 27 444 Sunshine Zeta Rho (North Da~ot a) 1968 44 24 18 264 Great Plains Zeta Sigma (Florida 'Tech) 1968 40 18 10 348 Sunshine Zeta Tau (Eastern Kentuclry) 1969 30 14 9 334 Cumberland Zeta Upsilon (Concord College) 1969 19 4 7 233 Founders Zeta Phi (Missouri/St. Louis) 1969 43 18 10 312 Midwest Zeta Chi (Southwestern Missouri State) 1969 67 43 26 363 Midwest Zeta Psi (Nicholls State) 1969 22 11 7 259 Delta Zeta Omega (Southwestern Louisiana) 1969 27 11 8 182 Delta Eta Alpha (Clemson) 1970 120 46 45 614 Carolinas Eta Beta (Seton Hall) 1970 37 25 25 353 North Atlantic Eta Epsilon (Angelo State) 1971 34 33 27 304 Lone Star Eta Zeta (Middle 'Tennessee State) 197 1 53 54 42 330 Cumberland Eta Theta (Weber State) 1971 34 22 14 363 Rockies Eta Kappa (South Alabama) 1971 27 23 20 176 Dixie Eta Nu (Northern Illinois) 1971 90 51 50 498 Midwest Eta Omicron (Northeast Louisiana) 1972 73 43 33 295 Delta Eta Rho (Northern K entucl{y) 1972 31 18 7 220 Cumberland Eta Sigma (West Georgia) 1972 101 58 41 438 Dixie Eta T au (Austin Peay State) 1972 55 48 24 499 Cumberland Eta Upsilon ('Texas/Arlington) 1973 48 20 16 245 Lone Star Eta Phi (Central Florida) 1973 86 67 27 341 Sunshine Eta Omega (Pembro~e State) 1974 21 6 6 203 Carolinas Theta Alpha (North Alabama) 1974 57 28 II 226 Dixie

10 Shield & Diamond 1984-85 1984-85 Total Ch apter/Sch ool Fou nded Size Pledges Initiates Initiates Region Theta Beta (Montevallo) 1974 55 17 12 181 Dixie Theta Gamma (Georgia College) 1974 63 25 12 205 Dixie Theta Delta (Francis Marion) 1974 39 25 12 185 Carolinas Theta Epsilon (Northeast O~lahoma State) 1975 22 18 15 178 Arkoma Theta Zeta (Northern Iowa) 1975 35 19 18 150 Great Plains Theta Eta (Loyola-Marymount) 1976 52 27 24 203 Golden West Theta Theta (Texas AC9'M) 1976 91 46 48 284 Lone Star Theta Iota (Tyler junior College) 1976 21 24 21 171 Lone Star Theta Kappa (Indiana Southeast) 1977 20 10 8 136 Midwest Theta Lambda (Creighton) 1977 122 36 32 370 Great Plains Theta Mu (Massachusetts) 1977 72 40 50 251 North Atlantic Theta Nu (Bay lor) 1977 96 55 54 253 Lone Star Theta Xi (East Texas State) 1978 50 24 12 240 Lone Star Theta Omicron (Indiana State) 1979 138 58 57 349 Midwest Theta Pi (Alabama/ Huntsville) 1979 46 18 14 121 Dixie Theta Rho (Northern Arizona) 1980 63 43 28 157 Golden West Theta Sigma (Winthrop) 1980 59 27 23 132 Carolinas Theta Tau (Cal State/Sacramento) 1981 85 39 37 175 Golden West Theta Upsilon (Tennessee Tech) 1981 53 26 20 105 Cumberland Theta Phi (Wichita State) 1982 52 26 20 79 Great Plains Theta Chi (Villanova) 1984 56 28 28 71 orth Atlantic Theta Psi (Chapman College) 1985 59 64 56 56 Golden West Theta Omega (California/ Davis) 1985 81 92 66 66 Golden West

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-with an- Elegant, Personalized Desk Plate Engraved on a Gold Anodized Aluminum Plate and Mounted on a Solid Walnut Base

Mail Check and Order Form To: C & S ENGRAVING 5126 WERLING DRIVE FORT WAYNE, IN 46806

Print name (23 Spaces Maximum) NAME ______I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I ADDRESS ------­ Type of script desired for name: CITY ------­ CONDENSED BLOCK D Check STATE Zl p ______CURSIVE 0 One Pri ce $14.50 Class Year I I I I Ind. Res. add 5% ...... ----- Postage & Handling ...... 1.25 Name of College (Exactly as you want it engraved) Total ...... _____ of Pi Kappa Alpha 11 Pi Kappa Alpha Welcomes Theta Omega

The Univers ity of California at Davis is the home of HKA 's newest chapter.

ON MAY 2-3, 1985, eighty-five men of Advisor Don Currier (Theta Tau '81}, to colonize in the fall of the next school the University of California-Davis Faculty Advisor William Sims (Alpha year. colony were officially installed as Z eta '47} and Housing Corporation In the fall of 1984, then Director of Theta Omega chapter of Pi Kappa Officer Steve Young (Gamma Pi '66). Expansion Scott Bell and Chapter Alpha. The colony was closely guided by Consultant Greg Jones worked on the National President William Resident Counselor Randy Fischer campus for almost three weeks, LaForge presided over the initiation of (Theta Tau '82). Installing teams that recruiting members for the new Pi all the charter members and the helped advise the colony were Kappa Alpha colony. After interview­ installation of the chapter on May 3, California-Berkeley (Alpha Si gma) ing over two hundred men, fifty men 1985. and Cal State-Sacramento (Theta Tau). were invited to join the new colony. The colony was established last On October 5, 1984 the official October with fifty-one members and colonization ceremony took place at the has grown to over eighty members in Colony History Memorial Union building on the Davis less than one year, and has become one Campus. Representatives from Theta of the largest among twenty The history of Theta Omega chapter Tau chapter (Sacramento State fraternities at Cal-Davis. dates back to 1978 when interest in University) and Alpha Sigma chapter The black tie chartering banquet establishing a chapter at the U.C. (U.C. B erkeley), resident counselor was held in nearby San Francisco on Davis campus began. Since that time Randy Fischer (Theta Tau '82), rush Friday, May 3 at one of the city's most the campus had been visited by many advisor Jim Eishen (Theta Lambda) prestigious hotels, the San Francisco members of the Memorial Headquar­ and national staff members Bell and Hyatt Regency. Golden West Regional ters' professional staff. However, strict Jones. President Charlie Dow, Executive interfraternity council guidelines The colony members spent the Director Allen Groves, Director of prohibited Pi Kappa Alpha from remainder of that semester working on Expansion Scott Bell and Chapter colonizing. the requirements for installation. Consultant Greg Jones were on hand to Finally, in 1984 the IFC invited Pi Among this group's many successes assist in the installation. Kappa Alpha to make an official was its first pledge class of twenty-six Alumni who supported the colony in presentation, and on March 22 of that men. meeting its requirements were Colony year they accepted the Fraternity's bid The colony members spent the

12 Shield & Diamond N_ational President William LaForge The Brothers of Theta Omega Chapter congratulates SMC Bill Hagenan. remainder of that semester working on rapidly, and in 1922, in conjunction the agricultural production of many the requirements for installation. On with the U.C. College of Agriculture in third world nations. Innovations such that day national officers Bell and Berkeley, the B.S. degree in as the mechanical tomato harvester, Jones, Regional President Charlie agriculture was initiated at Davis. salt water resistant grains, the "square Dow, and representatives from Theta tomato" invented by William Sims Tau and Alpha Sigma chapters In 1948 the campus expanded with the establishment of the School of (Alpha Zeta '47), and spruce saving reviewed the colony's accomplishments pigmy fruit trees are all products of and internal organizational structure. Veterinary Medicine. One of the twenty-four veterinary schools in the this research. After reviewing all of the information, The department of Food Science and the inspecting team voted unanimously United States and the only one in the state of California, this school has been is world renowned as the that the colony was ready to petition Pi creator of of such varied products as Kappa Alpha for installation. ranked in the top three veterinary schools nationally since its inception. fruit cocktail, freeze-dried coffee and The campus' most rapid expansion frozen fruit juice concentrate. History of the University began in 1951 when the College of Beyond this, Davis competes in over of California at Davis Letters and Science was founded and twenty-four intercollegiate sports. The more varied degree programs became Davis football team maintains an The University of California was available. In 1959 the Regents declared excellent record as the NCAC founded in 1868 when Governor Henry Davis a "general campus" of the conference champions for the past H. Haight signed the California University. Graduate and Professional fourteen years. This record ties the Organic Act, which provided that a work followed with the establishment previous mark held by the Oklahoma complete University be created for the of the Graduate division in 1961. The Sooners for consecutive conference state of California. Classes began in championships. Coach Jim Sochor College of Engineering came into holds the outstanding record as the 1869 on what is now the Berkeley existence the following year, owing campus and in June of that year, winningest active coach in the NCAA. much to the foundation already All of this is accomplished by a degrees were conferred upon the provided by the curriculum in University's first twelve graduates. University that gives no athletic Agricultural Engineering. The School scholarships. For the past ten years Today, the University of California of Law held its first classes in the fall of has a current enrollment of more than U.C. Davis has consistently taken the 1966, and the School of Medicine national title in both men's and 141,300 students at its nine campuses admitted its first students in the fall of women's equestrian polo. - Berkeley, Davis, Irvine, Los 1968. The Graduate School of Angeles, Riverside, San Diego, San Administration began holiday classes To conclude, no history of the Francisco, Santa Barbara and Santa in the fall of 1981. University of California at Davis would Cruz. Today the University of Today the University of California at be complete without the mentioning of California ranks as the world's top Davis has a student enrollment of the symbol of the Davis campus- the public education system and as a 19,542 students of which 5,139 are · bicycle. Davis has the distinction of highly respected research institution. graduate students. The Davis campus having more bikes per capita than any The University of California at Davis employs 3, 711 academic professors and other city in the world. The town of originated from a bill passed by the 9,800 support staff employees. The Davis maintains the most bicycle paths California State Legislature in 1905 University of California at Davis is the per capita of any city in the world and which authorized the establishment of largest U.C. campus in size and the over one-fourth of all transportation a University Farm. In 1906, 786 acres third largest in population. conducted within the city is done by of the Jerome C. Davis farm were Following in the agricultural bicycle. The Davis campus, complete purchased which formed the center of tradition of the University Farm, with its bicycle police who give tickets the 3,634 acre University of California Davis is proud of its title as the for everything from failure to hand at Davis campus. Classes began in 1909 "California Aggies". Agricultural signal to bicycle drunk driving, boasts with the enrollment of fifteen students. research on the Davis campus has led to the feat of having more than 14,000 The demand for greater educational the development of many new strains of bikes moving within one square mile opportunities in the state increased food crops which today are increasing area every ten minutes. of Pi Kappa Alpha 13 Paying Attention To People: A Recipe For Success

Jack Reich has never forgotten the virtues of human decency and hard work.

by Ed Pease

14 Shield & Diamond IT OCCUPIES the entire city block in downtown Indianapolis known as One American Square, and from this broad base it rises smartly above the city, completely dominating the Indianapolis s/cyline, the tallest building in Indiana. Sheathed in white Indiana limestone, its beautiful lobby climbs three floors into the building, dressed in deep green, salmon and black marble, inlaid in patterns broken by glass and brass and rich foliage. It is quiet despite its immensity, and the people come and go in a near-constant stream, dressed in the best that Brooks Brothers has to offer. It is the American United Life building, headquarters of one of America's largest and most successful insurance companies. It is a massive corporation (1984 sales of $5.7 billion), but one that got that way because it never stopped doing the things that made it successful in the first place. It pays attention to people; it provides personal

(continued on page 16)

of Pi Kappa Alpha 15 day's work. realizing that there was no such post, Reich says that the company he drew a paycheck- and stayed on for (contmued) deliberately kept its number of the rest of the session. Later, when the employees low for a very simple House of Representatives realized This corporation, then, and the reason. They have not had and never what had happened, they created, and building in which it is housed, are want an employee layoff. Benefits appointed him Assistant Postmaster. reflections of their Chairman and Chief abound. College tuition costs are Subsequent government jobs took Executive Officer, Jack E. Reich (Beta prov ided; on-site professional him through employment in the State Phi '29, Purdue University). improvement programs are offered; Gross Income Tax Division and the Jack Reich is one of Indiana's most contributions to higher education are State Employment Security Division, successful businessmen, one with a matched by the company; a type of where he also served as legislative resume too long to copy in our limited profit-sharing plan is in effect. More liaison. That job led to his employment space, and yet, as they say in Indiana, than seventy percent of AUL by the State Chamber of Commerce as "he's as common as an old ," the employees have been with the company its director of Membership and kind of man with whom one more than three years. Legislation. immediately feels comfortable. Reich himself knows what it is like to In 1952, he was named executive He is a gentle man, whose ready grin have to scrape for a living, and he is vice president (the chief staff position) and sparkling eyes are simultaneously committed to the idea that his of the Indiana State Chamber of engaging and deceptive. He is a major employees be well provided for. He Commerce. He left that position in 1962 financial success, but he is so because of expects them to work, but he rewards to become chairman and president of his very humanity. American United their labors. When he was in high the Indianapolis Water Company, ·a Life is, as he says, "a good corporate school, he went to school from 8:15 to post he left to become chairman of the citizen." It is, in that sense, a reflection 3:15 and then left for the mills of the board and chief executive officer of of Reich himself. Inland Steel Company, where he American United Life Insurance When the company decided to worked from four to midnight. Every Company in Decemberof1967. On July ex pand its former headquarters on the day. His mother died when he was 1, 1968, he was named President of the near north side of Indianapolis, Reich quite young, so he was on his own from Company, a position he has since determined that AUL could assist an early age, the oldest of three sons. relinquished to one of his sons-in-law. Indianapolis' efforts to revitalize its His wages, even in those pre­ Brother Reich's civic involvement is downtown by building a new structure Depression days, were 44¢ per hour. almost endless. Among his favorites is there. He picked a site occupied by, the Boy Scouts of America. Both of his among other things, adult bookstores, sons-in-law are Eagle Scouts and in his pawnshops, and a hotel where rooms office is a walnut plaque with eight were rented by the hour. He organized brass plates. On six of them are the meetings with tenants in the area to names of grandsons who are Eagle ex plain the company's interest in the Scouts (the other two grandsons aren't site and to determine whether the move yet old enough). would be considered disruptive by the Earlier this year, when the local Boy citizens of Indianapolis. Scout Council asked him to allow them Then, he sold the old building to the to honor his service to Scouting with a State of Indiana for less than cost, on Born in 1910, Brother Reich was recognition dinner, he declined. the condition that it be used to house the working in the mills of northern Instead, he chaired a Scouting dinner Indiana Vocational Technical College, Indiana by age fifteen, and entered for area businessmen and raised more a junior college that provides job Purdue University in the fall of 1928 to than $40,000 for the Boy Scout training and retraining for many study Civil Engineering. His plan was programs in Indianapolis. Classic Jack Hoosiers who might not otherwise find to obtain the engineering degree and Reich. decent employment. then enter law school, hoping then to His fraternity days provide happy Because the state needed the old become a railroad attorney. It never memories of good times built on building a bit sooner than AUL happened. Though he was admitted to adversity. The fact that he had to thought they could have their new one DePaul to study law, the mills were his deliver papers and work in the completed under tradit-ional only source of employment and, when fraternity kitchen in order to afford his construction techniques, the company the Depression intervened, he was laid fraternity membership didn't bother utilized a construction manager. As the off. There was no money for further Brother Reich. It was something he footings were sunk, they discovered studies. wanted and he was willing to work for that their site sat atop a huge Instead, he became active in it. underground lake. But, in typical Jack Democrat Party politics, organizing His support of PiKA has now Reich fashion, the company turned this and later chairing the Lake County spanned more than fifty year!f and isn't potential disaster into a bonanza. The Young Democrats, then the First limited only to his chapter at Purdue. architects and engineers designed a District Young Democrats, and When Delta Xi chapter at Indiana heating and cooling system that pumps working diligently in the successful University needed financingtoacquire seven and one-half million gallons of Democrat races of 1932. He had been new housing in the late 1960's, for water a day from the lake promised employment if his party was instance, no banks or other (environmental studies showed they successful, so he hitchhiked to conventional lenders would touch a could take up to fifty million gallons of Indianapolis following the election to loan to a fraternity. American United water a day without disrupting the obtain a job. Two weeks as the Senate Life took the chance, provided the loan, water table) and circulate its constant Doorkeeper was all the party could and secured housing for the Pikes at fifty-five degrees throughout the guarantee, though, since so many were IU, Purdue's oldest rival. building. In effect, the entire forty-plus in need of jobs. That was later cut toone That sort of attitude, of a "good story building is itself a giant heat week, but he managed to find citizen" concerned for his fellow man, pump. To the more than eight hundred employment in a job not actually of a brother who cares for brothers, is AUL employees, it is a comfortable funded in the budget - Assistant Jack Reich, a man who truly lives our home where they are treated well in Senate Postmaster. ideal of congeniality based upon exchange for an old-fashioned honest After a week on the job, with no one character.

16 Shield & Diamond

Pi Kappa Alpha's Unfinished Jountey: Report

NINETEEN EIGHTY -FIVE was another record breaking and precedent setting year for Pi Kappa Alpha. Two new chapters were installed, carrying the Fraternity through the uTheta Series" which will make Pi Kappa Alpha's next new chapter Iota Alpha. Membership statistics have broken records for the fourth consecutive year. New programs utilizing alumni have been implemented to enhance our expansion and chapter development programs. And a renewed ''anot h er commitment has been established by all of the Fraternity's governing arms. As the 1984-85 academic school year came to a record close in June, the Fraternity listed 17 4 active chapters and three colonies on its roll call. breaking Unfortunately, during this time the Fraternity did see three chapters surrender their charters. year'' Two chapters, Eta Eta (Morehead State College) and Eta Xi (Alabama-Birmingham) closed due to low membership. Meanwhile, Gamma Pi (University of Oregon) was closed because of serious financial problems. On a more positive note, Pi Kappa Alpha was able to prevent three chapters from failing with the new alumni receivership program. Today, Alpha Mu (Georgia), Alpha Gamma (LSU) and Delta Beta (Bowling Green State University) have been able to retain their charters while alumni assist these chapters in getting back on their feet.

