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{{Short description|North American collegiate fraternity}} |
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{{Infobox Fraternity | |
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{{Infobox fraternity |
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letters = ΣΧ | |
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| letters = {{lang|grc|ΣΧ}} |
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name = Sigma Chi | |
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| name = Sigma Chi |
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crest = [[Image:sigmachicrest.png|200px|The Coat of Arms of Sigma Chi Fraternity]] | |
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| crest = Sigma Chi Crest.png |
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motto = [[In Hoc Signo Vinces]] ("In This Sign You Will Conquer") | |
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| image_size = 200px |
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colors = Blue and Old Gold | |
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| alt = The Crest of Arms of Sigma Chi Fraternity |
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| nicknames = Sig, Sigs' |
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| motto = ''[[In Hoc Signo Vinces]]'' ("In This Sign You Shall Conquer") |
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| member badge = [[File:Sigma Chi badge.png|left|80px]] |
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| colors = {{Color box|#0000FF}} Blue and {{Color box|#CFB53B}} [[Old gold]] |
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| symbol = The White Cross |
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| flower = White [[rose]] |
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| founded = {{start date and age|1855|6|28}} |
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| birthplace = [[Miami University]] |
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| affiliation = NIC |
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| type = [[List of social fraternities and sororities|Social]] |
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| scope = International |
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| address = 1714 Hinman Avenue |
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| city = [[Evanston, Illinois|Evanston]] |
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| state = [[Illinois]] |
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| ZIP code = 60201 |
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| country = United States |
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| chapters = 242 |
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| members = 15,700+ |
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| lifetime = 350,000+<ref name="ReferenceB">{{Cite web|url=https://sigmachi.org/sigma-chi-welcomes-350000th-initiate/|title = Sigma Chi Welcomes 350,000th Initiate – Sigma Chi}}</ref> |
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| philanthropy = [[Children's Miracle Network]] and [[Huntsman Cancer Institute]] |
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| publication = ''The Magazine of Sigma Chi'' |
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| homepage = {{URL|https://sigmachi.org/}} |
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| flag = [[File:SigmachiFlag.png|150px]] |
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| colonies = 13 |
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| status = Active |
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}} |
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'''Sigma Chi''' ('''{{lang|grc|ΣΧ}}''') International Fraternity is one of the largest of North American social [[Fraternities and sororities|fraternities]]. The fraternity has 244 active undergraduate chapters and 152 alumni chapters across the United States and Canada and has initiated over 350,000 members.<ref name="ReferenceB">{{Cite web|url=https://sigmachi.org/sigma-chi-welcomes-350000th-initiate/|title = Sigma Chi Welcomes 350,000th Initiate – Sigma Chi}}</ref> The fraternity was founded on June 28, 1855, at [[Miami University]] in [[Oxford, Ohio]], by members who split from the [[Delta Kappa Epsilon]] fraternity. |
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Sigma Chi is divided into seven operational entities: the Sigma Chi Fraternity, the Sigma Chi Foundation, the Sigma Chi Canadian Foundation, the Risk Management Foundation, Constantine Capital Inc., the Blue and Gold Travel Services, and the newly organised Sigma Chi Leadership Institute.<ref>{{cite web|title=What is Sigma Chi?|url=http://www.sigmachi.org/about|publisher=Sigmachi.org|access-date=2014-02-26}}</ref> |
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Like all fraternities, Sigma Chi has its own colors, insignia, and rituals. According to the fraternity's constitution, "the purpose of this fraternity shall be to cultivate and maintain the high ideals of friendship, justice, and learning upon which Sigma Chi was founded." |
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==History== |
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symbol = The White Cross | |
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===Founding=== |
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flower = White Rose | |
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[[File:Cornell University - Sigma Chi Lodge.jpg|thumb|The Sigma Chi house at [[Cornell University]] in [[Ithaca, New York]], {{Circa|1905}}]] |
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founded = [[28 June]], [[1855]] | |
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Sigma Chi was founded in 1855 by [[Benjamin Piatt Runkle]], [[Thomas Cowan Bell]], William Lewis Lockwood, [[Isaac M. Jordan]], Daniel William Cooper, Franklin Howard Scobey, and James Parks Caldwell as the result of a disagreement over who would be elected Poet in the Erodelphian Literary Society of [[Miami University]] in [[Ohio]].<ref name="foundingstory">[https://web.archive.org/web/20060825045159/http://ilwwcm.sigmachi.org/ilwwcm/connect/Home/Sigma+Chi/About+Sigma+Chi/History/The+Founding/ The Founding of Sigma Chi]</ref><ref name="Beta Theta Pi">{{cite book |author=Beta Theta Pi |date=1885 |title= The Beta Theta Pi, Volume 13|url=https://archive.org/details/betathetapifirs01changoog |quote=Sigma Chi Whitelaw. |location=Columbus, Ohio|pages=[https://archive.org/details/betathetapifirs01changoog/page/n108 61]–62 |publisher=[[Beta Theta Pi]]}}</ref> |
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birthplace = [[Miami University]], Oxford, Ohio | |
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type = Social | |
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scope = International | |
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address = 1714 Hinman Avenue | |
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city = Evanston | |
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state = Illinois | |
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country = USA | |
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chapters = 217 undergraduate, 145 alumni | |
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free_label = Manual | |
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free = ''The Norman Shield'' | |
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homepage = [http://web.sigmachi.org/ Sigma Chi Website]}} |
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Several members of Miami University's [[Delta Kappa Epsilon]] chapter (of which all but one of Sigma Chi's founders were members) were also members of the Erodelphian Literary Society. In the fall of 1854 the literary society was to elect its poet and a member of Delta Kappa Epsilon was nominated for the position. He was supported by five of his brothers, but four others, James Caldwell, Isaac Jordan, Benjamin Runkle, and Franklin Scobey, supported another man who was not a member of the fraternity. Although Thomas Bell and Daniel Cooper were not members of Erodelphian they had aligned themselves with the four dissenting members. The chapter had twelve members total and were evenly divided on the issue. Both sides saw this as a matter of principle and over the next few months their friendships became distanced.<ref name="foundingstory" /><ref name="Beta Theta Pi" /> |
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'''Sigma Chi''' ('''ΣΧ''') is one of the largest and oldest international all-male college social [[fraternities and sororities|fraternities]], with chapters at [[university|universities]] predominantly in the [[United States]] and several in [[Canada]]. Sigma Chi was founded in 1855 at [[Miami University]] in [[Oxford, Ohio]] when members split from [[Delta Kappa Epsilon]]. Sigma Chi had seven founding members: [[Benjamin Piatt Runkle]], [[Thomas Cowan Bell]], [[William Lewis Lockwood]], [[Isaac M. Jordan]], [[Daniel William Cooper]], [[Franklin Howard Scobey]], and [[James Parks Caldwell]]. Sigma Chi is a part of the ''[[Miami Triad]]'', along with [[Beta Theta Pi]] and [[Phi Delta Theta]]. |
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In February 1855 Runkle and his companions planned a dinner for their brothers in an attempt to seal the rift. [[Whitelaw Reid]], one of the other brothers who supported the Delta Kappa Epsilon member as poet, was the only one to arrive. Reid brought a Delta Kappa Epsilon alumnus named Minor Millikin from a nearby town.<ref name="foundingstory" /> Reid had told Millikin his side of the dispute and they had arrived to punish the group for not supporting their Delta Kappa Epsilon brother. The leaders of the rebellion, Runkle and Scobey, were to be expelled from the fraternity. The other four would be allowed to stay in the fraternity.<ref name="foundingstory" /> Runkle resigned, and after the parent chapter at [[Yale University]] was contacted, all six men were formally expelled.<ref name="foundingstory" /> |
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The fraternity's official colors are blue and old gold, and its badge is a white cross with emblems on its arms: Crossed keys on the upper arm, an eagle's head on the right arm, seven gold stars and a pair of clasped hands on the lower arm, and a scroll on the left arm. In the center of the cross, on a black background, are the gold symbols for the [[Ancient Greek language|Greek letters]] ''Sigma'' and ''Chi''. The left and right arms are connected to the upper arm by linked gold chains. |
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The six men decided to form their own fraternity along with William Lewis Lockwood, a student from New York who had not joined a fraternity. On June 28, 1855, the organization was founded under the name ''Sigma Phi Fraternity''.<ref>[http://www.eiu.edu/~sigchi/birth.htm The Birth of Sigma Chi] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061210100737/http://www.eiu.edu/~sigchi/birth.htm |date=December 10, 2006 }}</ref> Lockwood used his business training to help organize the fraternity in its early years.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://ilwwcm.sigmachi.org/ilwwcm/connect/Home/Sigma+Chi/About+Sigma+Chi/History/The+Seven+Founders/Lockwood/|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070928075132/http://ilwwcm.sigmachi.org/ilwwcm/connect/Home/Sigma+Chi/About+Sigma+Chi/History/The+Seven+Founders/Lockwood/|url-status=dead|archive-date=September 28, 2007|title=William Lewis Lockwood|date=September 28, 2007|access-date=January 1, 2018}}</ref> The eventual theft of Sigma Phi's constitution, rituals, seals, and other records from Lockwood's room in [[Oxford, Ohio|Oxford]] in January 1856 prompted them to change the name of the fraternity to Sigma Chi.<ref name="Lettermen Boston">{{cite book |last=Maxwell |first=W. J. |date=1900 |title=Greek Letter Men of Boston|url=https://archive.org/details/greeklettermenb00maxwgoog|page=[https://archive.org/details/greeklettermenb00maxwgoog/page/n385 380] |quote=sigma chi norman shield. |publisher=College Book Company}}</ref> It is possible this action could have been forced upon the group as there was already a [[Sigma Phi]] Society. |
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Membership in Sigma Chi involves both [[community service|service-oriented]] activities as well as [[male bonding|social bonding]] for its members. Sigma Chi's suggested beneficiaries for chapter community service projects are the [[Children's Miracle Network]] and the [http://www.hci.utah.edu Huntsman Cancer Institute]. Since 1992 Sigma Chi chapters have raised more than $4.2 million dollars for area CMN hospitals [http://web.sigmachi.org/wps/portal/!ut/p/_s.7_0_A/7_0_2KL/.cmd/ad/.ar/sa.fireAptrixPortletAction/.c/6_0_15J/.ce/7_0_2L5/.p/5_0_1UL/.d/2?PC_7_0_2L5_aptrixPortletAction=UpdateAptrixPortletContext&WCM_Context=http://ilwwcm.sigmachi.org/ilwwcm/connect/Home/Sigma+Chi/Members/Undergraduate+Resources/Philanthropy/] and devoted thousands of hours of service to CMN affiliates. The Huntsman Cancer Institute was added as another beneficiary in 2005. In the 2005 - 2006 academic year, Sigma Chi raised $473,757.43 for the Children's Miracle Network, as well as $55,244.63 for the Huntsman Cancer Institute. |
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Much of Sigma Chi's heraldry was inspired by the legendary story of the [[Emperor Constantine]] from the [[Battle of Milvian Bridge]] against [[Maxentius]]. The White Cross and the motto "[[In Hoc Signo Vinces]]" are examples of the Constantine link. |
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The fundamental purpose of this fraternity is to promote the concepts of Friendship, Justice, and Learning within its membership. |
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===Founders=== |
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As of 2006, the Sigma Chi Fraternity consists of 213,535 living brothers and 217 active undergraduate chapters at colleges and universities throughout the United States and Canada, and 145 alumni groups and alumni brothers around the world [http://web.sigmachi.org/wps/portal/!ut/p/_s.7_0_A/7_0_2KH/.cmd/ad/.ar/sa.fireAptrixPortletAction/.c/6_0_15I/.ce/7_0_2L2/.p/5_0_1UI/.d/1?PC_7_0_2L2_aptrixPortletAction=UpdateAptrixPortletContext&WCM_Context=http://ilwwcm.sigmachi.org/ilwwcm/connect/Home/Sigma+Chi/About+Sigma+Chi/Sigma+Chi+Today/A_Today_Intro]. Every two years, delegates from all undergraduate chapters and alumni chapters meet for the Grand Chapter- in which Grand Officers, the International Sweetheart of Sigma Chi, and the International Balfour Award winner are elected, and revisions to the General Fraternity's Governing Laws and Ritual are proposed and debated. |
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[[File:Runkle Daguerreotype c1857 miamiUniv.png|thumb|[[Benjamin Piatt Runkle]], a Sigma Chi member and [[Union Army]] soldier who was badly wounded at the [[Battle of Shiloh]] during the [[American Civil War]] and later interred in [[Arlington National Cemetery]]]] |
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*'''[[Benjamin Piatt Runkle]]''' (September 3, 1836 – June 28, 1916) was born in [[West Liberty, Ohio]]. Runkle helped design the badge of Sigma Chi based on the story of Constantine and the vision of the Cross. Runkle was known for having a fierce pride and was suspended from [[Miami University]] when he fought a member of [[Beta Theta Pi]] for sneering at his badge. When the [[American Civil War|Civil War]] began Runkle joined the [[Union Army]]. He was badly wounded at the [[Battle of Shiloh]] and left for dead on the battlefield. Runkle stayed in the army as a career and retired as a [[major general]]. After is service in the Union Army he was ordained an [[Episcopal Church (United States)|Episcopal]] priest. He was the only founder to serve as Grand Consul. He died on Sigma Chi's 61st birthday in [[Ohio]]. He is buried in [[Arlington National Cemetery]] in [[Arlington County, Virginia]].<ref>"The Seven Founders: Benjamin Piatt Runkle" page 32. The Norman Shield, 41st Edition</ref> |
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*'''[[Thomas Cowan Bell]]''' (May 14, 1832 – February 3, 1919) was born near [[Dayton, Ohio]]. He was twenty-three years old when Sigma Chi was founded, second oldest of the founders. He graduated from Miami University in 1857 and began teaching. In 1861 he enlisted in the Union Army and rose to the rank of [[lieutenant]]. After the war he returned to his career in education, serving as the superintendent of schools in Nobles County, Minnesota as well as the principal and president of several preparatory and collegiate institutions in the Western United States. Bell died the day after attending the initiation of ''Alpha Beta chapter'' at [[University of California Berkeley]] on February 3, 1919. He is buried at the [[Presidio of San Francisco]] in [[San Francisco National Cemetery]] in California.<ref>"The Seven Founders: Thomas Cowan Bell" page 33. The Norman Shield, 41st Edition</ref> Section OS, Row 43A, Grave 3.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.interment.net/data/us/ca/sanfran/sfnat/san_fran_basben.htm |title=San Francisco National Cemetery Burial List Surnames Bas-Ben |publisher=Interment.net |access-date=2014-01-18}}</ref> |
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*'''William Lewis Lockwood''' (October 31, 1836 – August 17, 1867) was born in New York City. He was the only founder who had not been a member of [[Delta Kappa Epsilon]]. He was considered the "businessman" of the founders and managed the first chapter's funds and general operations, becoming the first treasurer of Sigma Chi. After graduating from Miami University in 1858 he moved back to New York and began work as a lawyer. He received serious wounds serving in the Union Army during the Civil War, from which he never fully recovered. He named his son after Franklin Howard Scobey.<ref>"The Seven Founders: William Lewis Lockwood" page 34. The Norman Shield, 41st Edition</ref> |
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*'''[[Isaac M. Jordan]]''' (May 5, 1835 – December 3, 1890) was born in [[Mifflinburg, Pennsylvania]]<ref name="jordanbio">{{cite web|url=http://bioguide.congress.gov/scripts/biodisplay.pl?index=J000268 |title=Jordan, Isaac M. at the Biographical Directory of the United States Congress |publisher=Bioguide.congress.gov |access-date=2014-01-18}}</ref> as Isaac Alfred Jordan.<ref>[http://www.isusigmachi.com/jordan.php Illinois State University ''Theta Rho chapter'' - Isaac M. Jordan] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070430115812/http://www.isusigmachi.com/jordan.php |date=April 30, 2007 }}</ref> His family later moved to [[Ohio]] where Jordan met Benjamin Piatt Runkle and became close friends. After graduating from Miami University in 1857 he went on to graduate school, where he graduated in 1862. He then began work as an attorney and was elected to the [[United States Congress]] in 1882.<ref>"The Seven Founders: Isaac M. Jordan" page 35. The Norman Shield, 41st Edition</ref> He proceeded to change his middle name, Alfred, to just the letter "M" to help distinguish himself from his brother and law partner, Jackson A. Jordan. He died in 1890 after accidentally falling down an elevator shaft while greeting a friend.<ref>[http://www.usasigs.org/index.php?page=founders Eta Upsilon biographies on the founders] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071009005308/http://www.usasigs.org/index.php?page=founders |date=October 9, 2007 }}</ref> He is buried in Spring Grove Cemetery in [[Cincinnati, Ohio]].<ref name="jordanbio" /> |
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*'''Daniel William Cooper''' (September 2, 1830 – December 11, 1920) was born near [[Fredericktown, Ohio]]. Cooper was the oldest founder and was elected the first consul of Sigma Chi. After graduating from Miami University in 1857 he became a [[Presbyterian]] minister. Cooper's original Sigma Chi badge came into the possession of the Fraternity at the time of his death. It is pinned on every new Grand Consul at their installation. Cooper is buried at the Allegheny Cemetery in Pittsburgh, Pa.<ref>"The Seven Founders: Daniel William Cooper" page 36. The Norman Shield, 41st Edition</ref> |
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*'''Franklin Howard Scobey''' (May 27, 1837 – July 22, 1888) was born in [[Hamilton, Ohio]]. Scobey was considered The Spirit of Sigma Chi for being friendly with everybody and not just a select group of people.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://web.sigmachi.org/wps/portal/!ut/p/About+Sigma+Chi/?New_WCM_Context=http://ilwwcm.sigmachi.org/ilwwcm/connect/Home/Sigma+Chi/About+Sigma+Chi/History/The+Seven+Founders/Scobey/ |title=Franklin Howard Scobey Biography at Sigmachi.org |publisher=Web.sigmachi.org |access-date=2014-01-18}}</ref> After graduating from Miami University in 1858 he went on to graduate again in 1861 with a law degree. He worked as a journalist in his hometown until 1879 but went on to become a cattleman in [[Kansas]] until 1882. Scobey then moved back to Ohio where he took up farming until his death. Never physically robust, Scobey was afflicted with hearing loss in his final years.<ref>"The Seven Founders: Franklin Howard Scobey" page 37. The Norman Shield, 41st Edition</ref> |
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*'''James Parks Caldwell''' (March 27, 1841 – April 5, 1912) was born in [[Monroe, Ohio]]. By the age of thirteen Caldwell had completed all academics which could be offered at his local academy. He was then sent to Miami University with advanced credits. Caldwell was just fourteen at the time of the founding making him the youngest of the founders. After Caldwell graduated from Miami University in 1857 he practiced some law in Ohio but moved to [[Mississippi]] to begin a career as an educator. When the Civil War broke out he joined the [[Confederate Army]]. During the war he was taken prisoner but later, due to the influence of General Benjamin Piatt Runkle, was offered freedom on the condition that he renounce his allegiance to the Confederacy. He rejected this offer and remained loyal to the south. He was later released, again due to the influence of General Runkle. After the war he moved back to Mississippi and was admitted to the bar. He moved to [[California]] in 1867 and practiced law. In 1875, he began to travel frequently practicing law and editing newspapers. He died in [[Biloxi, Mississippi]] where the latest issues of The Sigma Chi Quarterly were found in his room.<ref>"The Seven Founders: James Parks Caldwell" page 38. The Norman Shield, 41st Edition</ref> |
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===Early years=== |
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Sigma Chi was honored by the United States Congress on its 150th anniversary on June 13th, 2005, becoming the first Greek letter society so honored. [http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/z?r109:H13JN5-0018:]. |
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====Constantine chapter==== |
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[[File:Henry St. John Dixon.jpg|thumb|Harry St. John Dixon, a Sigma Chi member and [[Confederate States Army]] soldier in the Civil War, {{Circa|1865}}]] |
