at Miami University
Transcription
at Miami University
P&G The Purple and Gold THE JOURNAL OF CHI PSI FRATERNITY Spring 2006 Sigma Convention Celebrates 150 Years Peter Schenck, BJ Eswein Remembered Chi Psi Eye Profiles: NFL Coach Mangini, New Habitat CEO, Report from Bagdad Centennial Remembrance of the Great San Francisco Earthquake That Destroyed Gamma Delta Lodge Welcome Chi Psi’s Newest Alpha – at Miami University (Yes, it’s the one in Ohio.) Attend Chi Psi’s 165th Convention In Columbia, S.C. Sights around Columbia: Finlay Park, St. Patrick’s Day Festival at Five Points, Penguins at Riverbanks Zoo, one of the many area golf courses, Gateway to the historic Horseshoe at USC. At The University of South Carolina • Wednesday 25 July – Sunday 30 July 2006 T he University of South Carolina is home to more than 200 years of history and tradition, rising from a single building in 1805 on what would become the heart of the campus, the Horseshoe. The eleven buildings that now make up the Horseshoe frame a lush lawn that is an irresistible gathering place. The Columbia campus is the flagship school for an eight-campus system. In Columbia, fifteen degree-granting colleges with 1,450 faculty offer 350 different programs to 27,000 students. School colors are garnet and black, and the athletic nickname is the Fighting Gamecocks. 2 The Purple and Gold Spring 2006 O ur 165th annual gathering of the Chi Psi family is set for late July at the University of South Carolina in the capital city of Columbia. Convention events include the 165th Spencer Leadership Institute beginning Wednesday, Games at the Strom Thurmond Wellness Center on Thursday, the Beta 50th Anniversary Barbeque on Friday evening, and the Formal Banquet on Saturday. Lots of family fun is available within a short drive – from the zoo, museums, gardens, and historic houses in Columbia to great beaches along the coast – so consider vacation options around Convention week. Log on to the Web site at www.chipsi.org or call the Central Office at 615-736-2520 for details. P&G The Purple and Gold The Journal of Chi Psi Fraternity SPRING 2006 • VOLUME 124 • NUMBER 2 INSIDE THIS ISSUE: Alpha Rho Delta at Miami University, in Oxford, Ohio, is Chi Psi’s newest Alpha following the charter initiation and installation banquet . . . . . . Page 4 Alpha Sigma at the University of North Carolina turned 150 in 2005, and Chi Psi held its Annual Convention there to mark the occasion . . . . . . . Page 8 The 1906 Convention photo was missing from the national collection, but an original, including two Brothers who died in the Cornell Fire, was found recently and now hangs in the Central Office . . . . Page 12 In the Chi Psi Eye features our second NFL coach, more travels with Dr. Dan, the new Director of Habitat for Humanity, a report from Bagdad, and other news of our Brothers . . . . . . . . . . . Page 13 Chi Psi remembers 1906 mostly for the fire that destroyed the Lodge at Cornell and killed four Brothers and three firefighters. In April of that year, however, the Great Earthquake destroyed Gamma Delta’s Lodge and much of Stanford University . . . Page 22 Omega: We celebrate the lives of Chi Psi Brothers who have died, including two long-time national board members, Peter Schenck, ΕΔ’59, and BJ Eswein, ΔΔ’71 . . . . . . . . Page 24 Crew, Capstone House,Williams-Brice Stadium,The Lodge, Five Points Fountain, Strom Thurmond Wellness Center. Volume 124, Number 2, © 2006: The Chi Psi Educational Trust and Chi Psi Fraternity, 147 Maple Row Boulevard, Suite 200, Hendersonville, TN 37075 615-736-2520 • Address comments, content or queries to: p&[email protected] Nothing herein may be reproduced in whole or in part without the written permission of the Chi Psi Executive Director. The Purple and Gold is designed with QuarkXPress, using New Baskerville, Gill Sans and Comic Sans fonts, printed by The Watkins Printing Company, Columbus, Ohio. POSTMASTER: Please send address changes to The Purple and Gold, 147 Maple Row Boulevard, Suite 200, Hendersonville, TN 37075. The Purple and Gold is an educational journal published by The Chi Psi Educational Trust and Chi Psi Fraternity, distributed free of charge to Chi Psis and their families. Rho Delta – Page 4 Convention – Page 7 1906 Photo – Page 12 Head Coach – Page 13 Earthquake – Page 22 If you did not receive a copy of the Fall 2005 issue of The Purple and Gold, which included the 2004-05 Annual Report, visit www.chipsi.org for the electronic issue or contact the Central Office to receive a printed version. Pete Schenck – Page 25 2006 only Chi Psi’sExecutives 165th anniversary, but Chi Psi is a founding member of is thenot FEA (Fraternity Association), is it alsoInterfraternity the centennialConference), remembrance of the the NIC (North-American andyear the CFEA (College Fraternityhorrible Editors Association) member of theinFIPG Cornell Fireand (to isbea remembered the (Fraternal Information Programming Group). Summer P&G) & and the Great Earthquake which destroyed the Lodge at Stanford (story on page 00). The year is also the 80th anniversary of the incorporation of The Chi Psi Educational Trust Publisher: Sam Bessey, ΗΔ’97 • Editor: Bill Hattendorf, ΑΔ’69, Σ’82 Contributors: Kyle Moen, Ι’02, Todd Falls, ΤΔ’89, Brad Beskin, Σ’05, Joan Ross, Kurt Gilliland, Σ’92, Whitey Silverio, ΕΔ’71, Larry Batina, ΔΔ’74, Nate Evans, Ε’01 Spring 2006 The Purple and Gold 3 Alpha Rho Delta Chartered at Miami University C Former Council Chair Michael C. Hurst, ΤΔ’87, shares a handshake and greeting with Alpha Rho Delta’s #1, Jason Rarecha, ΡΔ’06. Above: Council Vice Chair Troy Ivey, ΙΔ’90, and Travis Valentine, ΩΔ’05 Below, Brothers circle the room and close the Banquet with Chi Psis Ever. 4 The Purple and Gold Spring 2006 hi Psi Fraternity is proud to announce the installation of Alpha Rho Delta at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio. Over the weekend of 17 September 2005, more than thirty alumni and undergraduate volunteers from seventeen different Alphas convened at the weekend home of James B. McGregor, ΤΔ’98, in Springfield, Ohio, to initiate the twenty-two founding members of Alpha Rho Delta. The weekend culminated with a traditional initiation banquet at the Hyde Park Golf and Country Club in Cincinnati, arranged by corporation president Bob Dearth, A’66. Former Trust Chair Cliff Massa III, ΕΔ’71, organized the proceedings for the formal initiation ceremonies with Central Office staff member Kyle Moen, I’02, while Bill Hattendorf, ΑΔ’69, Σ’82, was the designated chief presiding officer, with Brian T. Heil, Ε’80, and Brother Massa also sharing duties. Kyle Moen presented the colony members for their induction into Chi Psi. FROM DORM TO COLONY – Granted Colony status in the Fall of 2004, the Colony’s story really began in 2002 with a group of diverse freshmen in Miami’s Emerson Hall. Through social and academic interactions, a group emerged that ate together and attended Miami sports events as a unit. They even gave themselves a name: The Fighting Llamas (after the name of a member’s former basketball team). Several members of the group went through formal rush, but many felt that Alpha Rho Delta Installation existing groups did not meet their needs or match well with their values. As stated in their petition for Alpha status, they “wanted to change the landscape of Miami’s fraternities by actually living the values being preached – service, respect, courage, chivalry, and so forth.” The men sought, above all else, a family. On a cold evening in the Fall of 2003, the group gathered in an off-campus apartment and made a pact to create an organization at Miami for students to form a lifelong bond, to give back to the community, and to develop under the guidance of honorable principles. After exploring the options with existing organizations, they turned to the Greek Affairs Office. The Chi Psi Central Office had sent an extension packet literally the week before to that office. After much discussion and many conference calls with the Central Office, it was decided to pursue establishing Chi Psi at Miami. The group did not choose Chi Psi in a traditional sense. Rather, an intersection of fate brought the gentlemen to the gentlemen’s Fraternity; the group had chosen Chi Psi as much as Chi Psi had chosen the group. ALUMNI ASSOCIATIONS – Rho Delta has been fortunate to have an active Chi Psi Regional Alumni Association within driving distance. The Columbus Area Alumni Association (CAAA) was instrumental in establishing the Colony at Miami. CAAA President (and former CO staffer) William J. Green, ΜΔ’95, visited Oxford early-on, providing moral support and organizational guidance for the Colony. The CAAA hosted events in both Oxford and Columbus to lend additional support for the group. And former Chi Psi Educational Trust Chair Robert A. Dearth Jr., A’66, is the new president of the Rho Delta Alumni Corporation, succeeding Jamie McGregor, who led the organizational process. Many other alumni joined in the efforts to help form a new Alpha at Miami. The Colony was “adopted” by Central Office Staff member Kyle Moen, who spent much of his personal time driving back and forth to Miami University Founders Tim Reynolds, Anthony Baczewski, Mike Frey, and Kurt Ericson. Council Chair Joseph J. Devaney, Ρ’80, ΜΔ’99, Executive Council member Todd Falls, ΤΔ’89, and former Visitor Scott Boyd, ΘΔ’01. #1 Jason Rericha, ΡΔ’06 (right), gives special thanks to Central Office staff member Kyle Moen, Ι’02, for his guidance and assistance to Rho Delta. Spring 2006 The Purple and Gold 5 Oxford to encourage the efforts of the Miami students. Other key alumni included Council Chairs Michael Hurst, ΤΔ’87, and Joe Devaney, Ρ’80, ΜΔ’99, Council Finance Chair Jim Lazarus, ΣΔ’01, Alpha Visitor Preston Humphries, Β’03, and alumni James B. McGregor, ΤΔ’98, Charles McConville, ΖΔ’89, and O. Henry Hoversten, Ν’45. Colony members attended Executive Council meetings and National Conventions, and they completed a program for recruitment development. They also took part in a Risk Management Retreat, a Program for Self Development, and an Alpha Management Retreat. Within the Miami community, Rho Delta became active early-on in philanthropic and social pursuits. They created a bed race event as part of National Youth Service Day, and raised money and awareness for breast cancer, child abuse prevention, and a local animal shelter. A “hallmark” of Rho Delta is the Annual Rose Sale, held in the two weeks prior to Valentines Day. Quite an involved ordering and delivery system is required. The Rose Sale encourages interaction with students across a wide spectrum of the Miami community, and the delivery of a rose captures part of the essence of a Chi Psi Gentleman, supporting the reputation as men of true character. M UNIVERSITY was founded in 1809 in Oxford, Ohio, which is approximately 45 minutes north of Cincinnati. The University is named after the once local Native American tribe, the Miami Indians. Miami University was an all-male institution until 1909 when it merged with Ohio Normal College to become a full-fledged coeducational institution. U.S. News & World Report currently ranks Miami among the top 25 public universities in the nation based on academic quality. Miami’s graduation rates are among the highest nationally, ninth among NCAA Division I public universities (eighty percent). The undergraduate student body is composed of 6,900 males and 8,400 females; 9,500 from Ohio, 4,300 out of state, and 1,500 foreign. The average SAT entry score is 1200 (comparable to Rutgers and many other Chi Psi schools). Just over two-thirds of students graduate in four years, and about eighty percent graduate within six years. There are now 28 fraternities and 21 sororities at Miami, with 33% of the campus being Greek (26% of the IAMI 6 The Purple and Gold Spring 2006 CHARTERING THE NEW ALPHA – The Rho Delta Colony attended the National Convention at Chapel Hill in force last summer. Jason Rericha was point person on presentations to the Executive Council and the Convention, and his fellow colonists were active and effective presenters and lobbyists. The Executive Council endorsed the proposal to elevate the Colony to Alpha status, and the Convention enthusiastically voted in the affirmative. Perhaps it is worth noting the final lines of the petition for the Rho Delta petitioners: “Much like the road of life, the path that brought us here was filled with twists and turns. The experience and knowledge gained along the way forged bonds between us. With the support and guidance of the Central Office and dedicated alumni, a trail has been blazed at Miami University with the offering of virtues such as chivalry, loyalty, and honor. It is by these virtues, we wish to be judged, for they are the foundation of our cause. Twenty-two different founders find themselves down this one sacred road, illuminated by the belief in themselves and each other that this noble cause will long endure not because of where we come from or where we are going, but rather because of who we are and what we believe in.” ■ men are Greek). The allfraternity GPA is 2.9, while our Colony’s at the time of installation was 3.1. The average chapter size is 60, although the median is lower because a few fraternities have a disproportional number of members. Miami is the other Mother of Fraternities after Union, with four national fraternities and one sorority founded there: Beta Theta Pi (1839), Phi Delta Theta (1848), Sigma Chi (1855), Delta Zeta (1902), and Phi Kappa Tau (1906). According to the NIC’s Executive Director Jon Williamson, “Miami is one of the true cradles of Greek life. Its Greek community makes a difference in the lives of undergraduates by enriching their lives and adding to their compassion and respect for fraternity life. The community places a strong influence on academics and gives reason for alumni to return to campus to build upon and renew acquaintances made in undergraduate years.” Alpha Rho Delta Installation The Charter Initiation Class of Alpha Rho Delta of Chi Psi: Name, Class, Hometown, Major; Interests/Honors; Career Goals (Position) Anthony Baczewski ’06 – Dublin, OH, Microbiology; Eagle Scout, basketball, dodge ball; pediatrician. (Pledge Ed.) Benjamin Cox ’06 – Piqua, OH, Business; basketball, adopt-aschool; management. (#2) Kyle Cuthbert ’08 – West Chester, OH, Business; MU water ski team, basketball; create own business. (Social Chair) Chris Darland ’06 – Mason, OH, Finance; Delta Sigma Pi, basketball, softball; create own business.