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"THE OLD WELL"-UNIVERSJTY OF Volu e XIII MAY, 1927 Number 2
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Pi Kappa Phi

Volu e XIII "THE OLD WELL"-UNIVERSJTY OF CENTRAL OFFICE THE STAR AND LAMP of Pi Kappa Phi, for life .. ----------------------------------------------------------$10.00 Single copies, 50¢ each Apply to Central Office for prices on bound volumes. MEMBERSHIP CERTIFICATES, each ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 1.50 Handsomely engraved; size 8x10. Give full name, initiation date and chapter. SEND ORDERS AND MAKE CHECKS PAYABLE TO
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Page 1: 1927_2_May

"THE OLD WELL"-UNIVERSJTY OF

Volu e XIII MAY, 1927 Number 2

Page 2: 1927_2_May

Fraternity Supplies THE STAR AND LAMP of Pi Kappa Phi, for life .. --- ------------------------------------- --- ---------------$10.00

Single copies, 50¢ each Apply to Central Office for prices on bound volumes.

1926 MEMBERSHIP DIRECTORY, each ----------------- -- --------------------- -- ------ --- -- ----------- ------ 1.00 Membership listed alphabetically, geographically, and by chapters; 374 pages. A free copy with each five in group orders.

SONGS OF PI KAPPA PHI, per copy ------ --- ----------------------------------------------------------------- .50 Forty-two pages of Pi Kapp melody. A free copy with each five in group orders.

CONSTITUTION AND SUPREME LAWS, per copy ------------------------------------------------ .10 Complete and official, with index and examination questions.

BAIRD'S MANUAL OF COLLEGE FRATERNITIES, Eleventh Edition ____________ 4.00 Edited by Dr. Francis W. Shepardson.

BANTA'S GREEK EXCHANGE, per year ------------------------ ------------------------------------------ 2.00 News and comment from the college fraternity world.

COLLEGE FRATERNITIES, per copy ------------ ---- ---------- -- ------------ ------------------------------ -- 2.00 An exposition of the fraternity system published by the Interfraternity

Conference.

INTERFRATERNITY CONFERENCE YEAR BOOK, per copy__ _______________________ _ .50 Minutes of the last Interfraternity Conference.

ROBERT'S RULES OF ORDER (Revised ), per COPY------------------------------------- ----------- 1.50 The official parliamentary guide of Pi Kappa Phi, based upon the rules and

practice of Congress.

MEMBERSHIP CERTIFICATES, each ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 1.50 Handsomely engraved; size 8x10. Give full name, initiation date and chapter.

HATBANDS, Official Pi Kappa Phi design, each ---------------------------------- -- ----------------- --- 1.00

PRICES OR REFERENCES on fraternity supplies not listed will be furnished on application. These include ritualistic paraphernalia, accounting supplies, chapter tableware, phonograph records, stationery, card cases, photographs of supreme officers and founders, wall plaques, etc.

Orders for Pi Kappa Phi jewelry should be placed only with our Official Jeweler, Burr, Patterson & Auld Company, Detroit, Mich. Other jewelry houses are not author­ized to make Pi Kappa Phi designs and are not under the supervision of the Fraternity.

SEND ORDERS AND MAKE CHECKS PAYABLE TO

PI KAPPA PHI FRATERNITY CENTRAL OFFICE

4750 SHERIDAN ROAD CHICAGO, ILLINOIS

Page 3: 1927_2_May

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

~ I ~ The Star and Lamp ~ I oj Pi Kappa Phi ~ ~ ~ ~ Volume XIII MAY, !927 Number 2 ~ ~ I ~ I

I I ~

~ i

RICHARD L. YouNG, Editor

CHARLOTTE, N.C . .

~ Mambm of tha Frat,nity an invitad to contributa specWl orticl" ~ or news items, especially personal notes concerning the activities of the ~ ~ alumni. ~ ~ All contributions should be mailed direct to RICHARD L. YouNG, ~ ~ 2 Ashland Avanua, Midwood Manor, Charlotta, N.C. ~

~~~~~~~~~~~

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To EPery Member of Pi f(appa Pht. Frafernif.ZJ

GREETINGS:

The Supreme Chapter Meeting to be held in Birmingham, Ala .. December 28, 29 , 30, should be the main topic of discussion between Pi Kappa Phis this Spring, Summer and Fall.

Every Pi Kapp, active and alumni, should not pass up the opportunity to mention the Supreme Chapter Meeting to every brother he sees from now on, as this will be the largest and best meeting we have ever known.

We are growing in strength, both nationally and locally, and it is through thes2 meetings that we learn to know our distant brothers. Each of us have not the opportunity to visit each chapter and know our brothers personally, so we must take advantage of this great gathering, and know our brothers as we should know them. Only through association and co-operation can we get the most out of our fraternity, and at the same time, put the most into our fraternity.

We are striving to make our fraternity the Brightest Star in college life , but this can only be done by every man putting his shoulder to the wheel and pushing. He that plants hard work in his early years, will reap a harvest in the latter part of his life, but he that is a slacker will drift and die without fortune or friends.

An organization is already working to make your trip here a most pleasant and worth while one. You should show your appreciation of their labor by coming, or helping send someone to come, and if you will do your part, the rest will be easy, and the meeting will be the greatest ever held.

Let's buckle down now, and make this the greatest homecom ­ing and beneficial meeting ever held.

Yours for the up-building of Pi Kappa Phi,

V. H. HUEY,

General Chairman.

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II ~ "i1ie ~ ~ ~II L STAR AND LAMP II

~l ou Til E STAR AND r A • . ths of Octob D • MP IS P ubh shed U nder the D irection of the Supreme Council of the P i Kappa P hi Fraternity in the

\ Enterc

1 er, cce mber, February, a nd M~y, a t Cha rl otte '· C.

' J>pr ' as Matter of t1 S d Cl ' 19

oved Ma rch 3

· >e econ ass a t the P ostoffi ce at Cha rlotte, N. C., in Accordance with the Act o f Cong•·ess 17• Authorized A• ~ 879 · Acce ptance for Ma iling a t Special R ate of P ostage P rovided for in Sect ion I 103, Act of October 3,

The T ' f pnl 19, 1921. I· All ?\f~t : .S

1ublsc.-iption is $ 10 and is th e Only F orm of Subscription. Single Copies are 50 Cents.

· •11 11• ·• •• a nt cndecl f p II ' · S l 'ry, and At>ril. or II > •ca li on w ul d be in the H ands of th e Ed itor·in· hi ef by the 15th of September , November,

Changes in Add re<s ~ · S hou lcl he P rom ptl y ll eportecl to the Executi ve Secreta ry. Usc F orm in the Back of the Magazine.

\l olurne XIII ~ MAY, 1927 Number 2

EDITOR'S COMME.NT Central Office in Chicago

~liE cent I ffi \.9 n ra o ce of the Fraternity is Chicag~w located at 4750 Sheridan Road, the nrd' and the administrative affairs of ic • er are now b · d · · as se emg Irected m Amer-

l\1: cond city. Uch sign 'f'

of the d . ~ Icance attaches to the removal a tntmst t' ern metro . ra I~e offices to the mid-west-

the territ Pohs. It 1s located in the center of VeJoped . ory, which in recent years has de­Phi's "'l:nto the logical section for Pi Kappa ''' <> Owth p· t neath south 1 l_{ap.~a Phi, while born ended h ern sines, has long since ex-

lo er scop t· . nger be t e un Il the fraternity can no ls now re ermed a sectional organization. It 0fl'lce in C~~esented in seventeen states. The new aven lcago will mean the opening up of lers of th ues and closer contact for the chap-

c Pi I<ape Western part of the country. h· Pa Ph· h 1<: tcag0 I as not moved its office to

a appa p~~ h a hunt for more chapters. Pi nd we b

1. as never followed such a policy

cond e Ieve . , , . Uct of th never Wlll, but having the \:lty Will e fraternity directed from that 1'0Unding_:~ke for a strengthening and a

l'he "'r u of our organization. gl'ad " 0Wth f p · b UaJ lo . 0 I Kappa Phi has been een , gicai a d b . no h' ' n su stanttal. There has

our f tnt of b . C

oundat· a oom m our growing and Ure ton ha b . · We h s een latd sound and se-

ave re . d ceiVe , through the years,

just enough chapters each year, to spread out step by step, and this, we believe, shall ever be our plan. We will never receive more than we can readily and easily assimilate and mould into the whole. This scheme has brought us to our present state of success and will lead us to further success as an organi­zation for young men, based on high ideals of brotherhood and service.

We are glad that the central office is now established in Chicago. It widens our vision and gives us an outlook on broader fields.

Lily White at Last The fraternity map of the United States

has finally become "lily white." The last black spot on the map was recently removed when the legislature of South Carolina passed a law repealing the anti-fraternity regula­tions affecting state-supported institutions.

The repeal of the anti-fraternity law cli­maxed years of efforts on the part of frater­nity men in the state who were given the whole-hearted support of the Interfraternity Conference. Last fall the anti-fraternity regulations in Mississippi were removed, leaving South Carolina as the lone state in the Union with statutes prohibiting Greek­letter organizations in state institutions.

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TI-IE STAR AND LAMP of PI KAPPA PI-II

For the last several years, the fraternity movement in South Carolina was gaining strength as one after the other denomina­tional colleges, which followed the state ban on fraternities, withdrew the regulations and permitted the return of social fraternities. The Presbyterian College of South Carolina and Wofford College are notable among these. The anti-fraternity regulations, for­mulated by trustees, are still in effect at Furman University, the Baptist institution of the state. Here Pi Kappa Phi's Delta chapter still sleeps beneath the lid of the anti-fraternity ban.

With the repeal of the state law efforts were immediately started by a number of Pi Kappa Phi's residing in and near Colum­bia, to re-establish our Sigma chapter at the University of South Carolina. These broth­ers are shaping up their plans and announce that ere long a petition will be filed.

College Youth Today Better Student

In spite of jazz orchestras and collegiate sport roadsters, American college students of today are making as good grades, if not better, than did their predecessors of 10 years ago when bell-bottomed trousers and short skirts were unknown on the campus.

R. M. West, registrar of the University of Minnesota and president of the American Association of collegiate registrars which re­cently met in annual convention at Atlanta points to the record of modern day youth as proof of this assertion.

"One cannot be pessimistic about college students of today when he examines the rec­ords," Mr. West said.

"College students of today dress more free­ly, act more freely and think more freely than did college men and women of ten years ago, but it certainly has not affected their grades.

"The so-called jazz period, with its auto­mobiles and night life, has not shown up in

the records of students' grades, or of stu· dents' successes after leaving college, so fnt

as we are able to learn."

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Welcome, Brothers To the new brothers of Alpha-Lambda a111

Alpha-K:appa chapters, at the UniversitY 0! Michigan and the University of MississiPP1

we extend our warmest greetings. To sal ut· that we are pleased to welcome them is P .

ting it mildly, for we are rejoiced to cal them brothers.

That the members of each group will rt spond to the responsibilities of their neW rt lationship, we are confident. We are sur• that they will find their places in Pi KaPP

1

Phi and labor with us in carrying out our

ideals of brotherhood. With the institution of Alpha-Kappa at th'

University of Mississippi, Pi Kappa Phi rt ceived its thirty-fifth chapter. The frater nity also entered into a new state, bringi~ the total of states, where we are represent to seventeen. . h

Alpha-Lambda at the University of :l\1JC

igan comes to keep company with .AIP111

Theta at the Michigan State College.

Fraternity Leader Passes ·gi

With the death of William C. Levere, lll 0

official of Sigma Alpha Epsilon and outstal\ ing fraternity leader, the American frateo· nity system loses one of its most earnest 8

~~~- ~ While Sigma Alpha Epsilon is bowedth'

grief at the passing of its chief membel'f ill interfraternity world pauses to grate; It acknowledge the service of this man an contemplate upon who will take his place·ter

Pi Kappa Phi, as a part of the interfr~eef nity system, realizes the loss that haS sustained at the death of Billy Levere.

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cA.lpha~ Kappa Installed at cflrCichigan By CHANDLER H. WHIPPLE

IT Was M h ev arc 12, and the day to which f ery member of Gamma Sigma local

had braternity at the University of Mi;higan, een 1 k' day G 00 mg with pleasure. For on that arnm s· l\app a Igma was to become Alpha-

F'or t~ chapter of Pi Kappa Phi fraternity. from ~Past day alumni had been arriving, now e ew York and cities westward, and event.Veryone was in readiness for the great

Brother R b' one of th ? mso~, chapter inspector .and from D e. mstalhng officers, had arrived the n e;rolt on the preceding evening. Early other ~x morning Brother Turnquist, the S · Installin ffi oon aft g o cer, came from Chicago. tion t er members of Alpha-Theta's initia-

earn wh· h &'an to '. Ic was to put on the work, be-arrive

Everyth· . diateJy f mg was made ready, and imme-der w a ter lunch the work was gotten un­force ay, Alpha-Theta had turned out in Us the a~d twenty-five men aided in giving inspirinl'l;ual. The work was smoothly and Of Whi ; Y executed, and was a performance .iustJy c We believe Alpha-Theta should feel alumni Proud. Twenty active and eleven

F'oiJo tn_ernbers were initiated. lation Wmg initiation of men and the instal­ficers ~~~e the election of officers. The of­ll. ll'h· he local were retained Chandler vv Ipp] , G. Burg e being elected as archon, Leroy a non as t s ward secre ary, E. B. Schermerhorn llenry B en.w ~!bert Olson as historian, and treasur · hippie as chaplain. The former and at;~· Rryn J. Naglekirk, being absent cag0 ~... e conference wrestling meet in Chi-

, J.l.Otne B p ?ro tern r · orritt was elected treasurer Initiated. Upon Naglekirk's return, he was

A. st and elected as treasurei· I ag b · 0Wed 1·n·t· anquet at the chapter house foi-

l Iat· acted a Ion, at which Brother Eshleman betroit ~l~oast_rnaster. Members from the tended mm chapter and from Toledo at-

, and th ere were Pi Kapps present

who hailed from as far west as California, as far east as New York, and as far south as Georgia. Brother Turnquist gave a most inspiring talk as the final speech on the program.

Following the banquet, a formal dance was held at the chapter house. Sorority houses were ransacked to furnish dates for the men from Alpha-Theta-whether or not the girls proved satisfactory, we will leave to them. Midnight came, the party ended, and some very tired Pi I(apps sought their beds.

The final chapter was written when, a day later, every fraternity and sorority on the campus received an announcement of the in­stallation of Gamma Sigma as Alpha-Kappa chapter of Pi Kappa Phi. That week-end was a great event in our history, and marked the goal for which every member of Gamma Sigma had been faithfully striving. Every man of Alpha-Kappa is proud of his Pi Kapp pin, and every man is going to live up to the principles for which it stands.

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Alpha-Kappa is Installed

By ELMER N. TURNQUIST, Sup1·eme S ec1·etary

'CL?W AS a rainy day on March 12 in Ann Arbor, Michigan, but through the rain and the clouds appeared

a silver lining in the form of a new chapter to be added to the roll of Pi Kappa Phi. From far and wide the brothers came to wit­ness the installation of Alpha-Kappa chapter. By noon time Pi Kappa Phi was represented by brothers from Gamma, Eta, Upsilon, Omega, and Alpha-Theta. Alpha-Theta be­ing the nearest active chapter sent practically its entire membership to Ann Arbor includ­ing a crack team for the initiation cere­monies. The Detroit Alumni were well repre­sented and not to omit any one else the Chi-

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cago Al · Prern Summ were represented by the Su­

e ecretary Install t' · high a Ion ceremonies began shortly after

Gam noo.n with thirty-one members of casi rna-Sigma awaiting that longed-for oc­brotohn ~hhen they should become a part of our

ei ood Th . 't' t' conct t · e mi Ia wn ceremonies were A. I ph~~ Te: by a thoroughly drilled team from Present eta. I am quite sure that every one ly insp· Was very much impressed and great­the ini;;e~ by the thorough manner in which being th ati?n team went about its task. This A.lpha-T~ firs~ presentation of the new ritual, StJlenct·d ~ta Is to be congratulated on their Was i I Interpretation of it. Full regalia made n use Which presented a spectacle that

Aft us all feel proud of our fraternity. er the thirty-one brothers had been

presented with their pins, recess was taken in order that the brothers might prepare for the formal festivities which were to follow. A formal banquet was served at 6:00 P. M. at the chapter house. Owing to the large number of Pi Kapps present the banquet was divided into two sections. The dinner was followed by a number of impromptu speeches by the visiting brothers and members of Alpha-Kappa. Then came the dance and what an orchestra, and what a dance!

Sunday found the boys reminiscing over the affairs of yesterday sorry to see it over with, yet glad that they were there ready to carry on in Pi Kappa Phi. We are proud of Alpha-Kappa and we are expecting the brothers to assume a position in our midst worthy of their name and institution.

~he CJ-eistory of Gamma Sigma of the University of ctl(Cichigan

By ALBERT OLSON

(C\ ~tOctober 27, 1923, a small group of was submitted to the Dean of Students for '-J . Udents met in a room in the Mich- permission to establish the fraternity which 't Igan U . 1 Y of or nwn to consider the advisabil- was to be known as Gamma Sigma. ga .. ent reco ~IZing a fraternity. The men pres- The thirteen origin a I founders were tel'nitie gnized the fact that the field of fra- Joseph Benkert, James J. Dunn, Edwin C. \VelJ fil~e~t ~he University of Michigan was Galsterer, Ralph W. Goodall, D. Clinton also rea]· ' If not crowded. Those present Green, Howard B. Green, Willis Handy, Set a n lZed the difficulties which would be- Charles L. Lewis, 0. Harry Olson, Homer B. did not ~w organization which at that time Porritt, Stanley H. Richardson, E. B. Scher­~ancia] ave a house and had very small fi- merhorn, and C. Floyd White. An organi­It Wou]dr~sources. To secure desirable men zation was perfected with the following men establish e necessary to compete with well acting as the first officers of Gamma Sigma : It Was a e~ and well equipped fraternities. Ralph Goodall, president; James J. Dunn, Of such h Uge task to undertake in the face vice-president; 0. Harry Olson, secretary; stamPed eavy odds, but these men who here Willis Handy, treasurer; and Joseph Benkert, \\rhich it ~ character upon the organization chaplain. These men possessed unusual abil­\Vas a Pla as never lost, decided that there ity and Gamma Sigma was in for a glorious ~~her fra~e 0~ the Michigan campus for an- future.

1&'h idea] ernity which was to be guided by In the fall of 1924 Gamma Sigma moved Pursuance s.;.f ma~hood and scholarship. In into its present home at 807 South State

Ith this determination, a request street. A strenuous rushing policy was

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THE STAR AND LAMP of Pr KAPPA PHr

adopted alan . and Gamma Sigma took its place ig g With the older fraternities on the Mich-

o ... agn c~rnpus. Only the spirit stamped on the ' all!z t' b a Ion by its founders could have t~ought about such a remarkable rating in ha~ ~omp~ratively short time Gamma Sigma

'I' een m existence. unct he founders had intended nationalization me~~ the name of Gamma Sigma, but the affili t~rs soon realized the advantages of lishe~ Ing :With some strong and well estab­'"h national fraternity Pi Kappa Phi vv ose . d . ,

I eals were similar to those the foun-

ders had in mind, was chosen to be petitioned. In the spring of 1926, after a great deal

of work in which Charles J. Snoble, the secre­tary at that time, was the capable leader, the petition was completed and sent to the Su­preme Council of Pi Kappa Phi. In Decem­ber of that year, notification was received of the acceptance of this petition. Gamma Sigma had now passed through the critical period and was about to enter into the field as a chapter of one of the strongest national fraternities.

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c5\ GJeistory of the Uni1Jersity of cfl([ichigan

By W. D. 0DAM

~liE. bi_rth of the present University of science, and the arts." The following section ~ Michigan came the same year as did vested the government of the University in

into th the ~dmission of Michigan Territory a board of regents, to consist of twelve mem­ever t~ D~Ion, in 1837. This was not, how- hers and a chancellor, who was to be the ex­in ir· e first state university to be founded officio president of the board. Provision was 1\iich/chi?an. In 1817 the University of made for the appointment of the regents by due t gan~a was established in Detroit, but the governor, by and with the consent of the death 0 discouraging conditions, it met its state senate. anoth' only to be re-established in 1821 by The board of regents was given the power hundr:~ act of .the Territory. In 1826 nine and duty to enact laws for the government the in t' a~d sixty acres were set aside for of the University, to appoint the prescribed Boards Itubon, in what is now Toledo, by the number of professors and the requisite num­Versit of Trustees of the then extinct uni- her of tutors and to determine the amount

'I'h Y at Detroit. of their salaries. Power was also given to e D . found d n1Versity of Michigan was legally the board to regulate the courses of instruc-

1837 e by the Organic Act of March 18, tion, and a further duty required that each • and 't Gener

1 I was under the leadership of year the board should make an exhibit of the

sulleri~t Isaac Crary and John D. Pierce, affairs of the University to the board of five lllans f endent of public instruction, that persons appointed by the superintendent of Sity w or the organization of the new univer- public instruction. Provision was also made

s ere effected so that the regents might proceed with the t ection t . he Wh

1 Wo of the organic law embodies erection of necessary buildings for the Uni-

claiini 0 e Purpose of the founders by pro- versity as soon as the state should provide shan bng that, "the objects of the University the funds. \Vith ~to :Provide the inhabitants of the state Three departments were provided for the edge ofeans of acquiring a thorough know!- University in the Organic Law. They were:

the various branches of literature, the department of literature, science and the

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~ ------------------------------------------------------------------arts· th tn ' e department of law; and the depart­

ent of m d' . II't e Icme. In the department of eratu · fes re, SCience and the arts, thirteen pro-sorshi rna· Ps were provided. There were three In sub d' · ·

and . - !VISions in the law department, SIX '

After In the medical department. 2 000 . much debate Ann Arbor,. a town of ' Inh b't · rive a 1 ants, and located on the Huron

cho r about forty miles from Detroit, was 1'hese: as the location for the University. sess· oard of regents meeting for its first

Ion 0 J as th . n une 5, 1837, in Ann Arbor, chose knowe Site forty acres of land which was then erty n as Rumsey Farm. This piece of prop­llany,w~ ~ ?ift .the Ann Arbor Land Com­Proper his Is shU the location of the campus on an f although expansion has been made

"'h our sides. .1. e D . .

ternber lliVersity formally opened in Sep-he the f 1~41. It may be truthfully said to though ~.er~nner of state universities. Al­the fir t Ichigan was an infant state it was of th s to foster such a plan. At the time

e op · llopulat' emng of the University the total Ooo. Ion of the state was a little over 200,-

A.t the f' and tw- Irst session there were six students twelve

0 tfaculty members. In 1845 there were

eighb, s .udents. In 1847 and 1848 there were . .r·nine t Ing in

18 s udents, twenty-three graduat-

1'h 49. the f: ~ear~ between 1846 and 1850 marked huiJt ~ e:mty opposition period. Chi Psi chapter ~r log. house, the first fraternity and A.lph ouse m America. Beta Theta Pi ~his titn a Delta Phi were also organized at ~ntertnit~· All were expelled and reinstated In 18so ently until the final reinstatement

bece~b lllade th e~ 22, 1852, H. P. Tappan was Of ofiice ;h first president. During his term the Civil e O?servatory was opened in 1855, under theEngm~ering department instituted the Law- D Physics department, and in 1859 student epartment opened with ninety-two enrontn:·nt n.uring this time, 1852 to 1863, the dents Increased from 222 to 653 stu-

Under the leadership of his successor, Dr. Haven, courses in Latin, Pharmacy, and Chemistry were added and the Medical build­irtg enlarged. It was in January, 1870, that the first woman was admitted to the Univer­sity and certificates from high schools ac­cepted for admittance.

In 1871 Dr. Angell was elected president. Dr. Angell was one of the best and most wide­ly renowned college presidents the world has ever known. His election spelled a new era for the University. Under his regime of thirty-eight years the faculty grew from thir­ty-five to three hundred and seventy-five, and the student body from one thousand one hundred and ten to five thousand two hun­dred and twenty-three. The Law and Med­ical courses grew from two lecture courses of six months each to three- and four-year courses of nine months each, after a two­year preparatory course.

Following the death of the late President Burton, the University came under the lead­ership of Clarence Cook Little, of the Uni­versity of Maine. Under this youthful presi­dent, who is thirty-seven year·s of age, the University can be expected to expand beyond the wildest dreams of its founders. Presi­dent Little has to assist him a faculty com­posed of sixteen deans, three assistant deans, sixteen professors-emeritus, 182 professors, 54 associate professors, 121 assistant profes­sors, 270 instructors, 120 student teaching as­sistants, and 300 various other summer in­structors, library, museum, laboratory, and hospital assistants.

Since 1837 the University of Michigan has grown to such an extent that its enrollment now exceeds 12,000 students, placing it in fourth rank among the educational institu­tions of the country in that respect, and it now consists of buildings valued at $16,144,-449. The total valuation of the University as expressed in buildings, lands, land im­provements, and equipment, totals $25,535,-056.

