First Lou Gehrig Memorial Award Given to Alvin Dark

From The Scroll, January 1956

Brother Alvin Dark, Louisiana State ’45, is the first winner of the Lou Gehrig Memorial Award, which the General Council authorized in August 1953.

The award is to be given annually by Phi Delta Theta to the major league baseball player who, both on and off the field, best exemplifies the character of Lou Gehrig, Columbia ’25, who played in 2,143 games as a member of the New York American League Baseball Club.

George M. Trautman, Ohio State 1914, president of the National Association of Professional Baseball Leagues, heads the all-Phi committee, which made the selection for the 1956 recipient.

Dark, the star shortstop of the New York Giants, has had a brilliant major league career. His name will be entered on a permanent plaque, the location of which will be announced later.

Each player will receive a smaller plaque with a similar design as his permanent possession. Other players considered for the first award are Yogi Berra, Jerry Coleman, George Kell, Bill Klaus, Ted Kluszewski, Stan Musial, Jim Pearsall, Wally Post, Pee Wee Reese, Robin Roberts, Mickey Vernon, and Ted Williams. The time and place of the award to Brother Dark will be determined at his convenience.

Brother Trautman said, “The plaque will be eighteen inches in width and twenty-five inches in depth. It will carry a likeness of Brother Gehrig, a brief explanation of the award, and, at the bottom, the words “Dedicated by his brothers of Phi Delta Theta.”

After being traded from the Detroit Tigers to the St. Louis Cardinals, the award presentation to Alvin Dark was eventually made at Busch Stadium by Purdue University President Frederick L. Hovde, Minnesota ’29, and George M. Trautman. The St. Louis Alumni Club took advantage of this Phi Delta Theta Day at the ballpark to sponsor a rush party at the game. About one hundred undergraduate Phis and alumni attended.


Robert J. Miller Begins Service as Executive Secretary

From the November 1955 edition of The Scroll

Robert J. Miller, New Mexico ’50, was officially named Executive Secretary of Phi Delta Theta by the General Council at its meeting in Oxford on August 17, 1955. He had been acting in that capacity since the sudden death of Paul C. Beam on July 6.

Thus Bob succeeds the man he went to Oxford to aid on June 11, 1951. At that time, he was named Assistant Executive Secretary, a position he held until he was appointed Administrative Secretary in July 1954. He becomes the Fraternity’s third Executive Secretary, the office having been held previously only by Arthur R. Priest and Brother Beam.

A native of Mansfield, Ohio, Miller attended high school in that city and entered Heidelberg College in 1944. A tour of duty as an Air Force cadet followed his freshman year, and when he returned to college in 1947, he transferred to the University of New Mexico. Phi Delta Theta had just established a chapter on this campus the year before, and Bob became the fiftieth signer of the New Mexico Alpha Bond when initiated on February 15, 1948. From this time until his graduation in 1950, he is reported to have earned the title of ‘Second Founder’ of the chapter, holding no less than five chapter offices, including a double hitch as president, and attending both the 47th and 48th General Conventions in Oxford and Chicago, respectively.

As an undergraduate, he was active in campus as well as chapter affairs, earned a B average, and election to Phi Delta Theta, education honorary.

Having decided on a career in school administration, Brother Miller entered the New Mexico graduate school in the autumn of 1950 to work for his master’s degree. When the call came from Phi Delta Theta the following June, he transferred his credits to Miami University and received his MA in the 1951 summer session.

Bob is married to the former Jerri Ann Burran, a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma at New Mexico. They have a son, Robert J. Jr., born March 12, 1954.

During his five years of internship, Bob visited every nook and corner of the realm of Phi Delta Theta and was responsible for straightening out many problems that arose in the chapters. In the last two years, particularly, he had extensive experience in administering the work of General Headquarters. Bob has also been active in interfraternity and has won the respect and esteem of his many friends in the CFSA.

The Fraternity suffered a great loss in the untimely death of Paul Beam, but it is fortunate in having a brother of Bob Miller’s ability, experience, and love of Phi Delta Theta to succeed him.


Robert J. Miller ended up serving Phi Delta Theta in the executive vice president role for forty years.

Read the Summer 1991 edition of The Scroll where Miller shares some of his memories as his last official act as executive vice president.