(Housing, Alumni Relations & Development Chair) Kurt Ericson ’06 – Cincinnati, OH, Accountancy and Decision Sciences; rock climbing, Golden Key, Delta Sigma Pi, Beta Gamma Sigma, Gamma Sigma Alpha; consultant. (#4) Michael Frey ’06 – Toledo, OH, Finance; intramural sports, Delta Sigma Pi, eucharistic ministry; job in finance. Steven L. Guy ’06 – Chesterland, OH, Marketing; intramural sports, Greek life; sports management. William J. Huber ’07 – Findlay, OH, Biochemistry; track & field, dorm programming, philanthropy; cure Alzheimer’s. Nannaya Jampala ’06 – Wadsworth, IL, Chemistry & Psychology; philanthropy; physician in neurology. Jack Knellinger ’06 – Bellbrook, OH, Computer Science; basketball, philanthropy, Student Advisory Council; counselor. Justin Lynn ’06 – Tucson, AR, Accounting & Decision Sciences; philanthropy; accounting software co. (Sgt-at-Arms) Matthew Martin ’07 – Chillicothe, OH, Political Science; dorm council, Miami Symphony, philanthropy; law. Matthew McKinney ’06 – North Canton, OH, Organizational Leadership; start own restaurant. Matt McLaughlin ’06 – North Canton, OH, Accounting, philanthropy; accounting. (Service & Philanthropy) Ryan Pampush ’06 – Cincinnati, OH, Computer Science, computers; master’s degree & start own software company. (Information & Communications Chair) Jason Rericha ’06 – Novelty, OH, Engineering Mgt., varsity football, Dean’s Advisory Council, Fraternal Futures; masters degree & start own company. (#1) Timothy Reynolds ’06 – Parma, OH, Business Economics; local government, philanthropy, athletics; Economics professor. (#3) John D. Romer ’07 – Dayton, OH, Zoology; athletics; doctor in sports medicine. (Scholarship & Athletics Chair) Christopher Saltis ’08 – North Canton, OH, Finance; basketball, community service. David B. Spunt ’07 – New Albany, OH, Political Science & Journalism; athletics, student radio, philanthropy; career in public radio. Thomas Thole II ’06 – Cincinnati, OH, American Studies; water skiing, softball; banking. (Recruitment Chair) Ryan Tremblay ’08 – Troy, OH, Finance; soccer, wrestling, philanthropy; business professional & coach. ■ The Brothers of Alpha Rho Delta proudly display their Charter. Kneeling (l-r): Justin Edward Lynn ’06, Jason Michael Rericha ’06, Ryan Lee Tremblay ’08, Thomas Joseph Thole II ’06, Kurtis Richard Ericson ’06, Matthew Steven McLaughlin ’06. Standing (l-r): Christopher Kenneth Saltis ’08, John Michael Knellinger ’06,William James Huber ’07, Michael Timothy Frey ’06, Ryan Michael Pampush ’06, John Daniel Romer ’07, Anthony Peter Baczewski ’06, Benjamin Michael Cox ’06,Timothy Charles Reynolds ’06, Christopher Phillips Darland ’06, Matthew Ross Martin ’07, Kyle Robert Cuthbert ’08, Matthew Douglas McKinney ’06. Not pictured: Steven Louis Guy ’06, Nannaya Jampala ’06, David Barry Spunt ’07. Miami University Spring 2006 The Purple and Gold 7 Alpha Sigma Marks 150 Years Hosting Chi Psi’s 164th Convention The Sigma Symposium featured a number of prominent alumni speaking about their professions, including the dean of American sportswriters, Furman Bishop, Σ’38 (top), Alex Washburn, Σ’83, a principal with W Architecture in New York City, and Neel Latimore, Σ’83, former press secretary to Hillary Clinton. A lpha Sigma of Chi Psi, as part of its Sesquicentennial celebration (originally founded at the University of North Carolina in 1855), hosted Chi Psi’s 164th Annual Convention during the first week of August 2005 at Chapel Hill. Undergraduate and alumni delegates from across the country converged on one of the nation’s best college towns to forge and renew bonds of friendship far beyond their respective Alphas. The Spencer Institute sessions provided actives with a classroom environment to develop the tools necessary to effectively run their Alphas. Lead by volunteer alumni, sessions included risk management, financial training for #4s, leadership training for #1s, recruitment workshops, calendar planning, and much more. The Convention hosted a “Sigma Symposium” of excellent alumni speakers who shared their experiences and world-views with delegates and guests. Speakers included Richard Whisnant ’81, Alexandros Washburn ’83, Furman Bisher ’38, Tom Terrell ’79, Jim Medford ’67, Don Woodard ’79, Ali Farahnakian ’89, and Neel Lattimore ’83. The Educational Trust sponsored an awards reception at the Morehead State Dining Room, where Trust scholarship and fellowships were announced. After delegates had a chance to change clothes, the Chi Psi Games competitions took place at the intramural fields, and dinner was provided there by a well-known local barbeque establishment. Retiring Executive Council Chair Michael Hurst, ΤΔ’87, accepts an oversized gavel from new Council Chair Joe Devaney, Ρ’80, ΜΔ’99, and congratulations from #23 Sam Bessey, ΗΔ’97; #7 Dan Ahlberg, Ν’67, presents a scholarship to Aaron Eifler, ΕΔ’07; Representatives from Thayer, Founders and Goodbody finalist Alphas. 8 The Purple and Gold Spring 2006 164th Annual Convention (Perhaps it should be noted here that “barbeque” in the South generally refers to pulled pork from a slow-roasted pig – not charcoal-flamed hotdogs and hamburgers.) A scavenger hunt (documented not by collections of things but by photos from single-use cameras) acquainted delegates with more of the local area than they might have otherwise ventured into. Friday night was the celebration of Alpha Sigma’s Sesquicentennial with dinner and dancing on the grounds of the Lodge. The official program was short to allow for other activities, but the Distinguished Service Award was presented to Phil Smith, Sigma ’64. Music for the evening was provided by The Zookeepers, a band of Sigma alumni who first performed together in their undergraduate days. The Formal Convention Sessions were led excellently by #6 Charles Madison, Sigma ’84, at the UNC Student Union. All sessions ran smoothly with Charlie’s special light-hearted humor. A major topic of discussion during Convention was the possible elevation of the Rho Delta Colony to Alpha status. The gentlemen from Miami presented a compelling case to delegates in both formal sessions and informal gatherings. After the Council’s strong endorsement, the Convention ratified Alpha status in enthusiastic fashion. On Saturday, a memorial service was held at the Chapel honoring all Brothers who passed away this year. The Official Photo was taken on the steps of Wilson Library, then all processed to the Hill Alumni Center for the Final Banquet. It was a beautiful and spirited affair that capped a rewarding and fulfilling week. Singing has been stronger at some Banquets, but Philip Spencer, Maid of Chi Psi, The Banquet Song, and several collegiate fight songs were heard distinctly. The Banquet ended Convention with an enthusiastic closing gavel and a hearty rendition of Chi Psis Ever. ■ From top:Two break-outs of the Spencer Leadership Institute; Thursday evening’s barbeque/games; Donald Beeson Σ’82; Ryan Gardner Σ’07, Brad Beskin, Σ’05, Kurt Gilliland, Σ’92, and Ben Eisner, Σ’05; Linda Ahlberg, Jim Lazerus, ΣΔ’01, Dr. Dale Randall, ΣΔ’51, #7 Dr. Dan Ahlberg, Ν’67. Chapel Hill 2005 Spring 2006 The Purple and Gold 9 Rho Delta Colony #1, Jason Rarecha, ΡΔ’06, with his fellow colonists, making his case for elevating the group to Alpha status. Left: Most improved Alpha Pi Delta at North Carolina State with the Founders Trophy, posing with #7 Dan Ahlberg, Ν’67; Right: Chi Psi Educational Trust Vice Chair Bob Spindell, Ο’65, with Rutger’s Alpha Rho & their Goodbody Award for scholarship and educational programs. Left: Alpha Epsilon at Michigan accepts the Thayer Trophy from Joseph J. Devaney, Ρ’80, ΜΔ’99; Right: George Mason’s Travis Valentine, ΩΔ’05, accepts the 2005 Stanley Birge Award for most outstanding undergraduate Chi Psi. Also on stage are previous Birge recipients Sam Bessey, ΗΔ’97, Troy Ivey, ΙΔ’90,Tom Terrell, Σ’79, Sam Perkins, ΟΔ’80, Steve Starnes, ΕΔ’01, and Ryan Ahlberg, Ε’03. Current and former Central Office staff gathered for a group photo to be used in the new Chi Psi Story: Ryan Ahlberg, Ε’03, Jeffrey Andrews, ΠΔ’04, Todd Falls, ΤΔ’89, Steve Crow, Ε’79, ΑΔ’84, Kyle Moen, Ι’02, Preston Humphries, Β’03, Bill Hattendorf, ΑΔ’69, Σ’82, Brad Beskin, Σ’05, Sam Bessey, ΗΔ’97, Julian Emerson, Β’80, Nate Evans, Ε’01,Whitey Silverio, ΕΔ’71, Φ, Ψ, Joe Hughes, B’84, Ananda Ghosh, Σ’05, Bill Bode, ΘΔ’01, and Donald Beeson, Σ’82. 10 The Purple and Gold Spring 2006 164th Annual Convention DSAs Honor Sigma’s Strickland & Smith Philip L. Smith, Sigma ’64 John Strickland, Sigma ’65 DSA Citation XXV DSA Citation XXVI ohn was the first in the Strickland family to bypass the University of Michigan, looking to “set his own sail” not with maize and blue but with Carolina blue. At UNC the last thing he expected to do was join the fraternity of his brother – Paul Kent Strickland, Alpha Epsilon 1963 – but fate brought him and two of his fellow prep school classmates to the Lodge at 321 West Cameron. Brother Strickland has been continuously involved with Chi Psi and Alpha Sigma since his graduation, whether his banking career pulled him toward Chicago or New Jersey. He first became a director of the Sigma Corporation in 1969 serving as President of that board from the late 1970s into the ’80s, later becoming a Trustee of the Sigma Foundation. With frequent trips to the Chapel Hill Lodge, he has known every #1 and several Brothers of each Alpha Sigma class since 1964, and that list of Brothers now includes his son, Christopher, Alpha Sigma 2002. Even when John has not served the Alpha in an official capacity his influence is always felt. His advice and counsel has served countless numbers of alumni and undergraduates as they have worked for Alpha Sigma. Very little happens at Alpha Sigma without John having played some role. John’s expertise in numerous areas was put to good use on the National level when he served on the Chi Psi Executive Council and chaired several key committees during the late 1970s and early ’80s. Chi Psi is stronger for his thoughtful leadership, questioning concern and Brotherly care in all areas of the Fraternity. E xpecting to join another fraternity upon his arrival in Chapel Hill, Philip L. Smith was drawn instead to the Lodge, and Chi Psi and Phil Smith have both been enriched by the union. With his achievement-driven style, he seemed a natural leader at Sigma, and the Alpha chose him as both #1 and #4. By his senior year, Alpha Sigma took home both the Goodbody Award and the Thayer Trophy. After UNC and Harvard Business School, he ran his own successful business for many years as owner and president of Parnell-Smith, an automobile and truck parts distributor and service center. When Alpha Upsilon Delta was taking root at Wake Forest, Phil was one of the first to lend a hand – from helping with rush to serving on their new alumni board to recruiting other alumni to assist with the Colony and young Alpha. Back on his feet after a serious illness in the 1990s, he heeded the call to Ann Arbor to take on the job of Executive Director, enriching and protecting the Chi Psi family as advisor, leader and supporter. A long-time member of the Sigma Corporation, Brother Smith served as President from 1969-72, and he headed the Sigma Foundation from the late 1990s to 2003. He took an active role in three capital campaigns and has attended virtually every alumni weekend over the years. Very few Brothers have been as intimately involved in the shaping and influencing of as many aspects at Alpha Sigma as Brother Smith, and his wife, Virginia, has been a partner with him every step of the way. Brother Smith stands as proof that Chi Psi is not just for college years but for life. J The Official Photo of the 164th Annual Convention of Chi Psi Fraternity in Chapel Hill, North Carolina Chapel Hill 2005 Spring 2006 The Purple and Gold 11 This once lost photograph of the 1906 Convention in Detroit was found in an antique store, and the dealer acquired it in an estate sale. It is now in the possession of the Central Office thanks to Kurt Gilliland, Σ’92, and a little interfraternal cooperation. Alpha Psi Brothers (at sides of enlarged area at right) included Oliver LeRoy “Ducker” Schmuck ’07, from Hanover, Pennsylvania, and William “Billy” Holmes Nichols ’07, from Chicago, Illinois, who would perish later that year in the Alpha Psi Fire at Cornell. Lost 1906 Convention Photo Discovered Two Cornell Brothers who would perish in the December fire are pictured as delegates. T he alumnus advisor for Delta Kappa Epsilon at the University of North Carolina stumbled upon a piece of Chi Psi memorabilia in a local antique store. That advisor in turn contacted Chi Psi Executive Council member and Sigma Alumni Advisory Board President Kurt Gilliland, Σ’92. It is a framed and matted photograph of the attendees of the 65th Annual Convention of Chi Psi in Detroit in 1906. The following Alphas (seventeen of them) are represented by Alumni, undergraduates, or both (with number of attendees): Psi (5) Xi (1) Pi (2) Tau (1) Alpha Delta (1) Theta (4) Nu (1) Beta Delta (1) Alpha (1) Iota (1) Gamma Delta (1) Phi (3) Rho (1) Delta Delta (1) Epsilon (16) Epsilon Delta (3) Chi (5) 12 The Purple and Gold Spring 2006 A majority of the gentlemen in the photograph are undergraduates in the class of 1907, but there are alumni from as early as 1860 as well as various classes between 1870–1906, including future National Presidents John Wendell Anderson, Psi 1889, Epsilon 1890 (row 2, fifth from left) and Edward C. “Skipe” Swift, Epsilon 1876 (row 2, ninth from left). In the back row, fourth from left, is Malcolm D. Jeffrey, Theta 1906, an ancestor of recent #7 Malcolm D. “Jack” Jeffrey, Theta 1954. (There are eleven members of the Jeffrey clan who went to Williams and who became members of Chi Psi.) Five Alpha Psi Brothers made the trek to Detroit for Convention, including two who would perish in the Cornell Fire in December: Oliver LeRoy Schmuck, 1907. and William Holmes Nichols, 1907. ■ From the Archives IN THE E CHI PSI EY Eric Mangini Heads Jets Leaving mentor Bill Belichick’s Patriots to become the second Wesleyan Chi Psi NFL Head Coach E ric Mangini, Alpha ’92, became the youngest head coach in the NFL (and the secondyoungest ever in the NFL) when the Jets hired him in January, stealing him away from mentor and Chi Psi Fraternity Brother Bill Belichick, Alpha ’75, and the New England Patriots. The baby-faced Mangini, who turned 35 the same week, is the latest Belichick disciple to take over a team in the last year, joining Romeo Crennel, Charlie Weis and Nick Saban. Mangini spent ten of his eleven years working under Belichick, including the last six in New England. Not only have the Patriots won three Super Bowls, they have dominated their division rivals, winning six straight over the Jets. “They are the benchmark, but there's some things he realizes he'd do a little differently,” Jets general manager Terry Bradway said. “You get a guy from a successful program who knows how to win, your players are excited to see that.” The Jets can use all the insight into Belichick and the Patriots they can get. That might be one of the reasons they picked the former New England defensive coordinator to replace Herman Edwards. Now he must deal with the pressure of trying to be as good as his mentor while resurrecting a team following a 4-12 season. “I think the main qualities that made this job attractive to me were the commitment by the front office to winning and to building an organization for the long term,” Mangini said. “I look forward to building an organization that people can be proud of, one that's built with character, with toughness, and with discipline.” Belichick reportedly told Mangini not to take the job, knowing the task ahead: He was coach of the Jets for In the Chi Psi Eye a day before bolting for New England in 2000. In fact, the last four Jets coaches have left without being fired. “If you want to be the best you have to beat the best and if we can win this division, I think there's going to be some really good competition,” Mangini said. Eric Mangini's first job in the NFL consisted of handing out media notes in the press box and washing jockstraps. That was only a dozen years ago when he was a go-fer on Bill Belichick's staff in Cleveland. Born in Hartford, Eric received the Brian Piccolo Award for outstanding athletic and academic achievement and was named the Scholar Athlete of the Year as a senior at Bulkeley (Conn.) High. He became a Chi Psi at Wesleyan, where he was a political science major. Eric and his wife, Julie, have a son, Jake. Mangini is close friends with Jets assistant GM Mike Tannenbaum, who serves on the board of directors of Mangini's football camp/charitable foundation in Hartford, which raises money for children’s causes. But Mangini's football “Godfather” is Brother Bill Belichick, the man who has nurtured him. The Jets-Patriots Border War could become a tug of war. “Eric's done a great job for me,” Belichick said. “He's been an outstanding coach. I've been with him in three different organizations, and I have all the respect in the world for Eric. He worked his way from the most entry-level position to a place of great responsibility during several successful seasons,” Belichick said. “The opportunity Eric has earned is truly an example of good things happening to a good, hard-working person. I wish him well.” Except in the division, one would guess, where they must face each other twice a year. ■ Spring 2006 The Purple and Gold 13 IN THE E CHI PSI EY On the Road to Bagdad Notes from Bagdad By Lt. James A. Haltom, Sigma ’03 T he summer between my sophomore and junior year in college, in 2001, I joined Army ROTC at UNC. Starting late, I was behind in required classes, so I doubled up on those I had missed, starting three weeks before September 11th. Junior-year ROTC cadets sign a contract to become officers, so we were non-deployable until after graduation. As I worked toward a commission, I watched America roll to war. Upon graduation in Spring 2003, I was commissioned as a reserve officer in the National Guard where I would be a soldier one weekend