WINTER 2025
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A FORMER ARCHON’S PERSPECTIVE REFLECTIONS ON A CHARACTER-BUILDING EXPERIENCE DURING OUR RE-CHARTERING YEAR BY JOHN KREITZER Disclaimer: This article is intended to offer leadership insights and reflect on valuable lessons taught by the Fraternity. Trevor, of course, is not the real name of the brother who showed up that late summer of 1987. Similarly, we can’t assume that “Trevor’s” opinions reflect the previous generation of Alpha Psi as a whole. If you were at the chapter meeting, please do not share Trevor’s identity, it could have been anyone who showed up in his place. If you are reading this “Trevor,” please know that there are no hard feelings and that your contribution was and is greatly appreciated. In fact, I would love to hear from you, so give me a call if you see this. Brett Baltz has my number.
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had returned to IU on a typical late summer day. As I was finishing setting up my TV and hooking up a VCR, some of my brothers on the executive council stopped by, asking me to head out for some food and drinks. They had invited Trevor, an alumnus of the previous generation of Alpha Psi chapter, to join us. He was interested in becoming a chapter mentor and we thought it would be a good idea to introduce ourselves in a social setting. During our time together, he got to know each of us and tried to get a sense of who we were as some of the chapter’s new leaders. We kept the conversation mostly social, with only a few questions about the previous Alpha Psi chapter. I sensed that he liked the mix of skills he saw in us, which made me confident he would approve of the rest of the men who had joined our ranks. After our social gathering was over, we invited Trevor to our chapter meeting the next day and he gave me a ride back to the house in his car. During the drive, he inquired about my vision for Pi Kappa Phi and what role he could play in helping me achieve it. After discussing short-term needs, I explained that I wanted to encourage more Pi Kapps to take leadership roles throughout campus life and shared some of my ideas for forming new committees to handle the Fraternity’s external campus involvement. During our conversation, I felt he really understood what I was looking for and, more importantly, was willing to advise us how to get there. We certainly had a mutual camaraderie, and I felt fortunate that he was willing to volunteer his time, so I expressed this sentiment to him.
I looked back on my commitments to uphold the principles of brotherhood of Pi Kappa Phi and asked myself if these were going to be nice words and a false cloak of honor or if they were really going to become a part of who I was.