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Harry St. John Dixon, a brother from the ''Psi chapter'' at the [[University of Virginia]] in [[Charlottesville, Virginia]], who fought for the [[Confederate States Army|Confederacy]], kept a record of all Sigma Chis within his vicinity on the flyleaf of his diary during the [[American Civil War|Civil War]].<ref name="Constantine Chapter Article">{{cite newsgroup|author=Yeomans, Curt|date=September 30, 2014|title=Sigma Chi continues to draw inspiration from short-lived Constantine Chapter 150 years later|url=http://www.news-daily.com/news/sigma-chi-continues-to-draw-inspiration-from-short-lived-constantine/article_4d881a2c-530a-5503-8786-dece889656e5.html|newsgroup=news-daily.com|access-date=May 19, 2016}}</ref> He began planning a [[Confederate Army]] chapter of Sigma Chi with this information. On September 17, 1864 Dixon founded the ''Constantine chapter'' of Sigma Chi during the [[Atlanta campaign]] with Harry Yerger, a brother from [[Mississippi]] who was in Dixon's division. Dixon stated the reasons for which the war-time chapter was created saying, {{cquote|It was ascertained that a number of the fraternity were in the army of Tennessee under General Joseph E. Johnston during the Atlanta campaign in 1864. It was conceded that the South was forever disunited from the general government, and it was assumed that all chapters throughout the South would cease to exist. Furthermore, it was deemed expedient that we brothers should know each other and our several commands for the purpose of relief in distress, and communication in a case of need, with our Northern brethren. In the ruin at hand my sentiment was to preserve the lofty principles typified by the White Cross. I know that I had no authority to establish a chapter of Sigma Chi outside a college, or at all; but, isolated as we were, I thought I should raise the standard and fix a rallying point. By doing so we should preserve the Order, whether we failed or not in our struggle for independence.<ref name="ReferenceA">"The Constantine Chapter" page 40-41. The Norman Shield, 41st Edition</ref><ref name="Clayton County">{{cite book |last=Kemp |first=Kathryn W. |date=2009 |title=Historic Clayton County: The Sesquicentennial History|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=5cY0cZj6XJsC&q=Sigma+Chi+Harry+St.+John+Dixon&pg=PA17|publisher=Historical Publishing Network |isbn=978-1935377054}}</ref> |
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}} |
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Dixon and Yerger contacted all brothers listed in the diary who could come to the meeting.<ref name="Constantine Chapter Article" /> They met at night in a deserted log cabin a few miles southwest of Atlanta. Dixon later wrote, {{cquote|The cabin was in a state of frightful dilapidation. Its rude walls and rafters were covered with soot and cobwebs, and the floor showed evidences of having been the resting place of sundry heaps of sheep. |
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The Sigma Chi Foundation supports several leadership programs for the fraternity. The Balfour Leadership Training Workshop, held annually, is the largest gathering of its kind in the Greek-letter world. Horizons is an experiential leadership week spent in the mountains of Snowbird, Utah. Cornerstone is an effective mentor initiative that fosters alumni-undergraduate relations at the chapter level. The foundation also funds and distributes several undergraduate and graduate scholarships. Former NASA astronaut [[Gregory J. Harbaugh|Greg Harbaugh]] currently serves as the foundation's president and CEO. |
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}} |
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Dixon was elected "Sigma" (president) and Yerger was elected "Chi" (vice president); the chapter also initiated two men. The only badge in the chapter was one Dixon had made from a [[United States Seated Liberty coinage|silver half-dollar]]. |
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The last meeting was held [[New Year's Day]] 1865. The men at that meeting passed a resolution to pay a "tribute of respect" to the four brothers from the chapter who had died during the war. In May 1939 the ''Constantine chapter'' Memorial was erected by Sigma Chi in memory of the ''Constantine chapter'' and its members. The memorial is located on [[U.S. Route 41 in Georgia|U.S. 41]] in [[Clayton County, Georgia|Clayton County]], [[Georgia (U.S. state)|Georgia]].<ref name="ReferenceA" /><ref name="Clayton County" /> |
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==Founding== |
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====Purdue case==== |
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The founding of Sigma Chi came as the result of a disagreement over who would be named Poet in the Erodelphian Literary Society of old [[Miami University]] in [[Ohio]]. |
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In 1876, [[Emerson E. White]] became president of [[Purdue University]]. He required each applicant for admission to sign a pledge "not to join or belong to any so-called [[Fraternities and sororities|Greek society]] or other college [[secret society]]" while attending the school. The Sigma Chi chapter at Purdue, which was already established at the university, sent petitions to the faculty and pleaded their case to the [[board of trustees]], but was unsuccessful in changing the rule.<ref>{{cite book|title=A University of Tradition: The Spirit of Purdue|last=Purdue Reamer Club|date=2013|publisher=Purdue University Press|edition=2nd|page=237}}</ref> |
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In the fall of 1881, Thomas P. Hawley applied for admission to the university. Having already been initiated into Sigma Chi, Hawley refused to sign the pledge and was denied admission. Hawley took Purdue to court, but the judge ruled in favor of the faculty's decision. He also ruled, however, that the faculty had no right to deny Hawley from his classes based on the [[Fraternities and sororities|fraternity]] issue. The case was brought to the [[Indiana Supreme Court]], which reversed the decision on June 21, 1882. This victory for Sigma Chi also allowed other fraternities at Purdue and led to the Purdue president's resignation in 1883.<ref>"The History of Sigma Chi" page 48. The Norman Shield, 41st Edition</ref> |
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Several members of Miami University's [[Delta Kappa Epsilon]] chapter (of which all but one of Sigma Chi's Founders were members) were also members of the Erodelphian Literary Society. In the fall of 1854 this society was to pick its Poet, and a member of Delta Kappa Epsilon (a "Deke") wanted the position. He was supported by five of his brothers, but four others (Caldwell, Jordan, Runkle, and Scobey) felt that he lacked poetic talent. These men instead chose to give their support to another man who was not a Deke. Bell and Cooper were not members of Erodelphian, but their support for the dissenting four was unequivocal. |
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=== 20th century === |
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In 1854 Delta Kappa Epsilon at [[Miami University]] had 12 members, so the disagreement over who to support as Poet evenly divided the chapter. Other differences might have been forgotten, but both sides saw this conflict as a matter of principle and over the next few months there came a distancing of their friendship. |
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[[File:Sigma Chi House, South State Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan. A postcard by the Hugh C. Leighton Co., of Portland, Maine. No. 26216..jpg|thumb|The Sigma Chi house at the [[University of Michigan]] in [[Ann Arbor, Michigan]], {{Circa|1906–1909}}]] |
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[[File:Alphathetasigmachihouse.jpg|thumb|The Sigma Chi house at [[Massachusetts Institute of Technology|MIT]] in [[Cambridge, Massachusetts]]]] |
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[[File:Infirmary and Sigma Chi Chapter House, University of Mississippi..jpg|thumb|The Infirmary and Sigma Chi chapter house at the [[University of Mississippi]] in [[Oxford, Mississippi]]]] |
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During the first half of the 20th century the General Fraternity expanded in many places. In 1899, the fraternity adopted the flag design created by Henry V. Vinton. In 1901 the Grand Chapter approved the Fraternity's pledge pin. In 1903 at the Grand Chapter in [[Detroit]] the Board of Grand Trustees was established. In 1922 the ''Alpha Beta chapter'' at [[University of California, Berkeley]] held the "Channingway Derby" which led to the creation of the "Sigma Chi Derby Days".<ref>"The History of Sigma Chi" page 49. The Norman Shield, 41st Edition</ref><ref>Carlson, Douglas Richard (1990). ''History of the Sigma Chi Fraternity: 1955–1985''. The Sigma Chi Fraternity. pp. 8–9</ref> Some of the awards created during this time include the Significant Sig Award in 1935 and the Order of Constantine in 1948.<ref>"The History of Sigma Chi" pp. 50–51. The Norman Shield, 41st Edition</ref> |
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As of the beginning of the 20th century, Sigma Chi had installed a total of 74 chapters with 58 still active.<ref>Carlson, Douglas Richard (1990). ''History of the Sigma Chi Fraternity: 1955–1985''. The Sigma Chi Fraternity, pp. 517–518</ref> Having only established a centralized form of government in 1922, Sigma Chi was installing new chapters at a rate of about one chapter per year. On April 22, 1922, the ''Beta Omega chapter'' was installed at the [[University of Toronto]] in [[Toronto|Toronto, Ontario]] thus making Sigma Chi an international fraternity.<ref name="3carlson">Carlson, Douglas Richard (1990). ''History of the Sigma Chi Fraternity: 1955–1985''. The Sigma Chi Fraternity''.'' p. 3</ref> |
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The matter finally came to a head in February of 1855, when, in an attempt to seal the rift, Runkle and his companions planned a dinner for their brothers. The feast was prepared, and the table was set, but only one of the men who supported the Deke as poet arrived, [[Whitelaw Reid]]. With him Reid brought a stranger. The six learned that the stranger was an alumnus of DKE from a nearby town. |
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The Sigma Chi Foundation was created on November 9, 1939, when the Sigma Chi Endowment Foundation was incorporated in [[Colorado]]. This educational endowment was first discussed in 1898 by alumni who wanted to assist undergraduates financially so they could finish their undergraduate studies.<ref name=3carlson/> |
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[[Image:Sigma Chi Founders.jpg|thumb|300px|left|Founders of Sigma Chi]] |
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"My name is Minor Millikin; I live in Hamilton," said the man. "I am a man of few words." Reid had told Millikin his side of the dispute, and the two were present to lay down punishment on Runkle, Scobey, and the rest. The leaders of the rebellion (Runkle and Scobey) were to be expelled from the fraternity. The other four, after being properly chastised, would be allowed to stay a part of the group. |
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The world wars of the 20th century took the lives of 103 Sigs in [[World War I]] and 738 in [[World War II]]. A great resurgence in undergraduate activity followed World War II due to an increase in chapter memberships. This increase was caused by the men returning from military service who went back to school and the usual addition of new brothers.<ref name=3carlson/> During World War II, it became apparent to the General Fraternity officers that a few alumni as well as a few undergraduate chapters believed some of the prerequisites for membership in Sigma Chi were outdated and should be changed or eliminated. This led to the first discussions about membership within the fraternity that continued until early in 1970. Until this time, membership requirements had specified that a potential member must be a "bona fide white male student". After the first discussion in 1948 at the Grand Chapter in [[Seattle]], the committee on Constitutional Amendments tabled the issue pending a further study of the problem to be reported to the 1950 Grand Chapter. The study showed that the issue was "very hot" on 13 campuses with Sigma Chi chapters and only "lukewarm" on a dozen other campuses.<ref name="4carlson">Carlson, Douglas Richard (1990). ''History of the Sigma Chi Fraternity: 1955–1985''. The Sigma Chi Fraternity, p. 4</ref> |
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At the announcement of the punishment Runkle stepped forward. He pulled off his Deke pin, tossed it to the table, and said, "I didn't join this fraternity to be anyone's tool! And that, sir," addressing Millikin, "is my answer!" Runkle stalked from the room and his five brothers followed. One final chapter meeting was held, at which the chapter was six-to-six divided on the issue of expulsion. The parent chapter at [[Yale University]] was contacted, and all six men were formally excommunicated. |
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During this time period, the remaining four founders of Sigma Chi of the original seven all died; Daniel William Cooper was the last founder to die. Cooper's death led up to the Fraternity gaining one of its most priceless objects, Cooper's Sigma Phi badge. Cooper's body was sent by train to his final resting place in [[Pittsburgh]], and the ''Beta Theta chapter'' at the [[University of Pittsburgh]] was given the privilege to administer his memorial service. |
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The six men soon associated themselves with William Lewis Lockwood, a student from New York who had not joined a fraternity. Lockwood's natural business acumen helped to organize the fraternity in its early years. On June 28th, 1855 (Commencement at Old Miami), the ''Sigma Phi Fraternity'' was founded. |
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On December 13, 1920, Cooper's body was conveyed to the ''Beta Theta chapter'' house, where Beta Theta Consul Donald E. Walker removed Cooper's Sigma Phi Badge and replaced it with his own. Beta Theta Pro-Consul, [[Regis Toomey]], sang the hymn ''"With Sacred Circle Broken"'' before Cooper was taken to his final resting place.<ref>Carlson, Douglas R. "Sig History", p. 33 and 72. Sigma Chi Magazine, Winter 1983</ref> |
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The theft of the Constitution, [[Ritual]], Seals and other records from Founder Lockwood's room in [[Oxford, Ohio|Oxford]] in January, 1856 necessitated the change of the name of the Fraternity to Sigma Chi. Eventually, this action would have been forced upon the group as there was already a [[Sigma Phi]] Society in the [[collegiate]] world. |
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==Nomenclature and insignia== |
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==Leadership Programs== |
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===Badge=== |
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===Balfour Leadership Training Workshop=== |
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The badge of Sigma Chi is a white cross with white and black enamel. Two gold chains connect the two upper arms. Crossed keys are in the upper arm, an eagle's head lies in the left arm, and a scroll lies in its right arm. In the bottom arm lie two clasped hands and seven stars. |
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The Balfour Leadership Training Workshop, established in 1947, is a program designed to improve the quality of leadership in the Fraternity. Each August, leaders from Sigma Chi's undergraduate chapters spend three days on a college campus, immersed in presentations, discussions, and problem solving sessions about chapter operations and other issues that affect a chapter's viability. |
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=== |
===Seal=== |
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[[File:Sigma Chi Seal.jpg|thumb|Sigma Chi's seal]] |
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Horizons is a leadership program specifically created for Sigma Chi underclassmen who are eager and willing to improve themselves and their world. At Horizons, undergraduates experience a six-day immersion in whole-brained learning that engages both mind and body. The program was initially funded by [[Robert C. McNair|Bob McNair]], owner of the Houston Texans. |
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The seal of Sigma Chi is circular. On the outer edge is "Sigma Chi Fraternity" and at the bottom are the numbers "1855". In the middle lie seven stars and a seven-branched candlestick. |
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=== |
===Coat of Arms=== |
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The crest of Sigma Chi is a blue Norman Shield with a white cross in its center. On top of the Norman Shield is a scroll and a crest of an eagle's head holding a key. Below it, the fraternity's public motto, "In Hoc Signo Vinces" is placed on a scroll. It can be translated as, "In this sign, thou shalt conquer."<ref>{{cite book|last=Fraternity|first=Sigma Chi|title=The Norman Shield, 43rd Edition|year=2009|publisher=Sigma Chi Fraternity|location=United States of America|pages=51–52}}</ref> |
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The Cornerstone program is designed to provide alumni leaders with the tools they need to efficiently support undergraduate chapters. This mentorship program encourages alumni participation and growth at undergraduate chapters, Cornerstone aims to bring professionally-trained mentors to every Sigma Chi chapter. Mentors assist undergraduates by increasing leadership training and improving academic performance and general operations. Cornerstone mentors have an unequivocal commitment to the ideals of Sigma Chi, willingness to be a role model and accessibility and availability to the chapter and its members. Through the support of Jesse R. "Bob" Stone, three short ''Buildling On Our Brotherhood'' films were produced about the Cornerstone Program. |
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==Governance== |
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==Literature of Sigma Chi== |
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=== |
===Chapter officers=== |
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Officers in undergraduate chapters mostly have titles derived from [[Roman consul|Imperial Rome]]. The top officers of each chapter are known as the Consul (president), Pro Consul (vice-president), Annotator (secretary), Quaestor (treasurer), Magister (pledge trainer), Kustos (sergeant-at-arms), Tribune (communications), Risk Manager, and Historian. Those titles are the primary officers common to all chapters. Chapters also have other positions, such as Social Chairman, Sports Chairman, Scholarship Chairman, House Manager, Recruitment Chairman, etc., plus other positions and titles varying from chapter to chapter.{{citation needed|date=January 2014}} |
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''The purpose of this fraternity shall be to cultivate and maintain the high ideals of friendship, justice and learning upon which Sigma Chi was founded.'' |
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Alumni chapter positions and duties may also vary from chapter to chapter. Alumni chapters use the more common office titles such as: president, vice-president, secretary, and treasurer. |
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===Creed=== |
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''I believe in fairness, decency and good manners. I will endeavor to retain the spirit of youth. I will try to make my college, the Sigma Chi Fraternity, and my own chapter more honored by all men and women and more beloved and honestly respected by our own brothers. I say these words in all sincerity; That Sigma Chi has given me favor and distinction; that the bond of our fellowship is reciprocal, that I will endeavor to so build myself and so conduct myself that I will ever be a credit to our Fraternity.'' |
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===Grand officers=== |
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-[[George Ade]], [[Purdue University]], Class of 1887 |
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The international organization uses similar Roman titles, typically with the prefix of "Grand". The Grand Consul is the international president of Sigma Chi. He presides over the Executive Committee and the Grand Chapter. |
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=== |
===Grand Chapter=== |
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Grand Chapter is the supreme [[legislative body]] of Sigma Chi and convenes on odd numbered years. It is composed of one delegate from each active undergraduate chapter and alumni chapter, the Grand Consul and Past Grand Consuls, each being entitled to one vote. The Grand Chapter elects the officers of the Fraternity as well as alter or amend the Constitution, Statutes, and Executive Committee Regulations. It may grant or revoke charters as well as discipline any chapter, officer or member.<ref name=organization>"Organization, Governance & Services" page 80-84. The Norman Shield, 41st Edition</ref> The most recent Sigma Chi Grand Chapter was held in Toronto, Ontario on June 22–25, 2023.<ref>{{cite web |title=Save the Date: 84th Grand Chapter |url=https://sigmachi.org/84thgrandchapter/|website=Sigma Chi Fraternity |access-date=3 September 2023}}</ref> |
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''The confidence of the founders of Sigma Chi was based on a belief that the principles which they professed and the ideal of the Fraternity which they sought were but imperfectly realized in the organizations by which they were surrounded. |
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===Grand Council=== |
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The standard with which the fraternity started was declared by Issac M. Jordan to be that of admitting no man to membership in Sigma Chi who is not believed to be: |
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The Grand Council meets every year when no Grand Chapter is held. The Grand Council consists of the Grand Officers, Past Grand Consuls, members of the Executive Committee, Grand Trustees, Grand Praetors, members of the Leadership Training Board and one undergraduate from each province. It may [[Constitutional amendment|amend]] the Statutes or Executive Committee Regulations.<ref name=organization/> |
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===Executive Committee=== |
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*A Man of Good Character....... |
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The Executive Committee meets at least four times a year. The Executive Committee consists of 12 members; Grand Consul, Grand Pro Consul, Grand Quaestor, the immediate Past Grand Consul, a Grand Trustee elected by the Board of Grand Trustees, two Grand Praetors elected by the Praetorial College, one alumnus member-at-large, two undergraduate representatives elected by the undergraduate delegates from each chapter, and the two most recent International Balfour Award winners. The committee regulates the budget and expenditures as well as assign duties to the International Headquarters staff.<ref name=organization/> |
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*A Student of Fair Ability....... |
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*With Ambitious Purposes....... |
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*A Congenial Disposition....... |
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*Possessed of Good Morals....... |