18 Shield & Diamond This year also saw pledge and initiation statistics continue to increase for the fourth straight year. Our chapters pledged 5,591 men and Chapter Total initiated 4,203 of them into the Fra­ ternity. This increased the total Leaders undergraduate membership size by two and a half percent over last year. This year we ended the academic year with 12 ,226 undergraduates, the 2000 Initiates largest number ever! The average number of members per Florida Alpha Eta 2281 chapter has also increased to seventy Utah Alpha Tau 2020 men per chapter from sixty-eight last year. Meanwhile, the average pledge class size increased by four men over 1,000 - 1,499 Initiates last year to thirty-two, and initiations Auburn Upsilon 1994 per chapter increased as well to North Carolina State Alpha Epsilon 1985 twenty-four from twenty-three last Tennessee/Knoxville Zeta 1869 year. Arkansas Alpha Zeta 1706 Pi Kappa Alpha chapters are Texas Beta Mu 1703 definitely excelling, both in their Utah State Gamma Epsilon 1615 internal organizations and on their Mississippi State Gamma Theta 1537 Georgia Aipha Mu 1507 respective campuses. Evidence of this can be found in records at the Memorial Headquarters. In those 1,500 - 1,999 Initiates records it is noted that in 1980, the national staff had ranked thirty-eight Oklahoma Beta Omicron 1469 chapters excellent according to their Georgia Tech Alpha Del ta 1464 chapter evaluation procedure. At the Purdue Beta Phi 1432 Mississippi Gamma Iota 1430 end of this academic year the staff had Kentucky Omega 1384 ranked sixty-one chapters excellent Missouri/Columbia Alpha Nu 1382 using that same procedure. Cincinnati Alpha Xi 1363 Due to this incredible statistic the Alabama Gamma Alpha 1324 Fraternity will give out more national Illinois Beta Eta 1287 awards this year than it has ever done Virginia Alpha 1276 Duke Alpha Alpha 1269 before. A list of those chapters Millsaps Alpha Iota 1267 receiving national recognition can be New Mexico Beta Delta 1253 found in this issue. North Carolina Tau 1241 While boasting about breaking Vanderbilt Sigma 1230 records, attendance at this year's Pennsylvania State Beta Alpha 1230 fifteen regional conferences cannot be Florida State Delta Lambda 1218 overlooked. Again this Iowa State Alpha Phi 1190 year Pi Kappa Bowling Green Delta Beta 1179 Alpha's regional presidents orchestrated Kansas State Alpha Omega 1172 an informative and educational Ohio State Alpha Rho 1168 schedule of conferences with 169 of our William & Mary Gamma 1165 174 chapters participating in the Davidson College Beta 1163 programs. Through these conferences West Virginia Alpha Theta 1153 Southern Methodist Beta Zeta 1153 2,850 undergraduates were able to Miami Gamma Omega 1130 participate in seminars dealing with Emory Beta Kappa 1109 rush, pledge education, scholarship, Kansas Beta Gamma 1099 drug and alcohol abuse, and many Louisiana Polytechnic Institute Gamma Psi 1069 other chapter management programs. Pittsburgh Gamma Sigma 1060 Another conference which was a Cornell Beta Theta 1046 Tulane Eta 1044 success in the 1984-85 academic year Miami/Ohio Delta Gamma 1042 was the SMC conference in January. Memphis State Delta Zeta 1028 This was the twelfth annual SMC Texas Tech Epsilon Gamma 1024 conference and it drew eighty-one Murray State Epsilon Lambda 1024 chapter presidents to Memphis for a Washington & Lee Pi 1018 weekend program of sessions dealing Pennsylvania Beta Pi 1011 Missouri/Rolla Alpha Kappa 1011 with the role and responsibilities of the Hampden-Sydney Iota 1004 SMC. To date, Pi Kappa Alpha is still Oklahoma State Gamma Chi 1004 the only national fraternity that has a program solely for the chapter president. of Pi Kappa Alpha 19 In the area of communications, Pi Kappa Alpha's GARNET & GOLD Pledge Manual came out in its twenty­ second printing this year. This new edition also represents the fourth Chapter Membership: major revision of the manual since it was introduced to our chapters in 1956. PiKA's Top Twenty Demand for the new GARNET & GOLD was so overwhelming that it will undergo another printing this fall. Meanwhile, the SHIELD & DIAMOND Florida State Delta Lambda 184 continues to gain national recognition Florida Alpha Eta 179 amongst other fraternity and sorority Texas Tech Epsilon Gamma 156 magazines. Alpha Nu 144 At the time of this printing the Missouri/ Columbia national staff is preparing for the 1985 Arizona State Delta Tau 141 Officers' Leadership Academy. This is Indiana State Theta Omicron 138 another program that we are happy to Purdue Beta Phi 130 report will attract more undergradu­ Mississippi Gamma Iota 128 ate members than it did when it was Creighton Theta Lambda 122 revived in 1983. Already thirty-eight Beta Mu 121 percent more Pikes are registered for Texas this four day academy than our last Clemson Eta Alpha 120 one. Lehigh Gamma Kappa 116 Of course this annual report wouldn't Tennessee/ Knoxville Zeta 113 be complete if it didn't include the Cal State/ Northridge Zeta Omicron 111 Fraternity's past national convention Davidson College Beta 110 which was held in Dallas last summer. Iowa Gamma Nu 107 According to many long-time participants of our national William & Mary Gamma 105 conventions, Dallas will be remember­ Illinois Beta Eta 105 ed as one of our best ever. With this in Kansas State Alpha Omega 102 mind, plans have begun for another Emory Beta Kappa 102 extravaganza in Boston in 1986! West Georgia College Eta Sigma 101 From this overview of the 1984-85 Virginia Tech Epsilon 101 year it's obvious that the journey which Zeta Alpha 100 began on March 1, 1868 is unfinished. General Motors Pi Kappa Alpha is prepared to

Geographical Breakdown of Alumni

ALABAMA ...... 3,153 LOUISIANA ...... 2,118 OKLAHOMA ...... 2,087 ALASKA ...... 97 MAINE ...... 93 OREGON ...... 1,044 ARIZONA ...... 1,194 MARYLAND ...... 1,325 PENNSYLVANIA ...... 3,080 ARKANSAS ...... 2,177 MASSACHUSETTS ...... 1,055 RHODE ISLAND ...... 87 CALIFORNIA ...... 6,044 MICHIGAN ...... 1,782 SOUTH CA ROLINA ...... 2,209 COLORADO ...... 1,343 MINNESOTA ...... 468 SOUTH DAKOTA ...... 48 CONNECTICUT ...... 914 MISSISSIPPI ...... 3,002 TENNESSEE ...... 4,318 DELAWARE ...... 326 MISSOURI ...... 2,681 TEXAS ...... 8,617 DISTRICT of COLUMBIA ...... 212 MONTANA ...... 430 UTAH ...... 1,963 FLORIDA ...... 6,123 NEBRASKA ...... 636 VERMONT ...... 93 GEORGIA ...... 4,145 NEVADA ...... 146 VIRGINIA ...... 3,906 HAWAII ...... 130 NEW HAMPSHIRE ...... 430 WASHINGTON ...... 1,432 IDAHO ...... 491 NEW JERSEY ...... 2,011 WEST VIRGINIA ...... 1,040 ILLINOIS ...... 3,995 NEW MEXICO ...... 887 WISCONSIN ...... 576 INDIANA ...... 1,857 NEW YORK ...... 2,416 WYOMING ...... 79 IOWA ...... 1,056 NORTH CAROLINA ...... 3,592 GUAM ...... 2 KANSAS ...... 1,430 NORTH DAKOTA ...... 129 PUERTO RICO ...... 33 KENTUCKY ...... 2,506 OHIO ...... 4,119 VIRGIN ISLANDS ...... 7

TOTAL ...... 95,134

20 Shield & Diamond continue setting new records in all areas. The ground work has already 1985-86 been laid for our next year. In the area of expansion and chapter development several projects have Regional Conference already been slated. Two new colonies will be established this fall. At the Schedule beginning of September Pi Kappa Alpha will colonize at the University of Conference: Site: Date: California at Fresno, and when a group has been organized there the ARKOMA ...... Jonesboro, AR ...... Feb. 28 - Mar. 2, 1986 Fraternity's professional staff will CAROLINAS ...... Raleigh, NC ...... Jan. 2:1-26, 1986 then travel to the University of CUMBERLAND .. . Not Determined ...... Feb. 7-9, 1986 Wyoming to colonize a group DELTA ...... Not Determined ...... Not Determined there. Meanwhile, other staff resources will be working to establish alumni DIXIE ...... Atlanta, GA ...... Feb. 21-23, 1986 receiverships at Gamma Delta FOUNDERS ...... Morgantown, WV ...... Oct. 25-27, 1985 (Arizona) and Alpha Zeta (Ar kansas). GOLDEN WEST ... Anaheim, CA ...... Mar. 14-16, 1986 Other potential colony sites for which GREAT LAKES .. . Big Rapids, MI ...... Feb. 7-9, 1986 the Fraternity will be bidding include: the University of Connecticut, GREAT PLAINS .. . Omaha, NE ...... Oct. 25-27, 1985 Birmingham-Southern, Nevada-Reno, LONE STAR ...... Houston, TX ...... Feb. 14-16, 1986 California at Santa Barbara, James MIDWEST ...... Columbia, MO ...... Nov.1-3, 1985 Madison and California-Irvine. NORTH ATLANTIC .Bethlehem, P A ...... Feb. 21-23, 1986 NORTHWEST . . .. . Moscow, ID ...... Oct. 4-6,1985 ROCKIES ...... Not Determined ...... Not Determined SUNSHINE ...... DeLand, FL ...... Jan. 31 - Feb. 2, 1986 Membership REGIONAL CONFERENCE Highlights

ATTENDANCE STATISTICS PI edgings AvgChapter '84-'85

3000 32.0

'83-'84

29.3 2500

24.0

2000 23.5

Undergraduate Membership '84-'85

1500

'83-'84 81-82 83-84 84-85

21 of Pi Kappa Alpha The Fraternity will also be holding its first Regional President's Workshop in September. This weekend workshop will attract all of our fifteen regional presidents. During this time we will Top Twenty look at ways to improve our regional conferences so that they continue to College Fraternities provide a rewarding fraternity education. Many other programs will be going No. of Average Total No. Initiated through overhauls to bring them up to Active Chapter Since This Year date so that the national office can Fraternity Chapters Size Founding 5/84.5/85 continue to provide programming Tau Kappa Epsilon 270 46.8 157,000 4,370 ideas for our chapter's use when confronting the current trends and Sigma Phi Epsilon 243 149,290 5,167 needs. A new minimum chapter Lambda Chi Alpha 215 54 172,600 4,510 standards policy which was approved Kappa Sigma 194 68 159,503 3,196 by the Supreme Council this spring Sigma Chi 192 75 177,098 4,141 will be implemented this year. The SHIELD & DIAMOND is another Sigma Alpha Epsilon 191 74 197,500 3,868 service that will not go without some Sigma Nu 181 55 153,000 3,600 change. In the future the magazine will Pi Kappa Alpha 175 70 138,980 4,120 continue to report on the state of the Fraternity's chapters. However, the Phi Delta Theta 158 magazine will take on the responsibil­ Alpha Tau Omega 153 52 140,144 2,832 ity of reporting more on our alumni Theta Chi 147 53 107,638 2,567 through alumni notes and alumni 117,939 1,733 spotlights. It will recognize alumni Phi Gamma Delta 123 45-50 involved with the Fraternity's Delta Tau Delta 118 81 110,197 2,345 expansion and chapter development Kappa Alpha Order 114 53 94,825 1,702 programs, while also assisting alumni Beta Theta Pi 113 63 132,200 2,200 associations to communicate with brothers in their areas. Sigma Pi 111 50 49,600 1,550 The months ahead are· going to be Pi Kappa Phi 102 47,110 1,712 exciting ones for the Fraternity and all Delta Sigma Phi 100 44 72,000 2,110 of its members. Many great things are going to be happening. We hope that all Phi Kappa Psi 89 65 78,928 1,370 of Pi Kappa Alpha's alumni and Delta Upsilon 87 89,364 undergraduates will take part in assisting our national officers carry out this next part of the Fraternity's You can help Pi Kappa Alpha reach zealous brothers are needed "so that.Pi journey. A journey which will lead us to tomorrow today by renewing your Kappa Alpha rnay gain glory and Boston for the 1986 national · commitment and dedication. Now prosper thereby!" convention. more than ever the energies of our 1985 Alumni Awards

Distinguished Achievement A ward: Ted Koppel (Alpha Chi, Syracuse '58)

Loyalty A ward: Robert V. Wolf (Alpha Kappa, Missouri/Rolla '48)

Chapter Advisor of the Year: Robert A. McCool (Beta Alpha, Penn State '76)

22 Shield & Diamond 1985 Chapter Programming Awards

POWERS AWARD COMMUNITY SERVICE R. Jeff Cole Delta Eta Chapter Gamma Iota Chapter University of Delaware University of Mississippi Finalists CAMPUS INVOLVEMENT Gray Thomas Culbreath Delta Upsilon Chapter Nu Chapter Stetson University Drew Sutton Roslund Eta Alpha Chapter Beta Nu Chapter Clemson University Patrick Derek Smith Gamma Alpha Chapter Theta Omicron Chapter University of Alabama Timothy Donnelly Theta Chi Chapter HARVEY T. NEWELL A WARD PUBLICATIONS Gamma Sigma Chapter Theta Omicron Chapter University of Pittsburgh Indiana State University Honorable Mention: RUSH Epsilon Sigma Chapter University of Tennessee/Martin Eta Sigma Chapter West Georgia College Epsilon Tau Chapter Eastern New Mexico State University Theta Omicron Chapter Indiana State University Zeta Alpha Chapter - A Section General MotoTS Institute Epsilon Gamma Chapter Texas Tech University Zeta Xi Chapter Western Carolina University

INTRAMURALS Delta Theta Chapter Arkansas State University Theta Omicron Chapter Indiana State University Epsilon Gamma Chapter Texas Tech University

PLEDGE EDUCATION Beta Zeta Chapter Southern Methodist University

ALUMNI RELATIONS Gamma Iota Chapter University of Mississippi

SCHOLARSHIP Beta Pi Chapter University of Pennsylvania Zeta Alpha Chapter - B Section General Motors Institute

of Pi Kappa Alpha 23 PikePrOJ

by Norm Hulcher

24

Shield & Dicunond APRIL 24, 1983 started out as just Cochran was three years ahead of industries which are regulated here, or another day for Dr. Thomas K. McCraw. "I remember he rushed me," they allow the private sector a good McCraw. McCraw recalls. "We were good dee.l more discretion than is allowed The forty-four year old Gamma Iota friends and still are." here. Conversely, it's always been the (Mississippi) alumnus was in the After earning his bachelor's degree case that governments abroad have a middle of teaching a seminar at the in English from Ole Miss in 1962, strong voice in big investment Harvard Business School, where he is a McCraw served four years as a U.S. decisions or plant locations." professor of business history. His Navy supply officer before entering "American government, as a secretary slipped into the classroom graduate school at the University of bureaucracy, is a very young creation; and handed him a note. Tom Wisconsin. Specializing in history, law it dates from the New Deal, whereas McCraw's life hasn't been the same and economics, he completed his MA Japanese bureaucracy, the German or since. degree in 1968 and his PhD in 1970. even the British date back several The message: he had won a Pulitzer Among his numerous honors while at hundred years." Prize for his latest book, Prophets of Wisconsin was the Williams P. Lyons Pondering the contrasts aroused Regulation, a study of, according to one prize, a national award for the best McCraw's curiosity. What's different, review, "the special inferno and master's thesis in the field of history. he wondered, about the United States, purgatory American history has made McCraw joined the faculty at the and what is it in regulation that shows of the relation between business and University of Texas, where as an up those differences? government." associate professor he directed the "When I started on this, regulation News of such an honor would tend to masters and doctoral programs in was not a particularly important distract a person, but brother McCraw history. But in 1978, the Harvard topic," McCraw recalls. "It became a handled it with aplomb. "I couldn't do Business School beckoned. national obsession in the late 1970's and very much," he told the Boston Globe. "The reason I was recruited here was business people began to pay attention "I couldn't just interrupt(theseminar); not precisely because I was a historian, to it." I was running it." but because my field was business­ The challenge of this subject was not Nonchalance aside, however, government relations. In the 1970's, limited to a mere analysis, though, winning a Pulitzer Prize is no small when that became important in according to McCraw. He also had to feat. When colleagues and students business, the Harvard Business School devise a way " to take a dry, presented him with a cake bearing the and many others recruited people like controversial, multifaceted, multidis­ phrase "A Pulitzer Prize is nice- but me to try to augment their resources ciplinary topic like this and make it compared to what?" he replied, and expertise on business and intelligible." The answer was a matter "Compared to just about anything." government." of style displayed in Prophets of The honor marked the high point in a Free to cavort in that specialized R egulation. distinguished career that stems from field, McCraw focused on government McCraw converted part of his study McCraw's undergraduate days at the regulation of American business, a into a series of biographies of four University of Mississippi. A IIKA subject which, as a source of Americans who helped shape an era of triple legacy (his father and uncle were excitement for most laymen ranks regulation, and who embodied the members of Alpha Eta chapter at the slightly above watching fruit ripen. characteristics of that era: Charles University of Florida, his brother at But McCraw saw government Francis Adams, Louis D. Brandeis, Zeta chapter at the University of regulation as a means of accentuating James M. Landis and Alfred E. Kahn. Tennessee), he pledged at Gamma Iota the differences between the private "It became apparent that the only way I in the fall of 1958. He was a sector in the U.S. versus that of other could bring the reader along was contemporary of Brad Dye and Thad countries. through the eyes of these people." Cochran, who went on to political fame McCraw notes that, in contrast to the Regulation is notMcCraw'sonly area as, respectively, Mississippi's United States, "other countries either of expertise, however. He is a member lieutenant governor and U.S. senator. have public ownership of a lot of of the historical advisory board of !Pockets Pulitzer life hasn't been the same since.

of Pi Kappa Alpha 25 NASA and directs a required Harvard manufacturers to sell there. They like Tom McCraw into the world of MBA course, Business, Government developed a command of the home business education. and the InternationalEconom,y. He also market, used that market to develop "I think the basic thing (which gives has spent several weeks during each of expertise that would be useful in Japan an edge) is the nation-wide sense the past three summers in Tokyo, export markets, and that built capacity of weakness and vulnerability that teaching at the Nomura Research beyond their own domestic require­ kind of galvanizes everybody involved Institute's School of Advanced ments in such industries as steel and, into thinking that they've got to do this Management. This experience endows later, automobiles and semiconductors. to survive," McCraw contends. "That McCraw with a learned perspective on "Meanwhile, they kept control of the would be impossible in an American the roles of major countries in the domestic market and used that control context." world's economy. to service the huge fixed costs Despite certain Japanese successes, Mention of "world economy" necessary in capital-intensive McCraw suggests that Americans conjures images of high-level dealings industries, permitting them to sell at should not consider themselves second­ among the Exxons and Mitsubishis, more attractive costs abroad. That, of class citizens in the world economy. but McCraw warns that international course, requires a very close "If you think about it, the things business strikes close to home. coordination of government and they're beating us in are not a very long "The world economy is interdepend­ business policies, and the government list. It's not as if they can choose ent. Even a small proprietor is affected provided a setting in which that sort of anything and wipe out the world by such things as differential exchange thing is possible." competition. They're not good at a lot of rates and competition from the "Now, one of the most interesting things; they're not particularly good Japanese and now other Asian aspects of this story is that it confounds entrepreneurs, they're not good at countries. Once the 'oil shocks' of the traditional economic theory, which agriculture, and their energy 1970's came, it became obvious that the says that if you protect the home industries are not terribly well United States was just as integrated in market . . . and permit cartels or managed." the world economy as any other business combinations of a horizontal Such a high degree of expertise in, country." nature, inefficiency will result. Well, and exposure to, the international Japan's emergence during the 1970's the Japanese have done both of those business scene tempts many educators as a major competitor of the U.S. has things and somehow or other have to abandon the campus in favor of caused many informed observers to managed to remain extremely positions in government or in the wonder how Japan came so far so fast. efficient." private sector. Would Tom McCraw McCraw believes it was not by Knowledge of the cultural consider leaving the academic world? accident. disciplines which have allowed the "I don't think I would," says IIKA's "They started out by closing their Japanese to "confound traditional soft-spoken Pulitzer Prize winner. own borders, so they had a captive economic theory" is a prime Then, with a chuckle, he adds, "I think market ... and did not allow American justification for bringing historians I'm cut out to be a scholar." mm C§cwUcwov Prints and Slides from the same roll Kodak MP film ... Eastman Kodak's professional · r------motion picture (MP) film now adapted for still use INTRODUCTORY OFFER in 35mm cameras by Seattle FilmWorks.lts micro, 0 Rush me two 20-exposure rolls of your leading KODAK fine grain and rich color saturation meet the MP film-Kodak 524 7® (200 ASA). Enclosed is $2.00. I'd exacting standards of the movie . With like to be able to get color prints or slides (or both) from the same roll and experience the remarkable versarility of this wider exposure latitude, you don't have to be a professional quality film. Limitof2 ron. per customer. pro to get great everyday shots or capture special NAME ______effects. Shoot in low or bright light from 200 ASA up to 1200 ASA (with our high speed 5294® film). ADD~------Get prints or slides, or both, from the same roll. CITY STATE ____ ZIP _____ Enjoy the very latest in photographic technology Mail to: Seattle FilmWorks with substantial savings. 500 Third Avenue West, P.O. Box C-34056 0 Seattle, WA98124 4247 Kodok 5247 and 529-4 are registered n-.demarlu of the Eastman Kodok Company. 1984 Sullle F"d..wo.b Offer docs not include proces>ing. Process ECN -11.

26 Shield & Diamond The Pi Kappa Alpha Mentorial Foundation

Contributions as of June 30, 1985.

