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Culture Justice Friendship Volume 132, № 1 Character DU CELEBRATES SUCCESS WITH SUCCESSFUL MEN CHAPTER NEWS PLUS: FOUNDATION ANNUAL REPORT 6-8 13-20 21 ON THE COVER: Brother Peter Ueberroth, San Jose ’59, addresses fellow DUs at the 2013 Leadership Institute in Phoenix.

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The Delta Upsilon Quarterly is the official voice of Delta Upsilon International Fraternity

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: DU Quarterly: Volume 132, Vol. 1

Cu

ltu

re

Justice

Friendship

Volume 132, № 1

Ch

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ter

DU CELEBRATES SUCCESS WITH SUCCESSFUL MEN

CHAPTER NEWSPLUS: FOUNDATION ANNUAL REPORT

6-8

13-20

21

ON THE COVER: Brother Peter Ueberroth, San Jose ’59, addresses fellow DUs at the 2013 Leadership Institute in Phoenix.

Page 2: DU Quarterly: Volume 132, Vol. 1

DELTAU.ORG

We live in disruptive times. As such, everything we know transcends into everything we once knew. How we communicate, connect, discover, learn and share is changing. New and emerging technology is becoming increasingly relentless and it is forcing

evolution or complete transformation of how organizations and communities operate. We will all, at some point, collide with disruption. And in that moment, we will have a choice to make. We either fall to mind-numbing activity or continue to operate with little to no productivity. Or we choose to embrace change, and begin to imagine the possibilities beyond what’s immediately apparent in order to engineer our way toward a more meaningful and productive organizational outcomes.

In the industrial period, organizations like fraternities could operate and function the same for several decades. Not so today. The college and university campus is facing and undergoing tremendous change. The cost of education is soaring, the campus environment is becoming less tolerant of inappropriate behavior, and the global economy is demanding higher order cognitive abilities and deeper appreciation for global diversity from our young men.

In my several years as President of our grand Fraternity, I have been amazed at how some of our alumni bristle and react when I speak of the change that needs to happen with some of our chapters. They remember and want to hold on to the memories of what fraternity was like for them.

It takes courage to imagine what others don’t, or do what others won’t. It takes courage to push forward when pushed back.

In a 1966 speech, Robert Kennedy once said, “Few men are willing to brave the disapproval of their fellows, the censure of their colleagues, the wrath of their society. Moral courage is a rarer commodity than bravery in battle or great intelligence. Yet it is the one essential, vital quality for those who seek to change a world which yields most painfully to change.”

Organizations that enjoy enduring success have core values and a core purpose that remain fixed over time, while their organizational strategies and practices endlessly adapt to a changing world. The dynamic of preserving the core while encouraging and embracing new, fresh strategies is the reason that companies such as Hewlett-Packard, 3M, Johnson & Johnson, Procter

& Gamble, Merck, Sony and Motorola have become elite institutions, able to renew themselves and achieve superior long-term performance. Their employees know that radical change in operating practices, cultural norms and business strategies does not mean losing the spirit of the organization’s core principles. These organizations continually question their structure and revamp their processes, while preserving the ideals embodied in their missions. Drawing upon a six-year research project at the Stanford University Graduate School of Business, James C. Collins and Jerry I. Porras studied these organizations for their book, Built to Last: Successful Habits of Visionary Companies. These organizations have outperformed the general stock market consistently since 1925 and are preeminent in their fields.

Truly great organizations understand the difference between what should never change and what should be open for change, between what is genuinely sacred and what is not. This rare ability to manage continuity and change—requiring a consciously practiced discipline—is what organizations all over the world are facing! And DU is no exception!

This year’s Leadership Institute was the best of the more than 15 I have attended. I have watched as our Fraternity embraces change and works hard each year to implement new programs and educational sessions to impact our brothers.

We all need to relax. The Fraternity is changing. It needs to change. It must change. And we will never veer from our core principles. But how we build better men must change to meet the demands of a global economy.

If we are going to remain a relevant, award-winning fraternity, we must have a constant flow of creativity, innovation and imagination. If we care about our organization, we will let go of our need to keep everything the same, and we will continue to let talented men, and women, take our Fraternity to a preeminent position in the fraternity world.

I am very proud to be a DU man!

IMAGINEERING

E. Bernard Franklin, Kansas State ’75President, Delta Upsilon International FraternityEmail: [email protected]

Page 3: DU Quarterly: Volume 132, Vol. 1

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E. Bernard Franklin, Kansas State ’75President, Delta Upsilon International FraternityEmail: [email protected]

Delta Upsilon International Butler Memorial Headquarters

Office hours: 8:00 am - 4:30 pm Monday - Friday

Office: 317-875-8900 FAX: 317-876-1629

Email: [email protected] website: www.deltau.org

Delta Upsilon Quarterly is published quarterly in the spring, summer, fall and winter

8705 Founders Road Indianapolis, Indiana 46268, U.S.A., (R) TM Registered U.S. Patent Office

Copy deadlines: Spring: January 27; Summer: May 12; Fall: August 25

POSTMASTER: Send address changes to Delta Upsilon Quarterly,

8705 Founders Road, Indianapolis, IN 46268.

Delta Upsilon International FraternityNorth America’s Oldest Non-Secret Fraternity:

Founded 1834

The Principles of Delta UpsilonThe Promotion of Friendship

The Development of CharacterThe Diffusion of Liberal Culture

The Advancement of Justice

The Motto of Delta UpsilonDikaia Upotheke - Justice Our Foundation

OFFICERSPresident

E. Bernard Franklin, Ph.D., Kansas State ’75Chairman of the Board

Richard X. Taylor, North Carolina State ’82Secretary

Timothy C. Dowd, Oklahoma ’75Treasurer

E. Bruce McKinney, Missouri ’74

DIRECTORSJames Bell, Calgary ’94Terry Brady, Missouri ’62

Aaron Clevenger, Central Florida ’97Robert S. Lannin, Nebraska ’81

Jordan B. Lotsoff, Northern Illinois ’88Aaron M. Siders, Kansas State ’04Robert A. Stewart, Washington ’64Derek Lancashire, Ohio State ’15

Seth Miller, Kansas ’14

PAST PRESIDENTSTerry L. Bullock, Kansas State ’61

Samuel M. Yates, San Jose ’55Bruce S. Bailey, Denison ’58

James D. McQuaid, Chicago ’60Alvan E. (Ed) Porter, Oklahoma ’65

INTERNATIONAL HEADQUARTERS STAFFFRATERNITY AND EDUCATIONAL FOUNDATION

Executive Director: Justin Kirk, Boise State ’00 Executive Assistant: Jana McClees-Anderson

Senior Staff Accountant: Mary Ellen Watts

FRATERNITYAssociate Executive Director: Karl Grindel

Senior Director of Educational Programs: Noah Borton, M.A.Director of Global Initiatives: Kaye Schendel, M.S.

Director of Alumni Development: Colin Finn, Iowa State ’05Director of Chapter Services: Matthew Nance, M.S., DePauw ’10

Director of Expansion: Mark Gehrke, Boise State ’11Senior Expansion Consultant: Sean FitzGerald, Michigan ’12

Expansion Consultant: Jordan Guess, Oregon State ’13Expansion Consultant: Angel Ochoa, Oklahoma ’13

New Media Coordinator: Kaylyn EastonGraphic Designer: Kim Kreuzman

Communications Coordinator: Megan Samuels

FOUNDATIONAssociate Executive Director: Michael McRee, Ph.D.

Director of Foundation: John Duncan, M.A., Oregon State ’00Development Assistant, Natasha Dow, M.P.A

The Official Magazine of the

Delta Upsilon International Fraternity Since 1882

Volume 132, No 1Fall 2013

facebook.com/deltaupsilon

twitter.com/deltaupsilon youtube.com/deltaupsilonmedia

deltau.org/linkedin

Page 4: DU Quarterly: Volume 132, Vol. 1

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“I’ve been involved as a volunteer for the International Fraternity for more than 50 years and this is the strongest I’ve seen the State of our Fraternity.”Bruce Bailey, Denison ’58, former International Fraternity Board President

and Chairman

The state of Delta Upsilon is strong. We are experiencing success at a level that is unprecedented in our 179-year history. This past year was truly remarkable for our great Fraternity, and we are pleased to share with you the

Fraternity’s 2012-2013 Annual Report on pages four and five. I want to highlight the following achievements:

• More DU men returned to campusthisfallthananyyearinourhistory.

• TheFraternity’saveragechaptersizeis50,upfrom26justsixyearsago.Inthattimeourmembershiphasgrown73%.

• DeltaUpsilon’s averageGPA is 3.01,higher than theall-fraternityandall-men’sGPAsonthecampusesatwhichwearerepresented.

• More than 1,100 men attended aregional, national or internationalleadership program. That representsmore than 28 percent of theFraternity’sundergraduatemembership,a higher percentage than our peerorganizations.

• TheDeltaUpsilonEducationalFoundation(DUEF)hadarecordyearin2012-13,raisingmorethan$1.2millionandwerecognizeandhonorourloyalDUsintheFoundationAnnualReportonpages21-36.

Our Fraternity is leading the way among men’s college fraternities. Yet, I believe we can do more. Our higher education partners and the world are demanding it. And our young DUs need and want it.

Delta Upsilon has been positively influencing and shaping young men’s lives for over 179 years. Given the level of change and transition currently being experienced in our society, we have analyzed and assessed our ability to impact our members further, and prepare them for success in this ever-changing landscape. This process allowed the Fraternity to ask and respond to challenging questions, such as:

•Howdoweprepareyoungpeopletobeleadersinthe21stCentury?

•Howwillwehelpthemtoengagesuccessfullyinaglobalmarketplace?

•Whatarethekeyskillsandabilitiesthattheywillneedtomakeanimpactonoursociety?

The world these young people are stepping into is being dramatically reshaped by scientific and technological innovations, global interdependence, cross-cultural encounters and changes in the balance of economic and political power. Yet, their needs are not so different from ours back when we went to college. They need friends and mentors. They want to learn...though they may not know what they want to learn just yet. They are confident, yet uncertain at the same time. They feel invincible and live in the moment, yet, recognize that a plan for their future is important.

One of the many ways Delta Upsilon is setting our young men up for success is the Global Service Initiative (GSI). As you can read on the next page, the GSI is preparing men to be well-rounded individuals and globally competent citizens. GSI is much more than a service and philanthropic project. Through a values-based curriculum, GSI participants learn to respect diverse human values, challenge existing global perspectives and develop a deeper understanding of worldwide interconnectedness. In late April, the Global Service Initiative received its second industry-wide award when it received the 2013 North-American Interfraternity Conference (NIC) Laurel Wreath Award. The Laurel Wreath Award recognizes innovative educational programs that are truly elevating the Greek movement.

Every day, on every campus, men choose paths that determine their lifelong course. Numerous influences, including parents and pastors, teachers and friends – all converge to guide him on this journey. Delta Upsilon is in a very unique position to make a true difference in the lives of future leaders of our society and the world. We have both a distinctive responsibility and an exciting opportunity to positively influence the lives of 4,000 undergraduate men each year.

Thankfully, our Fraternity is well-positioned to meet the needs of today’s undergraduates, just as it has met the needs of our brothers for the last 179 years. I hope you are proud of your Fraternity, and I invite you to join us in building America’s next great generation.

Fraternally,

Delta Upsilon Fraternity Annual Report

Justin Kirk, Boise State ’00Executive Director, Delta Upsilon International FraternityEmail: [email protected]

Page 5: DU Quarterly: Volume 132, Vol. 1

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When you follow the paths generated by the Global Service Initiative, you’ll see that it quickly splits into two roads. The obvious and most tangible one being the physical appearances of the new and renovated schools constructed in Jamaica, giving children a better chance at an education and all the benefits that education creates. The other road is a bit harder to quantify, though could arguably be more important. That road is the one Delta Upsilon brothers take when they get back home. Armed with a new or expanded vision of the world, a new definition of service and a new perspective of what it means to be a DU, these men have definitely taken steps as global citizens. Hand in hand with their brothers, their potential to grow as leaders and as individuals is advanced in no small part through the lessons learned, emotions felt and experiences remembered through their week of GSI service.

The alignment of these experiences to the Delta Upsilon vision statement is not coincidental. The Delta Upsilon vision statement, “to become the premier men’s fraternity committed to Building Better Men for a global society through service, leadership development and lifelong personal growth of our diverse membership,” quite simply comes alive in front of the Global Service Initiative participants. Brothers see this in the eyes of the Jamaican children as they lift them up, they feel them in the sweat as they build a school using no power tools, and they realize the real power those words contain when they lay in bed at night exhausted, but still not able to sleep because there is so much to process from the day.

The idea of a global service trip is the mobilization of International President Bernard Franklin’s message and emphasis on preparing Delta Upsilon members for success in an ever-changing global marketplace, and aligning with the

Fraternity’s foundational value of advancing Justice. The initiative received unanimous support from the Fraternity’s Board of Directors in the summer of 2009, and the pilot trip was held in May 2010. Since then, there have been eight trips to Jamaica and one to New Orleans. Over 100 brothers have participated and we have built additions to local schools, repaired and constructed playground equipment, constructed a kitchen and restrooms at a Boys & Girls Club, completed fencing projects, and painted external facades and internal walls.

But, GSI is much more than trips, it is about education and providing global experiences and opportunities for growth and learning for all members. To date, members have raised over $150,466 for the GSI – money that was used to fund projects and edcuation. In the months to come, additional global initiatives will be rolled out to the membership, encouraging all brothers to participate to gain valuable skills related to global competence. These initiatives include personalized data sheets for every chapter on global experiences in their own community, a focus on the U.S. government’s International

Education Week and valuable information to members on areas of global concern.

While local roadside clean-ups, working with at-risk youth and fixing houses still have their place in the fraternity experience, these domestic experiences must be complemented with initiatives that help our members become more globally aware and prepared to meet the challenges of the future. The world around us is changing at a rapid pace, and for Delta Upsilon to remain relevant, we must fundamentally change the fraternity experience. Our conversations and education around core values must now include global competence if we want to be a relevant, 21st century organization.

GSI TAKES THE ROAD LESS TRAVELEDBy: Kaye Schendel, Director of Global Initiatives

“A MIND THAT IS

STRETCHED BY A

NEW EXPERIENCE

CAN NEVER GO

BACK TO ITS OLD

D I M E N S ION S . ” OLIVER WENDALL HOLMES

“Ourglobalcompetenceinthe21stcenturyisnotaluxury,butanecessity.Whetherengagingtheworld,orourculturallydiversehomeland,ourfuturesuccesswillrelyontheglobalcompetenceofourpeople.Globalcompetence

mustbecomeapartofthecoremissionofeducation.”-The 21st Century ImperativeJustin Kirk, Boise State ’00Executive Director, Delta Upsilon International FraternityEmail: [email protected]

Page 6: DU Quarterly: Volume 132, Vol. 1

DELTA UPSILON: BUILDING BETTER MEN SINCE 1834

STATE ofTHE FRATERNITY50 MEMBERS

73 CHAPTERS / 8 COLONIES

AVERAGE CHAPTER SIZETHE AVERAGE CHAPTER SIZE HAS INCREASED BY 24 MEMBERS SINCE 2007

WELCOME, NEW BROTHERS!

18 CHAPTERS VISITED MORE THAN ONCE

MEMBERSHIP GROWTH 2007-2013

UNDERGRADUATES

4000

3500

3000

2500

2000

1500

1000

500

2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013

2285

29853268 3296

35033718

3,954

3954

73 6.4% %THIS IS THE HIGHEST NUMBER RECORDED IN THE FRATERNITY'S HISTORY GROWTH SINCE 2007 GROWTH OVER LAST YEAR

0 200 400 600 800 1000

971

1,113

833

EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMMINGINVOLVEMENT

TOTAL ATTENDEES OF EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMS

GSI

LI

The minds of brothers are all similar. We were here to serve. - Patrick Harrington, Purdue ’14

It's not just about the man I am today. Delta Upsilon is always challenging me to think about the man I'll be tomorrow.- Josh Wimble, Pennsylvania State ’13

PRESIDENTS ACADEMY

REGIONAL LEADERSHIP ACADEMIES

EMERGING LEADERS EXPERIENCE

LEADERSHIP INSTITUTE

BUILDING BETTER MEN WEEKENDS

GLOBAL SERVICE INITIATIVE

DELTA UPSILON GPA3.01 3.00 ALL FRATERNITY GPA

2.98 ALL MEN’S GPA

Go to class. Sit in the front row.

Wear your letters with pride. Meet your

professors. Set the example.

- Dr. Will Keim, Pacific ’75

While tradition can strengthen our common bonds and engender our

common stability, when it comes to meeting our common goals, a leader owes it to his brothers to

examine what was and what should continue to be.

- Craig Sowell, Houston ’92

Get Global: SERVE in Jamaica: deltau.org/service

48 DIFFERENT CHAPTERS VISITED

69 TOTAL CHAPTERS VISITED

Page 7: DU Quarterly: Volume 132, Vol. 1

DELTA UPSILON: BUILDING BETTER MEN SINCE 1834

STATE ofTHE FRATERNITY50 MEMBERS

73 CHAPTERS / 8 COLONIES

AVERAGE CHAPTER SIZETHE AVERAGE CHAPTER SIZE HAS INCREASED BY 24 MEMBERS SINCE 2007

WELCOME, NEW BROTHERS!

18 CHAPTERS VISITED MORE THAN ONCE

MEMBERSHIP GROWTH 2007-2013

UNDERGRADUATES

4000

3500

3000

2500

2000

1500

1000

500

2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013

2285

29853268 3296

35033718

3,954

3954

73 6.4% %THIS IS THE HIGHEST NUMBER RECORDED IN THE FRATERNITY'S HISTORY GROWTH SINCE 2007 GROWTH OVER LAST YEAR

0 200 400 600 800 1000

971

1,113

833

EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMMINGINVOLVEMENT

TOTAL ATTENDEES OF EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMS

GSI

LI

The minds of brothers are all similar. We were here to serve. - Patrick Harrington, Purdue ’14

It's not just about the man I am today. Delta Upsilon is always challenging me to think about the man I'll be tomorrow.- Josh Wimble, Pennsylvania State ’13

PRESIDENTS ACADEMY

REGIONAL LEADERSHIP ACADEMIES

EMERGING LEADERS EXPERIENCE

LEADERSHIP INSTITUTE

BUILDING BETTER MEN WEEKENDS

GLOBAL SERVICE INITIATIVE

DELTA UPSILON GPA3.01 3.00 ALL FRATERNITY GPA

2.98 ALL MEN’S GPA

Go to class. Sit in the front row.

Wear your letters with pride. Meet your

professors. Set the example.

- Dr. Will Keim, Pacific ’75

While tradition can strengthen our common bonds and engender our

common stability, when it comes to meeting our common goals, a leader owes it to his brothers to

examine what was and what should continue to be.

- Craig Sowell, Houston ’92

Get Global: SERVE in Jamaica: deltau.org/service

48 DIFFERENT CHAPTERS VISITED

69 TOTAL CHAPTERS VISITED

Page 8: DU Quarterly: Volume 132, Vol. 1

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Peter Ueberroth, San Jose ’59, presents his keynote address at the 2013 Leadership Institute in Phoenix, Arizona.

The definition of success can mean many different things to many different people. Trying to contain the meaning into one person or one accomplishment is impossible. But certain levels of success are difficult for anyone to miss. There are those that one can measure; success becomes tangible, and you can see it.

The Leadership Institute is a special place where DU success is carefully measured and weighed, then celebrated. It is proportioned out into dollar amounts, noting how much chapters have raised for the Global Service Initiative. It is measured in numbers, applauding the number of new initiates and associate members attained each year.

A significant amount of DU success can be seen in the results that DU programs bring each year, reaching high levels in attendance and execution. Educational programs are exceeding expectations in number of attendees and the impact that is left on those participating. The 2013 Leadership Institute could arguably be one of the most successful and exciting LIs to date, leaving attendees feeling motivated and full of pride upon returning home.

And while the sparkling lights, large numbers, shiny trophies and fancy cocktail hour-dress may be inspiring, there is no better way to visualize your future goals than by meeting the DU men who are paving the way and living principles at this very moment.

Among those inspirational men is 2013 Leadership Institute Distinguished Alumnus and keynote speaker, Peter Ueberroth, San Jose ’59. There was no denying that the response in choosing Ueberroth as the keynote speaker, would receive “tens across the board” in the category of success, and not just by DU standards.

By business standards, Ueberroth, has done it all. Starting early in his career, Ueberroth became vice president and shareholder in Trans International Airlines. From there, he

was the founder of First Travel Corporation. In the late 1970s, he was selected to organize the 1984 Summer Olympics held in Los Angeles. The unprecedented success of those Olympics led to TIME magazine recognizing Ueberroth for his efforts with their prestigious “Man of the Year” honor in 1984. Soon after, Ueberroth was elected as the Commissioner of Major League Baseball, where he served for five years. Since his departure from baseball, Ueberroth has served as director of The Coca-Cola Company and as chairman of both Ambassadors International and the United States Olympic Committee Board of Directors. He is also a Life Trustee of the University of Southern California, and owner and co-chairman of Pebble Beach Company.

Nominated for the prestigious DU Distinguished Alumni Award, Ueberroth agreed to accept the honor at the Leadership Institute, and delivered an inspiring speech to his fellow brothers, combining two topics he knows very well: business and sports.

Most of the undergraduate and alumni brothers arrived on Thursday of the big weekend, shuffling through the doors of the beautiful and historic Arizona Biltmore Resort, buzzing with excitement for the weekend ahead.

Thursday morning festivities kicked off bright and early as alumni and undergraduates set out for the DU Golf Tournament and lunch held out at the Arizona Biltmore Golf Club. Participants braved the heat and played 18 holes. This was the first Delta Upsilon golf tournament in years and hopefully an annual tradition. This year’s event was sponsored by GEICO.

Throughout the day, guests continued to register and attend pre-conference programs created specifically to educate on a number of topics related to the Fraternity’s well-being. While

DU Celebrates Success with Successful Men

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pre-conference programs were optional, many undergraduates attended throughout the afternoon.

The opening reception soon followed that evening, with an opening presentation from President Bernard Franklin, Kansas State ’75, along with the initiation of Thomas James Lynn, Washington ’16, and Cameron Reicheneuer, Bradley ’16. The Ritual team assembled on the main stage, and shortly after, Master Joshua Katz, Central Florida ’97, said, “With great pride, I now present our newest brothers in Delta Upsilon,” the crowd applauded and cheered, officially welcoming these men into the brotherhood.

The Most Improved Chapter Award was presented to the Purdue Chapter by Richard Taylor, North Carolina State ’82.

Finishing the evening, Executive Director Justin Kirk, Boise State ’00, took the opportunity to kick off the weekend by welcoming all attendees, and getting them fired up for the weekend ahead.

Friday morning, brothers gathered in the Arizona Biltmore Ballroom for the delivery of the State of the Fraternity address, giving an overview of the Fraternity’s successes and introduction of the new initiatives planned for the year ahead.

President and CEO of La Quinta Inns & Suites, Wayne Goldberg, Louisville ’83, made an appearance to accept the Sloan-Kettering Award of Merit in Business. Goldberg became CEO in 2006, and under his leadership La Quinta is the fastest growing select-service brand in the U.S. during the last five and ten years.

Following the State of the Fraternity, educational breakout sessions and alumni and volunteer conferences began. The Global Service Luncheon was next on the program, celebrating DU’s award-winning Global Service Initiative. Over the last year, 21 chapters met the $1,000 fundraising goal. Those chapters were Alberta, Boise State, Bradley, Chattanooga, Iowa State, Kansas, Kansas State, Kent State, Lafayette, Nebraska, North Carolina State, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Oregon State, Pennsylvania State, Purdue, Rutgers, San Diego State, San Jose, Washington and Western Ontario.

Oregon State took home both GSI Fundraising Awards, for raising the most money per member and overall.

The Lester Pearson Award of Merit in Human Service was presented to Wilbur Oaks, Lafayette ’51, for his numerous efforts in humanitarianism. The Dr. Linus Pauling Award of Merit in Science was presented to Dr. William Dement, Washington ’52. His efforts in science include helping to discover and describe REM sleep and its relationship to dreaming, among many other achievements.

A special presentation was given in honor of Chairman of the Fraternity Board, Richard Taylor, North Carolina State ’82, and his brother Paul Taylor, North Carolina State ’87, who have both been great leaders in the Global Service Initiative efforts. The brothers have pledged gifts to the program totaling

$50,000 to establish the Taylor Family GSI Fund. The fund will provide two GSI scholarships annually and this is the first endowment to the program.

Later in the evening, the Undergraduate Convention took place. Each chapter sent one delegate, voting to elect two new Undergraduate Directors to serve over the next year. The two men chosen to serve as this year’s Undergraduate Directors are Derek Lancashire, Ohio State ’15, and Seth Miller, Kansas ’14.

The IGNITE Series came back for another year and did not disappoint. This unique opportunity is similar to TED Talks, featuring eight alumni and undergraduates who have access to the main stage where they share ideas, stories and messages with their brothers in 10 minutes or less. Topics and presenters included:

• RedefiningManhood Curtis Ryan DeGraw, Culver-Stockton ’14

• TheValueofCommunity Zack Hibbs, Louisville ’14

• TheEconomicsofEducationReformJoshua Katz, Central Florida ’97

• DiscoverYourPotentialwithEntrepreneurshipGreg Nance, Chicago ’11

• LiveYourOath! Craig Sowell, Houston ’92

• FromDUtoDhaka:LivinginaGlobalWorldMike Taylor, North Carolina State ’10

• America’sJobSurplus(TalentDeficit) Nick Welton, Lehigh ’10

• BuildingaBetterBrand Josh Wimble, Pennsylvania State ’13

Brothers were able to relax as they hit the streets of Old Town Scottsdale to top off the evening. The city is home to over 100 restaurants, shops and attractions.

Saturday morning began with the Founders Fitness Run, where brothers were invited to take a morning jog around the Biltmore property to start the day, just before a general session presentation given by Dr. Will Keim, Pacific ’75, titled “What Does It Take to Be a Man?” The speech was a hit with undergraduates and alumni.

The awards luncheon followed, where the Delta Upsilon Foundation recognized valued donors and presented a number of awards to deserving members. There have been many reasons to celebrate this year, as the Foundation raised more money this year than any other in history.

The McKeag Award-Oak Circle Chapter of the Year was presented to the Nebraska Chapter. Two Foundation scholarships were also presented. The Oak Circle Scholarship was presented to Alex Bolin, Kansas State ’14,

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and the McQuaid Scholarship was given to Tyler West, Oregon State ’13 and Charles Johnson, Boise State ’11.

Brother Dave Maguire, Southern Illinois ’73, was congratulated on attending his 39th DU convention, marking his 39th in a row! And as is custom, the newest members of the A.S.C. were welcomed.