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THE STAR AND LAMP of Pr KAPPA PHI

Lou· Two Pi Kapps on Michigan Nine . 0 IS A. K b' nd seaso ~ leek, of Alpha-Kappa, '-starts his sec- Edward W. Lange, of Alpha-Kappa, served last tlniversit n this year as star second baseman of the year as outfielder on the University of Michigan ~ear he :el~f Michigan nine. Du~i_ng his sophomore Conf.er~nce ?hampionship nine, a.nd g~ves promise of

nct received ~own a regular pos.twn on the squad, acqmttmg himself favorably agam th1s year. h1s varsity "M" at the end of the season.

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THE STAR AND LAMP of PI l(AP PA PHI

Pi Kapp Michigan Wrestler

Alpha Kappa Chapter takes pride in num­being Brother Kryn Nagelkirk among its most active members.

Brother Nagelkirk is at present a member of the university varsity wrestling squad. He won his numerals in the campus freshman meet and in his sophomore year he was given a berth on the varsity squad. This season he made a trip, as a member of the varsity squad, to Iowa, where he won both matches in which he engaged, one at Iowa State Teachers College, and the other at Cornell College, Iowa. Upon his return he was in­jured in practice and forced to retire for the remainder of the season.

Brother Nagelkirk has acted in the capac­ity of chapter treasurer for two years. He comes from Grand Rapids, Michigan, and is a junior in the literary college.

W hippie Archon of New Michigan Chapter

h v~ Alpha-Kappa Chapter is fortunate in alf. ing as its first archon Brother Chandler }e

Whipple, who gives promise of being an abe and popular leader. Under his guida~~~ Alpha-Kappa Chapter feels that, with .1;

willing support, the infant chapter will gJV

an excellent account of itself. . e~ Entering the university in the fall of ntil

9 teen twenty-three, Brother Whipple .~~. given ample evidence of his executive abtll d and qualities of leadership which recornme;.! him very highly to his present office in. t ~~ chapter. He has had two years of expert~II1111 as a member of the staff of the Mioh~U

115 Daily, and also served for one summer Jlt night editor of that publication. At pre~e t· he is editor of The Inlander, the campus h eJl' ary magazine. In honor of his literar~ ~ti· deavor on the Michigan campus he was III;

5,

ated into Sigma Delta Chi, national pro e sional journalistic fraternity, last year.

Page 17: 1927_2_May

-:;::::::::; = ~============================ e1 ~ __. -----=.._ THE; STAR AND LAMP of Pr KAPPA PHr ~

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

ine~

hBS

(itf )nd I

}liS ace ta,ll

ss nt :»f'

'Pi--c?llpha 6J3ecomes alpha--Lambda at iirCississippi

By LEo H. Pou, o, Installing Officer

at th . G a. chapter of Pi Kappa Phi Jim Buford acknowledging his former mem-1N"STALLIN

Pr e Dmversity of Mississippi at first bership in Rho chapter, and Brother Reeves With c ese~ted many difficulties, and it was breathing the traditions of old Alpha, we had

onsiderabl · · · the e misgiving that I undertook ten chapters represented, including Alpha-Wire W~rk after receiving Brother Driver's Lambda. know~ ~PPointment March 16. I did not The local group having no chapter house, sippi PI Kapp in the whole State of Missis- one of their faculty members, Dr. Pigott, upon wh I except B om could call for assistance, was good enough to permit the use of the ford brothers Jimmie Simms and Jim Bu- second floor of his large home for the instal-

' w o w I SJlon801"i ere a ready at the University, lation. This proved an ideal arrangement, Was suc~ga th~ local Pi-Alpha. And Oxford and Dr. Pigott's family, wise people as they chapter th distance from even our nearest must be, made it convenient to be away for Usually at I could not expect the help that the day. S. 0. S comes from such sources. But the From the first words of our beautiful did not · cans I sent out in every direction pledging service in the morning, to the in­if any go unheeded, which is another proof vestiture of the newly elected officers and

Were n d d . . , and spir·t ee e , of PI Kappa Phi loyalty presentation to them of the charter of the

C oll'licr~~ h new-born chapter in the late afternoon, the

larence W~ ~Pter sent its archon, Brother ceremonies were almost perfectly carried out. Bob Row} Ilhams, Alpha-Eta sent Brother All the members of the team had prepared renee Jud~~d, and Alpha-Iota, Brother Lau- for their parts in the ritual, with the result call'le out ~ns. Th.e one and only Pete Brice that it was one of the most impressive initia­three brothe rom Birmingham to join these tions we have ever witnessed. The reactions A.pri} 8 . rs and myself on the afternoon of of the new brothers was most favorable, and tored 0~ In my home town, whence we mo- they said that they had come into Pi Kappa and ll'lude~ the 175 miles of cement and gravel Phi with a feeling of love for and reverence

lt wa etvveen Jasper and Oxford. toward the Fraternity none of them had even the holl'l.s almost midnight when we reached contemplated before. As indicated above, ~0:Vs, thee of "Ole Miss," but the Pi-Alpha this result is due largely to the splendid work

have ev most enthusiastic lot of neophytes of the visiting brothers I have named, and to ~s and toe~ seen, were waiting to welcome Brothers Simms and Buford, and too much L tother Learn the plans for the morrow. praise cannot be showered upon them.

alllbda ch amar Vinson, an alumnus of The first officers of Alpha-Lambda chap-l<app, had apter, and every inch a true Pi ter are: Jim Buford, formerly of Rho, ~ell1Phis tlready arrived from his home in Archon ; Wiley D. Lewis, Treasurer; William f aturday b

0 take part in the ceremonies. R. Phillips, Jr., Secretary; Charles R. Penn,

~0111 A.lpha~~Ught Brother Henry Robinson Historian; Byrd P. Mauldin, Chaplain; and ~ ta, Broth eta, Brother B. F. Simms from John R. Edwards, Warden. The chapter roll ll:Silon, an~ i;'· M. Gracey, Jr., formerly of contains the names of the following other

etne 1're rother J. Chester Reeves, Su- members: 0. E. Cathey, Byron Gathright, asurer, from Atlanta. Thus with T. Baldwin Newman, Ira A. Rathbun, J. H.

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Page 19: 1927_2_May

~ T H E STAR A ND LAMP o f Pr KAP P A PHI ----------------------------------------------------------

R . TH E TEAM W I-IT CH I N TALLED ALPHA LAMBDA CHAPTER Will ia~adu{f ~rom left to right- Pete Brice, Omicron and Birmingham; I-Ienry Robinson, A lpha Beta; Clarence i\ J ph~ Est, . rnrcron ; Leo P~m, Omi cron, l nsta lli ng Officer _; Ji m Buford, Rho and A lpha Lambda; Bob Rowland,

'I'abb and a, -aurence J udk111s, Alpha l ota; a nd l.amo r V mson, Lambda and Memplus.

faculty J. D. Turner, and the following into Pi Kappa Phi. One of the best frater-l!!erJy 0~~rnbers : James R. Simms, Jr., for- nity talks any of us ever heard was delivered Pigott Thta, Elmer V. Levie and Albert W. impromptu by Jimmie's own brother, B. F. \Vi}J b~ ini .e chapter also has ten pledges who Simms, of Eta chapter, on "The Ideals o£

'I'h bated at an early date. Pi Kappa Phi." Brother "Red" Phillips, b e cone} d ' a le on u Ing feature, and a most enjoy- whose piano work is still remembered by

Sided 0~~rwas the installation banquet, pre- those who attended the Seventh District Con­toastrna t by Brother Byrd P . Mauldin as clave in Birmingham on New Year's Day, 1\appa ;h~r. An address of welcome to Pi proved himself a five piece orchestra, and dleston t~ Was ?elivered by Dr. W. D. Hed- furnished some excellent entertainment. fratern'it' e Dmversity's faculty adviser to Sunday morning saw the leave-taking, and 8Poke of I:~· an~ Chancellor Alfred Hume it was with a feeling of real regret that we record f e University's history and proud Alabamians said "good-bye" to the new l!!ade b~ ~lccornplishment. Short talks were brothers and the old, and pointed the nose of l!!ernber a the visiting brothers and several our Chevvie toward the rising sun. :ere re!d of the . n.ew chapter. Telegrams llPI·ern ' contammg the greetings of the

1!! e office any ind. . rs, the other chapters and ~llthusias~~Idual brothers. Probably th~ most

eeves• Ic applause greeted Brother Ches Co announ Unci! h cement that the Supreme ~al!!es R. S~d decided to appoint Brother . tate of 116~rns as chapter inspector for the 111 tr .Lv.ussi ss · · B · th Oduced , IPPI. rather Simms was

e arrival as a 'two times papa," in view of 011 April 7 of a little Pi Kapp at his home

' as Well as his fathering Pi-Alpha

Wickhorst to Coach at Iowa Frank H. Wickhorst, Illinois (Upsilon),

captain of the United States Naval Acad­emy's team last fall and the selection of many authorities as an all-American tackle, has been signed as assistant football coach at the University of Iowa. He will report Septem­ber 15 and will act as head line coach.

Page 20: 1927_2_May

THE STAR AND LAMP of Pr KAPPA PHI

cAlpha,Lambda and "C0le ctJrCiss" By CHAS. R. PENN, Alpha Lambda

C7::: HE University of Mississippi, better -l:J known as "Ole Miss," is located

among the hills of northeast Missis­sippi. The town of Oxford is a typical inland town with no traits of being the seat of a state university. Yet, in spite of the few pleasures presented in Oxford, there are enough activities to take up most of the students' time out of class. The main line of the Illinois Central railroad separates the campus from the corporation line of the town. Oxford is the seat of the federal court for the district, and, also, the county seat.

"Ole Miss" came into being, at this town, in November of 1848. Many of the first build­ings erected on the campus stood the fighting that took place around Oxford during the Civil War, and they still stand. The old chapel, soon to become a Y. M. C. A. build-

ing, was used as a hospital during the W91

·c: Between the States. Much of the Physi · equipment of that day was destroyed, but t.b' building remains with the Lyceum, an adrrll~ istration building, and one of the residence~ the "dead house," to bear witness of the a; of "Ole Miss." The "dead house" was bll1

before the war to serve as a magnetic obseri atory, but during the war was used as · morgue, hence the name. The only time t~:~ the school has closed its doors was dU1'1

10:

this period of the war, when only four 5

dents appeared for matriculation. Since that day "Ole Miss" has experienc~ , pi'

a great growth. The number of students . reached the eleven hundred mark. Of til~ about two hundred and fifty are co-~ti Fifty-three instructors make up the facu ·l' Seven degrees are offered, Bachelor of AI ·

LYCEUM BUILDING, UNIVERSITY OF MI SSl SSIPPI

Page 21: 1927_2_May

war lysic' Jt tb' dmifr ence: te 8~

bUit Jsefl

as ' e tb' ,utili!

r st&

i eJ1C~

ts b' t}lt

:o·ed' ~cult! j\rt!

~ THE STAR AND LAMP of Pr KAPPA PHI ~ --------------------~-----------------------------------and six pr f . 1\ied' . 0 ess10na! degrees,Law, Commerce, nee ~Cine, Education, Pharmacy and Engi-

rmg W'th' ' tion b : . I m the past few years an educa-finest ~Ildmg and a chemistry building, the Prese ~n the South, have been erected. At the 'I'his ~ .a .$125,000 Chapel is being built. Sprin UII?mg, when finished in the late beaut~ wl Ill be thoroughly equipped and most u.

Visitors t "OJ Press d a e Miss" are always im-tnocr: by the "spirit" of the students. De­know cy rules; snobbery is practically un­sorne ~· No student passes another without its be torrn of greeting. This "spirit" is at Everys rn:n t.he sidelines of the athletic field. every t n m school stands by his team and and ba e~rn stands by its school. The football this Y s etball seasons were very successful SchooJ;ar. The football team defeated the time i; ;::atest rival, A. & M., for the first ''Ole 11.-· Irteen years. The notice given to . u.uss" In the C as a power to be reckoned with R'reater. onference is constantly becoming

In 1912 fratern 't· ' by act of the state legislature, leges A

1 1fes Were banned from the state col-. te

r a Period of fourteen years, they

were allowed to come back, by a bill that passed the legislature in March, 1926. The bill provides that no fraternity houses shall be had for a period of five years. Faculty rulings deal further with fraternities through the faculty committee on fraternities. Judg­ing from all prospects, fraternities are back in Mississippi to stay.

In the Inter-Fraternity Council, which is affiliated with the national organization of that name, there are seventeen fraternities. Nine of these are national fraternities which have received their charters since the passing of the bill for fraternities. The others are locals petitioning nationals. This council is composed of two members from each fra­ternity and meets twice each month.

Pi Kappa Phi is the ninth national frater­nity to enter "Ole Miss." It is, also, the third to grant a charter which did not have a chap­ter here before fraternities went out of the state. Pi Alpha was founded on March 7, 1926, by nine men who came together with Brother Simms, to petition. Around this group were gathered others until the number has reached twenty-four. Most of the men were so bound together by bonds of friend-

CHEMI STRY· AND PH ARl\IACY B UILDING, UN IVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI

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Page 22: 1927_2_May

~ THE STAR AND LAMP of PI KAPPA PHI Gfi ----------------------------------------------------------~ ship that the fraternity was unified from the start, and very successful.

Pi Alpha, however, had a grave problem to face. There were few men in the University who had been experienced in fraternities. The "old heads" had to be looked to at all times, lest those inexperienced in fraternities should not carry out th~ir duties properly. Then, in all the excitem-ent over the passing of the Fraternity Bill, with every group rush­ing madly about, there was difficulty lest a bad step be made. Yet, Pi Alpha came through it all with a fine record. Another hardship that the fraternity has had to face is that of having no house. The real fraternal spirit can hardly be generated without the associations that come from the men living in a house together. But Pi Alpha has managed to keep its members closely united by fre­quent meetings, socials, and continually stick­ing together when "loafing." As Alpha Lambda, Pi Alpha has become the first chap­ter of Pi Kappa Phi in the State of Missis­sippi. The eyes of the state will be on this chapter to see what Pi Kappa Phi will mean to Mississippi. The eyes of the whole fra­ternity are on Alpha Lambda for the same reason. This means that every member will have to wo1·lc for his fraternity, and every member has decided to do this in every way possible. The record of Pi Alpha has been honorable and spotless; the record of Alpha Lambda promises to be even better.

