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04-15-2006, 02:36 AM
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Location: Tuscaloosa, AL
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Books on fraternity/Greek life
I've found it odd that there are virtually no books on fraternity life or memoirs about being greek. One interesting read was by Senator Bob Dole. His "One Soldier's Story" released last year has a chapter or two about his being Kappa Sigma at Kansas. Including his heartbreak at his girlfriend returning his pen while he was serving in WWII.
Does anyone know of any good books by former greeks recounting their experiences?
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04-15-2006, 02:55 AM
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I don't know of any such books (at least ones that have been proven not to be completely fictitious).
But I wanted to say hey cause I see you're a Sigma Pi at Bama. I was an A-D-Sig there. Hope things are going well for y'all. Your chapter was just getting started when I gaduated, but it seemed like y'all had a lot of interest!
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04-15-2006, 01:32 PM
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I appreciate your kind words. We got a house in Fall 2004 and our numbers have been strong. I'm rush chairman now and we're hoping for a big fall class so we can start construction on a new big house.
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04-15-2006, 01:41 PM
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The only one that I have seen is called "The Goat".
Not very flatering about a certain Fraternity in the South.
Congratulations on Growing at Bama and planning on a new House.
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04-15-2006, 01:43 PM
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I am reprinting a long excerpt from Skip Mason's Historical Moments, an email series that was first released in 1999 directly from the desk of Skip Mason, the Chairman of the National Historical Commission. He is a great Brother and a phenomenal historian -- an excellent example of someone who has melded the disciplines of Library Science and African American Studies.
***
Over the past five years there has been a wealth of books written on the African-American experience including biographies, autobiographies, fiction and nonfiction books. As an avid reader and book collector, I am always curious to to see how Alpha is presented in books written by Brothers and books dealing with organizational history. I usually turn to the Index of these books to see if Alpha is included. I have accumulated and briefly annotated a few titles below which discusses the fraternity in some aspect. I have listed those titles where the fraternity is not mentioned at all. This is not a complete list but a sampling of titles.
Title: Our Kind of People (Inside America's Black Upper Class) Harper
Collins, 1998 by Lawrence Otis Graham
A book recently published giving insight to the black upper class.
Chapter 5 "The Right Fraternities and Sororites"
"But as the presence of Alpha Phi Alpha and the other seven black organizations grew on black campuses during the early 1900s, they were each known for building their popularity by seeking out certain desirable student candidates(.e.g. smart, popular, accomplished, affluent.) and turning down
others...Apha Phi Alpha, it is the one to which most of my friends belong.... Quickly identifying themselves with programs that emphasized scholarship rather than mere social interaction...."
Graham devotes three pages to Alpha but throughout the book makes it clear that Alpha was "the" fraternity to join to be accepted in the status quo.
Title: Thurgood Marshall/American Revolutionary (Times Books, c. 1998) by Juan Williams
A biography of this Civil Rights icon and American legend.
Chapter 4 "Waking Up"
"Thurgood traveled to Lincoln with Aubrey Marshall (his brother)...There were 285 men at Lincoln that year. Aubrey had pledged a fraternity, Alpha Phi Alpha... Thurgood, meanwhile was at the heart of campus life. He took part in two rituals of young male college society. First he joined Alpha Phi Alpha, an elite fraternity of mostly light skinned boys. Although the fraternity was at the top of campus society, its hazing was rough...Once he became an Alpha, Thurgood delighted in the nasty tricks fraternity brothers would play on each other and on rival frats... Marshall' s life at Howard also included some fraternity run-ins. Half the class was made up of Alpha Phi Alpha, his fraternity...Marshall represented the Alphas as the competed with the Omegas...The Alphas thought they could run the class..."
Williams devotes about three pages to Thurgood's college days. He does not however, mention Thurgood's involvement with the fraternity's era of civil rights in the 1940s and desegregating law schools, one of the greatest periods in the history of the fraternity.
Title: Thurgood Marshall: Warrior of the Bar, Rebel on the Bench by Michael
Davis & Hunter Clark (Birch Lane Press, 1992)
"Chapter Seven "An Ethiop Among the Aryans"
"As Marshall impatiently waited for Houston's answer, Belford V. Lawson, Jr., turned his attention to the University of Maryland. Lawson served as counsel of Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity. Many of the national fraternity's members, like members of the Washington and Baltimore branches of the NAACP, were light skinned and held coveted government jobs or were professionals who came
from privileged families. The fraternity had a reputation for using the "paper bag" test for admitting members, an unwritten rule that a prospective member whose skin shade was darker than a paper bag would not be allowed to pledge. The fraternity also had a reputation for holding some of the most popular and best attended social affairs in black Washington."