Community Service Day Introduced

Community Service Day, an idea proposed by Stanley D. Brown, Nebraska ’36, was first designated in 1955. On a specific spring day, usually in late April, all chapters of Phi Delta Theta performed such services as cleaning, painting, and repairing some public facility, renovating a park or playground, or giving a mass donation of blood. Each chapter reported its project and the participation of its members. The group judged to have performed the best public service was awarded the Paul Beam Memorial Citizenship Trophy.

Stan Brown, a future General Council president, described Community Service Day as “the opportunity to demonstrate the benefits of membership in the Fraternity when viewed in the broadest form. The philosophy of ‘All for One, and One for All’ certainly has a larger meaning when that ‘all’ considers the community at large.”

Featured in The Scroll for September 1961 was a report on Community Service Day from fifty representative chapters. The editor made a wide-scope summary: “In communities all over the US and Canada, the men buckled down to manual tasks, many of them in the category of back-breaking labor. Parks and camps were cleaned, orphanages and hospitals scrubbed and painted on the inside, and grounds manicured on the outside. Little League baseball diamonds were constructed or made ready for use, and underprivileged children and aged families were aided. Indeed, the projects were many and varied, and thousands of man-hours were put into them.”


Colonization Became a Term and Process for New Chapters

Phi Delta Theta installed its 125th chapter on September 13, 1963, at the University of Tennessee. This group, Tennessee Gamma, was the first chapter to materialize through the procedure of colonization.

‘Colonization’ had been legislated at the Convention of 1956. This action empowered the General Council to grant charters from petitioners in institutions approved by the Survey Commission “as a college or university at which Phi Delta Theta should have a chapter.”

The door was not as wide as that wording suggested. The petition must be signed by fifteen or more students of the institution, approved by three-fourths of the chapters in the province where the proposed chapter would be located, and recommended by the province president. The General Council was further empowered to take appropriate steps in organizing a group of petitioners (a colony) at any approved institution. The legislation would become increasingly important in the years ahead.

Tennessee Gamma made history as the first chapter to be established in this way. Seventeen other chapters came by colonization between 1965 and 1973.

Today, the word colonization is not used in the Fraternity’s expansion process. Colonies are now referred to as emerging chapters and colonizations are now known as inductions.

First Marriott Hotel

Marriott Corporation was founded by John Willard Marriott, Utah ’26, in 1927 when he and his wife, Alice Marriott, opened a root beer stand in Washington, DC.

It wasn’t until January 16, 1957, that the company opened its first hotel, the Twin Bridges Motor Hotel, in Arlington, Virginia. The motel’s original design had six two-story buildings and 365 rooms, each with exterior entrances, two double beds, and a black and white television. The rates were $8 per night plus $1 for each person, with a maximum charge of $12, which compares to about $126.75 today. Guests would check in with the clerk, located outside, so the clerk could see how many guests were in each car. Each guest would then be escorted to their room by a clerk riding a bicycle.

Over time, Marriott became a global enterprise and transformed the hospitality industry. Today there are over 7,989 Marriott properties worldwide, with over thirty brands. Marriott International is the largest hotel chain in the world by the number of rooms, with roughly 1,400,000 rooms in 131 countries and territories.

Removal of Membership Exclusion Clause

Excerpts from In The Bond

Phi Delta Theta was founded at a time slavery was still in force in much of the United States. The existing social order included many habits, customs, and ideas that would become more democratic with the passage of time.

The six founders were men of high moral character with strong ties to three separate Protestant denominations. Three of them became active ministers.

Through the nineteenth century, there were no written regulations to be followed in extending bids to join the Fraternity. It was assumed that invitees would be professed Christians who would live by and uphold the ideals of the Fraternity as they promised in signing The Bond.

Time and social customs go through an inevitable process of change. As we have seen, much of the anti-fraternity sentiment among educators, legislators, and the general public was based on the premise that fraternal life was elitist, snobbish, and undemocratic.

There was enough justification in those views of fraternity life to force the leaders to fight hard to show that chapters did emphasize educational values and build character. It was inevitable that by the twentieth century, fraternities would formally define their requirements for membership.

In Phi Delta Theta’s case, that came in an apparently routine session at the 1910 Convention when this qualification for membership was voted into The Code: “Only male white persons of pure Ayran blood shall be eligible for membership.” That Code wording was passed almost unanimously at the time and reaffirmed in 1912.