Dear Brothers: SENTINEL SOCIETY N~bmskti-OnUJha The 1984-85 academic year is now part of Pi Kappa Alpha's history and on behalf of R. Craig Hoens.heU '63 the Memorial Foundation, I want to thank all of our alumni who participated in last year's FOUNDATION FELLOWS annual campaign. Alabama Richard F. Ogle '6 1 Kt.ntucky I wish that I could personally thank each one of you for your gift and tell you how your Wickliffe B. Moore '21 Nebraska gift benefited the Fraternity and our over twelve thousand undergraduate brothers. Quentin L. Richard '29 Rhodts However, since that's impossible I hope that you take the time to read through this and future JohnJ . Lux '53 issues of the SHIELD G' DIAMON.D to watch how the Memorial Foundation has utilized FOUNDER'S CLUB your recent gifts. AU.bama John A. Caddell '28 John E. Home '33 Pi Kappa Alpha has proven itself as a leader amongst other national fraternities over Bowling Green State Michael R. Clancy,Jr '58 the past fifteen years and the current support from our alumni is giving us the momentum for Bradlly James S. Long,Jr '72 an even stronger future. (AJJjorniJJ-&r/ully Richard Ralph '53 Since Pi Kappa Alpha was founded, alumni have been the motivating force behind the Etut Tenn . Statt M ichael R. Herron '63 Fraternity, and 117 years later that tradition has not changed. Like so many already, I hope MtushaJJ James F. McDonald '59 that more alumni will make the commitment to take an active role in this period of Pi Kappa Ptnnsylvan/Q Dehaven Devclin '21 Alpha's history. Ptn.nsylvtu~la StDU James D. Fdton '12 Slur Diego St41t George H. Roach ,Jr '57 TuasA&M Fraternally, John K. Sosnowy '61 JUNIOR FOUNDER'S CLUB ArkonD I. Douglas Dunipace '58 Vance Miller, Md '66 Arklln.S4S Samuel M. Sharp '21 Auburn James S. Dowdell '32 William C . Watkins '51 Bradley George W . Denton George F. Gee '51 CDIJfornil:l- lkrktky Memorial Foundation President Russell T . Bigelow '51 Giocondo F. Jacuzzi '41 William H. Maxwdi,Jr., M.D. '44

(continued on Following pages) ol Pi Kappa Alpha 27 (continued)

c:..mq•M~Oon J~ N. Cradlin '43 Syra<.... JohnC. l...auer '57 Frank D. Tecu '58 Henry A. WilkJ; '73 Jame:sO. ~n , Jr '43 Jay Fiugerald '45 JrnU C. Puku '59 Robe.n V. Wolf 't 8 Stdson A ubwn Glenn F. Perry '37 ~orr,town Eston V Whdchd, Clu '48 M on/IINI Stll.ll WcmuJ . Ik~ '49 Thomu H. Blake '23 Joseph F. Thomu '34 Milton C . Price '40 Tnut.-CM.tttutOOftJ Sherman C. Day '37 H arry Halverson ' 16 Donald H. Clay ' +4 John H. Wilkins, Jr "27 Georrlll Collq' Stephen P. Shdton '67 George R. Gcary,Jr '48 ~ David H. [)yJon ' 72 Clnd nMII Ladeuic W . Fetur '30 Thomas W. Wadt:, Jr '53 N . Ouolinla S t11t1 Drewry F. Wofford,J r '47 J ames R. Harris '65 Gary E. Mc.ndlhofc r '65 Hube-.n B. Owens '30 T~Martln E. Preston Andnws, Jr '48 Tnut.-CM.IttutOOfG Ray R . Hestu '59 William R . Nc.stcr, Jr '47 Gcorr/11 Tuh George M. Luhn '20 Raben Coleman, Jr '36 Ceoff~y E. Hcmmrich '64 Robc.n H . Lewis '54 George L. Rus.KU '27 Lc.landS. Covey '40 Maurice P. S. Spearman '25 l..aWTena: Sanford 't7 Robcn P. Peanon '72 Irwin K. Roth '28 Colorado AJben f , Gandy '52 Coulter R . Sublen '30 Leslie L. T aylor ' 13 TomW. Wade ' l7 Dean Se.ua.men '42 A. R Brundli '2!1 Raben M . Mcfvland,Jr '19 TUIU A &M NdNUita T~Mortbt David f . Smith '33 Colorado Co lllr~ GMI Robc:n R . Herrdl '58 Caner M . farrar '24 Jim A. Frederick '55 Luther A. Smith '26 Charles H. Waynick '33 David M . Smith '68 Trinity George W . Loomis '25 James H. Mccullick '4-4 Don E. Tillery '45 Drd• Hampdm-$ydMy WilliamJ. Cone '55 NtwMWco Charles A. Stephens ' 47 &Jolt Ronald E. Roa.rk '70 Charles P. Blackley '29 Guyton H. Watkins '42 C . LorenJessup '49 TUIUA&M Wallace B. Hoban '29 O.b /doho Tulluw S. P J ohnson, Iii '51 Marshall B. Corley '53 Birmbtzluun SoutMm Anhur P. Ha.rris,Jr '25 Michad C . Brechan '66 Bobby W. Heard '46 Jack C . Redman '43 111~ Citildtl Thomas A. Parke.r '43 Elutnn /UinoU fi/Jnols Univ. oftht South Emme.n A. Vaughey '26 J ohn A. Hage '63 J . Richard Spann '45 Jame.s Ooughen y '70 Kendall P. Bates '« Fnnklin S. Forsberg '28 Ntw Yorlt Donald H. KJotz, J r '55 Bowllnz Grwn St81t Florida Leslie A. Wan '30 Leslie H. Walling '29 William E. Weme.r '24 TrtuUy/VGIIiG B. Russell Decker '53 £ . DU!: ic Beggs '27 Joseph G. Wilson '37 YG!InciG North Ctuolbul Igor J. hJamofT, Md '53 Lanyj. Foran '56 Ben F. Munro '46 Iowa Allan R. Wdgc '59 Bynum R . Brown '49 Trln/1)' AJben A. K.siaU '6 1 Richard L. Mason '60 A. Frank Smith '66 Marvin S. McClaran '34 V/&nolltJ Lawson H. Lowra.n~ '29 John P. Barnes '39 J ohnJ. Riedl '62 Florida Stau /owa Stau Paul L. Meaders, Jr '50 NorthDGkota Tulluw fred C . Williams '51 Oouglau R. Cooke '61 Carl F. Bands '22 Wd:tForut Thomas E. Kiefel '68 Gco~ G . Bin '72 lfflulky ~,~ Wtuhlntton G regory I. Cottington '55 R ichardS. Crews '37 Northwut~m Tom M . Keith '47 Langley C . Cagle '« Clifford A. Mann '67 A. Wdlborne Moise '30 John E. J ones '47 William H. VogJc '66 Lawrence Garber '63 AJian Hall '47 Gary A. Wicklund '60 Wtuhlntton Roben £ . Krumwiede '47 Lenford K. Williams '47 Royal T . H arris,Jr '69 GftJrtttown KG!U4S Gary G . Grant '20 Thomas R . Roth '41 Univ. of the South CaU/om/ll.&rbley George A. Jacoby '21 Richard M. Barnes '54 Hcrben C . Nesbitt ' 17 Raymond P. Wagner '50 Walter G . Hanni '68 Herben D. Adams '23 Gtortill Tech Jere Kimmel '48 Oscar C . Sandbc.rg,Jr '49 Ohio C . Jay Parkinson '32 Philip H. Arnot ' 12 John R . Bowman '42 Roben L. Ha.nJ in '5+ Will iam L. Mathews ' 18 Wuhintton Unill. Robcn H. Hetz.ler '39 Va/pGToiso Ke. nncth S. Caldwdl '46 J ames B. Michaei,Jr '55 Ray D. Young ' 19 Thomas R . Clark '67 PauJ F. Hoff '47 Charle.s R . Moore '30 fi/Jno ls KIUUIU Stall Richard C . Ward '38 Walte.r H. Del Mar ' 41 Wut~orriG Vlllllnova Einar A. Hclsing '22 Danid M . Bird '59 Charles L. Wyndham '28 Ohio State Raben M . Hoffman '« John C . f crgu.son '33 Mvk B. MoJica '52 John D. Stee.ly '22 Earl M . Coc '23 Wut~m Ktntuclty Henry R . Chopc ,Jr '48 Hamner Hannah, Iii '57 lndiluaa J . A Crouch '62 Anhur R . Nash ,Jr '68 Roben W . Cycstcr '35 Anhur M . Myers '47 Frederick W . He.ster '26 Ridtard R . Nyc '65 J ohn L. Lisher '71 l...c.ste r F. Gfeller ' l7 David W. Edward '30 Wichita James C . Mcgusty '39 Robcn Shoemaker '69 Roy S. Harvey '42 Wave rly M . Cole '48 Olc.klhoma CD.rMfk--Mt-Uon VftrinU. IOWtl Eugene K. Kc;uing '50 J ackS. Bcnr-am '50 J ohn L. Bigley '47 Thomas C . TiUar,Jr '71 Ronald F. Hedglin '62 Clark G . Poner '49 Arden R . DougJu '33 J ohn R . Brindd '30 Leo A. Hocgh '29 John P. Raruom '38 PRESIDENrS CLUB George E. Gibson '28 Vftrlni4Tnh Edward Y. Lustig '60 Donald M . Mounce '29 Kermit Silverwood '27 Alabama Roben D. Harre.ll '46 Thomas D. Long '48 Roben E. Wood, Iii '37 KG!U4S Knrtucky J ohn H. Lary '29 William M . Raymond '50 WabForut Cau Wcstnn Rauw Charles D. Kennedy '42 Harry S. Traynor '32 J . Warre.n Ferguson '50 Jcffe.ry A. Emig '61 Charles I. Wa.U '25 uhlth William B. Valentine '32 ~ntro.l A rknsiu KG1tS1U State Roben C . Williamson '65 Wtuhlntton Randy Blythe ' 77 Loulrilma Statt Ralph L. Byron '56 J ohn H. Collett '35 Carl E. Forsberg '63 PauJJ. Kuckclman '46 Edward A. Davis,J r '68 Louis L. lvcrson, Jr '49 Vernon S. Melancon '61 Irvin F. Matson ,J r '48 J ohn B. Reynokb, Jr ' 70 Gary L. Robben '66 James A. Sylar '63 Wedon T . Smith '36 Wtuhlntton & l.a uhlth Cincinnati A. Maxwcll Paget '38 LoidskuuJ Tt-e.h William P. Ame.s, Jr '38 R . William Davi sCreen '64 Harold R. Dobbs '25 Scbcn R . Armstrong '54 LouUlana Stat~ Charles T . Everttt '30 ManlurU C hristoph Kcller, Jr '35 Piern V. Blanchard '60 HerbenJ. Goosman ' II EdwardJ. Evans, Ill '65 Kenneth G . Macdonald '33 JcffM. David '66 Chester L. Grove '36 William E. Dorroh '73 MnnphU Statt Wtuhintton State l;t.wrence L. Dodd '54 J oseph L. Lawson '!I I Auguninc L. Hogan ,Jr '34 William M. Banks,J r '62 W inston K. Lippen '55 Kenneth A. Merryweather '32 Allen H. Smith '33 Mtrc~r Jerry P. Mcfadden '53 Mary/4nd £dd A. Burch '30 Wut~ortiD Gary A. Miller '68 Andrew R. Barrett '58 Paul R. J a«k,Jr '52 Wahcr D. Morgan '24 NicholasJ. Orphan '65 MnnphU Stott Miluni George W . Hopkins '37 Richard P. Rogers '58 Bobby T . Williams '52 Carl f romh.age n, Jr '47 Wu t~m Michitan Ckmson Nelson R . Kopacka '35 Miluni·Ohio R . Earl Welbaum '51 Amos G . Grecn,Jr '71 Ronald H. Fanning '55 Miluni·Ohlo Wichita Russdl D. Shannon '72 M l/ls4ps Leo C . Banels '45 Charles A. Easley, J r '27 Colorildo Colkte Robc:n E. Blount '25 James A. Pttling '47 Winthrop ThomasA. Henry,Jr '57 George H. Zimmerman '50 Roben S. Mckay '42 OrttOn Robcn 0 . Blucker '50 Minnaoto Ernest V. Stabler '24 Harold f aunt '36 Clarence A. Markham '22 Roderick V. Hood '29 Michltan John C . Merriman '52 William W . Mcrrion '55 A rl:ono C hamp A. Husted '50 Cyrus 8 . Minshall '20 Lee H. Slater '25 Eugene B. Etchells '30 DE. Richard '48 Man in D. Munger '31 William A. E.stes,Jr '57 Ptnnsylvan/Q Jerome H. Stanek '35 Ctu-Mtii·Mtllon Edwin G . Gardner '34 J ohn C . Allen, IV '51 C . Reid Rundell '52 Thomas P. fidance '48 James E. Thayer '27 Richard B. Sandrini '60 Mi.ui.uippl William B. Govaars, li '66 James K. Dahlhausen '50 William M . Harrison '22 J ose ph Livezey '56 Wayne L. Smith '39 T yrus C . Gibbs '46 J ohnS. Kay '62 SHIELD & DIAMOND Harry F. Hayden '22 C harles B. Rhodes '24 John F. Wenig, Iii '49 R ichard M . Tolson '52 Dellic A. Mardis,Jr '47 f nnk L. Le.mpcn '48 A rkanstu PnrnsyhiMill Stalt CWB Frank C . Watson '49 Missi.uippiStau William H. Yate.s '28 William Log-an , Jr '65 J oe N. Basore '48 H.James Eaton '45 Adrilln Owen Coopc.r '27 William A. Shearer '39 L. Nd son Priest '59 Edward M . Mazzc '66 Thomas H . Meye r '66 Colorado Stott FJ!is P. Zidow '72 Missouri·Colwnb/4 Paul L. Rogers '65 Jack 0 . Snyder '61 A lalHlmo Hans W . Osterhoudt '56 Gco~ Denton '42 Cnrtrol A rlttJIUIU RobcnJ. Wiseman '30 Pittsburr Stat' Will iam R . Cherry,Jr '45 John K. Ziebell '71 Ralph D. Beh rens '63 Mlssourl· Rol/4 A rltanstu Statt Jerome. D. Michaelis '68 Will iam E. Davis '30 Com~U William Fcsler,Jr '56 Cincinnoti James E. Wilkinson '48 Plttsburrh G lenn P. Elliott '35 GustavcJ. Dammin,Jr '30 Harry F. Kirkpatrick '27 William f . Floyd '42 Bruno V. Dagostino '63 A uburn Willard R. Hoe.l '58 Norvin H. Eubanlt, Jr '54 Ndrtuia·Omoha Thomas Hdfrich '62 Clarence L. Smith, Jr '54 Richard E. C harhon, Ill '61 Ronald B. Livingston '48 Roben L. Lacey, Iii '52 Patrick W . Halloran, 111 '62 Ronald W . W ilcox '47 G lenn L. Smith '48 Robcn E. Lamben ,Jr '22 Purdw John F. Lyon '28 Clmuon Stephen G . Sheppard '65 David L. M ay '46 Davidson Robcn D. Word,Jr '52 AJCJ~andcr G . Bashenow '71 NtwMu lc.o John M . Alters '27 Lewis D. frttman ' 70 Blrmintham SoutMm John R. Oabasinskas '55 John W . Mcdonald '24 John E. Whitmore '26 William 8 . Moore '33 JosephJ. Tumer,Jr ' 70 J. Lewis H.aygood,Jr '34 William 8 . End 'H Carl A. Morring, Jr '39 Theron H. Moss '46 Charles H. Newbold '49 Comtll North Ctuolina BowUn1 Grt-tn Stllte C harles D. KJcinhans '65 John A. Wolhar '46 William C . Nelson '24 Raymond D. Thomas '59 Randall W. Reyer '37 Howard M . Delk '!I I Charles E. Martin '41 James L. Nonh '55 Dnt v~r Davidson Northwutnn James E. Holter '59 Henry E. Stalcup '22 Robc:n A. Poner '30 C harles M . Anderson '28 John f . McNair, Iii '« Clark R .Jones '38 BNUiky Rtnsukar Ttch David C . Pruitt, Iii '52 J ohn E. fiu.dl '48 Walter M . Pritt '6 1 Ohio Statt Glen H. Abplanalp '35 HarryJ . Kaiko '57 Wayne B. Smith , Sr '33 William L. Loving '25 /Hito Statt J . Roth Crabbe '25 Dainius ValiuJc.enas '67 Walter J . Schob,Jr '53 Sidney E. T imble '62 Clarence B. Ogden '39 William N. Laforge '69 Gary A. G ieser '62 Rhodes C41/fomiG·&rbky Joseph F. Watkins,Jr '37 Harold B. Walker '25 /Hn 111T Orqon Joseph L. Ott '76 Richard M . Erving '48 Anttlo Stott Drab Manual Boody '33 0. Wendcll Gray ' 41 J.a ma L Th.ayn '27 Richmond CharlcsJ. Hughes ' 73 Donald L. Duncan '53 Man in R . Gric.k '61 Orqon Stau Linwood C . Matthews,Jr '50 M lils4ps Richard A. Mckinney '71 Dennis L. Murphy '66 l.conon!J. M"'PhY ' 2 ~ Willard C . Beckley '22 William H. Bi.ucll '36 Roanob A rhona Glenn W . Reed '60 Drd• Pnuuylvtutlll C harles E. Bear '00 Charles M . Butler '47 Robcn M . Butcher '50 Edwin L. Vilimclt '66 James W. Hospodanlty '57 David F. M~ll '20 William E. Riecl:cn '50 Sam Howtbt Stott David A. Osborne. '50 Timothy Sotos '67 EdgarT. Crismon '31 Dub Mississippi Lawren~ H. Hammer '66 Weldon U. Howe.ll ,Jr '66 George C . Bcacham,J r '54 David E. Roseberry '63 Pouuylwmia Start Hardy M . Gr-aham '30 San DWto Stott Richard W. Trost '56 Jack D. Neilson ' 46 H. Byron Mock '30 J ""'ph R. Hedgp<