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*Having a High Sense of Honor and |
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*A Deep Sense of Personal Responsibility.'' |
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===Charitable foundations=== |
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-Founder [[Isaac M. Jordan]] addressed the 15th Grand Chapter in 1884, his speech provided the basic 7 points for the current Jordan Standard. |
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The Sigma Chi Foundation is a charitable and educational tax-exempt organization, separate and independent from the Fraternity, whose express purpose is to serve as an educational funding resource for the undergraduate and graduate student members of the Sigma Chi Fraternity. |
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A Board of Governor governs the Foundation. The Foundation's President and CEO is Ashley Woods and the Foundation's offices are based in Evanston, Illinois. |
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===Spirit=== |
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The Sigma Chi Canadian Foundation is the Canadian counterpart of The Sigma Chi Foundation. It serves independently of both the fraternity and the American foundation. It was formed by Canadian Sigma Chi Alumni as a registered charitable foundation to provide a tax-effective way for Canadian Sigma Chi to support the educational pursuits of Canadian undergraduate chapters.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.sigmachi.ca/en/canadian-foundation/programs/graham-scholarships/ |title=SCCF John W. Graham Scholarships |publisher=Sigmachi.ca |access-date=2014-01-18 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140118202509/http://www.sigmachi.ca/en/canadian-foundation/programs/graham-scholarships/ |archive-date=2014-01-18 }}</ref> The Foundation is guided by a Chair and a Board of Directors of alumni members.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.sigmachi.ca/en/canadian-foundation/governance/ |title=Sigma Chi Canadian Foundation Board of Directors |publisher=Sigmachi.ca |access-date=2014-01-18 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140118202507/http://www.sigmachi.ca/en/canadian-foundation/governance/ |archive-date=2014-01-18 }}</ref> |
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The spirit of Sigma Chi, as conceived by the Founders more than 150 years ago yet visible and alive today, is based on the theory that... |
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==Leadership programs== |
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*friendship among members, sharing a common belief in an ideal, and possessing different temperaments, talents, and convictions... |
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*The Krach Transformational Leaders Workshop (KTLW) is a three-day retreat held annually since 1947. Undergraduate members receive training for specific roles within their chapter. Alumni volunteers are also given mentorship training. The KTLW is named after the 64th Grand Consul of the Fraternity, [[Keith J. Krach|Keith Krach]].<ref>{{Cite web |author= |title=Member Development – Leadership |url=https://sigmachi.org/home/member-development-leadership/ |website=Sigma Chi}}</ref> |
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*Horizons is a six-day workshop for undergraduate brothers. The program aims to create lifelong values-based leaders.<ref>{{Cite book|title = The Norman Shield|publisher = Sigma Chi Fraternity|year = 2013|pages = 122–123|edition = 45}}</ref> |
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*Mission 365 is a recruitment workshop. Participants are taught how to "increase both the quality and quantity" of potential new members.<ref>{{Cite web |title=The Recruitment Vision {{!}} Mission 365 |url=http://events.sigmachi.org/mission365/home |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151109145513/http://events.sigmachi.org/mission365/home |archive-date=2015-11-09 |access-date=2015-11-12 |website=Sigma Chi}}</ref> |
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*The Journey Program is [[self-improvement]] training for undergraduate chapters. There are six Journey workshops, each with a specific aim to better one aspect of the chapter.<ref>{{Cite web|title = Journey|url = http://sigmachi.org/journey|website = Sigma Chi Fraternity|access-date = 2015-11-12}}</ref> |
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*The Sigma Chi Choices program and The Sigma Chi Crossroads Workshop both aim to combat drug and alcohol abuse and address mental health among members.<ref name=":0">{{Cite book|title = The Norman Shield|publisher = Sigma Chi Fraternity|year = 2013|pages = 126|edition = 45}}</ref> |
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*Sigma Chi Lifeline is an online resource for those suffering from mental illness. The program aims to prevent suicide among college students by providing information and support for those affected by emotional and mental health issues.<ref name=":0" /> |
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==Philanthropy== |
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*is superior to friendship among members having the same temperaments, talents, and convictions; and that... |
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===Derby Days=== |
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Derby Days is a series of charity events held by all Sigma Chi chapters. Throughout the course of a week, a participating chapter organizes and hosts a series of events and competitions among their campus' sororities. Money is raised through either donations, or through fundraising-type events. Hosting a Derby Days event is not mandatory for any chapter. A common event held across many campuses is the Derby Run, where brothers must wear derbies throughout the day, while sisters in participating sororities attempt to steal them. According to the International Fraternity's official website, the basic mission of Derby Days is to serve the community.<ref name="sigmachi.org">{{cite web |date=2013-04-12 |title=Philanthropy |url=http://www.sigmachi.org/philanthropy |access-date=2014-01-18 |website=Sigma Chi Fraternity |publisher= |archive-date=2014-02-01 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140201123004/http://www.sigmachi.org/philanthropy |url-status=dead }}</ref> According to archival information at Sigma Chi International Headquarters, the first "Derby Day" event was held in 1916 at the [[University of California-Berkeley]]. Then known as the "Channing Way Derby" because of the California-Berkeley chapter's location on Channing Way and College Avenue, the event spread to other chapters who created their own Derby Day.<ref>"The History of Sigma Chi" page 57. The Norman Shield, 44th Edition</ref> The most money raised by any Sigma Chi chapter was the ''Iota Psi chapter'' at Rutgers University in the fall of 2016. The brothers of the ''Iota Psi chapter'' raised $300,007 with the help of the eight sororities at the University: Zeta Tau Alpha, Phi Sigma Sigma, Sigma Delta Tau, Phi Mu, Delta Gamma, Gamma Phi Beta, Sigma Kappa, and Alpha Gamma Delta. This money is all donated to the Huntsman Cancer Foundation. $300,007 is the most money raised in a single event by any single Greek Organization in the world. |
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===Merlin Olsen Day of Service=== |
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*genuine friendship can be maintained without surrendering the principle of individuality or sacrificing one's personal judgment. |
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In honor of notable Sigma Chi alumni and [[Pro Football Hall of Fame|NFL Hall of Fame]] inductee [[Merlin Olsen]], September 15 is recognized by the fraternity as the Merlin Olsen Day of Service. On this day, members of the fraternity are encouraged to volunteer to improve their communities.<ref name="sigmachi.org"/> |
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[[Children's Miracle Network Hospitals]] (CMNH) is Sigma Chi's suggested beneficiary. The organization was introduced to the fraternity by Olsen in 1992. Since then Sigma Chi alumni and undergraduate chapters have raised more than 6.9 million for CMNH. Every chapter has a CMNH affiliate within less than 200 miles, with each chapter donating to the nearest affiliated hospital.<ref name="sigmachi.org"/> |
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The Spirit of Sigma Chi was written by the Fraternity to honor and pay homage to the beliefs of [[Franklin Howard Scobey]] who believed strongly in the ideal that friendship among members of different temperaments, talents and convictions is superior to friendship among those who are all similar. |
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===Huntsman Cancer Foundation/Huntsman Cancer Institute=== |
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===My Badge=== |
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The [[Huntsman Cancer Institute]] (HCF/HCI) is Sigma Chi's preferred charitable partner. It was chosen at Sigma Chi's 150th anniversary celebration in 2005. The Huntsman Cancer Institute today is dedicated to researching the causes, treatments, and preventative methods of cancer. The institute was founded in 1995 by Sigma Chi alumnus, and founder of the [[Huntsman Corporation]], [[Jon Huntsman, Sr.|Jon M. Huntsman Sr.]] Huntsman has donated more than 350 million dollars to the institute, and has encouraged his fellow brothers to contribute as well.<ref>{{cite web |title=Huntsman Cancer Institute - University of Utah Health Care - Salt Lake City, Utah |url=http://www.huntsmancancer.org/about-us/mission-and-history/mission-and-history |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121019110941/http://www.huntsmancancer.org/about-us/mission-and-history/mission-and-history |archive-date=2012-10-19 |access-date=2014-01-18 |publisher=Huntsmancancer.org}}</ref> By 2023, Sigma Chi undergraduate chapters had raised over $21 million to support the Huntsman Cancer Institute and have raised their pledge to an additional $20 million, for a $31 total pledge. In calendar year 2023, Sigma Chi undergraduate chapters raised $2,711,368.{{citation needed|date=January 2024}} |
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==Awards== |
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I might be forced to admit that there is some similarity between the ideals of Sigma Chi and those other fraternities but I will not share the beautiful and the symbolic supremacy of the White Cross of Sigma Chi with any other badge in the Greek world. The badge of my fraternity is a cross, a sign and a symbol known to all the world, uplifting HIM of whom our badge reminds us. |
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===Undergraduate awards=== |
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Sigma Chi gives out two undergraduate awards, The Peterson Significant Chapter Award, which is given to chapters who show a strong performance in all areas of chapter operations,<ref name=awards>{{cite web|url=http://web.sigmachi.org/wps/portal/!ut/p/_s.7_0_A/7_0_2KL/.cmd/ad/.ar/sa.fireAptrixPortletAction/.c/6_0_15J/.ce/7_0_2L5/.p/5_0_1UL/.d/2?PC_7_0_2L5_aptrixPortletAction=UpdateAptrixPortletContext&WCM_Context=http://ilwwcm.sigmachi.org/ilwwcm/connect/Home/Sigma+Chi/Members/Scholarships+and+Awards/Undergraduate+Awards/|title=Sigma Chi Undergraduate Awards|website=SigmaChi.org|access-date=January 1, 2018|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071220051341/http://web.sigmachi.org/wps/portal/!ut/p/_s.7_0_A/7_0_2KL/.cmd/ad/.ar/sa.fireAptrixPortletAction/.c/6_0_15J/.ce/7_0_2L5/.p/5_0_1UL/.d/2?PC_7_0_2L5_aptrixPortletAction=UpdateAptrixPortletContext&WCM_Context=http%3A%2F%2Filwwcm.sigmachi.org%2Filwwcm%2Fconnect%2FHome%2FSigma+Chi%2FMembers%2FScholarships+and+Awards%2FUndergraduate+Awards%2F|archive-date=December 20, 2007}}</ref><ref name="awards2">"Undergraduate Awards" page 98–100. The Norman Shield, 41st Edition</ref> and The International Balfour Award, which is given each year to one graduating senior who excels in four criteria; scholarship, [[Moral character|character]], Fraternity service and campus leadership.<ref name=awards/><ref name="awards2"/> |
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===Alumni awards=== |
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It is not a shield of timid defense nor a drawn sword of oppressive aggression nor an arrow swift and sure on its mission of death. It is not a diamond so rich and so rare as to have no part in the common crowd nor a crescent pale and incomplete nor a star shining with a borrowed ray. It is not a lamp whose feeble flame is extinguished by the slightest gust of wind that blows; nor a simple monogram of mysterious Greek letters presuming to reveal some hidden meaning. |
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The fraternity also gives out three alumni awards: The Significant Sig Award is given to a member who has excelled greatly in his field of study or occupation. The first seven Significant Sig awards were given to [[George Ade]], [[Roy Chapman Andrews]], [[John T. McCutcheon]], [[Chase S. Osborn]], James Wallington, F. Dudleigh Vernor, and Samuel P. Cowley.<ref name=alumniaward/> The Order of Constantine is awarded to alumni members who have devoted long and distinguished service to the Fraternity.<ref name=alumniaward>"Alumni Awards" page 92-94. The Norman Shield, 41st Edition</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://web.sigmachi.org/wps/portal/!ut/p/_s.7_0_A/7_0_2KL/.cmd/ad/.ar/sa.fireAptrixPortletAction/.c/6_0_15J/.ce/7_0_2L5/.p/5_0_1UL/.d/5?PC_7_0_2L5_aptrixPortletAction=UpdateAptrixPortletContext&WCM_Context=http://ilwwcm.sigmachi.org/ilwwcm/connect/Home/Sigma+Chi/Members/Scholarships+and+Awards/Order+of+Constantine/|title=The Sigma Chi Order of Constantine|website=SigmaChi.org|access-date=January 1, 2018|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101121184304/http://web.sigmachi.org/wps/portal/!ut/p/_s.7_0_A/7_0_2KL/.cmd/ad/.ar/sa.fireAptrixPortletAction/.c/6_0_15J/.ce/7_0_2L5/.p/5_0_1UL/.d/5?PC_7_0_2L5_aptrixPortletAction=UpdateAptrixPortletContext&WCM_Context=http%3A%2F%2Filwwcm.sigmachi.org%2Filwwcm%2Fconnect%2FHome%2FSigma+Chi%2FMembers%2FScholarships+and+Awards%2FOrder+of+Constantine%2F|archive-date=November 21, 2010}}</ref> The Semi-Century Sig Award is given to brothers who have been active in the fraternity for 50 years or more.<ref name="alumniaward"/> |
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===International Sweetheart=== |
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But a cross with its base planted in the common clay of earth; its arms outstretched to all the world and its head lifted heavenward. It is a White Cross, suggesting purity. As any pure white surface reflects all the rays of light without the absorption of any, so the White Cross of Sigma Chi reflects its ideals unselfishly to all Mankind. |
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{{Main|Sweetheart of Sigma Chi}} |
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Most undergraduate chapters elect a female associated with the chapter as the chapter sweetheart. At each Grand Chapter, the fraternity chooses a Sweetheart from one chapter to be the International Sweetheart of Sigma Chi for two years. The International Sweetheart Award is presented based on personality, character, campus involvement, Sigma Chi activities, general accomplishments, poise, and grace. Each [[nominee]] must be the sweetheart of an undergraduate chapter for the year nominated and a student at the nominating chapter's university.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://web.sigmachi.org/wps/portal/!ut/p/_s.7_0_A/7_0_2KL/.cmd/ad/.ar/sa.fireAptrixPortletAction/.c/6_0_15J/.ce/7_0_2L5/.p/5_0_1UL/.d/3?PC_7_0_2L5_aptrixPortletAction=UpdateAptrixPortletContext&WCM_Context=http://ilwwcm.sigmachi.org/ilwwcm/connect/Home/Sigma+Chi/Members/Scholarships+and+Awards/Additional+Awards/|archive-url=https://archive.today/20071018070149/http://web.sigmachi.org/wps/portal/!ut/p/_s.7_0_A/7_0_2KL/.cmd/ad/.ar/sa.fireAptrixPortletAction/.c/6_0_15J/.ce/7_0_2L5/.p/5_0_1UL/.d/3?PC_7_0_2L5_aptrixPortletAction=UpdateAptrixPortletContext&WCM_Context=http://ilwwcm.sigmachi.org/ilwwcm/connect/Home/Sigma+Chi/Members/Scholarships+and+Awards/Additional+Awards/|url-status=dead|archive-date=October 18, 2007|title=Additional Awards & Recognitions of Sigma Chi|website=SigmaChi.org|access-date=January 1, 2018}}</ref> [[Judy Garland]] was a Sigma Chi Sweetheart from the [[Ohio State University]] chapter and [[Faye Dunaway]] was a Sigma Chi Sweetheart from The University of Florida chapter.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.jgdb.com/articl31.htm |title=Judy Garland Database |publisher=Jgdb.com |date=1938-03-28 |access-date=2014-01-18 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070911031105/http://www.jgdb.com/articl31.htm |archive-date=2007-09-11 }}</ref> |
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===Military Service Recognition Pin=== |
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- W. Henry McLean, [[DePauw University]], Class of 1910 |
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The Military Service Recognition Pin recognizes honorably discharged veterans or currently serving members of the armed forces who are in good standing with the Sigma Chi Fraternity. The pin consists of a single Norman-style sword thrust upward with a small Sigma Chi Norman Shield with a cross embossed upon it placed upon the lower end of the blade just above the [[hilt]] and is to be worn on the brother's lapel. The Military service pin concept and design was created by Life Loyal Sig Anthony Dauer Theta Beta 1993 and was first presented at the 2007 Grand Chapter.<ref>''Sigma Chi E-Newsletter'', Vol. 17, September 2007</ref><ref>''The Magazine of Sigma Chi'' Summer 2007, "Letter from the Grand Consul", page 3</ref> |
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==Publications== |
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===The Sweetheart of Sigma Chi=== |
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===''The Magazine of Sigma Chi''=== |
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''When the world goes wrong as it's bound to do, and you've broken Dan Cupid's bow, and you long for the girl you used to love, the maid of the long ago, why light your pipe, bid sorrow avaunt, blow the smoke from your altar of dreams, and wreathe the face of your dream girl there, the love that is just what it seems, the girl of my dreams is the sweetest girl of all the girls I know, each sweet coed like a rainbow trail fades in the afterglow, the blue of her eyes and the gold of her hair are a blend of the western sky, and the moonlight beams on the girl of my dreams, she's the Sweetheart of Sigma Chi.'' |
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''The Magazine of Sigma Chi'' is the official quarterly publication for undergraduate and alumni brothers of the Sigma Chi Fraternity. First published in 1881 at [[Gettysburg College]], ''Theta chapter'', as ''The Sigma Chi'', publication eventually moved to Chicago and the name was changed to ''The Sigma Chi Quarterly''.<ref name="Lettermen Boston"/> The name was later changed to ''The Magazine of Sigma Chi'' |
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===''The Norman Shield''=== |
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-Often called the most beloved and popular of college fraternity songs, "The Sweetheart of Sigma Chi" was written in 1911 by Byron D. Stokes ([[Albion College|Albion]], Class of 1911) and F. Dudleigh Vernor ([[Albion College|Albion]], Class of 1913). Stokes had written the words while in class one June day that year, and presented them that afternoon to Vernor, who was practicing the organ in the chapel, and composed the music at that time. The song has since become a favorite among ballroom orchestras and was used in two movie musicals of the same name, in 1933 and 1946. When asked about the song's inspiration, Stokes replied, "The 'Sweetheart' is the symbol for the spiritual ingredient in brotherhood. It was the Sigma Chi Fraternity itself that inspired the song. I wrote the words not long after my initiation, and the magic of our Ritual with its poetic overtones and undertones was, I suppose, the source of my inspiration." |
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''The Norman Shield'' is the reference manual of the Fraternity.<ref>{{cite book|title=Works Cited: An Alphabetical Odyssey of Mayhem and Misbehavior|last=Schrand|first=Brandon R.|pages=[https://archive.org/details/workscitedalphab0000schr/page/62 62]|url=https://archive.org/details/workscitedalphab0000schr|url-access=registration|quote=sigma chi norman shield.|publisher=U of Nebraska Press|date=2013}}</ref> It was authorized by the 24th Grand Consul Herbert C. Arms at the 1924 Grand Chapter. It was first compiled in 1929 by Arthur Vos, Jr. and based on the booklet he prepared for the ''Beta Mu chapter'' at the [[University of Colorado at Boulder]] which Vos indicated was based on the material contained in the 1922 Manual and Directory.<ref>From the History of the Norman Shield https://www.sigmachi.org/the-norman-shield</ref> It contained biographies of the founders, significant alumni, a history of the Fraternity, the Constitution and Statutes, and other writings relevant to the fraternity. |
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== |
==Chapters== |
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{{Main|List of Sigma Chi chapters|List of Sigma Chi alumni chapters}} |
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===Athletics=== |
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As of 2023, the fraternity has sixteen associate chapters or colonies.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Current Colonies |url=https://members.sigmachi.org/Shared_Content/Custom/Fraternity/Undergraduate_Services/Expansion/Current%20Colonies.aspx |access-date=2023-09-02 |website=Sigma Chi |language=en}}</ref> |
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* [[Bill Arnsparger]], [[Miami University|Miami]], 1950. [[National Football League|NFL]] [[coach (sport)|coach]], [[National Collegiate Athletic Association|NCAA]] [[American football|football]] [[coach (sports)|coach]]. |
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* [[Matthew Baker]], [[University of North Carolina|UNC-Chapel Hill]], 2006. [[Quarterback]] ([[Scout team|Practice Squad]]), [[National Football League|NFL]] [[Dallas Cowboys]]. |
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* [[Drew Bennett]], [[UCLA]], 2001. [[Wide receiver]], [[National Football League|NFL]] [[Tennessee Titans]]. |
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* [[Drew Brees]], [[Purdue University|Purdue]], 2001. [[Quarterback]], [[New Orleans Saints]]. |
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* [[Bill Buckner]], [[University of Southern California|USC]], 1972. [[Major League Baseball|MLB]], [[Boston Red Sox]]. |
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* [[Mark DeRosa]], [[University of Pennsylvania]], 1997. [[Major League Baseball|MLB]], [[Texas Rangers (baseball)|Texas Rangers]]. |
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* [[Mike Ditka]], [[University of Pittsburgh|Pittsburgh]], 1961. [[Tight end]] and later [[Coach (sport)|Coach]], [[Chicago Bears]], [[Pro Football Hall of Fame]]. |
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* [[Luke Donald]], [[Northwestern University|Northwestern]], 2001. Professional [[golfer]], [[PGA Tour]]. |