a month, two weeks a year – or so I thought. I had also been accepted in Teach for America, a non-profit group that recruits non-education majors to teach in critical need areas of America for two years. I was placed in rural Mississippi, in a county with no stop lights in a self-segregated school system. The school was on the brink of being taken over by the state for low test performance and teacher turnover. I had my Guard unit changed to Mississippi. As I began to teach, I was overwhelmed with the poverty of rural Mississippi. The entire school qualified for free lunch, and many of my student's parents only had part-time, minimum wage jobs. I was challenged by a system that was really struggling. Most of my students wanted to learn, but their education system lacked proper tools, the home environment was less than perfect, and the community did not value education. I struggled to find a way to gain ground against the odds they faced. Yet, by Christmas, I felt my class was making gains. We were finding a way to bridge that educational gap. Then I got word that my Guard unit would be activated for Iraq and I would have to leave school in late March, six weeks before the end of the school year. For those remaining weeks, I devoted all my attention on being the best teacher I could be, but it was hard knowing what was ahead. In March 2004, I reported to Fort Knox, Kentucky, for the five-month Armor Officer Basic Course (AOBC). Our graduation there was bitter-sweet. We all knew we were heading to Iraq and would be responsible for leading soldiers. I had become good friends with fellow Lieutenant David Giamio. He would later be killed in Tikrit, Iraq, by a landmine while on patrol. After more schooling, more waiting, a Christmas leave, and a few days in Kuwait, I arrived in Iraq on 14 The Purple and Gold Spring 2006 January 14th to begin my year there – over a year since I found out I would be going to Iraq. My Battalion was placed in the city of Najaf, Iraq. Najaf at that time was being patrolled by a Marine unit and was very calm. While there had been a month-long fight between U.S. forces and insurgents in August, by January Najaf was a very safe city. For the next several weeks, the Marine unit we were replacing showed us the area and their systems; a sense of relief came over my unit as it appeared we would be in a relatively safe unit. However, as our Battalion took control from the Marines; word came down that our platoon needed to go further north to help a sister battalion that was about 20 miles south of Fallujah. My men were shocked. We began to leave on Valentines Day, but we were turned around just outside the gate. Postponed daily for two weeks, uncertainty wore on our nerves until word came. When we arrived at our new base, it seemed that this unit was expecting tanks to arrive (since we were tankers!), but our tanks had been left in Mississippi and were replaced with Armored Humvee gun trucks. After only a few days, our battalion conducted a battalion-size raid and my platoon was the lead element. Using the concealment of darkness, we entered a house for the first time expecting enemy contact. Fortunately we captured the targets with no shots fired. That would be the first of many raids we would do in the next weeks. For the next two months, my platoon went on daily missions, often two or three times a day. We conducted raids, cordons and searches, counter mortar patrols, route clearances, and convoy escorts to Baghdad and further north. We experienced our first Improvised Explosive Device (IED) attack. Toward late April, we were told to go back to our unit, but our return to Najaf would be short-lived, as our company almost immediately went further north to a base five miles outside of Fallujah in the Al Anbar providence within the area known as the triangle of death where many Americans had been killed. For more than three months my company patrolled the countryside southwest of Fallujah. While we thought our time at the other base had been hard, these next months proved to be even more difficult. We conducted more raids, found several large weapons cashes, and caught more insurgents. All three platoons in our comIn the Chi Psi Eye In his undergraduate days at the Lodge at UNC, Brother Halton was the recipient of the Robert Spearman Award, and he served as Pledge Educator, IFC Representative, and Lodge Manager. On Campus, he was President of the Order of the Old Well, VP for Public Affairs of the UNC System Association of Student Governments, on the Board of Directors for the Carolina Student Union, and Assistant Program Director for the North Carolina Renaissance Program. pany were hit by IEDs, but my platoon got the infamous title of "IED finder platoon" as we were hit by more. I worried every day about losing soldiers, but as the weeks rolled by, we managed no major injuries or loss of life. When I went home for a two week R&R (rest and relaxation) at the end of June, I was told my unit would move again before I returned. While I enjoyed being home with my family and friends, it was hard being there worrying about what I would return to. When I did return, to my surprise, my unit went back to the Najaf area; a different unit ended up going north instead of us. My men were relieved. For the next month, my company patrolled Najaf without incident. With about three months left in Iraq, my company was reassigned to Karbala, a city about 30 miles north of Najaf, which was under the same conditions as Najaf. Our primary mission was to secure the Iraqi JCC (joint command center) where the government controlled the providence of Karbala. My platoon provided security to U.S. forces operating within the compound. In addition, I was assigned as the security advisor to the city police department, a 5,000 strong unit. In the middle of December my Brigade began to rotate back home, a few weeks earlier than expected. I watched my men load up on helicopters. I was to stay with other officers to train our replacement unit until sometime after the New Year. On Christmas Day, however, I was told to get out. I was surprised. I quickly packed up and got on a chopper to begin my journey home. The call home on Christmas In the Chi Psi Eye day to let my family know I was coming home was amazing. I was flooded with emotion as I finished my tour and completed the journey I began two Christmases ago when I heard I would go to war. I arrived in the U.S. on 30 December and had a fourday leave for New Year's. I caught a ride from Mississippi to Atlanta and surprised my family on 31 December as I walked in the door for breakfast – two days since I left the middle east and three days since I last showered. They did not mind. The joy of my homecoming was indescribable. I spent quality time with my family and linked up with two Chi Psi Brothers for New Year's. Less than 48 hours earlier I had been in the Middle East, and on New Year’s Eve I was safe for the first time in a year. I was given the opportunity to continue my military training when I got home, and I am now at Fort Benning for the five-month Infantry Captain's Career Course to prepare for Company command. When the course is complete I will attend Ole’ Miss Law School. I cannot begin to express my appreciation for the Brothers of Chi Psi, who supported me with letters, emails and packages. Pledges I never even met sent me packages. Without brotherly support, a difficult year would have been even harder. I also have to thank my family. They are why I am in the military. I am so thankful for their love and support. And I must acknowledge the two dozen soldiers from my brigade who did not come home. Their sacrifice will always be remembered and their families held in my heart. ■ Spring 2006 The Purple and Gold 15 More Travels With Dr. Dan L ast summer’s issue of The Purple and Gold featured the travels of Chi Psi’s current #7 in a cover story. Dr. Dan Ahlberg, Nu ’67, has continued his journeys around the country for Chi Psi. After last summer’s 164th Convention in Chapel Hill (pages 8–11), his meanderings have included trips to the installation of our newest Alpha at Miami University in Ohio (cover story and pages 4-7), the joint board meetings in March in Nashville (top, on the General Jackson showboat), the fall Executive Council meeting at Lehigh University in Bethlehem (next from top), visiting with Alpha Zeta Delta in Champaign (at right), and the fall meeting of The Chi Psi Educational Trust in Chicago (at bottom). 16 The Purple and Gold Spring 2006 Travels with Dr. Dan Remember when you joined Chi Psi? Remember who introduced you to the Fraternity? Probably you can see his face and remember his name. What a difference he made in your life. Consider being that person for someone else. Introduce a young man to Chi Psi and make a difference in his life. Help Chi Psi create a life-long experience for someone you know. Make a recruitment recommendation today at [email protected] – or call 615-736-2520. Provide all the contact information you can (recruit’s name, class, phone, email, school info, and details about yourself too). Someone will be glad you did. And you will be too. Will you help keep your classmates in touch? H elp keep in touch with your Chi Psi Brothers. In spite of our best efforts, we lose track of too many Brothers over the course of their lives! We need your help to prevent this from happening. Consider volunteering to be a Class Agent (also known as the #27, or Corresponding Secretary). The primary objective of the Class Agent Program is to prevent losing track of our Brothers. The average American moves every five years – so 20% of a college’s or fraternity’s database changes every year. Many Brothers simply drift away and too often are not able to re-connect until it is too late. Our goal is to recruit class agents in each class year of each Alpha to remain in contact with Brothers as they journey through life in order to: • Keep track of every Brother • Maintain accurate records for address, phone, etc. • Keep Brothers informed about current events regarding the Alpha and National Fraternity • Keep Brothers more involved in our Fraternity and with each other Recruitment For the most recent classes this program is already underway because of the program announcement at the last Convention. In those cases, usually the Brother who served as #1 of his class will act as Agent for the class and contact each classmate annually to update the records. The #1s seem the best candidates from each class for the job, so we would first ask those Brothers to volunteer as Class Agents. If you served as #1 but think someone else might be a better candidate, please contact that Brother, or contact the Central Office to help you find him. The basic program would work like this: • In August the Class Agent would receive a class printout with each classmate’s most recent address, phone, e-mail, and other basic information. • The Class Agent attempts to reach every classmate by 31 December to collect and share news of the class, and he completes a contact form to help keep Central Office and Alpha alumni records up-to-date, etc. So, particularly if you were a #1, please contact the Central Office to volunteer or to ask questions at [email protected] or 615-736-2520. Spring 2006 The Purple and Gold 17 IN THE E CHI PSI EY Jonathan Reckford Heads Habitat From corporate leader to minister to director of Habitat for Humanity H abitat for Humanity International’s Board of Directors has named Jonathan T.M. Reckford, Sigma ’84, to serve as the global homebuilding ministry’s new chief executive officer. Brother Reckford served the last two years as executive pastor of Christ Presbyterian Church of Edina, Minnesota. Prior to that, he was president of stores for the Musicland division of Best Buy; senior vice president for Circuit City; and director of strategic planning for Disney Design and Development. “I believe passionately in Habitat’s mission and can’t think of a movement I would rather join,” said Reckford. Rey Ramsey, board chair for Habitat for Humanity International, said the board unanimously selected Reckford based upon his track record redirecting and leading complex organizations and for his personal commitment to serve the poor and forgotten. Former U.S. President Jimmy Carter, who served as honorary chair of Habitat’s succession planning task force, said, “Jonathan Reckford is a wonderful choice to become Habitat for Humanity’s new chief executive officer. His background in business will help Habitat navigate the economy and business climate, and his pastoral experiences will help him shepherd Habitat’s ministry and assure it continues to share and demonstrate Jesus’ teachings worldwide. I am delighted that Jonathan will lead Habitat forward in its mission to help bridge the housing divide between those who have everything and those who live in abject poverty. Rosalynn and I look forward to working with thousands of other volunteers to help assure the success of Habitat’s worldwide ministry under Jonathan Reckford’s leadership.” Reckford and his wife, Ashley, who is originally from Albany, Georgia, are longtime supporters of Habitat and have worked alongside Habitat partner families in building their homes. The change is a big one, Reckford said, but is a natural next step. “I have felt an increasing passion to serve more directly in heeding Christ’s call to serve the poor and forgotten,” he said. “My motivation is best summed up by the desire to live out the great commandment, expressed by Micah as a call to ‘act justly, love mercy and walk humbly with your God.’ ” [Micah 6:8] 18 The Purple and Gold Spring 2006 Jon grew up in Chapel Hill, although he prepped at St. Paul’s School in New Hampshire. He came home to Chapel Hill for college and was attracted to Chi Psi because of high school friends and because of his dad’s relationship with the Lodge. His father, Kenneth, was a classics professor at UNC and a favorite at the Lodge. Jon was particularly active on campus, and was an executive assistant to the student body president (Mike Vandenberg, Sigma ’82) as just a sophomore. He ran for SBP against another Brother, Kevin Monroe ’83, who won the election. (In this election both candidates and both campaign managers were Chi Psis. Jon’s campaign was managed by Neel Lattimore ’83, who was a speaker at the 2005 Convention – see page 8). Jon’s choices always seem to have reflected a mix of activities involving head, heart and helping hand. As part of a leadership development program as an undergraduate, he spent summers being introduced to a variety of careers and settings. One summer, he completed Outward Bound School, another summer he worked for a municipal police force, another he spent working with Pan American Airways. A fourth summer, he worked in the American Bar Association’s dispute resolution section and completed ABA mediation training. Reckford began his career as a financial analyst at Goldman, Sachs in New York in 1984. Regularly logging 80 hours a week at work, he found the position intellectually stimulating, but ultimately determined that investment banking was not the career he wanted to pursue. Perhaps the decision had to do with living in Times Square that year and walking by scores of street people on his way to the subway each morning. “The magnitude of the misery was overwhelming,” he recalls, particularly against the backdrop of the megadeals he was working on in the business world, and the lessons he had taken to heart growing up in a family long involved in justice issues and civil rights work. His parents were active in the civil rights struggle in North Carolina and his grandmother, the late New Jersey congresswoman Millicent Fenwick, was known for her commitment to justice issues, including the legislation that resulted in formation of the Helsinki Commission to monitor compliance with the accord on human rights. In the Chi Psi Eye Clockwise from top left: 1. Jonathan T.M. Reckford, Sigma ’84, is introduced as the new CEO of Habitat for Humanity International. 2. It didn’t take long for the new CEO to get on a housebuilding site. 2nd from right in blue shirt, he helps raise the walls on Habitat’s 200,000th house (in Knoxville). 3. Reckford with his wife, Ashley (a ΚΔ at UNC), and their children Grace, Lily, and Alexander. Ashley is from Albany, Georgia, just 35 miles from Americus, where Habitat was founded and is headquartered. 