28 Shield & Diam ond (continued)

Jam~ C. Moore:, Iii '68 Carroll L. J ohnson '31 Aoyd O . James '63 Oklahoma Glenn R . Casey '66 Jenkins M . Robe:nson '71 William P . Noningham '30 W illiam A. Kc:llmom '60 Carroll A. Kemp, J r '58 C harles L. Blankenshi p '50 Southern California T . Cato Tillar '73 Michael B. Sheldon '69 J ohn R. Limon '65 C harles R . Moore '43 A. Byron Pugh, Iii '70 David W. Henson '59 Douglas E. Tolben ' 71 Crcigh W. Taylor,Jr 'iS Richard F. Maninka '59 HoUis T . Rogers '28 D. W Bill Struve '70 John F. Egger '25 VlrtiniD Tuh Eben F. Tilly '20 James L . Melsa '57 Raben P. Scruggs, Iii '63 OkUU.omG Stat~ • R . Bevly Ford '26 Thomas C . Mundy '60 Richard H . Walker '47 Donald 0 . Nichols '59 William T . Trusty '31 David A. Bagwell '62 Warren L. Gravely '29 Edmond V Smith '58 David A. Weems '23 Michael S. Ri sk '70 AJ onzo S. Westbrook '35 James M . Han1ey '58 Donald C . Hardin '52 WaJceForut Henry G . Schmidt '31 GeorgeS. Williams '-iS William G . Wright, Jr '49 J ohn B. Walton '51 Lewis E. Magee '30 Ronald E. Cook '56 James Sidles '5 1 Fe"isState MWI.sslppl SIGle Or~ron Wihon B. Wright '55 J . Cedric Evans '32 Harold R. Sullivan '58 Michael W. Hogan '75 Harmon 0 . Alley '30 Benjamin F Banon '48 Southun Mtthodist ThomasJ. Fricke '28 C layton L. Snyder '66 William G. Tie1 z '41 Harry R. Andress, Jr '37 William R. Ford '62 Charles E. Harvison '56 Douglas 0 . Wallen '61 Washinrton Florida Carey M. Brickell , Jr '40 Thomas R. Swennes '53 Glenn L, Lyle '62 Gary E. Barnebey '57 Kansas Paul T , Hawkins '41 George E. C lark '36 Steven L. Tindell '68 Sou th~rn Mississippi George A. Doren '50 Ricbard L. Becker '23 J ames E. Conn '47 J eromeJ ohns '52 Ortron StGtt J o~ n D. Collard '69 Alfred E. Harsch ' 19 Herben L. Peterson '23 Richard N. Bills '51 Al1on B. F:uris,Jr '57 Gregory L. Robens '69 Southwut Missouri Thomas C. Rasmussen '54 William Y. Chalfant '47 C harles M . Rou ' 42 Roben P. French '35 Parsons Charles W. Scou '66 AJan R. Ross '59 Lawrence V. Comp1on '31 Florida Southlm Roben D. Hines '39 Michad N. Quigley '65 Southwtst Tu.as Stau Roben G. Woock '38 Charles W. Doornbos '24 James S. Easterling '56 Rodger L.J ohnson '67 Pennsylvanill Mark L. Langford,Jr '29 Washinrton & Lte William R. Hagman '30 Kenneth H . Gibson '64 Mlssouri-Columb/4 John F. Adams '51 Joseph H . Crute,Jr '52 Clement H. HaJJ '30 Donald H. Mcdonald,Jr '59 J ohn S. J ones '55 I. M Click '58 Richard G . Beck '40 NicholasJ . Salibo,Jr '51 Herben G . Jahncke '28 Bruce R. J ohn ston '52 Nicholas Kuiken '68 Leonard W. Goodin '64 C harles W. Bentz,Jr '39 South wutern State George F Parsons '29 Charles S. Lindberg '47 Ronald P. Mathews '52 Thaddeus S. Hadden,Jr '40 Joel L. Catania '71 Alben G . Peery '27 Frank T . Louk, Jr '52 William M. Dam '60 Ray C . Nathursl '60 Owigh1 C. J ohnson '31 Warren L. Cobb '25 Samuel L. Maddox '69 C harles R. Watt '34 Frederick T . Luke '38 W. Brent Kyte '57 H . Jennings Rou, li '58 J ohn P. Dol man '35 Stephen F. A aut in Washinrton StGte Roben H. Symons '47 J . Manin Hom Lamben '57 Florida Statt Craig A. Fenton '62 Leroy D. Lawson '62 Walter N. Ndson '36 Donald E. Webber '38 Charles J . Miller '26 Scou R . Griffith '76 Man in C. Goldfine '64 James H. Nance '51 Washinrton Unlv. Waller H. Wulf '66 Adolphus M . Riggs '29 M ichael R. Harrison '66 Emerson G . Reinsch '22 Roger H. Pierson '64 Donald V. Mickus '67 KGIUas State Timothy R. Schweighan '64 William B. Moore '55 George G. S1afford '29 Stttson Daniel W. White '(i6 Warren K. Andler '55 Gordon W. Steffens '56 Thomas H. Wunbach,Jr '64 Richard L. Sussman '69 West Florida Theodore F. Emerson '35 Anhur R. Weber '42 Raymond A. J ansen,J r '58 Florida Tech PennsylvanlG State Lon Keller '26 Wi.lliam E. Dri ve r '72 Duane E. Herman '66 Paul A. Williams '23 GeorgeJ. Morstatt, Ill '68 frank W. Glading,Jr ' 17 Thomas S. Muller '63 Nolan G . Mckenzie '38 MiJsourl-RolkJ Wut~orria Connon Lawrence T . 0verdorf '31 Syracuse Thomas M . Arnen '26 Roben E. Pulford '58 Richard H. Bauer 't 8 Paul D. Chicatelli '62 C harles H. Ross ' 18 Norben Koch '55 Brian J . Bober '69 Gladwi n A. Read '22 Willis H . C lark '41 James E. Crane '62 C larence P. Trumbore '42 FrankS. Cashman '58 Kennelh E. Rice '42 Powell A. Dennie '37 Tenn.-Chouanoora ~orrt Wa.shinrton Quentin E. Wood '42 Hayward W. Foy '25 RichardJ. Seitz '39 Leroy W. Fuller '42 Philip W. Barnhan '43 V il as F. Adams '55 Pituburr State Jeffery A. HaJJ ' 72 Oren D. Whistler '39 Roben C . Kreutzer '43 L. Theodore Bellmom '05 Hugh I. Manin '47 William H. Baker, Ill '65 Jeffrey F. Han ' 70 Ktntucky Harold A. Krueger '39 William F. Blackwood '41 Roben T . Ramsay '49 Frank A. Matteucci '63 J ames H . Laughlin, J r. , Esq '60 JoeL. Craig '48 Orville W. Morris '26 Terry D. Cook '72 Georretown Pillsburgh Roben L. Morris '69 J ohn H. Ewing, Jr '30 Eugene A. Hallibunon '25 EdgarO. Brashear '36 Raymond T . Ruenheck '47 Theodore W. BiddJc '34 Michael B. Putnam '68 Harlan H. Grooms '21 John R. Scrivner '50 Hal G. Littleford,J r '47 J o.hn C. Gunn '17 Kenneth G. Coburn '31 William P. O ' Neil'22 George D. Rowland '52 Alexander R . Innes '53 Spencer A. Stone '29 William G. Nash ' 16 SamucJ A. Cummins '48 David R . Vaughn '60 Thomas E. Spragens,Jr ' 57 C harles G . Robinson '32 Warren V. Pierce '2 1 James E. Teske '59 Roben M . Verklin '42 Frederic.kJ. Weihl '60 Lamtu C harles M . Will iams '51 Edwin M . Slaugh1er '1 7 Jeffrey D. Welzbacher '74 John T . Wood '42 West Virflnla Michael E. Aldredge '60 Tennesste Ttch. Jack R. Wiu.kamp '48 MontiUIG SIGle Prtsbyttrlon W. G . Powell '67 Jerry P. Dodson '58 Richard P. Missi mer '71 Oclben L. Ballard '50 j ohn M . Bullwinkel '34 ~orrill Colkrt William B. Stuessy '62 J erry L. Sullivan '62 Wtstern Kentucky Wiley S. Ansley ' 54 ThomasJ. Morrison '28 NelsonJ. Charles '54 Gary B. Glisa.n '65 James T . Wheeler, Jr '61 David L. Robenson '67 TenMsstt·Martin J . M Eaton, Jr ' 54 WaherG. Somerville,Jr '39 Harold F. Miles '66 Lthirh Philip M . Ryan '65 W. Russell Barrow '20 Harold L. Friedman ' 48 Harold Walker '27 Michael M . Di tto '58 Wutern Mlchiran john 0 . Collins, J r ' 50 N. QuoUniD State James C . Hall ' 70 J . Butch Woodward '57 fredrick R.Jenkins '54 Waller H. Jahn '54 Thomas B. f orsta.U '55 frederick C . Ayers '53 lnslee M .Johnson '30 Purd.u Raymond F Rabke,Jr '52 J ohn M . Scott '36 Richard 8 . Has.leu '66 Charles C . Bassett '51 Ponddee A. Leotis '47 Ralph S. Born '69 Stan1ey M . Woodward '43 Wichita Harry W. Jones '39 J ohn E. Bassen, Iii ' 78 William C . Lewis '58 jerome L. C iraJ '36 Tu.asA &M Roben L. Kersman '58 Linfield Burke M . Mcconnell '30 Gtorr/Q Tech William L. Gates '42 Russell L. Durham '61 Vincent L. Scxton, Jr '22 J ohn E. Buchner '62 Edward W. Bercegeay '47 Nebraska Harry W. Hawke '18 Frank P. Finch '63 William & Mary John R. Hakanson '62 Woodrow L. Berge '33 WiUiamJ. Bu rke ' 79 David K. Hedden '40 Russe ll H. Folk '67 Richard B. Kinnear '70 Fredrick B. Hammermann '62 firmin Q . f elu '34 William E. Cherry '67 Ralph R . Hofmann '66 The Citadel Davidj. Pauerson ' 70 James G . Marshall '69 Wilbur E. Olson '30 Eugene C. Clarke, Jr '22 Christopher J . lnglot '79 David N. Gillmore '56 Winthrop Lombard Joseph A. Pavelka, Jr '31 Thomas L. Corwin, Sr ' 19 Richard A. Justice '58 Walter Ikner '68 Irvi ng L. Wade '2 1 Roy G . Rylander '24 Willard L. Swanson '32 C. MalcolmJ. Gesner '43 Roben E. Lee '40 RonaldJ. T urner '55 Wisconsin Louisiana Nebraska-OrniJJuJ Aaron W. Hendry '54 James C . Massey '43 Tolldo Bunon B. Brown '28 Richard W. Hammaker, USAF DudJey H . Kersey '61 Charles E. Holman '51 RogerS. Odman '30 Thomas C. Conrey '31 C alder A. Gibson, Ji '51 '69 Cary D. Penisten '52 John G . Home '71 Jack E. Reich '29 J ohn T . Gentry '30 Theodore B. Harvey '30 Louisiana Statt Patrick Shields '59 C harles E. Madden '57 FrankS. Rekosik '51 Richard]. M ichaels '59 George G . Killinger, Phd '28 Cary F. O wen '60 Douglas W. Slaugh1er '64 Edwin M . Mcpherson, Iii '61 Richard L. Russe ll '56 J oseph C. Nelson ,J r '35 Willenbtrr J ames C . Phelps '4-9 New Hampshire Brian E. Mickler '59 Jerome H. Williams '72 J ohn C. Robinson '36 C liflon B. Crosland '!)3 BruceQ. HanJey '53 James f . Morris '57 G. Carl Shipp '68 J ohn L. Work '26 TrGIUylvanla fle1cher S. Suuon,Jr '61 Keith I. Twitchell '30 Donald B. Payne '46 Rnweletu Tech David M . Angelica '68 Roben F. Tobey '61 Roben W. Twombly '37 Percy H . Perkins, J r '24 William E. Briggs '66 C harles Ku rz , Ji '65 CENTURY CLUB George B. Pilkington, li '56 Loulsiana Tech NtwMulco Lewis S. Coonley '35 Richard A. Sviridoff '69 Adrian William F. Botwinis '48 William C . Shaver '42 WilliamS. Bundrick '59 Anhur M . Harden '60 Kenneth A. Weisburger '51 Ronald B. Davies '66 William C . C lark, Iii '72 J ohn G . Franchini '43 Ross Thompson '55 GeraldJ. Hewlett '35 Trinity M ichael B. Garber '66 Terrell H . Yon ,Jr '46 J ohn R. Clay '67 JeraldJ. Friedman '42 Palle C. Ostergaard '47 C laude]. Aucoin,Jr '62 A/oi>DmD GMI EUiou R. Edwards '15 William F. Kelly '45 Ocwiu G . Wilcox '39 Lehman M . Alley ,Jr '50 Ralph E. Loken '29 William A. Brandey,Jr '56 Donald F. Durham ' 70 WilliamS. Wymond , J r 't 2 Rhodes Henry L. Anderson, Jr '53 Peter F. Mccanna '11 Frederick C. Ebel '43 James L. Fosler '70 ManluUI Harry Baer '50 Thomas K. Harrah '45 Jim F. E. Beasley '75 Harold C. Seward '78 Roben W. Lueckel '70 J ohn E. Dave npon '52 David L.Jolly,Jr '42 Walter R. Bogan, Jr '36 RobenJ. Stamm '39 Jamesj . Mc:doskey, Jr '50 Daniel P. O'Donnell ' 71 Rank 0 . Dawson '18 ReinholdS. Matheson '30 Roben H. Carpencer,Jr ' 70 Ntw York Tulluoe Dex1er B. Woodwonh '7 1 Benjamin W . Hale,Jr '65 lrl R. Russum '40 Roben B. C hapman '37 Leo K. Cooper. Jr '67 Harry G. Hill ' l9 Hampden-sydney C harles M . Kesmodei, Jr '56 J ohn R. Sauenhwaile '70 William W. Cru01p '46 J on C . Countess '53 North A/Qbanul Roben C . Francis, Jr '40 Pe1er Polo, Jr '75 Coleman F. Stoltz '26 Lawdis V. Dennis '36 Ernest Coward '54 Mark V. Holmes '77 Walter L. Grubb,Jr '54 Leon Weekley '61 Richmond Seth G . Eby,J< '36 David W. Cowden '46 W. Henry Hubbard '35 Mtuy/iurd North Ctuolina AnhurT. EUeu '27 JackJ. Francis '49 James B. Crawford '71 J ohn M . Hum '27 Frank R. Bailey '55 Richard N. Barber, Jr '30 CarlyleT. Frost '3 1 J ohn H. Mcdonald '39 Phili p D. Drake '79 William W . Lucado ' 48 William L. Dorer '68 Julian W. Brown '65 Anhur W. Harrison '27 U oyd W. Richards '42 J ohn H . Echols '42 J ohn M . Miller '56 Theodore A. Gates, Jr '52 AnhurW. Daniels, Jr 'H Robert E. Marchant '62 Un/11. oftheStJuth Conrad M . Fowler '38 Kenneth M . Pri1cheu '61 Donald S. Monimer '52 Edward G . Glover '25 Edward H . Mcnew,Jr '70 C . Ross Anderson '57 Paul E. Haygood '31 Andrew T . Sanders '32 Thomas C . Shaner '66 Julian W. Hamrick '48 M ichael W. West '34 S S. C lark '56 U oyd H . J ohnson '5 1 HirhPolnt J ohn W. Zane '55 Millon C . Harding '42 G. S1uan Woodson '33 Sidney N. CornwaU '23 DouglasT. Manin '71 J ohn R. Peacock,Jr '53 Mnnphl.s Stalt H . C layton jacluon,Jr '5 1 William A. Wright '30 Raymond G . Fisher '3 1 George R . Mccurdy, Jr '42 Bobby H. Philbeck '60 Waller L. Davis, Jr '62 C laude E. Pope, Iii '53 Stun Howtin StGit Emanuel A. F1oor '54 Thurman G . Melson, Jr '35 ThomasJ. Zimmerman,Jr '58 Harold C . Jackson '68 James S. Rhodes, Jr '34 Henry 0 . Wilson '63 George H. Horsley, Ji '61 Theophanis K. Mitchelson '4 7 Idaho Raymond L. Orians '66 Edward C . Smith '63 Stunford Leland W. J onas '63 George A. Murphy '32 Allen D. Steele '33 Bill yT. Babin '66 Roben G . WaUace '50 Jack D. Bliss ' 71 C raig B. J orgensen '55 William 0 . Pardue '46 ldahoStGtt Mtrctr Ernest F. Young, Jr '55 J ohn D. Chandler 'H Larry L. Stowe,Jr '60 Walter L. Piuman '65 Darrow H . Ankrum '61 Julian E. Clark '25 North Dakota Clyde M . King,J r '56 Noall Z. Tann~r '29 Erik R. Ponmann '70 /Uinols MIDml Larry 0 . Wonder '70 Harold M . Langston '18 Thomas A. VaiJe '36 William P. Schuessler '41 ManinT. Boi '7 1 J ackson V. Curlin ' 71 North Tu.as State Walter L. Lagroue '61 Andrew M . Weaver '74 Thomas E. Sorrells '52 Jack E. Bowsher '50 Louis G . King '39 J ohn C . C;unpbell '57 Lonnie D. Lindsey '34 Utah James M . Wood ,Jr 'H M arvin D. Dennis '56 C harles C. Stipp '63 M ichael Klepak '59 James M . Pumam '69 Stratford Evans ' 41 A /oi>DmD-Bimlinlluun George F. Heck '50 Richard H. Swann '47 Northwutem Shell ie C . Reagan '57 Valencia James L. Hardwick, II ' 74 William P. Mumrord, li ' 41 MIDmi-Ohlo Roben K. C lark '37 San Dleto StGit Richard H. Boehm '53 Anrtlo Stat~ Glen Thorson '58 Thomas G . Harvey, Jr '55 J ames S. Miller '32 George 0 . Baker '51 Frederic: W. Kleve, Jr '65 Rudy J . Aguirre '76 Richard W. Wake '74 Thomas E. Husselman '49 James R. Steininger '13 Pierre M . Ney '57 Dale K. Kruse '60 J wyj . Onak,J<'71 lndiluul Kelly S. J ones '78 Ohio Brad Shuman '76 Valparaiso Kerry P. Rainey '73 Jack W. Sword '67 John R . Mohr '65 G . William Paddock '57 Douglas L. Brown '65 Thomas E. Page ' 47 Ari.tona Manuel Ventura '58 Edward A. Pease '71 MlchlfiUJ C lifford E. Loy '5 1 Charles A. Rankin , Jr '47 Alvin W. Gerhardt '30 J ohn P. Ribar '71 Ronald L. Barson '68 Ohio State San Jose S tGte Eric E. Wilkinson '32 Earl N. Haga '50 frederick H. Bohmfalk '56 /OWQ Roben Lindquisl '22 john W. Brown '67 Vlllano vG George D. Harding '26 James D. Valentine '69 Donald 0 . Havens '37 M/lls4ps J ohn M . C unningham '51 Michael D. Everhan '66 WilliarnJ. Hunon ' 71 Ronald H. J ohn son '55 Henry B. Collins,Jr ' 19 James H . Deal '57 South Quolbul Edward A. Hi rsch '51 J ohn B. j ones '21 Harold G . Reuschlein '29 William B. Kerr '56 Elmer H . Gardner, Jr '56 William R. Humphlett, Jr '3 1 Jesse T . Hudson,Jr '11 Conrad H. Larson '36 Verne F. Weber '30 Wesley M . Mann '26 Harry T . Hance, Jr '40 GorgeT. Keller, Jr '34 Charles 1... Reese, Jr '20 C raig M . Lea '7 1 JowaStatt LouisJ . Navarro '39 George F.J ones '28 South FlorldG James C . Sprigg, Jr '17 Scott R. Menhennel '77 Roben A. Love, Iii '59 Larry Crabb '67 Victor M . Roby '35 Michael D. Sims ' 74 James L. Trink.le '17 Ca.rl Pluchinoua '78 Howard D. Smith '51 G . Truman Draper '55 Mississippi Dean W. Young '68 JIV,in/o Arl:oMSIGte JayJ . Hinkhouse '78 George C. Carlson '52 Roben G. S1ein '54 Southuut Missouri Francis H. C haney '76 jeffrey M . Abraham '72 Karl H . Weaner '29 Herman T . Holmes '30 Richard N. G raham '66 Dennis R. Break '73 W. Thomas Clark ,Jr '73 Bradley A. Kra.ay '73 TorvaldJ. Holmes '34 C harles Herron, Iii '65 David A. YOunger '55 RobenJ. Pie1'68

,.I p; IC,.nnn .4/nJ.n 29 (continu~d)