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* [[Dwight Eddleman|Dwight "Dike" Eddleman]], [[University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign|Illinois]], 1949. Silver medalist, [[High jump]], 1948 [[Summer Olympic Games|Olympics]]; [[National Basketball Association|NBA]] All-Star. |
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* [[Jim Everett]], [[Purdue University|Purdue]], 1986. Former [[National Football League|NFL]] [[Quarterback]], [[St. Louis Rams|Los Angeles Rams]], 1986-93; [[New Orleans Saints]], 1994 - 1996; [[San Diego Chargers]], 1997. |
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* [[Eric Fonoimoana]], [[University of California, Santa Barbara|UCSB]], 1993. Gold Medalist, Men's [[Beach Volleyball]], [[2000 Olympics]]. |
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* [[Bob Griese]], [[Purdue University|Purdue]], 1967. [[Quarterback]] of the [[Miami Dolphins]], during the 17-0 [[1972]] season, [[Pro Football Hall of Fame]]. |
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* [[Woody Hayes]], [[Denison University|Denison]], 1935. [[National Collegiate Athletic Association|NCAA]] [[College Football|Football]] [[Coach (sport)|Coach]], [[The Ohio State University]], 1951 - 1978. [[College Football Hall of Fame]] |
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*[[Mark Herrmann]], [[Purdue University|Purdue]], 1980. [[Quarterback]], [[National Football League|NFL]] [[Denver Broncos]], 1982; [[Indianapolis Colts|Baltimore Colts]], 1983-1986. |
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* [[Bob Hill]], [[Bowling Green State University|BGSU]], 1971. Head [[coach (sport)|coach]], [[National Basketball Association|NBA]] [[Seattle SuperSonics]], 2006; [[San Antonio Spurs]] 1994 - 1996; [[Indiana Pacers]] 1990 - 1993. |
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* [[Mike Holmgren]], [[University of Southern California|USC]], 1970. [[National Football League|NFL]] [[coach (sport)|coach]], [[Green Bay Packers]], [[Seattle Seahawks]]. |
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* [[Brad Hoover]], [[Western Carolina University]]. [[Fullback]], [[National Football League|NFL]] [[Carolina Panthers]]. |
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* [[Don Hutson]], [[University of Alabama|Alabama]], 1935. [[Green Bay Packers]], [[Pro Football Hall of Fame]]. |
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* [[Johnny Majors]], [[University of Tennessee|Tennessee]], 1957. [[College football|Football]] [[Coach (sport)|coach]], [[Iowa State University|Iowa State]], 1968 - 1972; [[University of Pittsburgh|Pittsburgh]], 1973 - 1976; [[University of Tennessee|Tennessee]], 1977 - 1992. [[College Football Hall of Fame]], 1987. |
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* [[Casey Martin]], [[Stanford University|Stanford]], 1995. [[PGA Tour]], Plaintiff, ''[[PGA Tour, Inc. v. Martin|PGA Tour, Inc. v. Casey Martin]]'', 2001. |
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* [[Urban Meyer]], [[University of Cincinnati|Cincinnati]], 1986. Head Football Coach, [[University of Florida]]. |
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* [[Bronko Nagurski]], [[University of Minnesota|Minnesota]], 1930, [[Pro Football Hall of Fame]]. |
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* [[Merlin Olsen]], [[Utah State University|Utah State]], 1962, [[Defensive Tackle]], [[Los Angeles Rams]], [[Pro Football Hall of Fame]]. |
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* [[Johnny Orr]], [[Beloit College]], 1951. Basketball coach, Michigan and Iowa State. |
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* [[Jim Palmer]], [[Arizona State University|Arizona State]], 1967. [[Major League Baseball|MLB]], [[Baltimore Orioles]]. [[Baseball Hall of Fame|Major League Baseball Hall of Famer]] [[pitcher]]. |
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* [[Sean Payton]], [[Eastern Illinois University|Eastern Illinois]], 1987. Head Coach, [[National Football League|NFL]] [[New Orleans Saints]]; [[Quarterback]], [[Arena Football League|AFL]] [[Chicago Bruisers]], 1987. |
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* [[John Pont]], [[Miami University|Miami]], 1952. Head [[College football|football]] [[Coach (sport)|coach]], [[Miami University]], [[Yale University]], [[Indiana University Bloomington|Indiana University]], [[Northwestern University]]. |
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* [[John Robinson (football coach)|John Robinson]], [[University of Oregon|Oregon]], 1958. Head [[Coach (sports)|coach]], [[National Football League|NFL]] [[Los Angeles Rams]]; [[National Collegiate Athletic Association|NCAA]] [[college football|football]] [[University of Southern California|USC]] [[USC Trojans football|Trojans]], 1976 - 1982. |
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* [[Lou Saban]], [[Indiana University Bloomington|Indiana University]], 1944. Head [[Coach (sports)|coach]], [[National Football League|NFL]] [[Denver Broncos]], 1967 - 1971; [[Buffalo Bills]], 1972 - 1976 |
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* Lester "Les" Steers, [[University of Oregon|Oregon]], 1943. Former world champion [[high jump]], 1941. National [[Athletics (track and field)|Track & Field]] Hall of Fame, 1974 |
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* [[Hank Stram]], [[Purdue University|Purdue]], 1945. Head [[coach (sports)|coach]], [[National Football League|NFL]] [[Kansas City Chiefs]], 1963 - 1974. [[Pro Football Hall of Fame]], 2003. |
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* [[Eddie Sutton]], [[Oklahoma State University–Oklahoma City|Oklahoma State]], 1958. Oklahoma State [[Basketball]] [[Coach (sports)|Coach]] (retired), [[Big 12]] Coach of the Year. |
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* [[Bobby Valentine]], [[University of Southern California|USC]], 1972. Player, [[Manager]], [[Major League Baseball]]. |
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* [[Jay Wright (coach)|Jay Wright]], [[Bucknell University|Bucknell]], 1983. Men's Basketball [[Coach (sports)|Coach]], [[Villanova University]], [[Big East]] Coach of the Year, 2006. |
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* [[Fielding Yost]], [[West Virginia University|West Virginia]], 1897. Head [[College Football|football]] [[Coach (sports)|coach]], [[University of Michigan]], 1901 - 1923, 1925 - 1926; [[College Football Hall of Fame]], 1951. |
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* [[Randall Stone]], [[Oregon State University|Oregon State]], 1995. Member, United States [[Triathlon]] Team USA 1992, 1993. |
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==Notable members== |
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===Politics and government=== |
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{{Main|List of Sigma Chi members}} |
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* [[Lamar Alexander]], [[Vanderbilt University|Vanderbilt]], 1962. [[List of Governors of Tennessee|Tennessee Governor]], 1979 - 1987; [[United States Senate|U.S. Senator]], [[Tennessee]], 2003 - present. |
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Sigma Chi has alumni who are notable in many different industries and fields. In [[athletics (physical culture)|athletics]] Sigma Chi has 5 [[Major League Baseball All-Star Game|MLB all-stars]], 6 [[World Series|World Series champions]], 7 [[All-Pro|NFL All-Pro]] players, 6 [[Super Bowl|Super Bowl champions]], 2 [[NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Championship|NCAA Basketball champions]], and 3 [[Olympic medal]] holders. Some of these notable Sigs include [[Mike Holmgren]], [[Mike Ditka]], [[Bob Griese]], [[Drew Brees]], [[Sean Payton]], [[Joe Gordon]], [[Jay Wright (basketball)|Jay Wright]], and [[Eric Fonoimoana]]. In [[politics]] Sigma Chi has had 24 [[United States House of Representatives|U.S. Representatives]], 11 [[United States Senate|U.S. Senators]], 8 [[Governor (United States)|United States Governors]], 5 [[Lieutenant governor (United States)|Lieutenant governors]], and 1 [[United States President]] through the honorary membership of [[Grover Cleveland]] to the [[University of Michigan]] chapter.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://history.sigmachi.org/groverclevelandcase|title=Grover Cleveland Case|publisher=The Sigma Chi Historical Initiative|access-date=2016-04-10|archive-date=2016-04-09|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160409070221/http://history.sigmachi.org/groverclevelandcase|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=g_3hAAAAMAAJ&q=Grover+Cleveland+Sigma+Chi%7C&pg=PA238|title=Michigan Ensian, Vol. 93|year=1989|publisher=[[University of Michigan]]|access-date=2016-04-10}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1892/12/17/106091212.pdf|title=To Initiate Mr. Cleveland|work=[[New York Times]]|access-date=2016-04-10}}</ref> Among Sigma Chi's notable [[actors]] include 9 [[Emmy Award]] winners, 5 [[Screen Actors Guild Award]] winners, 4 [[Golden Globe Award]] winners, and 3 [[Academy Award]] winners. These notable alumni include [[Brad Pitt]], [[John Wayne]], [[Tom Selleck]], [[Brian Dennehy]], [[Woody Harrelson]], [[David Letterman]], and [[Ty Burrell]]. |
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* [[Scott Altman]], [[University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign|Illinois]], 1981. [[Space Shuttle]] [[astronaut]], [[STS-90]], [[STS-106]], [[STS-109]]. |
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* [[William M. Barker]], [[University of Tennessee at Chattanooga|Chattanooga]], 1964. [[Chief Justice]], [[Tennessee Supreme Court]], 2005 - present. |
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* [[James Brady|Jim Brady]], [[University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign|Illinois]], 1962. [[White House Press Secretary]], 1981. |
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* [[Saxby Chambliss|C. Saxby Chambliss]], [[University of Georgia]], 1966. [[United States Senate|U.S. Senator]], [[Georgia (U.S. state)|Georgia]], 2003 - present. |
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* [[Grover Cleveland]], [[President of the United States|U.S. President]] (Honorary Member). |
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* [[Bob Corker]], [[University of Tennessee|University of Tennessee, Knoxville]], 1974. [[United States Senate|U.S. Senator]] (elect), [[Tennessee]], 2007. [[Mayor]], [[Chattanooga]], 2001 - 2005. |
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* [[T. Coleman du Pont|Thomas du Pont]], [[MIT]], 1885. President [[DuPont|DuPont Chemical]]; [[United States Senate|U.S. Senator]], [[Delaware]], 1921 - 1922, 1924 - 1925. |
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* [[John Ensign]], [[University of Nevada at Las Vegas|UNLV]], 1980. [[United States Senate|U.S. Senator]], [[Nevada]], 2001 - present. |
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* [[Kirk Fordice]], [[Purdue University|Purdue]], 1956. [[List of Governors of Mississippi|Mississippi Governor]], 1992 - 2000. |
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* [[J. William Fulbright]], [[University of Arkansas]], 1924. [[United States Senate|U.S. Senator]], [[Arkansas]], 1945 - 1974. |
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* [[Jake Garn]], [[University of Utah]], 1954. [[United States Senate|U.S. Senator]], [[Utah]]. First Member of [[United States Congress|Congress]] to Fly into Space ([[STS-51-D]]), 1985. |
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* [[Jim Gerlach]], [[Dickinson College|Dickinson]], 1980. [[United States House of Representatives]], 2003 - present, [[Pennsylvania's 6th congressional district|Sixth District]], [[Pennsylvania]], 2003 - present. |
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* [[Barry Goldwater]], [[University of Arizona]], 1932. [[United States Senate|U.S. Senator]], [[Arizona]], 1953 - 1965, 1969 - 1987. |
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* [[Gregory J. Harbaugh|Greg Harbaugh]], [[Purdue University|Purdue]] 1978. [[Space Shuttle]] [[astronaut]], [[STS-39]], [[STS-54]]. |
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* [[Brooks Hays]], [[George Washington University|George Washington]], 1922. [[United States House of Representatives]], 1943-1959, [[Arkansas]]. |
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* [[Jon Huntsman, Jr.]], [[University of Utah]], 1983. [[List of Governors of Utah|Utah Governor]], 2005 - present. |
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* [[Henry Hyde]], [[Duke University]], 1946. [[United States House of Representatives]], [[Illinois]]. |
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* [[James Rhyne Killian|James R. Killian]], [[MIT]] 1925. 10th President of MIT, special assistant for science and technology to President [[Dwight D. Eisenhower]], 1957 - 1959. |
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* [[Jack Layton]], [[McGill University]], 1969. Leader of the [[Canada|Canadian]] [[New Democratic Party]]. |
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* Thomas F. McLarty III ([[Mack McLarty]]), [[University of Arkansas|Arkansas]], 1969. [[White House Chief of Staff]] to President [[Bill Clinton]]. |
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* [[Frank Murphy]], [[University of Michigan|Michigan]], 1912. [[List of Governors of Michigan|Michigan Governor]], 1937 - 1939; [[United States Attorney General]], 1939 - 1940; [[United States Supreme Court]] Justice, 1940 - 1949. |
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* [[B. Carroll Reece]], [[University of Tennessee at Chattanooga|Chattanooga]], 1910. [[United States House of Representatives]], [[Tennessee]], 1920 - 1930. |
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* [[William P. Rogers]], [[Colgate University]], 1934. [[United States Secretary of State]], 1969 - 1973; [[United States Attorney General]], 1957 - 1961. |
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* [[Nicholas Scoppetta]], [[Bradley University]], 1958. [[FDNY Commissioner|New York City Fire Commissioner]]. |
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* [[Ike Skelton]], [[University of Missouri - Columbia]], 1953. [[United States House of Representatives]], [[Missouri]], 1977 - present. |
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* [[Mo Udall]], [[University of Arizona]], 1949. [[United States House of Representatives]], [[Arizona]], 1961 - 1991; [[Presidential Medal of Freedom]], 1996. |
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* John Watson, [[University of British Columbia]], 1963. Director of the [[Vancouver International Airport]] and President of both major British Columbia Engineering Associations. |
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* Bob White, [[San Diego State University]], 1965. Chief of Government Affairs, Gov. [[Arnold Schwarzenegger]], [[California]]. |
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* [[John W. Young]], [[Georgia Tech]], 1952. [[Astronaut]], [[Gemini 3]], [[Apollo 10]], [[Apollo 16]], [[Space Shuttle]]. |
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* [[Ron Ziegler]], [[University of Southern California]], 1961. [[White House Press Secretary]], [[Richard Nixon|Nixon]] Administration. |
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== |
==Controversies and member misconduct== |
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{{further|Hazing in Greek letter organizations}} |
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* [[George Ade]], [[Purdue University]], 1887. American writer, newspaper [[columnist]] (''Fables in Slang''), [[humorist]]. |
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* David Ashenfelter, [[Indiana University Bloomington|Indiana University]], 1971. [[Pulitzer Prize]]-winning reporter, ''[[Detroit Free Press]]''. |
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* [[Warren Beatty]], [[Northwestern University|Northwestern]], 1959. [[Film actor]], [[Film director]], ''[[Bonnie and Clyde (film)|Bonnie & Clyde]]'', ''[[Reds]]''. |
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* [[Clancy Brown]], [[Northwestern University]], 1981. Film actor, ''[[The Shawshank Redemption]]'', ''[[Highlander (film)|Highlander]]''. |
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* H. Jackson Brown, Jr., [[Emory University]], 1962. [[New York Times Best Seller list]] ("''Life's Little Instruction Book''"). |
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* [[David Canary]], [[University of Cincinnati]], 1960. Television actor, ''[[All My Children]]''. |
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* [[Stephen J. Cannell]], [[University of Oregon]], 1964. [[Emmy]]-winning television producer. |
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* [[Milton Caniff]], [[Ohio State University]], 1930. Cartoonist, ''[[Terry and the Pirates (comic strip)|Terry and the Pirates]]'', ''[[Steve Canyon]]'' |
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* [[James Caviezel]], [[University of Washington]], 1990. Film actor, ''[[The Passion of the Christ]]''. |
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* [[William Christopher]], [[Wesleyan University]], 1958. Television actor, ''[[M*A*S*H (TV series)]]''. |
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* [[Will Clarke]], [[Louisiana State University]], 1993. Author of ''The Worthy'', ''Lord Vishnu's Love Handles'' |
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* [[Buster Crabbe]], [[University of Southern California]], 1931. Actor, ''[[Buck Rogers]]'', ''[[Flash Gordon]]''; [[Olympic Games|Olympic]] Swimmer. |
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* [[Brian Dennehy]], [[Columbia University]], 1960. [[Tony Award]]-winning actor. |
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* [[Clarence Gilyard]], [[California State University, Long Beach]], 1981. Film actor, ''[[Top Gun (film)|Top Gun]]''. |
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* [[Norris Goff]], [[University of Oklahoma]], 1928. [[Radio comedy]], ''[[Lum and Abner]]'' |
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* [[Tony Hale]], [[Samford University]], 1992. American Actor best known as "Buster" on the FOX Sitcom, Arrested Development . |
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* [[Woody Harrelson]], [[Hanover College]], 1983. [[Emmy]]-award winning film actor. |
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* [[David Hartman (TV personality)|David Hartman]], [[Duke University]], 1956. Actor, former host, ''[[Good Morning America]]'' |
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* [[Archie Kao]], [[George Mason University]], 1996. Film actor. |
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* [[Pat Kilbane]], [[Beloit College]], 1990. Comedic actor. |
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* Ted Kroeber, [[Loyola Marymount University]], 1999. Independent filmmaker. |
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* [[Chester Lauck]], [[University of Arkansas]], 1926. [[Radio comedy]], ''[[Lum and Abner]]''. |
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* [[David Letterman]], [[Ball State University]], 1969. Television personality, host, ''[[The Late Show with David Letterman]]''. |
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* [[Peter Lupus]], [[Butler University]], 1954. Television actor, ''[[Mission: Impossible]]''. |
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* [[Ted McGinley]], [[University of Southern California]], 1981. Film & [[television]] actor, ''[[Married... with Children]]'', ''[[Hope & Faith]]''. |
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* [[Patrick Muldoon]], [[University of Southern California]], 1991. [[Actor]], ''[[Melrose Place]]'', ''[[Starship Troopers]]''. |
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* [[Mike Peters]], [[Washington University in St. Louis]], 1965. American [[cartoonist]], (''[[Mother Goose & Grimm]]''); [[Pulitzer Prize]]-winning editorial cartoonist, ''[[Dayton Daily News]]''. |
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* [[Brad Pitt]], [[University of Missouri]], 1986. Film actor, ''[[Fight Club]]''. |
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* [[Edward S. Rogers|Edward "Ted" Rogers]], [[University of Toronto]], 1956. President and CEO of [[Rogers Communications]] Inc. |
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* [[Andy Rooney]], [[Colgate University]], 1942. Television personality, ''[[60 Minutes]]''. |
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* [[Ben Savage]], [[Stanford University]], 2004. Television actor, ''[[Boy Meets World]]''. |
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* Ronald L. Schwary, [[University of Southern California]], 1966. [[Film|Motion picture]] [[film producer]]. |
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* [[Tom Selleck]], [[University of Southern California]], 1967. Television actor, ''[[Magnum P.I.]]''. |
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*Leonard Shapiro, [[University of Wisconsin-Madison]], 1967. [[Sports journalism|Sports Writer]], [[The Washington Post]] |
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*[[Jay Stewart]], [[Butler University|Butler]], 1939. [[Television]] [[game shows|game show]] [[announcer]], ''[[Let's Make a Deal]]'', ''[[Deal of the Century]]''. |
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* [[Booth Tarkington]], [[Purdue University]], [[1893]]. [[Pulitzer Prize]] winning novelist, ''[[The Magnificent Ambersons]]''. |
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* [[Regis Toomey]], [[University of Pittsburgh|Pittsburgh]], 1921. [[Film]] [[actor]], ''[[Meet John Doe]]'', ''[[The Big Sleep (1946 film)|The Big Sleep]]''. |
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* [[Rip Torn]], [[University of Texas at Austin]], 1952. Film actor, ''[[Men in Black (film)|Men In Black]]''. |
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* [[Bob Trumpy]], [[University of Utah]], 1967. [[Color commentator]], [[NBC Sports]]; [[Tight End]], [[National Football League]] [[Cincinnati Bengals]], 1968 - 1977. |
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* [[John Wayne]], [[University of Southern California]], 1929. Film actor. |
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* [[Andrew Wilson (actor)|Andrew Wilson]], [[Willamette University]], 2006. Film actor. |
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* [[Don Wilson (announcer)|Don Wilson]], [[University of Colorado at Boulder]], 1923. Announcer, The [[Jack Benny]] Program. |
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=== |
=== 20th century === |
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*In 1965 and 1967 respectively, the Sigma Chi chapters at [[Stanford University]] in [[Stanford, California]] and [[Whitman College]] in [[Walla Walla, Washington]], disaffiliated from the national fraternity organization when they refused to abide by the whites-only membership policy of the national organization. The policy of the national organization was changed in 1971 to eliminate the racial discrimination.<ref name="StanDailyMay2021">{{cite web |last1=Nayudu |first1=Kaushikee |last2=Hsieh |first2=Victoria |date=May 20, 2021 |title=Sigma Chi and Stanford reach agreement on house, alumni initiate reinstatement process |url=https://stanforddaily.com/2021/05/20/sigma-chi-and-stanford-reach-agreement-on-house-alumni-initiate-reinstatement-process/ |access-date=January 31, 2022 |work=[[The Stanford Daily]]}}</ref> |
