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  #1  
Old 10-21-2007, 09:55 PM
Wolfman Wolfman is offline
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Originally Posted by ladygreek View Post
And you would be wrong. But maybe in your case it had something to do with Bishop Love's verbal "wrecking."
Please elaborate with evidence;enquiring minds want to know. Bishop Love was a real character. With the same verve, idealism and forthrightness he and his friends had in founding Omega they also supported and egged on some of their disaffected/disgruntled AKA friends who also wanted to do something different at Howard.
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  #2  
Old 10-21-2007, 10:49 PM
ladygreek ladygreek is offline
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Originally Posted by Wolfman View Post
Please elaborate with evidence;enquiring minds want to know. Bishop Love was a real character. With the same verve, idealism and forthrightness he and his friends had in founding Omega they also supported and egged on some of their disaffected/disgruntled AKA friends who also wanted to do something different at Howard.
Since you know "this", then you should also know the problems we had in getting recognized, too. Oh and his "friends" were not disaffected nor disgruntled. After all they were the only collegiate members of the sorority. So how can they be disaffected from or disgruntled with themselves? Could it have just been that two of your four were merely supporting their girlfriends' visions of the future?

Please don't make it sound as if the Omegas were knights in shining armour, who after going through great turmoil to get recognized came to the defense of ladies in distress. Trust, those 22 didn't need egging on from anyone. And as a result of what they did and what the alumnae AKAs did there became two highly impactful sororities (growing to four) serving our community.

And I am just speculating that maybe your hard time was because of how the administration was approached. Your were the one who brought up Bishop Love's penchant for verbally "wrecking."
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Last edited by ladygreek; 10-21-2007 at 11:12 PM.
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  #3  
Old 10-22-2007, 12:34 PM
Wolfman Wolfman is offline
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Originally Posted by ladygreek View Post
Since you know "this", then you should also know the problems we had in getting recognized, too. Oh and his "friends" were not disaffected nor disgruntled. After all they were the only collegiate members of the sorority. So how can they be disaffected from or disgruntled with themselves? Could it have just been that two of your four were merely supporting their girlfriends' visions of the future?

Please don't make it sound as if the Omegas were knights in shining armour, who after going through great turmoil to get recognized came to the defense of ladies in distress. Trust, those 22 didn't need egging on from anyone. And as a result of what they did and what the alumnae AKAs did there became two highly impactful sororities (growing to four) serving our community.

And I am just speculating that maybe your hard time was because of how the administration was approached. Your were the one who brought up Bishop Love's penchant for verbally "wrecking."
I was merely paraphrasing Paula Giddings' assessment of what occurred, as I remember reading it, which is basically in concert with your assertion, if you read what is written instead of reading between the lines. I'm make no value judgement on what they did;the results speak for themselves. The purpose of historical reconstruction is not necessarily for validation or disproval but simply understanding. The version of the Omega founding I related is not the "official" one; but it represents an important perspective by a Founder (and not the only one by any means!) to understand fully why the movement arose and its basic values, historically speaking, which transcends the "PR" material you'll find on any organizational website--which I pasted also.

The fact is this: for whatever reason the Delta founders were not satisfied with what AKA represented at the time; and presumably the graduate AKA members had a different assessment of the situation--along with later AKA historians? That's what I meant. And you may be right about why the Omega founders encountered such resistance--but I'm not interested in speculation, just evidence, historical evidence. I'm not an attorney; I don't ask rhetorical questions!
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Old 10-22-2007, 04:26 PM
Fleur de Lis Fleur de Lis is offline
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Kappa Kappa Gamma

Kappa Kappa Gamma was founded in 1870 at Monmouth College. The founding members of Kappa Kappa Gamma were Hannah Jeannette Boyd, Mary Moore Stewart (Nelson, Field), Anna Elizabeth Willits (Pattee), Mary Louise Bennett (Boyd), Martha Louisa Stevenson (Miller), Susan Burley Walker (Vincent).