~St., William F. Sigvaldaon '67 Stanley S. PyzdrowW '42 Whitdoord Smith,Jr '43 Thom.uJ. Trunnc.U '21 Jock E. ffinkcl '48 Tc.ny L. Com peon '66 Christopher D . Spinc.Ua ' 79 James R. Sharkey,Jr '59 Ch.arks W . Treat '48 GooiTM Doak P. Doolittle '71 Heath E. Valentine '55 Danny C . l..aboonc '78 William D. George ' 21 Luter T . Ddaup '34 Ark4JILJAJ' C.U Wutnn Rnnw Wahu E. OorTOb '38 Frederick W . Busc. '75 Henry L. Weather-s '32 CoO.,. Donald 0 . Cllton '56 Lance 0 . Alwonh '59 c.ort» F....Jerickj. Doty '64 Dirk E. Huucnbach '60 Roben L. Weaver '43 Hugh C . Ald.-edge '48 Gene C. Hanhman '46 Bunn M . Bell 'iO Timothy C . Ellender '63 Charles P. Mudlcr '66 Fr-anlc F. Yarborough '54 Volney J. Cissna,Jr '38 Jay P.Janis '74 William B. Ca.rwdJ '66 Peter J. Fagan '76 Sam R. Clark 'i6 Roger W , Powdi '6J ElutCmtNI G. DConcy '51 John P. Judge '76 Mark M. Minear '69 James C. Fowler ' 75 David R. EvanJ '67 Richard C . Rice2rdi '66 Marvin Ewy '64 F. Alex Criucnden,Jr '•thlm Terrel G. Stanton '66 James M . Markee '73 Edmond W. Bastek '52 Bruce A. Custin,Jr '36 Rudolph A. Krenz '63 Joe. N. Blair '43 Roben P. Wallace '69 Roy S. Manin '35 Frank P. Capotosto '64 W. MoKheUe Howard '28 Samuel C. Mcnamee '71 John E. Lovdess,Jr '48 Fk>rldo Sleven W. M ccaner '75 Theodore B. Dunn '67 J.1.ck E. Mayer '45 Robert D. Pirog '67 Charles R. Rogen, Jr '36 Kimberly R. Anderson '75 John L. Mckenzie '35 Slaten L. Finger '76 Frederic.kJ . Ya.nkocy '50 David L. Roberuon '78 Jame.J L. Sims '55 R1chard M . Anderson '48 Arthur L. Oldham '47 Howland W . Fisk '52 Colorado Sdtool of MinD David C . Strayer '72 Durham E. Terry '27 Ernest A. Cox , li '59 Stephen E. Pauerson '70 Paul D. Jankovic '63 Roben B. Barker '55 ChM:IesJ . Vomutek '74 &JwUnt G,_, SttUI Roben D. Craft '62 CreggT. Riley ' 7.) Harold L. Mccloskey '56 Colorado S11111 Clifford L. Wheeler, Iii '74 Thoma.s F. Baldassari '59 Alben C. Hoppe '64 Kenneth R. Riley '56 Brian R . Vanatta '66 J.1.1nes R. Meininger '56 Wayne S. Wilson '70 Thoma.s P. Bishop '68 Roben M . Howard '18 M ichael D. Scstric,Jr '47 Mtw«luums CorrconJ Don E. Cook '54 Aubrey Man in '37 H~ydNy Howard K. Sherwood '53 Jonathan D. Turcotte ' 77 David E. Couner '69 Gregory M . Allen '69 DavidS. Miller '74 Ralph A. Mateka '63 Bernard C . Stoecker 'Sl MnophbStou CaryL. Burleigh '69 Junes S. Shelton '60 George E. Folt& '42 Neil C . Powdl, Dds '46 Roben L. Stubblefield ' H RonaldJ. Ave.rwa.ter '56 Ron..Jd A. Lane '69 William K. Tracy '39 J . Bruce Gasaway '58 Sidney I. Smith '34 Don E. Thomas '48 Louis E. Cima '65 James L. Trinkle '47 Richard C . Graham '47 ConwU Richard A. Tocila.s '58 Tracy M . White '74 Eugene F. Durham '68 Gerald W. Henderson '48 Roben B. Jenkins '69 Alben R. Willillllls, Jr '42 HltiiPoltll Dave A. Windhont '72 Gerald N. Holbrook '52 Edward W. Hutchman '61 JohnJ. Mangan '61 C . Charles Wohlust'6S Cary R. Em '60 Xenrw•y John A. Lec,Jr '68 Jeffrey L. l..ake '65 MichaelJ. Schadle '76 WilliamS. Woolery '32 Stuan M . Hoyt ,Jr '64 C . Edward Bra.ndon,Jr '46 Harold I. Mansfield, Iii '57 James S. Ludwick '45 Roben F. Sprole '31 FloridiiSowlwm Billy F. Wright '53 Roben P. Brown '38 Lro H . Mckinnon '61 Joel A. Ma.shey '70 Cnlthton Stu an L. Anderson '54 Houstorr William T . Edger '29 Willilllll N. Morris,Jr '53 Ervin L. Pous ' +4 Pierre E. Prouty '77 Roben L. Buck '56 Harold F. Cunningham, Jr '67 Sun R . Ewing, Jr '38 Michael C . Shears '66 Dennis L. Rec.ker '66 Davids orr Donald M . Griffith '53 Randolph L. Delay '69 Bruce S. Ferguson '48 Charles A. Thompson '70 WilliamJ. Woodward '65 C . H Boykin '21 Roben B. Marvin '52 Marshall Heins ' 78 Stephen Fly '72 Mlllmi BNd,.y FrankL. Cade,Jr '33 Unis S. Rinaca '47 Ronnie R. Lohr '63 Franklin M . Fouer '36 Ronald J . Bolle, Sr '53 KenJ. Brunner ' 73 Ralph H. falls '23 Davis R. Smith '48 Larry£. Wilson '64 James W. Friend '31 Philip D. Doran '52 William A. Lombardo, Jr '69 Frank D. Haas ' 77 Alpheus B. Whiting '50 James P. Wisehean '56 Merwin Crayson,Jr '60" Gen.ld E. Harris,Jr '71 Edward E. Matthecussen '70 Henry H. Harris,Jr '29 Florldo Stall IdAho William M . Hanley '57 Cunis W. Monahan '56 J . Richard Perry '62 T ownes B. J ohnson '28 Richard W. Beagles '61 Thoma~ E. Eier ' 70 Roben D. Haun, Jr ' 49 Roben L. Rigney '37 Roger H.'Scbonewise '62 WalterW. Mccorkle ' 18 Larry W. Dunagan '68 DanieiJ. Lupe.r ' 79 James R . Hester '26 Howard M . Rogen '59 David M . Summen '50 WilliamJ. Mcdaniel,Jr '60 C harles B. Funk '66 Richard C. Lupe.r 'H Alfred E. Mcgregor '59 NickoluJ. Stickeler '50 Charles L. Taylor 'S I Jack R. Mcneill '61 Marvin C. G regory ' 73 RobenW. Vance, Jr '66 WilliamT. Moore '71 Austin R. Younts '26 WiliWnJ. Wilkiruon '59 Reuben W. Ogbum,Jr '33 RonaldJ. Howes '73 llllnou Carl T . Rowe '62 Richard A. Zeiser ' 74 OU. Stall at Northrldtl Ross L. Parks '40 J . Bob Humphries '66 W..Jter T . Anderson '20 l..anu L. Schwall 'SI Milzmi-Ohio William Y. Carlson ' 79 Larry D. Scott '62 J ohnS. Mcmullen '64 William H. Burger '60 Gen.ld T . Silven '57 RichardJ. Bennett '47 M ichaelS. Cohen '76 IHIDwan John R. Michael '56 Donald H. Buser '56 Wendell £ . Sparks '65 Bruce D. Brown '64 Barry H. Hinckn '68 James£. Dedman, l1I '48 Joel C . Padgett ' 71 Emst A. Comielsen '66 Arlyn N. Wagner '62 Weller T . Coud ' 48 James G . Powen '67 Herben V. Hac.kman , Jr '53 Philip£. Varc.a '70 John T . Davis '67 David W. Young '27 J . E. Green '73 Roben S. Rose '7 1 DavidJ. Hango '75 Roben I. Velzy '52 James 0 . Hey '37 LJmuu Roben N. Henchdman '50 David B. SalTer '78 lkltaStau Florida T«h Kevin E. Kumar '72 James C. Cox, Jr '58 Bruce Kirkp.~.trick '67 Glenn T . Seaborg '78 James M . Clark '70 Roben H. Copeland '68 Richard F. Mccrary ' 55 David R. Dunn '65 Mark M . Kochen ' 77 George E. Staininger '67 Charles W. Cole , Iii '71 James R. Hughes 'fia Kevin P. Mcdonnell '76 Joseph R. Dyer '65 Richard L. Loveland '49 Brent E. Vallens, Esq ' 73 J ohn M . Curlee '70 John C . Ma.sturzo '70 John R. Palandech '48 Cearge R .Jackson '65 Dougla~ Marker '58 CGlifornill-&rblly Thomas E. Ingram '69 Marc H. Michalovslc.y '72 Joseph W. Phillips, Jr '54 A. Charles Ke iser, Iii '63 James R. Mdarland, Dds '57 Arno M . AfTddt ,Jr '1!) C harles O . Jenkins '69 Gregory L. Perangelo ' 78 TunmothyJ. Schwanz '71 Lawrence W. Manin,Jr '60 PaulJ. Pease '5!) William C. Callender '46 Robert D. Newton ' 73 Cary D. Petrae '76 EdwardJ. Stn.sma '56 Vincent M . Rizzouo ' 75 Lowell R. Shook '53 Reginald M . Clotfelter '22 Phillip M . Ricks '67 Ban M . Pond '68 John P. Woodyard ' 72 Elmer G. Rode '58 John F. Terry ' 50 Bruce Crane ' SO Lawrence E. T oney, Jr ' 71 Francis Marlon lndliiM W. Dale Wonham ' 79 C raig L. Uebde '72 Ronald S. Duer '52 !Hnver James A. King ,Jr '74 A. Rawson Atkin '69 uhJ1h William A. Wildhack,Jr '54 Donald C. Giles '39 Harold S. Dillon '25 Robby D. Sisco '75 John Dejon,Jr '52 Edmund CoUins, III '32 Mkhitlllf Herman P. Hemanda '40 MichaeiJurich '38 Connon Jerry A. Romjue ' 73 Cearge K. Davenpon '57 Orvil R. Aronson '31 C unis C. Higgins '55 George T . Rochford,Jr '38 Thomas D. Bull '67 John W. Seng '74 Scot R. Cuempe.l ' 76 Gerald T . Boyd '68 Roben B. Jarboe '46 Charles E. Wangnild '25 Thomas L. Haines '65 WillWn F. Shonz ' 71 George K.lacik , J r '66 Philip A. Ventura '68 Donald E. Mi1cheU ' +4 Drab Daryl L. Hall ' 71 lrullllna So.. t~t.etut Donald H. Klein '53 Mlllups J ohn C . Ruddock,J r '51 Richard B. Allison '67 Bemard T . Lepkowski '62 Cary F. T yler '77 Roger D. Miller,Jr ' 71 Leslie H . Bear '66 Bart1eyC. Young '50 James C . J ohnson '62 ThomasJ. Mcin1ire '62 Jo- PeterS. Pennington '54 Mark A. Bebenxc '69 Canurii-MIUon Cary A. Rogaliner '69 J ohn H. Pinkowski '66 Richard E. Deighton '52 Roben W. Richards '36 Richard L. Berry '49 Edward M . Bailey, Jr '41 Lany R. Rugg '63 Joseph E. Prugar '75 Randy E. Hoff '63 WilliamJ. Sherman '57 Edwin C . Brent '37 0.1.vid I. Brandwein '68 Constantine Vlassis '54 GIO'fl WtUhinrtorr Clifford C. Larson '.SS j ohnS. Skelly,J• '30 John C. Castlen '32 J oseph A. Cangalosi '31 Mark R. Westhoff '78 Thomas N. Dowd ' 41 Bruce A. Mark-walter '72 James D. Sutton '34 WilliamS. £ulle '67 DavidJ. Fiedler '76 D•b Alvin E. Parrish ' 41 RonaJd K. Miller '33 William E. T oikka '59 Haden E. Mckay '34 Charles A. Cough '52 Ja.mes D. Ashe, Jr '58 Harry P. Rietman '47 Alfred T . Mitchell '30 Llnf"Jd William C . Mckic. ,Jr '68 Roben W. Homann '49 Frank M . Byen, Jr 'S I Frederick C. Steventon '41 • Uoyd D. Palmer '29 RichardS. Ledford ' 71 Max B. O.tner, Jr '62 Harold F. IUi g '26 Phillip W. Evans '50 tAorr~town Donald J . Sandhont '47 Bryce W. Mercier ' 75 Charles E. Phillips '60 Oliver H. Jacoblon '39 Edward L. Grimsley '28 Roben H. Alston '31 Erwin L. Schenk '29 Tilomas M . Meuecar '61 John H. Tatum '65 James K.Jubin.slti '60 George P. Harris '2) Elmer M . Cn.bbs '32 George W. Smith '39 Brian A. TooJe ' H Te.rryC. Winstead ' 70 j ohn W. !.add '30 Scott A. Muon '70 John W. D.1.vi.t ' 18 C.~.ylord D. Vincent '66 Wes Truesdale '52 William C . Logan, Sr '38 Mluisslppl James C . Meador,Jr '54 Roben E. Harvey,Jr '28 Edward E. Wieben, Sr '40 LomiMird Roben H. Meyn '60 Cunis B. Ale:under ' 4~ George W. Nance '35 Roben W. Hinton '31 lo'Wtl$1&16 Edward E. Mulliner '24 R.1.ymond W. Morse '64 James A. Barnett '42 Wallace B. Olson, Jr '37 IU

(continued) Roben G . Pattc.non '39 Louis W . Corrdl '31 Mark E. Rc.hm ' 79 Blmtbt•"""' S

32 Shield & Diamond (continued)

MarkS. Kcvnick '81 William T . Parr '60 Steven M . Cotner '77 Erwin D. Hollingsworth '29 George N. Hdm, Jr '53 Charles W . Barrett '49 William] . Kreh '66 Edward]. Peters '71 Timothy M . Dorsey '72 Fred M . Huey '4() Steven K. Hemphill '72 SteveR. Barrett '75 Bruce N. Parsons '78 Robert T . Price '68 Daniel R . Fagan '71 Rudolph F. Ja.u '50 Albert D. HoUingsworth,Jr '61 Albert A . Cordill '37 James E. Sage '66 Robert W . Reavis,Jr '66 David L. Gordon '80 William O . johnson ' 53 Ronald M . Hollingsworth '81 Robert K. Da.nid..s, Jr '79 Robert C . Schorejs '66 Bobby Stewan '82 LukeJ. Habig ' 74 Jerry T . Katlin '79 Kenneth T . J ackson '58 William K. Hill '81 Dougla.J A. Swantek '78 Gftorrill Teele Matthew C . H uffine '79 Ted E. Kelley '62 .Oavid S. Kennedy '64 C harles E. Holaday '35 Daniel A. Turner '72 Gilbert F. Amelio '62 David M . Keen 'H Markj. Kohlrus '78 Stephen L. Ramsey ' 71 Doug R. Holden '67 FlorldG Steven]. Asip '74 M ichaelS. Lannon ' 79 North R . Mcarthur '71 Henry K. Rice '70 Jack D. Holmes '81 James T . Barber '?7 Maurice D. Atwell, Iii ' 77 Stephen] . Mahoney '68 Kerry M . O'NeaJ '81 Frank V. Schriner,Jr '67 H erbert B. Hussey '52 Burton H. Boykin '33 David L. Beesley '+5 Dudley G . Malone ' 77 Paul B. Rayburn '31 David L. Seaton '67 Vince.nt C . Jackson,Jr '65 J ohn D. Bristol '81 William L. Boolu ' 76 Jeffrey C . Marshall '66 Donald G . Reames '38 Ben N. Walker, Iii '70 J ames L. Langford '29 Jeffrey M . Brown '77 Robert L. Branner, J r '41 Gregory G . Meyer '76 Mark R . Schlicht '72 Larry E. Williams '65 LarryW. Langfo.-d '68 RichardJ . Dalton '72 John Q. Bullard '42 Gerald L. Patterson '67 Frederick R. Snyder '39 Muar James E. Lenz '33 Carroll E. Deloach '50 James D. Bunn ' 70 Philip C . Schneider '7 1 Bernard E. Weller '42 August Burghard,Jr '23 C harles E. Lindley ' 75 Alfred Hernandez '67 Pierce E. Cantreli,Jr '67 Steven]. Schneider '74 Kentucky MiJJrni Robert B. Lurate '80 Keithj. Ketchman 'H Orlando H . Carmichael '29 Dennis W . Vanhouten '70 Robert W . Anderson ' 58 Aubrey E. Caner '50 John W . Marler '81 Russell T . Kokal '81 James B. C ulpepper '69 lndUma Southeast William L. Black '6 1 Keneth E. Chamberlin,Jr '62 Jim B. Moorehead '79 J ohnS. Kraus '74 MordeJ. Dabney, Iii '65 Ronald H . C lark '83 William L. Bruckan '39 ugla.s Dearden ' 77 Bob F. Norswon.hy,Jr '68 Scott D. Kuntz '77 Harry N. Edmondson '51 J ames F. Huffaker '79 Edward A. Caldarelli '73 Timothy f't.. . Donnan '69 William M . Schmitt ' 73 Glenn C . Leonard '74 J ohnj. Glover '

LouiJ A.Jones '63 Jamcy K . Reeves '79 Steven G . Ucrtings '75 WiJJWn E. Jcgen '63 ~ton HIIIJ H&rry A. Evenz, Iii '51 Robert M .Jump 'H Roger L. Sumlin '64 Allen L. Vanleuven '77 Don.aldW. JohnJOn '61 Peter M . Bonanni ' 72 Jerry K. Kern '55 James E. King '58 ortMtut Loublt:uul David E. Wood '53 J. P Kish, Iii '58 Thomas Frain,Jr '77 GcorgcW. M~U 'M Mark W. Mahan '58 Michul D. CruK '76 Ptmbrokt Stau William B. K.roU ' 71 Michac.l E. Lo~i ' 75 KcvinJ. O ' KecJc '78 hue W. Purdom '58 Kevin T . Sande non '8'2 Calvin L. Evilsizer '8+ Sidncyj. l...anier,Jr '43 Nicholas A. Mardcuo '70 StcvcnJ. R~ ' H Walter A. Qualk '67 D. l.an::hc Waucn ' 72 Howard F. Hugha '78 John H. LcfTc.l '31 South AlabcrmG John M . Scheurer ' 72 Runc.U E. Robb ' 79 orthtast OkiiVromD Porn.sylvaniD Bruce L. Man.hall '75 Jeffery L. Mon!lock '82 Brian A. Spickard '17 Jerry A. RO!e '60 James P. Orourke ' 76 Walker C . Armington '45 j oKph L. Mitchell '22 J<»

34 Shield & Diamond (continued) Tolfil; Ben B. Graves '79 Donald C . Schleicher '70 Lethco H . Brock,J r '64 P. ScottTarr'47 Lester G. Mcallister, J r ' 4() Bruce A. Starek ' 72 William 0 . Crawford '51 Daniel Warner '79 DanielS. Packard '36 Wayne W . Wodrich '59 Douglas B. Cunis '53 Bradley T . Wilson '72 TnuuylvGifia ValparG/so William E. Eutsler '39 Wut Virginia David L. Arp '59 William W . Bain,Jr '58 T imothy R . H ileman ' 79 DonaldS. Kimmer ' 71 MichaeiJ. Bany, Md '73 johnS. Beasley, Iii '81 Harry P. Isley '61 Richard E. Shaw,Jr '67 Mark A. Buttaro '79 Frank P. Bedt ' 78 James W . Martin '59 William F. Thompson,Jr ' 78 james F. Kirby '81 Francis E, Camey,Jr '62 Thomas E. Mccabe '76 Spiroj. Vetas ' 78 Marc L. Sherman '72 JeffreyS. Crane '79 Graydon A. Miller, Iii '78 Gerald R . Wagoner '69 RayTsukroff'79 Sam R , Dodson,Jr '37 John A. Nelms ' 76 Western Carolina OavidJ. We:isenreJd '79 Raben L. Evans '24 J . David Vega '80 Steven R . Brown ' 75 Alben E. R. Zug '79 Richard D. Carland '73 James F. White '76 john K. Hughart '77 Trinity Steven D. C lore '77 Joseph L. White,Jr '53 Charles M . J ack.son '65 Robert L. Boese '67 Charles M . Hamra '7 7 Wake Forest JamesJ . Spalding, Jr ' 70 Wayne T . Frei '78 Ira A, Hunt,Jr '4 1 C hristianS. Harstick '58 Cortis K. Stacy ' 70 Kevi n A. Killian '79 James B. Kynoch '78 Carl W . Hellwig '30 Winfield C. Underwood '71 Roger M . Long '56 Jerry A. Lamb, Jc '80 Winfield M . Homer '29 Western Kenturlty RichardJ. Smith, ti '82 William A. Lauderdale '35 Ra ben G . Houghtlin '28 Paul A. Clements '70 Tu/Qne William Lea,Jr '63 Ralph W . Knewitz '26 Donald Kuball,Jr '77 Mark Acree '77 Marcus I, Macdougall '72 Francis G . Lange '25 Gregory B. Palmer '75 C harles G . Brenny '81 James A, Matthews '34 Russell M . Ott '47 Robert L. Sherman '74 Frank C . Davidson, Iii '48 Michael E. Mccadden '75 Ernest H. Picker ' 48 J oseph E. Zabinski '7 1 Kenneth L. Dennison '66 F1 etcher R . Norris '54 Donald W . Wimberly '34 Wut~m Michigan jeffry M . Dimon '73 William N. Osburn '75 Washington Harry 0 . Ludwig '35 Glenn Dobbs,Jr ' 4() J ohn B. Parke '80 William 8 . C hace '29 Walter Poesse '32 Louis R. Girouard 'H Charles E, Pigg, Jr '35 Brantley P. Davis, Md '48 Western R~s~r11e David P. Lansdown '64 Charles 0 . Pinckernell '81 Dave A. Nostrand '80 Kenneth L. Ryan '80 john D. Marvin,Jr '36 William F. Polk,Jr '58 Henry Trimble '38 Wichita Timothy S. Miller ' 79 James H. Smolenski '75 Washington & Lee H. Randolph Barbee,Jr '60 Carl C . Stover, Iii '77 Richard A. Sobei,Jr '57 Edwin D. Cha.se, Jr '39 Eugene S. Barclay '32 Edwin B. Strong, Jr ' 75 LB. Stanford ' 53 Charles R . Crisp '49 Marion E. Bl anton,Jr '35 Clark L. Young '75 Robert R . Wahl '59 William H . Kemble, Jr '3 1 j ohn R . Boberg ,Jr '62 Univ. of the South Villanova David T . Shuffiebarger '63 Carhonj. Casey, Md '31 Raben S. Child '63 Nathaniel E. Adamson,Jr '38 George A. Speer, J r '28 Denis Coakley '75 Jonathan C rossett '78 Waldo F. Beebe '45 j ohn A. , Iii '79 Carhon L. C utchin '26 Jeffrey M . Edwards '74 Richard D. Caldwell '63 Washington Stat~ George W . Foreman '81 Ingrassia Appointed Richard P. Ensign '38 James L. Crowder '48 Richard 0 . Bartch '75 Robert L. Guillen '82 John C. Hancock '35 Walter V. Davidson,Jr '3 1 M ichael W . Brado ' 79 Thomasj. johnson, Jr '49 Hal R . Harmon '38 Glenn R . Diersen '73 James B. Giesa '70 DanJ. J ordanger '81 To Board of Visitors Eldon C . Holbrook '46 Francis R . Fera '60 William D. Naismith '70 Brian B. Kent '52 J ohn H . Holbrook '59 J ames L. Grogan, Iii '62 Michael W . Nelson ' 78 Walter A. Leyland,Jr '56 Ira E. Overfelt '41 William P. Hall '80 Washington Univ. Alan B. Mollohan '63 THE BOARD of Visitors of the Lester C . Paxton '41 Lynn R . Hammond,Jr '35 David L. Bartula '78 Frederick A. Morse '76 Merion F. Richards '41 jeffrey D. Levin ' 78 Allen M . Craig ' 73 Wilbur Y. Mon on '36 University of Virginia elected Mr. Karl C . Rove '70 William P. Lineweaver '67 Raben P. Duff'50 William E. Renn,Jr '29 Jesse R . Smith, Sr '23 PauJ Mcdonald, Sr '27 Douglas R . j ohnson '68 Davidj. Rogers ' 79 Timothy J . Ingrassia of Arlington, Dwight F. Walton '39 J ohn B. Mckenney, Iii '73 MiklosJ .Jurko ' 78 Thomas T . Suh '81 Virginia to a one-year term Gerald W . White '61 Paul D. Mehlhop '80 J ohn E. Kotwick '65 AndrewM. Vanderhoof '74 William R . Worley,Jr '35 William G . Quick '4-6 C hristopher Marin '71 Windsor commencing July 1, 1985 as the UtDh Steven T . Roebuck '80 Henry A. Nickol '51 William T . Sturgis '80 Allan C . Bassett '39 James M . Sonnen '75 DavidS. Romig '56 George H. White '80 student member. This is the third GeorgeS. Swan '37 Raben N. J ensen '54 Wayn~Stat~ James C . Williamson,Jr '80 Sterling B. I...arson '59 Virginia Clay Hansen '79 Winthrop year that a student has been so Timothy H . Parkinson '60 M ichael F. Baran '79 Alan Lakomski '77 John L. Brechler '48 elected to the Board and the first David B. Petersen ' 70 James D. Bowli.ng ,Jr ' 74 Vince Owens '79 Anthony G . Nelson '55 j ohn W . Mack ' 74 Raben R . Petersen '75 Weber State Richard R. Teschner '29 undergraduate invited to member­ Mark R . Miller '77 Eugene C . Peterson '37 William R . Carson ' 79 Wiscomin Kevin E. Murray ' 80 Sterling K. Peterson '39 West Florida J ohn W . Acree ' 73 ship on the University's governing Jamie C . Nock '79 Thomas W . Wood '58 Randall H. Henley '72 William C. Cox '40 Charles W . Patterson ' 71 body. Utah State West Georgia Timothy L. Fuller '72 William R . Quinn '73 Dennis S. McCarthy '76 William E. Bowling '60 Sheldon Granti '26 Rex A. Rohweder ' 76 Timothy Ingrassia is a member of Valencia Gordon P. Corbitt '26 Charles G . Hofelich '31 Scott D. Ryan '74 Mark F. AJbenin '56 Gustavus H. Crumpecker ,Jr '36 William L. Pifer '32 John H . Schanzenbach, Jr '80 Alpha Chapter and a rising fourth Paul R . Barber '77 Michael C . Elkins '79 PauJ B. Reichert '63 Ralph E. Setzer '80 Hugh L. Guthrie '52 year government major at the J ohn D. Dutton '67 Michael L. Smith ' 71 WittenMrg Otto W . Craesser, Iii '53 Keith S. Kennedy '63 David L. Swain '81 James H . Amick,Jr '81 H oward P. Hansen '65 C harles W . Meredith '58 University. He is an Echols Scholar James A. Waller, Jr '7 1 Charles H. Chewning, Jr '58 John P. Rohal '66 Gregory A. Kahre '72 Bruce C . Willard '79 Michael L. Chewning '62 and holds a full four-year merit Alan W . Lefevre '79 Richard E. Sarver '56 Virginia Tech Stephen M . Dodson '81 Donald C . Mclean ' 75 Michael T . Shook ' 77 Richard A. Rubel '76 J ohn H. Boyette '53 scholarship as a Jefferson Scholar. Byron 8 . Stansfield '78 William P. Weeks '81