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* [[J.W. Marriott, Jr.|J. Willard Marriott, Jr.]], [[Utah State University|Utah State]], 1954, [[President]] of [[Marriott International]]. |
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* Rick Frost, [[Louisiana State University|LSU]], 1973. [[Chief Executive Officer|CEO]], [[Louisiana-Pacific|LP]] Building Products . |
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* [[Roy Chapman Andrews]], [[Beloit College]], 1906. Explorer, Adventurer and Naturalist who became the director of the American Museum of Natural History |
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* [[Jon Huntsman, Sr.]], [[University of Pennsylvania]], 1959. [[Philanthropist]]; Founder, [[Huntsman Corporation]]; member, [[Forbes 400]]. |
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* [[Robert C. McNair|Bob McNair]], [[University of South Carolina]], 1958. Owner of [[National Football League|NFL]] [[Houston Texans]]. |
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* [[Philip Anschutz]], [[University of Kansas]], 1961. Entrepreneur, [[Anschutz Entertainment Group]]. |
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* [[Bud Adams|Kenneth "Bud" Adams]], [[University of Kansas]], 1944. Owner of [[Tennessee Titans]]. |
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* L. G. Balfour, [[Indiana University Bloomington|Indiana University]], 1907. Businessman, Founder - L. G. Balfour Company. |
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* E.W. "Ed" Kelley, [[Indiana University Bloomington|Indiana University]], 1939. Founder, Kelley & Partners Ltd; Chairman, [[Steak 'n Shake]]; Namesake of [[Kelley School of Business]] ([[Indiana University Bloomington|Indiana University]]). |
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* Lod Cook, [[Louisiana State University]], 1949. [[Chief Executive Officer|CEO]], [[ARCO|Atlantic Richfield Company]]. |
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* [[Alex d'Arbeloff]], [[Massachusetts Institute of Technology]] 1949. Co-Founder, [[Teradyne]]. |
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* [[William DeVries]], [[Doctor of Medicine|MD]], [[University of Utah]], 1966. Cardiothoracic [[surgeon]], Performed first successful [[artificial heart]] implant surgery on [[Barney Clark]], 1982. |
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* Mark A. Emkes, [[DePauw University|DePauw]], 1975. [[Chairman]], [[Chief Executive Officer|CEO]] Bridgestone American Holding, Inc., [[Bridgestone]]-[[Firestone Tire and Rubber Company|Firestone]] North American [[Tire]] Co. |
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* [[Gordon Gould]], [[Union College]], 1941. One of primary inventors of the [[laser]]; [[National Inventors Hall of Fame]]. |
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* [[Michael Graves]], [[University of Cincinnati|Cincinnati]], 1958. Award-winning [[post-modern]] [[architect]]. |
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* R. Brooks LaPlante, [[University of Rochester]], Founder/[[Chief Executive Officer|CEO]], Doughmakers Gourmet Bakeware; [[Indiana House of Representatives]]. |
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* Jason "Barney" Donnelly, [[Rutgers University|Rutgers]], 2001. [[Chief Operating Officer|COO]], [[American International Group|AIG]]. |
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*[[Kenneth Langone]], [[Bucknell University]]. Co-Founder [[Home Depot]]. |
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* Joseph W. Moeller, [[University of Tulsa]], 1966. President, [[Chief Executive Officer|CEO]], Koch Industries, Inc. |
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* David B. Nelson, [[University of Maryland, College Park|University of Maryland]], 1979. Co-Founder/[[Chief Executive Officer|CEO]], DnD Technologies. |
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* Vincent Sardi, Jr., [[Columbia University]], 1937. Restaurateur, [[Sardi's]], [[Manhattan]], [[New York City]]. |
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* [[Ed Seykota]], [[MIT]], 1969. Self made [[money manager]] and [[investor]]. |
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* Bob Stone, former [[Chief Executive Officer|CEO]], [[NEC Corporation|NEC]]. |
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* [[Robert A. Swanson|Bob Swanson]], [[MIT]], 1969. Co-Founder of [[Genentech]]. |
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* [[C. Bruce Tarter]], [[MIT]], 1961. Former director of [[Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory]]. |
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* [[Charles Watson]], [[Oklahoma State University]], 1972. Founder, former [[Chief Executive Officer|CEO]], [[Dynegy]]. |
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=== |
=== 2000s === |
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*In 2004, a 19-year-old [[University of Oklahoma]] freshman was found dead in the Sigma Chi fraternity house. The university suspended its recognition of the Beta Kappa chapter. In 2006 the Beta Kappa chapter of Sigma Chi was reinstated at the University of Oklahoma.{{Citation needed|date=August 2023}} |
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* [[Captain]] [[Maurice Britt]], [[University of Arkansas]], [[1941]]. Recipient of the [[Medal of Honor]], 1943, [[World War II]]; [[Lieutenant Governor]], [[Arkansas]]. |
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* The chapter at [[San Jose State University]] in [[San Jose, California]] found a member, Gregory Johnson, Jr., hanged in its basement on November 22, 2008. Ruled a [[suicide]] at the time, a group of activists in 2020 later publicized their concerns over what they believe to be an incomplete investigation of Johnson's death, citing the possibility of racist motivations.<ref>{{Cite web|last=Lorence|first=Stella|date=2020-07-20|title=As country grapples with racism, activists renew call for justice in SJSU killing|url=https://sanjosespotlight.com/as-country-gapples-with-racism-activists-renew-call-for-justice-in-sjsu-killing/|access-date=2021-05-08|website=San José Spotlight|language=en-US}}</ref> |
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* [[Sergeant]] [[Matt Eversmann]], [[Hampden-Sydney College]], 1988. [[U.S. Army Rangers]], portrayed by [[Josh Hartnett]] in the movie ''[[Black Hawk Down]].'' |
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*The chapter at the [[University of Nebraska]] in [[Lincoln, Nebraska|Lincoln]] was suspended for hazing and alcohol consumption violations in 2009. The hazing pledges endured included taking shots of [[Tabasco sauce|Tabasco]] hot sauce and vodka until they vomited, they were ordered to do strenuous exercises while their "big brothers" threw objects at them, and one pledge was randomly chosen and was anally penetrated with a vibrating dildo by a hired female stripper during an initiation party. Eight members were arrested and charged with hazing and providing alcohol to minors.<ref>{{cite web |last=Lee |first=Melissa |date=April 22, 2009 |title=UNL suspends Sigma Chi fraternity following hazing allegations |url=http://journalstar.com/news/local/unl-suspends-sigma-chi-fraternity-following-hazing-allegations/article_22ca2490-94f6-5ecb-8e17-f157593eeaa1.html |access-date=January 1, 2018 |website=Lincoln Journal Star}}</ref> |
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* [[Brigadier General]] Randall C. Gelwix, [[Kansas State University|Kansas State]], 1971. [[United States Air Force|U.S. Air Force]] (ret), Former deputy commander, Canadian North American Aerospace Defense Command Region. |
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* [[Brigadier General]] [[Patrick J. Hurley]], [[George Washington University]], 1913. [[United States Secretary of War]], [[Herbert Hoover|Hoover]] Administration, 1929 - 1933. |
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* [[Major General]] Silas R. Johnson, [[University of Miami|Miami]], 1967. Vice-commander, 21st Air Force, [[McGuire Air Force Base]]. Former [[Commander]], 93rd Bomb Wing, [[Castle Air Force Base]] and 552nd Air Control Wing, [[Tinker Air Force Base]]. |
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* [[Major General]] [[David M. Jones]], [[University of Arizona]], 1936. Participant, [[Doolittle Raid]] over Japan, 1942. Recipient, [[Distinguished Flying Cross (United States)]] |
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* [[General]] [[Merrill A. McPeak]], [[San Diego State University]], 1957. Former [[Chief of Staff of the United States Air Force|USAF Chief of Staff]]. |
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* [[General]] [[Russell A. Rourke]], [[University of Maryland, College Park|University of Maryland]], 1953. Former [[United States Secretary of the Air Force]]. |
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* [[General]] Harry St. John Dixon, ([[Confederate States of America|CSA]]), [[University of Virginia]]. Started the 'Constantine Chapter' of Sigma Chi in secrecy in the South during the [[American Civil War|Civil War]], [[1864]]. |
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* [[Technical Sergeant]] [[Forrest L. Vosler]], [[Syracuse University]], 1948. Recipient of the [[Medal of Honor]], 1944, [[World War II]]. |
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== |
=== 2010s === |
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*In September 2012, [[University of Tennessee at Chattanooga]] campus police fielded a report of a rape at the Sigma chi fraternity house.<ref name="tuscaloosanews.com">{{cite web |author= |date=September 25, 2012 |title=UA fraternity, Tide football player named in lawsuit |url=http://www.tuscaloosanews.com/news/20120925/ua-fraternity-tide-football-player-named-in-lawsuit |access-date=January 1, 2018 |website=Tuscaloosa News}}</ref> |
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*'''Α''' [[Miami University]] |
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*In 2012, the chapter at the [[University of Alabama]] in [[Tuscaloosa, Alabama]] was sued by a former pledge after he was severely beaten by fraternity members at a party that resulted in serious injuries, depression, and severe anxiety. The chapter was also cited for providing alcohol to underage people.<ref name="tuscaloosanews.com"/> |
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*'''Β''' [[The College of Wooster|College of Wooster]], [[Wooster, Ohio]], 1873-1913 |
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*The chapter at the [[University of Dayton]] in [[Dayton, Ohio|Dayton]] was suspended for three years in 2013 for damaging a store's property, urinating inside the store and exposing themselves to passersby.<ref>{{cite web |title=Sigma Chi Suspended from UD for Two years |url=http://www.abc22now.com/shared/news/top-stories/stories/wkef_vid_11031.shtml |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150512163659/http://www.abc22now.com/shared/news/top-stories/stories/wkef_vid_11031.shtml |archive-date=2015-05-12 |access-date=2015-10-31 |website=WKEF-TV ABC 22 News}}</ref> |
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*'''Γ''' [[Ohio Wesleyan University]] |
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*A fraternity member at [[Westminster College (Missouri)|Westminster College]] in [[St. Louis]] served 120 days in jail for violently beating up one of his fraternity brothers in 2013.<ref>{{cite web |last= |first= |title=Westminster College student sentenced for beating fraternity brother |url=http://www.columbiatribune.com/news/crime/westminster-college-student-sentenced-for-beating-fraternity-brother/article_54b2784d-e987-512d-b942-7d5278fc5fb9.html |access-date=January 1, 2018 |website=Columbia Tribune}}</ref> |
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*'''Δ''' [[University of Georgia]] |
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*The chapter at the [[University of Central Florida]] in [[Orlando, Florida|Orlando]] was placed on suspension in 2013 after photos surfaced on social media of pledges being forced to consume alcohol and getting sick from over-consumption. Several other fraternities on campus were also accused of hazing and alcohol abuse with their pledges that same semester which led to the president of the university temporarily banning all Greek Life activities on campus.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.clickorlando.com/news/university-of-central-florida-fraternity-suspended-after-alleged-hazing|title=University of Central Florida: Fraternity suspended after...|website=www.ClickOrlando.com|access-date=January 1, 2018|archive-date=November 12, 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171112073836/https://www.clickorlando.com/news/university-of-central-florida-fraternity-suspended-after-alleged-hazing|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.clickorlando.com/news/ucfs-sigma-chi-fraternity-to-remain-under-suspension|title=UCF's Sigma Chi fraternity to remain under suspension|website=www.ClickOrlando.com|access-date=January 1, 2018|archive-date=November 12, 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171112074041/https://www.clickorlando.com/news/ucfs-sigma-chi-fraternity-to-remain-under-suspension|url-status=dead}}</ref> |
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*'''E''' (Original Epsilon) Western Military Institute, [[Nashville, Tennessee]], 1856-57 |
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* Three Sigma Chi members at [[James Madison University]] in [[Harrisonburg, Virginia]] were found guilty of sexually assaulting a female student and distributing a recording of the incident. The members were banned from the campus after their graduation in 2014.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Kingkade |first1=Tyler |date=June 18, 2014 |title=Frat Brothers Who Filmed Themselves In Sexual Assault Expelled 'After Graduation' |url=http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/06/18/james-madison-university-sexual-assault_n_5509163.html |website=[[HuffPost]]}}</ref> |
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*'''Ε''' [[The George Washington University]] |
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* The chapter at the [[West Virginia University]] in [[Morgantown, West Virginia|Morgantown]] had six members arrested in 2014 and cited by the Morgantown police department for hazing pledges and facilitating underage drinking. After a party hosted by the fraternity, several members dropped off nineteen pledges, most of whom were intoxicated, at a random location far away from campus without their cellphones and wallets and told them to find their way back to their fraternity house on campus as part of a "team building" exercise.<ref>{{cite web |date=November 2014 |title=6 WVU students cited for hazing in Sigma Chi incident |url=http://wvmetronews.com/2014/11/20/6-wvu-students-cited-for-hazing/ |access-date=January 1, 2018 |website=WV Metro News}}</ref> |
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*'''Ζ''' [[Washington and Lee University]] |
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* The [[University of Dayton]] in [[Dayton, Ohio|Dayton]] permanently banned the fraternity in 2014 after a member’s death revealed the chapter had not been abiding by the parameters of its suspension.<ref>{{cite web |last=Filby |first=Max |date=December 7, 2017 |title=Bad fraternity behavior causing schools to take sweeping action |url=http://www.mydaytondailynews.com/news/bad-fraternity-behavior-causing-schools-take-sweeping-action/bWSks75kuRhmrXApKApUWN/ |access-date=January 1, 2018 |website=Dayton Daily News}}</ref> |
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*'''Η''' [[University of Mississippi]] |
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*A Sigma Chi member at [[Utah State University]] in [[Logan, Utah|Logan]] was kicked out the fraternity in 2015 after being charged with two counts of rape and aggravated sexual assault.<ref>{{cite web |last=Mullahy |first=Brian |date=7 August 2015 |title=Former USU student, frat member bound over for rape trial |url=http://kutv.com/news/local/women-testify-against-utah-state-student-accused-of-rapes |access-date=September 2, 2023 |website=KUTV}}</ref> The attacks are believed to have taken place at the fraternity house.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.deseretnews.com/article/865633181/USU-student-charged-in-campus-rape-investigation.html?pg=all|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151024101919/http://www.deseretnews.com/article/865633181/USU-student-charged-in-campus-rape-investigation.html?pg=all|url-status=dead|archive-date=October 24, 2015|title=USU student charged in campus rape investigation|first=Pat|last=Reavy|website=[[Deseret News]]|date=23 July 2015}}</ref> |
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*'''Θ''' [[Gettysburg College]] |
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*The chapter at [[Brown University]] in [[Providence, Rhode Island]] was suspended in 2015 for facilitating sexual misconduct and hosting an unauthorized party with alcohol.<ref>{{cite web |date=January 20, 2015 |title=Brown University: Two Fraternities 'Facilitated' Sexual Misconduct |url=https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/brown-university-two-fraternities-facilitated-sexual-misconduct-n289296 |website=[[NBC News]]}}</ref> |
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*'''Ι''' [[Washington & Jefferson College|Jefferson College]], [[Canonsburg, Pennsylvania]], 1858-69 |
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* The chapter at [[Louisiana State University]] in [[Baton Rouge, Louisiana|Baton Rouge]] was shut down in 2015 for repeatedly hazing pledges and illegal drug use in the fraternity house. Two months before the chapter closure a 21-year-old fraternity member died of a [[heroin]] overdose.<ref>{{cite web |last=Kinchen |first=Danielle Maddox |title=LSU Sigma Chi fraternity closed by international organization and kicked off campus |url=http://theadvocate.com/news/14260111-123/lsu-sigma-chi-fraternity-closed-by-international-organization-and-kicked-off-campus |website=The Advocate}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |author= |title=LSU confirms Sigma Chi Fraternity kicked off campus, students react to the news |url=http://www.wafb.com/story/30727698/lsu-confirms-sigma-chi-fraternity-kicked-off-campus?clienttype=generic&mobilecgbypass |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170922195459/http://www.wafb.com/story/30727698/lsu-confirms-sigma-chi-fraternity-kicked-off-campus?clienttype=generic&mobilecgbypass |archive-date=2017-09-22 |access-date=January 1, 2018 |website=WAFB.com}}</ref> |
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*'''Κ''' [[Bucknell University]] |
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* The chapter at the [[University of Tennessee at Chattanooga]] was suspended after the rape of a minor in 2016. The investigation uncovered 148 reports of sexual offenses over a 7 year period<ref>{{cite web |last=Cope |first=Cassie |date=March 30, 2016 |title=Accused of rape, 2016 Controversy of Sigma Chi, Delta Theta Chapter |url=https://sethakhweht.substack.com/p/2016-controversy-of-sigma-chi-delta |website=Substack}}</ref> |
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*'''Λ''' [[Indiana University Bloomington|Indiana University]] |
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* A former pledge at the [[University of Arizona]] in [[Tucson, Arizona|Tucson]] sued his chapter in 2016 after his fraternity brothers blamed him for the nonfatal overdose of a female party attendee.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://tucson.com/news/local/watchdog/former-pledge-sues-university-of-arizona-sigma-chi-fraternity-over/article_b7934b72-8761-58d1-897b-f3f2a18a755d.html|title=Former pledge sues University of Arizona Sigma Chi fraternity over party|first=Caitlin|last=Schmidt|website=Tucson.com|date=November 2016 |access-date=January 1, 2018}}</ref> |
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*'''Μ''' [[Denison University]] |
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* The chapter at [[Florida Atlantic University]] in [[Boca Raton, Florida|Boca Raton]] expelled a member in 2017 after he was found out to have [[Embezzlement|embezzled]] over $18,000 from the chapter funds. The reason the former brother embezzled the funds was to fund his heroin addiction.<ref>{{cite web |last=Scales |first=Katrina |date=October 11, 2017 |title=Boca police: FAU fraternity treasurer charged with grand theft of $18,000 |url=https://www.upressonline.com/2017/10/boca-police-fau-fraternity-treasurer-charged-with-grand-theft-of-18000/ |website=University Press |publisher=Florida Atlantic University}}</ref> |
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*'''Ν''' (Original Nu) [[Washington & Jefferson College|Washington College]], [[Washington, Pennsylvania]], 1859-63 |
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*The chapter at [[Fresno State University]] was suspended in 2019 due to underage drinking, property damage, noise complaints, and multiple physical assaults that resulted in serious injuries at their fraternity-sponsored party they promoted as "Cinco de Drinko", May 5. After learning of the incident, the university and Sigma Chi national headquarters placed the chapter on interim suspension.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Price |first1=Nancy |title=Fresno State Suspends Sigma Chi Fraternity for Underage Drinking, Assaults at 'Cinco de Drinko' |url=https://gvwire.com/2019/08/30/fresno-state-suspends-sigma-chi-fraternity-for-underage-drinking-assaults-at-event/ |access-date=October 25, 2019 |work=GV Wire |date=August 30, 2019}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |last1=Granda |first1=Nathalia |title=Fresno State suspends Sigma Chi fraternity |url=https://abc30.com/fresno-state-suspends-sigma-chi-fraternity-/5503473/ |access-date=October 25, 2019 |work=ABC30 Fresno |date=August 31, 2019 |language=en}}</ref> |
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*'''Ν''' [[Cumberland University]], 1872-80 |
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*'''Ξ''' [[DePauw University]] |
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===2020s=== |
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*'''Ο''' [[Dickinson College]] (although in good standing with the Fraternity, the Omicron chapter is not recognized by Dickinson) |
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*A former pledge at the [[University of Texas at Arlington]] (UT Arlington) sued the fraternity for $1 million in 2020. While pledging the fraternity, he was ordered by fraternity members to excessively consume alcohol which led to alcohol poisoning. Also he was subject to other hazing activities that often led to humiliation and black outs. National leadership of the fraternity decided to suspend the UT Arlington chapter indefinitely.<ref name="hazing allegations">{{Cite web|date=2020-01-13|title=Former UTA student files $1 million lawsuit over hazing allegations|url=https://www.dallasnews.com/news/education/2020/01/13/former-uta-student-files-1m-lawsuit-over-hazing-allegations/|access-date=2021-05-08|website=Dallas News|language=en}}</ref> |
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*'''Π''' (Original Pi) [[Erskine College]], [[Due West, South Carolina]], 1860-61 |