Next, the Chapter Advisor of the Year Award was presented to the tag team of Tony and Cathy Durano of Wichita. The James B. Conant Award of Merit in Education was presented to Dave Frohnmayer, Oregon ’01, for his success within the field of education.

The Canada Cup was presented to the Alberta Chapter.

By this time on Saturday, brothers had been buzzing around the arrival of Peter Ueberroth, San Jose ’59, and anxiously awaiting the Distinguished Leadership Forum. Around 3:00 in the afternoon, men filed into the ballroom trying to get a seat as close a possible. Ueberroth took the stage. “Because you’re my brothers,” Ueberroth stated, answering why he agreed to make it a priority to attend the Leadership Institute.

In his speech, Ueberroth talked about the importance of global citizenship and explained how important change has become in our growing world. He said of change, “If you don’t put it in your DNA, it will be here before you know it.” Ueberroth has dined with important men from around the world, getting the chance to fully understand how other countries endure change, and how they make it work, while taking note when there is failure.

At the conclusion of Ueberroth’s speech, he gave time to answer burning questions related to sports and business, offering his thoughts on some of the hottest topics in sports today. His speech continued to emphasize to those getting ready to head into the real world, that to be successful, you much be able to master change, and to affect it.

When asked what kind of impact DU has made on this life, Ueberroth responded, “If I hadn’t gotten into DU, my future would be dramatically altered.” The Fraternity house is where he met his wife, Ginny, who was an Alpha Chi Omega at San Jose. “I didn’t fit the mold, and it [DU] introduced me to the love of my life,” said Ueberroth.

Following the Distinguished Leadership Forum, men had the opportunity to clean up from the afternoon and head down to take the annual group photo. A picture says a thousand words, and this photo on the lawn of the historic Biltmore makes for a great memory, as brothers stand toe-to-toe with successful men like Brother Ueberroth.

Dressed to the nines, brothers filed back into the ballroom and mingled until they were seated for dinner at the Grand Banquet. Here seemed to be the moment everyone had waited for, as the last, but certainly not least, of the Fraternity accomplishments were announced.

Sweepstakes finalists included Kansas State, Pennsylvania State, Kansas, Nebraska, Carthage, North Dakota and Washington. These chapters demonstrated exceptional performance in multiple areas such as performance on the CEP, as well as their academic ranking, recruitment achievements, their standing on campus and the example they provide for other DU chapters. The 2013 Sweepstakes trophy went to the Kansas State Chapter for reaching above and beyond in those areas.

Fraternity Board Member Robert Stewart, Washington ’64, led the Delta Upsilon Remembrance, followed by a moment of silence for all of DU’s fallen brothers.

Rick Taylor, North Carolina State ’82, took a moment to recognize the retiring of Fraternity Board Member, Robert Fisher, Alberta ’76. Brother Fisher joined the Board in 2007 and has served three, two-year terms for a total of six years.

The William H.P. Faunce Interfraternalism was presented to Monica Lee Miranda who served as the Director of Fraternity and Sorority Affairs at the University of Rochester for 14 years, supervising 33 organizations and building an award-winning community. Miranda made an incredible impact on the Rochester Chapter, and is surely a friend of DU.

The President’s Award, which recognizes the chapter president of the year, was presented to Brandon Nieveen, Nebraska ’13, for his leadership and strength in pushing his chapter forward.

Britt Taylor, North Carolina State ’13, was recognized with the Distinguished Undergraduate Award based on his leadership, service and involvement within his chapter and campus community. The award is meant to highlight the attributes of an undergraduate’s involvement during his entire college career. The recipient will have his name engraved on the permanent recognition plaque at the International Headquarters in Indianapolis. Finalists included: Jordan Guess, Oregon State ’13; Tyler West, Oregon State ’13; Josh Wimble, Pennsylvania State ’13; and Angel Ochoa, Jr., Oklahoma ’13.

Following the banquet, brothers took photos on the main stage, and headed to the Oak Circle Poker Tournament & T-shirt Auction. The poker tournament featured a live auction where brothers had the opportunity to bid on DU T-shirts donated from various chapters from across North America. All proceeds went to providing for Oak Circle scholarships.

All in all, the weekend proved in every form, that DU success will continue to flourish. The men, like special guest, Peter Ueberroth, San Jose ’59, and the many others who attended, are doing great things every single day. It is the individual men who have a story to tell, who have advice to give, who give back to their brothers, who make DU successful.

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How has Delta Upsilon impacted your undergraduate experience?

Delta Upsilon has impacted my undergraduate career because it got me involved. Through my undergraduate membership I was able to better my community around my campus, and even better a community in Negril, Jamaica. If I was not a member of Delta Upsilon during my undergraduate career I would not have experienced things such as the Leadership Conferences offered by the Fraternity that prepared me for life after college. However, the biggest effect that my undergraduate experience had on me was sharing our Four Founding Principles with people that will be my best friends for the rest of my life.

Tell us about your community service involvement.

My community service involvement has focused around the issue of hunger. I went on an alternative spring break trip that studied world hunger issues and since then I have been focused on this issue. I participated in a number of meal packing events, as well as volunteered at soup kitchens. However, the biggest service I believe I did was educating people about world hunger.

Tell us about the work that you have done.

The work that I have done stems off of my passion for solving world hunger. I worked for a year at Stop Hunger Now, leading our meal packing events. These events are a fun atmosphere that teach people about how large of an impact we can make on world hunger, and then actually doing the service to make that impact.

What do you feel is most important for the future of the Fraternity?

I think that staying true to the Four Founding Principles is the most important thing for the future of the Fraternity. The

staff at headquarters and the Fraternity Board of Directors have done a great job giving the undergraduates opportunities to learn about these Principles through various educational events, and then actually put them into action in the Global Service Initiative. It is very important that undergraduates take these Principles back to their chapters and live them out on a daily basis.

If you could leave your brothers with any message, what would that be?

If I could leave my brothers with one message it would be the famous quote from Margaret Mead, “Never doubt that a small group of people can change the world, indeed it is the only thing that ever has.” It does not matter if you are a chapter of 500 or of five, merely trying your hardest to make an impact is the only way that it will happen.

What IS your favorite DU memory?My favorite memory of DU was the Global Service

Initiative. This trip offered a unique experience that is hard to match. I was able to go to Jamaica and do service for a week. Even though I had done something similar to this on the alternative service break trips, GSI was different. You are doing this volunteer work with your brothers. By the end of the week I had a second associate member class with all the men I met on this trip. This trip will always remain as one of, if not the best, memories of my undergraduate career.

What are your future plans? My future plans after graduation are to attend seminary

for the Roman Catholic Diocese of Charlotte North Carolina. After a few more years of schooling I will be ordained a Catholic priest and I know that my experience in Delta Upsilon has already prepared my very well for this vocation.

Distinguished Undergraduate Q&A: Britt Taylor, NORTH CAROLINA state ’13

Neil Hall, Arlington ’12, and Bill Rappolt, Lafayette ’67, present the Distinguished Undergraduate Award to Britt Taylor, North Carolina State ’13.

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Distinguished Alumni Award

PeterUeberroth,San Jose ’59

Sweepstakes Trophy KansasState

FinalistsCarthage,Kansas,Nebraska,NorthDakota,PennsylvaniaState,Washington

Distinguished Undergraduate Award BrittTaylor,North Carolina State ’13

FinalistsJordanGuess,Oregon State ’13, AngelOchoa,Jr.,Oklahoma ’13, TylerWest,Oregon State ’13, JoshWimble,Penn State ’13,

2012-2013 Award Winners

(Top) Fraternity President Bernard Franklin, Kansas State ’75, presents the James B. Conant Award of Merit in Education to Dave Frohnmayer, Oregon ’01. (Bottom) Brother Brandon Nieveen, Nebraska ’13, receives the Chapter President of the Year Award.

Delta Upsilon’s Executive Director Justin Kirk, Boise State ’00 congratulates Monica Lee Miranda, on receiving the William H.P. Faunce Interfraternialism Award.

The Kansas State Chapter poses with their awards after being presented with the coveted Sweepstakes Trophy for the 2013 year.

Sloan-Kettering Award of Merit in Business

WayneGoldberg,Louisville ’83

Lester B. Pearson Award of Merit in HumanService

WilburOaks,Lafayette ’51

James B. Conant Award of Merit in Education

DavidFrohnmayer,Oregon ’01

Dr. Linus Pauling Award of Merit in Science

Dr.WilliamDement,Washington ’52

Most Improved ChapterPurdue

McKeag Award-Oak Circle Chapter of the Year

Nebraska

William H.P. Faunce Interfraternalism Award

MonicaLeeMiranda,Rochester

President’s Award: Chapter President of the Year

BrandonNieveen,Nebraska ’13

Outstanding Alumni Chapter Award

LouisvilleAlumniChapter

Chapter Advisors of the Year

TonyandCathyDurano,Wichita Chapter

Canada CupAlberta

Awards of Merit

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The Kansas Chapter receives the award for Overall CEP Excellence.

Brother Patrick Harrington, Purdue ’14, accepts the award for Most Improved Chapter on behalf of the men at Purdue, from presenter Richard Taylor, North Carolina State ’82.

The Oregon State Chapter receiving their recognition for raising the most money per chapter and per member for the Global Service Initiative.

GSI Fundraising Award (per member)

OregonState

GSI Fundraising Award (Overall)OregonState

GSI $1,000+ Fundraising LevelAlberta,BoiseState,Bradley,Chattanooga,IowaState,Kansas,KansasState,KentState,Lafayette,Nebraska,NorthCarolinaState,NorthDakota,Oklahoma,OregonState,PennsylvaniaState,Purdue,Rutgers,SanDiegoState,SanJose,Washington,WesternOntario

CEP Awards of Excellence

Overall CEP ExcellenceKansas

Excellence in the Promotion of Friendship

Purdue

Excellence in the Advancement of Justice

Purdue,Washington,Nebraska

Excellence in the Diffusion of Liberal Culture

Washington

Excellence in the Development of Character

OregonState,Nebraska,Kansas

CEP Excellence in Operations

Kansas

Global Service awards

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There’s something about Williams College that seems to transport you back in time. From the quaint paths leading you through campus, to the aged dormitories where students have dwelled for over 100 years. Those very same dorms are where the first men of DU came together to change the meaning of fraternity.

It is also one of the stops on the DU Emerging Leaders Experience, where undergraduates have the opportunity to meet in Williamstown, Massachusetts for a leadership-based retreat. During this five-day trip, associate and initiated freshmen and sophomores have the opportunity to explore their strengths as a leader through StrengthsQuest, to flesh out their personal values and learn about the history of Delta Upsilon in the process. Upon completion of the program, men will have a vision for their ideal fraternity experience that aligns itself with the Mission and Principles of the Fraternity.

The 2013 DUEL Experience brought thirty men to Williams, the most ever to participate in DUEL history. Twenty-four of these men were freshmen, and six were sophomores. Twenty-five chapters were represented, bringing seven vice presidents in their respective chapters, and 12 members came having some kind of leadership position within their chapters. The DUEL Experience looks to cultivate future chapter leaders early in their Delta Upsilon experience, which creates greater potential for both personal and chapter success

This year, DUEL kicked off on May 31st, as participants traveled to their camp for check-in and welcomes, with an intro into StrengthsQuest. The Gallup Organization’s Clifton StrengthsQuestFinder is an online assessment of a person’s normal wiring, based on the perspective of Positive Psychology. Its purpose is to measure the presence of 34 talent themes. These talents refer to ways that you naturally think, feel and behave. DUEL participants had the opportunity to use StrengthsQuest as a tool to identify how to best use their own personal strengths to lead their chapters.

Over the next few days, groups are sifted into breakout sessions, aiming to help meet the needs of the contemporary fraternity man. Key topics are visited during the sessions, such as communication, values, global service and creating a legacy, while relating everything back to the Four Founding Principles. Perhaps some of the most useful breakout sessions are those that deal with issues that are happening right now within chapters and colonies. Some of these sessions include direction on how to effectively implement needed change, understanding the financial needs of the chapter and how to remain in good standing, how to facilitate effective programming, how to create a meaningful associate member program, managing conflict and challenging situations, and understanding loss prevention.

On Sunday, attendees arrived at Williams College in the early afternoon. While the sun peaked in and out of rainy skies throughout the day, it didn’t stop the tour around the quaint streets through campus, where brothers bought Williams College T-shirts and other mementos before retreating to the Garfield House on campus for a tour. While it is now just another living and learning facility for students, brothers had a chance to see all of the historical markings and engravings in the house that still remain today.

But perhaps the most meaningful moment, was captured right on the steps where Delta Upsilon’s Founding Fathers had stood many years ago. Crowding around the doorstep leading into the ivy-covered dormitory, initiated brothers recited their Oath, beaming with pride and smiles on their faces. Here, it seemed to sink in, that their legacy as a leader would continue on.

“Thank you for the opportunity to be a part of something like this. The ideals learned here are relevant to everyday life and reflect the image that DU wants to uphold.” - Duel Participant

DUEL Continues to Prep Men for Leadership

(Top) DUEL participants gather in front of the Garfield House at Williams College. (Bottom) (Left) Kendall Rabeneck, Louisville ‘16, and (Right) Braxton Hall, Louisville ‘16, give the thumbs up as they participate in team building activities.

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Alberta This fall, the chapter held their annual Car

Smash and raised around $250 for GSI, as well as Dunk a DU. Through the Delta Upsilon

Community Outreach program, money was fundraised to donate sports supplies to the local Garneau Community School.

Arlington The Arlington Chapter recently raised over

$1,100 for the Global Service Initiative. The effort was completed through t-shirt sells and

an associate member philanthropy project. In addition to this initial donation, the chapter is planning a GSI week on campus where they will host “Tie-Dye a DU.”

An event that allows donors to help paint the members’ shirts while they’re still wearing them.

Boise StateBrother Lucas Westcott ’13, received

the Dean’s Choice Award at the Boise State Undergraduate Research Conference for his work on a project titled “The American Dream or a True Cost Nightmare?,” which focuses on the economic effects of urban sprawl. At the end of last semester, Brother Ryan Gregg ’14, was elected to his second term as Student Body President.

CaliforniaOn Saturday, September 24th, over 25

members of the chapter aided alumnus Benito Delgado-Olsen ’07, in setting up

the K-12 School Supply Assembly, one of the largest Greek philanthropic events of the year. Benito’s nonprofit, K to College, sets out to aid disadvantaged school children by making supplies available at no cost. At the event, DUs together with other volunteers helped pack supplies for all 3,500 of Berkeley’s low income students. The chapter was recognized earlier this year in a City of Berkeley Proclamation signed by Mayor Tom Bates for similar work and support of the Early Learning Kit Initiative, an event also held by K to College last spring. They are expecting another proclamation this semester! The chapter now has three of them hanging together in their house.

Cal Poly Currently one member of the chapter

serves as a vice president of the Interfraternity Council, and another member serves on the IFC

judicial board. The chapter has made large strides toward completing their new housing project that should be completed next fall.

Chapter news

Have Chapter news? WewanttofeatureitinthenextQuarterly!Send your submissions to Communications Coordinator Megan Samuels at [email protected].

Boise State brothers holding their coat of arms shield made entirely of metal, given as a gift.

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Carnegie ColonyThis year, the colony gave out three

scholarships to incoming freshmen. These scholarships, totaling $6,000, were generously

donated by the Carnegie Delta Upsilon Alumni Association. The scholarships are given to men whom the chapter felt embodied the Four Founding Principles. The scholarship recipients are Nick Kosarek ’17, Richard Smith-Ortegon ’17, and Zach Newman ’17.

CarthageThe chapter made some very memorable trips

this summer. Cody Carrell ’14, participated in GSI, stating, “this was one of the most

meaningful experiences I’ve ever been a part of and I would encourage any DU to consider applying for the trip.” Bob Petts ’14, was able to follow his dreams and spend the summer in New York City studying theatre at a workshop. He said, “this workshop taught me many different things about the stage and how to become a better auditionee, but it also gave me much to think about on how to become a better person.” Lastly, Eric Ireland ’15, had the opportunity to team up with researchers from Carthage to send a payload into space as part of a research initiative through the Colorado Space Grant Consortium.

Culver-Stockton This past year at the Culver-Stockton

Student Life Awards, the chapter cleaned up the competition, earning seven out of the 11

awards to which they were eligible for, and one Student Activities Award. These awards include:

• Alumni/FacultyAdvisoroftheYear:Heather Keller

• NewMemberoftheYear: Spencer Waters ’16

• SophomoreoftheYear: Benjamin Brown ’15

• JunioroftheYear:Curtis Ryan DeGraw ’14

• ServiceProjectoftheYear:Homeless Rally

• GreekManoftheYear: Jeffrey DeGraw ’13

• OutstandingAcademicPerformance: Culver-Stockton Chapter

• ChapteroftheYear: Culver-Stockton

DePauwAt the end of the previous academic year,

the chapter took home two awards from the annual Greek Life Awards, presented by Order

of Omega, including the Chapter of Excellence Award and the award for Outstanding Philanthropic Endeavors. The chapter was the only member of IFC to receive recognition as the Chapter of Excellence.

In other news, Brother Walker Chance ’14, was sworn in as Student Body President for DePauw University.

ElonThe chapter has been busy this fall with a

handful of service projects. These projects include helping to restore a home in their own community

through the Local Service Initiative, giving to a canned food drive, and working with Burlington Parks and Recreation for fall cleanup days of service. Brothers are looking forward to Thanksgiving Dinner with their DU brothers.

Embry-RiddleThe chapter is excited to share it’s success

in its newest philanthropic event. In February 2013, The Dating Game made its debut, making

close to $500 for GSI. The concept is essentially like that on TV, but with a few small surprises in this version. During intermission, a group of brothers filed onto stage and began to sing a special rendition of “The Sweetheart of Delta U.” At the end of the song, their special guest, Elika Cruz Rivera, was called on stage to become the first ever Sweetheart of the chapter. Elika has been a good friend of the chapter since it chartered, and has helped them through rough times. The chapter is already planning the 2014 Dating Game and hopes that this annual show will become a signature event on the campus.

FloridaThis fall, the chapter paired with United Way

of North Central Florida to host a block party in Gainesville. The event was the second in a

series of four, featuring live music and a bounce house. All the proceeds for this event were split between the regional and national branches.

Ryan Degraw, Culver Stockton ’13, Culver-Stockton’s winner of Junior of the Year, presenting at the 2013 Leadership Institute.

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Georgia TechThis fall, outside of their usual activities,

the brotherhood has been focusing its efforts on a bone marrow donor drive for one of their

brothers in need. The entire chapter, along with close friends, have already undertaken testing to become part of the donor database. Officers are working diligently with other IFC fraternities and campus officials to kick off a campus-wide drive to aid their brother.

Iowa ColonyThe colony has returned to its chapter

house on campus at 320 Ellis Avenue. Renovations are a work in progress. Over the

summer, the colony held a meet and greet at Citizen Restaurant in Chicago to mingle with potential new members. This was a successful event, and a great way to meet new people.

IllinoisAt the end of spring semester 2013, the

chapter hosted two notable events. The annual DU-Theta Broomball Philanthropy

event was a combined effort to raise money for GSI. The two chapters were able to split $2,300, after an impressive turnout from both the fraternities and sororities on campus. The other notable event, the Dixie Ball, made a big splash on campus. The event had quite the turnout, complete with country and folk music and catered BBQ. The chapter hopes to continue this event as a new tradition.

IndianaTwo members were elected to the local IFC

Executive Board, where the leadership they have learned from the chapter will be distributed to

the entire campus. The chapter also started a new

philanthropic event called the Boys and Girls Cup. This is an outdoor soccer tournament featuring men from many fraternities on campus, along with some unaffiliated teams. All the proceeds from the tournament went to Bloomington Boys & Girls Club.

James Madison ColonyThe colony received a $1,000 donation from

the newest student residential neighborhood due to the high number of brothers living in

the space, and their partnership with them on university events over the past year. The colony intends on sending the donation to the GSI fund.

KansasThe chapter finished in the top spot for the

Chapter Excellence Plan and were once again finalists for the Sweepstakes Award at this year’s

2013 Leadership Institute.

Brothers have also been very involved on campus lately. Seth Miller ’14, serves as the President of the Interfraternity Council, and he is aided by Director of Recruitment Trevor McGowan ’15.

Five junior brothers were accepted into the prestigious Finance Scholars Program.

In an effort to further strengthen their relationship with the community, the chapter has partnered with a local elementary school in Lawrence to assist with its school carnival, field day and other events throughout the year.

Kansas StateFor the second year in a row, and the

sixth time in history, the chapter has won the coveted Sweepstakes Trophy at the

Leadership Institute. To acknowledge this significant achievement, a festive gala of families, members

The Kansas State Chapter gathered together to celebrate their achievement in winning the Sweepstakes Award for the second year in a row, and the sixth year in history.

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and alumni took place at the chapter house on September 7th. A BBQ and formal celebration was held with speakers President Bernard Franklin ’75, Alumni Board President Frank York ’71, House Director J.R. Love, Mom’s Club President Pam Van Bebber, and Chapter President Marshall Anliker ’14.

Kent StateThe fall semester corn hole tournament took

place on October 12th to raise money for the Global Service Initiative. Each year the chapter

strives to raise at least $1,000 to help support GSI.

LafayetteThis October, the chapter turned all their

hard work and planning into a full-fledged philanthropy. Their first ever Dodgeball

Unlimited (DU) was a school-wide tournament that encouraged high school students from around the community to attend.

LehighThis semester, the chapter has been

busy hosting events. They held a forum for professors to present their research in a Ted

Talks format called TEDxLEHIGH. The event has been very successful in the past. They also cohosted Lassoing for Leukemia for the American Leukemia and Lymphoma Society. This event was held at the chapter house, featuring carnival games and even a mechanical bull.

LouisvilleEarlier this spring, the chapter continued

its tradition of ending the spring semester with an alumni/active athletic event. This year,

the chapter challenged the alumni to a kickball game. Game day took place on a seemingly beautiful

Friday afternoon with sunny skies that soon changed to clouds and thunderstorms. According to Brother Robert Deskins ’15, “in true DU fashion, the undergraduate and alumni did not let the rain discourage them, but instead pushed forward and finished the game, even though it ended up being more like mud ball instead of kickball.” The day ended with a cookout.

ManitobaAfter six years, the chapter members have a

place to call home. Daniel Schwantz ’16, says, “while the renovations are still underway, we are

glad to have a place that is ours.”

MiamiThree sophomore members of the chapter

attended ACROPOLIS, a weekend retreat for emerging leaders in the Greek Community

from Miami. Representatives are sent from each fraternity and sorority chapter on campus to develop leadership skills and to think about the future of Greek life on campus.

Michigan The chapter is proud to announce their

current membership totals 78 brothers of merit. Coming back from some hardships

following an electrical fire that destroyed their chapter house, the chapter is feeling good. While membership dwindled since the fire in 2009, the chapter now stands at double the size of its 30 members back in 2011, boasting 30 new brothers over the course of the 2012-2013 academic year. The brothers intend to put that luck to good use in moving forward with the chapter’s collective desire to raise money for the Global Service Initiative.

Michigan brothers in front of their chapter house boasting their largest Associate Member class as of late.

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Michigan TechThe chapter reported its membership’s

term and cumulative GPA above the all men’s average at Michigan Tech. Nearly 20 percent of

the chapter is involved in undergraduate research, whereas 50 percent are involved in other organizations on campus. Fall 2013 marks the third year in a row this chapter will participate in Make a Difference Day. The Michigan Tech Chapter Alumni Foundation has expanded scholarship opportunities to the undergraduate brothers and has assisted the chapter in becoming debt free.

MissouriThe chapter held its Academic Banquet at

the chapter house on August 25th, where four members of the chapter received awards for having a

4.0 GPA. The chapter had 70 members who received above a 3.0 GPA in the spring semester. They also adopted a highway in Columbia, Missouri this fall semester, tht runs from Brown School Road to US 63. Four service events have been scheduled throughout the semester to do highway cleanup.

North DakotaThe chapter wrapped things up in the spring

with top grades out of all fraternities on campus, reaching an average of 3.21, taking home third

overall out of all fraternities and sororities. Joseph Kalka ’16, also received the Future Greek Leader Award.

North Dakota State Joseph Schaefbauer ’15, led college

students in a Students Today Leaders Forever “Pay-it Forward” Tour over spring break this

past spring. “We performed six service projects in six cities across the country over the course of nine days,” said Schaefbauer.

Brothers took their annual canoe trip this fall with both undergraduate and alumni guests. The trip was a success! The chapter also featured a float in the homecoming parade.

NebraskaFrank C. Pratt ’15, Jakeb A. Geisert ’14,

Ryan Kubert ’15, and Erik N. Spencer ’14, were honored at the University of Nebraska

Founders’ Day Banquet on Friday, April 5th as the recipients of the fifth annual “Roy James Harney - Four Founding Principles Scholarship Award: The Promotion of Friendship; The Development of Character; The Diffusion of Liberal Culture; and the Advancement of Justice.”

Roy James Harney 1917, was a graduate of the University of Nebraska College of Law, who later helped with the installation of the Delta Upsilon Chapter at San Jose State University and served as the alumni advisor there for many years.

The scholarship awards were awarded to the University of Nebraska brothers who have “fully demonstrated the ability to carry out the Four Founding Principles of the Delta Upsilon Fraternity: The Promotion of Friendship; The Development of Character; The Diffusion of Liberal Culture; and the Advancement of Justice. A sister award was given to recipients at the San Jose State Chapter. Read more on page 19.

North Dakota State brothers on their annual fall canoe trip.

Oregon State brothers on the GSI trip in Jamaica.

READ OREGON STATE’S FULL DESCRIPTION ON THE NEXT PAGE!

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North Carolina StateThe North Carolina State Chapter

has organized a Greek Unity Shack for Shackathon. This event brought together an

unprecedented 20+ organizations, including all fraternities and sororities, to work together to raise money for Habitat for Humanity.

OhioThe chapter hosted a special guest in its

home for dinner, giving them the opportunity to educate themselves on how to potentially

help brothers with learning disabilities navigate their way through school. Their guest, Abby Webb, works in the Department of Disability Services at Ohio University, helping students who have disabilities get the help they need throughout their college experiences.

Oregon StateThe chapter is proud to announce that

Tyler West ’13, received the 2013 IFC Man of the Year, and DJ Cook ’13, was also a finalist

for the award. Aside from their individual success, the chapter managed to take home the honor of most money raised as a chapter and per person, for GSI at the 2013 Leadership Institute. This marks their third year in a row.

Pennsylvania StateChase Englund, ’14, and Jon Garfield ’15, were

elected to the University Park Undergraduate Association Assembly. This assembly is the

student government that represents the 40,000+ Penn State undergraduates. Delta Upsilon is the only fraternity this year with more than one member serving in the Assembly.