Joe Arwine, Jr. (Texas) 10/ 8/85, Lubbock, TX . Robert F. Mayne (Southern Methodist) 3/ 27/85, James H. Ballard, Jr. (Missouri-Columbia) Palo Alto, CA. 2/ 15/85, Sun City Center, FL. Robert W. McDonald (Emory) 4/ 5/85, Baxley, Frank H. Bassett, Jr. (Virginia) 4/ 19/85, GA. Hopkinsville, KY. Robert F. McGuire (Pittsburgh) 2/ 14/85. Spencer D. Bayer (Tennessee-Knoxville) William G. Nash (Georgetown College) 4/85, 1/ 1/85, Eutaw, AL. Atlantic Beach, FL. Frank V. Benton, Jr. (Ohio State) 1/84 , Wilbur S. Pratt (Pennsylvania) 5/23/ 85. Newport, KY . Paul J . Ritter (Pennsylvania) 1/1/85, Bridgeton, George R . Bowling (Auburn) 2/ 19/ 85, NJ. Lafayette, LA. Harold Gordon Robertson (Roanoke College) William E. Bray, Jr. (Virginia) 4/29/85, 1/5/85, Salem, VA. Huntington, WV . William H. Skinner (Richmond) 7/ 31/84. George T. Crowder (North Georgia College) John G. Harris (North Carolina) 1/4/84, 5/4/85, Marietta, GA. Raleigh, NC. Rhantson B. Stillwell (Georgia Institute of Technology) 3/ 27/85, Savannah, GA. Arden R. Douglas (Oklahoma) 2/7/85, Wichita Louie P . Horrell (Arizona) 4/8/85, Scottsdale, Falls, TX . AZ. Wilson B. Voight (Iowa State) 10/7/84, San Mateo, CA. Page D. Fullington (Florida Southern) 5/ 16/84, Marion T. Kincaid (Florida) 12/ 20/84, Ormond St. Petersburg, FL. Beach, FL. James E. Weldonatt (Emory) 2/9/85, Lagrange, GA. Louis Richard Girouard (Tulsa) 2/2/85, Denver, Horton B. Knoll (Pennsylvania State) 2/13/85 . CO. Lafayette, IN. Charles K. Williams (Pennsylvania State) 2/6/85, Lexi ngton, NC. John B. Gray, Jr. (North Carolina State) 1/2/85, Jesse L. Lawver (Beloit College) 4/ 17/85, Wilson, NC. Hi ghland Park, IL. Nelson A. Young (Utah) 10/ 10/84 . Monrovia, CA. of Pi Kappa Alpha 35 -f------Compiled by Barbara E. Perkins ARIZONA STATE---: BiiiMcBroom'58(722------' ALABAMA: Steven P . Lynch, D.M.D. '80 Meadowbrooke Dr., Dallas, TX 75137) has (Route 1 Box 399, Henagar, AL 35978) been promoted to the rank of colonel in the graduated from the University of Alabama United States Army. School of Dentistry in June of 1985 and is ARKANSAS: Samuel M. Sharp '21 (536 setting up his private practice in Henagar, Elmwood St., Shreveport, LA 71104) AL. He and his wife Cindy have a son, received an honorary Doctor of Law degree Steven, born June 27, 1984. from Centenary College on May 19, 1985. ARIZ ON A: Tim Bonceskey '80 (64 72 Hart ARKANSAS STATE: Fred L. Puryear Lane, Austin, TX 78731) recently received '59 (39 Clarendon Rd ., Savannah, GA 31410) his Master's degree from the LBJ School of has accepted a position at Great Southern Public Affairs at the University of Texas, Federal Savings Bank as a vice president in and has accepted a position in the Mayor's Commercial Real Estate Lending . . . Urban Fellows Program in Washington, C. Michael Wise D.D.S. '80 (333 E. Market D.C .... Gregory J . Irwin '76 (2143 Merrill, Ave., Searcy, AR 72143) graduated from the University of Tennessee Dental School in Ypsi lanti, MI 48197) recently left his David H. Dyson position as assistant sports information June, 1985, and is now practicing dentistry director at Eastern Michigan University for in Searcy, AR. a job as sales and sports promotion ARMSTRONG STATE COLLEGE: Jim AUBURN: David H. Dyson '72 (Alumni consultant for the American Power Boat Brotherton, Jr. '71 (100 Avenue of the Office, Box A3 , Stockham Hall , Association ... Joel Niles '76 (444 N. Gila Champions, Palm Beach Gardens, FL Birmingham-Southern College, Birmingham, Springs Blvd. #1076, Chandler, AZ 85224) is 33410) is employed as a PGA fi eld AL 35254), associate vice president for · working in the Phoenix area as a sales repr esentative. He recent ly married Planning and director of Alumni Affairs at representative for Gelco Space. Kathleen Ki ely. Birmingham-Southern College, has been accepted to attend Harvard University's Institute for Educational Management July 7- August 3, 1985. He wi ll be among ninety participants, including twelve col lege presidents, from the Uni ted States and ten countries represented at the institute. William G. ash, Sr. Dyson completed the Birmingham­ ALpha Lambda '16 Southern Management Program at Carnegie-Mellon University in 1982 and the college's Master of Arts in Public and Private Management program in 1984. He also serves as president of the Upsilon chapter alumni association. BAYLOR: Philip L. Nauert '77 (1700 River Crest #1414, Sugar Land, TX 77478) graduated from dental school in 1983 and has his own practice in Bellaire, TX. He married Sandra Giere in 1983. Be rl O lswanger CALIFORNIA STATE/ NORTHRIDGE: DeLta Zeta '41 James M. Baral '77 (11163 Braddock Dr., Culver City, CA 90230) has been involved in radio and television since 1979, .and Memphis Musician, IIKA Distinguished Educator currently sells television advertising for Petry Television ... David A. Eliason '81 Alumnus Memorialized · Was 69-Year Member (2703 Dawson Ave., Ventura, CA 93003) has accepted a management position with ON MARCH DR. WILLIAM G. NASH (Alpha Lambda thirteenth, 1985, nearly four Weyerhauser Company in Santa Paula, CA. hundred people flocked to the Skyway of the '16), retired vice president of Murray State Peabody Hotel in Memphis for a Big Band University, died April18, 1985 in Florida. CALIFORNIA STATE/ SACRAMENTO: tribute to the late Berl Olswanger (Delta He began his long career as Instructor in David Whittington '82 (5050 Rosevi lle Rd, Zeta, Memphis State '4 1). Roscoe's Surprise Physics at Georgetown College and later A-1, N. Highlands, CA 95660) is working Orchestra showcased Olswanger's original became Professor and Chairman of the with the Sacramento Kings Basketball compositions written during the 1940's and Department as well as Treasurer of the Team as a part-time equipment manager. 1950's, when the popular pianist performed College. He res igned in 1940 to become on Memphis radio and television. Now his Dean of Faculty at Murray State Teachers CENTRAL ARKANSAS: John W. Bane thirty-six original jazz and blues College (later Murray State University) and '77 (General Delivery, Gillham, AR 71841) compositions, including "Down in Memphis in 1966 was appointed Vice President for recently accepted a coaching position at Town" with lyrics by retired Commercial Academic Affairs and Dean of Faculties. Lockesburg High School. He was voted Appeal columnist Lydel Sims, have been Dr. Nash retained a co nsuming interest in Coach of the Year in his conference ... published in a book by AnnaOlswanger, the IIKA's affairs throughout his life. He was William F . (Buddy) Herring, III (16 musician's daughter. The Memphis Music of district officer in charge of chapters at Pineash Ct., The Woodlands, TX 77381) is B e1·l Olswanger is a Limited Edition of six Georgetown, Transylvania, University of credit manager with theJ.I. Case Company hundred copies, and in addition to the Ke nt ucky, University of Tennessee, in Houston, TX. He has a daughter, Monica previously unpublished music, contains Vanderbilt and Southwestern, and also Elyse, born December 15, 1984. highlights of Olswanger's fifty-year career served the fraternity as treasurer of the CENTRAL FLORIDA: PatrickYoung'80 as composer, arranger and conductor. National Endowment Fund. (1470 Holly Oaks Lake Rd. W.,Jacksonville, Grouped chronologically, the newsclippings Brother Nash was listed in Who's Who in FL 32225) is a stockbroker with Dean and photograph which tell Olswanger's life America, Who's Who in Science and Who's Witter Reynolds. He and his wife Tamara story are es entially the story of popular Who in Education. He is survived by his have a son, Christopher, and a new daughter mu ic in Memphis. wife and two sons. born June 1, 1985, Shannon Elizabeth.

36 Shield & Diamond -r------___j CLEMSON: David W. Rhodes '82 (4810B and the New Albany Chamber of GEORGIA: C. Rushin Estes '80 (1416 S.W. 817th Lane, Federal Way, W A 98003) Commerce. Michael married Tammie Wildwood Ave. , Columbus, GA 31901) has has been promoted to account representa­ Appelhaus on May 11, 1984. joined TMC Long Distance as a tive for the Northwest region of Sonoco EASTERN NEW MEXICO STATE: communications consultant and sales Products Co. He recently married Beth Ann representative. McLaughlin. Patrick M. Lovato '71 (P.O. Box 166795 Irving, TX 75016) is on the board of GEORGIA COLLEGE: William M. CINCINNATI: R. Wayne Stratton '67 (Rt. directors of Roberto Enterprises in Robinson '76 (1205 Russell St., Ashland, 4, Box M48, Shelbyville, KY 40065) was Lewisville, TX. He recently married Diana KY 41101) has been promoted to shift installed as the head ofthe Kentucky Society Hart. foreman with Lone Star Cement in Pedro, of Certified Public Accountants in June, FERRIS STATE COLLEGE: Ivan G. OH. He married Lisa Sharp on December 1985. He is a partner with the accounting 17, 1984. They have adopted two daughters, firm of Jones, Nale and Mattingly. Boynton '73 (327 St. Joseph St., Union City, MI 49094) and his wife Jan have opened Al ecia, age nine, and Patricia, age seven. CREIGHTON: Michael P. Joyce '80 (6138 their own business, Boynton's Travel GEORGIA TECH: Daniel A. Finelli, M.D. Willers Way, Houston, TX 77057) has Agency. '81 (2300 Overlook Rd. #317, Cleveland returned to law school at the University of Heights, OH 44106) graduated from Case Houston Law Center after two and one-half FLORIDA: George L. Braeunig '78 (2541 Western Reserve University School of years with Avco Financial Services ... Allen N.E. 135th St., N. Miami, FL 33181) has Medicine in May, 1985. He is doing a five­ Kupetz '80 (1938 Columbia Pike #9, been appointed U.S.A. sales manager for year radiology residency at the University Arlington, VA 22204) is a research analyst S.D. Modular Displays, Inc.... Kenny Hospital of Cleveland ... N.K. Glover '73 with the U.S. Department of State. Kline '79 (2604 Dauphin St. #108, Mobile, (2598 Kings Pistol Ct., Grayson, GA 30221) AL 36606) joined Danka Industries in June, heads up the southease distributor sales DAVIDSON COLLEGE: William E. 1984 as a senior marketing account Caperos '77 (2933 Paces Lake Dr. N.W., program for the Wallace and Tiernan representative ... Dean A. Martin '37 (336 Division of the Pennwalt Corporation. He Atlanta, GA 30339) earned his Ph.D. in W. Wellington Ave., #1202, Chicago, IL chemistry from Emory University in April, and his wife Beth have two daughters, Sara, 60657) received a special commendation age three and newborn Rosalie . . . W. Les 1985 .. . Stephen J. Smith '76 (4700 Six from President Ronald Reagan for forty­ Forks Rd., P.O. Box 20106, Raleigh, N.C. Porter '69 (P.O. Box 9075, Houma, LA five years of government service with the 70361)has returned to the United States 27609) graduated from Harvard School of U.S. General Accounting Office. He retired Law in 1981, and has recently accepted a after seven years in the Middle East and in December, 1984 ... Pickens C. Talley '60 southeast Asia, and is employed as general position with the United Carolina Bank as a (3915 Venetian Dr., Tampa, FL 33614) was personal trust officer. manager for Raymond Fabricators . . . elected to the Hillsborough County Steve Striker '80 (525 Stoneridge Rd., Commission in May, 1985. Birmingham, AL 35209) is employed as a DELAWARE: Alan E. Schweizer, Jr. '75 FLORIDA STATE: Donald R. Roberson sales engineer in the Birmingham sales (118 Lovett Ave., Newark, DE 19711)works office of the AllenBradley Co. in the real estate business in Newark. Alan '77 (2187 Trailwinds Dr., Fort Meyers, FL is also the president of the Delta Eta House 33907) is associate vice president of HIGH POINT COLLEGE: Bob Duarte '80 Corporation. investments with Prudential Bache (935 Cowpens Circle, Florence, SC 29501) is Securities. He and his wife Kim have a two a sales representative with Beatrice/ Hunt­ DELTA STATE: JamesR. Marsh '70(401 year old daughter, Whitney-Brooke. Wesson Foods. He married Donna Fiovranti N. Cromwell Rd., Apt P-3, Savannah, GA on September 1, 1984. 31410) is employed with Gulfstream Aerospace as a senior programmer analyst. HOUSTON: Gary F. Devlin '76 (4305 Fox He has two sons: Graham, age five, and Trail, Temple, TX 76501) and his wife Taylor, age fifteen months. Rebecca are the proud parents of a baby boy, Patrick Ryan, born June 14, 1985 ... Robert DENVER: Martin R. Griek '61 (200 Fox Edward Reese '82 (4306 Dickson, Houston, Drive, Boulder, CO 80302) is president of TX 77007) is presently employed by First Westbrook Construction, Inc. City National Bank. He plans to marry 1983 DRAKE: Timothy S. Webster '79 (1421 Dream Girl Elaine Henderson on August Avalon, Olathe, KS 66062) is a CPA with 10, 1985. Deloitte, Hoskins & Sells in Kansas City. He INDIANA: Ronald L. Barr '73 (445 will marry Kristin Dibble on September 28, Corbett Ave. #3, San Francisco, CA 94114) 1985. has accepted the position of Director of DUKE: Kevin Burton '77 (134 Gruneburg Development for San Francisco State Weg, D-6000 Frankfurt-!, West Germany) University. He will be responsible for all has been promoted to manager of fund-raising activities in the school's first commercial operations in Germany for development position. General Electric Medical Systems. INDIANA STATE: Ted Buck '81 (3051 EAST CENTRAL: Wayne Johnson '64 Kirklevington Dr. #186, Lexington, KY (2557D Pilgrim Way, N.E., Atlanta,. GA 40502) is employed as a safety engineer with the SquareD Company in Lexington, KY . .. 30345) has coordinated a prize-winning Matt Hauser effort for the Georgia Occupational A ward Michael Hayes '70 (928 S. Center #2, Terre Haute, IN 47807) is the assistant director for of Leadership at Atlanta Tech for the past GANNON: Matt Hauser '75 (922 W. 52nd three years. A wards won were the 1983 admissions at Rose-Hulman Institute of St., Erie, P A 16509) was recently named an Technology. Goal, 1984 Pride, and 1985 Goal, for the best assistant vice president of the Erie record in the state. Indemnity Company. He is also a member of IOWA: Kirk Charles Gallup ' (1720 N. EASTERN KENTUCKY: Michael A. the Sales and Marketing Executives Grandview Lane #103, Bismarck, ND Ricke '79 (2102 E. Elm St., New Albany, IN Association of Erie and the Insurance 58501) is a reporter and weekend 47150) is a partner in the financial planning Marketing Communications Association . .. anchorman at KFYR-TV, an NBC affiliate. and insurance firm of Ricke & Associates. Richard J. Kujawinski '70 (398 Madison .. . John Rolander '82 (90 E. Franklin, He serves on the board of directors for Garden, Old Bridge, NJ 08857) has been Lake Forest, IL 60045) received his B.A. in United Way and the Southern Central promoted to manager of co mmercial economics in December, 1984. He works as a Association of Life Underwriters, and is marketing with ADT Security Systems in stockbroker with Thomson McKinnon also a member of Leadership New Albany New York City. Securities, Inc.

of Pi Kappa Alpha 37 IOWA STATE: Jeffrey Lynn Dietz '80 LEHIGH: Peter P. Garibaldi, Jr. '77 (401 of Tennessee - St. Francis Hospital. He (391 E. 9th, Upland, CA 91786) is a funeral W. Evesham Ave., Magnolia, NJ 08049)was plans to specialize in anethesiology . . . director with Stone Funeral Home. He and recently promoted to government relations Richard M. Nicholas '77 (4533 Forest Park his wife Patricia have one son, Joseph s uperviso r for the U . S . Stuart Dr., Jackson, MS 39211) is vice president of Daniel, born October 5, 1984 ... J. Scott Pharmaceuticals division of ICI Americas. Nicholas Equipment Co ... . Lt. Kenneth W. Fountain '80 (4324 Westbrook, Ames, lA He and his wife Karen announce the birth of Taylor '75 (223 Farrell St., Norfolk, VA 50010) has been promoted to development their first child, Peter Paul III, on April 7, 23503) is currently deployed aboard the officer for the Iowa State Achievement 1985. USS KIDD in the eastern Mediterranean. Foundation ... Harold Hansen '68 (4204 N. He is a helicopter pilot detached from the LOUISIANA STATE: Mark L. Radgett Naval Air Station in Norfolk. He has a son, Timber Circle, Peoria, IL 61614 ), general '81 (A Co., 1/8, 2nd Mar. Div. FMF, Camp manager of the Peo ria Civic Center and John Curtis, born November 30, 1984 ... Lejeune, NC 28542-5512) was commissioned David L. Traxler, Jr. '76 (11412 Marty, governor of the Civic Center Authority­ as a Marine officer in May, 1984 and is owned Ri ve rmen hoc key team, was Overland Park, KS 66210) is an advisory currently serving as a rifle platoon marketing representative on the regional awarded the Andy Mulligan Trophy and commander. named Co-executive of the Year by the staff of IBM. International Hockey League in June, 1985 MEMPHIS STATE: Bob Archer '69 (2987 MISSOURI/COLUMBIA: James S . in honor of his efforts on behalf of the sport Riverdale, Memphis, TN 38138) has been Bennett ' 77 (Waldstrasse 50, 6101 of hockey . .. Jay J . Hinkhouse '78 (2755 S. promoted from principal of Snowden Junior Bickenbach, Federal Republic of Germany) 9th St., Omaha, NE 68108) will begin High to principal of Kingsbury High School was transferred to West Germany as classes at the University of Nebraska in Memphis. Bob was also elected to be assistant manager of Campbell Design College of Med icine in August, 1985. He is a president of the Memphis Public Schools Group. He married Susan Louise Roe on chapter advisor for Theta Lambda chapter Principals' Association for 1985-86. December 29, 1984. at Creighton University . . . Ronald D. Stauffer '77 (2950 Raleigh Dr., Stockton, MIAMI: Curtis Monahan '56 (310 E. 60 St., MISSOURI/ ROLLA: Leonard Dean CA 95209) received his B.S. in biology in New York, NY 10021) married Wendy Marks '81 (3751 Appian Way #40, 1982, and his M.A. in New Testament Ro(\hrich on January 20, 1985 . . . Douglas Lexington, KY 40502) is employed by Studies in 1984. He is a sales representative A. Wilde '75 (1464 Graves Rd. #33, Square D as an industrial engineer. He for American McGaw. Ronald and his wife Norcross, GA 30093) graduated from plans to marry on August 17, 1985. Florida State University College of Law and Ruth have one daughter, Rebekah Joy, and NEW HAMPSHIRE: T. Smiley Chase '55 expect another child in August, 1985 . . . is now working with the firm of Dennis, Corry, Webb & Carlock in Atlanta. (3200 Springdale Blvd. 0-210, Palm Richard K. Wyatt '77 (9167 Linda Rio Dr., Springs, FL 33461) recently bought a Sacramento, CA 95826) graduated in 1983 MILLSAPS COLLEGE: Frederick Scott business in Florida, Gold Coast Signs. with a M.B .A. degree from Golden Gate Bayer '83 (904 Lakeland Dr. B-2, Jackson, University. He is the president of Metro MS 39216) is attending the University of NEW MEXICO: Dan Girand '57 (1111A Specialty Contracting, Inc. Mississippi School of Dentistry. He married West 7th, Roswell, NM 88201) is working Edith Bland on June 2, 1984. with the Harvey E. Yates Company as a contracts administrator. KANSAS:Thomas J. Mullender, III '77 MISSISSIPPI: Thomas E . Bat '78 (6052 (5501 W. 87th St., Overland Park, KS 66207) Blackraven Dr. #33, Memphis, TN 38115) NORTH ALABAMA: Jack Stanley is now managing claims for Royal graduated from the University of Brown, Jr. '79 (2251 Helton Dr. Apt. N-1 , American Managers, an insurance Mississippi Medical School in June, 1985 Florence, AL 35630) is an assistant vice brokerage/ managing firm in Kansas City. and is doing his internship at the University president and loan officer for the Southwest Bank of the Quad Cities. He married Lucy

