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[QUOTE]Originally posted by HotDamnImAPhiMu
[B]Alpha Phi's badge is hot. I especially have a thing for the lazy Phi. Us Phi Mus and you Alpha Phis have something in common! Thanks! We like it, too! ;) |
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Beta was closed down for a few years but they re-colonized in 1999 and have been going strong ever since! |
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---------- A few minutes later..... Okay, I found it: From here: http://forums.greekchat.com/gcforums...s&pagenumber=2 Quote:
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Bairds is not always correct, but for a lose, they are the best we have!
They like a Lot Of Greek Organizations or Greek Sites are only as good as the Information given to them.:( As far as I know, most Greek Organizatins are understaffed and this is where information comes from in this day in an age of Cyber! :) but, if you have enuff, of them, they do also change, they just do not keep everything!:( They are a great reference book but not all omnipresent! |
Thanks guys!!! :D
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Question: I can understand that the Great Depression and WWII probably caused many of the mergers that took place from 1928 through the early 1940s.
However, the majority of the other mergers listed took place in the late 50s and early 60s. What happened to cause these mergers? I think this is a good question for wptw or our other resident GLO scholars. |
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Beta Phi Alpha: founded 1909 at California-Berkeley, admitted to the NPC 1926, merged with Delta Zeta in 1941. Alpha Delta Theta: founded 1919 at Transylvania, admitted to the NPC 1926; from looking at their badge, one of their symbols appears to have been the key. They merged with Phi Mu in 1939. Theta Upsilon: founded 1914 at California, admitted to the NPC 1928, merged with Delta Zeta in 1962. Sarah Ida Shaw, one of the Tri Delta founders, helped them to write their ritual. Phi Omega Pi: founded in 1910 at Nebraska, originally affilated with the Order of the Eastern Star. They dropped the Masonic requirement in order to be admitted into the NPC in 1933. Later, in 1946 merged with Delta Zeta. Delta Sigma Epsilon: founded in 1914 at Miami University in Ohio. They were originally a member of the education sorority governing organization (I forget the name). They joined the NPC in 1947, merging with DZ in 1956. and associate NPC members: Sigma Phi Beta: founded at the "University of New York" (I'm not sure what the modern-day equivalent would be) in 1920. They later merged with Phi Omega Pi and then into Delta Zeta. From looking at their badge one of their symbols appears to have been the compass. Beta Sigma Omicron: went down to twelve chapters by 1962 and merged with ZTA in 1964. Lambda Omega: founded at California-Berkeley in 1923, later in 1933 merged with Theta Upsilon which merged with Delta Zeta. Their symbols and motto were founded around a Norse theme. Some of the associates might have been NPC members, I believe, but I'm not sure which or when. The sources I have list them as associate members. In addition to these I know there was another member, possibly historically Jewish, that died out later. My details on them are sketchy but I remember their name started with Iota (maybe Iota Phi Alpha or Iota Pi Alpha?) and I think they died out in the 1970s. If you can get your hands on a copy of Baird's, it often describes their expansion, tells how many chapters they have and what happened to them, and sometimes tells what their colors and symbols were. Your organization's written history might include some NPC history. And there is more information here: http://www.dzalphaeta.org/history.html |
ZTA was the first and only women's fraternity to have the backing of the Virginia legislature which granted the charter on 3/15/1902.
ZTA was also the first women's fraternity to be established in VA. |
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Sigma Tau Gamma: was the first National Fraternity to Start a Leadership Program for Chapter Presidents.
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SAI was the first international music fraternity for women. :D
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Kappa Alpha Theta
Not sure if these have been mentioned yet, but:
The first women admitted to Phi Beta Kappa were Thetas. The first women's fraternity to establish a chapter in Canada was Kappa Alpha Theta. The first woman elected to the U.S. Senate in her own right was a Theta. I'll let you know if I come up with any more...what are you collecting this information for? |
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