Kyle Rinda ’14, was elected to the Interfraternity Council Executive Board as Vice President for Chapter Development, taking part in the governance of 4,000+ Greek life members at Penn State. Michael Gorel ’14, was also selected for his second term on the IFC Judiciary, which oversees arbitration and adjudication of potential conduct policy violations.

Purdue The chapter is proud to report on their

newest philanthropy called the Acres Paint Wars, featuring a dodge ball tournament with

paint balloons. This successful event was held on September 13th, at the chapter house, where teams competed in a tournament for trophies, as winners of both the fraternity and sorority leagues. A large portion of the Greek community participated in the event, with a total of 30 teams to play, raising just under $2,000.

Quinnipiac ColonyIn April of this year, brothers invited a

noted finance professor to speak to the colony for a discussion on global economic issues.

The conversation mainly touched on how the U.S. interacts with other countries in regards to trading and embargos.

RutgersThe chapter was awarded the 4-Star Award

from the university. This is the top award given to an organization that has excelled in chapter

programming, community service, leadership, standards and academics.

San Diego State “Initiation is the one time each semester

that we accept the newest generation of brothers into our Fraternity,” said Brother

Ryan Whaley ’14. “Yet, unlike every other initiation we have ever had, the brothers of the San Diego State University Chapter of Delta Upsilon had the honor of having Brother Bernard Franklin in attendance.” Brother Franklin, Kansas State ’75, gave the Charge alongside undergraduate brothers who had the pleasure of initiating two new members, as well as two of the undergraduates’ fathers who have made gracious contributions and dedicated so much of their time to the chapter.

San JoseJohn Plecnik ’15, Eric Link ’12, Matthew

Collins ’13, and Brian Rus ’14, were honored at the San Jose State University Alumni and

Brothers old and new at San Diego State’s Initiation back in the spring. Read more below.

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Undergraduate Annual Dinner on Sunday, April 28th as the recipients of the fifth annual “Roy James Harney -Four Founding Principles Scholarship Award: The Promotion of Friendship; The Development of Character; The Diffusion of Liberal Culture; and The Advancement of Justice.”

Roy James Harney, Nebraska, 1917, was a graduate of the University of Nebraska College of Law, who later helped with the installation of the Delta Upsilon Chapter at San Jose State University and served as the Alumni Advisor there for many years.

The scholarship awards were awarded to the San Jose State University Delta Upsilon brothers who have “most successfully demonstrated the ability to carry out the Four Founding Principles of Delta Upsilon: The Promotion of Friendship; The Development of Character; The Diffusion of Liberal Culture; and The Advancement of Justice. A sister award was given to recipients at the Nebraska Chapter. Read more on page 18.

South CarolinaThe chapter has some impressive standards

to live up to, as they finished the 2012-2013 academic year with an overall GPA of 3.44,

which was well above the All Men’s Average of 3.07, and higher than any other fraternity on campus.

St. NorbertThe chapter kicked off the semester with a

small philanthropic event to raise money for GSI. The event was called Duck Hunt. Tables

were set up in a central location on campus, selling water balloons for $1 to throw at chapter members around campus. The event was a big hit, and it gave the chapter the opportunity to involve the entire campus in their efforts, while meeting some of the freshmen as they entered into recruitment season. Every penny went to Global Service Initiative.

SwarthmoreA couple of brothers have already taken

home some awards this semester, as well as in the spring 2013 semester. The Administrative

Acknowledgement Award was presented to Chapter President Yeab Wondimu ’14, for his work with the administrative advancement of student concerns for continuous improvement. Kyle Knapp ’14, was awarded with the Christian B. Anfinsen Award, which is presented to a junior or senior with the highest GPA. Knapp is an Engineering and Computer Programming double major with a cumulative GPA of 3.87.

TechnologyNine brothers qualified for the NCAA D3

championship swim meet. Out of those nine, six earned All-American status, and one earned

The South Carolina brothers posted high marks during the 2012-2013 academic year, earning the highest overall GPA of a fraternity on campus.

Brothers of the St. Norbert Chapter participating in their Duck Hunt philanthropy to raise money for GSI.

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honorable mention. Congratulations to Ben Bauchwitz ’15, Wyatt Ubellacker ’13, Remy Mock ’14, Craig Cheney ’14, Brad Jokubaitis ’16, Luke Schlueter ’16, and Thomas Norris ’16. In other news, the fraternity’s chef, Dave Zeno, will be leaving after serving the chapter for almost 20 years. A goodbye dinner was held in his honor, and both undergraduates and local alumni attended.

TorontoGreek Week was well attended by the chapter

and a spirit of cooperation and goodwill was fostered within the Greek community.

The chapter has enrolled 10 members in the Duke of Edinburgh Award Program and hopes to enroll more in the coming months.

TuftsBrothers are enjoying their first semester off

probation, and have worked hard throughout the summer to organize finances and to prepare

their house for this fall semester. Chapter elections were held on September 18th, and the members have elected the new group of individuals to lead and continue the growth and development of the chapter.

VirginiaJun Heng Jairus Ang ’16, competed in the

Paracanoe World Championship this summer. Paracanoe is a sprint canoe sport for disabled

athletes. Ang finished fourth in his semifinal heat. Paracanoing will be a sport featured in the 2016 Paralympics.

WashingtonThe chapter has kept its tradition of

volunteering with the Seattle Ronald McDonald House, as they did so three times

this past spring. Brothers travel to Seattle to volunteer their Saturdays and spend time with sick children and their families. It has become one of their favorite philanthropic activities. “I love donating my time to such a worthy cause. We as a chapter care for the community and we love to give back to the less fortunate. It makes me thankful for being healthy and happy that I can give back,” said Stephen Chung ’16.

Western IllinoisOn November 2nd, the chapter

participated in the Fallen Soldiers 5K in remembrance of Robert E. Baldwin ’93, who

was killed in Afghanistan. Over 400 guests were invited, including parents and alumni, to honor Brother Baldwin’s sacrifice.

WichitaThe chapter won the award for Most

Outstanding Fraternity for the 2012-2013 academic year. Additionally, the chapter raised

over $900 for the American Cancer Society with their first annual Teeter-A-Thon.

Western ReserveLast spring, the chapter participated in

MedWish’s Band Aid Bash 2013, a fundraiser to buy medical supplies for doctors in

developing countries. The chapter was recognized with honors for their service at the annual Band Aid Bash. Over half of the active brothers stepped forward to give a combined total of 152 hours of service, and the event raised over $300,000 for the nonprofit organization.

The Technology Chapter hosted a going-away party for their longtime house chef, Dave Zeno, who is leaving after almost 20 years of service.

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A MESSAGE FROM THE CHAIRMAN

Our Fraternity has taken great strides in recent years to position itself to be the premier men’s development organization available on college campuses. It has hired one of the finest professional staffs in the industry and has created a progressive portfolio of educational initiatives aimed at having a positive impact on the undergraduate experience. It is with this in mind that I enthusiastically deliver the 2012-13 Annual Report for the Delta Upsilon Education Foundation. We couldn’t be more proud to announce the Foundation raised more money in 2012-13 than any year in our history!

As a direct result of the significant generosity of alumni and friends, 1,113 undergraduate men were impacted through their participation in the cutting edge training and development programming offered through the Fraternity. This is the highest participation rate in our 179-year history! Consequently, DU chapters are becoming larger and stronger, and the undergraduate’s academic performance has surpassed the all-men’s GPA on our host campuses.

During 2012-13, the Foundation hired three new staff members to help advance the work of Delta Upsilon. Natasha Dow, recent graduate of the Indiana University Purdue University Indianapolis Master’s Program in Non-Profit Management, joined the team in June as Development Assistant. Michael McRee, Ph.D., started with the Foundation in January after spending 13 years as the Vice President of LeaderShape Inc. and serves as our Associate Executive Director. John Duncan, Oregon State ’00, joined the team in July of 2012 after spending seven years as the Director of the Holden Leadership Center at the University of Oregon, and serves as our Director of Foundation. These three talented individuals join the Foundation’s Executive Director Justin Kirk, Boise State ’00. This is a great team and they are excited and honored to work with the dedicated and loyal DU’s that invest in the Foundation each year.

This is a truly an exciting time for Delta Upsilon. I encourage each of you in the coming year to attend one of DU’s programs. The 2014 Leadership Institute will take place in Kansas City, Missouri and I, along with the Board of Trustees and the Fraternity’s Board of Directors, welcome your attendance and participation.

Also in the coming year, the Foundation will be launching a number of new giving opportunities that will help sustain and advance the Fraternity. Our outcome is simple – we want to impact and transform as many young men as possible into the future leaders, fathers and contributors that our society needs. DU, as it has done for nearly 180 years, can be a primary vehicle in accomplishing this outcome.

Thank you for your continued support and investment. Your generosity is what drives Delta Upsilon forward and you have my personal gratitude for your willingness to make a difference in the lives of these young men. Each of us has a unique reason for supporting Delta Upsilon. All of us carry our own special memories of this extraordinary experience and want to ensure that future generations have the same opportunities. Every year, every gift, of every size truly makes a difference. Thank you again for making 2012-13 a great success.

Fraternally,

Stephen K. Rowley, Ohio ’65Chairman, Delta Upsilon Educational Foundation

Delta Upsilon EDUCATIONAL Foundation 2012-2013 Annual Report

CHAIRMAN:Stephen K. Rowley, Ohio ’65

VICECHAIRMAN:Craig J. Franz, FSC, Bucknell ’75

TREASURER:P. David Franzetta, Michigan State ’70

SECRETARY:Lewis D. Gregory, Kansas ’75

VICE-PRESIDENTINVESTMENTS: William C. Rappolt, Lafayette ’67

VICE-PRESIDENTDEVELOPMENT:Craig R. Milkint, Illinois ’83

TRUSTEES:Roy F. Allan, Lehigh ’68Bruce S. Bailey, Denison ’58David L. Cole, Willimington ’72John A. Delaney, Florida ’77Charles A. Downton, North Carolina ’66Thomas F. Durein, Oregon State ’92John R. Eplee, MD, Kansas State ’75Gary S. Killips, Alberta ’71Coady H. Pruett, Cal Poly ’02Richard B. Thompson, Michigan State ’67Dr. John T. Weisel, Oregon ’48

DUEF Board of Trustees

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Heritage SocietyThe Heritage Society was established to honor living brothers who have listed the Delta Upsilon Educational Foundation as a

beneficiary in their will, insurance policy, 401K, or other deferred giving instrument. The following is a list of brothers that notified the DUEF of their intentions, and as such, are members of the Heritage Society.

Samuel Alboy, Northern Arizona ’01H. J. Avery, Illinois ’44Bruce S. Bailey, Denison ’58James G. Bell, Calgary ’94George A. Blair, Miami ’37Jerry L. Bobo, Houston ’77Anthony B. Cashen, Cornell ’57Aaron D. Clevenger, Central Florida ’97Robert E. Collins, Eastern Kentucky ’74Harry A. Crawford , Ohio State ’47Robert A. Dahlsgaard, Bradley ’63William F. Darlin, Miami ’56Stephan C. Davis, Northern Colorado ’94John A. Delaney, Florida ’77Henry J. Down, San Jose ’53Charles E. Downton, North Carolina ’66Darrell E. Dukes, San Jose ’53Thomas F. Durein, Oregon State ’92Clint M. Dworshak, North Dakota State ’00John R. Dytman, Syracuse ’71Steven R. Fisher, Washington ’87Frederick R. Ford, Purdue ’58P. David Franzetta, Michigan State ’70Jeffrey L. Fuhrman, Northern Iowa ’94John E. Giacomazzi, San Jose ’52

William R. Gordon, Kansas State ’60Lewis D. Gregory, Kansas ’75Terrence F. Grimes, Eastern Kentucky ’71Thomas E. Harrison, Johns Hopkins ’53David A. Heagerty, San Jose ’50Richard A. Hegeman, Purdue ’49John C. Herron, South Carolina ’88Melvin H. Iverson, Washington ’48Everett C. Johnson, Arizona ’62Michael O. Johnson, Arkansas ’90Justin J. Kirk, Boise State ’00Rodney P. Kirsch, North Dakota ’78Thomas M. Koehler, Carnegie ’87Martin Krasnitz, Chicago ’57Allan M. Lansing, Western Ontario ’53Donald E. Larew, Iowa State ’63Kelly S. Leach, Nebraska ’85William T. Liebermann, Miami ’51Jordan B. Lotsoff, Northern Illinois ’88Carroll L. Lurding, Ohio State ’59Dave Maguire, Southern Illinois ’73Maurice S. Mandel, Chicago ’55James D. McQuaid, Chicago ’60Craig R. Milkint, Illinois ’83Charles L. Miller, San Jose ’59

Robert W. Muntzinger, Kent State ’51Rodney L. Nelson, Minnesota ’63Warren P. Nesbitt, Wisconsin ’76William H. Noble, Missouri ’50H. P. Picard, Houston ’82Alvan E. Porter, Oklahoma ’65Philip G. Ranford, Culver-Stockton ’00Daryl W. Reisfeld, Rochester ’03John W. Rogers, Miami, ’57Paul E. Rosenthal, Florida ’73Stephen K. Rowley, Ohio ’65Michael H. Sarra, Auburn ’64Jeffrey W. Sears, Northern Arizona ’98Trent A. Shepard, Illinois ’73William A. Sigman, Iowa State ’50Craig S. Sowell, Houston ’92Tyler K. Stevens, North Carolina State ’11Haruo Taga Bradley ’54Richard X. Taylor, North Carolina State ’82James R. Tormey, San Jose ’57Ben T. Walkingstick, Oklahoma ’52Allan A. Warrack, Alberta ’61John T. Weisel, Oregon ’48Scott W. Wilson, Colorado ’73

INSPIRED TO GIVEBy: David Franzetta, Michigan State ‘70

DU was a huge part of my undergraduate experience at Michigan State. I pledged in the second half of my first year, lived in the house the next two years, serving as chapter president my junior year, then lived with three fraternity brothers in an off-campus apartment my senior year. I’m guessing my fraternity life was pretty typical for the late 1960s: lots of parties, good intramural sports teams and some strong friendships established.

Fast forward to 40 years when I’d started making annual gifts to the Fraternity. As the size of my income grew, the size of my annual gifts to the DU Educational Foundation did, as well. I lost my connection

to the MSU chapter, but I kept writing those annual checks, partly out of habit, and partly because Dick Thompson, Michigan State ’67, the MSU chapter president when I pledged, had a string of unbroken years of annual giving that was a few years longer than mine, and I wasn’t about to give up the chase.

While the four Principles of the Founders were unchanged, new life has been breathed into those Principles, and the Fraternity is engaged in the exciting challenge of not simply growing chapters and pledging new members, but actually Building Better Men. I am truly inspired by all of the new educational programming the Fraternity now provides, in large part through donor support.

After lots of discussion with my wife, we agreed to include the DUEF in our estate plans. After consulting with our financial advisors we decided that the best approach for us, given the size of the gift we were considering, was a bequest from our family trust upon my death. That gift will create a legacy for us by funding the educational and leadership initiatives of the Fraternity for years to come.

David Franzetta, Michigan State ’70, and his wife, Debbie Franzetta.

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THE LIFETIME GIVING WALLThe DU Educational Foundation commissioned a recognition piece in October 2004 to recognize lifetime

giving. The Lifetime Donor Wall honors all donors who have set an example by their loyal and generous support. All donors who have gifted a minimum total of $5,000 in a lifetime to the DU Educational Foundation

will be enshrined on the Donor Wall. Whenever a donor reaches the $5,000 plateau, his name will automatically be added to the wall! In addition, there are five levels of recognition for lifetime giving.

When a donor reaches the next level, his name will be moved up a level.At the unveiling, the board included 203 names of loyal donors. Since installation, 192 donors have reached a gift level that qualified

them to have their name added to the wall, including 24 new members in the 2012-13 fiscal year. The current list of 395 names are separated into the following five levels of recognition:

This permanent fixture honors those whose generosity demonstrates a commitment to the tradition of yesterday and the vision of tomorrow. Make sure your name will be included! Leave your legacy and preserve your name for posterity!

Visit DUEF.org for more information.

DIKAIAUPOTHEKESOCIETY $100,000ORMORE

H. James Avery, Illinois ’44David L. Cole, Wilmington ’72Clarkson A. Disbrow, New York 1899Paul B. Edgerley, Kansas State ’78W. H. Harwell, Missouri ’51John D. Luckhardt, San Jose ’56Arthur K. Lund, San Jose ’55Maj. Gen. Raymond Edward Mason, Jr., Ohio State ’41Charles D. Miller, Johns Hopkins ’49David C. Novak, Missouri ’74H. Clayton Peterson, Kansas State ’67John W. Rogers, Miami ’57Ben T. Walkingstick, Oklahoma ’52

JUSTICESOCIETY $50,000ORMORE

Roy F. Allan, Lehigh ’68Bruce S. Bailey, Denison ’58Curtiss L. Beebe, Washington ’35C. Norman Frees, DePauw ’36Nicholas T. Giorgianni, Kent State ’56Richard A. Hegeman, Purdue ’49Edgar F. Heizer, Jr., Northwestern ’51Howard Kahlenbeck, Jr., Indiana ’52Martin Krasnitz, Chicago ’57Maurice S. Mandel, Chicago ’55E. Bruce McKinney, Missouri ’74James D. McQuaid, Chicago ’60Henry M. Rowan, Williams ’45Nelson Schaenen, Jr., Cornell ’50Donald C. Slawson, Kansas ’56Dr. Allan M. Lansing, Western Ontario ’53Dr. John T. Weisel, Oregon ’48

CULTURESOCIETY $25,000ORMORE

Gary B. Adams, Oregon ’66Scott R. Bayman, Florida ’68George A. Blair, Miami ’37Jerry L. Bobo, Houston ’77Wilford A. Butler, Jr., Western Michigan ’61Richard B. Campbell, Nebraska ’68Anthony B. Cashen, Cornell ’57H. Scott Davis, Jr., Louisville ’65

John A. Delaney, Florida ’77Richard L. Delano, Indiana ’85Henry J. Down, Jr., San Jose ’53Thomas F. Durein, Oregon State ’92John R. Ehrlich, Missouri ’67Jeffrey L. Fuhrman, Northern Iowa ’94William R. Gordon, Kansas State ’60Dr. Benjamin Lee Harper, Indiana ’54Donald R. Heacock, North Carolina ’64John C. Herron, South Carolina ’88Charles F. Jennings, Marietta ’31Carl R. Jochens, Jr., Denison ’54Curtis M. Long, Oklahoma ’71Richard C. Marx, Pennsylvania ’54David Derek McKeag VI, Minnesota ’04William L. Messick, Lafayette ’68E. Lee Musil, Kansas State ’71Warren P. Nesbitt, Wisconsin ’76Alvan E. Porter, Oklahoma ’65Richard W. Porter, Kansas State ’72William C. Rappolt, Lafayette ’67Richard L. Rodine, Oklahoma ’73Paul E. Rosenthal, Florida ’73Stephen K. Rowley, Ohio ’65William A. Sigman, Iowa State ’50Steven K. Snyder, Oklahoma ’79Patrick Spooner, San Jose ’55Richard X. Taylor, North Carolina State ’82Richard B. Thompson, Michigan State ’67Robert L. Tyburski, Colgate ’74Peter V. Ueberroth, San Jose ’59John Howard Vinyard, Jr., Missouri ’49Ralph Owen Willard, Kansas State ’58

CHARACTERSOCIETY $10,000ORMORE

Horace L. Acaster, Pennsylvania ’44Dale H. Anderson, Iowa ’49Frederick C. Atkins, Jr., North Carolina ’67J. Carter Bacot, Hamilton ’55F. Lee Baird, Kansas ’58John E. Berry, Bradley ’87William J. Bittner, Bradley ’74William B. Boone, California ’35Terry J. Brady, Missouri ’62Leo Robert Brammer, Jr., Oklahoma ’47W. Perry Brown, Miami ’52Keith B. Bruening, Iowa State ’80Joseph Hall Buchanan, Iowa State ’33

Craig R. Campbell, North Dakota ’76David H. Carnahan, Denison ’60Douglas A. Cassens, Kent State ’68David E. Chambers, Arizona ’60Rodney L. Cook, Oklahoma ’79Mart H. Cooley, Kansas State ’58Jeffrey W. Courter, Iowa State ’84Steven L. Cox, Oklahoma ’92Harry A. Crawford, Ohio State ’47Robert H. Croak, Oklahoma ’63Robert A. Dahlsgaard, Jr. , Bradley ’63Julian L. Dawson, Jr., Oklahoma ’35Joseph A. DeBlasio, North Carolina ’62Christopher B. D’hondt, Illinois ’88Frank Smith Dodd, Miami ’49Timothy C. Dowd, Oklahoma ’75Charles E. Downton, III, North Carolina ’66Darrell E. Dukes, San Jose ’53Clint M. Dworshak, Pharm. D. North Dakota State ’00Craig R. Enochs, Houston ’94Dr. John R. Eplee, Kansas State ’79Richard F. Fagan, Washington ’52Matthew G. Fiascone, Bradley ’85Fred Fisher, Miami ’50Robert D. Fisher, Alberta ’75E. Bernard Franklin, Ph.D, Kansas State ’75P. David Franzetta, Michigan State ’70Ross K. Fuller, San Jose ’49John W. Funk, Oklahoma ’75Dr. Robert A. German, Oklahoma ’90Wayne B. Goldberg, Louisville ’83John P. Grady, DePauw ’38Donald S. Grant, Kent State ’70R. Nathan Greene, Kansas State ’58Lewis D. Gregory, Kansas ’75Fred A. Guggenmos, Nebraska ’61Thomas Roy Harney, San Jose ’52Kevin M. Hartley, Missouri ’80James B. Hawkes, Oklahoma ’63David A. Heagerty, San Jose ’50Timothy R. Herbert, Iowa State ’82John F. Herma, Rutgers ’70Louis L. Holtz, Kent State ’58H. Karl Huntoon, Illinois ’72John C. Jadel, Bowling Green ’52Aldie E. Johnson, Jr., Iowa State ’47Dr. Philip L. Jones, Oklahoma ’84William G. Kagler, Syracuse ’54

Charles H. Kamm, San Jose ’57Dr. Will S. Keim, Pacific ’75Ryan M. Kelly, Bradley ’94Gary S. Killips, Alberta ’71Rodney P. Kirsch, North Dakota ’78David R. Knuepfer, Iowa ’76Stephan G. Kouzomis, Illinois ’68Jeffrey R. Kreutz, Missouri ’99Dr. Allan A. Warrack, Alberta ’61Donald E. Larew, Iowa State ’63Byron O. Lee, Jr., Purdue ’51Robert T. Lewis, Pennsylvania State ’40Robert M. Loch, Nebraska ’54Jordan B. Lotsoff, Northern Illinois ’88Carroll L. Lurding, Ohio State ’59Dr. D. Robert Madsen, San Jose ’51Dave Maguire, Southern Illinois ’73William G. Malloy, III, Northern Illinois ’69Lewis A. Maroti, Lehigh ’58John S. McConnell, DePauw ’66Mark E. McGarrah, Oklahoma ’85 John L. McGehee, Wisconsin ’38Robert Charles McKinstry, Iowa State ’50J. Paul McNamara, Miami ’29William C. Moodie, Jr., Lehigh ’47John B. Morey, Jr., San Jose ’58John P. Morgridge, Wisconsin ’55Donald J. Moulin, California ’53Glenn A. Mull, Kansas State ’73Robert W. Muntzinger, Kent State ’51Ted A. Murray, Missouri ’71John C. Nemeth, Kent State ’67Reginald B. Newman, II, Northwestern ’59Brett A. Olson, Bradley ’88Edward F. Paliatka, Bradley ’56William M. Parks, Iowa State ’73W. Allen Perry, Iowa State ’27H. Paul Picard, Houston ’82William T. Porter, Oklahoma ’41Jon L. Prime, Bradley ’63Charles D. Prutzman, Pennsylvania State ’18Thomas S. Rakow, Northwestern ’65Dr. Leonard Rhodes, San Jose ’53Samuel A. Santandrea, Rochester ’56Christopher L. Saricks, Kansas ’70William C. Schoenhard, Missouri ’71Beurt R. SerVaas, Ph.D., Indiana ’41Jeffrey Siegel, Maryland ’78Todd P. Smith, Bradley ’89Thomas T. Stallkamp, Miami ’68

$5,000 Friendship Society$10,000 Character Society

$25,000 Culture Society$50,000 Justice Society

*NAMESASOFSEPT24,2013

$100,000+ Dikaia Upotheke Society

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Dr. Max M. Stearns, Kansas State ’66Norman J. Steffey, Kansas State ’57Douglas J. Stussi, Oklahoma ’77Ashton M. Tenney, Jr., Chicago ’43Charlotte B. Terry James R. Tormey, Jr., San Jose ’57Thomas E. Tuckwood, Kansas State ’79Gail B. Wakelee W. Donald Watkins, North Carolina ’27Jeffrey W. Waymack, Oregon State ’71Roger W. Wothe, Technology ’58David H. Wynja, Iowa ’67Samuel M. Yates, San Jose ’55Charles T. & Marion M. Thompson Foundation Mildred V. Horn Foundation Rice Family Foundation / Mrs. Arthur L. Rice, Jr. Winston Scott Trust

FRIENDSHIPSOCIETY $5,000ORMORE

Ronald C. Abbott, Kansas State ’61E. Lysle Adams, Miami ’29Jaime M. Aguero, Houston ’98David V. Allard, Indiana ’70Charles L. Allen, Michigan State ’55Richard C. Allendorf, Iowa State ’83Dr. James A. Allums, Texas ’59Bruce C. Anderson, Purdue ’65Stephen J. Anderson, Northern Iowa ’79K. Gordon Arnold, San Jose ’55Harold D. Barker, Miami ’50Dr. Michael J. Baughman, Kansas State ’78Thomas P. Bays, Oregon State ’42William B. Becherer, Kent State ’49David M. Blatner, Southwest Missouri ’86Paul John Bodine, Jr., Northwestern ’50Ernest J. Bontadelli, San Jose ’50Herbert H. Boswau, Denison ’55William W. Boyd, Northwestern ’48Charles W. Brace, Bradley ’89Capt. Malcolm P. Branch, USN (Ret.) Wisconsin ’69B. Chris Brewster, Colorado ’77Rev. Peter W. Bridgford, Northwestern ’56Dr. Harry N. Briggs, Missouri ’51Robert W. Broad, Syracuse ’60Herbert Brownell, Nebraska ’24Jeffrey A. Bryant, Oregon State ’97Thomas E. Burgess, Miami ’61Dr. Henry E. Burr, Miami ’61Ryan Jon Carroll, Kent State ’01Mitch Castor, Kansas State ’85Michael A. Cesa, Kent State ’76