~~ ~~~ ~~~

~~~

Towill Leader at Washington and Lee

By WILTON GARRISON, Rho John Bell-Towill is a leader in Rho's activi­

ties and on the Washington and Lee campu~ Brother Towill was last fall awarded his

varsity football monogram for playing end on the 1926 Generals eleven, starring in the games against V. P. I. and Maryland. He is a member of Phi Delta Phi, national legal fraternity; the executive committee of the Washington and Lee student body; Alpha Kjappa Psi, commerce fraternity; Pi Alpha Nu, honorary social fraternity; of the 1927

. V91 Finals Committee; of the Fancy Dress p1 figure, and is house manager this year·jcrol was recently elected a member of orn oitl'· Delta Kappa, campus leadership frater fe'1

which is a signal honor given only to ~ carefully chosen men each year. cbJ

Brother Towill is a junior in the law.s g of and is one of the men Rho is countJJlrsnif heavily for next year to uphold her leade in fraternity and campus life.

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Page 23: 1927_2_May

iD" of

pil

TnE STAR AND LAMP of Pr KAPPA PHI

Under the Student's Lamp By DR. WILLIAM E. EDINGTON, y

Chai1·man Schola1·ship Committee

The Pi]( . appa Pht Scholm·ship Rep01·ts HE v · anous reports requested by the

Committee are beginning to come in several ~nd already the scholastic records of are su h rothers have been received which

c a t · · ' Wi}] s s o IndiCate that Pi Kappa Phi oon h

to them the on?r these scholars by awarding ant as 'd PI Kappa Phi Scholarship Pend­tion of e;~ ~nee of our fraternity's apprecia­the awa d eir splendid achievements. When Will be r s are made a special announcement . sent to 11 lecognit' a our chapters, and formal Pear in t~n of these achievements will ap­LAM:p. e October number of THE STAR AND

In order th t Ptomptl a these awards may be made the schor ~~d with proper consideration of for this ahs Ic records of all members eligible

onor 't · secretar· • I IS necessary that chapter Ies co-op t . answerin era e With the committee by

tllunicati g Promptly and accurately all com­do so m ons addressed to them. To fail to brother ay delay the honoring of some worthy b ' and i · · rothers n Justice to these scholarly the utmoe~ch chapter secretary should make With the s effort to supply the committee leading c~mplete scholarship records of the

sc olars in his chapter. Dist?·ibut .

In th zon of Chapte1· Membe1·ship L e Feb

AM:p it ruary number of THE STAR AND ~hapter dwas stated that the strength of a

Ut on th 0~~ not depend alone on numbers

stranD' , .. e11

Istribution of these numbers the Ch .,, vve -b I ' tl1 apter Whic: anced organization being that

ost as graduates year after year al-r~~~· .to f~a~y members as it initiates each 't 1S Idea} .tP the ranks. In order to attain Is SI uati th tnembe on, e chapter must choose l'e rs fr sh?0rds indica om among those whose past

1P and th te that they have the scholar-rn · e ·1 a1n in cone WI l to study sufficient to re-

ge throughout the entire four

years. Deferred initiation and high scholar­ship requirements for initiation are two of the most successful ways of realizing this ideal. The following data are of special in­terest to all Pi Kappa Phi and all given with­out any thought of criticism; for with one or two exceptions these data indicate fairly well­balanced organizations. The data are from reports received during the past two months and doubtless changes have occurred due to recent initiations.

CuAPTER SENIORS J uNIORS Soi•Hs. FR>:srr. l' LEJJG>:s

Beta .................... 6 5 7 4 Epsilon .............. 4 5 6 Lambda .............. 5 7 6 Xi ......... .............. 4 5 5 Omicron ........ ...... 6 8 12 6 Upsilon .............. 11 5 .S 3 Omega ................ 7 12 10 5 Alpha-Alpha .... 4 7 6 5 Alpha-Epsilon .. 6 9 14 8 Alpha-Iota ........ 1 10 4 12

10

2 7 7 7 3 3 3 3 8

Unde1·gmduate Activities of L eading Alumni

This is the title of an interesting article in the February 26 number of School and Society in which a study is made of two groups of successful alumni of Lafayette College. One group consists of 89 alumni of the classes 1876-1906 considered as success­ful by classmates of these classes, and the second group consists of 85 alumni of the classes 1876-1900 whose names appear in Who's Who . The two groups have only 30 members in common.

In the first group 72 per cent were mem­bers of Greek letter fraternities and 22 per cent were members of Phi Beta Kappa. In the J!Vho's Who group 60 per cent were fra­ternity men and 24 per cent Phi Beta Kappa. Only about 6 per cent of the alumni of La­fayette College were classed as successful in this study.

"It was found that a member of Phi Beta Kappa has more than twice the chance of at­taining success than the general run of his class has." The author, B. W. Kunkel, of

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Page 24: 1927_2_May

======================================================================~~

~ THE STAR AND LAMP of Pr KAPPA PHr GtJ

-..a{ 22 Jut-·-

= ~ -Laf, esti: uut~

firn life clas: gra(

'I'J

A.ge ansv tnan, 'I' he a co}

··r, \\Tho sian like? Of th are c and E

third ders have caree exPe1 titne~ the · Ps~cl are -v

''B to be said and a \\rorJc hookE confi, \\rhic} and 1 ~tess 8Pent Was,

''St e\>et:y ~'iaJ b succe: l'ise8

Page 25: 1927_2_May

-==~~~============================================== ~ THE STAR AND LAMP of Pr KAPPA PHr ~ -------------------------------------------------------------La:ayette College makes the following inter­estmg and important statement: "At the uutset 't f' • I may be said that this study con-li~rrns the earlier one that leadership in after cl e follows more frequently leadership in the g ass room than in any other phase of under-raduate life."

College Education

1:1. The following article appeared in The New a:e Magazine, Volume XXXV, page 10, and rn swers so well the query in the minds of so 'r:ny college students that it is given here. a el author. J. H. H., discusses the value of

c2 lege education as follows: Wh Is such training worth while to the man sio 0 does not specialize in a certain profes­lik:?such .as medicine, law, engineering or the of the T~Is question often arises in the minds are high school graduate, the parents who and considering sending their son to college, thir;ven the student who is in his second or ders .J:ar at a university. One often won­hav I It Would not prove more beneficial to caree the Young man enter the business or ex"' e~ of his choice, and learn from practical

tJel'Ien tim ce rather than books. It seems at the es that the money and time invested in lls:yc~Ursuit of such subjects as history, ai·e ology, philosophy, and kindred subjects

Wasted ''B .

to b ut there are other advantages than these said\ taken into consideration. It has been and Y rnen who have their college degree, Worr~re now making a success in the business book ' that the knowledge obtained from confi~ Playe~ th~ min~r part, that it was the Which ence mspired m one, the ease with and th one can conduct himself in a crowd, lll·ess de art of making contacts which im­SJlenr thern with the fact that the time Was wIn an institution of higher education

''S ell invested. Uch q l't' . e"er ua I Ies are essential to almost

l'iaJ b occupation, and most certainly of mate­succe enefit if one is to be considered to be a rises s~ One minus these qualities seldom

a ove the masses in life's work.

"While the college graduate with his knowledge of theory, generally starts at the same salary as the man who has not had the advantages of a university education, usually the former, more confident of himself, rapid­ly strides ahead. He is soon paid with inter­est for the time and money spent for his training.

"Statistics show that although but one per cent of American men are college graduates, yet this one per cent has furnished: fifty­five per cent of our Presidents; thirty-six per cent of the members of Congress; forty­seven per cent of the Speakers of the House; fifty-four per cent of the Vice-Presidents; sixty-two per cent of the Secretaries of the Treasury; sixty-seven per cent of the Attor­neys General; and sixty-nine per cent of the Justices of the Supreme Court."

Neal Weds Miss Archer Characterized with much beauty and sim­

plicity was the wedding of Miss Jeanette Archer, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. I. J. Archer, of Montreat, N. C., and William Henry Neal (Davidson), of Charlotte, N. C. The ceremony was performed in the Ander­son Chapel at Montreat in March.

Brother Neal is assistant cashier of the Charlotte National Bank. He and his wife are residing at the Wesleyan Terrace Apart­ments, Charlotte, N. C.

Dawson-Hutson Nuptials April 20 Charleston society assembled at

historic Saint Philip's Episcopal Church to witness the marriage of Miss Mary Elliott Hutson to Mr. Claudius Stuart Dawson, of Charleston, S. C.

Brother Stuart Dawson is an alumnus of Iota Chapter, 1921.

-·oil!{ 23 ~·-

Page 26: 1927_2_May

THE STAR AND LAMP of Pr K A PPA Pnr

vrcaking cplans for Supreme ehapter vrceeting

a LREADY plans are being made for the Fourteenth Supreme Chapter Meeting of the :Irraternity, to be held

in Birmingham, December 28, 29 and 30. Energetic brothers hav.e tackled the prob­

lem of entertaining the hundreds of Pi Kapps who are expected to attend.

Those in charge of the various phases of the meeting include brothers who have taken prominent parts in the affairs of the Fra­ternity.

The following sketches will introduce these brothers:

V. HAIN HUEY V. Rain Huey is the general chairman of

the committee on arrangements for the Four­teenth Supreme Chapter Meeting. Brother

Huey is Birmingham's "best bet" for general chairman. In fact, no better Pi Kapp could have been secured for the place.

His unusual ability as a leader is proven by the way the members of the BirminghaJll Alumni Chapter, Omicron and Alpha Et~ · look to him for leadership. Conscientious ~n endeavor, loyal in activity, and steadfast 10

devotion, Brother Huey is one of the best known Pi Kapps in the state. ~

Brother Huey did his undergraduate wor at Omicron and, after some time in Chic~g~ came to the "Magic City." He has organiZed and developed in Birmingham the secoP largest alumni chapter in the fraternity.

He is a very successful member of a lal'f real estate firm known as the Smith, Schul t and Hodo Realty Company. .

·ttet As a member of the general commJ r for the Seventh District Conclave, Brotne Huey worked untiringly and unceasing!;; and to him goes much of the credit for 1

success. ~

With Brother Huey at the helm for t 0 • Jl

Fourteenth Supreme Chapter, there JS Jt doubt as to the success of the meeting. pi will truly be the greatest convention

1 Kappa Phi has even known. Rain HueY cnt and will do it!

LEO H. POU tile

Leo H. Pou, Chapter Inspector for lW Seventh District, hails from ,Jasper, ~111 bama, where he is a successful member of law firm of Curtis, Pennington and PoU: ron

Brother Pou became a Pi Kapp at Orn1c jtl

and from all reports of those who were 0•

school with him one would unequivocaiiY cood elude that he was the "pilot" of Omicron 8

an excellent student. pat If there is a man in the fraternity t tS•

every Pi Kappa Phi in Alabama resPecg~ admires and loves it is Leo H. Pou. Throtl

Page 27: 1927_2_May

THE STAR AND LAMP of Pr KAPPA PHI

r LEO H. PAU

his f . 1 alrness c . t' o''alt • onsc1en wusness staunchness

" Y and ' ' in the h undying love he has won a place 13 earts of all who know him.

rather p enth n· ou was the man behind the Sev-f lstrict c 1 . rotn h' one ave. The suggestwn came Was ou~~ and the program for the meeting

II . med by him. e 1s · · Fourt glVmg all that he can to make the

eenth s l\appa Phi' upreme Chapter Meeting, Pi s most spectacular event.

Alh J. T. JACKSON the :oua Eta claims the distinction of having United ~gest Student Body president in the teen andtates. J. T. Jackson, a lad of seven­elected to a Jun~or at Howard College, was can best the h1ghest office a student body the last 0t by an overwhelming majority in

Broths udent elections at Howard. lie has ~r Jackson rightly deserves his honor. out his ~en an outstanding scholar through­grade cfo lege career, maintaining an average

o A . mmus in all his studies. He has

J. T. JACKSON

led his class in scholarship every year since entering school. Brother Jackson is a mem­ber of the Sigma Upsilon Literary Frater­nity, the Beta Theta Pi Honorary French Fraternity and the Allied Arts Club.

CECIL A. CARLISLE Cecil A. Carlisle, Eta, was chairman of the

committee that petitioned the Supreme Coun­cil for the charter of the Atlanta Alumni Chapter on March 24, 1917. We find that he was the first secretary of the Atlanta alumni. He was active in the affairs of the fraternity in that great Pi Kapp city and brought much of that enthusiasm to Birmingham with him not so long ago. Brother Carlisle has been of invaluable assistance in the work of build­ing up the Birmingham Alumni Chapter. He is quiet and unassuming but interested, loyal and faithful. He has been especially inter­ested in the activities of Alpha Eta. Brother Carlisle will be a strong supporter of the Fourteenth Supreme Chapter Meeting.

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Page 28: 1927_2_May

THE STAR AND LAMP of PI KAPPA PHI

CECIL A. CARLISLE

HOWARD D. LEAKE Introducing one of Birmingham's most en­

thusiastic workers and, incidentally, the man to whom the credentials will be presented at the Fourteenth Supreme Chapter Meeting, Howard D. Leake.

Brother Leake was general chairman of the committee that put over the Seventh · District Conclave, which is ample evidence of what he will accomplish on a larger scale for the Supreme Chapter.

Brother Leake came to Birmingham two years ago from Rho Chapter as a member of the faculty at Birmingham-Southern College. His work in the alumni chapter here has been an inspiration to those who have been associ­ated with him.

As a member of the publicity committee and as chairman of the registration commit­tee, Brother Leake will serve doubly for Pi Kappa Phi's greatest convention. He says that he is expecting to register about four

HOWARD D. LEAKE

Jll' hundred of the loyal Pi Kapps next Dece i ber. Let us not fail to give him lots of wor to do!

W.A.BERRY t~e

Brother W. A. Berry, president of 0 Fidelity Building and Loan Association, ~~~r· one of the prominent business men of 131

•0 mingham, is a member of the executive bO~~e of the committee on arrangements fol' Fourteenth Supreme Chapter Meeting ... e~

Brother Berry is an outstanding c1tJZ ~ and a hearty supporter of his city, his colle and his fraternity. ·zeO

He is also one of the group that orga111 .cP the Psi Delta local fraternity in 1900, wW is now Alpha Eta of Pi Kappa Phi. 8~

The athletic field at Howard College ~~~ named in honor of Brother Berry and tne students recently erected an arch ovel' se entrance to the field "To W. A. Berry, W~~jc generosity sodded and fenced this atll e field."

-.e{ 26 Ja.·-

Page 29: 1927_2_May

tizeP >J]et

nizeO vbicJI

wB: 1 tbl , tP1

pose tleti'

THE STAR AND LAMP of Pr KAPPA PHI

W. A. BERRY

lie has f the B or a long time been a member of Pres otard of Trustees of Howard and is at

en ch . tee. airman of its Executive Commit-

PiKa alurn PPa Phi can well be proud of such an

h nus as B th is int ro er Berry, who has shown institut~rest in fraternities and educational

Ions on so many occasions.

B ALBERT LEE SMITH

rothe AI standi r bert Lee Smith, Alpha Eta, out-cessfu~~ a~umnus of Howard College, sue­affairs .usmess man and prominent in social the co~~· a member of the executive board of teenth S Ittee of arrangements for the Four-

Broth upreme Chapter Meeting. that or er ~mith was one of the small group later b gamzed in 1900 the Psi Club, which A.lpha ~:me P~i Delta Fraternity and is now

" a of PI Kappa Phi -<l.S an l .

loyal a d a umnus, Brother Smith has been n faithful to alma mater and frater-

A. L. SMITH

nity and is considered as one of Howard's most outstanding and successful alumni. Through his efforts the A. D. Smith Science Hall at Howard has been erected bearing the name of his father, a former president of the college. His mother has for more than twenty years, been fraternity mother for Psi Delta and Pi Kappa Phi.

As a business man, he has made a most enviable record. He is recognized throughout Birmingham and Alabama as a business man of ability, merit and influence.

Pi Kapps in Birmingham are justly proud of Brother Smith and are glad to have him on the executive board for Pi Kappa Phi's great­est convention.

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THE STAR AND LAMP of Pr KAPPA PHr

GJ3irmingham 1927 cOreecca forTi Kapps By EARL CARROLL, Alpha-Eta

Nestling in the foothills cif the Appalachian Mountains, is the "Magic City of the South," the scene of an industrial activity that has attracted the attention of all America, the site of the greatest iron and steel development south of the Ohio River, and the only spot in the world where limestone, coal and iron ore are found adjacent.

Birmingham is a city just fifty-six years old and yet in her brief space of life has ac­complished more than any other on the face of the globe.

From a struggling mining village of 3,000 persons in 1871, Birmingham has grown with

giant strides into the busy metropolis whiC~ we find it today-a city of 250,000 inha~J· itants. Birmingham is the largest citY 1~ the State of Alabama, the third largest in the South, the thirty-fifth of the country, and tne biggest for its age in America. . .

Birmingham is really the "Convention CJtJ of the South." During the year 1925, sixtl" seven conventions were held in Birmingh~~ with a total number of 20,836 delegates. W1t

0 splendid railroad connections, unsurpasse hotel accommodations, a delightful cJirnate: and a modern auditorium Birmingham hB~ everything a convention can want. The

SKYLINE OF BrRllf lNGTTAM, WHERE PI KAPPA PHT i\ IEETS IN DECEMBER

-.. -~§{ 2s r:Jto··-

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vhiC~ habi· ty in n the .d the

CitY ;i~tt ghllpl Witb assed mate. J hai

'fhl

WV TH:e S'l'AR AND LAMP of Pr KAPPA Pnr ~ -------------------------------------------------------------------hotels of B' . the el'hb .1rmmgham, forty in number, are ity ?dlments of true Southern hospital-

, cordial co t· spj ... ·t -opera Ion and a true welcoming d and p 'd col'hf rov1 e every convenience and Bi;~t. that the most fastidious can demand.

the 8 Ingham has a climate unexcelled in Year outh, enjoying an equable climate the

round with 'th su111111 ne1 er extremes of heat in Portaner r nor col.d in winter. In this im­lllany f espec_t It compares favorably with tisect ,

0 Amenca's leading and widely adver-

. lesorts Th Is 63 d · e annual mean temperature North egrees! First time visitors from the the "" dnever fail to express their wonder at

.. ,o er t' is all-th _ a Ion of the summer season. Golf No l'hat: Year-rou.nd pastime in Birmingham. City•• er What time you come to the "Magic the faft~~ may bring the trusty niblick and

ul putter. There'll be plenty of

opportunity to exercise them on as beautiful links as may be found.

Birmingham is the heart of the greatest mineral district in the United States. Nature has stored in the mountains of this section a vast chest of mineral wealth, sufficient to last the needs of man for centuries to come. Geologists have marveled at the lavish rich­ness of these gifts-their great diversity, their almost inexhaustible quantity, th~ir

splendid quality and close proximity. The Birmingham district is said to be the only point in the world where all of the materials and properties used in the fluxing of steel can be found within a stone's throw of each other. Steel can be manufactured more cheaply in Birmingham than at any other point in the United States. The present an­nual production is 1,400,000 tons. Th words

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THE STAR AN D LAMP of Pr KAPPA PHr

EARL CARROLL P11blicity Chairman for Fou•·tccnlh S11p1·cmc Chapter McetiH()

"Birmingham" and "steel" have become al­most synonymous terms.

The iron ore deposits in the Birmingham district are sufficient, it is estimated, to last the present blast furnaces 165 years or longer. Geologists gauge these deposits as representing one billion, seven hundred mil­lion tons of red ore and twenty-seven mil­lions of brown ore.

The annual production of pig iron in Bir­mingham is 3,000,000 tons. Eighty per cent of this output is used locally in the manu­facture of finished products.

Birmingham is also the second largest Pi Kappa Phi City in the world, and when 1928 rolls around it will have been the scene of the greatest Pi Kapp gathering in the history of the fraternity.

Kroog' s Grave Decorated der Wreath placed on the grave of Foun b~

Andrew A. Kroog at Charleston, S. C., · Supreme Archon George D. Driver.

Alumni News '.['~'

Brother Val Irion, Alpha-Beta, '26 1 ( w lane), has formed a partnership for the g;pi eral practice of law with John A. Smith~111, Delta Theta, and Mrs. Anna Wogan teO thews, Pi Beta Phi. The new firm is ·loc!l at 1013 Canal Bank Building, New Orleans~~

The first Phi Phi chapter in the Sout~ ~er installed at Tulane on March 13th. Brpt rl' Val Irion, Tulane, '26, a national ho'rl~r~fi· member of Phi Phi, acted as installing 0 of cer. Brother James I. McCain was one the fifteen charter members.

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bY .,

THE STAR AND LAMP of Pr KAPPA PHr

vilpha--crJelta ~rot hers in ~arthelmess 1?icture By DOUG WILLIX

With the l't' ga PO 1 1cal thunder last fall that ve Wide t · W h' no or1ety to the University of as Ingt . .

Pre 'd on qmetmg down, and the ousted Sl ent D on ' r. Henry Suzzallo, somewhere

sch:l to~r of the South Seas, Alpha Delta's ashe h h . Withi . orne as Withdrawn somewhat

the bn Its academic shell. College fl.Ctivities, reath · ca- of hfe to every "big man on the

'"PUs " · Off· : agam have the center of the stage. ous h lCial scholarship standings of the vari­not yo~s~ groups for the winter quarter have credite een released but persistent rumor Place ~ our chapter of Pi Kapps with second fi·at In competition with about forty other

ern·t· 1 Ies. If verified, it will but be an-

other successive time that Alpha Delta has stood high in the first section.

Sunday, April 10, saw the initiation of three more pledges. Johnnie Nelson, long, lean, electrical engineer, was shown the true light as was Pat Schlicting, frosh basketball star and pre-law student. Harold Badger, juggler of forestry scaling rods, was the third member of the trio.

Affairs of the local house are now under the control of a new set of chapter officers, including the following: archon, Charles Porter; treasurer, Cedric Walker; secretary, Charles Rutledge; historian, Laurie Porter; chaplain, Lloyd Lovegren, and warden, Win­ston Buckworth.

J>r " "-APps ON LOCATION WITH DICK llARTHELMESS, IN MAKING OF "THE PATENT-LEATHER KTD" PICTURE

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THE STAR AND LAMP of Pr KAPPA PHI

When Dick Barthelmess, motion picture star, came recently to Camp Lewis, located near Seattle, to make part of his new produc­tion, "The Patent Leather Kid," a play that includes many World War battle scenes, he sent out a call for several hundred University R. 0. T. C. men to act as German soldiers. Several of the local brothers listened to the call of the Klieg lights and our secretary, Brother Rutledge, an officer in the local unit, headed a platoon of collegiate Huns through the muck and roar of a realistic week's action during the spring vacation. We are includ­ing a few snapshots taken at the front.

Just a few moments before we unleashed our typewriter, word came from California of the crew race with southern institution in which Washington dropped the varsity and junior varsity duels and won the frosh events. In many respects the major sport at Wash­ington, crew held the attention of one man ·

from the house, Brother Buckworth, who turned out whole-heartedly for the frosh fleet all through the fall and winter training. Lack of weight and height, however, played against "Buck" in the final selections although he is declared to have mastered the stroke that baS placed Washington crews on top of the ccun· try's best.

Before many blue moons roll across the skY Alpha-Delta expects to be in full possession of its new lot now being purchased and which is located two blocks from the campus on "Fraternity Row." When the chapter buildS a new home sometime in the future it will be located in a position that will be difficult to excel.

According to the rushing committee p~an; for the fall pledging are fast being organiZ~

1 and a large group of representative men wJI be placed on the committee's inspection ]isl·

CVr. ctJrCcKgnzie C&ravels 7_Vorld on 1\fthn C&our

By DOUG WILLIX, A t.

A'AMSELLE RENEE was, oh, so chic, while ma'amselle Yvonne was-oo la la, so svelte, so petite!

Monsieur, le professeur Amercain, dining alone in the exclusive Paris restaurant, was most agreeable surprised when the two Paris­iennes, smiling sweetly under cloche hats, seated themselves at his table.

Brother Roderick Duncan McK'enzie, PhD., associate professor of sociology at the Uni­versity of Washington and a facu lty member of Alpha-Delta chapter, on a trip around the world, began to wonder if another adventure was beginning to bud. It was, in a mild way.

The ladies were friendly enough but some­what uncommunicative for le docteur's French was not quite what it might have been. With a nonchalant air they ordered

'Je an extremely complete luncheon whl 1 Brother McKenzie continued with his fr tl!l's1 repast. Ladies must eat and if they seJeC one's table, why, tres bien, q'importe? .

Ah, but it did import. The visitors fl:; ished their luncheon quickly and left t s place, pausing near the door to exchange~ word with the head waiter. He, in tu.:.; spoke to the waiter at Brother McKenZI be table who presently came around with t folded tally on a most discreet little traY· ~·

The total? It included the lunches-ge 5

erous items, these-for the two Parisien~e g Was it paid? Even with a name begin111n

0,

with 'Me and an ancestry from near Gl~5f0r chivalry overruled thrift and the proprle se had his way. Par dieu, were not all tile Americans rich? For certain, yes.

-·ot&f 32 }fit-·-

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= ~ -.vhO Ieet ack jnst e is has )un·

skY sio!l hich 1 oil j]dS will t to

Jans jzed wiil ]is!·

~ THE STAR AND LAMP of Pr KAPPA PHI

"And then," says Brother McKenzie, "I Woke up."

'I'his in 'd 1\1: l..- Cl ent, now legendary after Brother C.n.enzi ' corn. e s account at Alpha-Delta's Home-

havIng banquet last fall, was supposed to take occurred on a globe-circling expedition latee~ by Dr. and Mrs. McKenzie which ended unu ast fall. He had been selected for the

sua] hon . . Year or of a Kahn Fellowship for the de v 1925-26 that carried with it a "bourse

It o~age': of $5,000. Wealth as m. ~911 that M. Albert Kahn, a intet·es~ Parisi~n banker, created a fund the an of Which was to be used to provide scho?Portunity for a certain number of

ars from · · Was b l' varwus natwns to travel. It WouJct erleved ?Y M. Kahn that such a plan derni esult m the broadening of the aca­With c outlook and would secure the contact Schola:~~ all over the world without which lllotion Ip may become meaningless. Pro­Was n t 0,f research or of specialized studies

0 In the founder's mind-disapproved,

in fact-but rather the general cultural con­tacts by which sympathy and understanding might be developed, rather than knowledge from books.

Trustees of the Kahn Fellowship in Amer­ica include Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler, Ed­ward D. Adams, Charles D. Walcott and Dr. Henry F. Osborn. They are charged with the annual selection of two American scholars of proved aptitude who shall have a year's travel in foreign countries. One of the stipu­lations attached to acceptance of the Fellow­ship is the writing of a report, at the end of the year, to be submitted to the Trustees on the impressions received. At the discretion of the Trustees it may be published.

Unpleasant encounters with burly, scowl­ing North-of-China soldiers in blaring, mar­tial Peking; days of gales and sea-swept decks on many oceans; sunshine and blue skies on the French Riviera; deadened Eng­land, with gaunt-faced workers in the labor strike and hungry, waiting bread lines-all these and more had their place in Brother McKenzie's mental camera.

Japan, with its astonishing adaptions to Western ways, her industrialization and courtesy, formed one of the initial chapters of the trip. Renewing of acquaintances with former Japanese 'students, returned home, made a pleasant interlude to rounds of re­ceptions and inspections.

China was rumbling with anti-foreign feel­ing and travel in the Celestial Empire was not pleasant to contemplate. It was on the last train that left Peking at the time, going to Tientsin that Brother McKenzie and his wife left the capital. When the next train left it was fired upon and its passengers forced to flee back.

China-· -sounds, smells, turmoil-was fol­lowed by the Straits Settlements and the Dutch island possessions with the long-im­posed colonial government and indolent Malays.

The swarming cities of India with all their splendor and filth, rising political independ­ence of spirit and rigid castes, intellectual aristocracy and degradation, took up no

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THE STAR AND LAMP of Pr KAPPA PHI

small time on the itinerary of Dr. and Mrs. McKenzie.

But it was in Europe that a major portion of the time was spent visiting the central Continental countries. England, and visits with relatives in Scotland, were not neg­lected.

Dr. McKenzie, as a sociologist, was par­ticularly interested throughout the trip in comparing all forms of communal life and organization and the months in Europe gave more than a sketchy background.

Sometime during the summer of 1927 Brother McKenzie expects to finish his re­port of the trip, to be published in book form and which will probably be entitled "The Changing Cities."

Before he was chosen for the Fellowship, he made many valuable sociological contribu­tions to American scholarship. During the past several years his studies have mainly

been in the field of "Human Ecology"-the science of human movements, their causes and consequences.

Dr. McKenzie initiated his academic career by taking his A. B. from the University ~f Manitoba in 1912. The University of Chi· cago saw him as a graduate student fro~ 1913 to 1915 and during the summers 0

1916 and 1917. He was lecturer of matbe· matics at Manitoba Agricultural College in 1913, instructor in sociology and economicS at Ohio State University from 1915 to 1918

and assistant professor in 1918 and 1919· Later he went to the University of West Vir· ginia as associate professor and in 1920 caJlle to his present post at the University of Wash· ington. ·e

During the World War Brother McKen~If was in charge of Red Cross civilian re!Je at Camp Sherman for a time and then beca~e advisor to the U. S. Food Administration 10

Ohio.