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38 Shield & DiamonJ -r------___j Brown on October 19, 1984 ... J. Michael PENN STATE: Lt. Sean P. Bailey '80 SOUTHERN MISSISSIPPI: James Marshall '76 (135 W. Oak Hill Dr., (Homestead Airforce Base, Homestead, FL Andrew Korte '79 (1203 Winterscreek Dr., Florence, AL 35630) recently completed a 33039) is an F4 fighter pilot now serving Atlanta, GA 30360) graduated from Emory three and one-half month training session in with the 31st T.A.C. Wing of Homestead Air University in Atlanta with a Master's radiological chemistry, and will be working Force Base. • degree in Physical Therapy. He is employed as a nuclear chemist at Browns Ferry PITTSBURGH: Allan c. Bryce , ( by Gwi nnett Hospital Systems as a physical Nuclear Plant. He has one son, Michael 76 519 Maytide St., Pittsburgh, p A 152Z7) is therapist ... Michael J . Singleton '77 (6739 "Reid" Marshall, born December 10, 1983. manager of the distribution and processing Old Fort Bayou Rd., Ocean Springs, MS NORTH CAROLINA: Bradley T. Stipp departments of the South Hills Health 39564) works in southeast Asia, based in '77 (2501 Roswell Ave. #203, Charlotte, NC System . .. Louis J. Quinto '84 (l07 Ridge Singapore, as a foreman for McDermott, 28209) works as an account executive with Ave., North Plainfield, NJ 07060) was Inc. He and his wife Cindy have two Smith, Barney, Harris, Upham & Co., Inc. elected as the first president of thew arren daughters, Jessica, age five and Alyssa, age Brook Country Club's Golf Tournament three. NORTHEAST OKLAHOMA STATE: Association. SOUTHWEST TEXAS STATE: Bobby Steve Frank '75 (137 North Delaware Ave., PURDUE: Michael A. Hamilton , ( Hatfield '41 (4067 Beltway #114, Addison, Tulsa, OK 74110) is a partner in B.C.S. 77 6936 TX 75244) has been elected to a one year Maintenance Co. He married Beth Bogel on Polvadera, El Paso, TX 79912) has been term on the Addison, Texas Municipal March 17, 1984. promoted to manager of materials and Airport Board. systems with General Electric in Juarez, NORTHERN ILLINOIS: Bruce G. Mexico .. . JeffQuinto'82 (107 Ridge Ave., SOUTHWESTERN: Jerry T. Katlin '79 Mueller '77 (400 Groveland Ave. #44, North Plainfield, NJ 07060) was elected the (5441 Fox ridge Dr. #101, Mission, KS Minneapolis, MN 55403) is employed as first secretary/treasurer of the Warren 66202) is director of the Kansas City Office senior art director for Tad Ware & Co., and Brook Country Club's Golf Tournament of the Kansas State University Alumni is serving as Education Chairman for the Association. Association. He married Vicki Lynn Minnesota Designers Association. PRESBYTERIAN: Douglas McLeod, Phillips in May, 1985. NORTHERN lOW A: Brian D. Stephany '80 (8220 West River Rd. #230, Brooklyn D.M.D. '67 (2001 Eggleton Circle, Raleigh, TENNESSEE/ KNOXVILLE: Beecher A. Park, MN 55444) is employed by NC 27609) is establishing a private practice Bartlett, Jr. '79 (2005 Marshy Swamp PriceWaterhouse, a certified public in dentistry in Raleigh. He previously Point, Knoxville, TN 37923-1632) accounting firm in Minneapolis. On May25, served as chief of dental service at Francis graduated from Memphis State School of 1985 he was married to Kathleen K. Allee Scott Key Medical Center in Baltimore, Law and works as an associate with Taylor ... Dale Jensen '80 (859 E. Fountain St., MD. and Groover, Attorneys-at-Law in Mesa, AZ 85203) works as a financial RENSSELAER POLYTECHNIC INSTI- Knoxville. He married Kimberly Louise controller for Transportation Cooperative, TUTE: John L:-- Chislett '45 (31 Apple Kirkland on April 13, 1985 ... George A. Inc. in Phoenix, AZ . He married Susan Orchard Lane, Lake Wylie, SC 29710) Hill, M.D. '73 (5116 Victoria Cove, Feldpausch in August, 1984. retired on April 1, 1985 after nearly Brentwood, TN 37027) is a ' fellow in thirty-nine years with Alcoa. Reproductive Endocrinology and Inferti li ty NORTH TEXAS STATE: Arnold W. at Vanderbilt University Medical Center. Brock '55 (Beaver Creek #17, Caldwell, TX RHODES COLLEGE: Junius D. Allen '67 He and his wife Meg have a new son, Ryan 77836) has expanded the operations of his (3132 Darrington Dr., Dallas, TX 75228) Geo rge, born February 1, 1985 . .. Robert company, A.B. Enterprises, in Houston, received a Ph.D. in civil engineering from G. Key, Jr. '81 (Lodge Apts. #306F, North Bryan/ College Station, Brazos and the University of Texas at Austin in May of Oakley Dr., Columbus, GA 31906) was Burleston counties in Texas. 1985. commissioned as a 2nd lieutenant in the SETON HALL: Mark Marotta '82 (208 U.S. Army on March 19, 1985. He won his OHIO STATE: Stanley W. Harshfield '52 Olive Ave., Pompton Lks, NJ 07442) Jump Wings from Airborne School at Fort (7507 Glen Arbor Rd., Louisville, KY 40222) graduated in 1985 from Seton Hall Law Benning, and plans to attend the Army's is a laboratory manager with Devoe & School, and is working as a clerk for the Ranger School. Raynolds Paint Co ... Robert G. Stein '54 Hon. John F. Evers of the Tax Court of New (591 South Sierra, Solana Beach, CA 92075) Jersey. He plans to marry Linda has taken a new job in San Diego as senior Fourounjian in May, 1986 ... Robert R. program manager of Research Analysis Weir '74 (5 Devonshire Place, Bridgeton, Corporation. NJ 08302) married his wife Karen inJuneof OKLAHOMA: David K. Greer '80 (9821 1978. The Weirs have two sons, Christopher, Summerwood Circle #1702, Dallas, TX born October 28, 1981, and Sean, born July 75243) is a sales manager for Federal 27, 1983. Mogul. He recently married Leslie Sward. SOUTH ALABAMA: Cpt. Robert W. Kenyon '78 (liB Shadowood Apts., OKLAHOMA STATE: David L. Metz, Coleman Rd., Anniston, AL 36201) M.D. '77 (6008 E. Lovers Lane #109, Dallas, graduated from Jacksonville State TX 75206) received his Doctor of Medicine University with a Master's degree in degree from Oklahoma University in 1984, Criminal Justice. He is now assigned to the and has recently completed an internship at U.S. Army Military Police School at Ft. Parkland Memorial Hospital in Dallas ... McClellan as an instructor. Gerald L. Morrison '78 (6004 E. Lovers Lane #104, Dallas, TX 75206) is employed as a programmer analyst with Republic Bank SOUTHERN FLORIDA: David M. Esack of Dallas . .. Mitchell A. Noftsger '77 (1819 '75 (2100 N. 32 Ave., Hollywood, FL 32036) Augusta #344, Houston, TX 77057) works graduated from the Medical College of for PDM Associates, Inc. in Houston as a Georgia and is working as a registered project manager for proposed developments. physical therapist. He is the founder of "S.P.I.R.I.T." (Sport Psychology Institute, Tom Pulliam PENNSYLVANIA: DeHaven Develin '21 Rehabilitation, Instruction and Training) (Bryn Mawr #79, Bryn Mawr, P A . .. Wayne Oberson '84 (1320 Gaspar Ave., TENNESSEE/ MARTIN: Tom Pulliam 19010) is recovering after two months and Bethlehem, P A 18017) is in management '65 (113 Spring Valley Rd. , Nashville, TN major surgery in Bryn Mawr Hospital. training with Laneco, Inc. of Easton, PA. 37214) has been promoted to vice president 39 of Pi Kappa Alpha 411~------~ and assistant to the president of American WESTERN KENTUCKY: William Brent General Life and Accident Insurance Kelley '81 (1106 Summerton Pl., Yukon, Company. He is secretary of the Southern OK 73099) graduated from Oklahoma City Systems Development Committee of the University School of Law in May, 1985 and Life Office Management Association, and has taken an associate's position with the serves as chairman of the board of directors firm of Williams, Luttrell, Boren and Perry ALPHA: (Virginia) 513 Rugby Rd., Charlottes­ of Monroe Harding Children's Home, elder ... KelleyS. Reid '80(120 E. Flamingo Dr., ville, VA 22903. Advisor: RobertS. Michel. of the Downtown Presbyterian Church, on Clarkesville, IN 47130) received a Master's the board of directors of Ravenwood Club, degree from Indiana University, and BETA: (Davidson) P.O. Box 574 ,Davidson and as a member of the Nashville Area College, Davidson, NC 28036. Advisor: Dr. Clark announces the birth of his first child, Tyler Ross. United Way supplementary fund Mitchell, born May 24, 1985. committee. He and his wife Carol have four GAMMA: (William and Mary) Box 7733 College daughters. WEST VIRGINIA: Thomas Whalen '80 Station, College of William and Mary, (101 Washington Ave. #4211 , Oakmont, P A Williamsburg, VA 23186. Advisor: Andy Morse. TEXAS: Warren "Curry" Bair '44 (P.O. 15139) works as a design engineer with EPSILON: (Virginia Tech) Box 1, Blacksburg, Box 5244, Austin, TX 78763) retired from nuclear components. On April 20, 1985, he VA 24061. Advisor: Jenkins Robertson. his office supply business after forty years married Karen Lah. ZETA: (Tennessee) 1820 Fraternity Park Drive, and is now self-employed in the oil and gas Knoxville, TN 37916. Advisor: Rick Kuhlman. business in Austin, TX . ETA: (Tulane) 1036 Broadway, New Orleans, LA. TEXAS/ ARLINGTON: Jerry Heaton '81 70118. Advisor: Rick Rees. (4268 Chaha #303, Garland, TX 75043) THETA: (Rhodes College) Box BG, Memphis, TN recently joined F.S.L.I.C. as a real estate 38112. Advisor: Harless McDaniel. appraiser and construction supervisor. He lOT A: (Hampden-Sydney) Box 343 Hampden· will marry Susan Johnson on September 7, Sydney College, Hampden-Sydney, VA 23943. 1985 ... Phillip E. Lunt, Jr. '83 (2503 Advisor: John Walters. Brookline Ct. #811, Arlington, TX 76006) KAPPA: (Transylvania) 302 Davis Hall, married Linda Kaye Green on April 20, Transylvania Univ., Lexington, KY 40508. 1985. Advisor: Nathaniel Bosworth. TEXAS TECH: Rick Adams '82 (711 MU: (Presbyterian) Box 7, Presbyterian College, Marlow, Arlington, TX 76014) recently Clinton, SC 29325. Advisor: J. Harrison McGraw. married Janet de Baca, Epsilon Gamma's NU: (Wofford) P.O. Box 1236, Spartanburg, SC 1984 Dream Girl. 29301. Advisor: Tim Horton. XI: (South Carolina) 804 Whaley St., Columbia, TULANE: James J . McCloskey, Jr. '50 SC 29201. Advisor: Cu rtis Loftis. (152 Macque Dr., Harahan, LA 70123) has OMICRON: (Richmond) Box 188 University been elected vice president and division Station, Richmond, VA 23173 Advisor: Bill manager of Louisiana Power & Light Co. in Carnahan. Jefferson, LA. He has three grown children, Maura Keaton, Mark and Patrick. PI: (Washington & Lee) 106 North Main St., F. Anderson Morse Lexington, VA 24450. Advisor: Roger A. Dean. TULSA: Gary Trennepohl '66 (112 SIGMA: (Vanderbilt) 2408 Kensington Place, Sappington, Columbia, MO 65203) is WILLIAM & MARY: Har·old G. Mar·tin Nashville, TN 37212. Advisor: William H. Coles, director of the School of Business and '77 (2109 Early Settlers Rd ., Ri chmond, VA Jr. 23235-3830) is a senior management professor of finance at the University of TAU: (North Carolina) 106 Fraternity Court, Missouri-Columbia. Dr. Trennepohl is also co n ultant for Price Waterhouse. He Chapel Hill, NC 27514 . Advisor: Moyer Smith. co-author of "An Introduction to Financial married Lela Katherine Early in June, 1980 .. . F. Ander·son Mor·se '76 (2325 9th St. UPSILON: (Auburn) 840 West Magnolia Ave., Management", published by Addison­ Auburn, AL 36830. Advisor: Bill Ham, Jr . . Wesley. South, Arlington, VA 22204) has been promoted to the position of vice president OMEGA: (Kentucky) c/o Harry Traynor, 459 VIRGINIA: WilliamS. Littlejohn '77 (417- w ith th e Riggs ational Bank of Hugulet Dr., Lexington, KY 40506. Advisor: S. Baldwin, Apt: C, Arcadia, CA 91006) is Washington, D.C. He is also president and Harry S. Traynor. director of development for the American trustee of the Washington Chapter of the ALPHA ALPHA: (Duke) Box 4775, Duke Cancer Society in Pasadena, CA. American Institute of Banking, a member Station, Durham, NC 27706. Advisor: R. James of the Mortgage Bankers Associations of Henderson. VIRGINIA TECH: Archie C. Kohr '83 Washington and of America, and ALPHA GAMMA: (LSU) Box PK, LSU Station, (Lauxmont Farms, Box 100, Wrightsv ille, Outstanding Young Men in America. Baton Rouge, LA 70893. Advisor: Cary Owen. PA 17368) was recently appointed director Brother Morse is the president of the ALPHA DELTA: (Georgia Tech) 211 Tenth St., of marketing for Lauxmont Farms, a Founders Region of IIKA ... Robert E. N.W., Atlanta, GA 30318. Advisor: Mike Rice. leading breeder of Standardbred race Thompson, III '74 (1505 W. 13th St. S., ALPHA ETA: (Florida) 1904 West University horses. Newton, IA 50208) was recently named area Ave., Box 13947, Gainesville, FL 32604. Advisor: WAKE FOREST: Wilton L. Jordan, II '77 manager for Iowa for United Telephone Bob Edmunds. (1013 Verano Place, Irvine, CA 92715) is Sy tern , where he will supervise United's ALPHA EPSILON: (North Carolina State) 214 finishing his Master's degree in Civil Iow a operator . South Fraternity Court, Ral eigh, NC 27606. Engineering at the University of Advisor: Terry Slate. California-Irvine, and recently attended the WITTE BURG: Terry A. Tabler '77 (265 ALPHA ZETA: (Arkansas) 320 Arkansas Ave., organizational meeting for the Orange Hartford Dr., Hudson, OH 44236) is a Fayetteville, AR 72701. Advisor: Bob Wardlow. County IIKA Alumni Association. laboratory manager for Union Carbide ALPHA THETA: (West Virginia) 117 Belmar Corp. He married Ann L. Powers on Ave., Morgantown, WV 26505. Advisor: Dr. Dan WAY E STATE: Dwight C. Rinke '65 February 23, 1985. Adams. (498 East Southlawn, Birmingham, MI 4 009) has been selected by the National WOFFORD COLLEGE: William H . ALPHA IOTA: (Millsaps) P.O. Box 15434, Endowme nt for the Humanities to Floyd, III '51 (Apt. 7E, 320 S. Beltline Jackson, MS 39210. Advisor: Doug Minor. participate in their 1985 Summer Seminar Blvd., Columbia, S.C. 29205) married Ellen ALPHA KAPPA: (Missouri-Rolla) Box 156. 9th at Columbia University in ew York. He at Bishop, Rolla, MO 65401. Advisor: Robert V. Bernhardt on December 29, 1984 , and is Wolf. was one of fifteen econdary school teachers presently attending the University of South in the nation cho en for this honor. Carolina School of Law.

