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Thanks to the COM352 students for contributing a bunch of new pages! I'll be moving these pages into the main area of the wiki soon.

Alpha Delta Phi

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Alpha Delta Phi
Founded 1832 at Hamilton College
Founders
Motto Manus multæ cor unum (Many hands, one heart).
President Jon Vick, HAM '64 (Fraternity), Craig Cheslog, BDN '93 (Society)
Colors Emerald and Pearl
Flower The Lily of the Valley
Chapters 23 chapters and 3 affilliates (Fraternity), 5 chapters (Society)
Scope United States, Canada
Homepage Fraternity: http://www.alphadeltaphi.org

Society: http://www.adps.org

Alpha Delta Phi (ΑΔΦ) is a Greek-letter fraternity in the United States and Canada. Today the name refers to both an all-male fraternity that was founded in 1832 by Samuel Eells at Hamilton College in Clinton, New York and a "society" that broke off from the fraternity in 1992 which permits co-educated chapters. The Fraternity and the Society both come out of Eells's vision for a "literary society," although Alpha Delta Phi's original academic focus is preserved to varying degrees by individual chapters.

From its early days, Alpha Delta Phi sought students of a decided literary orientation. In the founder's own words, the literary pursuit of the fraternity must "be built on a more comprehensive scale providing for every taste and talent and embracing every department of literature and science. It must be national and universal in all its adaptations, so as not merely to cultivate a taste for literature or furnish the mind with knowledge but with a true philosophical spirit looking to the entire man, so as to develop the whole being -- moral, social and intellectual." Today, the literary tradition is carried on the international level in the form of annual literary competitions sponsored by the Samuel Eells Literary and Educational Foundation, which awards cash prizes in each of five categories.

Alpha Delta Phi was a charter member of the North-American Interfraternity Conference (formerly known as the National Interfraternity Council) (NIC), and a member of Alpha Delta Phi, Hamilton W. Mabie (Williams College, class of 1867), was the first President of the NIC.

Contents

[edit] The Fraternity

The Fraternity is a retronym used now to distinguish the all-male Alpha Delta Phi Fraternity (aka the Alpha Delta Phi International) from the co-ed Alpha Delta Phi Society. In general parlance, the Fraternity refers to itself simply as "Alpha Delta Phi", since the Society adds "Society" to the end to distinguish itself.

[edit] Chapters

As of 2005 the Fraternity has 23 chapters and 3 affiliates, the oldest chapter at Hamilton College and the most recent affiliate at Brandeis University.

  • Source: Alpha Delta Phi International

[edit] The Society

Several Alpha Delta Phi chapters began co-educating in the 1960's, starting with the California Chapter. Not all chapters approved of this change, and several decades of disputes followed, with some members lobbying for full admission of women, and others wanting to ban women altogether or grant them some form of associate membership. By 1992, the chapters agreed to bifurcate Alpha Delta Phi, creating the Alpha Delta Phi Society alongside the existing Fraternity. The Society espouses "home rule", letting each chapter decide whether or not to co-educate. To date, all of its chapters are co-educated.

[edit] Chapters

As of 2005 the Society had four undergraduate chapters and two alumni chapters. The Society was founded in 1992 by four chapters: Brunonian (at Brown University), Columbia (at Columbia University), Middletown (at Wesleyan University), and Stanford (at Stanford University). The Bowdoin chapter, which had been required to withdraw from the Fraternity by the administration of Bowdoin College, joined the Society a year later. In 1994, the Society's first new chapter was formed at Middlebury College, becoming Alpha Delta Phi's first chapter to be co-educated from the beginning. Bowdoin College later abolished its fraternity system, and the Bowdoin chapter became alumni-only. In 2005, Middlebury's undergraduate chapter went under, and it became alumni-only as well.

[edit] Notable Alumni

[edit] Athletics

[edit] Business and Finance

[edit] Clergy

  • Bishop Henry D. Aves -- (K 1878).
  • Bishop Frederick Burgess -- (Brn 1873).
  • Bishop Sheldon M. Griswold -- (Un 1882).
  • Bishop John M. Kendrick -- (K 1859).
  • Bishop Theodore B. Lyman -- (Ham 1837).
  • Bishop H. Clifford Northcott -- (N 1919).
  • Bishop Lyman C. Ogilby -- (Ham 1943).
  • Bishop Lauriston L. Scaife -- (PK 1931).
  • Bishop Herbert Shipman -- (Col 1890).
  • Bishop Dudley S. Stark -- (PK 1917).

[edit] Education

[edit] Entertainment

[edit] Government and Military

[edit] Law and Judiciary

[edit] Literature and Journalism

[edit] Science and Engineering

[edit] External links

[edit] Fraternity

[edit] Chapters

[edit] Society

Much of the text of this article has been copied from Wikipedia's UMass Amherst article. This notice is provided in accordance with the requirements of the GFDL. As such, until it is rewritten, this article is released under the terms of the GFDL.

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