Levere, Interfraternity Leader, CVies

WILLIAM C. LEVERE, secretary for

S. A. E. and outstanding interfra­ternity leader, died in St. Francis

Hospital, Evanston, Ill., on the afternoon of February 22, 1927. He had been ill since December 20, 1926. Until the last ten days before his death, his friends and fraternity brothers were advised that his illness was temporary and his recovery confidently ex­pected. It was, therefore, a great shock when his illness took a serious and fatal turn. After a noteworthy funeral service on Feb­ruary 25, he was laid to rest in Memorial Park, Evanston, a place henceforth destined to be a shrine for Sigma Alpha Epsilon.

Billy, as he was affectionately known, was born in New Haven, Conn., on October 10, 1872. Left an orphan at an early age, he went to Evanston to live. He was a student in Northwestern University and joined Sigma Alpha Epsilon there. In 1900 he was

elected Eminent Supreme Deputy Arch~~ and has been a national fraternity officln ever since. He attended every national co~~ vention of his fraternity since 1898 until h\ illness prevented his attendance at the rece~e meeting in Boston, and was a familiar figttl at the meetings of the Interfraternity CoJl' ference. . to

His twenty-seven years of active service e the fraternity is coincident with the cbaTign in the character of the organization fro~ 11pl exclusive Southern society to a great nat1ol'lp· organization, and that growth and ~evelond mentis a partial realization of his viswn aJld to a large extent the result of his work a sacrifice. 11e

Levere had a great historical instinct· d p

first found that Sigma Alpha Epsilon ba rY' romantic history and then he wrote the s~bis which is published in three volumes. ·ce

t . fol was probably the greatest construe 1ve

Page 37: 1927_2_May

-the a uses

areer ty of Chi·

froJll rs of a the· ~e in )}nicS 1918 1919· Vir·

caJI'le rash·

enzie ~elief caJI'le

[" i•

chon nci~l coil' I hiS !cent gure ~oil'

THE STAR AND LAM P of Pr K A PP A Pnr

that he c t 'b on ri uted to the fraternity's devel-0Ptnent f th . • or e romantic story thus devel-oped and . sou Circulated was the inspirational To ~~~ of most that it has since accomplished. his t" Is Work Levere devoted substantially all

nne from 1906 to 1912. th~f~r.1913 Billy devoted his entire time to ceptoth~Ia~ duties of his fraternity office, ex-

he bme during 1917 and 1918 when as somet· ' ian·t . Imes said, he was "the dough boys'

. I or m d' chate , a Irty Y. M. C. A. hut at Neuf-the s ~~: There he kept a book handy where theiro thiers sometimes wrote their names and signed : .ughts. One private of the Marines the h ll .Is name to this sentiment: "What Was ~he:~ Billy's other name?" Yet one who said th t e ~nd ought to know has publicly "the b a Billy, the dough boys' janitor, was theW es( known American in France during John por d War with the exception of General

ersh · in E mg, and the best loved American sarne uro~e, without exception, during the

Period" Arnong h.·

Were u Is outstanding characteristics nself' h and cult Is n~ss, a sound character, a keen

gift f ured mmd, a fine sense of humor, a or p bl' . . ality d u Ic speakmg, a dynamic person-

M:en tn an extensive physical rotundity. liis abaughed with him, but never at him.

sorb' · lie found mg mtere~t was his l~ve of boys. and h k the fountam of youth m his heart for, a:d ept it alive by his keen sympathy of the constant association with the flower sion wYouth of our land. His controlling pas­his sta~s the se:vice of mankind. He served editor e and City as a public official, as an '111Unity' as a leader in its social life and com-

enter · War F Prises. He served the nation at · ra and o~ nee decorated him with the Medal

h UlCer d'Ac d . H appy h a emlC. e was never so Youth 'thr~wever, as when he was serving fraterniti ugh the instrumentality of college

All es. AI the ad ..

<"\. Pha E . mmistrative work of Sigma carried Psilon's national organization was lie edite~n by him or under his direction. Wrote th the fraternity publications. He lected th: fraternity's war history. He col-

dues and the endowment fund.

He visited all of the ninety odd chapters and a large number of the alumni associations every two years. He developed the idea, brought about the purchase, and perfected the national house with its historical museum, fraternity library and national headquarters organization. He was perfecting the plans and drive for the erection of a magnificent memorial building an the fraternity's lake shore site as S. A. E's memorial to the brothers who gave their lives to the nation in the World War, when his weary body at last refused to keep pace with his indomitable spirit and surrendered it to the God who gave him to the service of mankind.

In Memoriam BROTHERJ.N.MOORE

Born June 27, 1904 Died January 2, 1927

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THE STAR AND LAMP of Pr KAPPA PHI

OK L A II O;\ I A WR EST LI NG 'frA:\ IPl ONS

Pi Kapps Athletic Stars at Oklahoma

Alpha Gamma continued the athletic pace which was set last year, and annexed two more silver loving cups this year as awards for interfraternity contest titles at the Uni­versity of Oklahoma.

Pi Kappa Phi won both the interfraternity basketball championship and the wrestling tournament in which the twenty national fra­ternities participated. Last year Pi Kapps won the baseball, wrestling, and track tro-phies. . ':. 1

. . I

Perhaps the most outstanding athletes on the Sooner compus are Pi Kapps. Last fall Brothers Cooke and Norris were the main­stays on the varsity gridiron squad, and at the end of the season, Norris was elected to pilot the 1927 football squad.

This winter both Brothers Norris and Jones were members of the varsity basketball

squad of which George Christmas was rn 11'';

ager. Norris easily lettered in the sport, b~ Jones failed to play in enough games to, W''' the numeral.

In wrestling, Soonerland's mat tearn WIIF 0~ led by Bob Cooke, the only undefeated rnan

the team for the season. His election to tile captaincy of the team had allowed him to sue· ceed another Pi Kapp, Bennie McElyea, wll; was captain of the mat squad in 1925·2 I Brothers Huddle and Lewis, also mernbel'S

0

the team, lettered in this sport, too. 11,

Then, in track, Brothers Raymond, Dtlpi son, Virgil and Raymond Cornelison are ,5 Kapps of whom we may be proud. DunS011

11s

record in the Missouri valley this spring w an outstanding one. to

Brother Leon Shipp is the lone Pi KaP~tS· represent the chapter in the polo conte st Shipp is regarded as on of Soonerland's be players.

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~ 'rHE S'l'AR AND LAMP of P 1 Y A PPA Pn 1. ~

------------------------------------------------~~=-u~ '&he CJraternities and the c5llumni

(EnrroR's N Writt OTE: The following article was at th=~ b~ Joe~ H. Hildebrand, Dean of Men

order offensive to neighbors where the most disorderly individuals present were not un­dergraduates but alumni. Pub] . h TIIvers1ty of California, in 1924 and

IS ed . . . ' forni M In the November Issue of the Cali - Again, while the alumnus performs a serv­

ice to the active chapter in informing it con­cerning desirable new students coming from his home community, these "desirable" stu­dents frequently are his sons or relatives, whom he urges upon the chapter with such insistence that if it chooses not to elect one of

a onthly in 1924.]

~ liE severest critic of the fraternity \:) StYstem could hardly expect that if fra-

er 't· arise n Til Ies were abolished there would 0 other 0 · t' . . and th f . rgamza wns m their place,

e r1endl ·t· · Prefer th Y C~I IC Is usually inclined to With 1·t e fratermty type of organization

s trad't' · . ' and its I IOns, Its national connections, hers t ll'lore or less responsible alumni mem-

' 0 s Which orne other type of organization 0 Would t ur exp . no possess these advantages. Pl'ob)ell'l e~Ience in dealing with the various lation tos ;~volvi~g t~e fraternity and its re­ally the . e Dmversity emphasizes continu­ln certai~ll'lPortance of its alumni members. source f chapters we have found them a With th~ Ugr:at s~rength, eager to co-operate lution of TIIversity administration in the so­regard t any Problems that have arisen with the alur:n ~heir respective chapters. Where carry out I have helped in inaugurate and lllent, resu~ Plan of sound business manage­factory, As ~ave usually been highly satis­standarct gam, where the traditional high conduct ~ of scholarship and gentlemanly the Pro~ ta chapter have suffered a relapse t •up C ' ent alull'ln. on cern and attention of compe-

necessary t~ ~ave frequently served as the On th nic.

f e othe h . ortunate) b r and, our experience has, un-

l~here aluY, .rought to light many instances Iab·J· mm ha I Ity th ve seemed to be more of a ~lull'lni of a~~/n asset to the organization. Iculty in f' I 1~Y are busy men, and have dif­

attention t Indmg the time to give desired With o the ff · . the a airs of the active chapter alu result th · · ' ll'lni Wh at th1s IS left to a few ~Porting in ° t~ave little to do but follow their t~ the cha;t lncts, and who are unable to take

ere ha''e er any ideals of value. Indeed v com t '

e o our attention cases of dis-

them he feels personally aggrieved and takes the chapter heavily to task. It is so hard for the older fraternities to resist this pressure, that they tend to become flooded with sons of alumni members, some of whom have no other qualification for membership.

Again, the theory mentioned at the outset that the organization with alumni has an ad­vantage has some doubt cast upon it by the fact that the strongest organizations, as measured by scholarship, are very predomi­nantly the younger ones. It has almost become a fixed rule that the house club will maintain a high scholastic standing for at least several years after its organization, but later, when it affiliates with a national fraternity and enters into the interfraternity competition for campus honors, perhaps builds a house so expensive as to limit membership to well-to­do students, then the scholarship drops to a mediocre level. This happens along with the acquisition of alumni members. It seems that the sense of loyalty to the fraternity often dulls the critcial judgment that might be expected from the alumni, to an extent that they accept any proposition made for "boosting" the organization, regardless of its soundness from a financial or academic point of view.

These are matters of deep concern for us, for the fraternities exercise a powerful influ­ence upon the careers of their members, and to a large extent determine the atmosphere of the University. They have possibilities for good which have hardly begun to be realized. While furnishing, as most of them do now,

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1' H E S '!' A R A N D L A M t• o f P r K A r p A p n 1

--------------------better living conditions for their members with an opportunity for learning better hov~ to behave in polite society, they could also go far toward supplying the more intellectual intercourse which is unfortunately denied to most students of today by reason of the lec­ture system. The fear of being known as a "highbrow" by one's fraternity brothers might be supplanted by franker interest in the real problems, political, scientific, eco­nomic, spiritual, of the world in which we live. The chapter, in seeking new members, might think less about the likelihood that a given freshman will make a team, and more about his keenness of mind and strength of character.

No thoughtful person can regard with com­plaisance the fact that the fraternities, with their enormous influence upon university life, show a scholarship average regularly be­low that of the non-fraternity group, and furnish 50 per cent more of disqualified stu­dents. Something is evidently wrong with many of them.

Where these things exist, alumni of the sort to be dissatisfied with them can perform no greater and more loyal service to their Alma Mater than to play the part of the older and wiser brother, helping to bring about new an:i better standards of membership, more sin­cere and sensible methods of rushing, more business-like house management, a greater desire for intellectual growth, and a keener interest in the solutions of great problems of mankind.

Dennis Re-elected Editor Oklahoma Paper

Again a Pi Kapp will direct the editorial policies of The Oklahoma Daily, University of Oklahoma daily student newspaper. Frank Dennis has been elected to succeed himself as editor of The Oklahoma Daily for next year, thereby gaining the distinction of being the only student in the university to ever be editor-in-chief of the newspaper for two con­secutive years.

Brother Dennis will be a senior in the c~ 'Jl!

lege of arts and sciences next year. DUI'1

his freshman year here, he was one of ~~ assistant editors of The Daily. In his soP~' more year, he was appointed man!lg1r~ d·t L et· e 1 or. ast year he was elected to the

't h' b . ]10~ 1 ors 1p, ~ng the second Pi Kapp to , this most influential position on the ca)'l1P

0

0 A 'l tt· n pn 12, Dennis was re-elected to editorship of the newspaper and is said to ~

\'( one of the best editors the paper haS e had.

D . h' per . urmg 1s sophomore year, Brothel' ·I ms was also editor of the Oklahoma wee~· another university newspaper in additi0

11 1

I ' ~I

being managing editor of The Daily. :fle 1'

member of Sigma Delta Chi, journalistic f!' ternity. ~Cl

He is also a member of the student coil p which governs Oklahoma University's 5,0 students.

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THE STAR AND LAMP of P1 KAPPA Pnr

Xi )s Unique Family B'Y DR. A. PELZER WAGNER

)C· Jli l\.

1 Chapter believes that it holds a unique

lllan ?p record in the possession of the Chap­Sale rothers, sons of Mr. I. D. Chapman of a Ye tn. 'I'he chapter was only a little over the ~r old when I. D. Chapman, Jr., first of \\las i~?t?ers to enroll in Roanoke College, that t' 1hated on November 15, 1917. Since !l'ener 1~e there has always been a Chapman, lllernba ly two, to be found on the list of active been e1~8 of Xi Chapter. These brothers have theh· l'lllghty active, too, as is evidenced by

1'o ~allege and fraternity records. F'rank I. D." there succeeded Walter, Carroll, 'Wes] ' ~en, and Ned. A seventh brother, bec0~Y, 1S still at high school preparing to l'oste e a loyal Pi Kapp and to complete the

1' of th' · ''l. b ,, . 1s remarkable family. <'\fte1• · 1~ shown in the picture by himself. retur servmg in the navy during the war he for a ~ed to college and completed his work

egree. On the afternoon of J qne 17th,

the day after he was made a Bachelor of Arts, he was struck by lightning and instant­ly killed. A wife and little daughter survive him. ·"I. D." was one of the most beloved men in Xi Chapter on account of both his splendid character and his 'companionable disposition. His memory will never be for­gotten.

Walter, Carroll, Frank, Ben, and Ned are seen in· the second picture grouped on the steps of the chapter house. We give the records of these men for it is one of which Pi Kappa Phi may well be proud :

I. D. CHAPMAN, JR.-Initiated November 15, 1917. College activities: Varsity base­ball 3 years, captain baseball, varsity basket­ball 2 years, winner Ciceronian declaimer's medal, debate council, second distinction. Chapter officers: Chaplain, secretary, ar­chon. Served in United States navy 1917-18. Killed by lightning June 17, 1921.

WALTER C. CHAPMAN-Initiated Novem­ber 17, 1919. College activities: Winner Cice­ronian declaimer's medal, class football, bas-

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~ ~ ~ ... _ .. _t:.J _____ T _H_E_S_ T_ A R AND LAMp 0 f pI KAppA p H ~

ketball and baseball, president German club S. A. T. C. 1918. Present position, with Ex~ tension division of the University of Vir­ginia, executive secretary Virginia Literary and Athletic League.

CARROLL S. CHAPMAN- Initiated April 19, 1923. College activities: Varsity baseball 4 years, captain baseball, class football and bas­ketball. Present position, athletic coach and teacher Norton high school, Norton, Va.

W. FRANK CHAPMAN- Initiated October 23, 1922. College activities: Winner Ciceronian declaimer's medal, debating team, member

. T. K. A. foren~;ic fraternity, class football and baseball, Junior varsity football, manager baseball, member Harlequins, Dramatic club, first distinction, Rhodes scholarship candi­date. Chapter offices: Chaplain, alumni sec­retary, archon, delegate to Atlanta conven­tion. Present position, clerk and treasurer Town of Salem, Va.

BENJAMIN E. CHAPMAN- Initiated April 28, 1925. College activities : Debating team, member T. K. A. honorary forensic frater­nity. Is now a Junior at Roanoke College.

ROBERT E. LEE CHAPMAN-Initiated May 1, 1926. Is now a Junior at Roanoke College.

,\1~ ,\It,. ~I t,..

~ ~ ~

Story Quits Oklahoma Alpha-Gamma loses another one of her

strong supporters by graduation this spring. This Pi Kapp to receive his degree is Lloyd E. Story, present archon.

The past year completed practically the fifth year of service which Brother Story has rendered Pi Kappa Phi. This semester marks his third term as archon of the chapter. His incessant work and untiring efforts have helped greatly to build Alpha-Gamma into one of the strong ·links of the fraternity.

Brother Story received his B.A. degree in 1925, and the Bachelor of Laws degree will be conferred upon him this spring. His legal ability and knowledge of law was recognized last year when he was elected to membership in Phi Delta Phi, oldest of legal fraternities.

In addition to being a leader of men 111~:

good student, Brother Story has bee~ ·tit" standing in both social and athletic act1~1

ti· He represents the chapter in the interft; ti nity council. Last year, he was one 0

1t mainstays on the baseball nine which W011

8 loving cup for Pi Kappa Phi at Oklah0!11 ·

~ ~ ~

Hurt Third Archon From Sy[acatJ~ fficer

During the recent elections of 0 oit . Alpha Iota elected William C. Hurt to g

11 the destinies of the chapter for the Jastlf of this scholastic year and the first hll the year 1927-28. til

Besides leading the state in the prodllcAI· of marble it might be said of Sylacauga, ter bama, that three archons of Pi Kapp chaP t'' have come from there within the past fi i> years. Clyde Warren served as the # archon of Alpha Eta, while James F~p(· served as first archon of Alpha Iota. Bt0

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~~=================================== -------- THE STAR AND L A MP of Pr KAPPA Pnr ~

liurt th Syla ' e second archon of Alpha Iota, claims

cauga h' r-. as IS home town ul'oth · 1924 er Hurt entered Auburn in the fall of local ~nd Was pledged by Alpha Iota, then the junio au Kappa Phi. He is a member of tha outs~ cl~ss and is rated as one of the most he h ndlng juniors. During his three years distias n:ade distinction two years and highest asticnctJon the other year. Besides his schol­a 0 l'ecord he has made for himself quite Scho~~e in the journalistic circles .of t.he Chief · Recently he was elected editor-m-1927_ of the AubU?'n Enginee1· for the year by th 28· _This is a magazine published is l' t e various engineering departments and to ba ed as one of the best of its kind. He is also~ editor of the 1928 Freshman Handbook

liu~~Sides his journalistic ability Brother and t served on the Honor Board last year a Ill he Student Council this year. He is also belt ember of Alpha Phi Epsilon and Phi

13 .~ Gamma, honorary societies. Pus

1 1 a.h:ays finds time from his other cam­activities to help the chapter along and

is one of the best boosters that the chapter has. At present he is instigator of a plan by which Alpha Iota hopes to erect its own home. Under his leadership the prospects of the chapter for the year 1927-28 appear in­deed bright.

Besides the above honors Brother Hurt has recently been elected to membership in Tau Beta Pi, honorary engineering society, much sought after by those students taking the various engineering courses.

W i !son Archon at Rho When C. H. Wilson receives his LL.B. de­

gree at Washington and Lee University this spring, Rho Chapter will lose one of its strongest men. "Buck" has been an active member of the chapter for three years, and is at present archon . He has made a varsity monogram as a member of the Blue and White tra_ck team for the past two years, and was a member of the South Atlantic cham­pion relay team during the past winter sea­son.

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~ ~

THE STAR AND LAMP of Pr KAPPA PHI

"C9le ctJrCiss" Installation By J. CHESTER REEVES

NEVER before have I attended an instal­lation which displayed the true ideals of Pi Kappa Phi as at "Ole Miss"

when we brought to light Alpha-Lambda. The smoldering spirit of Pi Alpha gushed forth to be directed and molded by Pi Kappa Phi Pilots. The hospitality and courtesy ex­tended us were elegant. The assured co­operation and praises bestowed upon us by Chancellor Hume and Dr. Hedleston of the University of Mississippi were magnificent. Unlimited praises are upon Brother Leo Pou, Seventh District Chapter Inspector and his initiating team. I most graciously mention Brother James Simms, Eta, who was the father of Pi Alpha.

Brothers, our Fraternity is a real one and I realize it more and more each day. Man is pre-eminently a social being. His social na­ture is the result of the interaction of all his separate and distinct natures. It consists in a balance of faculties . The political nature, the intellectual nature, the religious nature are only the bricks and mortar out of which the social nature is constructed.

Man's political relation is his relation to government and law; his intellectual relation is his relation to truth; his religious relation is his relation to his own actions but his so­cial and fraternal relation is his relation to his fellowmen. Hence, the social relation is the highest one possible.

Manhood is the basic principle and love the binding force of fraternalism. Founded on such lofty principles what may we not reasonably expect from Pi Kappa Phi.

Brother Simms of Eta Chapter well brought out our ideals in his address at the final banquet.

The Ideals of Pi Kappa Phi Speech delivered by B. F. Sims, Eta, at in­

stallation banquet of Alpha-Lambda Chapter at the University of Mississippi.

·tair. I glory with you that you have cer nt:

ideals to cherish and perpetuate as stude of of the University of your native ~tat~ b) which you have been so ably remwde your beloved Chancellor and adviser. ·ntt

Now you have crossed a threshold 1 1 ideals most sacred, lofty, and profound·

1111•

am unable to give you in a satisfactorY ~\151 ner the reason for the existence of these, J t1l as I am unable to explain the basis of

0pi

Fraternity. Neither can I tell you w,;, 'd \\W Damon returned to Pythias, why DaVl 01

so steadfast in his loyalty to J onat~an, 1~8 can I tell you why God loves. But m g fo­joy I tell you that Harry Mixon, Simon ·d·

d D. . 11\11

garty and Andrew Kroeg un er !VIlle "' 1.1

ance, as all positive values are guided, g;le to us the union of their souls in the tang~}li. form known to the world as Pi K,appa .___.s but known to us as something greater true, burning, living reality. e-

O, Brother, our Fraternity is not some ~11 . chanica] order, some man made organizatJ

1,

but a great unity of Brotherhood given to~~ from the union of the souls and hearts of 0 }lt founders. Our Fraternity was not brougof about by an artificial gathering of a grouP nd men who agreed upon a body of rules a it regulations, a r itual and a name and called ~ a Fraternity, but rather our heritage wa~ee Fraternity in the birth of this union of thr noble founders. pi

In telling you of the true nobility of ., Kappa Phi I do not have a spirit of irreV~i· ence toward any other Greek letter frater

1,

ties, but rather I have a deep reverence. J\~·e man who comes to the true conception of ~· · real meaning of his Fraternity will have t

1:

sense of reverence and further he will coJ11 to sense the common brotherhood of man· d

The pages of our history are not scorche, by disruption and disagreement. It is P:e thetic but true that some fraternities are t r offsprings and amalgamations of oth~e groups. Heart rending it is to know of t

-··..at 42 }!it-·-

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0

tl \\

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ft. 1 p b

(

Page 45: 1927_2_May

rtair. dent· ,e, ot :d b)

in t1 d. maw ,jUi

' our w)!Y ,,·~'

' nor rrea : F& ruid· ' garl gibl.i p]!!.

js

d

~ 'r ~ HF, STAR AND LAMP of Pr KAPPA Pr-rr

artificial c . . g:-own I onditlOns out of which some have the fuJI n the light of this we can appreciate

W Value of our birthright e s ff ·

\Vhich u er rebuke from outside forces ?oes th s~orn at our youth-but, ah, never It had ~ shake my faith in Pi Kappa Phi. If a babe . een born last night and now lay like

ln a c · Proud t armg mother's arms I would be been all 0 stand and testify now that I had of And owed the privilege to enter that union

Man re~, R~rry and Simon. the ent" With his legislative pen may destroy \\lear 0 Ire ~Ystem of college fraternities, time into di ur ritual, custom bring our regulations ....... but ;use, our badges be moulded into coin Andre 0 mortal man can destroy the union of Alil<on ~h Rr?e~, Simon Fogarty and Harry Pa Ph· at Is Immortal-that is our Pi Kap­burn ~-;honor it, glorify it-let your souls

h Passion for it.

Ga · rrzson One of Rho's Prominent

Leaders By N. DAWSON HALL

In W·I one of 1 ton M. Garrison, Rho Chapter has only . her outstanding leaders. Although has a J~nior at Washington and Lee, "Wilt" acth,~~.hleved quite a high place in campus by be·les. He was signally honored last fall t?lrn, ~n~ elected editor-in-chief of the Ring­forth ht, semi-weekly university newspaper, adl'lJi e 1926-27 session and has published an tinct·rable college paper. He holds the dis­tory

10fn of being the first junior in the his­

Posit? t~e university to hold this important :a/~n, 1t usually going to a senior.

Fancy Dress Ball figure; holder of the uni­versity poetry prize; member of the univer­sity publication board; president of the Lee Blue Pencil Club, local professional journal­ism fraternity, and treasurer of Rho Chap­ter.

_,\1~ ~\ll!,. .:."~

~ ~ ~

Epsilon Brother Distinguished Scholar

Guy Richard Vowles, B.A., M.A., Litt.D., Ph.D., can justly lay claim to the title of Ep­silon's most distinguished brother. From his arrival at Davidson in the fall of 1925 as head of the German department until the present time he has won a place in the hearts of all the students as one of the most popular men on the faculty.

After graduation from Fargo College Dr.

boar~ her Garrison is also on the editorial lllag . of The Mink, university humorous unh; azl~e, and associate editor of The Calyx, tJPsi~rsity annual. He is a member of Sigma belt on, honorary literary fraternity; Pi llity ~ :Psilon, honorary journalism frater­llity: 1 • Alpha Nu, honorary social frater­bado' assistant business manager of the Trou-1927 rs, _university players; member of the

F'mals Committee; member of the

Vowles attended for three years Oxford Uni­versity, England, as Rhodes scholar from North Dakota. Returning, he assumed a pro­fessorship at Fargo College and then was appointed dean of that college, at which insti-

Page 46: 1927_2_May

Tn E S T A R AN D L AMP of Pr K A P P A Pn r ! ---------------------------------------------------------- .

tution he remained until1922. The following year he served as assistant to the president of the University of North Dakota. The next two years saw him as senior fellow in Indo­European Comparative Philology and part time assistant in German at the University of Chicago. Dr. Vowles obtained the degree of B.A. at both Fargo College and Oxford University, also obtaining the degree of Mas­ter of Arts at the latter institution. The degree of Litt.D. was conferred on him by Fargo College, his Alma Mater, in 1919, and last summer he merited the degree of Doctor of Philosophy at the University of Chicago.

An intense student of languages, he has won recognition not only as a professor but as an editor, having edited an edition of Bjornson's En Glad Gut (1915) and was co­editor of Ibsen's Terje Viken (1918).

Brother Vowles is a member of the Presby­terian church, and is interested in various CIVIC moves. He is a noted Kiwanian; in fact, being a charter member of the first Kiwanis club in North Dakota. He also holds

. 1 an' membership in several professwna learned societies. krrtan

He was married to Miss Ella ~· Bee rear· of Moorhead, Minnesota, and their ten·) old son, Richard, is a future Pi Kapp. he i~

Epsilon is proud of Brother Vowles-a logical friend and brother.

-~1l;. ~14:. ~"4:.

~ ~ 1&'!

Brother Reeues, Champion Pledger Exits

By WILTON GARRISON, Rho I r!1Pjof<

Euclin D. Reeves, Rho, is the cha f tne pledger of Pi Kappa Phi and probablY 0

entire fraternity world. ·ioO; According to the records of the vaidg&

chapters in the fraternity, "Euc" has P1? tl'' a grand total of one hundred and nine· three men for Pi Kappa Phi.

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~================================== 't'

-------

TTE S'l'AR AND LAMI' of I 1 KAPPA Prrr ''1:'1 ------------------------------------------

. .l!JUC," Wh . . ~a 1·s ose home 1s m Clarkesville Geor-, a nat' ' lina, and is IVe of Orangeburg, South Caro-Reeves S a brother of Brother J. Chester

' upreme Treasurer ow round· .

ternity ]'f mg out his seventh year of fra-b I "E " h ~ le "line"' ~c as perfected an inimit-

lty on p· I( and 1s unquestionably an author­World.

1 appa Phi and the Greek fraternity

Du · ''1:1 rmg his ta ~Uc's'' s Y at Washington and Lee

t acti ·t· ' he frat VI les have not been confined to t' . ernity 1 lc'Pated . a one, however. He has par-.· ma · 1hes and vaned number of campus activ-two Years ~ade quite a record. For the past badour h e has played the lead in the Trou­Piayers s ows, Productions of the university I · He · · cUb. v· Is president of the dramatic

' ICe p · - res1dent of the Troubadours; ex-

change editor of The Mink, university humor­ous magazine, and the Ring-tum Phi, univer­sity newspaper; is on the editorial board of both publications; and is secretary of Phi Alpha Delta, legal fraternity.

The list of 193 men pledged by Brother Reeves includes many of those who have be­come leaders in their respective chapters and who have done a great deal for Pi Kappa Phi nationally as well as locally.

Brother Reeves receives his LL.B. degree from Washington and Lee in June. Such a man, who always has his fraternity at heart, will be missed immeasurably when the chap­ter roll is called next September.

But "Euc" says he isn't "through" by a good many years and that he can be counted on for 193 more men for Pi Kappa Phi yet.

CC5he CfJraternity-cA Servant By H. CLAY KNIGHT, A. H.

~Othdetermine _whether the existence of not perhaps recorded, but there can be no \() r/ Fratermty as a factor in college doubt that the Greek letter society rendered to und 1 e has been justified it is necessary service to the cause of higher education by