4. At a house dedication in Thailand. Not sure what his next career step should be, but sensing the need to get perspective, Reckford accepted a Henry Luce Foundation Scholarship to live and work for a year in Asia. With that, he traveled to Korea to work with the Olympic Organizing Committee, working on marketing sponsorships, coaching the Korean national rowing team, and living in the Olympic village with 300 Korean coaches and athletes. It was, says Reckford, “an immersion experience in international living.” It also was during that year that his serious faith journey began, as he met weekly with a Baptist minister friend to explore issues of faith “walking through the Bible,” an exploration that led to a decision to begin a personal relationship with Jesus Christ. After his Olympic duties and an eye-opening, threemonth journey through Southeast Asia, he returned to the U.S. and earned his MBA at Stanford with a certificate in public and nonprofit management. Here, a professor’s words struck home with him: “The same skills that will make you a success in the for-profit world also are desperately needed in the not-for-profit world.” Then Jon joined Marriott’s corporate strategy group in Washington, D.C., where his soon-to-be fiancée, Ashley, was practicing law. Friends from undergraduate days in North Carolina, they had stayed in touch during In the Chi Psi Eye his various moves and while she attended law school at the University of Georgia. After getting married, Reckford’s next career stop was Walt Disney Design and Development, in Orlando, Florida. In 1995, he joined Circuit City Stores as vice president, earning a promotion to senior vice president for corporate planning and communications in 1997. In 1999, he was recruited to become president of stores for Musicland Group, where he led 1,330 Sam Goody, Media Play and other stores, delivering $1.9 billion in sales and record earnings. He helped lead them through the transition when they were acquired by Best Buy. By then, he began thinking it might be time to take what he had learned in the business world to the not-for-profit world. His response included a mission trip to India, a journey that reignited his passion for social justice work. Active in local faith communities wherever he had lived, he prayed and went through a period of discernment about what he should be doing next in life. Eventually, his volunteer service turned into full-time ministry as executive pastor of a 4,300-member church, leading a ministry with a 70-member staff. As much as he has enjoyed and been challenged by his work with the church, he says, “God has this way of showing up at unexpected times with surprises.” This time, the surprise was a call informing him of Habitat for Humanity’s search for a CEO. A longtime admirer of Habitat’s “hand up rather than a handout” in helping low-income families build and buy homes – an “empowering approach to ministry” – Reckford believed that the organization was a good fit with his personal faith and values, and that his business career had honed the skills needed to lead a nonprofit with excellence. He was unanimously elected chief executive officer by the International Board in August. “The chance to serve Habitat combines many of the things I am most passionate about, with the potential to put my skills and gifts to use for a greater purpose,” said Reckford. “This is the kind of role I have been preparing for my entire life.” ■ Spring 2006 The Purple and Gold 19 C ornelius A. “Neil” Barnett, Epsilon ’57, wrote to #23 Sam Bessey, “It was very inspiring to read about the latest scholarship recipients. I was one of those recipients way back in 1958. Those funds were critical in allowing me to study for a Michigan MBA to go with my engineering degree. A successful career at Procter & Gamble was made possible because I had both. I've tried to be a loyal contributor to the Trust, so that young Brothers can benefit as I did. Even before the scholarship, the Brothers in Alpha Epsilon were very important to my college experience. Several of us have stayed close after graduation, even though we live all over the country. Most years, thanks to John Edleman's organizing, we get together for a dinner after the homecoming game in Ann Arbor. I was pleased to read that the Epsilon initiation banquet [as featured in the Spring ’04 issue of the P&G] continues to be a first class event. I was prompted to look through some old photographs. As #1, I was seated at the head table at the Detroit Athletic Club. The alum sitting at my right was Morris Taylor. During dinner he asked me if I'd ever heard of Dr. Ted Barnett, a graduate of the U of M Medical school. He had served with him in Europe as a member of the Red Cross in 1920. Ted Barnett was my father, who died when I was just two years of age! You can imagine how much it meant to me to have him recall the experiences they had over a two year period. I've attached the two photos I found. You'll recognize Slip Slifer, at least. My wife and I will be in Ann Arbor for Homecoming, and many of the class of 1957 should also be there as well. ■ On the ski slopes at Aspen are (l-r) Central Office Staffer Kyle Moen, I’02; former Alpha Delta #1 Mike Owen, ΑΔ’00, and his wife, Caren; and Julian B. Emerson, B’80, new Educational Trust Chair and Chair of the 165th Convention this summer at Columbia. 20 The Purple and Gold Spring 2006 Checking the press run on the new edition of The Chi Psi Story at The Watkins Printing Company in Columbus, Ohio, are former editor of The Purple and Gold and company representative Bill Green, ΜΔ’95, and current editor of the magazine and of The Chi Psi Story Bill Hattendorf, ΑΔ’69, Σ’82.The new books have been distributed to all undergraduate Chi Psis. For information on ordering your own copy, see the back cover of this issue. In the Chi Psi Eye I n earlier days of the fraternity movement, most pins and badges were created by local jewelers to order. Quality and consistency became a concern, so most fraternity jewelry of the last century has been produced by larger producers, with the business consolidating into just a few well-known brands. Chi Psi moved to a single jeweler 100 years ago, in 1906. Dr. John Austell, Beta ’61, took a very old-fashioned approach recently to create a new Badge for himself. Dr. Austell, who had retired and moved from the Atlanta area where he was campus Dr. John Austell, Beta 1961, and his Chi Psi jewelry dean of a two-year college, approached a local jeweler near Columbia in Lexington, SC. He brought with him gold coins that had been kept in a safe deposit box and almost never viewed. In order to get something “useful” out of the coins, they were melted down and cast into the badge using the “lost wax” method, and the badge was hand engraved. The 24KT gold was alloyed with another metal to make the final product more durable and the end product is 22KT gold. The jewels are from a family heirloom pin giving the badge instant sentimental as well as intrinsic value. Brother Austell received his BS in biology and his Master’s in biochemistry from the University of South Carolina, and then his PhD from Florida State. A career in education followed active duty in the Army Medical Service Corps. He retired from the military as a Lt. Colonel and as Executive Officer of a 750 bed Army hospital unit. He taught in USC’s Biology Department for ten years before moving to Atlanta. As an undergraduate, John held several offices at Beta including the position of #1 and was very active in other university organizations. After graduation, he served as Corporation president for many years, and later he served as faculty advisor. He is presently a Board member of the Beta Corporation and the Beta Foundation and has become active again in fraternity affairs after returning to Columbia. ■ D-Day Plus Sixty: Additional Stories from Our Own Greatest Generation Bomber Talk D avid B. Magee, Kappa Delta ’49: I really hesitate to write of my experiences as a bombardier, as I never went overseas and would not wish to compare myself with so many great war heroes. However, I did have some interesting experiences while in training. I went to bombardier school in Big Spring, Texas. I was making my bomb run at a target in the desert. I dropped the bomb and was looking through the bombsight to watch the impact. To my absolute horror, a huge American Airlines DC4 Flagship flew right over my target. Fortunately, the plane flew by after my bomb was dropped. Obviously, the pilot was off-course and in a restricted area, but for a few moments I thought I would need a change of underwear. At a later date, I was stationed at Westover Field in Massachusetts, training in B-24s. Toward the end of that training period, I had to drop a few bombs to fill out my quota of ten I think. I dropped the ten bombs and told the pilot that I was finished. I then remembered that the ground crew loaded 20 bombs before takeoff. I tried to close the bomb-bay doors, but they would not close. The cotter-pins in the bombs had to be replaced before landing. I did not wish to climb out onto that narrow catwalk, nor did I feel I could order one of the gunners to do so. I had shut down the bombsight and told the pilot that I would drop them visually In the Chi Psi Eye into the Quabbin Reservoir, which we used as a practice range. We did so, but to my horror I realized that I had missed the reservoir, and had actually bombed Amherst, Massachusetts, by mistake. Fortunately, all we hit was a dirt road! Perhaps you are familiar with the poem “High Flight,” written by my elder brother Pilot-Officer John Gillespie Magee Jr. shortly before his death in his Spitfire in December 1941. (DBM – Rye, New York) War in the China-Busma-India Theater J ohn Clark Alberts, Pi ’44: It’s nice to know that someone acknowledges that we did fight a war in “CBI” – ChinaBurma-India. The WWII issue of The P&G (Summer 2004) carried a story referring to this forgotten theater. I flew 106 trips over “The Hump” to Burma in C-A6s (actually, that’s 212 trips, since you have to come back) and several months with CBI Jungle Rescue in B-25s. Generally when I mention it, it takes too long to explain as it seems few have heard of us and our enemy, weather, logistical problems, and forgotten-man troubles. Then we were assigned to the Army of occupation in Bavaria. (JCA – North Barrington, Illinois) (Other WWII stories were featured in the Summer 2004 issue of The Purple and Gold.) Spring 2006 The Purple and Gold 21 The Great Earthquake 100 Years Ago, the Great Earthquake destroyed the Lodge and much of Stanford. Reported for The Purple and Gold of May 1906 by Ernest N. Smith, ΓΔ’09 O n the morning of 18 April, the peninsula upon which Stanford University and San Francisco is situated was visited by one of the most disastrous earthquakes of modern times. In the twinkling of an eye, buildings which had taken years to erect were spread upon the ground; work which was the result of the labors of a lifetime were demolished beyond replacement. San Francisco suffered more by the fire than by the earthquake, but it was the latter which caused the demolition of our grandest buildings at Stanford, and turned a university, which seemed about to enter upon a new era of usefulness and prosperity back in its course at least seven years. You who have spent four years at your college, or you who are still undergraduates, you who have fought for your chosen college, and you who have glorified in the achievements of your Alma Mater can realize what a feeling comes over one who goes to sleep at night and rises in the morning to find a large part of his university in ruins. But there was even more to mourn over. For years Stanford men and women had looked forward to the time when the construction of the university would be finished and would be a fitting monument to the cause of education and to the memory of the founders. That dream seemed about to be realized. Another year would probably have seen them opened. And then came the catastrophe which brought all to a standstill. Our Lodge was the only house on campus which was wrecked beyond repair, but all were damaged. It is almost a miracle that no Brother was hurt, although some narrowly escaped being hit by falling chimneys. The first shock came shortly after five o’clock in the morning. There was a sudden grinding and rumbling, and the house seemed to roll as though laboring in a heavy sea. Brothers who jumped from their beds at the first tremble were thrown to the floor. With the listing of the building the doors jammed, and it was necessary to break some down to get into the halls. Two of the Brothers did not wait but jumped from the second story windows, landing on the grass uninjured. The rest of us fell and ran down stairs. The front door was jammed, so we broke two plate glass windows and jumped to safety. For a few moments there was terror and consternation. 22 The Purple and Gold Spring 2006 House after house belched forth its frightened occupants who stood huddled in the streets momentarily expecting another shock. Then the cry went up, “The chapel has fallen!” Hurrying into the house for clothes we were soon on our way to the Quad in company with hundreds of others. The view was a never-to-be-forgotten one. The ruins of the Memorial church lay before us. The huge spire containing the clock and chimes had pitched forward into the inner quadrangle, the transepts had folded and dropped into the interior. Behind the church lay the huge smokestack of the engineering buildings and a group of students were feverishly digging the ruins. After an hour’s search they came to the mangled body of the night engineer who lost his life in an attempt to turn off the steam and electricity. Going around to the front of the Quad we saw the Memorial Arch. The top had fallen off and crashed to the pavement below and a crack extended down one end nearly to the base. On the right of the Quad lay the ruins of the new library, and further on the ruins of the new gymnasium, which when completed would have been one of the finest in the United States. At Encina Hall, the men’s dormitory, the excitement was intense. This great building held over three hundred students and all succeeded in getting out safely but about a dozen. These had been caught under one of the largest chimneys which fell through four floors to the basement. It was the work of but a few minutes to organize relief gangs to help those imprisoned. Hundreds of students swarmed into the wreckage until it was necessary to rope off a space and work with some degree of order. For over two hours the work went on until all had been rescued save one. He was at the very bottom of the heap and was mangled beyond recognition. He was a sophomore and working his way through college. The four classes promptly raised enough money to send his body home accompanied by one of his classmates. As our Lodge was a wreck and unsafe to live in, we received many offers of help from other fraternities, most of whom offered to take us in temporarily. We declined these offers with thanks and set about constructing a new Chi Psi Lodge in a corner of the tennis court. It was made of canvas and had but two rooms, but we were very From the Archives After the Great Earthquake – Top: The temporary Gamma Delta Lodge; Bottom: Memorial Arch, inside the old Lodge, and the ruined Chapel comfortable and had no cause to complain when we considered the plight of many others. This camp was maintained for over a week, until it was learned that college was definitely closed for the semester. Meanwhile, after fear of further shocks had subsided, we ventured into the building and removed all undamaged furniture and the piano, storing it nearby. Pictures can give but a little idea of the damage which we received. The Lodge was dropped six feet from its foundations and twisted to one side at least four feet. The interior was completely wrecked, as can be seen in one of the pictures. There is nothing left but the shell of a house, and that would fall with another good shake. It is impossible at present writing to say what we will do for a Lodge next year. Contractors who examined the building say it will be almost impossible to put it back in place again, and