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Johnson C. Smith Becomes First HBCU to Admit a Latino Fraternity
Saw this posted on FB, thought some folks here might be interested:
Johnson C. Smith Becomes First HBCU to Admit a Latino Fraternity |
JCSU was also the first HBCU to host a chapter of Alpha Phi Omega National Service Fraternity as well.
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Prairie View and FAMU have both had chapters of Sigma Lambda Beta. I'm not sure why the media is running with this story in this way. I have respect for LTPhi, but they are not the first Latino fraternity at an HBCU.
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Not the first
I thought Texas Southern had a least one or two Latino fraternities prior to this. I wonder how this chapter was declared "the first."
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Phi Iota Alpha did not have any active undergraduate chapters from 1979-1983. In 1975, when Lambda Theta Phi was founded, Phi Iota Alpha only had one active chapter (at LSU). It's understandable that the founders of Lambda Theta Phi wouldn't know about the near-dead organization, but their claims of being the first (and also the only one in 1975) are false.
This information was all pulled from Wikipedia, so I can't attest to its accuracy. |
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Unless they've agreed that "oldest", "first", and "largest" can co-exist peacefully. |
I don't acknowledge LTPhi as first. Sorry. You can't say first if something is older than you.
The way it was explained to me was that there were no undergraduate members of Phiota when LTPhi was founded, so they consider it a dead fraternity which was reborn. But we know an organization doesn't cease to exist just because the undergrads graduated. |
As the discussion in this thread (in a different lane) illustrates, the concept of being "first" attracts a lot more debate than one would expect.
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