erst · ' stances and what conditions of circum- encouraging members to complete their col-doing atcal!ed it into being, and what it is lege education, and by influencing them to PeJ·irnent the Present time. Begun as an ex- interest other men in what was for years an letter .more than a century ago the Greek experiment that met with slight favor and \ . society , h Vzth th seems to have been established scanty support from t e general public. That a co"'"' e hope that it might serve to unite in the Fraternity did cement friendship there is b ''1•110n ' e1·8 of Interest the most prominent mem- ample evidence to prove, for the earliest is-

'l'h the student body. sues of the Fraternity Magazine are filled 't· e cone t· 1 IVe, th e~ ~on of the Fraternity is prim- with the testimony of those who bore witne!s the \Vi de or1gm of which is by tradition to to the enrichment of their lives through the It date ~~ of the mythical chief Hiawatha. wealth of sympathetic interest such friend­centur s 10~ the beginning of the fifteenth ship had bestowed. To be trusted, to be ap­llation Y. Th1s confederacy consisted of five preciated, to be loved makes possible the by it s, and each nation was individualize:! practically impossible, and renders the joy the ter 11.ame, its dialect, its government and of success more keen . . Jus/~tory which it occupied and defenderl . The day for the fraternity as a protective

f11·st ow much the Fraternity did for the league is long since past. Its importance as theiJ. ~~n~ration of college men in making a prominent factor in the College life of to­their r· 1 Ion secure and in demonstrating day is even greater than ever, for it touches to th lght to the educational privileges e:]ual vitally the lives of hundreds where once it ose e .

n.Joyed by their present brothers is touched only a score. Today in the great

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~ THE STAR AND LAMP of Pr KAPPA PHI ~ ----------------------------------------------~ throngs attending our colleges there cannot be the opportunity for the development of individuality that once existed.

It is now one hundred years since the fra­ternity system began. That is a reasonable testing period. Each of the older societies is stronger, richer, better housed and more of an ally of the institutions in which it has its chapters than it was ten years ago. The co­operation between the academic authorities and the fraternity overseers is an established factor today that no one values more highly than the college administrators.

It is true that the intimate homelike life of a chapter tends to distract from study, but it is doubtful if this defect is greater within than it is outside the fraternity. In most respects, in fact, the fraternity reflects the life of the student body as a whole. Every effort is made to maintain decent scholastic and moral standards. There has been a great change for the betterment of the fraternity, it is more democratic since wide expansion. There has been a great increase in the num­ber of chapters of the established fraternities since the war, and many new organizations have arisen.

Although the work done in preparation for the leadership is perhaps the most important within the scope of the fraternity, it is far from being the only benefit that the members receive. Very valuable indeed is the business training that comes from the association with the chapter's duties and responsibilities in.the undergraduate days. Another opportunity that the fraternity opens to its members is the chance it gives them through its publi­cations, and conventions to get a wide out­look over the entire field of collegiate educa­tion. The important part that the fraternity is doing in developing a national type of cul­tured man is another phase of the work that it is doing for society and one for which it takes little credit to itself. A cultured man with lofty ideals and noble principles is al­ways an honor to the nation. Such is the fraternity-man. The badge he wears is a constant reminder to him that he has pledged himself, both heart and hand to honor and

Jigh! truth, that he has set his face to the never to turn back. reO

The chapter has still within itself. ad\jo· distinct and separate existence. Them ~105, ual members of both are united by verY. pO' ties, both continue indefinitely, and th~~~~ua! sition in society depends upon the indiVl nni· part that each member plays. AnY or~ lJ!

zation that fosters love of home sboU tral encouraged, for from the home as the cen iJI' force in civilization must emanate all the fluences that make for progress. . . 'dtla~

The fraternity is essentially an md1V1• tel' I

izing and harmonizing agency. The ft: ,,ef nity man will always be a success, wha e·slt be the line of service that he may consec\et himself to. If he is a fraternity man~ "'

1nil·

will be his guidance, more practical h.1s p for osophy, more potent his friendshiP• e~1-th:rough association with the different. rt1 d 1

bers of his chapter he will have galne nb· knowledge of human nature such as .can °

3nl

come from being in intimate touch w1th rtl· lives and minds. b

What we need to do is to create sucntat spirit within our chapters that the rne,vif drone cannot survive, that every man ter count it a task of his loyalty to his cha~ jO to perform every task as well as he baS fr~· him to do. If we would do this we as rf ternity men could prove to the world at 1~ jr: that when college-trained men are need~tbif any emergency the best will be found WI 131. the ranks of our fraternities. The sch05~0r ship of the fraternity according to p~of,~1; , Stuart of the University of Missouri, ndi· good barometer of most of the other cot ti tions." With so much of accomplishrnen tt its credit in the past, with so much ;no1;al be done in the present the fratermtY 0n· look forward to the future with courage,·~s . fident that its existence in the college fl 11er want that can be met in no other or be way. nd~

The fraternity of itself, in what it sta Bi for, and what it does is unimpeachable. rd= demanding excellence in classroom rec~ col­by insisting on indications of a propel e.~· lege spirit, and proper chapter pride, ?~ ob' pecting a fine regard for the best soc1a

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ven tlivid· cloS' 1' po­idU~

·gan'· ld ~

I ,ntr:, e ill'

cb · en I' ,,11

Pter II . it 10

rrs· }!ll'gr ed ir jtbi~ olot· esso· ''!S ondi· t t• •JI

re 1' Jll9)

coil· 'jJIS' etter

~ ----- Tn:e STAR AND LAMP of Pr KAPPA PHr

servan . ces by em h . . h . f •:rnPlicit ' . P_ asizmg t e Importance o

Part of Y, Sincerity and sympathy on the anothe the members in their relation to one ternityr'. and to other college men. The fra-

Is c t· attenti on mually calling every chapter's Placed

0~ to hi_gh ideals that the order has the w efore Itself, and incidentally paves be hig~~ for the organization as a whole to Ulty, Y respected by student body and fac-

'I'he fr t . achiev a ermty, then, by reason of its past future ement_s,. ~t~ present potentialities, its royal Possibihbes is deserving of a very ''Ever;elcome. One college president said : ought t Young man and woman in college in "'ro 0 be a member. Students must live

., UPs.'' Educat· ·

know! d Ion Is not only the acquirement of I'elati e ge, but also our harmonious living the clans. The fraternity supplies that which tnentsassroom cannot give, and thus compli­tnakes :. ma_n's intellectual training and that We .nn fit for life and usefulness. If they h Ie not true men in later years after lege dave gone on in life and left their col­\Vitho ays far behind would not say almost Part 0~t ex:eption the fraternity was the best What I their college career, "It has made me Unive ~In!" Whenever it enters a college or stude~~Ity, its advent means that a number of and

1 s have bonded themselves together

idea) p edged themselves to work for high arrivs, for noble aims-one of these aims to the c~ at a standard ideal by creating within \\rith apter that brotherly love, as we would associ~u: own blood brother and make our fore hon defend and protect with all the and e 1 ~f the fraternity through uniting one son a ' each placing in common his own per­dir~ :nd all his power under the supreme her cIon of the general will, and each mem­\Vho)accepted as an indivisable part of the

e. i\.g .

over am repeating, the badge that we wear both ~ur heart, which we received pledging not and and heart to honor and truth, is beinregarded as sacred as it should be. It is are g forgotten by many who think that they frat:n .honor to the fraternity whereas the

rnity is above all an honor to them. It

is an outward and visible sign of an inward and spiritual grace that has enthroned itself in the heart and will be content with nothing short of the glorious words of our motto.

Dunson Sensational Valley Athlete Most sensational athlete of the Missouri

Valley indoor track season is Raymond Dun­son, University of Oklahoma hurdler. Dun­son startled valley fans by his record per­formance of six seconds flat in the low hurdles at Des Moines, March 12. This win, coupled with his first in the high hurdles, gave the Sooners an unexpected Valley cham­pionship with 27% points. Dunson also tied Conger of Iowa State for individual scoring honors, the Iowa middle distance man win­ning two firsts, too. In the Rice and Texas relays, outdoors, Dunson again was in the spotlight, but was disqualified on his record­breaking performance of 14.9 for the high sticks.

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T nE S 'l'A R AN D L AM P o f P1 K APPA Pnr

Upsilon's New Eighty Thousand Dollar Home

By L. W. MARVIN

Upsilon is now beginning to realize the dream that has been cherished for the past ten years, the ideal to which every fraternity strives and hopes for with selfish pride and anticipation. The new home we have so long planned is now within a few months of being a reality.

The building we now occupy has served us about ten years. It has been ours from the organization of Gamma Sigma Kappa, the local chapter prior to affiliating with Pi Kappa Phi. It has been a struggle to obtain the equity we now have in the building and it has meant a good deal of work and worry on the part of men now alumni as well as active members, with the help and advice of faculty members.

As campus life has advanced and a frater­nal life advanced correspondingly, numerous steps have been made for better things. An increased interest in activities, a higher type of men sought for fraternities, great numbers of men in one organization and new frater­nity homes to accommodate the increased numbers. All these are the result of con­tinuous progression over a period of ten years.

It is this last phase that Upsilon is par­ticularly interested in at present. A new home means additional men, of an even high­er social standing on the campus, an assurity of a standing equal to all other fraternities with r egard to political, managerial, and ath­letic rating. Of coursa, it wi11 provide a won­derful environment inducive to higher schol­astic average, a greater incentive to acquire the routine s tudies with the extremely pleas­ant surroundings as the background.

We have purchased the lot for our new home, a piece of property 100 feet by 114 feet. On thi s will be built an $80,000 home. It will be of Georgian architecture, the type of buildings now on the campus at Illinois. It will be a two and a half -story structure, study

d ·rnitor. rooms on the second floor and the Ol . th on the third. Ground will be broken 111

0p1

0cc · next few months in order that we maY the new home the first of next year.

d. 5 Lieurance Goes Back to In tan

do' Sometime soon Thurlow Lieurance, ~e~·sit

the fine arts department of the umve 0,

of Wichita, will disappear from his u~·e' haunts and somewhere on a tepee dotte~

1.j1,

1 . s' ' ervation "The Man Who Carries Vo1ce

appear once again. rrif' For many weeks "The Man Who C~

1d;

Voices" will live among his Indian .frJ;\1~ They will sing their love lyrics, then· . epin chants, and chortle their war whoops fol hi~ to record on the phonograph which gave his Indian name. ,, wi·

Then "The Man Who Carries Voices :r,·eu· leave the reservation and as ThurloW . \1~: ranee, composer of "By the Waters of Ml~f. tonka," "Lullaby," and dozens of other so th• will return to his home to play and repla~err. records and interpret the sounds in Jl1°

music forms. ti~t This singular procedure has been repea

5,

itself for more than fifteen years, and, .a !Jl' result, Lieurance has gained fame folf .1• musical interpretations of the life of the a;~ disappearing American Indian. He is re~i9v nized as one of the foremost critics of In music. te<

Trustees of the university have gran 0,

Lieurance an extended leave of absence ;e, he plans to spend part of it in further st\~u·

The composer has melodies from a er· thirty different Indian tribes in North ;\!1\11' ica in his phonograph library. He ~as g~tx ered many Indian mementos and hiS co ~· tion of forty Indian flutes is considered ~r of the largest and finest in the world. In·df Indian programs, the flute music pr~"\n• the background, for, he says, the f lute tS

only native Indian instrument. · i ~ "Minnetonka" was written from mate~e11 •

gathered from a tribe of Sioux Indians. Lifo! ranee carried the meldoy in his mind

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up.

s

~==================================== ------ Tn n; STAR A N D LAMP of J 1 J ~ APJ> A Pnr

lllany lhonth '"'ent b s and then set it on paper. Years tion sy before it obtained general recogni-

. Olh · Cu!p, th e Way 1t got to Europe and Julia and int e Dutch musician, read it, played it, \Vith 1·t roduced the piece back to America

s res It' Much u 1.ng tremendous success. \Vork . of Lieurance's actual composition ho111e

18 done at "Cherry Hill," his summer

near Taylor's Falls, Minn.

:;\·~ ~\l~ ~"~ - ~ ~

ll!in . ozs Brothers Win Circus Cups

'l'he r . . held nvltabon High School Track Meet ter111i~n~ua]]y by the University of Illinois is ''lntersa ~d by .a circus (colloquially known as the stu~ olasbc"). This circus is put on by co111Pet ~nts. Prizes in the form of cups are theca e for by the various organizations on by \Vi:us. Upsilon has tied the local record the &'a Ing three cups. The picture shows

ng that won the cup in '26.

The brothers who took part from left to right are Marvin, Ullemeyer, Bucher, San­derson, Thompson, Reed, Wells, Kuhl, Ever­ett, Gehringer, Riggs, Dodds, McCoy, Schroe­de, Werden, Smith, Bergholtz, Moore, Du­Bois, and Chronis.

,S.II,.. ~lb: ~~~

~ ~ ~

Brother Smith Weds T. Clarke Smith, Kappa, '21, University

of North Carolina, was wed April 30 to Miss Anna Evelyn Valentine at Westfield, N. J . Brother and Mrs. Smith will make their home at Charlotte, N. C., where he is en­gaged in the insurance business.

~ ~ ~ Brother Charles D. Peavy, Alpha-Beta, '26,

Tulane, surprised and delighted friends and "Brothers" by his marriage, in March, to Miss Mary Vaughn of Monroe, Louisiana. Miss Vaughn was formerly a student at New­comb College, and Brother Peavy is a gradu­ate of the Medical School of Tulane.

Page 52: 1927_2_May

THE S1'AR AND LAMP of Pr KAPPA Pr-rr '(1 --------------------------------------------------------~

Lost Members

FIRST-CLASS MAIL HAS BEEN RETURNED FROM THE ADDRESSES LISTED

If you know the present address of any brother here listed, please send it to the central office:

ALPHA Bruce, Lawrence .................................. Knoxville, Tenn. Moore, William Heyward .................. Statesville, N. C. Moore, Robert Ashe ........ Broad St., Statesville, N. C. Stover, Melvin S ..... ...................... Heath Springs, S. C.

BETA Sellers, Marvin McSwain ........................ Bushnell, Fla.

GAMMA Adams, F. W ..... .. 2720 Filbert St., San Francisco, Cal. Anderson, William .. .............. .............. Republic, Wash. Barrett, Herbert Weir,

1051 Cole St., San Francisco, Cal. Church, James Blair ...................... Virginia City, Nev. Clayberger, L . .......................................... Fruitvale, Cal. De Lisle, Leo A . .................................... San Rafael, Cal. Fish, Harold Winslow,

938 Pine St., San Francisco, Cal. Galloway, Vernon R.,

1517 Jones St., San Francisco, Cal. Haskell, Lloyd Mell,

514 Fremont Ave., Olympia, Wash. Holler, Wesley,

Curtis Lorna Linda Ranch, San Fernando, Cal. Laws, Clarence Lyman ........................ San Diego, Cal. Magnus, Charles Ernest

2091 Dayton Ave., Los Angeles, Cal. Merill, Clarence, 1638 W. 51st St., Los Angeles, Cal. Mess, Charles Theodore,

P. G. E. Electric Power Co., Crockett, Cal. Morgan, Wm. Irving,

care Standard Oil Co., Stockton, Cal. O'Reilly, Gerald Henry ............................ Berkeley, Cal. Peebles, Juel Robert ............................ Greybull, Wyom. Peterson, William Hugh,

1547 Euclid Ave., Berkeley, Cal. Potterson, H. Rather, Frank H . .......................................... Hemet, Cal. Rea, Boyd William,

2222 Bancroft Way, Berkeley, Cal. Ring, Arden Garrison .............................. Ferndale, Cal. Robert, P. L. U . ............................................ Sprada, Cal. Stack, Frank Lawrence,

2624 Laguna St., San Francisco, Cal. Starke, Paul A.,

First National Bank Bldg., San Francisco, Cal. Stockton, Irwin .................................... Bakersfield, Cal. Suits, James C . .................................. ........ Yuma, Ariz.

DELTA Dodson, Leon Douglas .. 720 S. W. 5th St., Miami, Fla. King, Joseph ................................................ Dillon, S. C.

ZETA sC . Florence, . Blount, Alston W1lcox .......... .... ............ ..

Carpenter, William McNeill Hasburn, William H. Kelly, William Moore, c·ty S· c.

216 Thomas St., Lake 1 ' S C

Moody, J . .......... .... ....................................... . DiJion •.

Nichols, Fred Rollings, Richmond Hobson, b' s. C

care University of S. C., Colum Jilt, Gl· Atlan a, Walker, Perry Hoke ................................ ..

ETA Fain, Robert Lee, ·ne }i'IJ·

631 Riverside Ave., JacksonVI Ten~· Henley, Haggart Mark .................... Tracy Ci~;t;a, GI-Moran William Ralph .... 955 Greene St., Aug Gl·

' . Vienna, Shell, LewiS Donald ...................................... Royle, GB· Tyler, C . ............................................... ............ .

EPSILON . N C Cashion, J . ...................................... .............. Derita, · Fairley, Alexander Mciver, Jr., .

0, JII·

323 S. Franklin St., ChJcag S C McFadden, Edward White .... .................. Chester, ' Shaw, Thomas Wm.

THETA . oni•' K W 'll' F d · Cincinnati, ... em per, 1 Jam • re er1c ................ Jo''• Owens, John ........................................ Iowa Falls, oniv Schenk, Robert .................................. ........ Dayton.' ohio Tanner, Archibald E . .......................... Cincinnati,

IOTA

Barker, G., Capt. U. S. A., V C· care Adj. Gen. Office, Washington, ·

Bronson, George Remley, . 'l'enP· 507 E. Maclemore St., MemphiS, }i'IS·

Cochran, David .................................. Jacksonville, Davis, Edward McCollough, QS·

Newberry St., Atlanta.; p~· Durrett, K . ........................................ Clarksville, e Gotjen, Oswald August Theodore Hucks, William Richard, oniO

Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., Akron, GS· Hutchenson, J ames B . .................................. Sen.ora'f!S· Knight, James Lloyd .................. New Augustme, Gs· Lyle, L. Harry .................... 17 E. 5th St., Atlanta• GB· Manget, Victor ................ 277 Hillyer Ave., Macon, McAfee, Robert Echols, '1'~''

805 W. Nash St., Terrell, McFarland, Robert Warren, fiS·

803 7th St., St. Petersburg, GB· Melton, William H . ...................................... Macon, GB· Perkins, Olin Frazier ...... 57 Juniper St., Atlanta,f!B· Robinson, Louie Nunn .... .................... Rockledge, Watson, Albert Chandler, Jr. GB· White, Charles Franklin ...................... Statesboro,

-46{ 50~-

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s. c.

s. c. s. c.

s.c. t, G~

N·C.

Iii· o, c. s.

). c.

9•

~========================================= ~ THE STAR AND LAMP of Pr KAPPA PHr -----Wilson I -----------------------------------

'36r~in W., Kilgore, John Connor, \~ooton w·~l~ers Ave., West End Park, Danville, Va. 1692 Crawford Road, Cleveland, Ohio

' 1 latn Lewis, Sansbury, Shelley Somerville,

171 Madison St., New York, N. Y. care Marten-Nash Motor Co., Atlanta, Ga.

~loore F' ' rederick,

KAPPA

Sutton C 1

care Gudenrath & Hall, LaFayette, Ga. • ar ................................................ Wilson, N. C.

Duncan LAMBDA Gei ' Alexander F B 1841 At! t G Ssler b ............. .. ox , an a, a. ~fccask:I r. L.

1 1• Rhynhart Elliott

~cAfillan W 79 Oakdale Road, Atlanta, Ga. 1t!eetze B' G alter C .................................. ... McRae, Ga. 1.torga~ j raves .................................... Arlington, Ga. Parker 'a. C ....... .. ..... ....... 433 Orange St., Macon, Ga. llich ' eorge J asp A . " ards C! er ............................ mencus, ua.

' arence Dobson ~ory, Ze M 725 Ed~ewood Ave., Atlanta, Ga. il!iarns,rLonce~~~~~~d ......................... Thomson, Ga.

Wood "ob ' 171 G;eenwood Ave., Atlanta, Ga. I<\ In H . ....... .......................... ....... .. Jackson, Ga.

liendon RHO 'John Franklin

' 1300 N. 24th St., Lexington, Va.

1\n . g1er J ' ohn Cicero

Jackson J .600 Lexlngton Ave., Merchantville, N. J. 'I'aYlor 'w~han T . ............... ..................... Durham, N.C. Woote~ J llliatn Ferree .......................... Graham, N. C.

' · ............................................ ~aGrange, N. C.

MU

l'l arker J NU Gribble' ;mes Robart ........................ Midwest, Wyom.

' arold Everette, liender 217 4th St., Sioux City, Iowa liia\ra ~?~· Herbert Creighton ................ Stella, Nebr. 1.t ' VIrgil Ad I h · Oh' asters o P ....... .405 Broad St., Elyna:, 10

on, Frederick Alvin, SParks J 1031 N. Dearborn St., Chicago, Ill. W·1 ' ohn Row d W h' t K 1 son A ar ...................... as mg on, ans.

' llan Marshall, 512 E. 8th St., Kansas City, Mo.

l'leach C ' arrol! Eugene,

Crockett 70 East 96th St., New York, N. Y. Donald 'J . ............ Clinchfield Coal Corp., Dante, Va.

son, John L . .............................. Hyattsville, Md.

XI

Gal!ard H . OMICRON ' astmg Glenn,

!;'!etch Hillman Hotel, Birmingham, Ala. er, John Francis,

li0od B Altamont Apts., Birmingham, Ala. ' dward Pierce,

Ridgely Apt., Birmingham, Ala.

Tate, Robert Grey, care State Capital, Montgomery, Ala.

Thompson, Robert Edward, 2106 S. 50th Court, Chicago, Ill.

PI Chestnut, Homer Clyde .. Colonial Drive, Atlanta, Ga. Durham, Albus ........................................ Woodville, Ga. Frazer, John Brown,

care Western Union, West Palm Beach, Fla. Laird, Alexander Franklin J . ............ Flemington, Ga. Lawrence, Charles Frederick .......... New Orleans, La. Liddon, Francis Bartow ............................ Malone, Fla. Pittman, Robert Franklin,

120 Ponce de Leon Ave., Atlanta, Ga. Sims, Clifford .......... .................................. Richland, Ga. Wimbish, Shaffer Burke ......... ............. Five Points, Ga.

SIGMA Hamer, James Berry .. ......................... ... Rowland, N.C. Lipscomb, William C ..... Council St., Charleston, S. C.

CHI Dulmage, Gerald Arthur ......................... . Palatka, Fla. McCutcheon, Thomas Corduke .............. Daytona, Fla. Sloan, Stanley .......................................... Lakeland, Fla.

UPSILON Broom, Cohea A., 2441 N. Talman Ave., Chicago, Ill. Harris, Walter Henry ............................ Houstonia, Mo.

PHI Gettinger, Ted, care Postmaster, San Francisco, Cal. Pack, Samuel Bishop ........ 621 S. Elwood, Tulsa, Okla. Rains, Roy Alfred ...................................... Bixby, Okla. Jenanyan, Ernest Paul... ............. Box 382, Viselia, Cal.

ALPHA-ALPHA Cobb, William Frank ·····---····················-·····Temple, Ga. Hogan, Alton Paul .................... .................... Canton, Ga. Hogan, George Vernon, 1220 5th Ave., Columbus, Ga.

ALPHA-GAMMA Long, Andrew Jackson,

609 E. Oklahoma St., Anadarko, Okla. Bristow, Raymond Marcellus,

601 B. Broadway, Anadarko, Okla.

ALPHA-ZETA Hoag, Joseph Burr, Jr., 167 King St., Portland, Ore.

ALPHA-DELTA Bindon, Leonard Wm. Somerville,

1309 E. 63rd St., Seattle, Wash. Hotson, J ohn William, 4407 5th Ave., Seattle, Wash.

ALPHA-ETA Melson, Paul Connell,

255 W. 6th St., Jacksonville, Fla.

ALPHA-EPSILON Wright, Edle Winton ............. ... West Palm Beach, Fla.

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Page 54: 1927_2_May

'r n E s '1' A R A N n L A M I' a l 1) 1 K A p p A P 1 r 1

PULSE OF THE FRATERNITY Four Graduate at Charleston

Alpha Chapter loses four of her best men by graduation this year. They are Brothers Al Taylor, Bob Achurch, Cowlson Barfield and Bob Whitelaw. These men have for four years been quite active both in fraternity and student affairs, so it is with great regret that we see them leave.

Amongst the various student activities in which members of the chapter have taken an outstanding part during the past year are many of note. At present Brother Taylor is playing shortstop on the varsity baseball team, and during the basketball season was captain of the team as well as regular at the position of running guard.

Brother Hamilton is holding down the posi­tion of third base on the baseball team, while Brother Oates, as catcher, is one of the out­standing players.

Brothers "Bob" Achurch and Whitelaw are taking leading parts in the college play, "Out­ward Bound." Brother Whitelaw is quite a devotee of the drama, and has held the presi­dency of the dramatic society for th.e past two years. He is also an artist of ability.

Brother Barfield is editor-in-chief of this year's annual. His scholastic standing has always been the admiration of his friends, and during his four years here he has been rr..uch interested in athletics and music.

Brother Croft during the past year has been honored with the presidency of the soph­omore class.

Brothers Doscher and Browne have been very active in the publication of Collegiana, the college newspaper.

Alpha is planning to have her formal on the 25th of April and all indications are that it will prove an immense success. Several house parties are also being planned for later in the season.

Epsilon Plans Paper By R. C. GRADY hYte·

On February 11 the following neoP . 1·r the!"~

were received in as full-fledged bro bOJ'I

Pi Kappa Phi: W. H. Best, Jr., GoidsS ~ N. C.; P. B. Boyd, Warrenton, N. C.br~on· Brown, Chattanooga, Tenn.; R. D. ~ M t N C E B K 1 W hingto»• axon, .. ; .. uger, as dJ) C.; A.M. McKinnon, Maxton, N. C., a~ bf011~ Womack, Reidsville, N. C. They faJt .Jiuf I served the chapter during their year t~· period, and are now bringing credit to ant• fraternity as men well worthy of the

11

Pi Kappa Phi. I ctfl Brother T. H. Hamilton has been e/th~·

to act as chaplain due to the vacancY 0 si~ position caused by Brother Middleton's re nation. L~~!f

Since the last issue of THE STAR AND f 1 Epsilon has taken steps, in the forrn ~her chapter paper, to keep abreast of the

0h~P' chapters in the publication field. The c 0r ter has noted the success of similar pa.pe~::~P' letters, from the other undergradua.t? th• ters in regard, particularly, to keeP111g tel

alumni in closer touch with their ol_d _ch1tlt• and in regard to broadening the spn·Jt 0

!I

fraternity among the chapters as a wh01\ oO is planned, beginning with the next sc. W year, to issue The Epsilonian at regula! tervals. . 81t

Epsilon has been host to many alurn~l 5.6 . lady friends at house parties of Februa.I.Y

11jof

March 12-13, and at spring vacation, .Jtltin1e speaking week from April 14-20, at that bl•

• <1!\ with one of the largest and most en.1°J parties ever pulled. ,9r·

Brother Sims is again hurling for the \o~ sity and is due to sport a star when the sea is over. the

Brother John Kugler is capably fiJ}ing .11e. . . h •ty 111

pos1tion of shortstop on t e vars1 ·i~~ while Brother Doc Kugler is first ~tla\S' pitcher for the fresh. Brother Croorn 19 tltet on the fresh baseball squad, while Bro

-··-~!!{52~··-

Page 55: 1927_2_May

~================================ -------- TI-IJ~ STAR AND LAMP of PI KAPPA PHI

\\7 EP. TLOX CHAPTER 0lnack ·

the fre hIs Pole vaulter and broad j urn per on . s tra k t 1S qu1·t c earn. Brother Womack who

e an · ' accept d artist, has had several drawings llublic:tio~o~ Sanity Ra1·e, the junior class

'l'he oth .Issued during junior speaking. Selves in e1. fres~men are fast fitting them­llest and ~Ith. different ~ctivities, B.rothers WeiJ in l't cR:mnon showmg up particularly '3 I er . 0, is ha d ary society work. Brother Brown, both th Dr at work on the business staffs of th e a id' e annual v sonian, college newspaper, and

B . ~ ~'others p

llsi)011 C oweJJ and Grady represented debatin hapter and Davidson on varsity lioPkin; teams, the former meeting Johns latter w and Duke Universities, while the

'l'he ent against Emory. Cessful ~~ar. of 1926-27 has been a highly suc­

e In every way for the chapter. AI-

though Epsilon loses Brothers Jay Hall, Tom Hamilton and Roland Sims by graduation, these brothers entering the field of teaching next fall, still the nucleus that will return for next year presages another year complete in every respect.

Brother Sims has been the leader of the chapter in every phase, having served in every capacity the chapter has to offer in the way of offices, finally culminating his splen­did record by a re-election to the archonship his senior year. Brother Hall, besides hold­ing positions of responsibility in the chapter, directed the affairs of the chapter in its rela­tion to the college and campus life as an :highly efficient representative on the Pal1-Hellenic Council. Brother Hamilton's quiet influence has likewise been felt and rewarded by the brothers as shown by the fact that he .>Jas assumed a chapter office each year.

-··"'if ;)3 ~ .. -

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T HE ST A R AN D L A M P of Pr KAPPA P H I ~ __________________________________________________ __-/

!. E P SI LO N'S CH APT ER OWNED HOME

=======i=, =============:::;:;.--- ·n I Zeta Initiates five love of studying is great, still he s~ccee:s~l. 1

, being the bashful hero of many a fair da ,,e By C. W. DERRiCK Brothers King and McNeill alreadY jnd

Since last you heard from us, Zeta has brothers under THE STAR AND LAMP· ss completed a most successfu~ rushing season. they make it their purpose to even surPII 1 Five bids were issued, and · five men were their brothers in excellence.

0(

invested with the white diamond. These men Spring is beginning and ere long rna~Y 0~ were initiated on January 29 and Zeta now the brothers will find themselves again 'ell

has five brothers. ' the athletic field. R. C. King has bea~pe Three of these brothers ·claim Hartsville everyone to it by acting as coach for

as their home. These are Cl;l-rlisle King, Jack Freshman Class football team. hje 'r!lv Mcintyre, and Leon Penni~gton. All three We have moved our hall to more desl rJor·

of these shone with the light of infant stars quarters over the Bank of Commerce on 10. on the freshman football te:im. gan Square. We hope to be permanentlY