Dr. Alan R. Chapman, Illinois ’69Dr. Huntly G. Chapman, British Columbia ’68Donald A. Chew, Kansas State ’81Robert J. Clanin, Bradley ’66Clement T. Cole, Carnegie ’79Edwin D. Crane, Arkansas ’76Thomas Eric Darcy, CPA, San Diego ’72Thomas W. Darling, Syracuse ’81Joseph M. Darragh, North Carolina State ’85James H. Davis, Northwestern ’65Walter A. Dwelle, California ’67Dr. John H. Teeter, Kansas State ’75John E. Esau, Kansas ’78John H. Eyler, Washington ’69James R. Fisher, Lafayette ’77Jon T. Flask, Kent State ’67Craig R. Foss, Iowa State 71J. William Frank, III, Lehigh ’68Br. Craig J. Franz, FSC, Bucknell ’75John E. Fraser, San Jose ’55John E. Giacomazzi, San Jose ’52Joseph Gibson, Kent State ’68Robert C. Gimlin, Purdue ’42William N. Godfrey, Miami ’58Michael F. Goss, Kansas State ’81William R. Grant, Union ’49Dr. Hugh W. Gray, Nebraska ’34R. McDonald Gray, North Carolina ’59Dr. Wesley S. Grigsby, Oklahoma ’77David J. Habib, Washington ’86Scott D. Hahner, Rutgers ’78Brian A. Halas, Miami ’93Jay R. Hamann, Minnesota ’59Lt. Col. William H. Harkey, USA (Ret.), Oregon State ’71Oliver H. Heely, Jr., Auburn ’68William E. Heine, Sr., Iowa State ’60Bill A. Helvey, Kansas State ’58David G. Herzer, Wisconsin ’54Don A. Hill, Kansas State ’69Patrick S. Hobin, California ’59Richard M. Holland, Syracuse ’83Yancy D. Hudson, Kansas State ’68Thomas R. Jacobs, Arkansas ’77Richard G. Jacobus, Wisconsin ’51Alan C. Jeveret, Bowling Green ’59O. Kepler Johnson, Jr., Kansas ’52Scott A. W. Johnson,Washington ’80Thomas W. Johnson, California ’53Dr. Clifton C. Jones, Kansas State ’77Mark S. Jones, Arlington ’75Rees M. Jones, Manitoba ’67Joshua A. Katz, Central Florida ’97Donald A. Kelley, Miami ’69Steven Khoshabe, Bradley ’93

Bryan L. Kinnamon, Iowa State ’69Austin H. Kiplinger, Cornell ’39Justin J. Kirk, Boise State ’00T. Michael Knies, Tennessee ’71Douglas C. Kramlich, Northwestern ’59David A. Krebs, CPA, Miami ’80William C. Krommenhoek, Nebraska ’57Andris Lacis, Purdue ’64Hon. Robert J. LaFortune, Purdue ’51Robert S. Lannin, Nebraska ’81Dr. Richard F. Laubengayer, Kansas State ’64Dr. Daniel B. Livingston, Missouri ’70Dr. Frank Clarke Long, Jr., Ohio State ’32George C. Long, Bowling Green ’67Andrew Ludolph, Northwestern ’42Dr. Angelo J. Magistro, Rochester ’60Richard R. Mahoney, Houston ’83David L. Marston, Iowa ’63Michael B. Martens, Kent State ’03Robert J. Martin, Washington ’59Stephen C. Martinelli, California ’52Gregory H. Mathews, Florida ’70Phillip H. Mayer, Iowa State ’49David C. McCalpin, Bradley ’86Howard L. McGregor, Jr., Williams ’40Richard S. Melvin, Indiana ’30Michael A. Menius, North Carolina ’68Frank Willard Merrick, Jr., Oklahoma ’02Greg A. Metzer, Oklahoma ’82Craig R. Milkint, Illinois ’83William B. Miller, Jr., San Jose ’52Michael G. Mitchell, Texas ’65John L. Moodie, Iowa State ’45Martha Morey Jeffery B. Morris, Kansas State ’79Raymond R. Moser, Jr., Georgia Tech ’83Grayson L. Moss, Purdue ’47Brian E. Mudrick, Louisville ’82Corbin G. Navis, Kansas State ’03David Stuart Nelson, Clarkson ’69Herbert H. Nelson, Colorado ’59J. David Nelson, Northwestern ’63Robert V. Noreika, Lafayette ’67James W. Osborn, Iowa State ’73Sid W. Patterson, Oklahoma ’42Joe Holmes Petty, DePauw ’36Charles A. Phillips, III, Clarkson ’64Michael A. Pizzuto, Illinois ’81Neal R. Popham, Purdue ’54Richard R. Popham, Purdue ’40Daniel D. Porter, Iowa State ’90Joseph L. Raudabaugh, North Carolina State ’78Richard M. Rettstadt, Florida ’82Arthur Lynn Rice, Jr., Illinois ’36Mark G. Ritchie, Iowa ’83

James S. Roberts, Florida ’63James M. Robinson, Oklahoma ’61Edward A. Rosenfeld, Oregon State ’42Mark L. Rupert, Oklahoma ’74Elaine Sceva Terry K. Schmoyer, Jr., South Carolina ’88John O. Schram, Bradley ’50David R. Schumacher John L. Sherman, San Jose ’66Norman E. Sidler, Bradley ’91James S. Simpkins, Washington State ’81William S. Smeltzer, Syracuse ’58James W. Smith, Washington & Lee ’62Don S. Snyder, Miami ’70Craig S. Sowell, Houston ’92Dr. Michael L. Stepovich, DDS, San Jose ’56Col. Robert A. Stewart, Washington ’64Willis A. Strauss, Iowa State ’44George S. Studle, Washington State ’57Kenneth H. Suelthaus, Michigan ’66Marvin F. Swanson, Kansas State ’57Leland W. Sweeney, Jr., San Jose ’55Edwin J. Taff, North Carolina ’61Tamer N. Talaat, Louisville ’82Herbert K. Taylor, Jr., Swarthmore ’27Paul X. Taylor, North Carolina State ’89Michel C. Thielen, Iowa ’57Paul A. Thiry, Washington ’28Richard J. Thorpe, Syracuse ’60Keith D. Tucker, Kansas State ’76Peter A. Tuohy, Washington ’53Douglas D. VanderWeide, Iowa State ’89Clyde W. VonGrimmenstein, Purdue ’49William Wallace, III, Union ’48Dr. Stephen L. Wallenhaupt, North Carolina ’74Dr. Edward E. Waller, Jr., Oklahoma ’51Robert V. Wardle, Michigan ’52William F. Waters, Cornell ’54Donald Eugene Weaver, Indiana ’60George G. Weingardt, Ohio State ’55Frank E. Wellersdieck, Brown ’51Richard A. West, Lafayette ’53James V. White, Michigan ’50Paul W. Wilke, Jr., Minnesota ’50Clark K. Williams, Northwestern ’62Charles F. Witte, Miami ’51Robert G. Yingling, Jr. ’Missouri ’62James F. Zboyovsky, Jr., Pennsylvania State ’51M. Eighmy Foundation Ms. Martha S. Jack Rhodes Design & Development CorpSharkey Family FoundationU.S. Charitable Gift Trust

Honorary Gifts

Delta Upsilon International Fraternity, in honor of 2013 WEC Facilitator, Selby A. Lo, North Carolina State ’09Delta Upsilon International Fraternity, in honor of 2013 WEC Facilitator, Robert J. Miller, Carthage ’09Delta Upsilon International Fraternity, in honor of 2013 WEC Facilitator, Philip T. McDaniel, Central Florida ’03Delta Upsilon International Fraternity, in honor of 2013 WEC Facilitator, Michael R. Coombes, Miami ’04Delta Upsilon International Fraternity, in honor of 2013 WEC Facilitator, Kevin Smith, Ohio ’10Delta Upsilon International Fraternity, in honor of 2013 WEC Facilitator, Joshua A. Katz, Central Florida ’97

Delta Upsilon International Fraternity, in honor of 2013 WEC Facilitator, Jason H. Clark, Washington State ’01Delta Upsilon International Fraternity, in honor of 2013 WEC Facilitator, Derrick M. Collins, Carthage ’05Delta Upsilon International Fraternity, in honor of 2013 WEC Facilitator Corey R. Mock, North Dakota ’08John DiSarro, in honor of Lucas Piazza, Rochester ’12 and Trevor Baisden, Rochester ’12Andrew Malekoff, Rutgers ’73, in honor of Tom Holmes, Rutgers ’76Melinda B. Sopher, in honor of Justin Kirk, Boise State ’00 & Rick Taylor, North Carolina State ’82

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2012 – 2013 DUEF ScholarshipsChapter Leadership Scholarships

“A New Chapter in Leadership” Campaign, which concluded in 2007, impacts undergraduate leaders by allowing for increased participation at conferences like the Leadership Institute and DUEL Experience Program. These individual member scholarships are funded by the generosity of DU alumni members and DU alumni chapters. Thirty DU undergraduate brothers received scholarships to attend the 2013 DUEL Experience Program, which took place this June. In addition to these scholarships, “New Chapter in Leadership” Fund allowed for an additional $28,728 grant in support of the Leadership Institute.

ChicagoCornellDenisonFloridaHouston

Illinois(2)Indiana(2)IowaJohnsHopkins(4)Kansas(3)

KentStateLafayetteLehighMiamiMinnesota

MissouriNorthCarolinaNorthCarolinaStateNorthernIowaNorthwestern

Oklahoma(2)PurdueSouthCarolinaRutgersWisconsin(2)

In addition, these chapters have fully endowed DUEL Experience Program Scholarships:

Annual Scholarships AwardedThe 2012-2013 DUEF Scholarship Program

was completed with the announcements of the 2013 scholarship recipients during the Saturday Awards Luncheon on August 3, 2013 in Phoenix.

This year, two McQuaid Scholarships of $2,500 each were awarded, in addition to one $1,000 Oak Circle Scholarship. Congratulations to this year’s recipients!

Alex Bolin, Kansas State ’14, receives his certificate for the 2013 Oak Circle Scholarship, presented at the Leadership Institute in Phoenix.

Tyler West, Oregon State ’13, accepts his certificate as the 2013 recipient of the JamesD. McQuaid Scholarship at the Leadership Institute in Phoenix.

*Graduate fellowship

ArizonaState Kansas Louisville Nebraska NorthDakotaState

The McQuaid Scholarships

Charles W. Johnson, Boise State ’11*Tyler T. West, Oregon State ’13 *

The Oak Circle Scholarship

Alex C. Bolin, Kansas State ’14

The following chapters presently have fully endowed Leadership Institute Scholarships:

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Consecutive Giving to DUEF for 25 years or moreBelow is a list of those brothers who have been the most consistent in their giving. The giving leaders listed below have given for a

minimum of 25 consecutive years, and have the eternal and sincere thanks of the DU Educational Foundation for your loyal dedication to our cause.

43 YearsLeland J. Adams, Jr., Bucknell ’64Harold D. Barker, Miami ’50Michael G. Boylan, PC, Bradley ’69David L. Cutter, Stanford ’51Keith O. Kaneta, Washington ’59Maurice S. Mandel, Chicago ’55Robert J. Martin, Washington ’59Thomas E. Mattson, Oregon ’63Howard O. Mielke, Carnegie ’51Michael G. Mitchell, Texas ’65Donald R. Morse, Tufts ’42J. David Nelson, Northwestern ’63Aubrey H. Polser, Jr., Texas ’65Richard B. Thompson, Michigan State ’67James V. White, Michigan ’50

42 YearsJere E. Bremer, Bradley ’66John O. Cronk, Iowa State ’60Richard B. Hallman, Purdue ’54Aldie E. Johnson, Jr., Iowa State ’47John K. Johnston, Pennsylvania State ’58Howard Kahlenbeck, Jr., Indiana ’52Robert J. LaFortune, Purdue ’51Charles A Phillips III, Clarkson ’64James S. Roberts, Florida ’63William A. Sigman, Iowa State ’50George S. Studle, Washington State ’57

41 YearsDennis S. Kanemori, Western Michigan ’66John W. Sprout, Bucknell ’48Ben T. Walkingstick, Oklahoma ’52

40 YearsWilliam C. Krommenhoek, Nebraska ’57

39 YearsRobert G. Yingling, Jr., Missouri ’62

38 YearsGregory L. Allemann, Missouri ’69Thomas P. Bays, Oregon State ’42Robert A. Dahlsgaard, Jr., Bradley ’63Lewis D. Gregory, Kansas ’75John W. Rogers, Miami ’57

37 YearsFrederic Ackerson, Iowa ’44Bruce C. Anderson, Purdue ’65John R. Ashby, Arlington ’74John L. Cassell, Jr., Texas ’70P. David Franzetta, Michigan State ’70Paul E. Rosenthal, Florida ’73Mark L. Rupert, Oklahoma ’74

36 YearsDavid E. Chambers, Arizona ’60Mark A. Clemente, Cornell ’73George J. Hamilton, Arkansas ’77Bradley B. Hoot, Michigan State ’65David O. Johnson, Kansas State ’75Charles L. Kavanagh, California ’64Thomas F. Keating III, Cornell ’57Martin Krasnitz, Chicago ’57Eugene A. Lucadamo, Lehigh ’71Angelo J. Magistro, Rochester ’60Christopher L. Saricks, Kansas ’70Henley L. Smith, Lafayette ’51Ronald E. Wischhusen, Clarkson ’76Sheldon Wylie, Brown ’57

35 YearsDieter F. Czerny, Lehigh ’74John A. Delaney, Florida ’77John K. Dunlap, Texas ’73Terry D. Finnell, Syracuse ’57Robert W. Haerr, Creighton ’72Stephen G. Katsinas,Ph.D., Illinois ’78William T. Lauder, Esq., Columbia ’44Dave Maguire, Southern Illinois ’73Leland W. Waters, Texas ’73Keith W. Weigel, Iowa ’78

34 YearsRobert B. Buchanan, Illinois ’55John H. Eyler, Washington ’69Scott D. Hahner, Rutgers ’78Conrad L. Hoover, New York ’40Grayson L. Moss, Purdue ’47Warren P. Nesbitt, Wisconsin ’76James L. Ryan, Michigan State ’55Richard L. Smith, Esq., Colgate ’68Smith T. Wood, Technology ’69

33 YearsJerry E. Brennan, Jr., Purdue ’55Keith B. Bruening, Iowa State ’80Thomas W. Foote, Purdue ’50John F. Herma, Rutgers ’70Thomas E. Hoover, Ohio State ’56Alan C. Jeveret, Bowling Green ’59David A. Krebs, CPA, Miami ’80David C. Myers, Tennessee ’74David E. Vinson, Wisconsin ’59

32 YearsCharles L. Allen, Michigan State ’55Stephen J. Anderson, Northern Iowa ’79Michael B. Donnelly, San Fernando ’68John R. Ehrlich, Missouri ’67William B. Hallam, Delaware ’80Richard G. Jacobus, Wisconsin ’51Mark S. Jones, Arlington ’75Brian E. Mudrick, Louisville ’82 Kenneth D. Miller, Iowa ’67Roger F. Ray, Arlington ’70Gary A. Rugel, Illinois ’78John T. Weisel, MD, Oregon ’48

31 YearsJohn A. Buist, Illinois ’78Clement T. Cole, Carnegie ’79Philip E. Eubanks, Georgia Tech ’71Patrick S. Hobin, California ’59Robert W. Shively, Nebraska ’82Richard B. Wilcox, Florida ’68

30 YearsDennis A. Johnson, California ’63L. Geoffrey Lawrence, Washington & Lee ’59James A. Oppy, Kansas State ’64Jeffrey A. VanEenenaam, Colorado ’79

29 YearsKelley J. Brennan, Marietta ’64Alan R. Chapman, Illinois ’69Andris Lacis, Purdue ’64Stephen L. Mahannah, Colorado ’61Alan L. Mores, Iowa State ’80Charles F. Witte, Miami ’51

28 YearsMichael E. Hogan, Purdue ’85Willard C. Loomis, Miami ’59Michael A. Nickey, Iowa State ’65George G. Rinder, Chicago ’41Albert P. Stauderman, Jr., Syracuse ’58

27 YearsM. Dunbar Ashbury, Jr., Virginia ’54Bruce S. Bailey, Denison ’58Jerry L. Bobo, Houston ’77Walter R. Brookhart, Virginia ’71Daniel L. Costello, Northwestern ’54Michael D. Huke, Technology ’65Douglas P. Love, Alberta ’46Gary E. Middleton, Carnegie ’86Robert C. Nelson, Missouri ’83Jack A. Ritt, Illinois ’52

26 YearsWilliam R. Gordon, Kansas State ’60Philip B. Groebe, DePauw ’62John C. Herron, South Carolina ’88Joseph D. Joyner, North Carolina ’77James W. Lambert, Indiana ’87Jordan B. Lotsoff, Northern Illinois ’88Marshall T. Nanninga, Chicago ’47 William D. Rose, North Carolina ’69Al P. Saufley, Virginia ’54Jeffrey Siegel, Maryland ’78Richard Sunkel, Miami ’53

25 YearsBurton Y. Anderson, Oregon ’57 Dennis A. Barbour,Virginia ’77 Nelson Botsford, Jr., Union ’54 Aloysius P. Cannon, Jr., Lehigh ’74 Lee A. Doble, Jr., Cal Poly ’68 Hilliard J. Fjord, DePauw ’47 George N. Graf, Jr., Pennsylvania ’55 James W. Griffiths, Louisville ’69 Donald G. Hanson, Johns Hopkins ’50 James F. Harris, Wisconsin ’72 Roger M. LeBoeuf, Technology ’88 John McCormack, Columbia ’39 Gary D. Naylor, Lehigh ’71 William F. Spang, Harvard ’38 Edwin J. Taff, North Carolina ’61 Richard J. Thorpe, Syracuse ’60 Bruce N. Wilson, Stanford ’50

MY REASON FOR GIVING

Bob Dahlsgaard, Bradley ’63, can’t seem to remember when he started giving, but he knows it’s been a long time. Since his graduation in the ’60s, he began giving at the national level while he was living in Indianapolis. “The Fraternity has been a big part of my life, both as an undergraduate, and

later as an alumnus. It is for this reason that I give every year,” said Dahlsgaard.

Dahlsgaard knows that his gifts are making a difference in DU’s future. “I believe that my gifts simply allow the Fraternity to continue its mission, the development of men, as I see it,” said Dahlsgaard. “For the Fraternity to continue its mission, it needs a source of continued support. Only committed alumni donors

can insure that these successful programs continue.”

After all, donations go toward moving the Fraternity forward each and every year. “The Fraternity needs to be able to count on continued support to be able to plan activities and programs into the future. Only by giving on a continual basis is that possible for the Fraternity,” said Dahlsgaard.

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JAMESA.GARFIELDCIRCLE(GIFTSOF$25,000ORMORE)

Paul B. Edgerley, Kansas State ’78 John H. Vinyard, Missouri ’49

CHARLES EVANS HUGHESCIRCLE (GIFTSOF $10,000TO$24,999)

H. J. Avery, Illinois ’44Richard X. Taylor, North Carolina State ’82

JAMESS.MCDONNELLCIRCLE(GIFTSOF$5,000TO$9,999)

Roy F. Allan, Lehigh ’68Craig R. Campbell, North Dakota ’76David L. Cole, Wilmington ’72Rodney P. Kirsch, North Dakota ’78Martha Morey Warren P. Nesbitt, Wisconsin ’76John W. Rogers, Miami ’57Richard B. Thompson, Michigan State ’67 Paul X. Taylor, North Carolina State ’89

JAMESB.CONANTCIRCLE(GIFTSOF$2,500TO$4,999)

Scott R. Bayman, Florida ’68John A. Delaney, Florida ’77Timothy C. Dowd, Oklahoma ’75Wayne B. Goldberg, Louisville ’83Richard A. Hegeman, Purdue ’49Thomas R. Harney, San Jose ’52Karen JohnsonJames D. McQuaid, Chicago ’60Richard A. Moran, Rutgers ’72William C. Rappolt, Lafayette ’67Stephen K. Rowley, Ohio ’65Robert A. Stewart, Washington ’64Ashton M. Tenney John T. Weisel, Oregon ’48

HERBERTBROWNELLCIRCLE(GIFTSOF$1,000TO$2,499)

Terry J. Brady, Missouri ’62Peter W. Bridgford, Northwestern ’56Paul G. Cantor, Alberta ’62Richard L. Delano, Indiana ’85William R. Dillon, Kansas ’78Thomas F. Durein, Oregon State ’92Clint M. Dworshak, North Dakota State ’00 John R. Eplee, Kansas State ’75Richard F. Fagan, Washington ’52P. David Franzetta, Michigan State ’70Jeffrey L. Fuhrman, Northern Iowa ’94Lewis D. Gregory, Kansas ’75W. H. Harwell, Missouri ’51Howard Kahlenbeck, Indiana ’52Gary S. Killips, Alberta ’71Justin J. Kirk, Boise State ‘00David R. Knuepfer, Iowa ’76Robert M. Loch Nebraska, ’54

Jordan B. Lotsoff, Northern Illinois ’88Fred G. Luber, Purdue ’50William G. Malloy, Northern Illinois ’69E. B. McKinney, Missouri ’74Michael McRee, Ph.D. Corbin G. Navis, Kansas State ’03Jeffrey Siegel, Maryland ’78G. Michael Slovak, Cornell, ’77Robert L. Tyburski, Colgate ’74Peter V. Ueberroth, San Jose ’59Jo Ellen WaldenAllan A. Warrack, Alberta ’61Charles T. & Marion M. Thompson Foundation

EDGARBERGENCIRCLE(GIFTSOF$500TO$999)

David V. Allard, Indiana ’70Richard C. Allendorf, Iowa State ’83James A. Allums, Texas ’59Ted J. Biggerstaff, Nebraska ’63William J. Bittner, Bradley ’74Jerry L. Bobo, Houston ’77Noah Borton Robert W. Broad, Syracuse ’60Paul G. Cantor, Alberta ’62 J. Michael Chaplin, Carthage ’96Aaron D. Clevenger, Central Florida ’97Robert A. Dahlsgaard, Bradley ’63James H. Davis, Northwestern ’65Joseph A. DeBlasio, North Carolina ’62Christopher B. D’hondt, Illinois ’88William H. Eckert, Columbia ’61Colin P. Finn, Iowa State ’05E. Bernard Franklin, Ph.D., Kansas State ’75Craig J. Franz, Bucknell ’75Earl R. Freeman, Arlington ’73David J. Habib, Washington ’86Jay R. Hamann, Minnesota ’59William H. Harkey, Oregon State ’71Oliver H. Heely, Auburn ’68John F. Herma, Rutgers ’70Stanley L. Iezman, Washington ’70Thomas W. Johnson, California ’53Joshua A. Katz, Central Florida ’97William T. Killian, Auburn ’69Martin Krasnitz, Chicago ’57Robert S. Lannin, Nebraska ’81Byron O. Lee, Purdue ’51George C. Long, Bowling Green ’67Maurice S. Mandel, Chicago ’55Lewis A. Maroti, Lehigh ’58David L. Marston, Iowa ’63Stephen C. Martinelli, California ’52Richard C. Marx, Pennsylvania ’54John S. McConnell, DePauw ’66David D. McKeag, Minnesota ’04Robert S. McKeeman, Georgia Tech ’77David M. Mertens, Michigan Tech ’94Craig R. Milkint, Illinois ’83Reginald B. Newman, Northwestern ’59Robert V. Noreika, Lafayette ’67

Michael C. Norman, Oregon ’67Christopher P. Olson, Houston ’92Joshua Pennings, Ohio State ’12H. P. Picard, Houston ’82Ashutosh A. Pradhan, Johns Hopkins ’96Jon L. Prime, Bradley ’63Coady H. Pruett, Cal Poly ’02Thomas S. Rakow, Northwestern ’65Bruce D. Raskin, Washington ’85David L. Reiner, Rochester ’03Edward Rensi, Ohio State ’90Howard O. Reynolds, Denison ’57James S. Roberts, Florida ’63Paul E. Rosenthal, Florida ’73Christopher L. Saricks, Kansas ’70Terry K. Schmoyer, South Carolina ’88Andrew C. Sigerson, Nebraska ’93William A. Sigman, Iowa State ’50James S. Simpkins, Washington State ’81Craig S. Sowell, Houston ’92William S. Symons, Rutgers ’66Tamer N. Talaat, Louisville ’82Peter A. Tuohy, Washington ’53Allan A. Warrack, Alberta ’61Ben T. Walkingstick, Oklahoma ’52George G. Weingardt, Ohio State ’55Frank E. Wellersdieck, Brown ’51Clark K. Williams, Northwestern ’62Herbert G. Wylie, Lehigh ’45Samuel M. Yates, San Jose ’55

CHARLESG.DAWESCIRCLE(GIFTSOF$200TO$499)

John S. Adams, Wichita ’04James C. Aitken, Washington ’70Jeffrey M. Akhtar, Indiana ’92James R. Allan, Oregon ’53Alden L. Allen, Minnesota ’49Bruce C. Anderson, Purdue ’65Patrick D. Anderson, DePauw ’09Stephen J. Anderson, Northern Iowa ’07Drew C. Aron, San Jose ’89Bruce S. Bailey, Denison ’58Harold D. Barker, Miami ’50John R. Baron, Lehigh ’79Thomas P. Bays, Oregon State ’42William B. Becherer, Kent State ’49Aaron J. Beckman, Iowa State ’02James G. Bell, Calgary ’94C. R. Bell, Indiana ’54K. Michael Berkley, Kansas ’61Lawrence A. Bilker, Rochester ’91Anthony Billick, Miami ’77Peter M. Blauvelt, Cornell ’57Mark K. Bowen, Purdue ’82Henry B. Brackin, III, Georgia Tech ’71Robert J. Brand, Louisville ’70Jere E. Bremer, Bradley ’66Jerry E. Brennan, Jr., Purdue ’55Kelley J. Brennan, Marietta ’64B. Chris Brewster, Colorado ’77William F. Briscoe, Purdue ’65Walter R. Brookhart, Virginia ’71

Robert W. Brown, Purdue ’46Keith B. Bruening, Iowa State ’80John A. Buell, Jr., Technology ’56Benjamin T. Burson, III, Georgia Tech ’67H. Francis Bush, Florida ’85Thomas A. Busson, Michigan State ’68Richard B. Campbell, Nebraska ’68Gerald A. Caplan, Syracuse ’55J. F. Carey, Jr., Delaware ’70Kevin D. Carlton, Washington ’86William L. Carter, Florida ’71Anthony B. Cashen, Cornell ’57John L. Cassell, Jr., Texas ’70Douglas A. Cassens, Kent State ’68David E. Chambers, Arizona ’60Clark G. Channing, California ’58Alan R. Chapman, Illinois ’69Philip N. Christiansen, South Dakota ’75Brent L. Circle, Indiana ’67Clement T. Cole, Carnegie ’79Robert F. Coleman, III, North Carolina ’68Anthony C. Colletti, Bradley ’96John A. Copland, Cornell ’59Michael R. Coppola, Kent State ’65Barry D. Cory, Northern Iowa ’75Jeffrey W. Courter, Iowa State ’84Donald D. Cowe, Tennessee ’73Kim C. Cox, Illinois ’76John W. Crabbe, Auburn ’68Andrew J. Cramer, Miami ’12Edwin D. Crane, Arkansas ’76John O. Cronk, Iowa State ’60Charles M. Crowe, Jr., Northwestern ’55H. R. Crowther, Technology ’54Dieter F. Czerny, Lehigh ’74Bernard A. Dahlem, Louisville ’51Alfred W. Dalcher, Kent State ’57Lawrence W. Dam, Washington ’68Thomas E. Darcy, San Diego ’72Scott D. Darin, Michigan Tech ’90Jack David, Rutgers ’63Richard B. Davies, Oregon ’49Robert W. Deichert, Johns Hopkins ’97Nikhil A. Dhuna, Northwestern ’14Theodore J. Diego, Western Reserve ’66Paul W. Doetsch, Maryland ’76Richard P. Donohoe, Illinois ’55Roger N. Downey, Oklahoma ’62Charles E. Downton, III, North Carolina ’66John W. Duncan, Jr., Oregon State ’00Andrew M. Dunham, San Jose ’86John R. Dytman, Syracuse ’71John R. Ehrlich, Missouri ’67Christopher J. Ellingson, Minnesota ’92Andrew A. Englehart, Michigan ’06Craig R. Enochs, Houston ’94Herbert P. Evert, Northwestern ’56John H. Eyler, Washington ’69Joel M. Fairman, Amherst ’52Philip D. Farley, Houston ’04Marion L. Fessler, Bowling Green ’56James W. Fields, San Jose ’66Laverne E. Finney Merritt W. Finney, Illinois ’53

President’s ClubThe President’s Club was established over 30 years ago to further the important work

of the Foundation by providing the resources necessary to advance the mission and support of our great Fraternity. The President’s Club represents a loyal and prestigious branch of Delta Upsilon – gentlemen who bring honor and distinction to the Fraternity through their generosity and leadership.