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*In 2021, as part of an allegedly mandatory hazing event at the [[University of Tennessee at Chattanooga]] chapter, 18-year-old freshman Dylan Johnson died as a result of excessive alcohol consumption. Manslaughter charges were brought against the Sigma Chi organization itself, rather than any individuals. In response, the chapter dissolved and the case was suspended. MIT later settled with Johnson's family for 3.46 million dollars.<ref name="hazing allegations" /><ref name="Meyerhofer">{{Cite web |last=Meyerhofer |first=Kelly |date=February 11, 2020 |title=UW-Madison cuts ties with Sigma Chi fraternity, declares chapter 'inactive' |url=https://madison.com/news/local/education/university/uw-madison-cuts-ties-with-sigma-chi-fraternity-declares-chapter-inactive/article_8469bb79-d236-5453-acfd-27048eeb0e95.html |access-date=2021-05-08 |website=Wisconsin State Journal |language=en}}</ref> |
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*'''Π''' Howard College, East Lake, Alabama, 1872-85 |
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*A sexual assault was report to [[University of Nebraska]] campus police and on social media in August 2021 as having taken place at Sigma Chi in [[Lincoln, Nebraska|Lincoln]]. Sigma Chi announced the chapter was being placed on "self-suspension" and the accused fraternity member ejected. The report came in during ongoing street protests against nearby [[Phi Gamma Delta]], where a sexual assault was reported a week prior.<ref>{{cite news |last=Wegley |first=Andrew |date=August 30, 2021 |title= Sex offense reported at UNL's Sigma Chi house amid reckoning over Greek culture |url=https://journalstar.com/news/local/crime-and-courts/sex-offense-reported-at-unls-sigma-chi-house-amid-reckoning-over-greek-culture/article_34488c73-b750-5827-ac0a-8b104be7cbc8.html |work=Lincoln Journal Star |access-date=August 30, 2021}}</ref> |
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*'''Π''' [[Samford University]] |
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* In January 2022, [[National Public Radio]] obtained a partial copy of a police report of a call by then-student [[Elizabeth Holmes]] on October 5, 2003, in which she said she had been sexually assaulted in the early hours of that morning at the Sigma Chi fraternity house at [[Stanford University]]. Holmes would found the biotechnology start-up company [[Theranos]] later that same year, and the alleged sexual assault came to light when she was on trial for fraud in her work at the company in 2021.<ref name=NPRPoliceDocument>{{Cite news|last=Allyn|first=Bobby|date=2022-01-24|title=Police document: 19-year-old Elizabeth Holmes reported sexual assault from Stanford|language=en |work=NPR |url=https://www.npr.org/2022/01/24/1075364585/elizabeth-holmes-stanford-rape-sexual-assault-report|access-date=2022-01-25}}</ref> |
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*'''Ρ''' [[Butler University]] |
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*'''Σ''' (Original Sigma) La Grange Synodical College, [[La Grange, Tennessee|La Grange]], Tenn. 1860-61 |
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==See also== |
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*'''T''' [[Roanoke College]], [[Salem, Virginia]] |
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* [[List of social fraternities and sororities]] |
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*'''Υ''' Polytechnic College of Philadelphia, [[Philadelphia, Pennsylvania|Philadelphia]], 1865-76 |
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*'''Φ''' [[Lafayette College]], [[Easton, Pennsylvania]], 1867-1966 |
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==References== |
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*'''X''' [[Hanover College]] |
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{{reflist}} |
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*'''Ψ''' [[University of Virginia]] |
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*'''Ω''' [[Northwestern University]] |
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*'''AB''' [[University of California, Berkeley]] |
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*'''ΑΓ''' [[The Ohio State University]] |
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*'''AΕ''' [[University of Nebraska, Lincoln]], 1883 |
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*'''ΑΖ''' [[Beloit College]] |
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*'''AH''' [[University of Iowa]] |
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*[[List of MIT fraternities and sororities#Sigma Chi|'''ΑΘ''']] [[Massachusetts Institute of Technology]] |
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*'''ΑΙ''' [[Illinois Wesleyan University]] |
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*'''ΑΚ''' [[Hillsdale College]] |
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*'''ΑΛ''' [[University of Wisconsin-Madison]] |
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*'''ΑΝ''' [[University of Texas at Austin]] |
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*'''AΞ''' [[University of Kansas]] |
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*'''AO''' [[Tulane University]] |
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*'''AΠ''' [[Albion College]] |
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*'''ΑΡ''' [[Lehigh University]] |
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*'''AΣ''' [[University of Minnesota, Twin Cities]] |
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*'''ΑΤ''' [[University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill]] |
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*'''ΑΥ''' [[University of Southern California]] |
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*'''ΑΦ''' [[Cornell University]] |
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*'''ΑΧ''' [[Pennsylvania State University]] |
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*'''ΑΨ''' [[Vanderbilt University]] |
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*'''ΑΩ''' [[Stanford University]] |
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*'''ΒΑ''' [[Western Reserve University]], [[Cleveland]], 1963-1970 |
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*'''ΒΓ''' [[Colorado College]] |
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*'''ΒΔ''' [[University of Montana]] |
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*'''ΒΕ''' [[University of Utah]] |
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*'''ΒΗ''' [[Case Western Reserve University]] |
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*'''BΘ''' [[University of Pittsburgh]] |
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*'''ΒK''' [[University of Oklahoma]] |
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*'''ΒΛ''' [[Duke University]] |
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*'''ΒΝ''' [[Brown University]] |
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*'''ΒΟ''' [[Iowa State University]] |
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*'''Bπ''' [[Oregon State University]] |
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*'''ΒΡ''' [[Montana State University]] |
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*'''ΒΣ''' [[University of Tennessee, Knoxville]] |
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*'''BX''' [[Emory University]] |
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*'''ΒΨ''' [[Georgia Institute of Technology]] |
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*'''ΒΩ''' [[University of Toronto]] and [[Ryerson University]] |
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*'''ΓΔ''' [[Oklahoma State University]] |
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*'''ΓΖ''' [[Union College]] |
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*'''ΓΗ''' [[University of Idaho]] |
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*'''ΓΙ''' [[Louisiana State University]] |
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*'''ΓΚ''' [[Utah State University]] |
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*'''ΓΛ''' [[McGill University]] |
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*'''ΓΝ''' [[University of South Carolina]] |
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*'''ΓΠ''' [[University of Rochester]] |
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*'''ΓΡ''' [[Dalhousie University]] |
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*'''ΓΣ''' [[Auburn University]] |
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*'''ΓΤ''' [[North Dakota State University]] |
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*'''ΓΥ''' [[Mississippi State University]] |
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*'''ΓΦ''' [[University of Miami]] |
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*'''ΔΔ''' [[Purdue University]] |
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*'''ΔΕ''' [[North Carolina State University]] |
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*'''ΔΖ''' [[Willamette University]] |
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*'''ΔΗ''' [[University of California at Los Angeles]] |
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*'''ΔΘ''' [[University of Tennessee at Chattanooga]] |
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*'''ΔΙ''' [[University of Denver]] |
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*'''ΔΚ''' [[Bowling Green State University]] |
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*'''ΔΜ''' [[Southern Methodist University]] |
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*'''ΔN''' [[Wake Forest University]] |
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*'''ΔΞ''' [[San Diego State University]] |
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*'''ΔΟ''' [[University of British Columbia]] |
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*'''ΔΠ''' [[Ohio University]] |
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*'''ΔΡ''' [[Bradley University]] |
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*'''ΔΣ''' [[University of Rhode Island]] |
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*'''ΔΤ''' [[Westminster College, Missouri]] |
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*'''ΔY''' [[Kansas State University]] |
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*'''ΔΦ''' [[University of Puget Sound]] |
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*'''ΔΧ''' [[Wabash College]] |
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*'''ΔΨ''' [[Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute]] |
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*'''ΔΩ''' [[University of Tulsa]] |
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*'''ΕΖ''' [[Florida State University]] |
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*'''ΕΗ''' [[California State University, Fresno]] |
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*'''ΕΘ''' [[San Jose State University]] |
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*'''ΕK''' [[University of Memphis]] |
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*'''ΕΛ''' [[Ripon College]] |
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*'''ΕΟ''' [[University of Western Ontario]] |
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*'''ΕΠ''' [[University of Northern Colorado]] |
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*'''ΕΡ''' [[University of Richmond]] |
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*'''ΕΤ''' [[Murray State University]] |
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*'''ΕΥ''' [[Arizona State University]] |
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*'''ΕΦ''' [[Southeast Missouri State University]] |
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*'''ΖΘ''' [[Kettering University]] |
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*'''ΖΚ''' [[University of California at Santa Barbara]] |
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*'''ZΛ''' [[Kent State University]] |
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*'''ΖΜ''' [[Western Kentucky University]] |
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*'''ZN''' [[Western Michigan University]] |
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*'''ΖΟ''' [[Northern Arizona University]] |
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*'''ZP''' [[Central Michigan University]] |
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*'''ΖΥ''' [[College of William and Mary]] |
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*'''ZΧ''' [[University of Nevada, Las Vegas]] |
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*'''ΖΨ''' [[University of Cincinnati]] |
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*'''ΖΩ''' [[East Tennessee State University]] |
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*'''ΗΑ''' [[Eastern Kentucky University]] |
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*'''ΗΓ''' [[Middle Tennessee State University]] |
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*'''ΗΔ''' [[Tennessee Technological University]] |
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*'''ΗΕ''' [[University of South Alabama]] |
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*'''HZ''' [[Georgia Southern University]] |
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*'''ΗI''' [[Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University]], [[Daytona Beach, Florida]] |
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*'''ΗΛ''' [[Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University]] |
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*'''[http://www.etaxi.asigiam.com/ ΗΞ]''' [[Austin Peay State University]] |
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*'''HΠ''' [[University of Central Florida]] |
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*'''[http://www.ucisigmachi.com/ ΗΣ]''' [[University of California, Irvine]] |
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*'''ΗΦ''' [[Troy University]] |
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*'''ΗΧ''' [[Youngstown State University]] |
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*'''ΗΨ''' [[Clemson University]] |
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*'''ΘΒ '''[[University of South Florida]] |
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*'''ΘΓ '''[[Drake University]] |
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*'''ΘΗ '''[[University of Missouri–Rolla]] |
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*'''ΘI '''[[St. Louis University]] |
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*'''ΘΚ '''[[University of Texas at Arlington]] |
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*'''ΘΜ''' [[Spring Hill College]] |
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*'''ΘΝ''' [[Alma College]] |
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*'''ΘΠ''' [[Indiana State University]] |
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*'''ΘΣ''' [[Cal Poly Pomona|California State Polytechnic University, Pomona]] |
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*'''ΘΘ''' [[University of Michigan]] |
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*'''ΘΥ''' [[Yale University]] |
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*'''ΘΧ''' [[Arkansas State University]] |
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*'''ΘΨ''' [[University of Waterloo]] |
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*'''ΘΩ''' [[Elon University]] |
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*'''ΙΑ''' [[California State University, San Bernardino]] |
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*'''ΙΓ''' [[Jacksonville University]] |
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*'''IΔ''' [[State University of New York at Albany]] |
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*'''ΙΕ''' [[College of Charleston]] |
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*'''[http://people.clarkson.edu/~sigmachi/ IZ]''' [[Clarkson University]] |
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*'''ΙΗ''' [[Western Connecticut State University]] |
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*'''ΙΙ''' [[University of Alabama]] |
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*'''ΙΘ''' [[University of Dayton]] |
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*'''ΙΚ''' [[Fairleigh Dickinson University]] |
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*'''ΙΜ''' [[Wilfrid Laurier University]] |
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*'''ΙΝ''' [[Furman University]] |
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*'''ΙΟ''' [[Western Illinois University]] |
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*'''ΙΞ''' [[George Mason University]] |
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*'''ΙΠ''' [[Marquette University]] |
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*'''ΙΡ''' [[Bishop's University]], [[Lennoxville]], [[Quebec]] |
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*'''ΙΣ''' [[Valparaiso University]], [[Valparaiso, Indiana]] |
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*'''ΙΤ''' [[University of St. Thomas]], [[St. Paul, Minnesota]] |
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*'''ΙΥ''' [[Boston University]] |
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*'''ΙΦ''' [[University of North Texas]] |
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*'''ΙΧ''' [[University of California, San Diego]] |
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*'''ΙΨ''' [[Rutgers University]] |
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*'''ΙΩ''' [[Loyola Marymount University]] |
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*'''ΚΒ''' [[University of North Florida]] |
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*'''ΚΓ''' [[Western Carolina University]] |
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*'''ΚΕ''' [[University of Delaware]] |
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*'''ΚΖ''' [[Radford University]] |
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*'''ΚΗ''' [[Harvard University]] |
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*'''ΚΘ''' [[California State University, Chico]] |
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*'''ΚI''' [[Southern Utah University]] |
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*'''ΚK''' [[University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign]] |
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*'''ΚΛ''' [[Albertson College of Idaho]] |
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*'''ΚΜ''' [[University of Windsor]] |
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*'''ΚΞ''' [[Tarleton State University]] |
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*'''ΚΟ''' [[Pepperdine University]] |
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*'''KΠ''' [[Towson University]] |
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*'''ΚΡ''' [[American University]] |
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*'''ΚΣ''' [[University of the Pacific]] |
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*'''ΚT''' [[Minnesota State University, Mankato]] |
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*'''ΚΥ''' [[Johns Hopkins University]] |
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*'''ΚΦ''' [[Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University]], Prescott, Arizona |
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*'''ΚΧ''' [[Villanova University]] |
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*'''ΒΒ''' [[Mississippi College]], [[Clinton, Mississippi]], 1873-1874 |
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*'''ΔΔ''' [[Purdue University]] |
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*'''ΛΛ''' [[University of Kentucky]] |
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*'''MM''' [[West Virginia University]] |
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*'''PP''' [[University of Maine]] |
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*'''ΧΧ''' [[Birmingham-Southern College]] |
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*'''YΥ''' [[University of Washington]] |
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*'''ΩΩ''' [[University of Arkansas]] |
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*'''ΧΨ''' [[University of New Orleans|University of Louisiana in New Orleans]], 1882-1883 |
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==External links== |
==External links== |
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{{Category commons}} |
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*[http://www.sigmachi.org/ Official Sigma Chi website] |
*[http://www.sigmachi.org/ Official Sigma Chi website] |
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*[http://cornerstone.podshowcreator.com/ Cornerstone ''Building On Our Brotherhood'' film website] |
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*[http://www.sigmachi-thetapi.com/other/literary.pdf Literary Exercises] |
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*[http://www.sigmachi-thetapi.com/other/historyfromcarlson.pdf Memories of Miami, History from Founders' Speeches] |
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*[http://wabash.facebook.com/group.php?gid=2204655679 The Original Sigma Chi, Global Facebook Group] |
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{{North-American Interfraternity Conference}} |
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{{Fraternities and Sororities|collapsed}} |
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[[Category:1855 establishments]] |
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{{Sigma Chi}} |
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[[Category:International student societies]] |
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{{North American Interfraternity Conference}} |
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{{Authority control}} |
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[[Category:Sigma Chi brothers| ]] |
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[[Category:United States student societies]] |
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[[Category:Sigma Chi| ]] |
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[[Category:1855 establishments in Ohio]] |
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[[Category:Fraternities and sororities in Canada]] |
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[[Category:Miami University]] |
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[[Category:North American Interfraternity Conference]] |
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[[Category:Student organizations established in 1855]] |
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[[Category:Student societies in the United States]] |
Latest revision as of 23:41, 20 December 2024
Sigma Chi | |
---|---|
ΣΧ | |
Founded | June 28, 1855 Miami University |
Type | Social |
Affiliation | NIC |
Status | Active |
Scope | International |
Motto | In Hoc Signo Vinces ("In This Sign You Shall Conquer") |
Member badge | |
Colors | Blue and Old gold |
Symbol | The White Cross |
Flag | |
Flower | White rose |
Publication | The Magazine of Sigma Chi |
Philanthropy | Children's Miracle Network and Huntsman Cancer Institute |
Chapters | 242 |
Colonies | 13 |
Members | 15,700+ active 350,000+[1] lifetime |
Nicknames | Sig, Sigs' |
Headquarters | 1714 Hinman Avenue Evanston, Illinois 60201 United States |
Website | sigmachi |
Sigma Chi (ΣΧ) International Fraternity is one of the largest of North American social fraternities. The fraternity has 244 active undergraduate chapters and 152 alumni chapters across the United States and Canada and has initiated over 350,000 members.[1] The fraternity was founded on June 28, 1855, at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio, by members who split from the Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity.