0ut

Merritt McNeill, besides· being an excel- cated here, and the latch stri.ng is a!waY:.t of lent student, is only waiting for baseball sea- to any Pi Kapp that comes mto this pa son to come so that he may' show his skill in the country.

0ur

that line, as he did in Union. · Already we are making plans for ·t ~ :Sob Schofield comes out of the "Gate City spring banquet and we hope to make 1

of the Pee Dee," Florence, and although his greater success this year than ever before·

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Page 57: 1927_2_May

~ T II E s '!'A R AND LAM I 0 f I I l ' A I p A p II I ~ --------------------------------------------------------tta Enjoys Little Commencement

By JOHN C. WILSON

ho~~:ou had only been at the Eta Chapter throu ~n the week end of March 19! Girls Weathg out the South were present; the stayeder ~as beautiful and even the moon entir ~Ide awake in order to take in the

e Situation Forth .

in full s r.ee days Little Commencement ran Wher Wing. There were girls from every­ties i~ t~t.ertained by the various fraterni­the p· eir homes, and you can be sure that our hI I<apps had a choice selection over at \Vas t ouse on Oxford road. The entire house el(cenurned over to the girls and they proved

'hh ent hostesses on all occasions. .l e f'

SPons Irst feature was a basketball game the g ored by Pan-Hellenic Council. After Perfoatne there was a tea-dance. A Glee Club

trnance was next, and everyone listened

with a most attentive ear while they were resting up for the "Big Pan-Hellenic" dance that night, which was to be given at Druid Hill's. Can you think for a minute of that huge ballroom with the lights giving the ap­pearance of twilight? Even a moon could be seen rising over a mass of beautifully ar­ranged flowers.

Saturday held just as many interesting events as did Friday. A Roadster show brought new thrills, for it was quite an un­usual affair. About twenty men, the mem­bers of a literary fraternity, selected their girls and the group passed in review for the judges to choose the best couple. After this everyone gathered at the Delta Tau Delta house for a few more hours of real fun. Sat­urday afternoon a tea-dance was given and followed that night by the second Pan-Hel­lenic at Druid Hill's. Sunday morning a breakfast party was given by the Pi Kapps

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Page 58: 1927_2_May

1r-rE S'I'AR AND LAMP of Pr KAPPA Pr-rr

and proved quite a success. That afternoon all the fraternities held open house and with this event the most enjoyable week-end had ended.

This has been a most successful year for Eta. We pledged thirteen men.

March 27, three out of the four last pledges, to be taken in, were initiated. They were: Ed Lowenhaupt, Sam Perry and Clyde Sinclair. The revised ritual was used with our new initiation equipment.

Present at the initiation were several alumni from the Atlanta chapter and Broth3r Fish from Pi and Brother Gracey from Lambda.

April 3 Eta is having a smoking party for the Alumni and at that time we will put on a model initiation, taking in the last pledge, William Tumlin.

At a recent meeting of the Alumni Council of Emory University, Brother Nixon, who is Supreme Historian of Pi Kappa Phi, was elected Alumni Secretary.

:£!~ • ~1((.. SIV

f!Sl:!! ~ ~

Items From Iota By WILLIAM DUNN, JR.

For the past few weeks our best pool shots have been practicing in order to be in pink of condition for the interfraternity pocket billiard tournament. It happened that one of our brothers conceived of the idea of a tour­nament and plans are being made for it to come off the first part of May.

We gave our annual costume ball April 25, at East Lake Club and a large number of alumni and brothers from nearby chapters were present.

The following brothers were initiated April 16: Bob Reeves, Atlanta, Ga.; Ed White, Watkinsville, Ga.; Albert Cornell, Barnwell, S. C.; and Chas. Price, Atlanta, Ga.

Spring fever has not yet taken hold of our chapter from a scholastic standpoint. The desire for knowledge has gripped the chapter with such great force that our 'scholastic standing has been moved from fourteenth to seventh place.

N. C. Chapter Adopts ({Big Brother" System

By JOE R. BOBBITT, JR. f In an effort to uphold its standards

0

8 scholarship and to instill in the ple~g.e~t , deeper sense of scholastic responsib11l.[h Kappa chapter, at the University of .No~e­Carolina, soon after Christmas and at th~'b·g ginning of a new quarter instituted the ~. brother" system as outlined by Frank ,

·elt'•· Waugh in the December Review of Revt to That is, an upperclassman was assigned k each freshman to help him with his wor ~ interview the student's professors where sucp action was needed, and see that the fresh~~e actually attempted to pass his work. h plan, we believe, has been successful; so rl'l 11cd so that we plan to use it again next year all

haP· would recommend its use by the other c ters of Pi Kappa Phi. . d

When the senior statistics were decid~e upon by a meeting of that class a short .w~~e ago, two of Kappa's men found places 1n he list of those whose features will grace t 1 tt!l' page of "mosts" in the student ann d Daniel Moore, rising young attorney, a!ll· member of Phi Beta Kappa national schO , astic fraternity, was chosen by his fello:v~ the most dignified of that group whose dig; nity is renowned. Frazier Glenn, presidell. of theY. M. C. A. and manager of track, wa~ voted most business-like. 11

Brother Moore's dignity has further bee y accentuated by his election to the presideJlCt ·us of the first-year law class. He has also .1 hS recently been initiated into the Phi AlP Delta legal fraternity. 5

Winter football found Jimmie Willi!l~e donning the uniform of the blue and wh~2 to try out for one of the half positions..

01 was · regular quarterback for the DavJdSble freshman eleven last year and should be a 1 to make his letter with the Carolina tea!l

en· next fall. Pledge Shuler, prominently rn

1 0 tioned last fall for all-state guard, was a se in uniform and is being counted upon as o!l of the mainstays of the 1927 line. r

"Red" Ellison, coming up as a star pitche

Page 59: 1927_2_May

el'

THE STAR AND LAMP o f p, KAPPA Pnr

of the T tv d ar Baby nine last spring, is expected

1\ evelop into a varsity heaver this season. Alia ap~a has pledged two valuable men, tere~ oren: of Greensboro, N. C., who en­Gra school m the winter quarter, and Calvin B;~s, of Mount Airy. Both are freshmen.

and 1. Murdock, who was married last year

ove/~ now keeping house in Durham, motors lie h 0 class every day in the Law School. for t~s recently passed the bar examination by ; State of North Carolina and is there­not a tully licensed attorney, though he has

Ye opened up an office. ~\1~ ~~~ ,\1&

~ ~ ~

Pi Second in Scholarship p· By ALLAN WATKINS

the 1

Chapter held its second initiation of are Y;~r on M~rch 4, '27. The new brothers hiirn lank Little, Cornelia, Ga.; Edward \Vort~ Marietta, Ga., and Cliff Collins, Ac­the i : ~a. The revised ritual was used and able ~lbation came off in fine style. We were of th 0 use the new ritual due to the courtesy the e Atlanta Alumni Chapter. They bought thre~ecessary equipment to be used by the

'I'h Atlanta chapters-Iota, Eta and Pi. and ~freshmen were awarded their football \VelJ /sketball numerals. Pi chapter was Ceiv d epresented. Six of our brothers re­baske t football numerals and one received a nurn e hal! numeral. Those who won football tin, ~als. Were: Brothers Fox, Darnell, Mar­Con· ass1ert, Mims and Watkins. Brother l3r0~~s received a basketball numeral. the er Floyd Bass had the honor of being baskcaptain of the first Oglethorpe varsity \Vel·eethal l team. Brothers Hardin and Dekle bask Inanagers of the varsity and freshmen era] ~hal! teams respectively. We have sev­ban rothers who are out for varsity base­~al~b They are Brothers Anderson, Bass and ban Y. The freshmen who are out for base­and ~~·e Brothers Martin, Collins, Mims, Fox

1' Jttle. \Vor~e. tnemhers of Pi chapter have done good ter In their classes. This term in the chap­~lactatings the Pi Kappa Phi's were in second

e. The general average of the fraternity

was 82.4; the general average of the school was 76. This shows that Pi chapter is well above the average. Brothers Hovis, Everett and Fisch stood among the first twenty-five highest students.

Pi chapter held its second term election and the following brothers were installed in office: Hardin, archon; Stacy, secretary; Fisch, treasurer; Brunson, historian, and Fox, warden.

Pi still owns its house on Peachtree Road and we are planning to give it a thorough spring cleaning. It is our custom on every Thursday night to have open house and the boys are invited to bring their girl friends out and we have an informal party.

After spring cleaning we have eight brothers who are ready to live in the house. Pi chapter is the first chapter of Pi Kappa Phi in Georgia to own its own chapter house.

~ ~ ~ Tau Holds Initiation

By WILLIAM H. TAFT

On March 31 and April 1 Tau chapter held its initiation of freshmen pledges as follows: David S. Cox, Jr., Raleigh, N. C.; Joe Y. Honeycutt, Smithfield, N. C.; Howard S. Wimbish, Greensboro, N. C.; Sam S. Howie, Jr., Monroe, N. C.; Braxton C. Adams, La Grange, N.C.

In the semi-annual election the following officers were elected : Kenneth Byers, archon ; H. B. Askew, treasurer; W. H. Taft, secre­tary; L. R. La Bruce, chaplain ; H. B. Bar­wick, warden.

We had a flashy team to represent Tau in the inter-fraternity basketball league this past season. The various fraternities were divided into groups. Pi Kapps were winners in their group. Our team kept steadily climb­ing towards the championship but were de­feated by the team which won the inter-fra­ternity championship. The Pi Kapp team was composed of Howie (captain) and Cox, forwards; Wimbish, center; Honeycutt and Garribaldi, guards.

We are glad to have back with us Jack

Page 60: 1927_2_May

T HE S'r A R AN D LAMP o f Pr KAPPA Prrr ~ ----------------------------------------------------~ Brantley, who is out for catcher on the var­sity baseball team.

"Hooker" Spence who played a regular po­sition at forward on the State basketball team this year was second high score man on the team.

Wilson Kilgore is representing the frater­nity in the school of public speaking. He is prominent in inter-collegiate contests and is a member of Pi Kappa Delta, a national forensic fraternity.

We have recently moved from our home on Forest Road to a beautiful house just across the street from the campus. This house is one of the best if not the best of the frater­nity houses at N. C. State. We are planning to give a tea dance soon.

'''lt.. ~~~ ~1/ ...

~ ~ ~

Chi Leads Stetson Campus By BERT C. EUSTICE

When the final curtain descends on this school year it will bring to a close one of Chi Chapter's most successful years as leader of the Stetson campus.

To begin the year we moved into our new home, which without a doubt is the best house on the campus. The fellows have shown fine co-operation all year, and the house has been our source of pride during the entire year, and will continue to be so in the years to come.

The Stetson Collegiate, the school paper, which has been dormant for more than a year, was brought to life about a month ago largely through the persistent and untiring effort of Brother James W. Carr, who has been elected editor-in-chief. He was the guiding spirit in the organization of the Stu­dent Publication Board, which is now putting out the paper with Brother Carr as the leader. He is from St. Petersburg, Florida, and has been in Stetson's school of business administration for three years, being a senior in that department this year. During his stay on the Stetson campus Brother Carr has been popular from the first. He has been a

HARRIS SIMS

ni· ~ember of the university Glee Club, the u

19 versity quartet, president of Phi Sigma ,F;~i b • f . f CJ• I usmess ratermty, and treasurer o chapter. I co

At a meeting several weeks ago the fo1l0'~· as ing officers were elected : Larry Bernat .'

cro11 ' archon ; Fred Owens, secretary; Jack ~ treasurer; Bert Eustice, historian ; Chas

fo th te. 1. ]11 '

Johnson, chaplain, and Maurice Willll b warden. At a meeting of the "S" C10

1 as Brother Bernard was elected president

0 ba

that organization. et 1 ti~ In the most spirited election that haS eV ! Set

Sill1' n been held on the Stetson campus, Harris d]' e was elected president of the student bO d ~ll . e, the highest student office that can be attal~ r· Ce Harris carried the election by a large rna2o 1• ell ity. He came to Stetson from Southern . 1~r ill lege at Lakeland, Fla., where he held a siJJ'l1 js th office. He is a junior in the law schoolphi 1

president of his class, and a member of .09

t ha] Alpha Delta legal fraternity. He haS J

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Page 61: 1927_2_May

lo11'' I 8rd· ·o''', }lao J115'

"Job . of

.vet I jJ11S

dl'• ed·

AND LAMP of Pr I<:APPA PHI

SI X OUT OF E IGHT ARE PT KAPPS cotn

Pleted as ar h a very commendable term of office Sp~· on of Chi chapter.

for 8

ll'lg football has been in progress now ever 1 the ''II a weeks, and froin all appearances

teatn f atters" have the makings of a great as ca or the 1927 season. Brother Bernard ~ace :tain and quarterback, is setting the tice. ~~ his men in the daily rounds of prac­sented 1 Kappa Phi, as usual, is well repre­nern °11 the gridiron, and besides Brother ~aur~rd there are Chet Freeman, halfback; Cellte;~e Williams, guard ; Joe Jennings, end. t·.' 'rom Smith, halfback; Ed Marsh, . ' .oe t -c. 1llll'er r .c.ustice, center, and Carroll Welsh-the V~re~d. All these men are members of

Sil<: Sity eleven. hal} t of the eight men composing the basket­

eal11 of the past season were Pi Kapps.

Reading from left to right: No. 1, Brother Bert Eustice;.No. 2, Brother Welshinger; No. 3, Brother L~rry Bernard; No. 5, Brother Tom Smith; No. 6, Brother Chet Freeman (captain); No.7, Brother Ed Marsh.

At the student election during the past week Douglas King was elected manager of the tennis team. At the same election of student managers, Brother Wagg was chosen manager of the track team.

The marriage of Geo. B. Clarke, Jr., to Miss Sarah Bradley, Delta Delta Delta, has been announced for June. They are popular on the Stetson campus, and Chi Chapter joins heartily in wishing them much happiness.

To end up the successful, year Chi Chapter is to hold a dance at the Chapter house on the night of April 15. The following night

-.. otl!{ 59 )fit-·

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1'n E T A R AN D LA M P o f I 1 KA P P A PnT

at the DeLand Country Club the annual ban­quet will take place. Extra effort is being put forth to have as many alumni back as possible for this big Pi Kapp week-end.

]A i\ I ES W. CA R R

Activity at Psi By S. G. ERICSON

Seven men were initiated March 19 : H. Temple Scofield of Ithaca, N.Y.; Norman E. Scott of Attleboro, Mass.; C. Hunter Howard of Hickory, N. C.; Alfred F. Sulla of Har­rison, N. Y.; Thurlow Purdy of New York City; Howard J. Knapp of Ticonderoga, N. Y.; and Smith W. Tompkins of Ithaca, N.Y. Edward S. Dutcher was also scheduled b undergo the transition but owning to an ill­timed attack of pneumonia was unable to do so.

Three Pi Kapp grad students are pursuing their work at Cornell: J. E. Ferguson of Beta, in architecture; Roy Magruder of Ome­ga, in plant breeding; and Frank Howard of Alpha-Zeta, in plant pathology.

arJ· Psi has been well represented in the v ,t

ous extra-curricula activities during the ~~lll term, and the indications point to ~ ~the' greater expansion along these lines Ill ]1st

ensuing term. Everett C. Bradley, stebot· high jumper, and Gerald A. Murray, 5 r~ putter, are mainstays on the varsitY tr8

01 team. Both are letter men and mernber:ber honorary societies. There are also four 0

8r

brothers on the squad. Edwin C. HanselJ11e1. is the logical choice for catcher on thiS 5£ son's varsity baseball team. Norrnall r''

· ea · Scott, '30, was regular fullback on thiS Y th' freshman football team and is noW ?n 0{

first frosh crew, thus assuring hl~ 81

another set of numerals. Walter L. l\'fe.1°0er a recent election was chosen head cheerleate~l for next year. We are also well represeJI i~ . . o~J11 · m the R. 0. T. C., there being SIX c 0· sioned officers in the house. Major :flbet Merle and Captain L. L. Seaman are-rne~·et' of the national honorary military soc! · Scabbard and Blade. ·

· 'tie! Mercer Brothers in Varied ActtVI

By WALLACE BUTTS ·011 ,.

Baseball is now the center of attract! te Mercer and Alpha Alpha is well repre~e;jpi Cleveland Purcell is a member of the P1t af' staff. Darby Cannon and Wallace ButtS infielqers on the varsity squad. Jof.

In the field of journalism we have. h" Ellis and Wiley Jordan. Brother El!JS ti.· been promoted from assistant editor on 1

M erce1: Clust.e1·, a st~dent public~tiol;~o managmg editor. Wiley Jordan IS a ~11·' member of the Cluste1· staff. Brothel' ,pit was editor of the Junio1· Class Cluster, \I

recently won the interclass contest. . teaP· Jimmie Sharp is captain of the tenniS h80·

Jimmie Glover, winner of the single~ c l pionship of Mercer summer school, Wll~~. ably play under Brother Sharp's directJ f lt.

William Bruner is the new president 0 d, Phi Delta Literary Society and presi!,e ret the intersociety debates held in 1

"8

Page 63: 1927_2_May

____._.;

vari·l ·' , pB'

' stil' tbt

teJIBf shot· traei ~rs of ~tbff

I ,1J11 an

[ seJ· I £. ~ar': r tb'

to:: raoef \f]t~ ln1ii'

o. befi jet!

~ Tr-rE S 'rAR AND LAMP of Pr KAPPA PHr ~ ---------------------------------------------------------------Broth B ele t' er runer has also been honored by his erne ~on as recording secretary of the South­lat· tudent Conference on International Re-

Jons.

ra~st term the members of Alpha Alpha Br t~d unusually high in classroom work. Ire~ ers Glenn Hasty, Paul Etheridge, and the ? Cobb were placed on the honor roll of

aw school Wi · . Pia lharn Jordan is secretary of the Mercer

Yers. -S-1{', ~IV ..,\If.,

~ ~ ~

Pi Kapps Active at Tulane A By RICHARD E. RANKIN

1'u! 1Pha-Beta initiated nine of pledges at ane d · J urmg March and April.

Shr:ck Birdwell, Pre-Med, comes from Boydveport, where he attended Centenary. hii . E~ans, Commerce, hails from Gulfport, lea SsJsslppi, but is now residing in New Or­takns. J. J. Elick has done some work and 'l'e)(en a Year's treatment of good hazing at 'l'ex as A. and M., being a native of Granger, :E;u as. Jerry is also in the Commerce School. c01fene Harding is a graduate of Centenary llle ege, and Gene's calling is likewise Com­avorce .with the tooting of the clarinet as an Lou~a~lon. George Hopkins is formerly of 'l'u]lSlana College and is taking Pre-Med at the a~e. . ?eorge starred as a songster with dern °U1s1ana College Glee Club and has J\Irn on&trated the same capability at his new ing ~ lV.tater. Jimmie Dick Purcell is seek­cia · onors in Architecture. Hugh Shane in~~s a Year at Texas University and is look­Gen orwa~d to an M. D. in the near future. hii e RobiChaux claims Excelsior Springs, dojssouri, as his stamping grounds. Gene is thi~g Pre-Med work. A. R. Thompson is the 1'h member of the famous dynasty of va1°!nPsons and bids fare to prove himself as his Uable as Bill and Jimmy. Boots has found

llace in the School of Commerce. .Br t{eview of the basketball . season shows t>

0 er Wilmer ("Griff") Jones as Pi {\app•

the 1' s outstanding star, playing forward on llun ulane quintet. An excerpt from the

abaloo reads--"Jones is fast and elusive

and has shown remarkable goal-shooting abil­ity at the forward position." We add_ that Brother Jones was one of the mainstays on the team. Griff is a sophomore this year in the Pre-Med school and besides landing a permanent position on the cage squad, played scrub football.

With the coming of spring and baseball, several Alpha-Beta aspirants were seen out limbering up with hopes high for a berth on the "nine." Brother Birdwell was only hin­dered by the First Year Ruling which made him ineligible for the team. Brother Ayo has shown very promising work.

The old order hath changed once more yielding place to the new. Brother William H. Thompson was unanimously re-elected Archon of the Chapter. Every duty connected with the Chapter seems to be a pleasure to him. Natural ingenuity and several years' exposure to the Commerce School have given Bill a business skill from which the Chapter profits much.

The other officers installed were: R. H. Riggs, treasurer; R. E. Rankin, secretary; W. G. Jones, chaplain; H. D. Ogden, warden, and H. Robinson, historian.

The widely known and much talked abou t Mardi Gras in New Orleans lent a touch of oddity to the diversion of the younger out-of­town brothers who had never witnessed thi s gala occasion. A truck was hired for the day and Alpha-Beta and "dates" joined in the promiscuous masking and frolic of the gen­eral public.

Brother Robinson, Alpha-Beta's represen­tative to the installation of Alpha-Lambda at "Ole Miss" recently returned impressed with the ceremony and gave an interesting account of t he installation and his trip. We of Alpha-Beta extend our heartiest congrat­ulations to our new Pi Kapp brothers at Michigan and "Ole Miss" and wish them much success .

The new blood of the freshmen brothers has given an impetus to the growth of Alpha-Beta. She is out of her "teens" now and the outlook is bright for the future. ("Greatness always appeals to the future.")

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T I-IE S T A R AN D L AMP o f PI K AP P A P H I

ALPHA-GA111MA CHAPTER ~

Florida Brothers Cop Honors B y CHARLIE CROZIER

Alpha Epsilon is tense with expectation as the annual "Easter Follies" are now only a few days away. Unparalleled hoarding of shekels, meticulous care as to class attendance and frenzied telephone calls and special deliv­eries point toward a gay and colorful week.

The follo'wing men were initiated on Feb­ruary 14: Reginald Axtell, Jacksonville; Bill Bullard, Gainesville; Andy Garroway, Sanford; David Henry, Live Oak; Dan Kelly and Tom Ozmer of Fernandina; S. Maupin Wall, Asheville, N. C., and Jack D. Williams of Tampa.

In the interfraternity basketball tourna­ment our team swept into the finals only to lose a heartrending game to the Sigma Chi's for the championship.

In the bridge tournament we were leading f9r a while but were nosed out by the A. T. 0., s.

. )oJlg Plans for our new house are commg a ill

very nicely and one of these days we VI definitely launch a building program.

00 A chapter paper, the Gatorzette, will 50 p·

be out and a copy will be mailed to each cbll ter of the fraternity. "e

1 · · on t1' Honors have been fairy rammg d

't 'R d" Smith all brothers lately, WI ness: · e 1

ll~

;:;am McCormick have .been pledg~d ~ ~oe .K:appa .l:'si, commercial fratermty' . 51 •

.t'earce has been pledged Gamma Sigma ~~115 10n, chemical honorary; Charlie. l.iroziBI

1 11~ oeen p1eaged and elected president o! ~ P 115

Tneta, lnerary honorary ; Tom Owens : 110 oeen p1eagea .t'irate. J::Srothers uzmer .

1u0,

·vv aH nave oeen taken into the Haccnus 0 1v

S ~I a social orgamzatwn. J::Srothers uwea ~~ .1nrower were mvitea to play on tne varsl baseball team. 0t

Well, Station A-E will now ring off, jS

whatever a station does when the progra~ js completed. Might add that the weathe mighty balmy. Mizpah.

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Page 65: 1927_2_May

~ THE S'l'AR AND LAMP of PI KAPP A PH I G_*. --------------------------------------------------

0· A. C. Brothers Led in Relay Alpha Z t . .

ces f - e a 1s makmg plans for the sue-the s ~! ~om.pletion of the college year with o1 gmnmg of spring term. "Chuck" sen w der f as re-elected archon for the remain-the

0 the Year. No changes were made in

other offices .1\1 .

brot:ha-Zeta begins this term with four new 0,

0 ers: Karl Zieber, Pasadena, Calif., sop h-.,, re .

h In commerce· Fred Goeller and "Art" "tOor ' ..;n e, Klamath Falls, Ore., freshmen in en­'" eer· OI~e . . mg: and Lawrence Tucker, Portland, adcti' tJun10~ in forestry. Zieber is a tennis tion c and Is making a strong bid for a posi­''.1\rt~n the varsity squad. Fred Goeller and latter [;Io?re are both "grade-getters," the teM... avmg made a 90 average for both

• ''IS, "Tu k " h ll l tel'tn c , w o returned to co ege ast ll~ Was a member of the old local chapter.

Pi, n:~.ld Weaver was initiated into Xi Sigma last t Ional honorary fraternity in forestry,

erm .1\ sp ..

Gard ring formal was held at the College Pto"'~ns .Aprill6. Many alumni and several

·••Ising h Pled rus ees for next year attended. t\vo of ges "Renny" Martin and Ted Klein are took t the most promising candidates for the and thrack squad. Martin is out for the 220 fou1• lll.~ low hurdles. Klein runs the mile in to l'ed Inutes and forty seconds and expects the Uce that time ten seconds by the end of

season Pi ·

of th l{a.Ppa Phi won easily in the first heat ~Psi]~ Intramural relays from Sigma Phi cons· n and Beta Kappa. The relay team t> Ists f L ~enn ° Ynn Horton, Harry Kallender, lead ;th Martin and Ted Klein. With this int1·a 1Pha-Zeta looks forward to winning the Sp~ural relays this spring.

\Va:y f Ing baseball practice has been under \\Ieath or several weeks. Although inclement tnen er has prevented extensive training, the ~am are showing up well. Two practice f1·at:1~ ~ave been played with Omega Upsilon Pi l{ nlty, both of which were won easily by sched appa Phi. The first official game is

Uled for April 19, with Alpha Sigma

Phi. Perry Price will probably pitch with Vernon Keane at the receiving end.

"Bob" Peacock, sophomore in advertising, was business manager for "Captain Apple­jack," a play presented by advanced students in community drama. This term Peacock was student director of a group of plays pre­sented in the Majestic theater by students in advanced community drama, and he also took part in "A Night at an Inn," an English play.

"Doc" Davis, '26, has just returned from Texas where he has been doing research work in entomology. He has taken a position in the entomology department at 0. A. C. where he is working in conjunction with Joe Wilcox.

Nelson Hohl, who is studying for a mas­ter's degree in bacteriology at Washington State College, was a visitor at Alpha-Zeta chapter house during his spring vacation .

Harry Kallender, having defeated all con­tenders in the 175-pound class in inter-class wrestling, seems likely to win the champion­ship in the all-college wrestling meet to be held soon .

Alpha-Theta Highlights By H. H. HALL

On May 9 Alpha-Theta will celebrate the second anniversary of its existence as a chap­ter of Pi Kappa Phi. This date is the second in significance of all dates as far as the chap­ter is concerned. The first in importance is the founding of the fraternity and the second is the date on which we were taken into the fraternity. Another date of great signifi­cance to us is March 12 of this year on which date our crack installation team, with the assistance of Brothers Turnquist and Robin­son, took Alpha-Kappa into the ranks of the Fraternity. It was a pleasure as well as an honor to perform this ceremony.

As it has been the custom of the chapter to celebrate the important dates Alpha-Theta will hold its reunion when the history of the fraternity and chapter will be revealed to the new men.

During the past term several of the mem­bers have brought fame to the Fraternity and

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Tn E ST A R A N D LAMP of . Pr KAPPA P H r

• to Walter Dernberger, a junior, we extend the right hand of brotherhood for his schol­astic and athletic ability. He has the highest average of any individual which is 3.38. Last term he lacked a few points of an "A" average and won three letter sweaters and a medal for track honors. Thus far this term his achievements have been with the fairer sex, at the initiation banquet April 16, Walt announced his engagement to Miss Helen Bischof of Pontiac, Michigan.

Kenneth Trapp one of our six footers and the famous bowler of the College, added two cups to our collection during the winter term. One is for the highest score in one game and the other for the highest average for all games of the interfraternity bowling league. His high scoring ability gave him the priv­ilege of rolling a match against Jimmy Smith, the World's Champion.

Several of the boys have answered the call to the cinder track and foremost among them is Robert Dearing of Detroit. While in High School "Bob" set some distance records. While only a yearling on the track he has showed up remarkably well and in a short time he should be able to step the mile with State's premier miler, Henry Wiley, well known in the Central and Western States. Roy Brigham, Fred Hodge and Howard Trapp a pledge, were the other men to an­swer the call.

Last but not least come the seniors, four in number, who are destined to leave their Alma Mater June 10.

Harold Lakin, of Portland, probably has done as much for the chapter as any one member. Since joining as a freshman he has worked hard and cheerfully that the name of Pi Kappa Phi be outstanding on the cam­pus. "Chick" is a member of the Alpha-Zeta honorary Agriculture Fraternity and Scab­bard and Blade the honorary Military Fra­ternity.

Franklin Creager, of Three Rivers, a Me­chanical Engineer, deserves a lot of credit for the advancement of the Fraternity. He is a member of the Phi Lambda Tau honor­ary Engineering Fraternity. "Hap" has been Archon for two terms and has functioned

equally as well on several committees. 'ded Harlow Hall, of East Leroy, has deClbliC

to be a benefactor to mankind via the P~ ri· health route. "Bill" took a liking to Bac e

1d

ology and Chemistry some years ago tur whether he will leave a name such as pas ~e. did will be determined in the years to co·or·

Herman Gnodtke, of Bridgman, is rn~.l 8 ing in Horticultural work. "Herrn" 15 ~e member of the Alpha-Zeta FraternitY· 11• . th cat has served on many committees on e et' pus and helped to make the annual Farm Week of the college Nationally known.. the ·

The years 1926-27 stand foremost 1n 1,1

College track activities. Several men ll~11g been responsible for tieing and threaten! world's records. Jd'' 1' •

Captain Fred Alderman, one of the world'~ fleetest dash men is a co-holder of the wo fe'1

record for the 300-yard dash and on a 1

nd occasions has bettered some of :Ro

9.ed

Locke's times, the Nebraska dash ace. F\d is a member of the famous State 440· :to 880-yard relay team which will atternP at lower the world's time for those events the Penn Relay Carnival this spring.

11 js

Bohn Grim another of State's dash rne 15. a co-holder of the world's record for the 81,

yard dash. Bohn is the fleetest 440 Jl'lart State has ever seen and takes an active P with the relay team.

11r)'

William Kroll, Forrest Lang and U:~i!lg Henson are the alternates for the rernaJ positions on the crack team. ·iJl'

In the Rice and Texas relays these sPl~ed ters set four new State records and .JaC the only three-tenths of a second of breakJn~roJll world's 880 relay time. They returned }le~· the Southern trip with sixteen gold watc