if it could be done it would cost as much as it would to build a new house. We hope to rent a house on the campus for next semester at least. The Great Earthquake College will be open for fall term the latter part of August. The loss has been a great one for the university, but the majority of the instruction buildings have not been badly damaged and can be repaired probably during summer. The Chapel will never be rebuilt according to original plans, and it is likely that the Memorial Arch will be reduced in size. There will be less ornamental work about the college hereafter, but all efforts will be towards making a solid, well-constructed set of buildings. Every student is anxious to return next year. There is a determination shown on all sides to stick with the university no matter what happens. We are not ruined. The work of reconstruction has already begun. It is a terrible disappointment to see one’s university set back years, but the blow given was not a fatal one. Stanford spirit has helped us in lesser difficulties. It is helping us now, and the college will take up its work next September with renewed energy, and continue to give instruction and enlightenment to all who may step within its doors. ■ Spring 2006 The Purple and Gold 23 IN MEMORIAM Brother, Thou hast kept the trust, True to thy fraternal tie; Sweet be thy repose in dust, Mourned and loved by all Chi Psi. Grant him, Lord, eternal rest, With the spirits of the blest. ALPHA THETA WILLIAMS COLLEGE John C. Clifford ’50 died on 5 Dec 01. A graduate of the Blake School and Williams, he was a member of the Air National Guard and the Minikahda Club. He is survived by his wife of 51 years, Bette, two sons, two grandchildren, a brother, a sister, and other relatives. John S. Osborne Jr. ’63, of Salisbury, CT, died 1 Dec 04. He was a senior law partner at Watson, Farley & Williams. He was captain of the Williams track team. He spent two years in the Peace Corps in Liberia and received a law degree from Michigan in 1968. He belonged to the Ephraim Williams Society. He is survived by his wife, Pamela, a daughter, and a brother. ALPHA ETA BOWDOIN COLLEGE William V. Copeland ’33 died on 1 Sept 04 in Orlando, FL. After Bowdoin, he was in the insurance business for many years, managing the Providence office of Liberty Mutual. During WWII, he served in the U.S. Navy, attaining the rank of lieutenant junior grade. After the war, he was a member of the Pawtucket Naval Reserve Unit. He served as president of the Lincoln Country Club while in Rhode Island. He moved to Florida in 2000. He was married in 1937 to Imelda Gauvin, who died in 1988, and they had a son, Loren. James Donald Crowell ’35 died on 10 Feb 05 at Hilton Head Island, SC. Originally from Glen Ridge, NJ, after Bowdoin he did graduate work in business, mathematics and statistics while serving as a clerk with the Commercial Investment Trust in NYC. In 1937, he became an actuarial assistant with the Colonial Life Insurance Co. in Jersey City. During WWII, he served in the U.S. Army, becoming a first lieutenant. After the war, he became an actuarial assistant with the Veterans Administration in Washington, DC., and from 1951 to 1971, he was an actuary with the U.S. Department of Labor. Following retirement in 1971, he moved to Hilton Head Island. He was married in 1943 to Elizabeth Selby, who died in 1963. James Roland Alexander Melville ’36 died on 27 June 04 in Fayetteville, NC. Born in NYC, he prepped at Augusta Military Academy in Virginia. He was a grant engineer with IngersollRand in Philipsberg, NJ. He moved to Florida in 1975, and then to North Carolina in 1990. Kenneth Nettleton Birket ’39 died in Lancaster, PA, on 20 Jun 05. He was a captain in the Army Air Corp during WWII. He held positions with the George B. Hanlow Co., the Boston & Maine Railroad, and Norfolk County Trust, and then taught at Bryant and Stratton Junior College, in the Dedham (MA) public schools, and at the Boston Center for adult education with the Veterans Adm. He retired in 1978. He was married in 1943 to Margaret Reed, who died in 1994. He is survived by a daughter, 3 sons, a brother, a sister, and six grandchildren. William Henry Bledsoe ’39 died on 3 April 03 in Cagnes sur Mer, France. He prepped at Gloversvile HS and Phillips Exeter before Bowdoin, and received an MA in European history from Harvard in 1940. During WWII, he was a sergeant in the Army and then an agent in the Counter-Intelligence Corps. After the war, he worked in Paris at the Radiodiffusion Corp. and then became chief of the North American Service of the French Broadcasting System in Paris. He later joined Pan American World Airways where he was a senior flight control agent. Survivors include a sister and a sister-in-law. Robert Edward Foley ’39 died in Sparks, NV, on 1 August 03. He was born in Boston and attended Newton High School. During WWII, he served in the U.S. Army attaining the rank of captain. After the war, he was manager of Produc-Trol Company of Philadelphia. Peter Frederick Wulfing ’39 died in Silvis, IL, on 22 Jan 03. Born in St. Louis, he prepped at St. Louis Country Day. Following Bowdoin, he attended Harvard Business School, and then became an accountant with Airpath Instrument 24 The Purple and Gold Spring 2006 We appreciate receiving full obituary notices and pictures to share in The Purple and Gold, and we will print as space allows. Obituaries received too late for this issue will appear in the next edition. Co. before serving as a private in WWII. He joined the St. Louis Gear Company in 1945 and became its president in 1948. The company moved to Keokuk, IA, in 1962. In 1971, he married Molly Matlock. He is survived by his wife, two sons, a daughter, and a number of other relatives. Harry Heath Baldwin III ’40 died 7 Jan 05 in Lexington, MA. Following graduation from Bowdoin, he was a messenger with Merchants National Bank in Boston, and then served as a corporal with the Army Air Force in WWII. He then returned to the bank (which became New England Merchants National Bank), received a degree from the Graduate School of Banking at Rutgers, and was VP of the bank until he retired in 1982. He was president of the Boston chapter of the American Inst. of Banking and the Bank Officers Assn. of Boston, was trustee of the Symmes Arlington Hospital and the Mass. 4-H Foundation, director of the Boston YMCU and the Nat’l Municipal Finance Officers Assn. of the US and Canada. He chaired the Arlington Trust Fund Commission and the First Parish Unitarian Church Standing Committee. He was the Bowdoin 1940 Class Agent from 1986 to 2004. Survivors include his wife of 62 years, Eleanor, two sons, two daughters, six grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. Russell Lee Christopher ’46 died on 20 Nov 05 in San Benito, TX. In WWII he received a Purple Heart and three Bronze Stars. After Bowdoin he graduated from UMaryland’s School of Medicine and went into private practice and was school physician in Hinsdale, MA. He joined the staff of Austin Riggs Center in Stockbridge, and graduated from the Houston State Psychiatric Institute. Returning to Mass., he had a private practice in adult and child psychiatry until retiring in 1987. He was a member of the Lower Adirondack Regional Arts Council, the North Country Arts Council, and the Harlingen Art Forum. Survivors include his wife, Nancy, a son, two daughters, four stepchildren, and twelve grandchildren. David Merton Towle ’46 died on 9 Dec 04. He served in the Army in WWII, and graduated cum laude from Bowdoin as a member of Phi Beta Kappa. After working in his father’s lum- In Memoriam A Tribute to the Former Chair of The Chi Psi Educational Trust Peter H. Schenck, ΕΔ’59 ormer Chi Psi Educational Trust Chair Peter H. Schenck, Epsilon Delta ’59, died suddenly of natural causes on Saturday 24 September. As an undergraduate at Northwestern, Pete was elected #1 and #4 of Alpha Epsilon Delta. He was a longtime member of the Alpha’s Alumni Corporation and served as president in the 1980s. Pete served two separate six-year terms on The Chi Psi Educational Trust and was Chair during his last three years on the board. Pete received Chi Psi’s 115th Distinguished Service Award in 2000. The DSA citation stated “Peter Schenck embodies the best qualities of Chi Psi.” That was certainly true. Pete and his wife, Ann, were regular attendees at Chi Psi functions for many years. Peter Schenck was born in Bryn Mawr, PA, and the family moved to Hinsdale, Illinois during WWII. After attending Hinsdale Township High School, he graduated from the Lawrenceville School in New Jersey. He attended Princeton University and Elmhurst College before entering the U.S. Army in 1955. After his discharge, he enrolled at Northwestern University, earning a bachelor’s degree in business in 1960. At Northwestern, he joined Alpha Epsilon Delta of Chi Psi. His career was spent entirely in the textile industry, starting at Johnson & Johnson in 1960. He retired in 2000 after 22 years at Quick Service Textiles Inc. of Chicago, where he was V.P./Merchandise Manager. Peter was an active member of Community Presbyterian Church in Clarendon Hills, serving as a deacon, an elder and chairman of the stewardship committee. Proud of his Dutch heritage, he was also active in the Holland Society of New York, serving as president of its midwest branch. He was also a longtime member of Ruth Lake Country Club in Hinsdale. Peter, Ann and their family loved to travel, watch Cubs and Sox baseball, and most of all, play golf. In addition to his beloved wife, Ann, he is also survived by five children, a sister, six grandchildren, and other relatives. At the memorial service for Peter Schenck, Dr. Ralph N. “Whitey” Silverio, ΕΔ’71, spoke about his Northwestern Brother: F G ood Morning. My name is Ralph “Whitey” Silverio and I am a longtime friend and Brother of Peter Schenck through his association with Chi Psi Fraternity. It is on behalf of the twenty-five thousand Brothers of Chi Psi that I offer our deepest sympathy to Peter’s wife, Ann, and to his entire family. And, I would like to thank the family for allowing me to share with you, in brief remembrance, this very important part of Pete’s life. It may strike some of you as a bit out of character for Pete to have devoted himself to something like a college fraternity. We know that Pete was not a frivolous person, nor was he outrageous or undignified in behavior. Unfortunately, the current negative image regarding fraternities is imbedded within the In Memoriam conventional wisdom. I can assure you however, that when Peter Schenck pledged Chi Psi, verging on a half century ago, Chi Psi’s purpose was then – as it is now – the establishment of elevated and refined friendships. This may sound a bit high minded to some, and I’m not suggesting that Chi Psis, during Pete’s undergraduate days, or in the present, do not like to have fun. Peter liked to have fun; he was fun to be around. And, if heaven didn’t know that – it knows that now. But, Peter approached fun, like he approached everything else in life, with propriety, balance and perspective. Perhaps this is best expressed by those glorious words in scripture “To everything there is a season, and a time to every purpose under heaven.” Peter understood that there was a time to enjoy all that life has to offer and a time to offer life what all can enjoy. As a parallel to the old sports adage that “athletics instill character,” Pete was always effusive about what Chi Psi instilled in him – leadership qualities, what is meant to be a gentleman, what it took to be a productive member of society. Personally, I subscribe to a variation on that old adage that “athletics brings out or inspires character.” Chi Psi was in the right place, at the right time with the right message, to help polish and refine qualities of character that were already there. Pete was always willing to learn, to adjust, to grow. That was true with Chi Psi as it was for his work, his family, his faith. He had that great habit of making the good things part of his being, and in turn, make us better for it. The idea of an elevated and refined friendship appealed to Peter and it became a central part of him – the way he thought, the way he felt, the way he acted -- and most certainly our Fraternity has been better for it. Pete’s involvement was both on a national level and with his chapter at Northwestern, and it extended over six decades. To give you an idea of what Peter meant to his Fraternity, I share with you that in the 165-year history of Chi Psi, with better than seventy thousand Brothers participating in that history, the Fraternity has recognized only 122 men with its highest award. Peter Schenck is one of them. You probably realize by now that I would canonize Peter if I could. But, there is only one St. Peter and he has that very large church named after him, and besides Peter Schenck did have a bit of an ego. Those of you who have played golf with him probably know that. I know it because for years Peter and I would have lunch and always at Red Kerr’s downtown. Some of you may remember Johnny “Red” Kerr as a very fine pro basketball player of the 50’s, who also happened to be 6’6 with red hair. I always wondered why Pete insisted that we go there – but since he always broke for lunch – I didn’t argue! (What are Brothers for!!!) It was revealed to me one day as we were walking out of the restaurant. As we passed I noticed a gentleman point to Pete and whisper to a colleague – “That’s Red Kerr.” When we got outside I said to Former Educational Trust Chair Peter Schenck, ΕΔ’59, with his wife, Ann, at a Chi Psi Convention Banquet Pete, “There are people in there who think that you are Red Kerr.” He said with a wry smile, “I know.” I must pay tribute to Peter’s wife, Ann. Because, like everything else in Peter’s life, she was very much a part of his Chi Psi experience. In fact to this day, I think Ann knows more about the Fraternity than he did. In deference to their love of baseball, I like to refer to Pete and Ann as Chi Psi’s hall of fame, double play combination. For Ann supported Peter in all things just as he supported her in the two or three thousand organizations that she has been involved with Like a great double play combination -they made things happen. For me, the epitome of their Chi Psi involvement was their participation in the campaign for a new home for the fraternity at Northwestern. They made a wonderful gift to the project even before there were architectural plans. Then Ann asked what was to become of the library in the old home that was named after one of Peter’s Brother’s who had died of cancer shortly after graduation. No plans had been arranged, but Peter and Ann determined that the memory of Brother Edward Menke would be preserved in Chi Psi’s new home – and they made an extraordinary gift to make that happen. I cannot think of more words that can say more about two people who have devoted their lives to faith, family and friendship. So, allow me to borrow words from St. Paul, which forms the basis for Peter Schenck’s Alma Mater, because I believe they describe our friend and Brother so directly: What so ever things are true What so ever things are honorable What so ever things are pure What so ever things are lovely What so ever things are gracious If there be any excellence If there be anything worthy of praise Think on these things Whatever you have learned and received and heard and seen in me, do And the God of peace will be with you. Spring 2006 The Purple and Gold 25 ber business for a year, he earned a master of science degree and a doctor of philosophy degree in physics. He joined MIT as a scientist for 38 years until he retired in 1991. His research on radar and defense systems took him to the Pacific islands, the summit of Mount Washington, and many other locations. He was a member of the American Geological Union and a life member of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers. He was a member of the Appalachian Mountain Club and the Action Congregational Church. Survivors include his wife of 57 years, Shirley, a sister, and two brothers. John Edwin Davin ’49 died on 27 Aug 05 in Irvington, NY. Born in Dublin, Ireland, he prepped at the Newton School in South Windham, VT. He attended Bowdoin before and after his service in the