In the 2012-2013 fiscal year, there were 493 members of the President’s Club. Your gifts have had an immediate positive impact on Delta Upsilon and has transformed the DU experience for thousands of undergraduate brothers. Thank you for your leadership and loyalty.

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Robert D. Fisher, Alberta ’75David C. Fohr, Wisconsin ’73Jere W. Fonda, Tufts ’51Thomas W. Foote, Purdue ’50Thomas W. Forbes, Marietta ’64Frederick R. Ford, Purdue ’58Garrett M. Frankamp, Kansas ’12Robert C. Franklin, Iowa ’97Norman H. Frazier, Virginia ’99James D. Freyer, Syracuse ’61Kevin C. Friis, Western Reserve ’09Mark J. Gehrke, Boise State ’11Robert H. Geisler, Nebraska ’62Patrick L. Gerhart, Northern Colorado ’04Daniel S. Gibbs, Illinois ’85Joseph Gibson, Kent State ’68William H. Gibson, Jr., Miami ’51Ryan M. Gilmore, Illinois ’13Nicholas T. Giorgianni, Kent State ’56The Giving Campaign Dudley J. Godfrey, Jr. 1996 Trust Roger K. Godfrey, Wisconsin ’54Matthew A. Goering, Kansas ’91Fred M. Goolsby, South Carolina ’81William R. Gordon, Kansas State ’60Julian O. Gordon, Florida ’10Bradford S. Grabow, DePauw ’85R. M. Gray, North Carolina ’59Dominic K. Greene, Oregon ’99Gary W. Gregory, Arlington ’77J. M. Gresham, Texas ’71Raymond K. Grindel Gerald E. Gross, Michigan State ’63Grayson M. Hajash, Alberta ’47William A. Hamilton Ph.D., Oklahoma ’57William R. Hamlin, Missouri ’60John P. Harden, Wisconsin ’59James F. Harris, Wisconsin ’72Stephen C. Hartstern, Louisville ’70David P. Hattery, Iowa State ’83David A. Heagerty, San Jose ’50Melvin D. Heckt, Iowa ’46Tim L. Heiman, Kansas State ’76Richard D. Heroux, Jr., South Carolina ’84Charles J. Herro, Wisconsin ’43John C. Herron, South Carolina ’88William P. Hesse, Union ’49Edward M. Hipke, Wisconsin ’56Patrick S. Hobin, California ’59William E. Hole, Jr., Michigan ’51Charles W. Hoppe, Purdue ’57 Bruce V. Howard, San Diego State ’70 Robert B. Huggins, Georgia Tech ’98James T. Inscoe, North Carolina ’62Melvin H. Iverson, Washington ’48Thomas R. Jacobs, Arkansas ’77Richard G. Jacobus, Wisconsin ’51 Miles S. Jenney, Syracuse ’55Alan C. Jeveret, Bowling Green ’59 Warren Y. Jobe, North Carolina ’63 David O. Johnson, Kansas State ’75Edmund C. Johnson, Purdue ’58John K. Johnston, Pennsylvania State ’58Clifton C. Jones, Kansas State ’77Mark S. Jones, Arlington ’75Rees M. Jones, Manitoba ’67Hans M. Jorgensen, San Jose ’07James F. Kakarakis, Northwestern ’42Keith O. Kaneta, Washington ’59Stephen G. Katsinas, Illinois ’78Gregory R. Kavanagh, Miami ’81Charles L. Kavanagh, California ’64Edward Kavazanjian, Jr., Technology ’73Vincent L. Kelly, Dayton ’80C. B. Kern II, Michigan ’84Anthony K. Kesman, Iowa ’77Michael J. Kilbane, Bradley ’78Brett A. Killips, Alberta ’03Bryan L. Kinnamon, Iowa State ’69T. M. Knies, Tennessee ’71Alfred J. Knox, CPA, Northern Illinois ’77

Carolyn O. Kovener Ronald R. Kovener, Indiana ’55 James M. Kraebber, Northwestern ’58Barry S. Kramer, Rutgers ’62Douglas C. Kramlich, Northwestern ’59David A. Krebs CPA, Miami ’80Mark S. Kristoff, Cornell ’84William C. Krommenhoek, Nebraska ’57Paul E. Krupa, Carthage ’11Mark D. Kuchel, Iowa State ’76Steven F. La Buda, Western Illinois ’88R. A. LaBerge, Washington ’87Andris Lacis, Purdue ’64Robert A. LaFontaine, Santa Barbara ’91Robert J. LaFortune, Purdue ’51Mark D. Lausier, Maine ’85John R. Ledbetter, M.D., Arkansas ’90Kenneth J. Lee, DePauw ’47James H. Leitch, Alberta ’86Mark Lemons, Georgia Tech ’08Anthony M. Linares, Lehigh ’58William C. Line, North Dakota ’07Willard C. Loomis, Miami ’59George A. Ludwig, Syracuse ’51Jon D. Lundy, DePauw ’90Carroll L. Lurding, Ohio State ’59Joseph M. MacDonald, Colorado ’69Angelo J. Magistro, Rochester ’60Dave Maguire, Southern Illinois ’73Andrew Malekoff, Rutgers ’73Michelle Marchand Joseph J. Marinelli, Florida ’65Thomas L. Markl, Carnegie ’70J. Lawrence Marsh, Colgate ’75Michael B. Martens, Kent State ’03Robert J. Martin, Washington ’59Kraig J. Marton, Carnegie ’71Thomas E. Mattson, Oregon ’63Marshall D. McCollum, Miami ’54John H. McConnell, Kent State ’06Robert A. McDonald, Ohio ’73Duncan K. McDonald, Williams ’50R. G. McGovern, Brown ’48John P. McGrail, Illinois ’87Harold E. McGurk, Jr., Creighton ’86Gregory A. McLaughlin, Florida ’82David J. Meyers, Wisconsin ’77Gary E. Middleton, Carnegie ’86Mile High United WayMichael C. Miller, Bradley ’80Christopher L. Miller, Miami ’90Daniel T. Miller, Lafayette ’11Michael G. Mitchell, Texas ’65Michael A. Mone, Florida ’85David A. Moody, Georgia Tech ’67James R. Moody, Brown ’58Richard L. Morrison, Kansas ’70Theodore C. Mortenson, Michigan State ’61Gerald H. Morton, Alberta ’60Donald J. Moulin, California ’53David C. Mouron, Jr., Tennessee ’77Brian E. Mudrick, Louisville ’82Mark J. Mueller, Wisconsin ’82Matthew C. Nance, DePauw ’10David M. Neese, Michigan State ’68David S. Nelson, Clarkson ’69J. David Nelson, Northwestern ’63Michael A. Nickey, Iowa State ’65George Nicolau, Michigan ’48Thomas H. Norris, Missouri ’60Evan M. Nosek, Northern Illinois ’85Angel Ochoa, Oklahoma ’13Brett A. Olson, Bradley ’88Tomas I. Ortiz, Houston ’10Julius A. Otten, III, Michigan ’62Joseph W. Parker, Jr., Johns Hopkins ’67Mark Parseghian, Lehigh ’49

Dominick N. Pasquale, Cornell ’57Charles A. Phillips, Clarkson ’64Justin D. Pierce, Kent State ’11Helen J. PikeMichael A. Pizzuto, Illinois ’81James P. Plessas, California ’53Aubrey H. Polser, Jr., Texas ’65Vitor T. Pontual, Lafayette ’08Judson W. Preece, Washington State ’87Gary K. Pritchard, Florida ’62John W. Puth, Lehigh ’52Robert L. Randels, Kansas ’59David R. Ravander, Washington ’86Daryl W. Reisfeld, Rochester ’03Joseph J. Rembusch, Northern Illinois ’66Richard M. Rettstadt, Florida ’82Reid M. Ricciardi, Purdue ’94Phillip S. Rice, Arlington ’95Donald L. Riechman, Bradley ’60Dustin W. Roberts, Bradley ’03F. E. Romano, Hamilton ’49William D. Rose, North Carolina ’69Kenneth P. Roy, Bowling Green ’61D. S. Rudd, Western Ontario ’51Mark L. Rupert, Oklahoma ’74

Samuel A. Santandrea, Rochester ’56Chris H. Sarlas, Illinois ’63Kaye Schendel James M. Seals, Oklahoma State ’68Lee F. Seguin, Michigan State ’53Louis S. Seno, Wisconsin ’71James H. Sergeson, Michigan ’59Brewster H. Shaw, Jr., Wisconsin ’67Edwin B. Shaw, Syracuse ’66Robert W. Shively, Nebraska ’82Aaron M. Siders, Kansas State ’04F. S. Smith, Indiana ’61James W. Smith, Washington & Lee ’62Richard L. Smith, Esq., Colgate ’68Walter R. Smith, Jr., Washington ’70Michael W. Spelliscy, Alberta ’76Richard T. Spencer III, Michigan ’59Patrick Spooner, San Jose ’55Alan H. Staidl, Iowa State ’69Albert P. Stauderman, Jr., Syracuse ’58Scott R. Steelman, Missouri ’79Arthur R. Steiger, Purdue ’48Kevin Stein, Syracuse ’83Richard L. Stern, Georgia Tech ’90H. A. Stevens, Northwestern ’46Richard G. Stewart, Purdue ’49

64595445434140383735

Top Ten Chapters by Number of DonorsAnnual Appeal 2012 – 2013

As of June 30, 2013Chapter TotalDonors

1. Purdue2. Kansas State3. Illinois4. DePauw5. Nebraska6. Oklahoma7. Washington8. Iowa State9. Miami10. Indiana/Northwestern

$43,350.72$32,801.68$24,813.30$16,530.15$11,134.21$11,090.13$11,078.14$10,034.54

$9,500.00$9,349.00

Top Ten Chapters by Amount of DonationsAnnual Appeal 2012 – 2013

As of June 30, 2013Chapter TotalDonations

1. Kansas State2. Missouri3. Illinois4. North Dakota5. Purdue6. Florida7. Washington8. Wisconsin9. Michigan State10. Miami

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Robert C. Stites, Rutgers ’53Stanley F. Stockhammer III, Florida ’88George S. Studle, Washington State ’57Kenneth H. Suelthaus, Michigan ’66Todd C. Sullivan, Santa Barbara ’95Scott C. Surplus, Miami ’81Leland W. Sweeney, San Jose ’55Robert L. Sypult, Arizona ’67Edwin J. Taff, North Carolina ’61Haruo Taga, Bradley, ’54Warren M. Taylor, North Carolina State ’11

Joshua D. TeBeest, Carthage ’08Forest S. Tennant, Jr., Missouri ’62Richard J. Thorpe, Syracuse ’60Robert J. Tinsley, Western Reserve ’87James R. Tolonen, Michigan ’71James R. Tormey, Jr., San Jose ’57Barry S. Turcotte, Houston ’92Daniel J. Uttecht, Nebraska ’14Walter G. VanBenthuysen, Kent State ’61Jeffrey A. VanEenenaam, Colorado ’79James B. Wadsworth, Jr., Florida ’65

Ronald S. Walcisak, Wisconsin ’74Joseph A. Walker, Illinois ’67Edward E. Waller, Oklahoma ’51B. Michael Walsh, Oregon ’64William F. Waters, Cornell ’54Richard A. Wells, Oklahoma ’82Paul W. Wentzien, Iowa ’59Gregory J. Wessling, North Carolina ’74Richard A. West, Lafayette ’53James V. White, Michigan ’50Nicholas Wilder, Colorado ’61Judson E. Wilhelm, Florida ’68

Matthew D. Wilson, Guelph ’97John W. Wingate, Hamilton ’85Charles F. Witte, Miami ’51Samuel D. Wolcott, Jr., Pennsylvania State ’57Robert G. Yingling, Jr., Missouri ’62Hugh D. Young, Carnegie ’52Robert S. Zakos, Jr., Pennsylvania State ’02

MEMORIAL Gifts

Richard B. Campbell, Nebraska ’68, in memory of Scott A. W. Johnson, Washington ’80Douglas A. Cassens, Kent State ’68, in memory of Ole Gilbo, Kent State ’65John E. Giacomazzi, San Jose ’52, in memory of Ross K. Fuller, San Jose ’49David J. Habib, Washington ’86, in memory of Scott A. W. Johnson, Washington ’80Richard M. Holland, Syracuse ’83, in memory of Scott A.W. Johnson, Washington ’80 & Gary Golden, Rutgers ’74

Karen Johnson, in memory of Scott A.W. Johnson, Washington ’80Robert S. Lannin, Nebraska ’81, in memory of Scott A. W. Johnson, Washington ’80The Snook Family Trust, in memory of Nelson Snook, Lafayette ’59Catherine A. Wilhelm in memory of Judson E. Wilhelm, Florida ’68Richard M. Holland, Syracuse ’83, in memory of Scott A.W. Johnson, Washington ’80 & Gary Golden, Rutgers ’74

THE FOLLOWING CONDITIONS APPLY:• To qualify, a brother must be 70½

year of age or older.• Gifts can be made for up to

$100,000. • The transfer must go directly from

IRAs to the DU Educational Foundation.

• Gifts must be made outright.• The opportunity for these types

of gifts is available only until December 31, 2013.

One important provision of the Act allows the charitable transfer of IRA distributions to apply to your required minimum distribution (RMD) requirements for the year. For example, if an IRA owner is required to withdraw five percent from his IRA for the year, he could direct up to $100,000 to Delta Upsilon in satisfaction of the RMD.

John T. Weisel, Oregon ’48, has already taken advantage of this legislation to make an impact on Delta Upsilon.

NEW WAYS TO DONATE TO DUEF In January 2013, the American Taxpayer Relief Act of 2012 was passed. This

legislation includes an important provision allowing direct gifts from individual retirement accounts (IRAs) to charity. The gifts can be made without any income tax consequences and can immediately impact the Mission and Purpose of Delta Upsilon.

“Donating from my IRA has provided me with an opportunity to give more to the DUEF because of the tax breaks associated. There is only one more month left in 2013 to do this, and we don’t know if Congress will authorize this benefit next year. Take this special opportunity to make or increase your gifting to DUEF before year end. I have taken this opportunity to make my DUEF contribution from my IRA every year that it has been allowed. Depending on the size of the account the tax consequences of using the IRA are very significant, especially if you live in an income tax state. Do it now! ”

John Weisel, Oregon ’48 gives to the DUEF through his IRA.

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Honor Roll2012-2013 Donors to the Delta Upsilon Educational Foundation

Each person has a unique reason for supporting Delta Upsilon. All of us carry our own special memories of this extraordinary experience and want to ensure that future generations have the same opportunities. Every year, every gift, of every size truly makes a difference.

ALBERTA President’sTrust

P. Cantor ’62 G. Killips ’71 (11)A. Warrack ’61 (16)

President’sClubR. Fisher ’75 (6) CEA+G. Hajash ’47B. Killips ’03 (5)J. Leitch ’86G. Morton ’60 (4)M. Spelliscy ’76

GoldenDeltaD. Lewis ’00 (2)I. McDonell ’72 (4)G. Mills ’95J. Wojcicki ’74I. Zaharko ’72

SilverDeltaL. Hatch ’65D. Love ’46 (27)E. van der Lee ’51 (2)

DUDonorN. Booth ’15I. Dalsin ’13D. Davila ’02 (4)J. Makuch ’15D. Volschenk ’15B. Wright ’15

AMHERST President’sClub

J. Fairman ’52 (16)DUDonor

F. Tesch, Ph.D. ’66 (3)R. Lewin ’66 (3)

ARIZONA President’sClub

D. Chambers ’60 (36)R. Sypult ’67

GoldenDeltaD. Lapins ’61 (2)

SilverDeltaG. Stoesser ’63 (3)

ARIZONA STATESilverDelta

T. Shell ’12 (2)DUDonor

P. Haslag ’10 (4)Z. O’Brien ’11

ARKANSASPresident’sClub

T. Jacobs ’77 (2)E. Crane ’76 (21)J. Ledbetter, MD ’90 (2)

SilverDeltaB. Beaird ’76K. Satterfield ’83 (3)

DUDonorG. Hamilton ’77 (36)M. Zimmerman ’90

ARLINGTONPresident’sTrust

E. Freeman ’73 CEA+President’sClub

G. Gregory ’77 (14)M. Jones ’75 (32)P. Rice ’95 (7)

GoldenDeltaW. Bruck, MD ’72 (2)

SilverDeltaM. Hawkins ’70 (13)D. Marrufo ’13 (3)R. Ray ’70 (32)

DUDonorJ. Ashby ’74 (37)S. Atchison ’70 (10)J. Branstetter ’12 R. Cuajunco ’93 N. Hall ’12 (3)D. McAlister ’13 M. Rathman ’13

AUBURN President’sTrust

O. Heely, Jr. ’68 (14)W. Killian ’69 (6)

President’sClubJ. Crabbe ’68 (8)

SilverDeltaJ. Dixon, Jr. ’65 (6)C. Flint ’65 (2)

DUDonorJ. Henderson ’62 (19)

BAYLOR SilverDelta

R. Shull ’85 (15)

BOISE STATE President’sTrust

J. Kirk ’00 (7) President’sClub

M. Gehrke ’11 (2)GoldenDelta

D. Avera ’13 (2)E. Schuler ’12

DUDonorC. Bower ’14 C. Fries ’15 R. Gregg ’14 C. Johnson ’10 R. Jung ’94 B. Priddy ’15

BOWLING GREEN President’sTrust

G. Long ’67 (14)President’sClub

M. Fessler ’56 (3)

A. Jeveret ’59 (33)K. Roy ’61 (4)

GoldenDeltaC. Clingman ’69 J. Kenlon ’54 (2)C. Schaffer ’73 (14)

SilverDeltaN. Elkins ’97 (12)R. Hayek ’69 (6)W. Koons ’71 (5)D. Mielke ’59 (3)

DUDonorW. Bensie ’70 (2)G. Bonnell ’71J. Klipfell III ’71 (2)D. Morgan ’58 (15) J. Walsh ’68 (2)

BRADLEY President’sTrust

W. Bittner ’74 (2)R. Dahlsgaard, Jr. ’63 (38)J. Prime ’63 (14)

President’sClubJ. Bremer ’66 (42)A. Colletti ’96 (2)M. Kilbane ’78 (13)M. Miller ’80 (17)B. Olson ’88 (10)D. Riechman ’60 (15)D. Roberts ’03 H. Taga ’54 (13)

GoldenDeltaM. Boylan, PC ’69 (43)J. Kless, Jr. ’78 A. Parus ’53 (19)B. Wernke ’79L. Yenkole ’60 (4)

SilverDeltaB. DeSplinter ’84 (11)J. Faltinek ’60 (15)M. Hale ’89 J. Leonard ’76 L. Meyer ’64 (6)R. Norkus ’51 (10)R. Zarvell, Ph.D. ’68 (2)

DUDonorE. Antanitus ’13 (2)T. Cazel ’15 J. Furmanski ’13 (3)C. Lamoureux ’59 (2)R. Lugiai ’11 D. Misewicz ’79 (2)M. Schardt ’85 (4)J. Simpson IV ’08 W. Tekien ’69 (18)R. Tringali ’51 (16) S. Walczynski ’77

BRITISH COLUMBIA GoldenDelta

E. Valentine ’53

BROWNPresident’sTrust

F. Wellersdieck ’51 (11)President’sClub

R. McGovern ’48 (4) J. Moody ’58 (6)

GoldenDeltaK. Wulfekuhler ’89

SilverDeltaR. Norman, USAF

(Ret.) ’57 (10) S. Wylie ’57 (36)

DUDonorE. Bennett, Jr. ’52 R. Judd ’43 (3)W. McKibben ’49 (3)W. Nash ’44

BUCKNELLPresident’sTrust

C. Franz, FSC ’75 (13)GoldenDelta

L. Adams, Jr. ’64 (43)J. Finegan II ’14 T. Kaercher ’57 R. Minesinger ’83 D. Steinberg ’15 J. Watters II ’64

SilverDelta A. D’Abbraccio ’15 R. Forry ’13 (2)J. Sprout ’48 (41)W. Vollmer, Jr. ’55

DUDonorJ. Eachus, PE ’60 (2)D. Hopkins ’42 (5)J. Kern, Jr. ’14 (2)T. Lisofsky ’13

CAL POLYPresident’sTrust

C. Pruett ’02 (13)GoldenDelta

L. Doble, Jr. ’68 (25) J. Silva ’11

DUDonorA. Lanphar ’11

CALGARYPresident’sClub

J. Bell ’94

CALIFORNIAPresident’sTrust

T. Johnson ’53 (11)S. Martinelli ’52

President’sClubC. Channing ’58 (13)P. Hobin ’59 (31)C. Kavanagh ’64 (36) D. Moulin ’53 (16) CEA+J. Plessas ’53

GoldenDeltaJ. Fry, Jr. ’63 (4)D. Johnson ’63 (30)E. Stephens ’44

SilverDeltaG. Brewer ’78 (2)C. Rea ’81 (4)L. Rea ’54P. Ten Doesschate, Esq. ’50 D. Witt ’49

DUDonorM. Chase ’65 (3)W. Lewis ’47 (12)G. Loria ’14

CARNEGIE President’sClub

C. Cole ’79 (31)T. Markl ’70 (16)K. Marton ’71 G. Middleton ’86 (27)H. Young ’52 (2)

GoldenDeltaA. Icken ’65 (13)K. Kerlin ’82 J. Polles ’67 D. Williams ’64 (13)R. Zimmerman ’78 (15)

SilverDeltaG. Alan ’82 (2)R. Riggs ’76 (2)

DUDonorD. Hanna, Jr. ’15 W. Leete ’58 (23)J. McGurk ’84 H. Mielke ’51 (43) W. Murdock ’83 (4) J. Reid ’81 (2)J. Walters ’79R. Young ’53 (5)

CARTHAGEPresident’sTrust

J. M. Chaplin ’96 President’sClub

P. Krupa ’11 J. TeBeest ’08 (7)

GoldenDeltaJ. Blakeway ’13 D. Kniss ’97 (14)S. Telkamp ’09 (3)

SilverDeltaA. Martini ’15 R. Miller ’09 (2)

DUDonorB. Anderson ’14 R. Campea ’13 D. Collins ’05 S. Kalberg ’15 Z. Resch ’14 (2)D. Ross-Jones ’06 (6)M. Tokarz ’10 (7)

CEADonorK. Miller ’99 (3)

CENTRAL FLORIDA President’sTrust

A. Clevenger ’97 (13)J. Katz ’97 (11) CEA+

GoldenDeltaM. Goldman ’99

SilverDeltaR. Krausmann ’02

DUDonorJ. Katz ’95 (2)P. McDaniel ’03 (2)

CENTRAL MISSOURI

SilverDeltaG. George ’89 (24)

DUDonorM. LeDoux ’83 (2)D. Stockwell ’78

CEADonorB. Stewart ’85

CHATTANOOGADUDonor

A. Clement ’13 L. Fuqua ’12 G. Mansfield ’16 A. Scherelis ’13 H. Wood ’15

CHICAGOPresident’sTrust

M. Krasnitz ’57 (36)M. Mandel ’55 (43)J. McQuaid ’60 (22)

SilverDeltaS. Appel ’54 (9)Q. Johnstone, JD ’36 (19)M. Luchins ’14 D. Mars ’68 (2)J. Morgan ’51

CLARKSONPresident’sClub

D. Nelson ’69 (5)C. Phillips III ’64 (42)

GoldenDeltaK. Klafehn ’61 (5)

SilverDeltaP. Davidson ’69 (4)

DUDonorR. Hopkins, Jr. ’76 (4)R. Wischhusen ’76 (36)

COLBYSilverDelta

P. Salmon ’53 (3)

$500+ ............. President’s Trust $200-$499 ...... President’s Club$100-$199 ...... Golden Delta$50-$99 .......... Silver Delta$1-$49 ............ DU Donor CEA Gift ........ CEA Donor

ANNUALGIVINGLEVELS ADDITIONALGIVING LIFETIMEGIVINGSOCIETIES

Donation of +$1000 to the Annual FundBrick Campaign DonorDonor gave to both the CEA and the Annual FundOak Circle Donor

$100,000+ ..... Dikia Upotheke Society $50,000 .......... Justice Society$25,000 .......... Culture Society$10,000 .......... Character Society $5,000 ............ Friendship Society

Red Text

CEA+

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COLGATEPresident’sTrust

R. Tyburski ’74 (18)President’sClub

J. L. Marsh ’75 R. Smith, Esq. ’68 (34)

SilverDeltaJ. Norris ’14

DUDonorB. Crockett ’13

COLORADOPresident’sClub

B. C. Brewster ’77 (24)J. MacDonald ’69 (11)J. VanEenenaam ’79 (30)N. Wilder ’61 (12)

GoldenDeltaJ. Colonell ’58 L. Gaddis ’63 (9)J. Stamps ’59 (2) S. Yezek ’80

SilverDeltaK. Clark ’76 F. Jewett III ’63 (3)D. Koch ’82 K. Pober ’62 (19)S. Wilson ’73 (4)