~~~ ~,,~ -tl~

~ ~ ~

Alpha Iota Getting Busy .M~v

Since the last issue of THE STAR of LAMP Alpha-Iota has had much to happen05e interest. One of the big events was the hO rv· party during the Junior Prom in Janll~e~t The dances were proclaimed one of the )lS'

sets ever to be staged at Auburn and AIPjrlg Iota did its part to make it so by bollS

-· -til{ (i-t r)- ·-

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:e

~ THE STAR AND LAMP of Pr KAPPA Pnr ~

------------------------------------------------------twenty.t actenct· woof the one hundred and fifty girls Pi !( Ing. Four other fraternities, besides danceappa Phi, acted as hosts during the

s. As haseb ]] l<app a season gets under way two Pi

.Rupe:t c;n be seen on the field for Auburn. his lett n~ram, not contented with making catch er In football, is acting as alternate one 0~rt~n the varsity nine. Albert Lester is I!Ja.., e most important cogs of the fresh-

" mach· the Var . Ine and shows bright prospects for 1'h Sity team next year.

this ; class football championship was won large) ear by the class of twenty-eight, due acted y to the good work of Mack Moore, who neth ;~ q.uarterback for the Juniors. Ken­sentar llnns was one of the Junior's repre­fl·orn ~~es also. Although the Juniors won Put u e. Freshmen there was a good fight \Vork p fby the Freshmen due to the efficient terbac~' E.arl Adams, who handled the quar-

Ou. s .Job for the first year men. Week

1 twelve pledges were initiated the first

that t~f February. We are glad to report sa1·y ~Y all came through with the neces-

1''\Vsc olarship requirements. l<'elix ~ T~u Kappa Phi alumni, now brothers cent) higpen and Nelson Haygood were re­Jlhi % r~ceived into the bonds of Pi Kappa to th urlng a special initiation. In addition Sor ~se two alumni we also initiated Profes­is on enneth Daughrity. Brother Daughrity depa:t of the faculty members in the English Ulty rnent and one of the most popular fac­have ~.embers on the campus. We hope to

h, Irn act as a chapter adviser. vve w· h

Schol .1s to say that before the end of the ation a;tJc Year we hope to hold another initi­this t' or our Tau Kappa Phi alumni and at I!Jisse~rne to include a number of those who

b . our last initiation. Ur1n Iota g the last month and a half Alpha-

Alph su~rendered its place as baby chapter to by A~-h appa, who has since been displaced ne'W ~ a-Lambda. We wish to extend to the &'rat~ a?ters the heartiest welcome and con­ta'tnbctabons. At the installation of Alpha­tion t a We were represented on the installa-

earn by Laurence Judkins, who reports

a fine time and a fine installation. Our Archon, Brother Bill Hurt, has taken

unto himself a couple of new honors for both himself and the chapter during the last month. He has recently been elected to mem­bership into Tau Beta Pi, honorary engineer­ing society. Also he has been elected editor­in-chief of the Aubu'rn Engineer, an engi­neering magazine published monthly by the engineering societies represented at the school.

Last but not least the new scholarship plans have aroused interest in the chapter and the brothers seem to be doing their part toward the scholarship awards.

,\!!,.. ' ' '"-" '"~ ~ ~ ~

A Word From the Baby Chapter By C. R. PENN

Alpha-Lambda has initiated eleven men and two alumni. Brothers J. R. Simms and James Buford of Eta and Rho complete the number. The faculty of "Ole Miss" has set a very high scholarship mark for entering a fraternity, an average of eighty on one Eemes­ter of work. All the pledges are certain of meeting the requirement by the time of open­ing school next fall. This high average re­quirement is quite a help to the fraternities since it insures an average of the group at least as good as that of the whole student body.

The eyes of "Ole Miss" will be on several Alpha-Lambda men next year. The treas­urer-elect of the Y. M. C. A. is a Pi Kapp. Representation will be had on the athletic teams. We have several men in the band; some in the literary societies, professional clubs, and the dramatic club. The group is decidedly well rounded, having some men from each school of the University.

Alpha-Lambda is planning an entertain­ment for the Mothers who will be on the campus for the national celebration of Mothers' Day at "Ole Miss." Plans are also being made for next year's rushing season, and for many honors on the campus next year.

_,, ~f 6 5 }!.*-··-

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THE Sl'AR AND LAMP of Pr KAPPA Pnr ~ -----------------------------------------------~

Recent Initiates

Name Date of

Initiation

A LPHA--Colleac of Charleston William Cuttino Achurcl1.......................... 2- 8-27

5 Lucas_ St., Charleston, S. C. Jacob l, rancis Browne................................ 2- 8-27

Johnston, S. C. Ralph Olin Bowden, Jr. .......................... 2-26-27

Hampton, S. C.

BETA- PrrsbJ•teria" Col/cue of So1tth Caroli1ta Alexander Ramsay Batchelor ····-····-····---- 5-2 7-24

Whitmire, S. C. I saac McDonald Adail'.......... .................. 4-26-27

Clinton, S. C. William O'Dell Bankhead................... ...... 3- 7-27

106 Hemphill Ave., Chester, S. C. Cornelius Warren Grafton .. ..... 3- 7-27

IIaichow, China. Walker Kelsey Huggins ........... 3- 7-27

11 2 Hemphill Ave., Chester, S. C. Philip Allen Roberts .......... .. ............... 3- 7-27

100 Tindall Ave., Greenville, S. C. Atticn• Grandvill e Thornton, Jr. ...... . 3- 7-27

132 West End St., Chester, S. C. William Waller Miller, Jr ............... ____ 3-26-27

404 Park Ave., Rock Hill, S. C.

EPSILON--Dn vidso" Co/leur William Hinton Best, Jr. .... ...... ......... 2- 11-27

224 East Center St., S. Goldsboro, N. C. Pettway Burwell Boyd . _ 2- 11-27

Warrenton, N. C. Scott Newston Brown ............................. ..

835 Vine St., Chattanooga, Tenn. Robert DeVane Croom, Jr .....

1\Iaxton, N . C. Edwin Brown Kugler.. .......... ..

East Main St., ~'ashington, N. C. Alexander Murphy McKinnon ............ ..

Maxton, N. C. John Archibald \Vomack ........... ..

161 Main St., Reidsville, N. C.

2-11 -27

2-11 -27

2- 11 -27

2- 11-27

2-11-27

ZETA···-IV offord Carlisle Richard King .........

Collrae 1-30-27

McBee, S.C. John Archibald Mcintyre, Jr. 1-30-27

Hartsville, S. C. Andrew Merritt McNeill ........ 1-30-27

Union, S.C. Leon Carl Pennington ...... .... .. 1-30-27

Hartsville, S. C. Robert P ace Schofield, Jr ......... . 1-30-27

Florence, S. C.

IOTA-Georgia Tccl!. Hall Hathaway ........ ................ --·------------- 2-12-27

3704 San Juan Ave., Tampa, Fla. Oswald Tot.ien .. ..................................... 2-12-27

27 East Fifth St., Atlanta, Ga. John LeRoy Hammond, Jr. ..................... 2-12-27

16 East Taylor St., Savannah, Ga. Kenneth Haughton ...... .......... 2-12-27

82 1 Pettus St., Selma, Ala. Harold A. Isenhower ............................. 2-12-27

Box 224, Salisbury, N. C. David N icholes .... ----------------------------- 2-12-27

369 Eighth St., N. E., Atlanta, Ga. Louie D. Rauschenberg ----·--------------------- 2-12-27

833 Cherokee Ave., S. E., Atlanta, Ga.

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Date of Name Initiati.ou.

Albert Chandler Watson, Jr. ------------------- 2-12-27 Elloree, S. C.

KAPPA- University of North Carolina Hugh Leonidas Merritt.............................. 1-26-27

Mount Airy, N. C. Charles Whitlock Banner, Jr ...... ------------- 4- 8-27

808 N. Elm St., Greensboro, N. C. William Edgar Bobbitt------------------------ 4- 8-27

334 Villa St., Rocky 1\Iount, N. C. Thomas Contee Bowie, Jr. _____________________ 4- 8-27

\Vest Jefferson, N. C. Calvin Graves, Jr. ----------------·· ---------------- 4- 8-27

117 Rawley Ave., Mount Airy, N. C. Walter Laxson, Jr. ------------·---------------- 4- 8-27

617 Randolph St., Huntsville, Ala. Earnest Clewell Mcinnis ------------------------ 4- 8-27

Clio, S.C.

LAMBDA- University of Georgia Andrew .Foy Byrd__________________________________ 1-18-27

122 Birch St., Macon, Ga. Walter Herbert Miller.............................. 1-18-27

338 W. Shotwell St., Bainbridge, Ga. Prince Preston, Jr .... ----------------------------- 1-18-27

Statesboro, Ga. Rufus M. Ward .......................................... 1-18-27

12 \V. Prentiss Ave., Greenville, S. C. Edward Mumford Moore, Jr. ----------------- 1-25-27

526 Shotwell St., Bainbridge, Ga. Seaborn Jarnigan Moss________________________ 1-25-27

Tignall, Ga. George Durward Nichols.. .. .. .. .............. 1-25-27

Jessup, Ga. Rudolph Cooper Richter......... ................ 1-25-27

1201 E. Duffy St., Savannah, Ga.

XI- Roanoke Col/cue James Worth Banner .. __________ _______________ 4-13-27

South Main St., Mount Airy, N. C. Henry Lee Cannaday................................ 4-13-27

614 Walnut Ave., S. W., Roanoke, Va. Henry Hamill Fowler ...................... .... ..... 4-1 3-27

1327 Patterson Ave., Roanoke, Va. William Togo McAfee ------------.... 4-13-27

Rugby, Roanoke, Va. Raymond Lee Paine -------------------------------- 4-13-27

532 Mountain Ave., S. W., Roanoke, Va. Edmund Burke Whelan, IV....... 4-13-27

Laurelton, N. J. Olen Arthur Wilkins .................. ... 4-13-27

Edinburg, Va.

OMICRON-U·uivcrsity of Alabama Wilbur Cecil Grant ---------------------·.......... 2-26-27

Daytona Beach, Fla. Joseph Guy Kelly....................................... 2-26-27

Cullman, Ala. William Earle May...................... .. .. .... 2-26-27

Troy, Ala. Jack Haughton McGuire........... ............... 2-26-27

Tuscaloosa, A Ia. Charles Edward Mundine .............. ........ 2-26-27

Jasper, Ala. Ralph Powell -------------------.. ................... 2-26-27

Red Level, Ala. Thornton Bidgood 1\Ioore.......................... 4-18-27

Mobile, Ala. Leo Clide Smith .... ................................... 4-18-27

El Reno, Okla.

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Date of Initiation

Clifton A PI- Og/etluwpc University

Pra:o~ is~0~~~~o!t~;-c;;~-------------------- 3- 4-2 7

unnels Little ' Bo" 289 ------------------------- 3- 4-27

£dward C • Cornelia, Ga.

406 p~~erS 1\iims .. :-------------------------- 3- 4-27 t., Martetta, Ga.

"'•nklin b ~-IO-Washi>Igton and L ee University l 11!9 p: k eattie ...... _________________________ 2-16-27 l enry F Ic ens St., Columbia, S. C.

n Bo" ~~~er Dullard .. ________________________ 2-16-27 ~oy p1 • Lake Wales Fla.

easants B , \ . Pleasant umpass --------------------------- 2-16-27 ~'•liiarn A Ga~den Road, Greensboro, N. C.

F JOg Si~t;al;ttngham --------------------------- 2-16-27 '•nk Boyd G lace, S. W., Birmingham, Ala.

G Care E ary, Jr................................. 2-16-27 torge La Vans & Galbraith, Spartanburg, S. C.

J Care ~~s Hester.:.---------------------------- 2-16-27 ohn bwain ':fr~trl rNttze, Roland Pk., Baltimore, Md.

] Aivert • I --------------------------------- 2-16-27 •rttes B on, Pa.

A Bat~s~Oltnan ------------ ---------------------- 2-16-27 lbert C J Urg, S. C.

C Bat~sb ones ---------------........................... 2-16-27 harles Giiurg, S. C.

)j 817 S ~~e McElroy.......................... 2-16-27 01Yard n' tlJow Ave., Tampa, Fla.

p raxton R Ci aris I 1 ountree ...................... 2-16-27

•renee E s ~nd, S. C.

)j 5!5 S r~111 Saunders ....................... 2-16-27 •rry Sch argan St., Florence, S. C.

l'h Cousha~~~ Stephens ___________ --------------- 2-16-27 orttas Sk· ' La.

60s E ';~er Stone, II........................ 2-16-27 · llle St., Florence, S. C.

G l 'AU to. J. Ba - North Carolina State College

a,.~:!~ ~~~~~e~~.:--:r~li~ct-~~~:-'Ai~:--------- 11- 1-26

ll La Gra Well Adams............................ 4- 1-27 av id S nge, N. C.

J 201 ~~Uel Cox, Jr ...... --- ------------_____ 4- 1-27 .. V amberlain St R I · h N C ou 11g H ., a etg , . .

S North S oneycutt ------------------------------- 4- 1-27 •rtt Steve econd St., Smithfield, N . C.

)j 404 S ~I Howie ... ______________________________ 4- 1-27 ""'•rd s . w~Urch Ct., Monroe, N. c.

410 Ay •mbish --------------------------------- 4- 1-27 cock Drive, Greensboro, N . C.

lharJe5 1; PSI- Conw/1 U"ivcrsity l-! · Unter Howard 27

llo~'ar~c7ry, N. C. ------------------------- 3-19-

'J'· •mes Rna l'h •conde PP------------------------------- 3-19-27

Uti ow p roga, N. Y.

fler 9 W, ~~~Y -------------------- --------------------- 3-19-27

hert 'I'e St., New York City.

Nor 114 'I'h:P~e Scofield -------------------------- 3-19-27 tnan E S arkway, Ithaca, N. Y.

Air IJo ~ra · cott ______________________________________ 3-19-27 'ed F S

111 St., Attleboro, Mass.

Srtt· 21J i'a~la, Jr .. _______________________________ 3-19-27 1th W 'I' Ave., Harrison, N. Y.

112 E GOtnpkins________________________ 3-19-27 · reen St., Ithaca, N. Y.

Chester ~! A OMEGA- Perd"c University I Os E. T dams ------------------------------- 4- 2-27

· el. St., Dowagiac, Mich.

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Name Date of

ln#iatiou.

Hobert W. Cline ...... --------·-- ----------------- 4· 2-27 708 Emerson St., Goshen, Ind.

A. Warren Ginther----------- -- -------------------- 4- 2-27 Union Mills, Ind.

Richard Nelson DLJzzard ---------------------- 4· 2·27 1200 Moraine Ave., Hammond, Ind .

Fred Eldon R ector ... ------------------------------ 4- 2-27 52 1 W. Adams St., :Muncie, Ind.

ALPHA ALPHA- Mercer U11ivcrsity

Charles S tagmaier Brown ------------------------ 1·26-27 Dalton, Ga.

Philip Fitzgerald Etheridge...................... 1·26-27 33 Maddox Drive, Atlanta, Ga.

William Norther Etheridge...................... 1-26·27 33 Maddox Drive, Atlanta, Ga.

Lynward Sears Lightner ...... -----------· 1-26-27 Ellaville, Ga.

Sherwood Lee Bugg --------------------------------- 2-23-27 1102 Fourth Ave., Columbus, Ga.

Max Howard Chapman ------------------------- 2·23-27 733 Fletcher St., Cedartown, Ga.

ALPHA DETA- T11Ia11c University

Jack Birt Birdwell ............... ----------------- 3- 2-2i 276 W. lith St., Shreveport, La.

Boyd Alexander Evans --------------------------- 3- 2-27 3510 Cleveland Ave., New Orleans, La.

Eugene Harding --------------------------------- 3- 2-27 947 E. College St., Shreveport, La.

George Sanders Hopkins.... ...................... 3- 2-27 Slagle, La.

James Richard PurcelL ..... -- -- ........... 3- 2-27 Plain Dealing, La.

Eugene B. Robich'IU"- ------·--------------------- 3- 2-27 522 Elms .Blvd., Excelsior Springs, Mo.

Hugh Shane ........... --------------·------------------- 3- 2-27 801 E . Houston, Marshall, Tex.

Alexander Rogers Thompson ________________ 3- 2-27 Hosston, La.

J e•·ome John Elick ......... -------------------------- 3· 2-27 Granger, Tex.

ALPHA GAMMA- U11ivcrsity of Oklahoma.

Olin 0 . Scoggins ------- -------------------------------- I 0· 2·26 529 Wyandotte Ave., Bartlesville, Okla.

Ceo. Bernard Cbrisitmas...................... 9-.10-26 Pond Creek, Okla.

Robert N. Cooke -------------------------------------- 2-26-27 Boyd and Okla. Sts., Norman, Okla.

John Lawrence Fr~nch............................. 2-26-27 Drumright, Okla.

William Delzell G~rrison ------------------------ 2-26-27 Pond Creek, Okla.

Ralph E. GilchrisL ......................... --------- 2-26-27 Seiling, Okla.

George Halcomb -------------------------------------- 2-26·27 Pond Creek, Okla.

Cosby T. Huddle...................................... 2-26-27 Lawrence, Okla.

Ross Gossard Hume.................................. 2-26-27 Anadarko, Okla.

Chester Carson LeMarr........................ . 2-26-27 Vici, Okla.

Thomas Robert Moore__________________________ 2-26-27 1016 Park St., Greenville, Tex.

Leon Shipp -~----------------------------------- 2-26·27 Idabel, Okla.

Ceo. Washington Walker ..... - 2-26-27 Stidham, Okla.