40 Shield & Diamond ALPHA LAMBDA: (Georgetown College) GAMMA DELTA: (Arizona) 1525 E. Drach man, DELTA KAPPA: (San Diego State) 5071 College Georgetown College, Georgetown, KY 40324. Tucson, AZ 85719. Advisor: Doug McMaster. Ave., San Diego, CA 92115. Advisor: Joseph Advisor: Gary Billiter. GAMMA EPSILON: (Utah State) 757 East Camacho. ALPHA MU: (Georgia) 360 South Lumpkin St., Seventh North, Logan, UT ~321. Advisor: DELTA LAMBDA: (Florida State) 218 South Athens, GA 30602. Advisor: Lauren M. Coile, Jr. Vacant. Wildwood, Tallahassee, FL 32316. Advisor: Robert A. Miller. ALPHA NU: (Missouri) 916 South Providence GAMMA THETA: (Mississippi State) Drawer Rd., Columbia, MO 65201. Advisor: Richard GT, Mississippi State, MS 39762. Advisor: Will DELTA MU: (Southern Mississippi) 8427 Tarleton. Randle. Southern Station, Hattiesburg, MS 39401. Advisor: Dr. Stanley Brookling. ALPHA XI: (Cincinnati) 3400 Brookline Ave., GAMMA IOTA: (Mississippi) Box 8227, Cincinnati, OH 45220. Advisor: Jeff Carletti. University, MS 38677. Advisor: Steven Laird. DELTA NU: (Wayne State) 266 E. Hancock St., Detroit, MI 48201. Advisor: John Heppner. ALPHA OMICRON: (Southwestern) Box 6009, GAMMA KAPPA: (Montana State) 1321 South Southwestern Univ. Station, Georgetown, TX Fifth, Bozeman, MT 59715. Advisor: Brad Hall. DELTA XI: (Indiana) 1012 East Third St., 78626. Advisor: Mike Rossman. Bloomington, IN 47401. Advisor: Greg Meyer. GAMMA LAMBDA: (Lehigh) 515 Delaware ALPHA PI: (Samford) Box 2473 Samford Ave., Bethlehem, PA 18015. Advisor: Peter P. DELTA OMICRON: (Drake) 1311 Thirty-fourth University, Birmingham, AL 35209. Advisor: Garibaldi. St., Des Moines, IA 50311. Advisor: Michael Mike Chapman. Huppert. GAMMA MU: (New Hampshire) 5 Strafford ALPHA RHO: (Ohio State) 43 East 15th, Ave. , Durham, NH 03824. Advisor: Tom DELTA PI: (California State-San Jose) 385 E. Columbus, OH 43201. Advisor: Steve Wathen. Youngman. San Fernando St., San Jose, CA 95112. Advisor: ALPHA SIGMA: (California-Berkeley) 2324 David Andrade. Piedmont Ave., Berkeley, CA 94704. Advisor: GAMMA NU: (Iowa) 1032 North Dubuque St., Iowa City, IA 52240. Advisor: James Craig. DELTA RHO: (Linfield) 435 College Ave., Charles Dow. McMinnville, OR 97218. Advisor: Robert B. ALPHA TAU: (Utah) 41 University St., Salt GAMMA XI: (Washington State) N.E. 710 Johnson. Lake City, UT 84102. Advisor: William Shaw. California St., Pullman, W A 99163. Advisor: Don Nelson. DELTA SIGMA: (Bradley) 706 North Institute, ALPHA PHI: (Iowa State) 2112 Lincoln Way, Peoria, IL 61606. Advisor: Ray Zarvell. Ames, IA 50010. Advisor: Chuck Benson. GAMMA RHO: (Northwestern) 566 Lincoln St., Evanston, IL 60201. Advisor: Dale Fry. DELTA TAU: (Arizona State) 620 Alpha Dr., ALPHA CHI: (Syracuse) 405 Comstock Ave., Tempe, AZ 85281. Advisor: Norm Hulcher. Syracuse, NY 13210. Advisor: Frank Macaulay. GAMMA SIGMA: (Pittsburgh) 3731 Stadium Rd., Pittsburgh, PA 15213. Advisor: Dr. Larry DELTA UPSILON: (Stetson) Box 8240, Stetson ALPHA OMEGA: (Kansas State) 2021 College Lunsford. Univ., DeLand, FL 32720. Advisor: Dr. William L. View, Manhattan, KS 66502. Advisor: Kent March. Doyen. GAMMA TAU: (Rensselaer Polytechnic DELTA CHI: (Nebraska at Omaha) Milo Bail BETA ALPHA: (Penn State) c/o Robert A. Institute) 128 Twelfth St., Troy, NY 12180. Student Center, 62nd and Dodge Street, Omaha, McCool, 805 Stratford Dr. #13, State College, PA Advisor: Michael DeFeo. NE 68132. Advisor: Patrick H. Connell. 16801. Advisor: Robert A. McCool. GAMMA UPSILON: (Tulsa) 3123 E. Seventh, DELTA PSI: (Maryland) 4340 Knox Rd., College BETA BET A: (Washington) 452318th Ave. N.E., Tulsa, OK 74104. Advisor: Steve McCarter. Park, MD 20740. Advisor: Gary Reznikov. Seattle, W A 98105. Advisor: AI Ross. GAMMA PHI: (Wake Forest) Box 7749 Reynolds DELTA OMEGA: (High Point) Box 3046, High BETA GAMMA: (Kansas) 2000 Stewart Ave., Station, Winston Salem, NC 27109. Advisor: Dale Point College, High Point, NC 27262. Advisor: Lawrence, KS 66044. Advisor: Jim Chappell. Martin. Mark Walling. BETA DELTA: (New Mexico) 1700 Sigma Chi GAMMA CHI: (Oklahoma State) 221 South EPSILON ALPHA: (Trinity) 94 Vernon St., Rd., Albuquerque, NM 87106. Advisor: John Lincoln, Stillwater, OK 74074. Advisor: Dr. Hartford, CT 06106. Advisor: Mike Bronzino. Kusianovich. William A. Ivy. BETA ZETA: (SMU) 6205 Airline Rd ., Dallas, EPSILON BETA: (Valparaiso) 808 Mound, GAMMA PSI: (Louisiana Tech) 110 Western, Valparaiso, IN 46383. Advisor: Bruce Starek. TX 75205. Advisor: Jeff Kaye. Rouston, LA 71270. Advisor: Fred May. BETA ETA: (Illinois) 102 E . Chalmers, EPSILON GAMMA: (Texas Tech) 20 Greek GAMMA OMEGA: (Miami) 5800 San Amaro Circle, Lubbock, TX 79416. Advisor: Mike Powell. Champaign, IL 61820. Advisor: Rich Western. Dr., Coral Gables, FL 33146. Advisor: Jerry BETA THETA: (Cornell) 17 South Ave. , Ithaca, Askew. EPSILON DELTA: (North Texas State) P.O. NY 14850. Advisor: Paul Eldridge. Box 2654, Denton, TX 76201. Advisor: Johnny DELTA BETA: (Bowling Green) 810 5th St. #6, Metzler. BETA KAPPA: (Emory) Drawer R, Emory Bowling Green, OH 43402 . Advisor: John Barberi. Univ., Atlanta GA 30322. Advisor: Neil Smith. EPSILON EPSILON: (Toledo) 2955 Dorr St., DELTA GAMMA: (Miami of Ohio) 410 E. Toledo, OH 43607. Advisor: David Howard. BETA MU: (Texas) 2400 Leon, Austin, TX 78705. Church St., Oxford, OH 45056. Advisor: Dr. Larry Advisor: Donald Flournoy. Rankin. EPSILON ZETA: (East Tennessee State) Box 20020A, ETSU, Johnson City, TN 37614. Advisor: BETA NU: (Oregon State) 209 N.W. 14th St., DELTA DELTA: (Florida Southern) Box 4855 Mark Hanson. Corvallis, OR 97330 . Advisor: Steve Uerlings. Florida Southern College, Lakeland, FL 33802. Advisor: John Wendel. EPSILON THETA: (Colorado State) Box 810, BETA XI: (Wiscon3in) 137 Langdon St., Madison, Lory Student Center, Colorado State Univ., Ft. WI 53703. Advisor: Frank Worzala. DELTA EPSILON: (UT-Chattanooga) 900 Oak Collins, CO 80523. Advisor: Gary Anderson. BETA OMICRON: (Oklahoma) 1203 South Elm St., Chattanooga, TN 37403 . Advisor: Ronald St., Norman, OK 73069. Advisor: William Dales. Trigleth,III. EPSILON ETA: (Houston) 2233 Bellefontaine, Hou ston, TX 77030. Advisor: Don Bullard. BETA PI: (Pennsyl vania) 3916 Spruce St., DELTA ZETA: (Memphis State) 3839 Philadelphia, PA 19104. Advisor: Joe Li vezey. Norriswood, Memphis State Univ., Memphis, TN EPSILON IOTA: (S.E. Missouri State) c/o 38111. Advisor: Louis B. Quinto. Robert Cox, 825 Independence, Cape Girardeau, BETA SIGMA: (Carnegie-Me llon) 1079 MO 63701. Advisor: Robert Cox. Morewood Place, Pittsburgh, PA 1521 3. Advisor: DELTA ETA: (Delaware) 313 Wyoming Rd., W. Thomas Wood , II. Newark, DE 19711. Advisor: Ralph Oliver. EPSILON KAPPA: (Lamar) P.O. Box 10080, BETA PHI: (Purdue) 629 University St., West Lamar Univ., Beaumont, TX 77710. Advisor: Lafayette, IN 47906. Advisor: Don Motl er. DELTA THETA: (A rkansas State) P.O. Box370, Charles Turco. State University, AR 72467. Advisor: Tim Brow n. GAMMA ALPHA: (A labama) P.O. Drawer B-H, EPSILON LAMBDA: (Murray State) P.O. Box University, AL 35486. Advisor: Dr. Jerry C. DELTA IOTA: (Marshall) 1661 Fifth Ave. , 2102 University Station, Murray, KY 42071. Oldshire. Huntington, WV 25703. Advisor: Greg Rash. Advisor: Mark Zoeller. 41 of Pi Kappa Alpha -f..------' ZETA TAU: (Eastern Kentucky) 351 Coates THETA ZETA: (Northern Iowa) 2320 College Administration Bldg., E .K.U., Richmond, KY St., Cedar Falls, IA 50613. Advisor: Robert EPSILON NU: (Georgia State) University Plaza, 40475. Advisor: Michael Carter. Byrnes. Box 466, Georgia State University, Atlanta, GA 30303. Advisor: Dan Aldrich ZETA UPSILON: (Concord College) Box C-26, THETA ETA: (Loyola-Marymount) P.O. Box 97, Concord College, Athens, WV 24712. Advisor: 7101 West 80th, Los Angeles, CA 90045. Advisor: EPSILON XI: (Case Western) 11120 Magnolia John David Smith. Tony Leoni . Dr., Cleveland , OH 44106. Advisor: David E. Wagner. ZETA PHI: (Missouri at St. Louis) 8826 Natural THETA THETA: (Texas A&M) P.O. Box 4396, Bridge Rd ., St. Louis, MO 63121. Advisor: John College Station, TX 77844. Advisor: Jim Raatz. EPSILON OMICRON: (Stephen F. Austin) P.O. Roundtree. Box 7421, Stephen F . Austin University, THETA IOTA: (Tyler Junior College) Box 228, Nacogdoches, TX 75962. Advisor: David ZET 1\ CHI: (Southwest Missouri State) 800 South Tyler Junior College, Tyler, TX 75701. Advisor: Campbell. National, Springfield, MO 65804 . Advisor: Mike Stan Watson. Call. EPSILON PI: (Sam Houston State) 142817th St., THETA KAPPA: (Indiana University Huntsville, TX 77340. Advisor: Johnny Holland. ZETA PSI: (Nicholls State) Box 2098, N.S .U., University Southeast) Box X282, 4201 Grantline Thibodaux. LA 70301. Advisor: Tony Baez. Rd., New Albany, IN 47150. Advisor: Craig EPSILON SIGMA: (Tennessee-Martin) 220 Whitaker. Hannings Ln ., Martin, TN 38237 . Advisor: ZETA OMEGA: (Southwestern Louisiana) 1322 Carmen Maddox. Johnston St., Lafayette, LA 70503. Advisor: Paul THETA LAMBDA: (Creighton) 3100 Chicago DeBaillion. St., Omaha, NE 68131. Advisor: Michael Joyce. EPSILON TAU: (Eastern New Mexico State) P.O. Box 2521 , ENMU , Portales, NM 88130. ETA ALPHA: (Clemson) P.O. Box 2127, Clemson THETA MU: (Massachusetts) 418 North Advisor: Victor Worley. University, Clemson, SC 29632 . Advisor: Joseph Pleasant St., Amherst, MA 01002. Advisor: Dale Turner. Hubbard. EPSILON UPSILON: (Gannon) 515 West 7th Ave., Erie, PA 16502. Advisor: Bernard Hills. ETA BETA: (Seton Hall) 400 South Orange, c/o THETA NU: (Baylor) Box 313, Student Union, Seton Hall Univ., South Orange, NJ 07076. Baylor Univ., Waco, TX 76798. Advisor: Dr. A. EPSILON PHI: (Central Arkansas) Box 564, Advisor: Donald John Yacus. Scott Lea. Univ. of Central Arkansas, Conway, AR 72032 . Advisor: Ralph Behrens. ETA EPSILON: (Angelo State) P.O. Box 3946, THETA XI: (East Texas State) P.O. Box 0, East Herring Station, San Angelo, TX 76902. Advisor: Texas Station, Commerce, TX 75428. Advisor: EPSILON CHI: (Pittsburg State) 1900 South Michael Brown. Robert Hacker. Pine, Pittsburg, KS 66762. Advisor: Larry Damico. ETA ZETA: (Middle Tennessee State) 715 N. THETA OMICRON: (Indiana State) P.O. Box Tennessee Blvd., Murfreesboro, TN 37130. 1062, Terre Haute, IN 47808. Advisor: Ed Pease. EPSILON PSI: (Western Michigan) 1619 Advisor: Charles Ward. Fraternity Village Drive #9, Kalamazoo, MI THETA PI: (Alabama-Huntsville) Univ. of 49007. Advisor: David Mcllmurray. ETA THETA: (Weber State) Box 2, Weber State Alabama-Huntsville Student Union Bldg., College, Ogden, UT 84408. Advisor: Joe Herlihy. Iruntsville, AL 35810. Advisor: David Byrd. EPSILON OMEGA: (East Central State) Box 227, ECU , Ada OK 74820. Advisor: Dr. James ETA KAPPA: (South Alabama) Box U-204 , THETA RHO: (Northern Arizona) 520 S. Verde, Harris. University of South Alabama, Mobile, AL 36608. Apt. A, Flagstaff, AZ 86001. Advisor: Dr. Walt Advisor: Marc Bradley. Appelgren. ZETA ALPHA: (General Motors) 1484 N. Linden Rd ., Flint. MI 48504. Advisor: Mark S. ETA NU: (Northern Illinois) 900 Greenbriar Rd. , THETA SIGMA: (Winthrop College) 360 Park DuCharme. Dekalb, IL 60115. Advisor: Tom Greenway. Ave., Rock Hill, SC 29730. Advisor: John Wiggs. ZETA BETA : (Delta State) Box 606, Delta State ETA XI: (Alabama at Birmingham) Box 7, THETA TAU: (California State at Sacramento) Univ., Cleveland, MS 38732. Advisor: Lindsey University Center, 1400 University Blvd., Box 24 , CSUS, Student Activities, Sacramento, Meador. Birmingham, AL 35294 . Advisor: Palmer Keith. CA 95819. Advisor: Paul Romanick. ZETA GAMMA: (Eastern Illinois) 962 lOth St., ETA OMICRON: (Northeast Louisiana) P.O. Box THETA UPSILON: (Tennessee Tech) 514 N. Charleston, IL 61920. Advisor: Vacant. 5331 , NLU Station, Monroe, LA 71212, Advisor: Walnut St., Cookeville, TN 38501. Advisor: Thomas E . Avera. Vacant. ZETA EPSILON: (Western Kentucky) 1321 Kentucky St., Bowling Green, KY 42101. Advisor: ETA RHO: (Northern Kentucky) P.O. Box 263, THETA PHI: (Wichita State) 3820 E. 16th St., Alan Hurt. NKU, Highland Heights, KY 41076. Advisor: Wichita, KS 67208. Advisor: Don Wernert. Danny Antrobus. THETA CHI: (Villanova) P.O. Box 3029, ZETA ZETA: (Southwestern State) 301 N. ETA SIGMA: (West Georgia) Box 10056 West Kennedy Hall, Villanova Univ., Villanova, PA Custer, Weatherford, OK 73096. Advisor: Vacant. Georgia College, Carrollton. GA 30118. Advisor: 19087. Advisor: Dr. Robert Langran. · ZETA ETA: (Arkansas-Little Rock) P.O. Bo~ Joe Baker. THETA PSI: (Chapman College) 333 N. Glassell, 4556, Little Rock , AR 72214. Advisor: Preston ETA TAU: (Austin Peay State) Box 4637, APSU, Orange, CA 92666. Advisor: Page Singletary. Wright. Clarksville, TN 37044. Advisor: Jim Amos. THETA OMEGA: (California-Davis) Box 155, ZETA THETA: (Southwest Texas State) 1132 ETA UPSILON: (Texas at Arlington) 1108 West Memorial Union, Davis, CA 95616. Advisor: Don Belvin, San Marcos, TX 78666. Advisor: Pat Second St., Arlington, TX 76013. Advisor: Currier. Jackson. Fredrick R. Jenkins. ZETA lOT A: (Old Dominion) 4011 Hapton Blvd., ETA PHI: (Central Florida) Box 29296, Univ. of THE ALUMNI ASSOCIATIONS Norfolk, VA 23508. Advisor: Michael Bass. Central Florida, Orlando, FL 32816. Advisor: ALABAMA: ZETA KAPPA: (Ferris State) 607 South Charlie Lousignont. Lafayette Area Association Michigan, Big Rapids, MI 49307. Advisor: Robert ETA OMEGA: (Pembroke State) P.O. Box 1143, Mark Hood D. White. Pembroke, NC 28372. Advisor: James Hall. 114 Aspasie, Youngsville, AL 70592 ZETA MU: (Idaho) 715 Nez Perce Dr., Moscow, ID 83843. Advisor: Roger Wallins. THETA ALPHA: (North Alabama) Box 5548, Theta Pi Alumni Association Univ. of North Alabama, Florence, AL 35630. David Byrd ZETA XI: (Western Carolina) P.O. Box 478, Advisor: Dr. Eddie Keith. 6508 Marsh Ave., Huntsville, AL 35806 Cullowhee, NC 28723 . Advisor: Cpt. Gary Bryant. THETA BETA: (Montevallo) P.O. Box R, Univ. Upsilon Alumni Association ZETA OMICRON: (California State at of Montevallo, Montevallo, AL 35115, Advisor: Dave Dyson Northridge) 17839 Halsted, Northridge, CA Christopher Hoff. Birmingham-Southern College 91325. Advisor: Jerry Niehaus. THETA GAMMA: (Georgia College) 331 W. 808th Ave. West ZETA PI: (South Florida) U.C. Box 2428, Montgomery, Georgia College, Milledgeville, GA Birmingham, AL 35254 University of South Florida, Tampa, FL 33620. 31061. Advisor: Ed Sowell. ARKANSAS: Advisor: Frank Smith. THETA DELTA: (Francis Marion) 325 N. Northwest Arkansas Alumni Association ZETA RHO: (North Dakota) 2622 Univ. Ave., Cashua Ave., Florence, SC 29501. Advisor: Alan Bob Wardlow Grand Forks, NO 58201. Advisor: Tom Alinder. Deaver. 3015 Elizabeth Ave. , Fayetteville, AR 72701 ZETA SIGMA: (Florida Institute of Technology) THETA EPSILON: (Northeast Oklahoma State) Central Arkansas Alumni Association P.O. Box 520, Melbourne, FL32901. Advisor: Dan Box 341, N.E. Oklahoma State Univ., Tahlequah, Preston Wright Bradley. OK 74464. Advisor: Charles Noble. 2420 Riverfront Dr. #240 , Little Rock, AR 72202

42 Shield & Diamond -f------' CALIFORNIA: MASSACHUSETTS: PENNSYLVANIA: Orange County Alumni Association Theta Mu Alumni Association Steel City Alumni Association Vic Balasi Albert Picardi Thomas Vater 13841 Tustin East Dr. #198 158 Concord Rd., D-25 700 Carriage Rd . 2A, Pittsburgh, PA 15220 Tustin, CA 92680 Billerica, MA 01 821 SOUTH CAROLINA: San Fernando valley Association MICHIGAN: Raymond Niesslein Clemson Alumni Association 6641 Wynne St., Reseda, CA 91335 Zeta Alpha Alumni Association Joe Palmer Peter E. Peters Rt. 8, Box 131-A, Piedmont, SC 29673 DELAWARE: 563 Vansickle Rd., St. Catherines Ontario, Canada L2S 2X3 Nu Alumni Association Delaware Alumni Association Tim Horton David M. Comen Zeta Kappa Alumni Association 100 Vanderbilt Rd . #F-10 8 Parke Ave., Newark, DE 19711 Ken Karsten Spartanburg, SC 29301 1431 Forest Hill, SE, Grand Rapids, MI 49506 FLORIDA: Theta Delta Alumni Association Central Florida Alumni Association Detroit Alumni Association Jimmy Street Bernardo Rios, Jr. Brian Zahra 1217 Clarendon Ave., Florence, SC 29501 121 East New Hampshire 25867 Shirley Ln., Dearborn Heights, MI 48127 Theta Sigma Alumni Association Orlando, FL 32804 MINNESOTA: Dan Urscheler 1043 E. Morehead St., Charlotte, NC 28204-2812 Delta Lambda Alumni Association Twin Cities Alumni Association Charles Barnes David Wicker TENNESSEE: P.O. Box 6091 , Tallahassee, FL 32301 5005 Goldenrod, Plymouth, MN 55442 Memphis Alumni Association Delta Upsilon Alumni Association MISSOURI: David VanHoozer Frank D. Teets, Jr. 6602 Pidgeon Woods Cv., Memphis, TN 38119 12722 Pelonic Ct., Wellington, FL 33411 Alumni Association of St. Louis Rick McFarland East Tennessee Alumni Association Ft. Lauderdale Alumni Association P.O. Box 16853, Clayton, MO 63105 Stephen Sitton Glenn Leonard Rt. 14, Box 425. Gray, TN 37615 2810 East Oakland Park Blvd. Cape Girardeau Alumni Association Ft. Lauderdale, FL 33339 Benjamin F. Lewis West Tennessee Alumni Association 416 N. Frederick, Cape Girardeau, MO 63701 David Graham GEORGIA: 500 5th Ave. N. #106 , Nashville, TN 37219 Ozark Area Alumni Association Atlanta Alumni Club William Wedge TEXAS: Chuck Francis 1302 Eastwood, Rolla, MO 65401 2142 McKinley, Atlanta, GA 30318 Epsilon Omicron Alumni Association NEW HAMPSHIRE: Charles Goldstein Eta Sigma Alumni Association 2427 Shady Brook, Houston, TX 77084 Larry Hansard Gamma Mu Alumni Association 5096 Shalloway Ct., Kennesaw, GA 30144 John Depuy Mid Cities Alumni Assoc iation 10 Otis Place #1 , Boston, MA 02108 Frank Sutherland ILLINOIS: P.O. Box 769 , Arlington, TX 76010 NEW YORK: Eta Nu Alumni Association San Angelo Alumni Association Quentin Vorel Alpha Theta Alumni Association Rick McKinney 1172 S. Grove Ave., Oak Park, IL 60304 B. Thomas Sporney P.O. Box 391 , San Angelo, TX 76902 7023 Doris Dr., Indianapolis, IN 46224 INDIANA: Theta Xi Alumni Association Syracuse Alumni Association Delta Xi Alumni Association Theodore L. Copeland Dennis Wesolowski 6506 Wickerwood, Dallas, TX 75248 Gregory A. Horn 304 Fourth Ave., Frankfort, NY 13340 P.O. Box 534, Indianapolis, IN 46206 VIRGINIA: NORTH CAROLINA: Epsilon Beta Alumni Association Alpha Chapter Alumni Association Bruce A. Starek Eastern North Carolina Alumni Association George T. Richardson 712 S. 2nd, Chesterton, IN 46304 Paul Davenport III Box 30, Crozier, VA 23039 Rt. 5, Box 333, Greenville, NC 27834 Southern Indiana Association Gamma Alumni Association Christopher Smith NORTH DAKOTA: Raymond Hogge, Jr. 1906 Charleston Rd., New Albany, IN 47150 North Dakota Alumni Association 11 Seaview Dr., Hampden, VA 23664 Wabash Valley Alumni Association Tom Alinder Richmond Alumni Association Rick Carpenter 3220 Fifth Ave. North, #3 Bill Carnahan P.O. Box 1062, Terre Haute, IN 47802 Grand Forks, ND 58201 515 Libbie Ave., Richmond, VA 23226 KANSAS: OHIO: WASHINGTON: Alpha Omega Alumni Association Delta Beta Alumni Association Seattle Area Alumni Association Kent McKinney Michael R. Clancy, Jr. Chet Grove 3217 Ella Ln., Manhattan, KS 66502 2531 Clague Rd. , Westlake, OH 44145 4540 8th Ave. N.E. #301 , Seattle, WA 98105 Epsilon Chi Alumni Association Southland Hall Alumni Association DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA: B. Zimmerman Denis R. Cleeter 1702 S. Broadway, Pittsburg, KS 66762 2260 Park Ave., Cincinnati, OH 45206 Washington D.C. Area Alumni Association Joe Pavelka KENTUCKY: Toledo Alumni Association P.O. Box 14078, Washington, D.C. 20044 David Lewis Zeta Tau Alumni Association 818 Lafayette Blvd., Bowling Green, OH 43402 Michael Parker 102 Hager Ave. #3, Ricmond, KY 40475 OKLAHOMA: LOUISIANA: Theta Epsilon Alumni Association Tommy Webb South Louisiana Alumni Association 102 East Ave., Tahlequah, OK 37462 William R. Hall 6901 Veterans Memorial Blvd. Tulsa Alumni Association Please send additions, corrections, or any Metairie, LA 70003 Bill Vogle P.O. Box 1153, Tulsa, OK 74101 other information concerning this list to: MARYLAND: OREGON: Patrick F. Haynes Alumni Association Contact Delta Psi Alumni Association Corvallis Alumni Association David A. Crow Steve Uerlings 577 University St. 6728 Deerspring Ln., Middletown, MD 21769 3129 NE Powderhorn Pl., Corvallis, OR 97330 Memphis, TN 38112 43 of Pi Kappa Alpha BOSTON!

Pi Kappa Alpha's 1986 National Convention