Navy. He became a travel consultant with the Automobile Club of New York. During his 43 years with that organization, he held a number of important positions. He continued his education at New York University and the City College of New York. He retired in 1992 as director of travel for the Automobile Club of New York. He is survived by his wife, Lillian Sydnor Davin, whom he married in 1982, a daughter, and a grandson. Henry Francis Daley Jr. ’51 died on 4 Apr 05 in Canton, MA. He was a staff sergeant during WWII. After Bowdoin, he taught math and coached football at Rockland High in Maine for two years. He then joined Liberty Mutual Insurance, where he became chief underwriter of casualty insurance. He was president of Mutual Underwriters Assn. of New England, was a member of Northeastern School of Insurance advisory board, and was a parish council member at St. Mary of the Hills Church, where he sang in the choir for more than 40 years. He was honored for his service by his church and by the town of Milton (MA), where he coached a youth hockey league team. Survivors include his wife, Catherine, a daughter, a brother, three sisters, and three grandchildren. Lawrence M. Boyle ’53 died on 4 Apr 05 in Ft. Myers Beach, FL. After graduation from Bowdoin, he served in the Army for two years, becoming a first lieutenant. He worked for two years with Goodyear Tire and Rubber in Boston before joining the faculty of Deerfield Academy to teach Latin and coach, and eventually serve as assistant admissions director. He received a Fulbright grant to attend a classics seminar in Rome, and he received a master of arts degree from Trinity College. He is survived by his wife, Hannas, whom he married in 1964. Robert Knute Gustav Arwezon Jr. ’53 died on 22 Feb 05 in Anchorage, AK. After Tilton School, Bowdoin, and the Army, he worked in oil company marketing in Rhode Island and New Jersey. From 1965-71, he bred and raced sled dogs in Alaska. Entering the real estate profession in 1967, he was president of the A Tribute to Former Council Member BJ Eswein, ΔΔ’73 I can remember where I was and what I was doing when I met Jim Eswein. It was the Summer of 1971 after my freshman year at Cal. Jim was transferring from U of Washington and had lived in the Chi Psi Lodge up there. I was living at the Berkeley Lodge that summer, organizing Rush when Jim came by. We hit it off immediately due to our common backgrounds of growing up on the Peninsula. That friendship, begun over 34 years ago, has continued ever since. I last spoke with Jim two days before his fatal tumor episode. I had recruited Jim after his January 2004 kidney cancer operation to help the Berkeley alumni purchase that Lodge from the National. For the last 18 months, Jim was a vigilant and instrumental ally on a mission to help us achieve our goal. On that Sunday we spoke for about forty-five minutes on the fraternity issues and people involved, then discussed his recent trip to DC to watch his beloved New York Mets lose to the lowly Washington Nationals, then discussed his kids and life’s normal issues. We parted by saying that we would contact each other as soon as we heard from the National guys regarding our recently submitted proposal to buy the building. That follow-up call was never made. Over 34 years I shared many experiences with Jim, Bruce, BJ, Bruce James, or whatever we called him. As Jim and I finished grad school in 1977 and I returned to the Bay Area, we became actively involved in the Delta Delta Alumni B.J. Eswein, ΔΔ’73, at a long-ago Convention Corporation. Jim became President and I Treasurer. In the summer of 1979 we traveled to Ann Arbor for Convention, and crafted a deal to purchase the building at that time. That deal, though incomplete, lasted for over ten years. Jim and I worked closely on fraternity matters from 1977-1983 as advisors to the students, coordinators of alumni activities and liaison with the National. Jim held several volunteer positions with the National for over 15 years. I was best man at Jim’s wedding and he attended my wedding. When he moved to NYC in the mid-’80s, we lost immediate contact but stayed close. With the advent of the Internet we were often in contact. Jim was an avid baseball fan taking his kids not just to NY Mets games, but to All-Star games all around the country including Seattle, 26 The Purple and Gold Spring 2006 Anchorage Board of Realtors and a director and treasurer of the Alaska Association of Realtors. He served on several Anchorage committees and task forces regarding wetlands and coastal management. He served as president of the Southern Alaska Advisory Council and was honored as Anchorage Realtor of the Year in 1974 and 1984 and was State Realtor of the Year in 1984. Survivors include his wife, Alice, and a sister. William Weston Fisher Jr. ’54 died on 1 Dec 05. He prepped at the Kingswood School in West Hartford. Following Bowdoin, he served in the U.S. Navy for twwo years, and then did graduate work at Yale, completing his MA in 1958. He studied law at Michigan Law School, receiving his JD in 1960. After being an associate with Robinson & Cole in Hartford, he joined the Travelers Insurance Co., where he became head counsel. From 1975 to 1985, he chaired Small Craft, Inc., designing and building rowing shells with his co-owner and son, Jonathan. In 1985, he returned to the practice of law, specializing in criminal defense. He served as town attorney for Granby, CT, and as chair of the Granby Chapter of the American Red Cross, was a member of the Granby Tennis Club, and served as Commodore of the Groton (CT) Long Point Yacht Club. He is survived by his wife of 53 years, Louise, two sons, a daughter, a sister, and four grandchildren. Richard Sheldon Farr ’63 died on 16 Dec 03 Chicago and elsewhere. I know his kids enjoyed every game, win or lose. In fact, in 1995 he brought Tom and Liz out to LA for a DodgerGiant game. I think we four were the only fans rooting for the Giants. In 2000, I invited Jim to our annual fraternity guys Cal-Stanford football get-together and told him if he didn’t attend, we would talk about him. Jim attended almost every one since then. In May 2004, I was fortunate to stay with Jim at his condo in Croton, 30 miles north of NYC. It was a comfortable place, just perfect for his needs. We spent some quality time together focusing on our shared objectives and planning strategies. We visited NYC and Jim showed me around the World Trade Center site and some neighborhood churches. We had lunch with Steve Puccinelli, another Delta Delta Brother, and met some friends for a drink at Grand Central Station. Jim was loyal, dedicated and one of my closest confidants. While our lives changed over the years, we never lost respect or admiration for each other. With his new found “free time” as he was dealing with kidney cancer, Jim spent endless hours working towards a common goal he and I shared. He even flew out to California several times to attend alumni banquets, football games and other events. He was a true ally and friend. Jim’s passing is tough on all of us for it reminds us of our own mortality and forces us to identify what is truly important in life. Jim, you’ll be missed. Who else could we tease with such love and admiration? You’re not gone, you’ve just preceded us. See you soon. – Larry Batina, ΔΔ’74 In Memoriam in Fremont, CA. After Bowdoin he received his MA in Communication from Stanford in 1964. He was promotion manager for KHVH AM and TV in Honolulu while he worked on his doctorate degree for Stanford. In 1968 he was diagnosed with MS, and he worked as an enablercounselor for physically handicapped students at De Anza College. Later, he worked for Hewlett-Packard and then bought and operated a Hobbe’s Restaurant. Surviving are his wife, Barbara, and three sons. ALPHA EPSILON of sailing, golf, music, and U of M football; and his love of people and outgoing personality will be well remembered by his community. He is survived by his wife, Frances, two daughters, a brother, Don William Robinson, E’44, five grandsons, and other relatives. Clark E. Pardee ’45, of Birmingham, MI, died on 25 Aug 05. He attended Western Military Academy and Michigan before serving in the South Pacific, where he survived his B-24 being shot down near Borneo. Returning to civilian life, he majored in economics at Michigan and married his high-school sweetheart in 1948. Creativity expressed itself in his writings, cartooning, and encyclopedic knowledge of jazz; and he drew yearly Christmas cards that have been treasured. During his career, he worked as an account executive for several firms including Florez Inc., Bill Sandy Co., and Bloomfield Intercom. After retiring, he enjoyed a ten-year second career as a freelance writer for Ford and other clients. He is survived by his wife of 56 years, Mary, three children, and a grandson. Frederick R. Pickard ’51 died as a result of a brain tumor on 28 Dec 04. Fred grew up in Grand Rapids and earned a BBA and MBA at Michigan. He played football, including the Rose Bowl game of 1 Jan 51. After OCS, he served on a destroyer escort as a gunnery officer in the Pacific at the end of the Korean War. At Pearl Harbor he became Special Services officer and was coach of the Navy football team. He was named head coach of the Hula Bowl in 1956 for a team made up of Service All-Stars and members of the pro. Returning to Ann Arbor in 1956, he joined Merrill Lynch, where he retired in 1990 as senior VP. Football Saturdays in Ann Arbor were always a big part of Fred’s life, and he was a life member of Barton Hills CC. He is survived by his wife of 52 years, Evelyn Gardner, three sons and nine grandchildren. UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN Arthur D. Robinson ’43, a long-time realtor and businessman of Niles, MI, died on 25 Dec 04, following an extended illness. After Michigan he entered midshipman school at Notre Dame and was commissioned an ensign in the Naval Reserve. He served landing craft duty in the Pacific Theater, saw action at Pelilu and Leyte Gulf, was involved in the relocation of the Chinese Nationalist Army to Taiwan after the War. After his service, he was employed by Wyandotte Chemicals and then Electro-Voice until beginning a 30-year career in real estate. As realtor and broker with Morden Realty (which became Modern Realty), he was top sales associate in 1976 and achieved Senior Million Dollar Club numerous times. He was a two-term president of his Rotary Club, a Paul Harris Fellow, and was chair of the Niles Republican Club from 1967-74. He was actively involved in passage of a new city charter, served on the Zoning Board, and was a director of the Greater Niles Community Development Corp. A long-time member of Trinity Episcopal, he served several terms on the Vestry, was Senior Warden in 1984, and was a steadfast member of the choir’s bass section. Art had a life-long love UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA Voit Gilmore ’39, former Southern Pines, NC, mayor and state senator, whose greatest contribution was smoothing over race relations in Southern Pines, died of Parkinson’s disease on 15 Oct 05. A native of Winston-Salem, he earned a BA in journalism and an MA and PhD in geography from UNC. His generosity to the Department of Geography includes the Voit Gilmore Distinguished Professorship in Geography and a geography travel fund to give qualified students and faculty funds for travel and research. An experienced world traveler, Gilmore was owner and president of Four Seasons Travel Service of Pinehurst since 1970. He worked several years at PanAm Airways, was a lieutenant in the U.S. Navy, and was a news correspondent in the Arctic and Antarctic for five years. He was a life fellow of the Royal Geographic Society of London, a recipient of the “Mr. Travel” Award from the Golden Helm Society of World Travel Leaders, president and ALPHA PHI HAMILTON COLLEGE David McLean ’60, of Hot Springs Village, AR, died on 8 Apr 06 after a long battle with heart disease. At Hamilton, he was #1, played basketball and ran track, and was a member of Nous Onze. He received his MBA from Columbia Univ. in 1962. He was an officer in the Navy from 1962-65 and participated in the Cuban Missile Crisis on a landing ship tank (LST) and in the Dominican Republic flare-up in 1965. He was a reporter and asst. financial editor of the Newark (NJ) Evening News, a reporter and columnist for the Wall Street Journal, assoc. editor at Nation’s Business magazine. He joined the Postal Service in 1975 and successfully managed national media relations, employee publications and speech writing for the agency. He was a member of the National Press Club for more than 25 years, an usher, lay eucharistic minister, and newsletter editor at Holy Trinity Episcopal Church, and legislative director for the Nat’l Assn of Retired Federal Employees. An artist for more than 35 years, his paintings were hung at Artists Workshop Gallery in Hot Springs (where he was chair in 2004). He is survived by his wife, Carroll, a sister, and a nephew. In Memoriam ALPHA SIGMA chief executive officer of the American Society of Travel Agents and the president of the Travel Council of North Carolina. At UNC, he was invited to ride to Washington, D.C., on a special train with President Franklin D. Roosevelt. In 1961, he was appointed by President John F. Kennedy to head the U.S. Travel Service. He is survived by his wife, the former Jody Baldwin, five children, and other relatives. Thomas W. Kates ’71 died on 26 Oct 05. He prepped at Loomis and was a Morehead Scholar at UNC before earning his Masters in Teaching at UChicago. He and his wife, Jane, moved to Kent, Conn., in the early ’80s, to join the Kent School faculty, and they raised their two sons there. He was known as a devoted history teacher and enthusiastic coach for 22 years at Kent School. An avid golfer, he was passionate about teaching, traveling (always sending postcards), reading, and family. He was predeceased by his brother, Bill, and is also survived by his mother and sister. ALPHA CHI AMHERST COLLEGE William R. Throckmorton ’41 died on 9 Dec 05 in Belmont, MI. Bill graduated cum laude from Amherst, majoring in history and politics. He attained the rank of 1st lieutenant (infantry) and was a decorated combat veteran. He worked for Sears for most of his career, and was a volunteer for Rockford Public Schools and the North Kent Service Center. He wanted to make sure that no one forgot those who served in WWII and wrote several books on the topic, including “Lord Jeff’s Unsung Heroes,” “They Also Served” (in two volumes), and “Memories of WWII.” He was a member of the Rockland VFW, the Grand Rapids Civil War Round Table, and the Michigan Co. of Military Historians and Collectors. He was predeceased by his first wife, Donna, and is survived by his second wife, Wilma, seven children and stepchildren, fourteen grandchildren, and sixteen great-grandchildren. ALPHA PSI CORNELL UNIVERSITY John C. Lydon Jr. ’46 of Charlotte, NC, died 24 Dec 03. He was a veteran and was active in religious affairs. William D. Turner Jr. ’49 of Ashville, NC, died on 18 Nov 03. He had been Exec VP and Treas. of Turnpike Properties, general mgr of the Ashville Pepsi Bottling Co. , and gen. mgr of the Vanderbilt Hotel. He was a veteran, and was a member of the Rotary Club and the Biltmore Forest Country Club. Survivors included his wife, Polly, and son, William III, Sigma ’81. Robert E. Shope ’51, an expert on viruses and perhaps the world’s most distinguished arbovirologist, died 19 Jan 04. After graduation, he went on to receive his MD from Cornell in 1954 and served as a Captain in the US Army Medical Corps from 1955-57. He was a professor of microbiology and immunology at the Univ. of Texas Spring 2006 The Purple and Gold 27 Medical Branch. He built the World Reference Center for Emerging Viruses and Arboviruses. He was an emeritus professor in the Department of Epidemiology and Public Health at Yale. He was an author and was active in community and professional affairs. Bob served as President of the Amer. Soc. of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene; Chair of the James A. Baker Institute for Animal Health at Cornell; member of the WHO Expert Panel on Virus Diseases and the U.S. Delegation to the U.S. – Japan Cooperative Medical Science