DUDonorK. Dunham, Jr. ’62 S. Mahannah ’61 (29)D. Morton ’81 W. Oliver ’62 (14)

COLUMBIAPresident’sTrust

W. Eckert ’61 (3)SilverDelta

W. Lauder, Esq. ’44 (35)J. McCormack ’39 (25)

DUDonorR. Rosen, USN (Ret.) ’58

CORNELLPresident’sTrust

G. M. Slovak ’77 President’sClub

P. Blauvelt ’57 A. Cashen ’57 (8)J. Copland ’59 (9)M. Kristoff ’84 (12)D. Pasquale ’57W. Waters ’54 (14)

GoldenDeltaT. Anderson ’15 R. Attiyeh ’55 (16)M. Clemente ’73 (36)A. Kiplinger ’39 (16)J. Maier ’69 (9)G. Malanga ’15 B. McNulty ’15 J. Medert ’68 (2)A. Murray ’60 (7)J. Stevens ’10 (6)N. Tombari ’12 C. Vail, Jr. ’61

SilverDeltaP. McMahon ’55 (2)

DUDonorB. Ilingi ’10 (3)T. Keating III ’57 (36)

CREIGHTONPresident’sClub

H. McGurk, Jr. ’86 (2)DUDonor

R. Haerr ’72 (35)P. Knapp ’89 (3)

CULVER-STOCKTON

SilverDeltaA. Leach ’07

DUDonorJ. DeGraw ’13

DARTMOUTHGoldenDelta

J. Giddens, Esq. ’59 (17)SilverDelta

J. Gately ’49 (2)

DAVISSilverDelta

J. Haydon, CPA ’68

DAYTONPresident’sClub

V. Kelly ’80 SilverDelta

W. Maselko ’81 (10)

DELAWAREPresident’sClub

J. Carey, Jr. ’70 (12)GoldenDelta

W. Hallam ’80 (32)SilverDelta

E. Anzalone ’72 (11)DUDonor

J. Brzostowski ’79 (11)

DENISONPresident’sTrust

H. Reynolds ’57 (2)President’sClub

B. Bailey ’58 (27)DUDonor

R. Carleton ’60 (12)E. Mancini ’94 (3)D. Shell, JD ’59 (17)

DEPAUWPresident’sTrust

J. McConnell ’66 (18)President’sClub

P. Anderson ’09 B. Grabow ’85 (5)K. Lee ’47 (7)J. Lundy ’90 (23)M. Nance ’10

GoldenDeltaW. Barrett ’61 (2)R. Current ’59 (4)M. Herrell ’60J. Isenbarger ’45 J. Kemper ’59 W. Murphy II ’93 (13)B. Ramos ’15 R. Sass ’55 K. Sims ’97 (3)

SilverDeltaE. Boldrey ’63 (21)P. Brems ’15 J. Downs ’65 (2)H. Fjord ’47 (25)P. Groebe ’62 (26)W. Hunn ’59 A. Kaufman ’05 (4)J. Koch ’53 (6)W. Kyhos ’66 (11)K. Madden ’94 (12)M. Miller ’88 (10)N. Smith ’52 S. Stokke ’98 R. Tilly ’64 (4)

DUDonorJ. Ayers ’61 T. Bussian ’15 W. Chance ’14 (2)D. Copple ’00 A. Cornelius ’99 (2) B. Diekhoff ’14 A. Dickey ’14 R. Gackenheimer ’00 (2)J. Gordon ’88 (24)C. Graham ’82 (22)V. Guzzetta ’14 (2)J. Novak ’49 (22)A. Pace ’14 (2)A. Parker ’14 J. Volkman ’63

CEADonorJ. Davidson ’63

EASTERN KENTUCKY

GoldenDeltaR. Collins ’74 (11)

ELONGoldenDelta

J. Branchaud ’13

R. Waetjen ’15 SilverDelta

M. Hart ’14 A. Lake ’13

DUDonorC. Bosak ’13 R. Mandelkehr ’14 K. Murray ’15 K. Ocheltree ’15 J. Shaver ’12 N. Sprout ’14

EMBRY-RIDDLEDUDonor

B. Davne ’11 A. Teta ’15

FLORIDAPresident’sTrust

S. Bayman ’68 (22)J. Delaney ’77 (35)J. Roberts ’63 (42)P. Rosenthal ’73 (37)

President’sClubH. F. Bush ’85 (8)W. Carter, USN (Ret.)

’71 (4) J. Gordon ’10 (5)J. Marinelli ’65 (17)G. McLaughlin ’82 M. Mone ’85 (14)G. Pritchard ’62 R. Rettstadt ’82 (18)S. Stockhammer, III ’88 (3)J. Wadsworth, Jr. ’65 (3)J. Wilhelm ’68 (15)

GoldenDeltaM. Zajkowski ’86 (2)

SilverDeltaP. Forrest ’58 (4)J. Hernandez ’15 A. Innocent ’15M. Panzano ’11 (5)

DUDonorJ. Bonney ’67 (2)K. Brown ’13S. Carpenter ’91 (2)A. Cox, MD ’87 (2)P. Karpowich ’12 L. Oestmann ’15 M. Shuster ’13 J. Tully ’69 (12)R. Wade ’61 (17)R. Wilcox ’68 (31)

FRESNOGoldenDelta

R. Buhl ’90 (3)DUDonor

J. Takeda ’71 (10)

GEORGIA TECHPresident’sTrust

R. McKeeman ’77 President’sClub

H. Brackin, III ’71 (9)B. Burson, III ’67 (10)R. Huggins ’98 (5)M. Lemons ’08 CEA+D. Moody ’67 (3)R. Stern ’90 (22)

GoldenDeltaM. Doyle ’71 K. O’Toole ’94 (13)T. Slovak ’87 (16)E. Vietor ’91 (15)

SilverDeltaD. Autin ’66 S. Chait ’13 (3)D. Crawford ’61 (17)P. Eubanks ’71 (31)S. Flax ’78 (3)M. Haney ’79 (2) CEA+H. Whitehead ’72

DUDonorR. Davis III ’83 (5)C. Fulghum III ’78 (21)W. Hay, Jr. ’71 (15)M. Myers ’16 E. Schepps ’81 (17)

GRAND VALLEY STATE

DUDonorT. Layer ’14

GUELPHPresident’sClub

M. Wilson ’97 (11)DUDonor

S. Collette ’14 J. Khehra ’12

HAMILTONPresident’sClub

F. Romano ’49 (4)J. Wingate ’85 (19)

GoldenDeltaS. Nye ’52 (9)

SilverDeltaP. Luney, Jr. ’70 (4)D. Wefer ’54 (10)

DUDonorP. McNall ’57

HARVARDSilverDelta

W. Spang ’38 (25)DUDonor

P. Blumberg ’39

HOUSTONPresident’sTrust

J. Bobo ’77 (27)C. Olson ’92 (5)H. Picard ’82 (13)C. Sowell ’92 (19)

President’sClubC. Enochs ’94 (7)P. Farley ’04 (5)T. Ortiz ’10 (7)B. Turcotte ’92 (4)

GoldenDeltaP. O’Connor ’07M. Sachs ’96 (3)

SilverDeltaR. Cowan ’67 (12)J. Magill, Jr. ’73 S. Zamir ’05 (5)

DUDonorJ. Aguero ’98 L. Figueroa ’11 (4)C. Gilmer ’16 G. Maduzia ’94 M. McMahon ’15

ILLINOISPresident’sTrust

H. Avery ’44 (16)C. D’hondt ’88 (6) CEA+C. Milkint ’83 (9)

President’sClubA. Chapman ’69 (29)K. Cox ’76 (24)R. Donohoe, AIA ’55 (2)M. Finney ’53 (3)D. Gibbs ’85 (5)R. Gilmore ’13 (2)S. Katsinas, Ph.D. ’78 (35)J. McGrail ’87 M. Pizzuto ’81 (14)C. Sarlas ’63 (11)J. Walker ’67 (4)

GoldenDeltaG. Auble ’59 J. Buist ’78 (31)E. Clements III ’71 (4)C. Erickson ’43 (3)E. Grandone ’70 N. Henrickson ’15 R. Hougham ’72 (9)T. Lindsey ’74 (2)T. Loptein ’13 R. Magnussen ’60 (21)R. Selby, FAIA ’66 (11)T. Shepard ’73 (18)J. Sladek ’74 (6)C. Zelent ’84 (19)

SilverDeltaA. Bock ’15 B. Brockstein ’85 (2)

C. Carey ’82 A. Cork ’59 D. Dees ’55 (3)T. Duffy ’78 (6)G. Flathers II ’78 (2)G. Graessle ’79 (2)D. Hortberg ’57 (2)D. Kohout ’74 (10)M. McLees ’75 (14)J. Nagel ’69 D. Nixon ’73 (10)J. O’Donnell ’82 G. Rugel ’78 (32)R. Smith ’50 (17)K. Ulatoski ’76 (4)

DUDonorC. Dexter ’51 (4)J. Kimmel ’60 (12)H. Lang ’59 (4)S. Miranda ’15 J. Ritt ’52 (27)D. Terdy ’15 (2)K. Ward ’15 (2)S. Wigginton ’45

INDIANAPresident’sTrust

D. Allard ’70 (18)R. Delano ’85 (6)H. Kahlenbeck, Jr. ’52 (42)

President’sClubJ. Akhtar, DO ’92 C. Bell ’54 (8)B. Circle ’67 (12)R. Kovener ’55 (20)F. Smith ’61

GoldenDeltaD. Epstein ’90 (15)E. Euteneuer ’14 P. Gutman, Esq. ’52 (3)S. Jaren ’76 (5)R. Rumford ’80 (5)L. Stuckey II ’97 (13)R. Swanson ’56 (16)K. Wingham ’66 R. Yoder ’89

SilverDeltaJ. Boyd, DDS ’65 (10)J. Brunner ’14 J. Coffman ’79 T. Cook ’48 T. Kilpatrick ’57 (15)C. Kirk ’67 (2)J. Lambert ’87 (26)S. Leibovitz ’13 (2)R. Levin ’87 (24)R. Rock ’67 (4)G. Sims ’82 (15)K. Smith ’63 (14)R. Williams, Jr. ’58 F. Wolf ’67 (14)M. Yancey ’14 (2)

DUDonorM. Bear ’55 (4)R. Manalo ’71 (2)E. Snelz ’82 (2)

IONADUDonor

R. Losco ’10 M. Opoku ’07 (7)E. Paparo ’11 N. Sgambelluri ’09 (2)

IOWAPresident’sTrust

D. Knuepfer ’76 (9)D. Marston ’63 (6)

President’sClubR. Franklin ’97 (4)M. Heckt ’46 (10)A. Kesman ’77 P. Wentzien ’59 (2)

GoldenDeltaH. Hearst, Jr. ’88 (3) C. King ’96 K. Miller ’67 (32)K. Nelson ’44 (6)R. Renfro ’48 (4)S. West ’68

SilverDeltaD. Hinson ’57 H. P. Parsons ’67 (2)J. Pattie ’58 W. Volkmer ’53 K. Weigel ’78 (35)

DUDonorK. Chamberlain ’16 R. Kodros ’68 (4)J. McCarragher ’68 (23)W. Nesbitt ’16

CEADonorR. Black ’95 (7) T. Drake ’78 (14) B. John ’96 (11) G. Lamb ’94 (19)

IOWA STATEPresident’sTrust

R. Allendorf ’83 (6)C. Finn ’05 W. Sigman ’50 (42)

President’sClubA. Beckman ’02 K. Bruening ’80 (33)J. Courter ’84 (12)J. Cronk ’60 (42)D. Hattery ’83 B. Kinnamon ’69 (17) M. Kuchel ’76 (13)M. Nickey ’65 (28)A. Staidl ’69

GoldenDeltaJ. Ashbaugh ’83 H. Bentzinger ’44 (2)R. Fleck ’49 (11)C. Foss ’71 (13)R. Holland ’80 S. Hudson ’84 L. Johnsen ’68 (3)A. Johnson, Jr. ’47 (42) J. Lein ’62 R. Patterson ’54 (2)H. Tett ’65 (2)

SilverDeltaM. Bowman ’65 (15)A. Mores ’80 (29)D. Morse ’52 (12)

DUDonorD. Carne ’70 J. Carson ’73 (4) R. Frink ’51 D. Heckmiller ’57 (3)J. Larson II ’74 (2) CEA+C. Vermie ’73 (7)R. Wood ’51 (2)

CEADonorR. Conklin ’07R. Farr ’61 (2) T. Hansen ’79D. Larew ’63 (4) K. Solberg ’09

JOHNS HOPKINSPresident’sTrust

A. Pradhan, MD ’96 (4)President’sClub

R. Deichert, Jr. ’97 J. Parker, Jr. ’67 (7)

GoldenDeltaD. Hanson ’50 (25)

DUDonorM. Boyd ’73 (13)J. Hildebrandt ’43 (5)

KANSASPresident’sTrust

W. Dillon ’78 L. Gregory ’75 (38)C. Saricks ’70 (36)

President’sClubK. M. Berkley ’61 (11)G. Frankamp ’12 (5)M. Goering ’91 (9)R. Morrison ’70 (8)R. Randels ’59

GoldenDeltaE. Clarke ’42 (10)S. Hagan ’13 C. Hayes ’13 (4)

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R. Mastin ’62 (2)G. McCann ’40 T. North ’69 (3)K. Seals ’14 (2)

SilverDeltaL. Armstrong, Jr. ’55C. Cram ’69 (2)J. Cram ’71 D. Morrison ’67 M. Thomas ’62 (7)

DUDonorM. Crowther ’59 (12)

KANSAS STATEPresident’sTrust

P. Edgerley ’78 (19) CEA+J. Eplee ’75 (12) CEA+E. B. Franklin, Ph.D. ’75 (5)C. Navis ’03 (7) CEA+

President’sClubW. Gordon ’60 (26) CEA+T. Heiman ’76 (4)D. Johnson ’75 (36)C. Jones ’77 (19)A. Siders ’04 (4)

GoldenDeltaH. Altwegg ’62 (4)L. Butel ’87 (13)D. Chew ’81 (2) CEA+D. Hawkins ’81 (5)J. Miesse ’72 (10) CEA+J. Oppy ’64 (30)B. Reinhardt ’83 (2) CEA+D. Reinhardt ’80

SilverDeltaG. Conner ’58 (2)B. Helvey ’58 (6)S. Long ’73 (2)S. Moore ’99 (4)S. Radetic ’15 M. Ruff ’64 B. Zuk ’13 (2)

DUDonorA. Bolin ’14 T. Fritson ’15 R. Greene ’58 (5) CEA+C. Hunt ’15 A. Johnson ’14 (2)F. Jurenka ’59 (19)D. Rogenmoser ’11 R. Wilkerson ’11 CEA+

CEADonorG. Ahlquist ’99J. Anderson ’04W. Bahr ’94K. Bryant ’08J. Callen ’62 (12) P. Davis ’78L. Dean ’66R. Flickner ’07K. Freeman ’74G. Gerritz ’69 (2) B. Glaves ’98M. Goss ’81G. Hammer ’71S. James ’67J. Kippes ’99H. Kirchhoff ’68S. Leahy ’99A. Link ’74 (5) G. McDonald ’68 R. Miller ’99R. Porter ’72 (2)

W. Ray ’93D. Reeves ’58T. Ulrich ’89 B. Vulgamore ’98 (2) R. Willard ’58W. York ’71 (2)

KENT STATEPresident’sClub

W. Becherer ’49 D. Cassens ’68 (15) CEA+M. Coppola, Jr. ’65 (24)A. Dalcher ’57 (12)J. Gibson ’68 (14)N. Giorgianni ’56 (15)

CEA+M. Martens ’03 J. McConnell ’06 (3)J. Pierce ’11 (5)W. VanBenthuysen ’61 (2)

GoldenDeltaP. Camerino ’57 (11)M. Cesa ’76 (4) CEA+T. Meinhardt ’54 (17)J. Mottice ’91 (2)J. Vitangeli ’60

SilverDeltaJ. Brown, Jr. ’64R. McNeil ’51 (10)W. Miller ’65 (4)K. Skurkey ’68 (2)

DUDonorP. Hall ’49 (6)N. Helman ’54 J. Manninen ’57 (24)R. Potter ’64 R. Stevenson ’47 (18)F. Tolloti ’57 J. Wright ’05

CEADonorJ. Flask ’67S. Thom ’97

LAFAYETTEPresident’sTrust

R. Noreika ’67 (7) CEA+W. Rappolt ’67 (9)

President’sClubD. Miller ’11 (2)V. Pontual ’08 R. West ’53 (10)

GoldenDeltaA. Neeb ’15 J. Zembron ’74 (6)

SilverDeltaM. Argento ’14 (2)P. Auvil ’15 J. DeRuyter ’73 (6)P. Moser III ’68 (8)H. Smith ’51 (36)D. Williams ’14

DUDonorT. Ashton ’86 (12)N. DeRosa ’12 (2)Z. Lappen ’14 G. Sanchez ’10N. Sullivan ’00 (13)

CEADonorJ. Fisher ’77

LEHIGHPresident’sTrust

R. Allan ’68 (19)L. Maroti ’58 (2)

H. Wylie ’45 (2)President’sClub

J. Baron ’79 (3)D. Czerny ’74 (35)A. Linares ’58 (3)M. Parseghian ’49 (22)J. Puth ’52 (3)

GoldenDeltaJ. Alcaro ’74 (10)C. Curtiss ’43 (14)J. Frank III ’68 (15)P. Leonard ’91 (3)J. Sini ’68 (15)N. Welton ’10 (5) CEA+

SilverDeltaA. Barker ’61 (7)A. Beeken III ’45 (4)A. Cannon, Jr. ’74 (25)H. Frymoyer ’49 R. Gabriel ’51 (12)M. Kelly ’13 (3)J. Lichter ’68 (4)R. Ruth ’68 (2)

DUDonorA. Alber ’65 (12)F. Batson, Jr. ’50 (18)S. Brown ’09 (2)D. Cubbage ’07 J. Edell ’79 (2)R. Frey ’70 E. Lucadamo ’71 (36)G. Naylor ’71 (25)

LONG BEACHSilverDelta

D. McKenzie ’91 (2)DUDonor

C. Cooper ’88 (16)

LOUSIVILLEPresident’sTrust

W. Goldberg ’83 (6)T. Talaat ’82 (13)

President’sClubR. Brand ’70 (21)B. Dahlem ’51 (11)S. Hartstern ’70 (18)B. Mudrick ’82 (32)

GoldenDeltaM. Barnes ’76 (4)T. Batcherlor ’14 J. Brian ’87 (14)D. Parish ’56 R. Sneed ’80 (3)

SilverDeltaE. Mathis ’15 W. Thompson ’57

DUDonorA. Finch ’15 P. Fussenegger ’79 (7)J. Griffiths ’69 (25)F. Howe ’64 R. Russell ’14 J. Spivey ’85

CEADonor J. Griffin ’11

MAINEPresident’sClub

M. Lausier ’85 (8)SilverDelta

T. Hooper ’89 (4)D. Stairs ’80 (14)

DUDonorC. Hoak ’76 (6)S. Spear ’83 (15)

MANITOBAPresident’sClub

R. Jones ’67 (9)DUDonor

D. Dickson ’11 J. Livesey ’93 (3) CEA+S. Stadnyk ’13

MARIETTAPresident’sClub

K. Brennan, Jr. ’64 (29)T. Forbes ’64 (4)

GoldenDeltaG. Yester ’51 (24)

SilverDeltaD. Trabilcy ’59 (12)

DUDonorR. Krupp ’64 (6)W. Richards ’57 (9)D. Stephan ’58

MARYLANDPresident’sTrust

J. Siegel ’78 (26)President’sClub

P. Doetsch ’76 GoldenDelta

M. Caporaletti ’73 (24)M. Osmeyer ’77 (2)

SilverDeltaJ. Girolami, DPM ’75 (20)J. Kennedy, Esq. ’85 P. McCusker ’85 (12)

DUDonorR. Costello ’65 R. Goco ’87 (15)

MASSACHUSETTSGoldenDelta

J. Bougie ’10 (2)SilverDelta

J. Hoggard ’71 (2)DUDonor

M. Crosscup ’96 (10)

McMASTERDUDonor

C. Bain ’99 (2)

MIAMIPresident’sTrust

J. Rogers ’57 (38)President’sClub

H. Barker ’50 (43)A. Billick III ’77 (3)A. Cramer ’12 W. Gibson, Jr. ’51 (9)G. Kavanagh ’81 (3)D. Krebs, CPA ’80 (33)W. Loomis ’59 (28)M. McCollum ’54 (10)C. Miller ’90 (12)S. Surplus ’81 C. Witte ’51 (29)

GoldenDeltaS. Brooks ’04 W. Brown ’52 (4)M. Plummer ’56 (4)J. Rathbun, MD ’74 (2)A. Snyder, CPA ’97

SilverDeltaD. Batista ’56 (2)H. Burr ’62 (4)F. Fricker ’63 E. Gates ’48 (2)B. Gilleland ’51 (7)S. Koch ’01 (2)T. O’Keefe ’82 (12)J. Steen ’41 (3)J. Wenckus ’63 J. Wettengel ’65 (7)

DUDonorB. Case ’03 (9) CEA+M. Coombes ’04W. Filter ’49 P. Geiger ’63 (11)J. Key ’64 (2)M. Ponder ’67 E. Sarkisian ’85 (15)R. Schoenherr ’63 (7)D. Sechnick ’76 (16)

CEADonorF. Shera ’63 (4)

MICHIGANPresident’sClub

A. Englehart ’06 (6)W. Hole, Jr. ’51 (9)C. Kern II ’84 G. Nicolau ’48 (9)J. Otten III ’62 (3)J. Sergeson ’59 R. Spencer, III ’59 (14)K. Suelthaus ’66 (8)J. Tolonen ’71 (4)J. White ’50 (43)

GoldenDeltaW. Alexander ’47 (5)S. Dater ’15 S. FitzGerald ’12 (3)J. Grettenberger ’59 M. Hartliep ’16 R. Vogel ’51

SilverDeltaR. Holloway ’51 (2)J. Markiewicz ’64 T. Mowry ’70 (2)J. Saber ’15 R. Waddell ’61 (3)

DUDonorS. Carney ’14 (2)R. Munt ’64 (3) C. Schweigert ’16 T. Spencer ’65 (2)W. Steen ’44 J. Stuart ’52 (8)M. Szocik ’16T. Tanase ’63 (3) A. Zynda ’15

MICHIGAN STATEPresident’sTrust

P. D. Franzetta ’70 (37)R. Thompson ’67 (43)

President’sClubT. Busson ’68 G. Gross ’63 (16)T. Mortenson ’61 (9)D. Neese ’68 (23)L. Seguin ’53 (2)

GoldenDeltaC. Ferguson, PE ’79 R. Johnson ’54 D. Kill ’56

G. Whitson ’52SilverDelta

D. DeVries ’56 (4)B. Hoot ’65 (36)S. Knox, Jr. ’68 (6)C. MacDonald ’64 A. McGovern, Jr. ’50 (2)R. Perkins, Jr. ’50 (2)J. Ryan ’55 (34)W. Savage ’56 (21)G. Shannon ’62 (4)J. Tanton ’56R. Zimmerman ’53 (19)

DUDonorD. Carpenter ’63 (14)S. Zimmerman ’83 (2)

MICHIGAN TECHPresident’sTrust

D. Mertens ’94 (13)President’sClub

S. Darin ’90 (2)SilverDelta

A. Mitteer ’03 (7)DUDonor

K. Jurek ’13 (2)M. Lathia ’04 (5)I. Olson ’14O. Washington, Jr. ’91

MIDDLEBURY GoldenDelta

R. Johnson ’58 (21)SilverDelta

T. Carey ’86 (11)C. Lauer ’52

MINNESOTAPresident’sTrust

J. Hamann ’59 (15)D. McKeag VI ’04 (11)

CEA+President’sClub

A. Allen ’49 (21)C. Ellingson ’92 (9)

SilverDeltaJ. Gausman, PE ’50 (21)J. Sullivan ’49

DUDonorA. Herzog ’13 (2)

MISSOURIPresident’sTrust

T. Brady ’62 (6) CEA+W. Harwell, Jr. ’51 (18)E. McKinney ’74 (11)

CEA+J. Vinyard, Jr. ’49

President’sClubJ. Ehrlich ’67 (32) CEA+W. Hamlin ’60 (2)T. Norris ’60 (13)S. Steelman ’79 F. Tennant, Jr. ’62 (3)R. Yingling, Jr. ’62 (39)

GoldenDeltaG. Bistline ’76 (8)J. Jeans, Jr. ’53 (2)J. Montgomery ’16 G. Rector ’62 (17)S. Richards ’64 (2)

SilverDeltaG. Allemann ’69 (38)K. Fattmann ’53 (2)K. Gordon ’76

$500+ ............. President’s Trust $200-$499 ...... President’s Club$100-$199 ...... Golden Delta$50-$99 .......... Silver Delta$1-$49 ............ DU Donor CEA Gift ........ CEA Donor

ANNUALGIVINGLEVELS ADDITIONALGIVING LIFETIMEGIVINGSOCIETIES

Donation of +$1000 to the Annual FundBrick Campaign DonorDonor gave to both the CEA and the Annual FundOak Circle Donor

$100,000+ ..... Dikia Upotheke Society $50,000 .......... Justice Society$25,000 .......... Culture Society$10,000 .......... Character Society $5,000 ............ Friendship Society

Red Text

CEA+

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A. Kaestner ’57 (4)S. McFarland ’81 (2)B. Tarantola ’81 (17)W. Weber ’55 (7)

DUDonorP. Birk ’14 W. Bradley ’54 (14)D. Caponi ’16 R. Nelson ’83 (27)S. Sportsman ’09 (3)D. Tesarek ’55 (12)

CEADonorK. Hartley ’80J. Kreutz ’99D. Livingston ’70T. Murray ’71D. Novak ’74W. Schoenhard ’71 (4)

NEBRASKAPresident’sTrust

T. Biggerstaff, Ph.D. ’63 (6)R. Loch ’54 (10)A. Sigerson ’93

President’sClubR. Campbell ’68 (18)R. Geisler ’62 (2)W. Krommenhoek’57 (40)R. Shively ’82 (31)D. Uttecht ’14 (2)

GoldenDeltaH. R. Douglass ’59 (8)J. Houchin ’85 (12) S. Killinger ’61 (2)M. Lutomski ’12 L. Million, Jr. ’53 (3)A. Pudenz ’14 (2)C. Reynolds ’13

SilverDeltaG. Fisk ’58R. Gustafson ’67 (2)R. Hirsch ’66 M. Humphrey ’63T. Jensen ’14 R. Lannin ’81 (13)R. Noble ’49 (2)G. Novotny, Jr. ’66 (4)C. Preisler ’16 R. Schmidt ’16 D. Spencer ’85 (4)J. Warrick ’59 (14)

DUDonorC. Bloedorn ’16C. Counts ’14 J. Frazier ’15R. Glover ’62 (4)S. Henning ’85 (11)R. Kubert ’15 (2)K. Leach ’85 (14)B. Lee ’74 (13)B. Nieveen ’13 W. Nuckolls ’51J. Poarch ’15T. Schnell ’89 R. Seline ’78 (4)J. Trenhaile ’13 K. Zwiener ’16

CEADonorJ. Moravec ’05

NEW YORKDUDonor

C. Hoover ’40 (34)

NORTH CAROLINAPresident’sTrust

J. DeBlasio ’62 (15)President’sClub

R. Coleman, III ’68 (5)C. Downton, III ’66 (16)R. Gray ’59 (8)J. Inscoe ’62 (2)W. Jobe ’63 W. Rose ’69 (26)E. Taff ’61 (25)G. Wessling ’74 (6)

GoldenDeltaR. Ayres ’65 (16)W. Crawford ’76 (15)J. Ely ’68 (2)

M. Fleming ’15 J. Fluet, Jr. ’65 (5)D. Heacock ’64 (2)C. Hoffman, Jr. ’75 J. Joyner, Jr. ’77 (26)S. McClanahan ’74 (18)J. Ruddell, Jr. ’71W. Snypes, Jr. ’70 (2)R. Swacker ’71 (3)

SilverDeltaJ. Allen ’73 (4)M. Baratta ’81 (20)E. Johnson ’55 D. Myrick ’65 (3)A. Subramanian, OD

’97 (16) CEA+K. Sullivan ’86 (18)R. Tower, Jr. ’61 (2)T. Yermack ’78

DUDonorO. Dillard ’62 (2)R. Fairey, Jr. ’80 (2)W. Kirkland ’65 (2)C. Pippert ’91 (8)C. Schumacher ’73 (2)

NORTH CAROLINA STATE

President’sTrustR. Taylor ’82 (9)P. Taylor ’89

President’sClubW. Taylor ’11

GoldenDeltaS. Warren ’14

SilverDeltaJ. Harke ’07 (4)J. White ’14

DUDonorW. Holloway ’14 B. Keller ’14 (2)S. Lo ’09 (2)B. Pack ’80 (11)S. Plummer ’13T. Stevens ’11 (2)S. Storey ’16B. Taylor ’13

NORTH DAKOTAPresident’sTrust

C. Campbell ’76 (3)R. Kirsch ’78

President’sClubW. Line ’07 (3)

GoldenDeltaP. Knoll ’84D. McLeod ’63 (21)R. Szczys ’69 (14)

SilverDeltaJ. Atkinson ’09 (7)D. Bruschwein ’74 (15)D. Dunham ’89 W. Harwood ’68 (3)D. Munski ’74 J. O’Grady ’71

DUDonorT. Balaban ’16T. Dolan ’72 (15)D. Finke ’74 (4)N. Herbst ’15 (2)S. Kahler ’14 J. Kappel ’12W. Karlstrom ’14 C. Mock ’08 (8)T. Richter ’14 D. Wehr ’09

NORTH DAKOTA STATE

President’sTrustC. Dworshak, Pharm. D.