Skip's note- More discussion of Thurgood's account of his pledging days at Lincoln's Nu Chapter will be used in an article that I am working on on "The Origins of Pledging"
Title: A Way Out of No Way: The Spiritual Memoirs of Andrew Young (Nelson, 1994)
>From former Congressman, Ambassador and Civil Rights legend who marched with Dr. King
Chapter One "A Time for Decision"
"In concession to my father, I joined his fraternity Alpha Phi Alpha. The Alphas were the oldest black fraternity in the country. My pledgemaster was David Dinkins, a marine veteran a year ahead of me at Howard and future Mayor of New City. The Alphas gave me a sense of belonging and I was quite proud when the chapter elected me chaplain in my senior year-perhaps because I was one of the few brothers who didn't smoke or drink. The challenge of pledging and completing probation to the fraternity was something of a rite of passage to manhood. ....."
Title: Andrew Young: An Easy Burden: The Civil Rights Movement and the
Transformation of America by Andrew Young (Harper Collins, 1996)
Chapter 5: Serving Bethany"
"The Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity chapter at Talledega in Alabama provided my first opportunity to meet Martin Luther King....I accepted the invitation in the spring of 197 to speak for the Alpha Phi Alpha annual program...When I arrived I discovered I was one of two speakers. Martin King was the other. I look forward to hearing him speak and to meeting him with great
anticipation..."
Skip's Note: (Brother Andrew Young has written the foreword for my book "The Talented Tenth: The Founders and General Presidents. Brother Young will celebrate 50 years in Alpha next year. He is a friend, a brother and calls on me to pinch hit for him at some speaking engagements when he has overbooked or cannot attend. I thank God for him and his support!)
Title: The Young Paul Robeson by Lloyd Brown (Westview Books)
An easy reader on the life of an American legend. \
p.111 " Robeson joined Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity at Lincoln....."
Title: The Papers of Martin Luther King, Jr. Vol. II Rediscovering Precious
Values July 1951-November 1955 edited by Clayborn Carson
The voluminous second volume of his papers held at Boston University. The third volume is in production and will feature letters referencing King's involvement with the fraternity. Due out in December.
There are several pages referencing King's involvement with Alpha p. 39-"June 22, 1952 King is initiated into Boston's Sigma Chapter of the Alpha Phi Alpha social fraternity"
p. 560- "King gives the benediction at a June Citizenship Rally sponsored by
local Alpha Chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha in Montgomery, Alabama."
"W.H. Coston writes a letter to King to speak at the Southern Region Convention in 1955"
King's Shingle is pictured in the book. It is signed by Chapter officers, but the date is not included on it. It is in the M.L. King papers at Boston University.
Skip's Note: A recent autobiography actually compiled by Clayborn Carson does not make any mention of King's affiliation with Alpha.
Title: Beyond the Timberline by T.M. Alexander
A fascinating account of the life of pioneer Insurance executive in Atlanta and the first man to run for public office in Atlanta since reconstruction.
"In 1939, while in New York, I attended a meeting of my national fraternity, Alpha Phi Alpha...Members came from all over the country. Speakers outlined their problems and what they had attempted to do to solve them....he bemoaned the plight of the brothers in the South and the need for the organization to give leadership and help its southern members..."
*Brother T.M. Alexander served as president of Eta Lambda Chapter. He was initiated into Alpha Rho Chapter at Morehouse in 1930. His son (now deceased) and grandson were also Alpha Rho initiates. He just recently celebrated his 90th birthday.
Title: Christopher Darden, In Contempt
(Regan Books/Harper Collins, 1996) by Brother Christopher Darden A personal account of the life of the LA County Assistant Prosecuting Attorney in the "trial of the century" the O. J. Simpson Case.
p. 57... "Here I was, just two semester from graduating, and I still didn't
feel as if I'd gotten the full college experience.....I was a chronic introvert so driven by some intense desire to succeed that I wasn't enjoying the things I was working hard to achieve....I could join a fraternity....One of the guys I met in my Afro American studies classes...was a member of Alpha Phi Alpha. I went to smoker for Alpha Phi Alpha during the first week of classses in
January 1977....In some ways, the entire purpose of pledging a fraternity is the initiation. There are lessons-pride in your history, brotherhood and discipline......We were called pledges or line brothers, and as a "line" we had to wear similar haircuts and absolutely no jewelry, to dress all in black and gold. We could never wear colors associated with another frat... We had
to wear a four inch Sphinxhead......"
Darden devotes five pages to his experience pledging Alpha.
*The Western Region honored Darden two years ago at its regional convention. I had a chance to meet him. He was very thrilled that his own organization did not turn its back on him as he felt the public did. Skip
Title: King of the Cats: The Life and Times of Adam Clayton Powell, Jr.
