In the fall of ’66, brother Jeff Prosseda was elected Class President and seated on CGA. At that time, there was a warming to the development of Greek Life by some of the faculty: but not administration. The college was operating under president Harvey Andress. His directive was that no social fraternities would be permitted under his reign.
Late fall of 1966, CGA approved a process of establishment of Greeks. Following
Andress's retirement on Jan 1 1967, CGA opened applications by groups of students for Greeks. There was a cadre of administrators left from the Andress administration who were to make establishment of Frats a very difficult task. Five groups made application. One, ΣIΩ, flew through due to Dept. Head Dr. Warren. Beta Sigma Delta was approved next, followed by DΩC and TKE. Our group attempted to apply as Phi Sigma Pi. And all hell broke loose.
Phi Sigma Pi was a "national education fraternity". Faculty on campus belonged to it. Our first guys unfortunately held strong feelings for keeping those Greek letters. This only added to the hoops these guys had to jump through. Pending a successful
application, each of the groups were permitted to take a pledge class in the spring. However, only one (ΣIΩ) had been given official status. Phi Sigma Pi continued to wrestle with the application process as our original pledging group progressed. Phi Sigma PI had no standing other than a group making application . But the process did go on. By the time of our "Founder's Day", that first group were already brothers. Those new brothers along with the Founders voted together to form Delta Pi.
Those 34 brothers were all "Charter Brothers".
To acknowledge the work of those first 15...they were also designated as "Founders".
So let history reflect from this day forward –
1-15 Founders
16-34 Charters
35+ Grateful
Delta Pi, as it exists on Bloomsburg University's campus today actually started as Phi Sigma Pi and was originally an educational fraternity of which our founding brothers were members. They were all that was left of that organization after 40 or so brothers left to be part of the fledgling social fraternity movement that was taking place at Bloomsburg State College. The founders left the educational group, kept the letters Phi Sigma Pi, reorganized as a local social fraternity and took its first pledge class during the spring semester of the 1966-1967 school year. The Founding brotherhood consisted of Robert Hinkle (Sage), Bob Niccol (First Counselor), Ken Mattfield (Second Counselor), Ace Faust, (Third Counselor), Bud Rogers (Herald), Al Brunner, Dave Waltman, Chuck Ranck, Jim Rupert, and Gary Cassell. The first pledge class included Don Beuler, Frank (Red) Callahan, John Frey, Bernie Gavlick, Bill Hitchings, George Hopkins, Bill Kelley, Richard Leahy, Steve Messner, Lin Nester, Joe O'Neill, Len Pawlowski, Jim Poechmann, Tom Pratico, Fred Richards, Jim Shaughnessey, Wade Stackhouse, Paul Walters and John Zubeck.
This new social fraternity was not officially recognized by BSC, so that process was the next thing that needed to happen. College officials were concerned that Phi Sigma Pi was an established national fraternity and this new organization's use of those letters for a social entity became a point of contention between the brotherhood and the BSC administration. At first, a simple change to Phi Sigma Phi was tried, but that didn't satisfy the governing body at Bloom. A vote was taken and the letters Delta Pi were agreed upon as the group's new name. All the red tape was dealt with and Delta Pi became an officially-recognized social fraternity on April 30, 1967, which we consider to be our "Founders' Day".