But by World War II, dissenting voices were beginning to be heard urging liberalization of that Code legislation which barred membership to blacks, Jews, Asians, and Muslims.

The matter was discussed at the 1946 and 1948 Conventions, although supporters for change did not want to push hard during the Centennial Convention. But George Banta Jr. cleared the way for stronger debate with an interesting and scholarly article in the May 1949 issue of The Palladium. Banta raised three questions but offered no answers in a way to stimulate discussion.

Banta described the rising civil rights movement and the renewal of increasing criticism of fraternities over the same issues that had been heard for the last fifty years. He insisted the Fraternity must come to grips with the issue.

The second difficult question had to do with how big the Fraternity could become, in chapters as well as members within a chapter. In the beginning, the average chapter was rarely more than ten or twelve men. When he raised the question, many chapters were in the one-hundred-plus-member category.

Banta’s third question was more easily resolved, having to do with the need for an expanded salaried administrative staff and giving the executive secretary the power to make some decisions that heretofore had to await General Council or Convention approval.

The eligibility for membership question was one that would be fought over for the next two decades at every Convention before adjustments to The Code finally brought the Fraternity more in tune with the times. During that same period, American society itself was almost torn apart on the issue of race relations.

In its first one hundred years, our Fraternity selected its new members from a collegiate society that was mostly white, male, and of Christian religious beliefs. After the end of World War II, the campus population began changing.

It was inevitable that there would be attempts to throw out the Ayran blood requirement at the undergraduate level with the older alumni determined to preserve the membership requirements in effect when they were initiated.

The 1952 Convention at the resort site of French Lick Springs, Indiana, turned into a combative arena on the issue. The speaker at the banquet was Roger D. Branigin, Franklin 1923, soon to be governor of Indiana. His witty approach was welcome in the tense atmosphere, as was a scholarly talk by Dr. Alton Ochsner, South Dakota 1918, president of the American College of Surgeons.

The banquet ended around 10:00 p.m., but President George Housser, McGill 1906, instructed the delegates to return to the meeting hall for unfinished business. That turned out to be two reports filed by the Committee on General Statutes. The majority recommended a modification of the existing rule. The minority report favored no action.

A long session lasted into the wee hours; the final vote upheld the existing rules. Two years later the same issue was fought over again at the Mackinac Convention and resulted in a marathon business session beginning at 9:30 a.m. and finally adjourned at 10:20 p.m. with interruptions for lunch and dinner. Present were 114 underclassmen with the right to vote, while officers and alumni numbered 75. Everyone who wanted to speak was given the floor. The undergraduates generally were on the side of change, many under pressure from the knowledge that university administrations were poised to outlaw fraternities that held to restrictive membership.

The roll call found the motion to change the regulations defeated. But there had been a compromise proposal that came to the floor. This would remove the restrictive wording but made it clear that all members of Phi Delta Theta must be acceptable to all chapters. The key word was ‘all.’

The ‘black ball’ vote on membership that had been decided by individual chapters wasn’t new. But now one negative vote, from which there was no appeal, would disqualify a candidate.

After much discussion about how the proposed change would be controlled, the proposal passed 168–21. That was the first breakthrough, and the poisonous word Ayran, so offensive to most Americans because of its association with Adolf Hitler, was gone forever from our Code and Bylaws.

At the 51st Convention in Boulder, Colorado, two years later, the 1954 action was ratified by an overwhelming majority, 187–6.

The Scroll reported, “the new section eliminates any reference to race, color, or creed but stipulates that those chosen must be possessed of social attributes that will make them acceptable to all members of the Fraternity.”

It was not anywhere near a perfect solution to the membership wording, but it was a major breakthrough. The membership issue was a long way from being resolved, as it remained an overriding concern at Conventions through the 1960s

Phi Delta Theta Foundation Created

At the 52nd Biennial General Convention in Asheville, North Carolina, on behalf of the Committee of Constitution and General Statutes, Past President of the General Council O. J. Tallman and Ed Knowles of the New York Alumni Club presented the creation of the Phi Delta Theta Foundation. The purpose of the Foundation is “to provide for the advancement of learning, particularly in colleges and universities in which chapters of the Phi Delta Theta Fraternity are active, through the granting of scholarships and other aid to deserving students in such colleges and through the extension of financial or other aid in furtherance of educational activities conducted at such colleges and universities.”