(Houghton Mifflin, c. 1993)
p. 12 "Powell got himself initiated into Alpha Phi Alpha, the renowned fraternity for young black men. There was no Alpha Phi Alpha chapter at Colgate, which never had enough black students to organize one. Walking by Powell's room...noticed an Alpha insignia, which he had conspicuously affixed to his door at eye level...The three were perplexed, and also quite impressed. "How he became an Alpha I'll never know, said Crosby" Powells senior picture shows him in a three piece pin striped suit, silk tie, collar closed by a stickpin....There was nothing beneath Powell's picture but the Alpha Phi Alpha insignia, a distinction none of his classmates enjoyed"
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04-18-2006, 05:41 PM
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I recall in Jack Welch's autobiography a few years ago there was a little blurb about his being a member of Phi Sigma Kappa, but it wasn't more than a paragraph or two...
I also remember a pledge brother of David Letterman wrote a book "The Sweetheart of Sigma Chi (I think) about their antics at Ball State (including throwing my chapter's cannon in the White River).
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04-19-2006, 09:23 AM
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There's one called "Pledged"
It is the worst fucking book ever. I'm suprised this hasn't been mention. Either she made up alot of stuff, or there are alot of big mouth girls. I refuse to buy it to give money to the author. It's set in SMU but goes to several unnamed campuses.
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04-19-2006, 09:59 AM
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Quote:
Originally posted by ilikehazing
There's one called "Pledged"
. . . I'm suprised this hasn't been mention.
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It's just this thread where it hadn't been mentioned so far.
From the Author of Pledged (Yes, the author herself started this thread).
Book Pledged: The Secret Lives of Sororities
There are lots of other threads where it's talked about as well.
BTW, the paperback edition contains a "new" introduction where Robbins talks about the response -- positive and negative -- to the book, including all the sorority members on an unnamed website {*cough* GC *cough*} who have panned the book.
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04-19-2006, 10:47 AM
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Actually, I liked Pledged. It read like fiction, and I read it as though it were. Well, except for the parts that I knew were true. I was actually featured in the book. The section about me still read kind of like fiction, though, since she sort of made me seem pathetic, which, at least as far as I can tell, I was not.
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10-28-2007, 06:14 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ADSigMel
Actually, I liked Pledged. It read like fiction, and I read it as though it were. Well, except for the parts that I knew were true. I was actually featured in the book. The section about me still read kind of like fiction, though, since she sort of made me seem pathetic, which, at least as far as I can tell, I was not.
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You're the founder of Alpha Delta Sigma, aren't you?
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10-28-2007, 06:24 PM
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There is a new book, which I do not have in front of my at the monent, written by the author of Animal House.
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10-28-2007, 09:12 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jon1856
There is a new book, which I do not have in front of my at the monent, written by the author of Animal House.
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His website: http://www.chrismillerwriter.com/
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04-19-2006, 10:52 AM
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Quote:
Originally posted by ADSigMel
Actually, I liked Pledged. It read like fiction, and I read it as though it were.
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The problem is that it was presented as truth and many uninformed people took it as such. It kind of makes me think this is where the Million Little Pieces guy got his idea...
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04-19-2006, 10:59 AM
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LOL, I was thinking that very same thing. I didn't even read Million Little Pieces until after he was "exposed," and I thought the book was not great, but at least okay, as fiction. I actually don't think I would have liked it as much if it were nonfiction.
As for the "day-in-the-life" stuff in Pledged, I have no idea how much or what kind of research she did. But for the stuff at Alabama, she actually did come and talk to me, and we hung out for a couple of days, if I recall correctly. Like I said, she made me seem pathetic, but I probably fit into her book better that way. And since I read it like fiction, and I know a lot of other people do too, it doesn't really matter to me.
I know a lot of people on here hate her just because, but she's actually a really nice girl. I think she would have made a good sorority girl if she had been more open to it.
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04-19-2006, 04:53 PM
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Quote:
Originally posted by ADSigMel
As for the "day-in-the-life" stuff in Pledged, I have no idea how much or what kind of research she did. But for the stuff at Alabama, she actually did come and talk to me, and we hung out for a couple of days, if I recall correctly. Like I said, she made me seem pathetic, but I probably fit into her book better that way. And since I read it like fiction, and I know a lot of other people do too, it doesn't really matter to me.
I know a lot of people on here hate her just because, but she's actually a really nice girl. I think she would have made a good sorority girl if she had been more open to it.
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I'm going to unfortunately say I don't believe you, as you are the ONLY person on GC (to my knowledge) to ever say she came to your sorority/school while writing the book.
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