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  #1  
Old 06-03-2008, 09:40 PM
PADFSUGirl2K2 PADFSUGirl2K2 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by naraht View Post
While it is certainly up to the chapter as to what you want to be called on campus, in this case, I'm not sure that trying to go by APO or APhiO on campus is worth the stress in relations with the alumni or the instructors. To me, using Que as part of the abbrevation gives a tie to the HBCU GLO experience that helps in terms of recruitment deal with the fact that the 14 (or 20) faces in the manual are Caucasian. (GSS, KKY and TBS also have to deal with this of course)

The people most likely to be confused by Aye Phi Que are probably the active brothers at the other chapters in the section, but they'll figure it out. I've never talked to a staffer who had an issue with chapters using Aye Phi Que who wasn't corrected by a more senior staffer. There *is* no official way to abbreviate the greek letters for our fraternity in English.

(Now using *Viking* is a different kettle of fish)


Still wonder when the term Que for Omega was first used by Omega Psi Phi, for all I know it was originally an insulting term which was adopted later with pride (like "Mormons" to describe latter day saints".)
I may be wrong but I read somewhere that the term "Que" was used because of the similarities of the Omega letter looking like a "Q" thus the Que's calling themselves that. The O was more reserved for Omicron.
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Old 06-04-2008, 03:33 PM
naraht naraht is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by PADFSUGirl2K2 View Post
I may be wrong but I read somewhere that the term "Que" was used because of the similarities of the Omega letter looking like a "Q" thus the Que's calling themselves that. The O was more reserved for Omicron.
It isn't really "reserved" as much as sort of obvious because of the identical shape. Alignments between English and Greek letters really depend on whether you are dealing with shape or pronounciation. Using O for Omega is just fine because an O standing by itself in english is pronounced the same was an Omega. The easiest way in english to get a pronounciation alignment for our Greek letters would be Ah F O since the Alpha is a short A...

As for when Omega Psi Phi started using Q, haven't gotten an answer for that...

Randy
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