Sigma Chi is divided into seven operational entities: the Sigma Chi Fraternity, the Sigma Chi Foundation, the Sigma Chi Canadian Foundation, the Risk Management Foundation, Constantine Capital Inc., the Blue and Gold Travel Services, and the newly organised Sigma Chi Leadership Institute.[2]
Like all fraternities, Sigma Chi has its own colors, insignia, and rituals. According to the fraternity's constitution, "the purpose of this fraternity shall be to cultivate and maintain the high ideals of friendship, justice, and learning upon which Sigma Chi was founded."
History
[edit]Founding
[edit]Sigma Chi was founded in 1855 by Benjamin Piatt Runkle, Thomas Cowan Bell, William Lewis Lockwood, Isaac M. Jordan, Daniel William Cooper, Franklin Howard Scobey, and James Parks Caldwell as the result of a disagreement over who would be elected Poet in the Erodelphian Literary Society of Miami University in Ohio.[3][4]
Several members of Miami University's Delta Kappa Epsilon chapter (of which all but one of Sigma Chi's founders were members) were also members of the Erodelphian Literary Society. In the fall of 1854 the literary society was to elect its poet and a member of Delta Kappa Epsilon was nominated for the position. He was supported by five of his brothers, but four others, James Caldwell, Isaac Jordan, Benjamin Runkle, and Franklin Scobey, supported another man who was not a member of the fraternity. Although Thomas Bell and Daniel Cooper were not members of Erodelphian they had aligned themselves with the four dissenting members. The chapter had twelve members total and were evenly divided on the issue. Both sides saw this as a matter of principle and over the next few months their friendships became distanced.[3][4]
In February 1855 Runkle and his companions planned a dinner for their brothers in an attempt to seal the rift. Whitelaw Reid, one of the other brothers who supported the Delta Kappa Epsilon member as poet, was the only one to arrive. Reid brought a Delta Kappa Epsilon alumnus named Minor Millikin from a nearby town.[3] Reid had told Millikin his side of the dispute and they had arrived to punish the group for not supporting their Delta Kappa Epsilon brother. The leaders of the rebellion, Runkle and Scobey, were to be expelled from the fraternity. The other four would be allowed to stay in the fraternity.[3] Runkle resigned, and after the parent chapter at Yale University was contacted, all six men were formally expelled.[3]
The six men decided to form their own fraternity along with William Lewis Lockwood, a student from New York who had not joined a fraternity. On June 28, 1855, the organization was founded under the name Sigma Phi Fraternity.[5] Lockwood used his business training to help organize the fraternity in its early years.[6] The eventual theft of Sigma Phi's constitution, rituals, seals, and other records from Lockwood's room in Oxford in January 1856 prompted them to change the name of the fraternity to Sigma Chi.[7] It is possible this action could have been forced upon the group as there was already a Sigma Phi Society.
Much of Sigma Chi's heraldry was inspired by the legendary story of the Emperor Constantine from the Battle of Milvian Bridge against Maxentius. The White Cross and the motto "In Hoc Signo Vinces" are examples of the Constantine link.
Founders
[edit]- Benjamin Piatt Runkle (September 3, 1836 – June 28, 1916) was born in West Liberty, Ohio. Runkle helped design the badge of Sigma Chi based on the story of Constantine and the vision of the Cross. Runkle was known for having a fierce pride and was suspended from Miami University when he fought a member of Beta Theta Pi for sneering at his badge. When the Civil War began Runkle joined the Union Army. He was badly wounded at the Battle of Shiloh and left for dead on the battlefield. Runkle stayed in the army as a career and retired as a major general. After is service in the Union Army he was ordained an Episcopal priest. He was the only founder to serve as Grand Consul. He died on Sigma Chi's 61st birthday in Ohio. He is buried in Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington County, Virginia.[8]
- Thomas Cowan Bell (May 14, 1832 – February 3, 1919) was born near Dayton, Ohio. He was twenty-three years old when Sigma Chi was founded, second oldest of the founders. He graduated from Miami University in 1857 and began teaching. In 1861 he enlisted in the Union Army and rose to the rank of lieutenant. After the war he returned to his career in education, serving as the superintendent of schools in Nobles County, Minnesota as well as the principal and president of several preparatory and collegiate institutions in the Western United States. Bell died the day after attending the initiation of Alpha Beta chapter at University of California Berkeley on February 3, 1919. He is buried at the Presidio of San Francisco in San Francisco National Cemetery in California.[9] Section OS, Row 43A, Grave 3.[10]
- William Lewis Lockwood (October 31, 1836 – August 17, 1867) was born in New York City. He was the only founder who had not been a member of Delta Kappa Epsilon. He was considered the "businessman" of the founders and managed the first chapter's funds and general operations, becoming the first treasurer of Sigma Chi. After graduating from Miami University in 1858 he moved back to New York and began work as a lawyer. He received serious wounds serving in the Union Army during the Civil War, from which he never fully recovered. He named his son after Franklin Howard Scobey.[11]
- Isaac M. Jordan (May 5, 1835 – December 3, 1890) was born in Mifflinburg, Pennsylvania[12] as Isaac Alfred Jordan.[13] His family later moved to Ohio where Jordan met Benjamin Piatt Runkle and became close friends. After graduating from Miami University in 1857 he went on to graduate school, where he graduated in 1862. He then began work as an attorney and was elected to the United States Congress in 1882.[14] He proceeded to change his middle name, Alfred, to just the letter "M" to help distinguish himself from his brother and law partner, Jackson A. Jordan. He died in 1890 after accidentally falling down an elevator shaft while greeting a friend.[15] He is buried in Spring Grove Cemetery in Cincinnati, Ohio.[12]
- Daniel William Cooper (September 2, 1830 – December 11, 1920) was born near Fredericktown, Ohio. Cooper was the oldest founder and was elected the first consul of Sigma Chi. After graduating from Miami University in 1857 he became a Presbyterian minister. Cooper's original Sigma Chi badge came into the possession of the Fraternity at the time of his death. It is pinned on every new Grand Consul at their installation. Cooper is buried at the Allegheny Cemetery in Pittsburgh, Pa.[16]
- Franklin Howard Scobey (May 27, 1837 – July 22, 1888) was born in Hamilton, Ohio. Scobey was considered The Spirit of Sigma Chi for being friendly with everybody and not just a select group of people.[17] After graduating from Miami University in 1858 he went on to graduate again in 1861 with a law degree. He worked as a journalist in his hometown until 1879 but went on to become a cattleman in Kansas until 1882. Scobey then moved back to Ohio where he took up farming until his death. Never physically robust, Scobey was afflicted with hearing loss in his final years.[18]
- James Parks Caldwell (March 27, 1841 – April 5, 1912) was born in Monroe, Ohio. By the age of thirteen Caldwell had completed all academics which could be offered at his local academy. He was then sent to Miami University with advanced credits. Caldwell was just fourteen at the time of the founding making him the youngest of the founders. After Caldwell graduated from Miami University in 1857 he practiced some law in Ohio but moved to Mississippi to begin a career as an educator. When the Civil War broke out he joined the Confederate Army. During the war he was taken prisoner but later, due to the influence of General Benjamin Piatt Runkle, was offered freedom on the condition that he renounce his allegiance to the Confederacy. He rejected this offer and remained loyal to the south. He was later released, again due to the influence of General Runkle. After the war he moved back to Mississippi and was admitted to the bar. He moved to California in 1867 and practiced law. In 1875, he began to travel frequently practicing law and editing newspapers. He died in Biloxi, Mississippi where the latest issues of The Sigma Chi Quarterly were found in his room.[19]
Early years
[edit]Constantine chapter
[edit]Harry St. John Dixon, a brother from the Psi chapter at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville, Virginia, who fought for the Confederacy, kept a record of all Sigma Chis within his vicinity on the flyleaf of his diary during the Civil War.[20] He began planning a Confederate Army chapter of Sigma Chi with this information. On September 17, 1864 Dixon founded the Constantine chapter of Sigma Chi during the Atlanta campaign with Harry Yerger, a brother from Mississippi who was in Dixon's division. Dixon stated the reasons for which the war-time chapter was created saying,
It was ascertained that a number of the fraternity were in the army of Tennessee under General Joseph E. Johnston during the Atlanta campaign in 1864. It was conceded that the South was forever disunited from the general government, and it was assumed that all chapters throughout the South would cease to exist. Furthermore, it was deemed expedient that we brothers should know each other and our several commands for the purpose of relief in distress, and communication in a case of need, with our Northern brethren. In the ruin at hand my sentiment was to preserve the lofty principles typified by the White Cross. I know that I had no authority to establish a chapter of Sigma Chi outside a college, or at all; but, isolated as we were, I thought I should raise the standard and fix a rallying point. By doing so we should preserve the Order, whether we failed or not in our struggle for independence.[21][22]
Dixon and Yerger contacted all brothers listed in the diary who could come to the meeting.[20] They met at night in a deserted log cabin a few miles southwest of Atlanta. Dixon later wrote,
The cabin was in a state of frightful dilapidation. Its rude walls and rafters were covered with soot and cobwebs, and the floor showed evidences of having been the resting place of sundry heaps of sheep.
Dixon was elected "Sigma" (president) and Yerger was elected "Chi" (vice president); the chapter also initiated two men. The only badge in the chapter was one Dixon had made from a silver half-dollar.
The last meeting was held New Year's Day 1865. The men at that meeting passed a resolution to pay a "tribute of respect" to the four brothers from the chapter who had died during the war. In May 1939 the Constantine chapter Memorial was erected by Sigma Chi in memory of the Constantine chapter and its members. The memorial is located on U.S. 41 in Clayton County, Georgia.[21][22]
Purdue case
[edit]In 1876, Emerson E. White became president of Purdue University. He required each applicant for admission to sign a pledge "not to join or belong to any so-called Greek society or other college secret society" while attending the school. The Sigma Chi chapter at Purdue, which was already established at the university, sent petitions to the faculty and pleaded their case to the board of trustees, but was unsuccessful in changing the rule.[23]
In the fall of 1881, Thomas P. Hawley applied for admission to the university. Having already been initiated into Sigma Chi, Hawley refused to sign the pledge and was denied admission. Hawley took Purdue to court, but the judge ruled in favor of the faculty's decision. He also ruled, however, that the faculty had no right to deny Hawley from his classes based on the fraternity issue. The case was brought to the Indiana Supreme Court, which reversed the decision on June 21, 1882. This victory for Sigma Chi also allowed other fraternities at Purdue and led to the Purdue president's resignation in 1883.[24]
20th century
[edit]During the first half of the 20th century the General Fraternity expanded in many places. In 1899, the fraternity adopted the flag design created by Henry V. Vinton. In 1901 the Grand Chapter approved the Fraternity's pledge pin. In 1903 at the Grand Chapter in Detroit the Board of Grand Trustees was established. In 1922 the Alpha Beta chapter at University of California, Berkeley held the "Channingway Derby" which led to the creation of the "Sigma Chi Derby Days".[25][26] Some of the awards created during this time include the Significant Sig Award in 1935 and the Order of Constantine in 1948.[27]
As of the beginning of the 20th century, Sigma Chi had installed a total of 74 chapters with 58 still active.[28] Having only established a centralized form of government in 1922, Sigma Chi was installing new chapters at a rate of about one chapter per year. On April 22, 1922, the Beta Omega chapter was installed at the University of Toronto in Toronto, Ontario thus making Sigma Chi an international fraternity.[29]
The Sigma Chi Foundation was created on November 9, 1939, when the Sigma Chi Endowment Foundation was incorporated in Colorado. This educational endowment was first discussed in 1898 by alumni who wanted to assist undergraduates financially so they could finish their undergraduate studies.[29]
The world wars of the 20th century took the lives of 103 Sigs in World War I and 738 in World War II. A great resurgence in undergraduate activity followed World War II due to an increase in chapter memberships. This increase was caused by the men returning from military service who went back to school and the usual addition of new brothers.[29] During World War II, it became apparent to the General Fraternity officers that a few alumni as well as a few undergraduate chapters believed some of the prerequisites for membership in Sigma Chi were outdated and should be changed or eliminated. This led to the first discussions about membership within the fraternity that continued until early in 1970. Until this time, membership requirements had specified that a potential member must be a "bona fide white male student". After the first discussion in 1948 at the Grand Chapter in Seattle, the committee on Constitutional Amendments tabled the issue pending a further study of the problem to be reported to the 1950 Grand Chapter. The study showed that the issue was "very hot" on 13 campuses with Sigma Chi chapters and only "lukewarm" on a dozen other campuses.[30]
During this time period, the remaining four founders of Sigma Chi of the original seven all died; Daniel William Cooper was the last founder to die. Cooper's death led up to the Fraternity gaining one of its most priceless objects, Cooper's Sigma Phi badge. Cooper's body was sent by train to his final resting place in Pittsburgh, and the Beta Theta chapter at the University of Pittsburgh was given the privilege to administer his memorial service.
On December 13, 1920, Cooper's body was conveyed to the Beta Theta chapter house, where Beta Theta Consul Donald E. Walker removed Cooper's Sigma Phi Badge and replaced it with his own. Beta Theta Pro-Consul, Regis Toomey, sang the hymn "With Sacred Circle Broken" before Cooper was taken to his final resting place.[31]
Nomenclature and insignia
[edit]Badge
[edit]The badge of Sigma Chi is a white cross with white and black enamel. Two gold chains connect the two upper arms. Crossed keys are in the upper arm, an eagle's head lies in the left arm, and a scroll lies in its right arm. In the bottom arm lie two clasped hands and seven stars.