As collegiates at Monmouth College, they were determined to form a Greek letter organization for women. Founders Minnie Stewart, Jeannette Boyd, and Louise Bennett first met around 1869-1870 in the Amateurs des Belles Lettres Hall, a literary society of which the women were active members when they first decided to form a new society. They determined that nothing short of a Greek letter fraternity, equal to men’s fraternities, would satisfy them. Since chapel exercises were required for all students, the founding members announced the formation of the new group by wearing their golden key pins to the Chapel service on October, 13, 1870; hanging back so that they would have to sit in front after the other students were seated.
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Old 10-22-2007, 07:12 PM
sigtau305 sigtau305 is offline
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From: http://www.sigmataugamma.org

Our Principles


Sigma Tau Gamma was founded with the understanding that all men are social creatures and that friendships made in college days are lasting ones. Believing that a social Fraternity must be dedicated to the highest ideals of manhood and brotherhood; to congeniality, the development of good personal characteristics and social poise; to good scholarship, mature thinking and action; to good citizenship, democratic principles and acceptance of responsibility; and, to loyalty and service to college, community, country and Fraternity; Founder Edward H. McCune authored a set of Principles. Embraced by our Founders and early members, these Principles have become our guide.


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Last edited by sigtau305; 10-22-2007 at 07:21 PM.
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  #6  
Old 10-24-2007, 09:36 AM
ealymc ealymc is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by sigtau305 View Post
From: http://www.sigmataugamma.org

Our Principles


Sigma Tau Gamma was founded with the understanding that all men are social creatures and that friendships made in college days are lasting ones. Believing that a social Fraternity must be dedicated to the highest ideals of manhood and brotherhood; to congeniality, the development of good personal characteristics and social poise; to good scholarship, mature thinking and action; to good citizenship, democratic principles and acceptance of responsibility; and, to loyalty and service to college, community, country and Fraternity; Founder Edward H. McCune authored a set of Principles. Embraced by our Founders and early members, these Principles have become our guide.



Is there anything in your history regarding a Sigma Nu connection?
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  #7  
Old 10-24-2007, 11:01 AM
MaryAmanda MaryAmanda is offline
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Erin already covered OPhiA's History for me, so here's Coyote's (from www.gtcoyote.org) :


Chi Omega Tau started in the Fall of 2000. Interested in starting a new sorority, the four original members met with Greek Advisors to determine what options were available to them through Georgia Tech and the Panhellenic Council. They petitioned the Student Government Association for a charter as a student organization, but were turned down by the Graduate Student Senate because membership selection discriminated on the basis of sex. Undeterred, the friends pushed forward, determined to make Chi Omega Tau a reality.

In the Spring of 2001, the sisters began their weekly meetings at Fellini's, a local pizza parlor in Atlanta, and held information sessions in the freshman dormitories on campus. They petitioned the Student Foundation for recruitment funding, and petitioned the Georgia Tech Panhellenic council for sponsorship as a local sorority. On April 24th, 2001, Chi Omega Tau was accepted into the Georgia Tech Panhellenic Council as the 10th Tech Sorority, with Associate Memeber status. On April 26th, thirty-seven official members were inducted and the first officers were elected. Over the following summer, the true spirit of Chi Omega Tau began to take form. Constitution and By-Laws were revised, Fall recruitment was planned, and members began their Fundraising. The sisters of Chi Omega Tau continue to make the sorority grow and continue to achieve new heights with every passing semester.
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  #8  
Old 10-24-2007, 12:31 PM
sigtau305 sigtau305 is offline
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Originally Posted by ealymc View Post
Is there anything in your history regarding a Sigma Nu connection?
officially no, but I was told by Kevin that Wilson C. Morris, who help our founders as advisor, is a member of Sigma Nu.
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Last edited by sigtau305; 10-25-2007 at 09:40 AM.
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  #9  
Old 01-22-2008, 01:45 PM
OLD_GOLD3 OLD_GOLD3 is offline
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A brief history of ALPHA PHI ALPHA Fraternity, Inc.

A brief history of ALPHA PHI ALPHA Fraternity, Inc.

Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity Incorporated was founded on the campus of Cornell University on a cold Tuesday, December 4th, 1906 by seven African American men affectionately referred to as the jewels. The Founding Jewels of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc. were not ordinary achievers. Given the racial attitudes on campus during this period their accomplishments were monumental. As founder Henry Arthur Callis euphemistically stated—because the half-dozen African American students at Cornell University during the school year 1904-05 did not return to campus the following year, the incoming students in 1905-06, in founding Alpha Phi Alpha, were determined to bind themselves together to ensure that each would survive in the racially hostile environment. They came together meeting at various homes initially started as a social studies club. It later became a literary society to support the black students on campus in a retention effort and finally became a Fraternity. The organization grew rapidly through out the United States and even became international in 1908 with its Delta chapter being established at the University at Toronto. Alpha prides its self on service and scholarship and has been blessed to have many illustrious members grace the halls of Alpha since its founding.

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