The Phi Delta Theta Educational Foundation was officially established on August 16, 1960. The original trustees were David Gaskill, Miami 1916; Robert F. Maskey, Ohio Wesleyan 1924; Grosvenor S. McKee, Ohio 1916; Harold A. Minnich, Akron 1924; George S. Ward, Illinois 1910, and Donald Winston, Williams 1915. The aim was to provide scholarships and other aid to deserving students. Begun on a small scale, the Foundation would steadily enlarge its influence in the years ahead.

Today the Phi Delta Theta Foundation grants $1 million annually in scholarships and educational support thanks to the generous donation of Phis and friends over the past six decades.

First Silver Star Awards Given

At the Fraternity’s 52nd General Convention in Asheville, North Carolina, citations were first presented to the following Silver Star chapters for chapter improvement:

Florida Gamma – Florida State University

Georgia Alpha – University of Georgia

Kentucky Epsilon – University of Kentucky

Maryland Alpha – University of Maryland

North Carolina Alpha – Duke University

North Carolina Beta – University of North Carolina

Nova Scotia Alpha – Dalhousie University

Oregon Beta – Oregon State University

Washington Gamma – Washington State University

The Silver Star Award continues to be given annually to Phi Delta Theta chapters, those submitting 100 percent of their chapter accreditation milestones and receiving 65 percent of the eligible points. Today’s award is more focused on chapter excellence versus chapter improvement.

Frank Lloyd Wright Designs Arizona Beta House

From the November 1963 issue of The Scroll

The late great architect. Frank Lloyd Wright, Wisconsin 1889, paved a career in architecture that may never be surpassed. His fabulous accomplishments are a matter of record and known throughout the world. Few realize, however, that Brother Wright designed only one fraternity house. This is the home of Phi Delta Theta’s Arizona Beta Chapter at Arizona State University in Tempe.

The story begins on November 28, 1958, the day Phi Delta Beta colony became a chapter of Phi Delta Theta. Founder of the group, E. V. Graham, Colorado College 1926, and present Chapter Adviser Vic Kramer, Arizona State ’61, immediately started action on the proposal of a new house. The dreams of these men became a reality in 1959 when Brother Wright and his foundation agreed to do the architectural work for the fraternity house. Finally, in December of 1961, funds provided by a long-term loan were appropriated and construction began. Brother Wright did not live to see the project develop, but his foundation closely carried out his original plans.

The fraternity house was ready for occupancy in September 1962. The structure, now over a year in use, has been a special sight to see for the many winter visitors in the Valley of the Sun.

The fifty-two-man house was built at a cost of $230,000. Most of $11,000 (additional cost) inventories in furniture was paid by the Phoenix Alumni Club. The style of the house is one of definite modern design. Linear lines surrounding circular centers is characteristic of the living room, kitchen, and sun deck.

The house is partially separated into two units. The front unit consists of the living quarters of the housemother and president, dining room, living room, and kitchen. The back unit includes the study rooms and sleeping porch. The arrangement of separating sleeping facilities from the study rooms, as developed by Brother Wright, has proven to be of benefit to the-scholarship program. Before the move into the new chapter house the Phis ranked fourteenth of seventeen fraternities in campus scholarship. After one year in the new house the Arizona Beta scholarship index jumped to first on campus. This is truly a remarkable improvement, reflecting largely the environmental situation found in the new chapter house.

One of the features of the house is a large sundeck upstairs where dances are held when the weather is mild. It also provides a location for the brothers to sun-bathe year-round, as temperatures in December of 70° are commonplace.

If you are ever in the greater Phoenix area, you are most welcome to come to the chapter house in Tempe. All parents. Phoenix alumni, and Arizona Beta alumni were encouraged to attend the fifth anniversary of our chapter on November 16–17, Homecoming weekend.


Ralph Wilson Creates Buffalo Bills, Becomes AFL Franchise

In the NFL, a franchise’s legacy is important. On October 28, 1959, Ralph C. Wilson Jr., Virginia ’40, made history as Buffalo’s principal owner of the professional football team.

Under Wilson’s leadership, Buffalo became the seventh American Football League (AFL) franchise. An astute businessman from Detroit, Wilson was a vital member of the ‘Foolish Club,’ which helped create the AFL. Naming his newly awarded football team the ‘Buffalo Bills,’ on November 30, 1959, Wilson would forever leave a mark on the Western New York community and professional football.