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THE STAR AND LAMP of Pr KAPPA PHI ~ -------------------------------------------------------~

Nam e Date of

Initiation

ALPHA ETA- 11owanl College James G. Cunningham, Jr. .. 3-24-27

Grove Hill, Ala. Edwin Theodore Hicks ·······-·----·-·····-------- 3-24-27

North Highlands, Selma, Ala., Clarence Broughton Landham

13.10 Christine Ave., Anniston, Ala. .f ohn Milton Langley ........... .

Sylacauga, Ala. II enry 11. \Voodward, Jr.

Lineville, Ala.

3-24-26

2-28-27

.1 -2 4-27

ALPIIA THETA Aliclligall State james Davis Appleyard ........ .

1498 Roycroft Ave., Lakewood, 0. Alhe Earl :Munson ........................... .

608 Eighth St., Waukegan, Ill. Preston alvin Purdy

Gagetown, Mich. jack K. Reed .................. .

4-16 -27

4-16-27

4-16-27

4-16-27

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ALPHA JOTA- Aiabatna Pol)•lrl'illlic J,stiiJIIe ] ames Noble Cru mp --------------------············· 2-10-27 37

504 Washington Ave., Montgomery, Ala. Lucien E. Owen ....................................... 2-10-27

41 2 1 Eighth Ave., Wylam, Ala. J<:dwi n Lc Sueur Dean ....... .................... 2-10-27

X South Hi ghland Cou1·t, Montgomery, Ala. James Phillip Lynch.. ........... 2-10-27

3 South cott St., Mobile, Ala. Earl . Adams .......................................... 2·1 0-27

412 Clayton St., 1\lontgome•·y, Ala. ll enry J ferbert White .......... ................... 2- 10-27

Enterprise, Ala. Thomas McGregor Roberts, Jr . 2-10-27

Sylacauga, Ala. Frederick F. Edwards ...... .. 2-10-27

Enterprise, Ala. john Hay Fuller 2-10-27

115 North 55th . t., Dirmingham, Ala. Albert E lmore Le;ter ............ .................. 2-10-27

222 F1·anklin St., Selma, Ala. ~!arcus Stallworth Moore ......................... 2- 10-27

R. F. D., Rovic C., Brewton, Ala. Rex E. Sikes .... . ..... ............................. 2·1 0-27

Luverne, Ala. Kenneth Dauchrity ................. . 3-26-27

Auhurn, Ala. !t oward Nelson Haygood ...... 3-26-27

209 S. McDonough St., Montgomery, Ala. Felix Persons Thigpen ....... 3-26-27

Auburn, Ala.

ALPHA KAPPA- Utu'versity of Micbiga11 Paul Harold Doyts .................... ............... 3-12-27

Somerset, Pa. Leroy Grey Burgnon -~---~--- --···········-·······

317 E Eighth St., Erie, Pa. 1arence ~1arquis Cutler .... ·····--·········-··-···

328 Amanda Sa., Sault te. Marie, Gustaf Danielsson --------·-····

120 Maple St., Manistique, Mich. J ohn Ellsworth Doty ........................... ..

730 Main St., Negaunee, Mich. ] ames J. Dunn ....................................... ..

St. Johns, Mich. Fred Koontz Eshleman -----····-----·--------------

403 Rowe St., Ludington, Mich. Edwin arl Galstercr ................................. .

Frankenmuth, Mich. Luis Gibson . . ..... · · ·· ·-~---

70 Oakwood Ave., Upt>cr Montclair, James T. Gi llespie ................ .

448 vVest lith St., Erie, Pa.

3-12-27

3-12-27 1\lich. 3-12-27

.) -12-27

3-12-27

3-12-27

3-12-27

3-12-27 N.J. 3-12-27

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Name Date of

]uitiation

Halph William Goodall ........ . 3-12-27

Division Hd., Dearborn, .!\lich. Lester \Vhiteomh Goodell _ ....... 3-12-27

Eau Claire, Mich. Harold Lawrence Gould ............... ......... .. 3-12-27

St. Charles, Mich. Lucius Cha rles Gould __ __ . 3-12-27

St. Charles, Mich. Elmer \Villiam Gustafson ~-- 3- 12-27

184 Cedar St., Manistique, Mich. Charles Ladd Lewis ............................... .. 3- 12-27

Vassar, l\1:ich. William Douglas Odam ....... . 3-12-27

l!07 Swinton St., Sault Stc. Marie, licit. A !bert Olson ........................................... . 3-12-27

181 Cedar St., Manistique, Mich. ll omcr B. Porritt ................ .. ................. . 3-12-27

38 ~lathews St., Pontiac, Mich. Ceci l Art hu•· Reed .. .. .................... . 3-12-27

122 George S t., l\1ishawaka, Ind. William James Hobcrtson ..... .1-.12-27

R. F. D. 1, Romeo, Mich. Delmer J rvi ng Roedel ................ . 3-12-27

I J9 Courtland Ave., Wellington, 0. \VilliHm VVarren Rowley ............. ... ........... . 3-12-27

St. Charl es, Mich. E. B. Schermerhorn .. 3- 12-27

Stanton, 1\lich., R. F. D. 3. Fred Leroy Skinner .. ........ 3-12-27

St. harles, Mich. Charl es John Snoble ...... -............ .......... 3-12-27

117 ~'ave rly Ave., Elyria, 0. John Thomas Swanwiek, Jr .. .......... _... 3- 12-27

1604 Brooklyn Ave., Ann Arbor, 1\fich. 1 fenry Chandl er Whipple .......................... 3-12-27

R. F. D. 2, Jackson, Mich. H enry D. Whipple.... ......................... 3- 12-27

Grass Lake, Mich. Cha rl es Floyd White .............. ......... 3-12-27

845 Greenwood Ave., Glencoe, Ill. Joseph Patrick White ............................ .1- 12-27

.318 E. Spruce St., Sault Ste. Ma•·ie, Mich. Howard Sylves{er Zoll ............. 3- 12-27

923 Downs St., Defiance, 0.

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ALPHA LAMBDA- Uui11er·.rity of MississiPPi

Oliver Edward Cathey................ 4· 9-27 Taylor, Miss.

John Byron Gathright ......... . . 4- 9-27 Oxford, Miss.

John Reed Edwards ................ .... 4- 9-27 1065 Second Ave., Laurel, 1\fiss.

Elmer Vivian Levie...... ............................ 4· 9-27 Ashlancl, Ala.

Wiley Davidson Lewis ........................... _ 4- 9-27 Woodland, Miss.

llyn! Prentiss Mauldin .... .... ...... ......... ... 4- 9-27 Pontotoc, Miss.

Talbot Baldwin Newman, Jr. 4· 9-27 Learned, l\1.iss.

Cha rl es Robert Penn ........ . 4· 9-27 51 5 Second St., Grenada, Miss.

William Rufus Phillips .............................. 4- 9-27 Oxford, Miss.

Albert William Pigott ............... .... ......... 4- 9-27 Oxford, Miss.

Im Ava Rathbun ....................................... 4- 9-27 Charleston, Miss.

James Hugh Tabb ...................................... 4- 9-27 Houston, Miss.

J ewe! Doris Turner ......................... .......... 4- 9-27 Saltillo, Miss .

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------ TnE STAR AND LAMP of Pr KAPPA Pnr

DIRECTORY PI KAPPA PHI FRATERNITY

Founded at the College of Charlesto n, Charleston, S. C., December I 0, 1904. Incorporated und er the laws of the State of South Carolina, December 23, 1907.

FOUNDERS

SIMON FOGARTY, JR., 151 Moultrie Street, Charleston, S. C. ANDREW ALEXANDER KROEG, JR., Chapter Eternal, February 8, 1922.

LAWRENCE HARRY MIXSON, 217 East Bay Street, Charleston, S. C.

Supreme Tt·easuret· 3 J. CHESTER REEVES 42 VVest Peachtree Street

Atlanta, Ga.

Su1Jreme Sect·etat·y ELMER N. TURNQUIST 5676 Ridge Avenue

Chicago, Illinois

GENERAL OFFICERS SUPREME COUNCIL

Supt·eme Archon GEORGE D. DRIVER

1309 Telephone Building Omaha, Nebraska

Sup1·eme Histot·ian RAYMOND B. NIXON

Emory University, Ga.

Sup1·eme Editor RICHARD L. YOUNG

2 Ashland Avenue, Midwood Manor Charlotte, N. C.

THE CENTRAL OFFICE

Suite 438, 4750 Sheridan Road, Chicago, Ill. Long Beach 8957

GEo. E. SHEETZ, E xecutive Sem·etat·y All communications of a genet·al natut·e should be sent to the Centml Office, and not to individuals.

Fit·st Distt·ict 2? K. C. LAUTER 0~ East 19th Street

rooklyn, N. Y.

Second Distt'ict R. R. RusH

Box 1147 Roanoke, V a.

I<: Third District Gl'een ENNETH M. BRIM

sbo1·o, North Carolina

J Fout·th District ' CRAM. FREEMAN

Spal't Elford Agency anburg, South Carolina

Fifth Distt·ict S~2 R. WAGGONER

S. F. C. Bldg. Augusta, Georgia

G Sixth District Eo. B. EvERSON

B:astings, Florida

bn. \lvS~hola?·ship Committee ;;3~- EDINGTON, Chait·man

Wes Russell Street t LaFayette, Indiana

DISTRICT CHAPTER INSPECTORS

Seventh Dist1·ict LEO H. Pou

Jasper, Alabama

Eighth Dist1·ict CLANCY A. LATHAM

1201 Hibernia Bank Building New Orleans, La.

Ninth Dist1·ict WADES. BOLT Otterbein, Ind.

Tenth District V. R. FLEMING

306 North State Street Champaign, Ill.

Eleventh District RALPH E. ANDERSON

919 Terminal Building Lincoln, Nebraska

Twelfth Distt·ict DR. J. H. ROBINSON

Wesley Memorial Hospital Oklahoma City, Okla.

STANDING COMMITTEES

Advisory Architect J. COZBY BYRD

Commercial Bank Bldg. Charlotte, N. C.

Thirteenth District PAULS. BOREN

2662 14th Avenue Oakland, California

Fou1·teenth District WALTER R. JONES

7034 Sycamore Avenue Seattle, Washington

Fifteenth District J. W. ROBINSON

1651 East Grand Blvd. Detroit, Michigan

St:xteenth Distt·ict RALPH T. URE

775 East 17th Street, N. Portland, Oregon

Seventeenth Distt·ict JAS. R. SIMS, JR.

% University of Mississippi Oxford, Miss.

Ritual Committee DR. J. FRIEND DAY, Chait·man

University of Alberta Edmonton, Alta., Canada

Page 72: 1927_2_May

=======================================~ THE STAR AND LAMP of Pr KAPPA PHI _3

UNDERGRADUATE CHAPTERS Ch'r'~

NOTE :--Th c add ress following th e name of the college or univers ity in every case is the official address of the ·,e ~ The line follow itl g the address indicates the date on which the Chapter meets. Officers are requ ested to inform the ExecuiiV rcta ry promptl y of any changes taking pl ace, either in personnel of officers or in dates of meetings.

ALPHA, District 4- College of Charleston. Charleston, S. C. Saturday evening. ROBERT W. ACHURCH, At·chon. NICHOLAS DOSCHER, S f3cret ary.

BET A, District 4-Presbyterian College of South Carolina, Clinton, S. C. Monday evening.

OMICRON, District 7-University of Alabar!ln· Pi Kappa Phi House, University, Alaba!llll· Wednesday evening. R . CLARENCE WILLIAMS, 'Ar·chon. WALLACE LINDSEY, Secr·etary.

PI, D istrict 5-0glethorpe University. Oglethorpe University, Georgia.

NALL BRIGHT, Ar·chon. J. K. RoBERTS, JR., S ec?·eta?'Y·

GAMMA, District 13- University of California. 2614 Dwight Way.

VVednesday evening. I G. W. HARDIN, Ar·chm1. T. J. STACY, Secreta1·y.

. ersitf Berkeley, California. Monday evening. J. H. BURKHARDT, A ·rchon. J . LEIGHTON AMES, JR., S ec?·e ta?'Y·

EPSILON, District 3-Davidson College. Box 271, Davidson, N. C. Thursday evening. G. R. SIMS, A r·chon. R. C. GRADY, Secreta1·y.

ZETA, District 4-Wofford College. Spartanburg, S. C. Tuesday evening. W. A. BECKHAM, Ar·chon. W. N. SWETT, Sect·eta?·y.

ETA. District 5-Emory Uuiversity. Pi Kappa Phi House, Emory University, Ga. Thw·sday evening. HENRY E. TROST, A1·chon. W. REDDEN BLALOCK, Secretary.

IOTA, District 5-Georgia School of Technology. 27 Fifth Street, N. E., Atlanta, Ga. Sunday afternoon. W. MARVIN McGRAW, Archon. ESTILL E . EZELL, Sec1·etary.

KAPPA, District 3-University of North Carolina. Pi Kappa Phi House, Chapel H ill, N. C. W ednesday evening. JoHN F. GLENN, JR., Anhon. ROBERT W. WILKINS, Secreta1·y.

LAMBDA, District 5-University of Georgia. 386 H ill Street, Athens, Ga. Monday evening. E. B. CRIM, Archon. J. G. PRYOR, S ec?·eta?·y.

MU. D:strict 3-Duke University. Durham, North Carolina. Thursday evening. ~AM D. BUNDY, Ar·chon. COURTNEY D. BRIGHT, S ecr·eta•I'Y·

NU, Dlstrict 11-University of Nebraska. 1820 B Street, Lincoln, Nebr. Monday evening. ERWIN J. DOMEIER, A1·chon. T. A . KNUDSEN, S em·e tcwy.

XI, District 2-Roanoke College. Pi Kappa Phi House, Salem, Virginia. Tuesday evening. ONZA M. HYATT, Ar·chon. CECIL M. HEFNER, Secr·etary.

RHO, Distt·ict 2- Washington a nd Lee U,n!v 85 South Main Street, Lexington, VirgJnl!l· W ednesday evening. CHAS. H. WILSON, A1·cho11. HARVEY B. HENLINE, S ecr·etary.

TAU, District 3-N orth Carolina State College· 309 Forest Road, Raleigh, N. C. Monday evening. KENNETH BYERS, Archon. W . H. TAFT, S em·eta.ry.

UPSILON, District 10-University of Ill_ino_iS· 106 East Green Street, Champaign, IlhnD15' Monday evening. THOS. W. WINTON, Ar·chon. F . W. TEEGARDEN, Secretary.

CHI, District 6-John B. Stetson UniversitY· Pi Kappa Phi House, DeLand, F lorida. VVednesday evening. HARRIS SIMS, A ?'Chon. FRED OWENS, JR. , SecTeta1·y.

PSI, District !-Cornell University. 115 Ridgewood Road, Ithaca, N. Y. Monday evening. GERALD A. MURRAY, A ·1·chon. LAWRENCE L. BENWAY, S ec1·etar·y.

OMEGA, District 9-Purdue University. d 40 N. Salisbury St., West LaFayette, In · Monday evening. GEo. E . SPENCER, Ar·chon. RALPH E . RECTOR, S ecr-etar·y.

ALPHA-ALPHA, District 5- Mercer UniversitY· 1424 Lawton Avenue, Macon, Georgia. VVednesday evening. GLENN B. HASTY, A1·chon . WM. K. JORDAN, Secr·etar·y.

ALPHA-BETA, District 8-Tulane Louisiana.

, of UniversitY

830 Audubon Street, New Orleans, La. Monday evening. WM. THOMPSON, Ar·chon. RICHARD E. RANKIN, S ecr·e tar·y.

ALPHA-GAMMA, District 12- UniversitY Oklahoma. 757 DeBarr Avenue, Norman, Okla. Monday evening. LLOYD STORY, Archon. J. GEORGE POINTER, S ecre tary.

I

C~> !s'l.

tc:.

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T T-IE STAR AND LAMP of Pr KApPA pH I ----ALp a -------------------------------------------------------------

in~~~ELTA, District 14-University of Wash-

5212 isth Mond Avenue, N. E., Seattle, Wash. CiiAS ay evening. C. E ·l· PORTER, Archon.

. UTLEDGE, Sec1·eta1·y.

ALPHA-THETA, District 15-Michigan College.

State

Pi Kappa Phi House, East Lansing, Mich. Monday evening. F. W. CREAGER, Archon. H. E. SPRAGUE, Sec1·etary.

ALp!i1A-.EPSILON B or1da , District 6- University of

T~;sd63·, Uni~ersity Station, Gainesville, Fla.

ALPHA-IOTA, District 7- Alabama Institute.

Polytechnic

~rsitf I

SAivttJ ay evemng. Jos ~L PMcCORMACK, A1·chon.

1\ ' • EARCE, Sect·etary. LPaA.z

Col!egET A, District 16-0regon Agricultural 31 N e. Moni 26th Street, Corvallis, Ore. eliAs ay evening. A. I( A. OLSEN, A1·chon.

A · 0.1-lORE GRIFFIN, Secretary. LPaA.

Pi ~ETA, District 7-Howard College. Mondappa Phi House, Birmingham, Ala. L E ay evening. A.. Ji ARt CARROLL, Archon.

· AYDEN McDANAL, Sec1·eta1·y.

Auburn, Alabama. VVednesday evening. W. C. HURT, A1·chon. 0. C. THIGPEN, Secreta1·y.

ALPHA-KAPPA, District 15-University of Mich­igan. 807 South State Street, Ann A1·bor, Mich. C. H. WHIPPLE, A1·chon. L. G. BURGNON, Sec1·etm·y.

ALPHA-LAMBDA, District 17-University sissippi, Oxford, Miss. JAS. M. BUFORD, A1·chon. WM. R. PHILLIPS, JR., Sem·etct1'11·

of Mis-

ALUMNI CHAPTERS 1tr, Alurnn·

~rtlen t as 1 t 0 ffi.cers are requested to inform 1\'!' · 0 ltme and place of meetings.

n,taL~NTA, GEORGIA , anter II . · ''~~llu Wuse; tlurd Sunday)

342 \ · H ARRTS, Archon li'ATJiA Vest Peachtree St.

B! 60s W T. TEAGUE, Secretor)• n~lN est Peachtree St.

r~. ~t. c <iliAM, ALABAMA. 1~, ·o ·· alternate Wednesdays, 7 :45)

ts 10U~~IORE, A1'chon llowAR orth 24th St.

0.1> 220 ~ D. LEAKE, Secretary (S"All. "orth 48th St.

'cond ~~STON, SOUTH CAROLINA. lrtosonday) "11 ·P~i MSOSTMAI\'N, Archon ""~ot t.

Cb 13 Th A. MouzoN, Secretary r~"All.t omas St. ""'•nd lOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA

R. r"e~ay, Manufacturers' Club) C~~e OUNG, Archon

R. t PThe Charlotte News Cb 30 ·w•rcE. Secretary 'liCA. est Fifth !:>t.

1\A~~\ ILLINOIS. 19 ·S f. C:t.unoN, Archon

<;•o ll outh La Sa ll e St. ('Ot 8 's · HetRON, Sccrctar1• 1[. U1.fJ3 outh Oearbom St. · ''••n ~'arriA, SOUTH CAROLINA.

I) R. G~t . Tea Room; second Monday) 1. Statt·!i" I!· CARRIGAN, Arrhou

, \ft OSpJtal. CoL C.:are An~ BAKER. Secr,•tarv r11 U1.fB 'ederal Land Bank.

~''ay u"ys, GEORGIA. flu 001 ~ d•nq, first Sunday. 3 P. M.) \,.1912 'j,.G. HENSON, Archon v" i\f 'tJ:hth Avenue.

h~;>., JQJ 1 i! F• A>tDROUGH, Sec•·rtm·y , 11-' ~ll.o t1 Street.

•l.ster ~T. MICHIGAN. J. \\'. ~II, first Monday)

16s 1° nTNSON, Archon ~lrl.voRnEas t Grand .Boulevard.

f> t s F· A. TYRR >:Lr .. Secretary '11·•r National Bank Building.

the Executive Secretary promptly of any chttnges in personnel anrl addresses, or of

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA. (1st and 3rd Mondays, Tait's, 424 West. 6th St.)

MARVTN G. OsBORN, Archon 1001 Edwards & Wildey Building.

L. C. TAYLOR, Secretary 1209 South Rimpau Bouleva rd .

MIAMI, FLORIDA. CHAS. B. CosT.\R, Archon

128 N. E. 25 th Street. WM. C. RtTCH, SPc•·etary

140 East Flagler St.

NEW YORK, NEW YORK. (1st Wednesday; alternately Cornell Club of New York awl

TTniversity Club of Brooklyn, 6:30 P. M.) WALTER MEASDAY, ]R .1 Archon

Box 91. Westwood, N. J. CARL OsTERGREN, Secretary

1021 Ocean Avenue, Brooklyn.

OMAHA, NEBRASKA. (1st Tuesday, Elks' Club)

FLOYD S. PEGLJ-.: R, A1·cltou 2.1 15 North 60th Ave.

r.nA.s. fL COLLTNS, Secretar.v I 00.1 Sou:!, 51st St.

ROANOKE, VIRGINIA. L. G. MusE, Archon

117 Broadway. R. R. Rnsu, rcretm·y

1'. 0. Box 11~ 7

~ '1'. PETERSBURG, FLORIDA. ( llomestead Tea Room. \Ved nesday, 12:15 P. 11!.)

VtRGJt.. S. PARHAM. Archon .1 17 First National Bank Building.

JAsON A. HAT LEY, Seuetary P. 0. Box 3831.

SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA. Jon~< F. CON!<OLLY, Archon

I 748 Larkin St. l ,RANCTS 1-T . B oLAND, JR., Secretary

284 3 Green St.

SPARTANBURG, SOUTH CAROLINA. PA UL C. THOM AS. Archon

Spartan 1\fills.

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+I-II-IIM-MII-MII-11~-~~-··-··-IIft-MII-NI-NN-hll-lla-IIII-1111-M~-~~h-IIII-MII-MII--IIII-MII-II"-NM-hii-MII-IIII-III-"II-IIII-IIII-IIII-II~ !

I ! I i j

! 1 j i i I I j i

SCHOOL CATALOGS AND ILLUSTRATIONS FRATERNITY AND CLASS STATIONERY

The

Chas. H. Elliott Co. THE LARGEST COLLEGE ENGRAVING HOUSE IN THE WORLD

OFFICIAL ENGRAVERS OF PI KAPPA PHI CERTIFICATES Order through your Secretary

Dance Programs and Invitations,

Leather Dance Favors and Covers,

Commencement Invitations, Class

Day Programs, Class Pins and Rings

Seventeenth Street and Lehigh Avenue

PHILADELPHIA

I I CALLING CARDS. MENUS WEDD I NG INVITATION~

+ ~

t_,,_,._,._.,_.,_,,_,._.,_,,_,._,,_,._.,_,. __ ,,_.,_,._,_,._,_.,_,,_.,_,._,_.,_,_,_.,_.,_,_ .. _~ .. -·1 I-III-MI-1111-II- 111-"II-Nn- II- IIM- II-IIII- IIII-MN-III-IIII-IIII-III-IIII-MU- MII-IIII-- 1111 - IU-ni -UH- II- II- III-IIII-nN- I-- 111

I ATTENTION, PI KAPP§l '' i The mailing list of The Star and Lamp is in the hands of the Executive SecretarY: .A.J: I I communications regarding failure to receive the magazine or giving notice of a change tn 11 I 1 dress should be sent directly to him.

I DO THIS AND GET THE MAGAZINE I I The Star and Lamp, being second-class matter, cannot be forwarded. Do not expect it to I follow you about like letter mail. ! When you change your address, fill out this form and mail at once to Geo. E. Sheetz, j 4750 Sheridan Road, Chicago, Ill.

! Name ------------------ -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------~

I (Write Plainly)

Class Numeral ________________________________ : Chapter ___________________________________ Date.----------------------------------------------~··

I OLD ADDRESS

I !

Street -----------------------------------------------------··----- ---------------- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------~

City and State -------------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------~ 0 P ERMANENT

NEW ADDRESS 0 TEMPORARY

1 . • Street _____________________ :·------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------·- I

l! City and State ---- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------~ I • • ADD ANY INFORMATION OF INTEREST CONCERNING YOURSELF OR OTHER PI KAPPS YOU KNO '

1_ .. _,_.,_,_,._.,_,._.,_,,_,._,_,._,._., __ ,_,.~~.~ .. ::~ .. -.. _ .. ....:.. .. _.,_,_.,_,._,._,._,._,._ .. _ .. _ .. ) ~~

Page 75: 1927_2_May

I I ,

II I

I' I I I

/

~ .. - .. , .. ,........., ............ , ....... , .................. ,_ ANNOUNCING

The Merger of

the Fraternity Jewelry Division

of

AULD'S, INC.

with

Burr, Patterson & Company

A .s J/1 anuf act urer .s qf

the finest grade Fraternity Jewelry under the

new name of

Burr, Patterson & Auld Co. J/1 anufacturing Fraternity Jewefer.s

Detroit, Michigan

/}bigger and better .ser()icefor the Pi Kappa Phi Fraternity

OBS ERVER PRINTING HOU S E, CHARLOTTE, N, C.

Page 76: 1927_2_May

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