’00 (12)SilverDelta

H. Hagen ’86 (10)DUDonor

S. Jordheim ’13 W. Lindseth ’13 W. Rogers ’13 (2)

NORTH FLORIDADUDonor

P. Jackson ’16M. Rios ’13M. Schulz ’14 (2)Z. Thomas ’09 (2)

NORTHERN COLORADO

President’sClubP. Gerhart ’04 (8)

NORTHERN ILLINOIS

President’sTrustJ. Lotsoff ’88 (26)W. Malloy III ’69 (8)

President’sClubA. Knox, CPA ’77 (15)E. Nosek ’85 (15)J. Rembusch ’66 (6)

GoldenDeltaJ. Chesko ’71 (2)L. Michna ’84 (15)G. Swanson ’66 (2)

SilverDeltaW. Tyler, Jr. ’65 (7)

DUDonorS. Borbely ’66 R. Cherry ’73 (4)J. Singelmann ’64

NORTHERN IOWAPresident’sTrust

J. Fuhrman ’94 (13)President’sClub

S. Anderson ’79 (32)B. Cory ’75 (6)

DUDonorM. Melcher ’92 (2)C. Nyguard ’91 (2)

NORTHWESTERNPresident’sTrust

P. Bridgford ’56 (7)J. Davis ’65 (12)R. Newman II ’59 (18)T. Rakow ’65 (9)C. Williams ’62 (9)

President’sClubC. Crowe, Jr. ’55 (11)N. Dhuna ’14 (2)H. Evert ’56 (14)J. Kakarakis ’42 J. Kraebber ’58D. Kramlich ’59 (14)J. D. Nelson ’63 (43)H. Stevens ’46 (12)

GoldenDeltaW. Boyd ’48 (15)H. Cakora ’59D. Costello ’54 (27)R. Countryman, Jr. ’50 (8)M. Darraugh ’76R. Grottke ’52 (18)J. Hamilton ’65 R. Horvath ’59 (6)K. Maher ’15S. Martin, Jr. ’56 (6)C. Norborg ’62 (4)S. Sullivan ’15 J. Tessler ’11R. White, Jr. ’52 (4)

SilverDeltaJ. Dorn ’54 (13)J. Karwath ’97 (5)D. Martens ’59 J. Montgomery ’43 (11)R. Van Vooren ’53 (12)

DUDonorE. Akemann ’62 (6)W. Anderson, Jr. ’53 R. Whisnant ’98 (4)

OHIOPresident’sTrust

S. Rowley ’65 (23)President’sClub

R. McDonald ’73 (8)

The chart above details the total assets of the DU Educational Foundation over the past six years. The DUEF acknowledges Bill Rappolt, Lafayette ’67, Chairman of the Investment Committee for his over-sight during some difficult economic times. On an annual basis the Foundation’s financial statements are audited by K.B. Parrish & Co. LLP of Indianapolis, Indiana. Copies of the 2012-2013 audited financial statements will be available upon request from Delta Upsilon Headquarters. *Unaudited

0

$1.0M

$2.0M

$3M

$4M

$4.5M

$3.5M

$2.5M

$1.5M

$500K

GoldenDeltaJ. Boeh ’80 H. Opperman ’65 (3)

SilverDeltaR. Hughes ’67 G. Logsdon ’62 (12)M. Logsdon ’64 (12)E. Paxton ’68 W. Spanfellner ’61 (24)J. Wills ’70 (4)W. Wright ’61 (12)

DUDonorK. Ellis ’ 14Z. Marion ’13M. McFadden ’13 W. McNutt ’63 (3)S. Randle ’13K. Smith ’10 (2)J. Weimer ’68

OHIO STATEPresident’sTrust

J. Pennings ’12E. Rensi ’90G. Weingardt ’55 (13)

President’sClubC. Lurding ’59 (9)

GoldenDeltaW. Ballinger, MD ’49 (10)W. Beck ’55S. Blozis ’80 (7)

W. Buchsieb ’51 (2)M. Odle, USAF

(Ret.)’56 J. Wingard ’63 (8)

SilverDeltaS. McCormick ’92 (21)B. Reagan ’78 (7)R. Reamer ’64R. Schieferstein ’66 (13)D. Veverka ’78 (4)T. Voght ’97 (16)W. Walker ’54 (11)

DUDonorR. Amatorio ’16 T. Hathhorn ’62E. Hein ’52 (1)T. Hoover ’56 (33)W. Kenyon ’16 A. Kimbrell ’99 (9)E. Kohler ’50D. Lancashire ’15A. Mate ’16L. Selvey ’48 (8)N. Wampler ’15

OKLAHOMAPresident’sTrust

T. Dowd ’75 (8) CEA+B. Walkingstick ’52

(41) CEA+A. Porter ’65

President’sClubR. Downey ’62 W. Hamilton, Ph.D.

’57 (11) A. Ochoa ’13 (3)M. Rupert ’74 (37)E. Waller ’51 (11)R. Wells ’82 (11)

GoldenDeltaG. Carr ’83 (17)R. Johannes ’61 G. Noland II ’86 (4)T. O’Bannon ’82 (17)D. Stussi ’77 (13) CEA+

SilverDeltaC. Coleman ’81 (10)C. Frymire ’79 (4)K. Hirsch ’74 (11)G. Layne ’15 H. McKee ’16 C. Payne ’98 CEA+H. Wilson ’55

DUDonorJ. Ammon ’10 (2)A. Cheves ’13 S. Fred ’12A. Loyd ’82 (2)J. Powers ’58 P. Rabb III ’80 A. Swift ’10

DELTAUPSILONEDUCATIONALFOUNDATIONTOTALASSETS

$3,410,114*

$4,358,356

$3,424,542

$2,854,679

$3,169,523

$3,676,169

2007-08 2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12 2012-13

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CEADonorJ. Choate ’66R. Cook ’79 (2) S. Cox ’92 (4) R. Croak ’63 (2) J. Funk ’75 (2) W. Grigsby ’77J. Hawkes ’63P. Jones ’84 (2) C. Long ’71 (2) M. McGarrah ’85 (2) F. Merrick, Jr. ’02 (2) R. Rodine ’73 (2) S. Snyder ’79 (2)

OKLAHOMA STATEPresident’sClub

J. Seals ’68 (6)

OREGONPresident’sTrust

M. Norman ’67 (3)J. Weisel, MD ’48 (32)

President’sClubJ. Allan ’53 (20)R. Davies ’49 (8)D. Greene ’99 (14)T. Mattson ’63 (43)B. M. Walsh ’64 (4)

GoldenDeltaJ. Ciatti ’64 (4)D. Donile ’95 (6)W. Duhaime ’50 (3)D. Kirtley ’63 (3)R. Price ’62J. Smith ’92 (15)

SilverDeltaE. Goffard ’49 (10)F. Lovell ’49 (4)G. Moulds ’64 (14)R. Watson ’71 (13)

DUDonorB. Anderson ’57 (25)F. Johnson ’55 (2)D. Mecklem ’53 (6)R. Newell ’65 (9)N. Pereira, Jr. ’62 (3)J. Trigg ’58 (14)

OREGON STATEPresident’sTrust

T. Durein ’92 (21)W. Harkey, USA (Ret.)

’71 (10)President’sClub

T. Bays ’42 (38)J. Duncan, Jr. ’00

GoldenDeltaK. Tuerffs ’13 (2)

SilverDeltaJ. Guess ’13 R. Van Anda ’14

DUDonorC. Cordoza ’06 R. Easter ’15A. Riley ’16 R. Smith ’95 (5)

CEADONORS. Carda ’85J. Graham ’65W. Pavitt III ’64J. Waymack ’71 (2)

PENNSYLVANIAPresident’sTrust

R. Marx ’54GoldenDelta

G. Curchin ’50 (12)A. Elseroad, Jr. ’53 (9)

SilverDeltaR. Canfield ’61 (9)R. McVay ’54 (8)B. Short ’91 (4)C. Stehman ’49 (4)

DUDonorJ. Beach ’62 (10)B. Blecherman ’82 (6)E. Gentino, Jr. ’50 (8)G. Graf, Jr. ’55 (25)J. R. Hall ’91 (2)S. Ma ’14 (2)V. Ngo ’15A. Noble ’51 (15)

PENNSYLVANIA STATE

President’sClubJ. Johnston ’58 (42)S. Wolcott, Jr. ’57 (3)R. Zakos, Jr. ’02 (12)

GoldenDeltaR. Baldwin ’57 (19)R. Crosby ’54 (12)A. Dahle ’14 W. Davidson ’59W. Kelly ’02 D. Merenda ’77 (16)

SilverDeltaB. Balderston ’76 (23)W. Bilohorka ’50L. Dash ’92 (21)R. Devon ’62J. Maher ’59 (2)R. Slayen ’15

DUDonorJ. Dubinsky, Sr. ’59 (9)Z. Dunlap ’14D. Fry ’14 (2)W. Haffner ’54 (4)C. Margolf ’50R. Noah ’57 K. Norton ’14T. Samuel II ’91 (4)P. Strittmatter ’50 (4)A. Thames ’15 R. Yeager ’96

PURDUEPresident’sTrust

R. Hegeman ’49 B. Lee, Jr. ’51 (16)F. Luber ’50

President’sClubB. Anderson ’65 (37)M. Bowen ’82 (3)J. Brennan, Jr. ’55 (33)W. Briscoe ’65 (8)R. Brown ’46 (23)T. Foote ’50 (33)F. Ford ’58 (4)C. Hoppe ’57 (8)E. Johnson ’58 (2)A. Lacis ’64 (29)R. LaFortune ’51 (42)R. Ricciardi ’94 (3)A. Steiger ’48 (12)R. Stewart ’49

GoldenDeltaL. Alexander ’45 (3)A. Chamberlain ’15 (2)R. Coble ’58 (2)G. Forszt ’72 (3)R. Gimlin ’42 (5)R. Hallman ’54 (42)J. Maddox ’15 M. Perez ’04 (2)N. Popham ’54 (15)J. Prickel ’15 W. Robinson ’98 (7)R. Tewksbury ’46 (2)

SilverDeltaR. Byrne ’68 (21)W. Cross ’44 R. Fox ’63 (14)E. Letts ’67 (13)G. Moss ’47 (34)M. Murrill ’01 R. Rhine ’77 (13)G. Riley ’15 (2)P. Schwartz ’00 (2)W. Shumaker ’55 (8)J. Smith ’52 (16)E. Stocker, Jr. ’48 (3)K. Trabue ’55 A. Voelker ’95 (15)N. Williams ’64

DUDonorM. Banks ’02 K. Baumel ’62 (13)D. Bielefeld ’61 (9)L. Bowler ’71 (2)J. DeVoll ’63 (13)D. Doyle ’03 (2)M. Grahovac ’13M. Guthrie, Jr. ’45 (4)M. Hogan ’85 (28)C. Houff ’53 (4)D. Martin ’82 (2)T. Miller ’14J. Murray ’13 (2)D. Parker ’13 A. Soni ’15T. Sordelet ’14B. Stayback ’15 J. Svehla IV ’14J. Sweeney ’64 (18)C. Vas ’16

RIPONSilverDelta

J. Beisner ’71 DUDonor

G. Rieder ’82 (4)

ROCHESTERPresident’sTrust

D. Reiner ’03 President’sClub

L. Bilker ’91 (4)A. Magistro ’60 (36)D. Reisfeld ’03 (12)S. Santandrea ’56 (11)

GoldenDeltaJ. Bassingthwaite ’92 (12)

SilverDeltaT. Barnes III ’66 (12)P. Rouff ’96 (18)R. Woods ’42 (18)

DUDonorP. Avakian ’55 (3)E. Garfield, Jr. ’53 (21)

J. Pomeranz ’65P. Ryan ’46 (4)B. Wilson ’14 (2)

RUTGERSPresident’sTrust

J. Herma ’70 (33)R. Moran ’72W. Symons ’66 (4)

President’sClubJ. David ’63 (2)B. Kramer ’62 (4)A. Malekoff ’73 (14)R. Stites ’53 (4)

GoldenDeltaR. Giaconia ’58 C. Hart ’54 (13)J. Miller ’60 (2)J. Nazzaro ’62 (13)

SilverDeltaC. Little ’60 (14)J. Strampfer ’72 (10)

DUDonorC. Adelizzi ’62 (19)A. Bolter ’56L. Cipriani, Jr. ’75 (7)D. Flores ’14J. Jacobs ’15 C. Laterza ’14 M. Lucciola ’14 K. Maher ’13 G. McLaren ’75 (4)B. Pullen ’58 (2)R. Templeton ’14 S. Tomaszewski ’14 B. Wolf ’14

SAN DIEGO STATEPresident’sClub

T. Darcy, CPA ’72 (11)B. Howard ’70 (11) CEA+

DUDonorJ. Chazen ’14 (2)S. Lewis ’96 (5)

CEADonorF. Becker ’69T. Deary ’13 (2) P. Fieri ’73L. Gable ’72A. Glaves ’81M. Hartell ’67 (4) V. Jeffery ’69 (3) M. Judd ’70 (3) J. Little IV ’72 (3) B. Lowder ’80 (3) K. Prestegard ’87L. Tapia ’86J. Turley ’69 (2) R. Zappelli, Jr. ’90

SAN FERNANDOSilverDelta

M. Donnelly ’68 (32)DUDonor

J. Phillips ’65

SAN JOSEPresident’sTrust

S. Yates ’55 (21)President’sClub

D. Aron ’89 A. Dunham, Ph.D. ’86 (8)J. Fields ’66 (5)T. Harney ’52 (13) CEA+D. Heagerty ’50

H. Jorgensen ’07 (5)P. Spooner ’55 (16)L. Sweeney, Jr. ’55 (4)J. Tormey, Jr. ’57 (14)

GoldenDeltaE. Bontadelli ’50 (14)B. Chambers ’88 D. Colby ’56 (15)

SilverDeltaJ. Agan ’57 (7)S. Borges ’56 (2)P. Kauffman ’11 (4)J. Moeller ’52 (2)L. Spolyar, Ph.D. ’52 (4)H. Thompson ’58 (7)

DUDonorR. Brady ’63 (16)B. Brown ’56 (16)K. Dickerson ’13 (2)A. Eisen ’14 R. Harder ’54 D. Notaro ’10 (7)W. Rus ’14 (2)

CEADonorJ. Fraser ’55 (3) J. Giacomazzi ’52C. Kamm ’57 (10) A. Lund ’55 (14) D. Madsen ’51D. Madsen ’66 (2)P. Ueberroth ’59

SANTA BARBARAPresident’sClub

R. LaFontaine ’91 (10)T. Sullivan ’95 (15)

SOUTH CAROLINAPresident’sTrust

T. Schmoyer, Jr. ’88 (18)President’sClub

F. Goolsby ’81 (11)R. Heroux, Jr. ’84 (7)J. Herron ’88 (26)GoldenDeltaM. Washburn ’91 (6)

DUDonorW. Anderson, Jr. ’84 (3)R. Howell IV ’13D. Weaver ’85

SOUTH DAKOTAPresident’sClub

P. Christiansen ’75 (6)DUDonor

P. Conlin ’80

SOUTHERN ILLINOIS

President’sClubD. Maguire ’73 (35)

DUDonorM. Carr ’73 (12)

SOUTHWEST TEXAS

GoldenDeltaC. Cantu, Jr. ’74 J. Keller ’73 (13)

ST. NORBERTGoldenDelta

J. Flanagan ’93 SilverDelta

C. Michalski ’99

DUDonorA. Dziewa ’15N. Reif ’15

STANFORDGoldenDelta

L. Chaffin, Jr. ’56 R. Flatland, Jr. ’46

SilverDeltaJ. Cusick ’51 (3)D. Cutter ’51 (43)J. Seeley ’59 (3)

DUDonorA. Cheney ’55P. Hearne ’60 (2)R. Smith ’59 (7)B. Wilson ’50 (25)

SWARTHMORESilverDelta

H. Bedolfe III ’74 (7)DUDonor

H. Bode, Jr. ’55 (6)B. Codell ’13R. Hall ’52 (11)S. Heiser ’72 (6)V. Jose ’44 (10)M. Meltzer ’06B. Snavely ’57 (4)

SYRACUSEPresident’sTrust

R. Broad ’60 (18)President’sClub

G. Caplan ’55 (6)J. Dytman ’71 (14)J. Freyer, Sr. ’61 (4)M. Jenney ’55 (9)G. Ludwig ’51 E. Shaw ’66 (6)A. Stauderman, Jr.

’58 (28)K. Stein ’83 (3)R. Thorpe ’60 (25)

GoldenDeltaR. Eckardt ’66 (5)J. Heider ’54 (14)R. Holland ’83 D. Robitaille ’82 (4)

SilverDeltaP. Bayer ’60 (2)D. Butts ’62 T. Finnell ’57 (35)M. Reiser ’68

DUDonorR. Damm ’58 J. Gold ’79 (2)W. Stark, Jr. ’47 (11)R. Terwilliger ’51 (2)

TECHNOLOGYPresident’sClub

J. Buell, Jr. ’56 (8)H. Crowther ’54 (12)E. Kavazanjian, Jr.

’73 (12)GoldenDelta

K. Bowman ’15 (2)H. Drab, Jr. ’69 (10)T. Johnson ’93 (2)D. Maurer ’78 (15)R. Wothe ’58 (4)

SilverDeltaC. Hagge, II ’57 (4)M. Huke ’65 (27)

$500+ ............. President’s Trust $200-$499 ...... President’s Club$100-$199 ...... Golden Delta$50-$99 .......... Silver Delta$1-$49 ............ DU Donor CEA Gift ........ CEA Donor

ANNUALGIVINGLEVELS ADDITIONALGIVING LIFETIMEGIVINGSOCIETIES

Donation of +$1000 to the Annual FundBrick Campaign DonorDonor gave to both the CEA and the Annual FundOak Circle Donor

$100,000+ ..... Dikia Upotheke Society $50,000 .......... Justice Society$25,000 .......... Culture Society$10,000 .......... Character Society $5,000 ............ Friendship Society

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The breadth of contributions made by DU members is something you don’t find at every Fraternity. Each day, notable alumni and students across the globe are contributing to make our world a better place. Whether it’s attending a regional leadership initiative, taking advantage of recruitment training, or participating in a global service opportunity, annual giving supports students through their living and learning experiences every day.

Most of the things that make Delta Upsilon unique — our history of non-secrecy, award winning educational programming, unflinching commitment to friendship and lifelong loyalty — are supported by private gifts from our close-knit community of alumni, parents, and friends. Areas of impact include:

LEADERSHIPINSTITUTESince 1948, the annual Delta Upsilon Convention &

Assembly has been included within what we now know as the Leadership Institute. For nearly 60 years and counting, the Leadership Institute has provided stellar educational programming to undergraduate and alumni members of Delta Upsilon.

PRESIDENTSACADEMYFirst instituted in 1995, Presidents Academy includes intense,

forward-thinking, and experiential educational programming for chapter presidents. The three-day conference is designed to assist these officers in their leadership and management function to help build a stronger Delta Upsilon.

BUILDINGBETTERMENWEEKENDS Building Better Men weekends are intensive weekend-

long retreats customized to meet the needs of a chapter. Senior fraternity staff facilitate the retreats, which focus on creating chapter buy-in to a shared plan of action.

LEADERSHIPCONSULTANTPROGRAMThis program was established to employ graduate members

of DU to serve as representatives of the Fraternity. The representatives are trained to assist chapter/colony members and alumni advisors to advance the principles of DU.

GLOBALSERVICEINITIATIVEThe Global Service Initiative offers members a unique

opportunity to engage in direct service in developing nations and regions of the world while uniting their actions with Delta Upsilon’s Four Founding Principles. Through an application process, members travel to, study in, and work with a community where social and economic conditions are substandard. They engage in a variety of cultural, educational, recreational, and reflective activities. Participants will roll up their sleeves to build or rebuild in areas, and engage in dialogue of social justice with other Delta Upsilon members.

CHAPTERSERVICESSUPPORTIHQ serves as a clearinghouse for an assortment of

educational manuals, videos, programming services, personnel resources and management tools. The Chapter Services department supervises the development and implementation of these educational resources.

EMERGINGLEADERS(DUEL)EXPERIENCELaunched at the 2000 Leadership Institute, the

DUEL Program is designed for our chapter’s newest members (freshmen and sophomores). Participants receive customized training in leadership philosophies, group dynamics, confrontation, service learning, public speaking, and motivation. The program is held near Williamstown, Massachusetts, where the participants experience the history and heritage of DU at the Fraternity’s founding site.

REGIONALLEADERSHIPACADEMYHeld in five major cities, RLA is designed to unite and assist

the chapters in officer training, sharing ideas and learning innovative membership and chapter leadership skills. DU continues to evaluate its personal growth and membership education curriculum tailored to all DU members.

MCQUAIDSCHOLARSHIPFUNDUndergraduate Scholarships and Graduate Fellowships

awarded annually to attend leadership conferences and to help further the education of those brothers who apply and are selected. The scholarships were established in 2000 to honor the service of Brother James D. McQuaid, Chicago ’60.

