
09-19-2006, 03:26 PM
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Alpha Phi Alpha exhibit traces 1st black fraternity
Article from today's Atlanta Journal Constitution
http://www.ajc.com/metro/content/metro/stories/2006/09/18/0919metalpha.html
Alpha Phi Alpha exhibit traces 1st black fraternity
By By ERNIE SUGGS
Published on: 09/19/06
One hundred years ago, on the cold campus of Cornell University, seven black students looking for social and academic support in a racially hostile environment started Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity.
Those "Seven Jewels" as they are called, created a foundation for a fraternity that now has more than 700 college and graduate chapters and over 175,000 living members, including Andrew Young, John Hope Franklin, Cornell West and Dick Gregory.
The roster of former members is even more impressive: Duke Ellington, W.E.B. DuBois, Thurgood Marshall, Paul Robeson, Jesse Owens, Adam Clayton Powell, Maynard Jackson, and the man who casts the biggest shadow of them all, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.
Starting today, the full history of the fraternity — the first black Greek letter organization — will be on display at the Robert W. Woodruff Library on the campus of the Atlanta University Center.
Per the article, it is on display through November 3rd. I am not sure if this is the same exhibit as the Cornell archives online thread/traveling exhibit similar to the AKA traveling exhibit.
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