Seal
[edit]The seal of Sigma Chi is circular. On the outer edge is "Sigma Chi Fraternity" and at the bottom are the numbers "1855". In the middle lie seven stars and a seven-branched candlestick.
Coat of Arms
[edit]The crest of Sigma Chi is a blue Norman Shield with a white cross in its center. On top of the Norman Shield is a scroll and a crest of an eagle's head holding a key. Below it, the fraternity's public motto, "In Hoc Signo Vinces" is placed on a scroll. It can be translated as, "In this sign, thou shalt conquer."[32]
Governance
[edit]Chapter officers
[edit]Officers in undergraduate chapters mostly have titles derived from Imperial Rome. The top officers of each chapter are known as the Consul (president), Pro Consul (vice-president), Annotator (secretary), Quaestor (treasurer), Magister (pledge trainer), Kustos (sergeant-at-arms), Tribune (communications), Risk Manager, and Historian. Those titles are the primary officers common to all chapters. Chapters also have other positions, such as Social Chairman, Sports Chairman, Scholarship Chairman, House Manager, Recruitment Chairman, etc., plus other positions and titles varying from chapter to chapter.[citation needed]
Alumni chapter positions and duties may also vary from chapter to chapter. Alumni chapters use the more common office titles such as: president, vice-president, secretary, and treasurer.
Grand officers
[edit]The international organization uses similar Roman titles, typically with the prefix of "Grand". The Grand Consul is the international president of Sigma Chi. He presides over the Executive Committee and the Grand Chapter.
Grand Chapter
[edit]Grand Chapter is the supreme legislative body of Sigma Chi and convenes on odd numbered years. It is composed of one delegate from each active undergraduate chapter and alumni chapter, the Grand Consul and Past Grand Consuls, each being entitled to one vote. The Grand Chapter elects the officers of the Fraternity as well as alter or amend the Constitution, Statutes, and Executive Committee Regulations. It may grant or revoke charters as well as discipline any chapter, officer or member.[33] The most recent Sigma Chi Grand Chapter was held in Toronto, Ontario on June 22–25, 2023.[34]
Grand Council
[edit]The Grand Council meets every year when no Grand Chapter is held. The Grand Council consists of the Grand Officers, Past Grand Consuls, members of the Executive Committee, Grand Trustees, Grand Praetors, members of the Leadership Training Board and one undergraduate from each province. It may amend the Statutes or Executive Committee Regulations.[33]
Executive Committee
[edit]The Executive Committee meets at least four times a year. The Executive Committee consists of 12 members; Grand Consul, Grand Pro Consul, Grand Quaestor, the immediate Past Grand Consul, a Grand Trustee elected by the Board of Grand Trustees, two Grand Praetors elected by the Praetorial College, one alumnus member-at-large, two undergraduate representatives elected by the undergraduate delegates from each chapter, and the two most recent International Balfour Award winners. The committee regulates the budget and expenditures as well as assign duties to the International Headquarters staff.[33]
Charitable foundations
[edit]The Sigma Chi Foundation is a charitable and educational tax-exempt organization, separate and independent from the Fraternity, whose express purpose is to serve as an educational funding resource for the undergraduate and graduate student members of the Sigma Chi Fraternity.
A Board of Governor governs the Foundation. The Foundation's President and CEO is Ashley Woods and the Foundation's offices are based in Evanston, Illinois.
The Sigma Chi Canadian Foundation is the Canadian counterpart of The Sigma Chi Foundation. It serves independently of both the fraternity and the American foundation. It was formed by Canadian Sigma Chi Alumni as a registered charitable foundation to provide a tax-effective way for Canadian Sigma Chi to support the educational pursuits of Canadian undergraduate chapters.[35] The Foundation is guided by a Chair and a Board of Directors of alumni members.[36]
Leadership programs
[edit]- The Krach Transformational Leaders Workshop (KTLW) is a three-day retreat held annually since 1947. Undergraduate members receive training for specific roles within their chapter. Alumni volunteers are also given mentorship training. The KTLW is named after the 64th Grand Consul of the Fraternity, Keith Krach.[37]
- Horizons is a six-day workshop for undergraduate brothers. The program aims to create lifelong values-based leaders.[38]
- Mission 365 is a recruitment workshop. Participants are taught how to "increase both the quality and quantity" of potential new members.[39]
- The Journey Program is self-improvement training for undergraduate chapters. There are six Journey workshops, each with a specific aim to better one aspect of the chapter.[40]
- The Sigma Chi Choices program and The Sigma Chi Crossroads Workshop both aim to combat drug and alcohol abuse and address mental health among members.[41]
- Sigma Chi Lifeline is an online resource for those suffering from mental illness. The program aims to prevent suicide among college students by providing information and support for those affected by emotional and mental health issues.[41]
Philanthropy
[edit]Derby Days
[edit]Derby Days is a series of charity events held by all Sigma Chi chapters. Throughout the course of a week, a participating chapter organizes and hosts a series of events and competitions among their campus' sororities. Money is raised through either donations, or through fundraising-type events. Hosting a Derby Days event is not mandatory for any chapter. A common event held across many campuses is the Derby Run, where brothers must wear derbies throughout the day, while sisters in participating sororities attempt to steal them. According to the International Fraternity's official website, the basic mission of Derby Days is to serve the community.[42] According to archival information at Sigma Chi International Headquarters, the first "Derby Day" event was held in 1916 at the University of California-Berkeley. Then known as the "Channing Way Derby" because of the California-Berkeley chapter's location on Channing Way and College Avenue, the event spread to other chapters who created their own Derby Day.[43] The most money raised by any Sigma Chi chapter was the Iota Psi chapter at Rutgers University in the fall of 2016. The brothers of the Iota Psi chapter raised $300,007 with the help of the eight sororities at the University: Zeta Tau Alpha, Phi Sigma Sigma, Sigma Delta Tau, Phi Mu, Delta Gamma, Gamma Phi Beta, Sigma Kappa, and Alpha Gamma Delta. This money is all donated to the Huntsman Cancer Foundation. $300,007 is the most money raised in a single event by any single Greek Organization in the world.
Merlin Olsen Day of Service
[edit]In honor of notable Sigma Chi alumni and NFL Hall of Fame inductee Merlin Olsen, September 15 is recognized by the fraternity as the Merlin Olsen Day of Service. On this day, members of the fraternity are encouraged to volunteer to improve their communities.[42]
Children's Miracle Network Hospitals (CMNH) is Sigma Chi's suggested beneficiary. The organization was introduced to the fraternity by Olsen in 1992. Since then Sigma Chi alumni and undergraduate chapters have raised more than 6.9 million for CMNH. Every chapter has a CMNH affiliate within less than 200 miles, with each chapter donating to the nearest affiliated hospital.[42]
Huntsman Cancer Foundation/Huntsman Cancer Institute
[edit]The Huntsman Cancer Institute (HCF/HCI) is Sigma Chi's preferred charitable partner. It was chosen at Sigma Chi's 150th anniversary celebration in 2005. The Huntsman Cancer Institute today is dedicated to researching the causes, treatments, and preventative methods of cancer. The institute was founded in 1995 by Sigma Chi alumnus, and founder of the Huntsman Corporation, Jon M. Huntsman Sr. Huntsman has donated more than 350 million dollars to the institute, and has encouraged his fellow brothers to contribute as well.[44] By 2023, Sigma Chi undergraduate chapters had raised over $21 million to support the Huntsman Cancer Institute and have raised their pledge to an additional $20 million, for a $31 total pledge. In calendar year 2023, Sigma Chi undergraduate chapters raised $2,711,368.[citation needed]
Awards
[edit]Undergraduate awards
[edit]Sigma Chi gives out two undergraduate awards, The Peterson Significant Chapter Award, which is given to chapters who show a strong performance in all areas of chapter operations,[45][46] and The International Balfour Award, which is given each year to one graduating senior who excels in four criteria; scholarship, character, Fraternity service and campus leadership.[45][46]
Alumni awards
[edit]The fraternity also gives out three alumni awards: The Significant Sig Award is given to a member who has excelled greatly in his field of study or occupation. The first seven Significant Sig awards were given to George Ade, Roy Chapman Andrews, John T. McCutcheon, Chase S. Osborn, James Wallington, F. Dudleigh Vernor, and Samuel P. Cowley.[47] The Order of Constantine is awarded to alumni members who have devoted long and distinguished service to the Fraternity.[47][48] The Semi-Century Sig Award is given to brothers who have been active in the fraternity for 50 years or more.[47]
International Sweetheart
[edit]Most undergraduate chapters elect a female associated with the chapter as the chapter sweetheart. At each Grand Chapter, the fraternity chooses a Sweetheart from one chapter to be the International Sweetheart of Sigma Chi for two years. The International Sweetheart Award is presented based on personality, character, campus involvement, Sigma Chi activities, general accomplishments, poise, and grace. Each nominee must be the sweetheart of an undergraduate chapter for the year nominated and a student at the nominating chapter's university.[49] Judy Garland was a Sigma Chi Sweetheart from the Ohio State University chapter and Faye Dunaway was a Sigma Chi Sweetheart from The University of Florida chapter.[50]
Military Service Recognition Pin
[edit]The Military Service Recognition Pin recognizes honorably discharged veterans or currently serving members of the armed forces who are in good standing with the Sigma Chi Fraternity. The pin consists of a single Norman-style sword thrust upward with a small Sigma Chi Norman Shield with a cross embossed upon it placed upon the lower end of the blade just above the hilt and is to be worn on the brother's lapel. The Military service pin concept and design was created by Life Loyal Sig Anthony Dauer Theta Beta 1993 and was first presented at the 2007 Grand Chapter.[51][52]
Publications
[edit]The Magazine of Sigma Chi
[edit]The Magazine of Sigma Chi is the official quarterly publication for undergraduate and alumni brothers of the Sigma Chi Fraternity. First published in 1881 at Gettysburg College, Theta chapter, as The Sigma Chi, publication eventually moved to Chicago and the name was changed to The Sigma Chi Quarterly.[7] The name was later changed to The Magazine of Sigma Chi
The Norman Shield
[edit]The Norman Shield is the reference manual of the Fraternity.[53] It was authorized by the 24th Grand Consul Herbert C. Arms at the 1924 Grand Chapter. It was first compiled in 1929 by Arthur Vos, Jr. and based on the booklet he prepared for the Beta Mu chapter at the University of Colorado at Boulder which Vos indicated was based on the material contained in the 1922 Manual and Directory.[54] It contained biographies of the founders, significant alumni, a history of the Fraternity, the Constitution and Statutes, and other writings relevant to the fraternity.
Chapters
[edit]As of 2023, the fraternity has sixteen associate chapters or colonies.[55]
Notable members
[edit]Sigma Chi has alumni who are notable in many different industries and fields. In athletics Sigma Chi has 5 MLB all-stars, 6 World Series champions, 7 NFL All-Pro players, 6 Super Bowl champions, 2 NCAA Basketball champions, and 3 Olympic medal holders. Some of these notable Sigs include Mike Holmgren, Mike Ditka, Bob Griese, Drew Brees, Sean Payton, Joe Gordon, Jay Wright, and Eric Fonoimoana. In politics Sigma Chi has had 24 U.S. Representatives, 11 U.S. Senators, 8 United States Governors, 5 Lieutenant governors, and 1 United States President through the honorary membership of Grover Cleveland to the University of Michigan chapter.[56][57][58] Among Sigma Chi's notable actors include 9 Emmy Award winners, 5 Screen Actors Guild Award winners, 4 Golden Globe Award winners, and 3 Academy Award winners. These notable alumni include Brad Pitt, John Wayne, Tom Selleck, Brian Dennehy, Woody Harrelson, David Letterman, and Ty Burrell.
Controversies and member misconduct
[edit]20th century
[edit]- In 1965 and 1967 respectively, the Sigma Chi chapters at Stanford University in Stanford, California and Whitman College in Walla Walla, Washington, disaffiliated from the national fraternity organization when they refused to abide by the whites-only membership policy of the national organization. The policy of the national organization was changed in 1971 to eliminate the racial discrimination.[59]
2000s
[edit]- In 2004, a 19-year-old University of Oklahoma freshman was found dead in the Sigma Chi fraternity house. The university suspended its recognition of the Beta Kappa chapter. In 2006 the Beta Kappa chapter of Sigma Chi was reinstated at the University of Oklahoma.[citation needed]
- The chapter at San Jose State University in San Jose, California found a member, Gregory Johnson, Jr., hanged in its basement on November 22, 2008. Ruled a suicide at the time, a group of activists in 2020 later publicized their concerns over what they believe to be an incomplete investigation of Johnson's death, citing the possibility of racist motivations.[60]
- The chapter at the University of Nebraska in Lincoln was suspended for hazing and alcohol consumption violations in 2009. The hazing pledges endured included taking shots of Tabasco hot sauce and vodka until they vomited, they were ordered to do strenuous exercises while their "big brothers" threw objects at them, and one pledge was randomly chosen and was anally penetrated with a vibrating dildo by a hired female stripper during an initiation party. Eight members were arrested and charged with hazing and providing alcohol to minors.[61]
2010s
[edit]- In September 2012, University of Tennessee at Chattanooga campus police fielded a report of a rape at the Sigma chi fraternity house.[62]
- In 2012, the chapter at the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa, Alabama was sued by a former pledge after he was severely beaten by fraternity members at a party that resulted in serious injuries, depression, and severe anxiety. The chapter was also cited for providing alcohol to underage people.[62]
- The chapter at the University of Dayton in Dayton was suspended for three years in 2013 for damaging a store's property, urinating inside the store and exposing themselves to passersby.[63]
- A fraternity member at Westminster College in St. Louis served 120 days in jail for violently beating up one of his fraternity brothers in 2013.[64]
- The chapter at the University of Central Florida in Orlando was placed on suspension in 2013 after photos surfaced on social media of pledges being forced to consume alcohol and getting sick from over-consumption. Several other fraternities on campus were also accused of hazing and alcohol abuse with their pledges that same semester which led to the president of the university temporarily banning all Greek Life activities on campus.[65][66]
- Three Sigma Chi members at James Madison University in Harrisonburg, Virginia were found guilty of sexually assaulting a female student and distributing a recording of the incident. The members were banned from the campus after their graduation in 2014.[67]
- The chapter at the West Virginia University in Morgantown had six members arrested in 2014 and cited by the Morgantown police department for hazing pledges and facilitating underage drinking. After a party hosted by the fraternity, several members dropped off nineteen pledges, most of whom were intoxicated, at a random location far away from campus without their cellphones and wallets and told them to find their way back to their fraternity house on campus as part of a "team building" exercise.[68]
- The University of Dayton in Dayton permanently banned the fraternity in 2014 after a member’s death revealed the chapter had not been abiding by the parameters of its suspension.[69]
- A Sigma Chi member at Utah State University in Logan was kicked out the fraternity in 2015 after being charged with two counts of rape and aggravated sexual assault.[70] The attacks are believed to have taken place at the fraternity house.[71]
- The chapter at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island was suspended in 2015 for facilitating sexual misconduct and hosting an unauthorized party with alcohol.[72]
- The chapter at Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge was shut down in 2015 for repeatedly hazing pledges and illegal drug use in the fraternity house. Two months before the chapter closure a 21-year-old fraternity member died of a heroin overdose.[73][74]
- The chapter at the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga was suspended after the rape of a minor in 2016. The investigation uncovered 148 reports of sexual offenses over a 7 year period[75]
- A former pledge at the University of Arizona in Tucson sued his chapter in 2016 after his fraternity brothers blamed him for the nonfatal overdose of a female party attendee.[76]
- The chapter at Florida Atlantic University in Boca Raton expelled a member in 2017 after he was found out to have embezzled over $18,000 from the chapter funds. The reason the former brother embezzled the funds was to fund his heroin addiction.[77]
- The chapter at Fresno State University was suspended in 2019 due to underage drinking, property damage, noise complaints, and multiple physical assaults that resulted in serious injuries at their fraternity-sponsored party they promoted as "Cinco de Drinko", May 5. After learning of the incident, the university and Sigma Chi national headquarters placed the chapter on interim suspension.[78][79]
2020s
[edit]- A former pledge at the University of Texas at Arlington (UT Arlington) sued the fraternity for $1 million in 2020. While pledging the fraternity, he was ordered by fraternity members to excessively consume alcohol which led to alcohol poisoning. Also he was subject to other hazing activities that often led to humiliation and black outs. National leadership of the fraternity decided to suspend the UT Arlington chapter indefinitely.[80]
- In 2021, as part of an allegedly mandatory hazing event at the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga chapter, 18-year-old freshman Dylan Johnson died as a result of excessive alcohol consumption. Manslaughter charges were brought against the Sigma Chi organization itself, rather than any individuals. In response, the chapter dissolved and the case was suspended. MIT later settled with Johnson's family for 3.46 million dollars.[80][81]
- A sexual assault was report to University of Nebraska campus police and on social media in August 2021 as having taken place at Sigma Chi in Lincoln. Sigma Chi announced the chapter was being placed on "self-suspension" and the accused fraternity member ejected. The report came in during ongoing street protests against nearby Phi Gamma Delta, where a sexual assault was reported a week prior.[82]
- In January 2022, National Public Radio obtained a partial copy of a police report of a call by then-student Elizabeth Holmes on October 5, 2003, in which she said she had been sexually assaulted in the early hours of that morning at the Sigma Chi fraternity house at Stanford University. Holmes would found the biotechnology start-up company Theranos later that same year, and the alleged sexual assault came to light when she was on trial for fraud in her work at the company in 2021.[83]
See also
[edit]References
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- ^ a b Beta Theta Pi (1885). The Beta Theta Pi, Volume 13. Columbus, Ohio: Beta Theta Pi. pp. 61–62.
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- ^ "William Lewis Lockwood". September 28, 2007. Archived from the original on September 28, 2007. Retrieved January 1, 2018.
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- ^ a b "The Constantine Chapter" page 40-41. The Norman Shield, 41st Edition
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- ^ Purdue Reamer Club (2013). A University of Tradition: The Spirit of Purdue (2nd ed.). Purdue University Press. p. 237.
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- ^ a b c "Organization, Governance & Services" page 80-84. The Norman Shield, 41st Edition
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- ^ "Member Development – Leadership". Sigma Chi.
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- ^ "The Recruitment Vision | Mission 365". Sigma Chi. Archived from the original on 2015-11-09. Retrieved 2015-11-12.
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- ^ a b The Norman Shield (45 ed.). Sigma Chi Fraternity. 2013. p. 126.
- ^ a b c "Philanthropy". Sigma Chi Fraternity. 2013-04-12. Archived from the original on 2014-02-01. Retrieved 2014-01-18.
- ^ "The History of Sigma Chi" page 57. The Norman Shield, 44th Edition
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