M. Hurst ’70 R. Mackintosh ’53 (5)S. Martin, Jr. ’50 (11)T. Norris ’16 K. Shimberg ’91 (3)J. Ward, Jr. ’92S. Wood ’69 (34)

DUDonorS. Balsbaugh ’54 (12)T. Hoffman ’87 (16)B. Jokubaitis ’16 R. LeBoeuf ’88 (25)C. McCracken ’76 (2)R. Moore ’92T. Nowak, Jr. ’71 (5)Z. Swanson, Ph.D. ’71 (5)D. Warren, Jr. ’76 (2)B. Xiao ’15 (2)

TENNESSEEPresident’sClub

D. Cowe ’73 (4)

T. Knies ’71 (10)D. Mouron, Jr. ’77 (11)

GoldenDeltaD. Myers ’74 (33)

SilverDeltaP. Freesh ’70 K. Snyder ’94 (9)

TEXASPresident’sTrust

J. Allums ’59 (11)President’sClub

J. Cassell, Jr. ’70 (37)J. Gresham ’71 (10)M. Mitchell ’65 (43)A. Polser, Jr. ’65 (43)

GoldenDeltaH. Adams, Jr. ’88 (8)L. Waters ’73 (35)

SilverDeltaJ. Dunlap ’73 (35)W. Nelson ’59 (11)

W. Tibbitts III ’61 (24)J. Whitehill ’74 (3)J. Word ’68 (9)

TORONTODUDonor

M. Economopoulos ’93 (11)

A. Jamal ’14 E. te Boekhorst ’15

TUFTSPresident’sClub

J. Fonda ’51 (4)GoldenDelta

J. Doll ’15 M. Luciani ’15 D. Morse ’42 (43)

SilverDeltaC. Erickson ’64 (11)E. Parker ’13 D. Picard ’81 M. Slaven ’78

DUDonorE. Casabian, Jr. ’64 (16)D. Lambert ’14 (2)M. McCarthy ’94

UNIONPresident’sClub

W. Hesse ’49 (4)GoldenDelta

R. Corbin ’62 J. Gardeski ’51 (16)J. Greve ’51 (4)R. Jarrett ’51 (2)K. Merz ’69 M. O’Meara, Jr. ’50

SilverDeltaN. Botsford, Jr. ’54 (25)

DUDonorB. Bonanno, MD ’77 D. Cate ’62 (16)R. Obremski ’59 (12)J. Thompson ’76 (3)

VIRGINIAPresident’sClub

W. Brookhart ’71 (27)N. Frazier, Jr. ’99 (12)

GoldenDeltaJ. Cook ’14 (2)W. Reusing ’62 (3)

SilverDeltaM. Ashbury, Jr. ’54 (27)D. Barbour ’77 (25)R. Hoak ’15 B. Rice ’57 (2)A. Saufley ’54 (26)

DUDonorG. Ferrell ’70 (13)M. Minneman ’11 T. Neale ’74 (6)W. Updike ’63 (2)

WASHINGTONPresident’sTrust

R. Fagan ’52 (16)

S. Iezman ’70 B. Raskin ’85 (4)R. Stewart ’64 (4)P. Tuohy ’53 (13)

President’sClubJ. Aitken ’70 (11)K. Carlton ’86 (12)L. Dam ’68 (8)J. Eyler ’69 (34)D. Habib ’86 (10)M. Iverson ’48 (2)K. Kaneta ’59 (43)R. LaBerge ’87 (15)R. Martin ’59 (43)D. Ravander ’86 (14)W. Smith, Jr. ’70

GoldenDeltaR. Amick ’63 D. Baer ’82 (15)B. Elfers ’92 (21)G. Harris ’71 (19)W. Henderson ’59 (7)

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FOUNDATIONGIFTSJuly 1, 2012 – June 30, 2013

$1,232,845*

T. Hendrickson ’67 (4)B. Keen ’50 (18)T. McKay, MD ’50

SilverDeltaA. Coombs ’13 B. Fortier ’87 (12)I. Hastings, CPCU ’56 V. Martin ’66 (7)

DUDonorT. Bowman ’15 P. Duffy VIII ’14 S. Fisher ’87F. Hunkins ’89 (3)E. Larson ’15 K. Mackey ’77 (14)K. Maley ’16G. McHale ’13 A. Pieris ’15 M. Reynolds ’13 R. Robinson ’59 (3)T. Turner ’15

WASHINGTON & LEEPresident’sClub

J. Smith ’62 SilverDelta

G. W. Whitehurst ’50 (15)

DUDonorJ. Hess ’60 (13)L. Lawrence ’59 (30)

WASHINGTON STATE

President’sTrustJ. Simpkins ’81 (13)

President’sClubJ. Preece ’87 G. Studle ’57 (42)

GoldenDeltaD. Gusseck, Ph.D. ’63 (2)J. Lehmann ’79 (3)

SilverDeltaJ. Clark ’01 (3)D. Hagen VIII ’13 D. Hambelton ’75 (12)H. Jones ’15 A. Lathrop ’14 (2)

DUDonorB. Lawrence ’15

CEADonor B. Anderson ’95 (2) K. Chomentowski ’94H. Gauthier, Ph.D. ’81A. Hall ’91E. Marble ’58T. Marker ’81 (2) T. Martin ’89 (2) R. McKinlay ’77 (2) K. Moe ’79 (2) N. Rundhaug ’03R. Snyder ’88 (2) J. Stubb ’87 D. Uyeda ’91

WEBSTERDUDonor

K. McWilliams ’11 (5)

WESTERN ILLINOISPresident’sClub

S. La Buda ’88 (18)GoldenDelta

J. Nevel ’00 (13)

SilverDeltaR. Gruenig ’85 (15)Z. Zubka ’15

DUDonorS. Brown ’86 M. Egan ’12 E. Leiterman ’16 D. Markwell ’15

WESTERN MICHIGAN

GoldenDeltaJ. Campbell, Jr. ’62 (2)J. Frego ’64 (2)D. Pew ’63 (4)V. Sutherland ’57 (14)

SilverDeltaD. Kanemori ’66 (41)J. Wagner ’58

DUDonorJ. Klarr, Esq. ’75

WESTERN ONTARIO

President’sClubD. Rudd ’51 (8)

DUDonorP. Campisi V ’14 (2)D. Gracey ’57 K. Hay ’56 J. Kuracina ’13

WESTERN RESERVEPresident’sClub

T. Diego ’66 K. Friis ’09 (2)R. Tinsley ’87 (2) CEA+

SilverDeltaP. Barratt ’69 (7)C. Cookson ’51 (8)W. Frederick, Jr. ’69 (6)W. Howard ’75 (3)S. Marshall ’87 (10)R. Soltis ’81 (2)

DUDonorC. Bizga, Jr. ’69 (4)W. Cotton ’77 (3)J. Heintz ’39 (2)J. Hilty ’13 (3)P. Kaluszyk ’73 (13)J. Kendel ’59 (17)G. Kish ’63 G. Powers ’54 (3)J. Roberts ’14 R. Sacks ’09M. Valentine ’14

WICHITAPresident’sClub

J. Adams ’04 (12)GoldenDelta

G. Butts ’60 (11)J. Little ’58 (17)W. Loyd ’77 (2)

SilverDeltaG. Roberson ’14 (2)C. Trammell II ’68 (7)

DUDonorA. Coyan ’13 C. Davis ’15 T. Hockenberry ’14B. Hundley ’14 B. Myers ’06 C. Scannapieco ’14 (2)

F. Schneider ’08 (8)R. Scull ’55 (9)A. Shreves ’15 A. Tilden ’13 (2)M. Wedel ’12 (3)N. Weidner ’04 (4)

WILLIAMSPresident’sClub

D. McDonald ’50 (10)SilverDelta

J. Pilgrim ’60 (12)DUDonor

J. Gepson ’65 (11)O. Svenson, Jr. USMC

’50 (23)

WILMINGTONPresident’sTrust

D. Cole ’72 (3)DUDonor

J. Stasios ’70 (2)

WISCONSINPresident’sTrust

W. Nesbitt ’76 (34)President’sClub

D. Fohr ’73 (7)R. Godfrey ’54 (11)J. Harris ’72 (25)J. Harden ’59 (16)C. Herro ’43 (16)E. Hipke ’56 (19) R. Jacobus ’51 (32)D. Meyers ’77 (2)M. Mueller ’82 (7)L. Seno ’71 (7)B. Shaw, Jr. ’67 (2)R. Walcisak ’74 (8)

GoldenDeltaR. Allman ’58 (4)M. Baer ’80 (13)G. Day, Jr. ’70 (2)S. Miller ’70 (13)D. Vinson ’59 (33)J. Wingstrom ’57D. Yenerich ’82 (15)

SilverDeltaP. Laper ’68 (24)R. McLimans, Ph.D.

’68 (13)S. Mendlinger ’14 (2)R. Salzwedel ’62 G. Sirotkin ’41 C. Thomas ’59 (12)R. Thompson ’67 (12)

DUDonorT. Coogan ’58 (7)W. Morrisey ’43 C. Roup ’67 (10)J. Sippl, Jr. ’70 (3)F. Trubshaw ’43

FRIENDS OF DUPresident’sTrust

N. BortonK. JohnsonM. McRee, Ph.D.M. MoreyA. Tenney, Jr.C. T. &. M. M.

Thompson FoundationJ. E. Walden

President’sClubDudley J. Godfrey, Jr.

1996 TrustL. Finney The Giving CampaignR. Grindel (2)C. KoevenerM. MarchandMile High United WayH. PikeK. Schendel (2)

GoldenDeltaArcher Daniels

Midland CompanyJ. CompauDigital Pix &

Composites, LLC First Data FoundationLaird Norton Real

Estate, LLC (2)M. Sopher

SilverDeltaJ. DiSarroN. DowGE Foundation (2)The Snook Family TrustT. SullivanUBSM. E. Watts

DUDonorJ. AndersonBank of America

Charitable FoundationK. EastonV. HunterH. KirkM. Lawrence (2)PepsiCo Foundation (2)M. Robinson M. SamuelsJoe Volkman Living

Trust (2)CEADonor

ARC Rehabilitation Services

K. BocoxR. Taitch (2)

CHAPTER FUNDRAISING

President’sTrustAlberta ChapterBoise State Chapter (2)Bradley Chapter (2)Bucknell ChapterCarthage Chapter (2)Chattanooga ChapterDePauw Chapter (2)Elon ChapterIowa ColonyIowa State Colony (2)

Kansas Chapter (2)Kansas State Chapter (2)Kent State ChapterLafayette Chapter (2) CEANebraska Chapter (2)North Carolina State

Chapter (2)North Dakota Chapter (2)Oklahoma Chapter (2) Oregon State Chapter (2)Pennsylvania State ChapterPurdue ChapterQuinnipiac ColonyRutgers Chapter (2)San Diego State Chapter (2)San Jose Chapter (2)South Carolina ChapterWashington ChapterWestern Ontario Chapter

President’sClubLehigh Chapter (2)Louisville Chapter

GoldenDeltaCentral Florida ChapterJames Madison Colony Ohio State Chapter (2)Sacred Heart ColonyWestern Reserve Chapter

SilverDeltaCarnegie Colony (2)

CEADonorOptimum Chirocare

35% Annual Appeal

62% Chapter Educational

Accounts

3% Other

Restriced Gifts

$500+ ............. President’s Trust $200-$499 ...... President’s Club$100-$199 ...... Golden Delta$50-$99 .......... Silver Delta$1-$49 ............ DU Donor CEA Gift ........ CEA Donor

ANNUALGIVINGLEVELS ADDITIONALGIVING LIFETIMEGIVINGSOCIETIES

Donation of +$1000 to the Annual FundBrick Campaign DonorDonor gave to both the CEA and the Annual FundOak Circle Donor

$100,000+ ..... Dikia Upotheke Society $50,000 .......... Justice Society$25,000 .......... Culture Society$10,000 .......... Character Society $5,000 ............ Friendship Society

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The ideal weather foretold a perfect Centennial Celebration for about 150 DUs and guests in Ames on September 20-21, as we reinstalled the Iowa State Chapter and celebrated the start of DU’s second century at ISU.

From the time alumni started arriving Friday through the last songs early Sunday morning, it was an event that no one wanted to end.

We began formally, at our wonderfully restored college home at 117 Ash Avenue. There, Chief Marshal Jami Larson ’74 (Chapter Advisor and Ames city councilman), and Examiner Tom Hansen ’79 (former DU Executive Director) conducted Rite I of Initiation, as we prepared to add 52 new members to our ranks. Assembled before the dining room fireplace featuring the airplane propeller memorial to Mark Middlekauff 1916, the candidates made their declarations and signed the roll book as 1,625 men had done before them.

Saturday morning found us at ISU’s new Alumni Center where we entertained about 50 DU alumni and another 50 family and guests for a reception before Rite II, with Steve Smith ’73, at the piano. Chaplain Herb Harmison, ’56 (retired Director of Engineering Placement for ISU), and Master Craig Foss ’71 (past president of the ISU Alumni Association), joined Brothers Larson and Hansen on the Initiation team.

One highlight was a stirring Charge from Speaker Bernard Franklin, Kansas State ’75, who related how DU sought him out as a man who, like their members, sought to make the most of himself, which he did, heading KSU’s student government, becoming the youngest chairman ever of the Kansas State Board of Regents at age 28, and much more. He challenged the new initiates to do their very best in every aspect of life at Iowa State and beyond.

When Brother Foss administered the Oath of Initiation and declared that the candidates were now members of Delta Upsilon Fraternity, our chapter was revived and the DU flag now flies over Ames once again.

Sam Kammermeier ’14, president of the newest chapter of DU, thanked the Fraternity, alumni and guests, swore in the Executive Board, and with other officers, accepted the DU flag, Ritual, roll books and copies of fraternity histories on behalf of the chapter. We are thankful for the arrangements for the Re-Installation from Delta Upsilon headquarters, ably conducted by our own Colin Finn ’05 and Mark Gehrke, Boise State ’10, who was also the DU staff member heading up the re-colonization effort beginning in 2011.

There were two wonderful nods to history after a great brunch at 117 Ash. Dick Frink ’51, son of Founder Gale Frink 1915, and nephew of Founder Ralph Reuling 1914, told 100 or so guests how he bought the chapter a replacement charter in the 1980s after a fire slightly damaged the original charter, on condition that the original be sent to him for restoration, safekeeping and presentation to the chapter at an appropriate occasion. Our Centennial Celebration was certainly appropriate, and the 1913 charter, properly framed with a plaque noting Brother Frink’s work, again hangs at 117 Ash.

Then came dedication of a plaque outside the front door, with Romey Thompson ’72, State Curator of the Iowa State Historical Society, explaining the process which led to 117 Ash being listed on the National Register of Historic Places, a key part of its renovation under the leadership of Brother Larson and other investors in 117 Ash LLC during the past four years. The front lawn also served as the perfect setting for lingering conversations among alumni and guests,

Iowa State Celebrates Re-Installation and Centennial Back at HomeTom Hansen, Iowa State ’79

(Top) The newly initiated Iowa State brothers pose together before heading into the initiation ceremony. (Bottom) Iowa State brothers during the initiation ceremony. Photos courtesy of Erin N. Fernandes.

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several of whom travelled to Ames just for the initiation and afternoon ceremonies. Tours of the house and of campus were another hit.

The day was capped off by a banquet for almost 150 at the Alumni Center, bedecked with group photos from every decade and a display of historic material coordinated by Don Larew ’63. New DUs Kyle Ticer ’16 and Matt Brueggen ’14 assembled photos from early and recent history, and from undergraduate achievements over the past two years.

A key partner in DU’s revival has been having 117 Ash host the ISU Entrepreneurship and Innovation Learning Community (EILC) which includes mostly DU members, as well as other students. Judy Eyles, Program Coordinator for the ISU Pappajohn Center for Entrepreneurship and DU’s Faculty Advisor, explained how the EILC and the DU revival grew together and shaped the lives of so many undergraduates. She brought a tear to more than a few eyes in the room when she concluded that while DU had been attracting many solid men, “it’s clear that you now have the best men on campus.”

The program featured presentations on Colonnades and chapter history from Brothers Hansen and Kyle Solberg ’11, on the renovation of 117 Ash by Brother Larson, and on the coming Centennial Campaign by John Carson ’73.

It was Brother Carson’s pleasant task to report that pledges for almost two-thirds of the $1.25 million campaign goal have already been received. The campaign got another shot in the arm from Ernie “E.T.” Marshall ’48, who provided the group with a CD of ISU DU’s in the 1940s singing some favorite DU songs, and word of a substantial gift from Brother Marshall for the campaign.

Brother Franklin spoke again, noting that he wished he had come up from Kansas City on Friday evening instead of Saturday morning, so that he could have spent more time learning from our newest DU brothers about what it took to revive the Iowa State Chapter and about their plans and dreams for the future. Then came cakes with 100 candles for the chapter’s actual Centennial on December 6th, and a surprise cake for Brother Larson who was celebrating his own birthday the day of DU’s big Centennial Celebration.

With the clock nearing 10:00 pm, and a few guests needing to hit the road, the rest of the group lingered at the Alumni Center for a time, then dispersed to a number of Ames watering holes, where a large assortment of DU songs could be heard breaking through the long brotherly conversations that carried on well past midnight.

And so we marked the entrance to our second century at Iowa State, from turn-of-the-century friendships that grew into the Colonnades Society in 1905, and then the Iowa State Chapter in 1913. May each of us pause this December

6th, when our second century truly begins, and raise a glass to our constant efforts “to cultivate those sentiments which should ever exist between brothers,” those with us today and those gone before.

(Top) Iowa State alumni gather outside the chapter house following the re-installation ceremony. (Bottom) The newest Iowa State Associate Member class gathered for a photo, donning their blue and gold ribbons, following their initiation ceremony.Photos courtesy of Erin. N. Fernandes.

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The brothers of the Oklahoma Chapter received quite the welcome home present, as they kicked off the fall 2013 semester with the completion of Phase 1 of their $1.32 million renovation of their chapter house.

Phase 1 of the renovation included a full transformation of the second and third floor living quarters of the house. Included in those renovations were a new roof; fire sprinkler and alarm system; new fire exits and bringing the fire stair up to current code; controlled access door security system; new windows; renovated second floor bathroom; new laundry room; new electrical, plumbing and heat and air systems; high-speed, wireless internet; and reconfigured rooms, most with separate study areas, complete with new bedroom and study room furniture.

Additionally, limited first floor remodeling included a newly reconfigured two-story foyer, renovated dining room with new tables, new kitchen floor and countertops, as well as a new living room floor. Some of the exterior improvements included new fencing, paint, renovated asphalt parking lot and landscaping.

“The improvements to the house were great, from the entryway to the dining hall, to the remodeled rooms. It gives the members and alumni a house to be very proud of,” said Mike Colvin ’97.

In celebration of the new renovations, the chapter rededicated their house on August 1, 2013. Over 250 brothers, DU parents and guests attended the event. Both undergraduates and alumni were said to have been beaming with pride. “Every undergraduate member I saw at the dedication had a smile on his face. They were so proud of how the renovated house looked, and you could see the impact,” said Ameil Shadid ’01.

A proud moment for undergraduate and alumni brothers was sharing in the excitement of the 56 new associate members who had just finished their recruitment process. Using the new facility as the centerpiece, brothers aimed to recruit new members who understood what a privilege living in the new house would be. “The pride of having something no other house can offer is one of the main reasons we were able to sign such great men,” said Vice President of Recruitment, Colin Jones ’15.

But the renovations are still not complete, and only the first of the two-phase project is finished. The chapter is looking to raise another $675,000 to fund the entire $2 million project, by completing the necessary infrastructure improvements to the main level of the house and exterior.

“I’m excited to see the next phase of improvements after seeing the almost unrecognizable DU house after the Phase 1 renovation. These improvements will most certainly have a positive impact on current and future DU members,” said Matt Seddelmeyer ’07.

Oklahoma Chapter Celebrates $1.3 Million Renovation with House Rededication

(Top to Bottom) The exterior of the newly renovated Oklahoma chapter house; Alumni on the sport court;Dick Rodine ’73, Phil Hurley ’64, Charlie Floyd ’02 and Brent Rodine ’01; Alumni from the 2003 Associate Member class.

“Therenovationwasimpressiveandtheundergraduateswereevenmoreimpressive.OklahomaDUshaveabrightfutureasIseeit.”

Steve Cox, Oklahoma ’92

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AlbertaClare Drake, British Columbia ’50, has

been recognized with Order of Canada Honour. Drake was initiated into the British

Columbia Chapter, and eventually came to the University of Alberta for a further degree. He and the Alberta Chapter have embraced in brotherhood since. An excellent athlete in his own right, Brother Drake coached track and football, and earned his greatest fame as the University of Alberta hockey coach. His team won 17 Canada West titles and six national championships. The hockey arena on campus is named the Clare Drake Arena. He served as coach of the Edmonton Oilers and later had specialized coaching roles with the Winnipeg Jets and Los Angeles Kings.

Drake is known to former players as the “Coaches Coach” because of his talent, patience and sense of timing. Several players went on to the National Hockey League. In December 1985, Coach Drake was recognized by Sports Illustrated for coaching the University of Alberta football and hockey teams, to concurrent National Championships. This is an achievement not likely to ever happen again.

Cornell In 2008, more than 125 alumni attended

the Decade of the 70’s Homecoming Weekend, boasting one of the biggest homecoming

celebrations to date. That is, until this year. This year, Cornell hosted an All Decades, All DUs Homecoming Weekend, including over 200 alumni!

LafayetteMarkus Dubischar, associate professor

of foreign languages and literature, is the recipient of the Lafayette College Delta

Upsilon Distinguished Mentoring and Teaching Award. This award was established in 2000 by alumni of the Lafayette Chapter on the 115th anniversary of its founding. It recognizes members of the faculty for distinctive and extraordinary teaching through mentoring, which may include advising, undergraduate research, independent study or any of the many one-on-one mentoring activities that take place in a student-centered learning environment.

LouisvilleThe chapter’s 2013 homecoming reunion

took place at the University Club on campus. A reunion reception and dinner followed,

honoring brothers from the 1950s. A dance concluded the evening.

PurdueBe sure to save the date for the Purdue

Delta Upsilon 100th Anniversary Celebration! The anniversary festivities are

scheduled for June 20-22, 2014 at the Shively Club at Ross Ade Stadium. So far, the space has been booked for Saturday night of the big weekend, and further plans are in the works. Room blocks have been reserved at the Union Club Hotel and the Hilton Gardens. Be on the lookout for future announcements.

ALUMNI NEWS

Brothers of the Western Ontario Chapter with Brother Alan Thicke ’67, and his son, Carter, in front of their chapter house.

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San Diego StateBrother George Lee Marshall ’71 has written

a text book about the history of television in America. The book reads like a novel and walks

the reader through mid-20th Century America.

Brother Rick Tigner ’84, made an appearance on the TV show, Undercover Boss, as he is the CEO of Kendall Jackson.

Western Ontario Alan Thicke ’67, of the television show

Growing Pains, made an appearance to his alma mater, bringing his son, Carter.

Brother Thicke shared some stories about the good ol’ days, and left current members impressed by his charm.

Please notify the Fraternity of deceased brothers or any errors in the list. Memorial gifts may be directed to the Delta Upsilon Educational Foundation at the same address or online at www.duef.org.

Delta Upsilon 8705 Founders RoadIndianapolis, IN [email protected]

Alpha & OmegaAlbertaDouglas P. Love ’46Kenneth E. Machon ’61James D. Paterson ’51Frank E. Smith ’60ArkansasJoseph D. Cripps ’78Bowling GreenGus Grozdon ’50BradleyRichard M. Davidson ’53George E. Field ’50Richard C. Tringali ’51CaliforniaStephen K. Jones ’55Robert D. Kayser, MD. ’46CarnegieJohn C. Vassil ’52Hugh D. Young ’52ClarksonJames R. Stein, PE. ’68ColbyRaymond W. Deltz ’49ColoradoWilliam F. Drum, Jr. ’61ColumbiaGeorge A. Delatush ’39CornellCarmine W. DiGiacomo ’63Robert O. Safford ’56DePauwByron E. Wise ’36Eastern KentuckyDavid V. Smith ’79FloridaRobert D. Moore ’61HarvardWilliam F. Spang ’38IllinoisKeith R. Ulatoski ’76Richard S. Winton ’58IndianaCarl F. Henthorn ’39Edward A. Roth ’52Gordon R. Sinning ’69Stephen M. Waller ’48

IowaMaurice A. Mahoney ’42Iowa StateRobert J. Byse ’60Harry S. Carl, Jr. ’49Chester H. Danielson ’47Aldie E. Johnson, Jr. ’47Scott E. Kinkade ’75Paul R. Larson ’47Johns HopkinsCarl F. Geigle ’35Kenneth H. Grim ’44Richard E. Richardson ’50KansasWade D. Abels, AIA ’51John F. Elliott ’50J. Edmund Lister ’75Kent StateLt. Col. Irving Gersten, USA (Ret.) ’61JJ Marino ’09Victor D. Ragon ’54William F. Rummell ’53Henry T. Webber ’59LafayetteRobert G. Ernst, Jr. ’48LehighFrank P. Eisinger, Jr. ’48Ralph S. Frymoyer, Jr. ’47LouisvilleHarold V. Bomar, Jr. ’49Walter F. Hamilton ’58ManitobaBarry J. Gunn ’70MiamiWilliam S. Armington ’47John W. Ault ’46Kurt C. Becker ’48Umberto A. Carbone ’48Richard K. Cover ’43Richard C. Erd ’46Chester H. Lohr ’53Chester C. Lucido, III ’86Robert P. Lytle ’33Don M. Maddox ’44William V. McGory ’49Wilford H. McLain, Jr. ’44Andrew Mitzo ’49James E. Poth ’55Ralph D. Preble ’59Eugene F. Rausch ’38Raymond Ray ’38John R. Vintilla ’46

MichiganF. Eugene Guire ’50Donald h. Treadwell ’40Michigan StateJames C. Saylor ’57Elwood M. Stock ’59MiddleburyPhilip H. Dunham ’45MissouriDan McKinnon ’56John R. Samuelson ’72NebraskaRichard D. McConnell ’42North Carolina StateJohn M. Taylor ’03North DakotaMichael F. Archbold ’67NorthwesternArthur E. Barnes, MD. ’55Clifford A. Graybill, Jr. ’47William N. Guthrie ’52James L. Hamilton ’65James F. Kakarakis ’42Richard B. Schultz ’54Ohio StateJames T. Lynn, Jr. ’43Richard D. Risser ’66James C. Shaw ’49OklahomaA. M. Morrison ’46Oklahoma StateMark A. Crawford ’80OregonR. A. Munnecke ’63PennsylvaniaCharles S. Biggs, III ’55Joseph Yuhasz ’15Pennsylvania StateRobert D. Bair ’56Vincent J. Cavanaugh ’51Richard W. Greenleaf ’63Michael J. Karboski ’46PurdueDonald K. Bell ’62Clyde W. VonGrimmenstein ’49RutgersNeil S. McIlhenny ’73Richard F. Nace ’51

San JoseRobert S. Barmettler ’49Donald N. Brainard ’52Richard K. Jewell ’51Gary P. Kankel ’64Richard S. Pike ’58Henry J. Tonini, Jr. ’48Donald K. Wacker ’52StanfordJoseph D. Cusick ’51SwarthmoreEdward K. MacFarlane ’57SyracuseWilliam G. Kagler ’54William F. Laidlaw ’59David G. Palmer, USAF ’51TexasJames A. Peters ’54TuftsFrank H. Conrad ’50WashingtonGifford S. Blyton ’32Robert C. Heston ’50Washington StateFred L. Bess ’74WisconsinJohn A. Clemens ’54Lorin M. Heimerl ’51Donald W. Paape ’53Thomas F. Raemisch ’58Thomas J. Sillers ’54Western ReserveKenneth M. Hinson ’48Joseph A. Howard, Jr. ’51Robert G. Nemec ’49James R. Ulrich ’48Patrick S. Zabaldo ’55

Notices received at Fraternity Headquarters between February 19, 2013 and October 1, 2013.

ALUMNI NEWS

Page 44: DU Quarterly: Volume 132, Vol. 1

Delta Upsilon International Fraternity Inc.8705 Founders RoadIndianapolis IN 46268

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POSTAGE PAIDBolingbrook, ILPermit No. 374

Change of Address?Contact Delta Upsilon International Headquarters at the address shown above, call 317-875-8900 or or email information to: [email protected]. Please include your full name, chapter and graduation year.

Parents: Your son’s magazine is sent to his home address while he is in college. We encourage you to review it. If he is not in college and is not living at home, please send his new permanent address to: [email protected].

Name: ______________________________________________________Address: ____________________________________________________City: ____________________________ State: _________ZIP_________Phone: _______________________ Email: ________________________ Chapter: ______________________ Graduation Year: _______________

We change men who

This fall, why not make a commitment to Building Better Menand ensure the future of our Fraternity?

The Delta Upsilon Educational Foundationis proud to announce the establishment of the1834Society.Thisfirst-ever society recognizesthosebrotherswhochoosetomakeagiftwithamonthlycommitmentof$18.34throughacreditcardpaymenttotheAnnualLoyaltyFund.

WE ARE LOOKING FOR MEN OF MERIT.

JointodayandbecomeapartoftheFraternity’s leadership andhistoryatwww.duef.org

On the evening of November 4, 1834, 30students, ten men from each of the threeclasses at Williams College met in theFreshmanRecitationRoom inWestCollegeandformedthesocialfraternityknowntodayasDeltaUpsilonInternationalFraternity.

1834 SOCIETY“All good men and true.”

A new era had begun.

change the world.