Program, the International Commission on Taxonomy of Viruses (ICTV), the Armed Forces Epidemiology Board, the Fogarty International Center, National Institutes of Health, the Institute of Medicine Committee on Improving Civilian Medical Response to Chemical and Biological Terrorism Incidents, the American Museum of Natural History Infectious Disease Exhibition, the National Research Council Program on Strategies to Protect the Health of Deployed U.S. Forces, and the National Research Council Committee on Climate, Ecosystems, Infectious Diseases, and Human Health. Over the years his honors included the Bailey K. Ashford Award from the American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene; the Richard M. Taylor Award from the American Committee of Arthropod-Borne Viruses (ACAV) and the Walter Reed Medal from the American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene. Bob was a teacher and mentor, colleague and friend to many, and he is survived by his wife, Virginia, two daughters, two sons, a sister, and six grandchildren. ALPHA NU UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA James Lawrence Rankin '34 of Carmel Valley, CA, died on 23 Jan 06 as the result of a stroke. Born in St. Paul, he graduated from U of Minnesota and the Minneapolis College of Law, and was a Navy Lieutenant during WWII. His business career was long and varied. He was vice president of the Pillsbury Co., director of Millers National Federation, director of the Grocery Manufacturers of America and the Mpls. Savings and Loan, president of Wheat Flour Inst. and the Renown Foundation. In 1960 he became president and CEO of Foremost Dairies in San Francisco. In 1963, he became president of General Development Corporation of Coral Gables, FL, developers of Port Charlotte and Port St. Lucie. Jim returned to the Food Industry in 1965 as head of Helme Products, NY owners of Bachman pretzels, Schraft Candy, etc. In 1968 he became president of Speigl Foods, and then Dalgety Foods, USA. He was VP of Flagg Industries and Calny Foods and then president of Hawaii Koi Co. Jim was a member of Edina Country Club, the Minneapolis Club, Stock Exchange Club, World Trade Club of San Francisco, Union Club of New York, Siwanoy Golf Club, Monterey Peninsula Club and Carmel Valley Ranch Tennis Club. He is survived by his wife, Elaine, a son, two daughters, a sister, three stepchildren, six grandchildren, four step-grand- children, and twelve great-grandchildren. Robert L. Michelson ’41 died 15 Feb 06. A graduate of Blake School and UMinn., Bob served in the US Army during WWII. He was a longtime employee of Honeywell, Inc., founder of the MN Decoy Collectors Association, an avid duck hunter, golfer and photographer. Bob had a marvelous sense of humor, was dearly loved by many and will be missed by all. He was preceded in death by his sister and is survived by his wife, Ann P. Michelson, a daughter, a son, four granddaughters, and numerous other friends and relatives. Glenn Arthur Eide '50 of Wayzata, MN, died on 26 Feb 06 at home surrounded by his family. He served in the US Navy from 1944-45. [He married Mary, his wife of 52 years, and moved to Wayzata in 1952 to start their family.] Glenn took over Eide Saw from his father in 1951, and sold it in 1976 to established Eide Machinery sales in 1976, which passed to his son, Mitchell, in 2005. Glenn was a pioneer and leader in the industrial woodworking business for over 50 years; a president and founding organizer of the Woodworking Machinery Distributors Association (WMDA). Glenn was a cornerstone of citizenship and service, from his days as a Community Chest fundraiser and Shriner to officer in Friends of the Big Woods and the Wayzata Historical Society. He enjoyed 47 years as a private pilot, and a lifetime of fishing and hunting with family and friends. He was preceded in death by his wife of 52 years, Mary, and is survived by children Kristen and Mark, four granddaughters, and other relatives. Thomas W. Noble ’57, of Edina, died on 7 November 05. “He lived a big life and has now embarked on his new and free journey.” Preceded in death by his parents and brother, John, he is survived by his wife of twenty-five years, Mary; daughter Libby, sons Michael, Jeffrey, and Tom, seven grandchildren, and numerous other relatives. ALPHA IOTA UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN John Spencer Wadsworth ’36, a Northern Kentucky businessman, died on 19 Nov 04 in Naples, FL. Captain of his high school football team, he became president of his UWisconsin sophomore class and then #1 at Iota as the Alpha won the Thayer Trophy his senior year. His Chi Psi relatives included brothers Randolph L., I’17, and Arthur, I’33, and cousins Frank P. Stegeman, I’25, and Robert H. Stegeman, I’35. “Scotch” (as his friends called him) worked his way up the ladder at Wadsworth Watch Case Factory to become president of the family business until the Elgin Watch Co. bought the business. Then he moved to another family business, Littleford Day Inc., and transformed it from a road-maintenance machinery manufacturer to the high-speed, industrial machinery producer it is today. He retired in 1990 to Naples. He was very active in civic affairs and clean government, and was 28 The Purple and Gold Spring 2006 chair of the greens committee at the Hole-inthe-Wall Golf Club and a member of the Naples Yacht Club, the Gyro and Commonwealth Clubs and the Cincinnati Country Club. He is survived by his wife, Mary, a son, a daughter, five grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren ALPHA BETA DELTA LEHIGH UNIVERSITY Walter Cray Haulenbeek ’39 of Garner, NC, died on 11 Sept 05. A former #1 at Lehigh, his two older brothers, Garrie ’36 and Robert ’37, were also Chi Psis. He served in the Army in Western Europe where he documented much of his time on film, being an avid amateur photographer. He began his career in personnel at Union Carbide and then at the Frank W. Egan Company, before fulfilling a life-long dream to own a general store in Vermont, Putnam’s Market in Saxtons River. His last 17 years of work-life were ones that seemed to make him the happiest, as he lived on a large farm in rural Vermont as a handyman and general “go-to” guy. “The Farm” became the home where grandchildren spent the best times with Grandpa, a caring man with a wonderful sense of humor. He is survived by his wife of 58 years, five children, fourteen grandchildren, and thirteen great-grandchildren. ALPHA GAMMA DELTA STANFORD UNIVERSITY Walter J. Apley ’70 died on 4 April 05 in Richland, WA, following a brief but hardfought battle with cancer. Born and raised in Salem, OR, he graduated from Stanford with bachelor’s and master’s degrees in engineering. Following five years as a nuclear submarine officer, he earned his master’s and doctorate degrees in nuclear engineering from the U of Washington. He held numerous leadership positions at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory in 1977, and most recently, he was an invaluable member of the Battelle Energy Alliance team that successfully bid on the management of the Idaho National Laboratory. Walt was an active member of Christ the King Church and the American Nuclear Society, and supported several community organizations, including Columbia Basin College, the Children’s Center, United Way, and the March of Dimes and programs at many N.W. universities. A loving husband and father, son and brother, he was a voracious reader, enjoyed composing limericks and loved history, especially books on Ben Franklin. He lived life with humility and a gentleness that was endearing, and had a smile that was contagious. Preceded in death by two sisters, Walt is survived by his wife, Gail, two daughters, his parents, a sister and numerous nieces and nephews. Known for his wry wit and penchant for sharing quotations, he would want us to remember In Memoriam the words of Mark Twain, “Power, money, persuasion, supplication, persecution – these can lift a colossal humbug, push it a little, weaken it a little; but only laughter can blow it to rags and atoms at a blast. Against the assault of laughter nothing can stand.” ALPHA DELTA DELTA UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA Dr. Philip Knowlton Ferrier ’39 died from complications of Alzheimer’s disease on 10 Sept 05. A graduate of UC Medical School in San Francisco, he was a general surgeon, with a private practice in Berkeley from 1950-84. In WWII, he was a captain in the Medical Corps, coming ashore in Europe on D-Day plus 6, and he received the Purple Heart, Bronze Star and Silver Star during the war. He was married to Esther Elizabeth Christopher for 49 years, and they had four sons and five grandchildren. He was a deacon at the St. Johns Presbyterian Church, and his favorite pastime was hiking in the back country of the Sierra Nevada. He climbed Mount Shasta, Mount Rainier, and even peaks in Nepal. He was preceded in death by his parents, wife and brother, and is survived by all his children and grandchildren. At his request, there were no services, as he would not have wanted people to make a fuss over him. ALPHA EPSILON DELTA NORTHWESTERN / UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO James Trimble Evans ’51 died in Lac du Flambeau, WI, on 20 Feb 05. He is survived by his wife, Faye, 5 children and 6 grandchildren. ALPHA ZETA DELTA UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS William H. Creason Jr. ’50, of Williston, FL, died on 13 Nov 05. He was a retired wholesale plumbing distributor in Naples. A WWII Navy veteran, he belonged to the Mayfield Rotary Club, the Mayfield City Council, and the Trinityby-the-Cove Episcopal Church. His survivors include two daughters, a brother, three grandchildren, six nephews, and a niece. ALPHA PSI DELTA UNIVERSITY OF COLORADO Edwin A Bemis Jr. '41 died on 14 July 05 following a yearlong battle with cancer. Ed studied undergrad and graduate physics at Colorado, where he taught physics to Navy flyers; played clarinet, trombone, and piano in a dance band; and learned to pilot a biplane and competed in a national biplane competition sponsored by Jimmy Dolittle. He was a talented classical musician in voice, piano and pipe organ. After serving in the Navy in the South Pacific and Japan during WWII, he returned to UColorado, and then came to Los Alamos in 1947, when the streets were still paved with mud. At Los Alamos National Laboratory from 1947-1980, Ed studied and helped develop protective measures against a variety of radiation sources. He was a charter member of the Health Physics Society, and one In Memoriam of the first Certified Health Physicists. In Los Alamos he was president of the Arts Council, a founding member of Coro de Camara, president of the Choral Society, president of the Los Alamos Concert Association, president of the Los Alamos Student Concert Association, was a member of a two-piano, four-hands group, and sang with various local groups. As a founding member and president of the Los Alamos Historical Society, founding member and Chairman of the State Health Coordinating Council. He was a founder of the Family YMCA, which was the first in the country whose charter was to serve as a family organization, and he served as an adult sponsor for its Youth in Government program. He was a member of the first Los Alamos Charter Commission, and he helped found the Triangle Club for AA members. He was a founding member and Member of the Board of the Los Alamos Nutrition Interest Group. A founding member of a number of local organizations, Ed was a member of the architectural planning committee for Los Alamos Library, and as a member of its endowment committee, he helped to establish the Library Endowment Fund. He served as president and member of the board of Civitans, president of the Los Alamos PTA, president of Toastmasters, and he served on the Democratic Central Committee of Los Alamos County. He was a member of the board and president of the Los Alamos Council on Alcoholism. Ed received numerous recognitions and awards for his service. He was listed in Who’s Who in the West in 1954. In 1978 he received an Honorable Mention for the Jefferson Award for outstanding citizenship in service of the community. He received the Governor’s Certificate of Appreciation for Outstanding Volunteer Service in 1983. In 2001, Los Alamos conferred its highest honor upon Ed, that of “Living Treasure,” in recognition of his many years of community service. His wife of nearly 50 years, Darleene Christensen, predeceased him, and he is survived by three daughters and other relatives. James N. Brown ’40 of Hilton Head and Holdrege, SC, died on 10 May 04. After Colorado, he served as a lieutenant in the Navy in WWII and was on loan to the Petroleum Administration during the Korean War. During his service, he married Dorothy Hardendorf and had two children. Dorothy died in 1964. He married Audrey McCann in 1971. He retired from Gulf Oil Corp. in 1982. He was a member of Sea Pines Country Club, was board member of the Spanish Wells Club and the Senior Men’s Golf Assn of Hilton Head, and president of the Chevron Gulf Retirees Assn’s Lowcountry chapter. He was preceded in death by his son and three brothers. He is survived by his wife Audrey, a daughter, two granddaughters, a sister, and numerous other friends and relatives. ALPHA ETA DELTA UNIVERSITY OF OREGON James W. Wells Jr. ’39 of Prairie Village, Kansas, died on 11 Dec 04. Born in Saskatchewan, Canada, he was raised in Portland. After graduating from Oregon, he was a trainee at the Chase Bag Co., and he married Jane Shepherd, who preceded him in death in 1996. In 1942, he joined the Army as a private and separated four years later as a captain. Returning to Chase Bag Co. as a sales representative, he later became sales manager, then manager of the Portland factory, then national vice president and director of sales, headquartered in NYC. In 1973 he moved to Kansas City and was vice president of the Percy Kent Bag Company. He was a member of the Kansas City Country Club, the River Club, the Union League Club, the Kansas City Club, the Multnomah Athletic Club and the Portland Golf Club. He is survived by his wife, Hazel, two sons, four stepsons, a stepdaughter, and fourteen grandchildren. Charles N. Tripp ’41, died on 24 June 05. He was CEO of Charles N. Tripp Co., an investment banking firm, that he merged with Kidder Peabody in 1979. He was commissioned a second lieutenant from ROTC at Oregon. He served as a captain with the 13th Armored Division, assigned to Patton's Third Army in Europe. Tripp was an avid fisherman on the Columbia, Willamette, McKensie and rivers in Canada and Baja Mexico. A fine athlete in high school, he lettered in football and track. He and his wife traveled extensively to Europe, the Orient, Australia and Canada. He is survived by his wife of 63 years, Florence, two sons, a daughter, three grandchildren, and two great grandchildren. The Portland Golf Club members held a “celebration of life” after his demise. Steven Eric Cooper ’72 died 15 July 05 in Eugene. He graduated with a bachelor’s degree from the University of Oregon in 1972, Phi Beta Kappa. He served in the U.S. Army as a radar specialist in 1972 and was stationed in Germany. He worked in the technical and manufacturing field and enjoyed photography, tai chi and church activities. He was a member of North Eugene Faith Center, and his family will remember him for his “intelligence, kindness, sense of humor, artistry, strong faith and love of family.” Survivors include his mother and two brothers. ALPHA IOTA DELTA GEORGIA TECH Richard C. Reed Jr. ’48 died on 30 April 05. Born in Port Arthur, TX, he was a graduate of Georgia Tech, later made his home in Houston, and lived his last 15 years in Boynton Beach, FL. He is survived by his wife of 63 years, Virginia Reed of Houston, TX, and their three children and eleven grandchildren. Richard B. Love ’72 died on 4 Feb 04 of a brain disease in Decatur, GA. He had worked in auto sales most of his career, and had been treasurer of the Iota Delta Alumni corporation during some challenging times for the Alpha in the 1970s. He is survived by his wife, Abbye Love, four sons, and other relatives. Spring 2006 The Purple and Gold 29 The Executive Council of Chi Psi Fraternity Dr. Daniel B. Ahlberg, Ν’67, #7 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Golden Valley, Minnesota Joseph J. Devaney, Ρ’80, ΜΔ’99, Chair . . . . . . . . . . . . .Jacksonville, Florida Troy N. Ivey, ΙΔ’90, Vice Chair . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Chattanooga, Tennessee Samuel C. Bessey, ΗΔ’97, #23 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Nashville, Tennessee Other Council Members: W.S. “Bill” Hattendorf, ΑΔ’69, Σ’82, Η’83 . . . . . . . . .Gill, Massachusetts Dr. Ralph N. “Whitey” Silverio, ΕΔ’71, ΦH, ΨH . . . . .Evanston, Illinois William H. Cooper, ΑΔ’74 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Griffin, Georgia Michael C. Hurst, ΤΔ’87 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Sewanee, Tennessee Dr. E. Todd Falls, ΤΔ’89 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Birmingham, Alabama Kurt O. Gilliland, Σ’92 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Raleigh, North Carolina James E. Lazarus, ΣΔ’01 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Charlottesville, Virginia Ben Eisner, Σ’05 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Chapel Hill, North Carolina Michael Carlson, Ν’05 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Minneapolis, Minnesota Andrew W. Eschweiler, I’06 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Madison, Wisconsin Council Members Emeritus: W. David Romoser, ΖΔ’65 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Mequon, Wisconsin Michael Kosusko, Ξ’77 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Durham, North Carolina Harold G. Arnwine II, ΤΔ’86, ΝΔ’02 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .New York, New York Past #7’s: Malcolm D. “Jack” Jeffrey, Θ’54 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Columbus, Ohio Dr. George W. Ray III, Α’54 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Lexington, Virginia Robert C. Preble Jr., Χ’44 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Chicago, Illinois Carleton A. Holstrom, Ι’57 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Pipersville, Pennsylvania Council Advisory Board Members: J. Lee Cook, ΑΔ’74 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Atlanta, Georgia Paul Landaker, ΗΔ’75 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Portland, Oregon Michael R. Webb, ΑΔ’80 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Kingwood, Texas Craig S. Chelius, ΘΔ’83 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Seattle, Washington John A. Cohenour, ΜΔ’85 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Atlanta, Georgia Michael F. O'Neill, Ξ’87 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Lake Forest, Illinois Todd A. Fouts, ΖΔ’89 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Edelstein, Illinois Adam Wellman, Ε’93 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Ann Arbor, Michigan Todd H. Packebush, ΗΔ’93 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Littleton, Colorado Mark S. Puzella, Α’94 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Cohasset, Massachusetts Andrew Van Deren, Ο’94 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Richmond, Virginia Lathrop B. Nelson, ΟΔ’97 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Heath J. Mills, ΣΔ’97 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Tallahassee, Florida Nathaniel Eberle, ΜΔ’98 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Orlando, Florida David A. Shuler, Ν’01 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Plymouth, Minnesota The Chi Psi Educational Trust Julian B. Emerson, Β’80, Chair . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Columbia, South Carolina Robert F. Spindell Jr., Ο’65, Vice Chair . . . . . . . . .Milwaukee, Wisconsin Benjamin R. Silliman, Γ’86, Treasurer . . . . . . . . . . . . . .New York, New York Steven L. Crow, Ε’79 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Charlotte, North Carolina William L. Warren, M’88 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Atlanta, Georgia Daniel T. Clifford, ΗΔ’97 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Bakersfield, California Warren W. Shu, E’99 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Los Angeles, California Philip A. Gillingham, ΘΔ’00 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Seattle, Washington Ryan Ahlberg, Ε’03 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Minneapolis, Minnesota Associate Trustee Walter C. Williams, Γ’91 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Ithaca, New York Chi Psi Alphas & Corporations Phi – Hamilton College #1: Peter Shepard ’08 [email protected] 198 College Hill Road, Clinton, NY 13323 Cell: 315-525-4735 Corporation Treasurer: David Scott ’93 [email protected] 5 Yale Street, Holyoke, MA 01040-2655 H: 413-539-9621 Epsilon – University of Michigan #1: Dean Caplan ’07 [email protected] 620 South State Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48104 Cell: 269-998-0266 President: Brian T. Heil ’80 [email protected] 11301 Fawn Valley Trl, Fenton, MI 48430-4010 Home: 810-750-4501 Sigma – University of North Carolina #1: Travis C. Starkey ’07 [email protected] 321 W. Cameron Ave., Chapel Hill, NC 27516 Cell: 859-338-9265 Corp. President: Charles A. Madison, Esq. ’84 [email protected] 920 W. Johnson St., Raleigh, NC 27605-1762 Home: 919-828-8890 Beta – University of South Carolina #1: Todd Bailey ’07 [email protected] 508 Lincoln St., Columbia, SC 29225 Cell: 251-533-7133 Corp. President: Thomas Outlaw ’78 [email protected] 5330 Sunset Blvd., Lexington, SC 29072-9260 Home: 803-356-8027 Gamma – University of Mississippi #1: William Barrett Brewer ’08 [email protected] 303 Fraternity Row, University, MS 38677 Cell: 615-545-5442 Corporation President: Robert Forsythe ’99 Phone: 901-238-8866 3609 Mimosa Avenue, Memphis, TN 38111 [email protected] Omicron – University of Virginia Lodge: 804-296-6704 #1: Drew Donaldson ’08 @virginia.edu 1536 Rugby Rd. Ext., Charlottesville, VA, 22903 Corp. Pres: Andrew T. Van Deren ’94 [email protected] 3025 Monument Ave., Apt. D2, Richmond, VA 23221 Cell: 703-864-9318 Chi – Amherst College . #1: Andrew Nguyen ’06 [email protected] AC 773 Keefe Campus Center, Amherst, MA 01002 Home: 909-519-2957 Corp. Pres: Hew D. Crooks ’90 [email protected] 546 North Beson Rd, Fairfield, CT 06824 H: 203-256-0502 C: 203-550-6967 Psi – Cornell University #1: Daniel Thorp ’07 [email protected] 810 University Ave., Ithaca, NY 14850 Cell: 508-934-9750 President: Jake Hennemuth ’98 [email protected] 767 Fifth Avenue, Suite 4701, New York, NY 10153 Phone: 212-832-5280 Nu – University of Minnesota #1: Ryan Owen Timm ’07 [email protected] 1515 University Ave. SE, Minneapolis, MN 55414 Cell: 262-434-0118 Corp. Pres: Paul L. Hellickson ’88 [email protected] 2529 Pierce Street NE, Minneapolis, MN 55418-3839 Home: 612-788-8060 Iota – University of Wisconsin #1: Alex R. Knodell ’07 [email protected] 150 Iota Court, Madison, WI 53703 Cell: 612-385-8364 Corp.Pres: Phillip H. Prange ’88 [email protected] 208 Lakewood Blvd, Madison, WI 53704 B: 608-252-9245 H: 608-255-2937 Rho – Rutgers,The State University of New Jersey #1: Michael Wallace ’07 [email protected] 114 College Ave., New Brunswick, NJ 08901 Cell: 908-421-0484 Corp.Pres: Vincent Le Blon ’77 [email protected] 21 Bunker Hill Run, East Brunswick, NJ 08816-3315 Home: 732-238-5368 Xi – Stevens Institute of Technology #1: Ben Louis Bateman ’07 [email protected] 804 Castle Point Terrace, Hoboken, NJ 07030 Cell: 908-625-1742 Corp. Pres: Dennis Paul Grupe ’90 [email protected] 344 Westview Ave., Fort Lee, NJ 07024 C: 201-218-5765 H: 201-302-9725 The Chi Psi Central Office 147 Maple Row Blvd., Suite 200, Hendersonville, Tennessee 37075 Office: 615-736-2520 Samuel C. Bessey, ΗΔ’97 . . . . . . . . . . . .Executive Director, Executive Secretary Kyle Moen, Ι’02 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Director Alumni Services Preston Humphries, Β’03 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Director of Extension Brad Beskin, Σ’05 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Alpha Visitor Donald Beeson, Σ’82, ΥΔ’86 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Associate Executive Director and Risk Management Administrator . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Office: 919-929-7070 Box 4633, Chapel Hill, NC 27515 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Fax: 919-929-9053 Ann Leath . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Office Manager, Chi Psi Central Office 30 The Purple and Gold Spring 2006 Fax: 615-826-9986 Email: [email protected] Who’s Who Zeta Delta – University of Illinois Lodge: 217-531-2087 #1: Kyle Churillo ’08 [email protected] 110 E. Armory Ave., Champaign, IL 61820 Cell: 630-779-1157 Corp. President: Matthew Hess ’00 [email protected] 3148 W Meadow Lane Dr., Merrionett Park, IL 60803 Home:708-218-3121 Upsilon Delta – Wake Forest University #1: David Senter ’07 [email protected] PO Box 7452, Winston-Salem, NC 27109 Cell: 336-339-3208 Corp. President: Bruce Thompson ’88 [email protected] 3909 Stratford Court, Raleigh, NC 27609 [email protected] H: 919-783-6993 Sigma Delta – Duke University #1: Daron Newell Gunn ’07 [email protected] PO Box 99312, Durham, NC 27708 919-559-9330 Corporation President: Jim Lazarus ’01 [email protected] 136 Harvest Drive, Charlottesville, VA 22903 Cell:703-568-5233 Pi Delta – North Carolina State University Lodge: 919-828-6554 #1: Corey Gooden ’07 [email protected] 3414 Hillsbourgh St, Raleigh, NC 27607 Cell: 910-876-1982 Corp. President: Brett J. DeSelms H: 919-439-2086 B: 919-606-1949 800 Old Baron Drive, Fuquay Varina, NC 27526 [email protected] Omega Delta – George Mason University Lodge: 703-359-2511 #1: Corey Callahan ’07 [email protected] 825 Union Forge Lane, Cheseapeake, VA 23322 Cell: 757-284-9300 Corp. President: Andrew Dewing, ΟΔ’84: [email protected] 8604 Viney Vista, Suffolk, VA 23436 757-238-8190 Cell: 757-537-0383 Rho Delta – Miami University #1: Kyle Robert Cuthbert ’08 [email protected] 356 Shriver Center, Oxford, OH 45056 C: 757-284-9300 Corp. President: Robert A. Dearth Jr., A’66 [email protected] 1834 Keys Crescent Ln, Cincinnati, OH 45206-1825 Home: 513-221-1944 Eta Delta – University of Oregon #1: Kris Kellog ’07 1018 Hilyard St., Eugene, OR 97401 Corporation President: David Waterfall ’82 10744 SW Heron Circle, Beaverton, OR 97007 Atlanta Area Contact: Bo Jackson, Γ’77: C: 404-245-6486 H: 404-325-8522 B: 770-447-378 670 Sunnybrook Drive, Decatur, GA 300334 [email protected] Alpha Delta – University of Georgia Lodge: 706-353-3898 #1: James Wheeler ’07 [email protected] 1120 South Milledge, Athens, GA 30605 Mobile: 404-213-9433 Corporation President: J. Lee Cook ’74 [email protected] 3298 Grant Valley Road, Atlanta, GA 30305 H: 404-228-7923 Beta Delta – Lehigh University #1: Grant Hartman ’07 [email protected] 39 University Dr., Box C720, Bethlehem, PA 18015 Cell: 717-487-2000 Corporation President: Scott R. McKay ’78 [email protected] 1815 Apple Tree Lane E., Bethlehem, PA 18015-5202 Cell: 610-730-6612 Delta Delta – University of California Lodge: 510-540-9213 #1: Jason Dreibelbis ’07 [email protected] 2311 Piedmont Ave., Berkeley, CA 94704 Cell: 760-415-5421 Corp. President: Matt Michael ’82 B: 916-646-6492 Cell: 916-204-6492 5100 Laurelview Ave., Carmichael, CA 95608 [email protected] Epsilon Delta – Northwestern University #1: Billy Carberry ’08 [email protected] 2313 Sheridan Road, Evanston, IL 60201 Cell: 781-856-3324 Corporation President: Don Lennie ’66 [email protected] 715 North Elmwood Ave., Oak Park, IL 60302 Home: 708-386-4184 Theta Delta – University of Washington #1: Jay Fredlund ’07 4600 22nd Avenue NE, Seattle, WA 98105 Corp. President: Kent Smith ’89 1715 Naomi Place, Seattle, WA 98115 Iota Delta – Georgia Tech #1: Jon Vuong Hong ’07 150 4th Street NW, Atlanta, GA 30313 Corporation President: T. Allen Park ’68 9220 W. Lake Highlands Drive, Dallas, TX 75218 Lodge: 541-345-2711 [email protected] Cell: 303-818-7499 [email protected] Home: 503-627-7027 Lodge: 206-526-7203 [email protected] Cell: 360-420-2244 [email protected] Home: 206-527-9424 Lodge: 404-892-9623 [email protected] Cell: 301-728-4240 [email protected] Phone: 214-957-3747 Tau Delta – University of the South Lodge: 931-598-1272 #1: Daniel Shaver ’07 [email protected] 735 University Avenue, Sewanee, TN 37383 Cell: 931-598-2074 Corp. President: Michael Hurst ’87 [email protected] 49 Roark's Cove Road, Sewanee, TN 37375-3027 Home: 931-598-0588 Chi Delta – Clemson University #1: Roy Talbert ’07 rtalber@@clemson.edu 2128 University Station, Clemson, SC 29632 Cell: 803-917-0766 Corp. President: Donald Eric Bischof ’00 [email protected] 17 Stearns Road, Apt. 2, Brookline, MA 02446-5118 Home: 617-775-0567 Omicron Delta – Washington & Lee #1: Padrick Dennis ’07 5 Lee Avenue, Lexington, VA 24450 Corp. President: Andrew J. Dewing ’84 8604 Viney Vista, Suffolk, VA 23436 Mu Delta – Rollins College #1: Charles Mackenzie ’07 1000 Holt Ave, # 2483, Winter Park, FL 32789 Corp. President: Felipe Pinzon ’97 621 Arbor Lake lane, Tampa, FL 33602 Lodge: 540-462-5006 [email protected] Cell: 228-861-4374 [email protected] Home: 757-238-8190 Lodge: 407-646-2040 [email protected] Cell: 617-851-2823 [email protected] Phone: 813-416-4390 Xi Delta – Texas Tech Lodge: 806-762-1677 #1: Terronald Logan ’07 [email protected] 2223 17th Street, Lubbock, TX 79401 Cell: 214-334-2509 Corporation President: Jason Cox ’98 [email protected] 13435 W. Center Drive, Lakewood, CO 80228 Cell: 303-204-3033 Chi Psi Regional Alumni Associations Columbus (Ohio) Area Contact: William J. Green, ΜΔ’95 7545 Mills Road, Ostrander, OH 43061 Capital Area Contact: Cliff Massa III, ΕΔ’71 1935 Franklin Avenue, McLean, VA 22101 [email protected] 740-666-8845 [email protected] B: 202-457-5294 Denver Area Contact: Joe Hughes, Β’84, ΨΔ’97 [email protected] 4800 Baseline Road, E104, PMB 449, Boulder, CO 80303 303-554-9123 Middle Tennessee Area Contact: Kyle Moen, I ’02 [email protected] 147 Maple Row Blvd, Suite 200, Hendersonville, TN 37075 B: 615-736-2520 New England Area Contact: Bill Hattendorf, ΑΔ’69 206 Main Street, Box 4935, Northfield, MA 01360 Philadelphia Area Contact: Lathrop Nelson, ΟΔ’97 334 Fitzwater Street, Philadelphia, PA 19147 Alpha Pi Alumni Corp. President: Brian E. Shea Π’82 862 Worcester Dr., Niskayuna, NY 12309 Alpha Psi Delta Alumni Contact: Chris Wong ΨΔ’87 1340 Humboldt, Denver CO 80218 Alpha Nu Delta Alumni Corporation President: Steven Sacco ΝΔ’01 10302 Appalachian Circle, #311, Oakton, VA 22124 [email protected] B: 413-498-5470 [email protected] H: 215-925-1952 [email protected] H: 518-393-4012 [email protected] 303-861-0979 [email protected] 703-975-7976 Want to Start an Alumni Association in Your Area? Contact Kyle Moen, I’02, in the Chi Psi Central Office 147 Maple Row Blvd, Suite 200, Hendersonville, Tennessee 37075 Office: 615-736-2520 Fax: 615-826-9986 Email: [email protected] For additional information about Chi Psi and its entities, including the Boards, Alphas, Corporations, Foundations and individual members, please contact the Chi Psi Central Office by phone at 615-736-2520, e-mail [email protected], or visit www.chipsi.org. Spring 2006 Directory Spring 2006 The Purple and Gold 31 The Official Chi Psi Store Just Off the Press – A Brand New Edition of Order today at www.chipsi.org or call Chi Psi at 615-736-2520 The Chi Psi Story At 272 pages, this new edition has everything you ever wanted to know about Chi Psi (and lots more). Familiar stories of the founding, heros and martyrs, and brotherhood, supplemented with newly updated information and full color photography throughout. Nearly sixty pages of Fraternity and college songs should add to your enjoyment. This new edition is available through the Central Office for $35.00 (including shipping). To order, e-mail [email protected] or call the office at 615-736-2520. MARK YOUR CALENDAR TO ATTEND ALPHA BETA’S REFOUNDING GOLDEN ANNIVERSARY AND VISIT NEW LODGE IN COLUMBIA, SC – WEDNESDAY 26 JULY TO SUNDAY 30 JULY 2006 165TH ANNUAL CHI PSI NATIONAL CONVENTION Log on to the First Fraternity on the Web: New Features and Links to Alpha & School The Purple And Gold, Journal of Chi Psi Fraternity 147 Maple Row Boulevard, Suite 200 Hendersonville, Tennessee 37075 CHANGE SERVICE REQUESTED www.chipsi.org Nonprofit Organization U.S. POSTAGE PAID Permit No. 4416 Columbus, Ohio