Alpha Phi Omega | |
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ΑΦΩ
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Founded | December 16, 1925 Lafayette College |
Type | Service |
Scope | International |
Motto | Be a Leader, Be a Friend, Be of Service |
Colors | Old Glory Gold |
Symbol | Golden Eagle (bird), Sturdy Oak (tree) |
Flower | Forget-me-not |
Jewel | Diamond |
Publication | Torch & Trefoil |
Chapters | United States 369 Active (of 744 charters), Philippines 250, Australia 1, Petitioning Groups in the U.S. 13 |
Members | United States 300,000+ collegiate |
Cardinal Principles | Leadership, Friendship and Service |
Headquarters | Independence, Missouri, USA |
Homepage | http://www.apo.org/ |
[1][2] |
Alpha Phi Omega (ΑΦΩ) (commonly known as APO,[3] but also A-Phi-O[4] and A-Phi-Q[5]) is the largest collegiate fraternity in the United States, with chapters at over 350 campuses, an active membership of approximately 17,000 students, and over 350,000 alumni members. There are also 250 chapters in the Philippines and one in Australia.
Alpha Phi Omega is a co-ed service fraternity organized to provide community service, leadership development,[6] and social opportunities for college students. Chapters range in size from a handful of active members to over 200 active members, independent of each college's size.
The purpose of the fraternity is "to assemble college students in a National Service Fraternity in the fellowship of principles derived from the Scout Oath and Scout Law of the Boy Scouts of America; to develop Leadership, to promote Friendship, and to provide Service to humanity; and to further the freedom that is our national, educational, and intellectual heritage."[7] Unlike many other fraternities, APO's primary focus is to provide volunteer service within four areas: service to the community, service to the campus, service to the fraternity, and service to the nation as participating citizens.[2] Being primarily a service organization, the fraternity restricts its chapters from maintaining fraternity houses to serve as residences for their members.[8] This also encourages members of social fraternities and sororities that have houses to join APO as well.
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Alpha Phi Omega was founded on December 16, 1925 at Lafayette College in Easton, Pennsylvania,[1] by Frank Reed Horton and 13 other students who were former Boy Scouts and scouters, as a way to continue participating in the ideals of Scouting at the college level. These founding brothers were Frank Reed Horton, Everett William Probst, Ephraim Moyer Detwiler Jr., Thane Sanford Cooley, William Taylor Wood, Lewis Burnett Blair, Gordon Minnier Looney, Donald LeRoy Terwilliger, William Weber Highberger Robert Jefferson Green, Donald H. Fritts, Ellsworth Stewart Dobson, George Axel Olsen, and Herbert Heinrich. Six advisors were also inducted: Lafayette President John H. MacCracken, Dean Donald B. Prentice, Professors D. Arthur Hatch and Harry T. Spengler; one local Scouting official, Herbert G. Horton, and one national Scouting official, the national director of relationships for the Boy Scouts of America, Ray O. Wyland.[9][10] The founders insisted that all those gaining membership must pledge to uphold the fraternity's three cardinal principles of Leadership, Friendship, and Service.
Alpha Phi Omega became a national fraternity on January 11, 1927 with the founding of Beta chapter at University of Pittsburgh.[9] Horton served as Supreme Grand Master from the founding of the fraternity until the 1931 convention. A total of 18 chapters were founded during this period. At the 1931 convention, H. Roe Bartle was elected as Supreme Grand Master (title changed to National President in 1934)[11][12] and served through World War II, stepping down at the 1946 convention. During his time as president, the number of chapters grew to 109. Early in his term (October 1931), Alpha Phi Omega was formally recognized by the Boy Scouts of America.[13]
The most rapid growth of the fraternity was in the post-war years. By 1950, Alpha Phi Omega had 227 chapters in the United States. The first chapter outside the US was organized in the Philippines that year. Many Filipinos were active in the Boy Scouts. Sol Levy, an APO member from University of Washington introduced the organization to Filipino Scouts. Librado I. Ureta, a graduate student at Far Eastern University in Manila, was among the audience. Inspired by Levy's words, he read the publications and shared them with fellow Eagle Scouts and students on the FEU campus. He asked their opinion about Levy's desire and the response was good. On March 2, 1950, the Alpha Phi Omega International Service Fraternity was chartered on campus.[14]
Alpha Phi Omega grew rapidly in the Philippines. By its third year, seven chapters had been chartered at Manila and Visayan schools and it was registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission as a nonstock, nonprofit, and nondividend corporation. Alpha Phi Omega (Phil.) Inc. was the first branch of the fraternity to be chartered outside the USA.[14]
The fraternity was opened fully to women in 1976.[15] All members are called "Brothers," regardless of gender. The Fraternity views "Brothers" as a gender-neutral term. Before women were allowed to join, several smaller sororities, parallel in ideals but independent in structure, were formed for women who had been Camp Fire Girls or Girl Scouts, including Gamma Sigma Sigma and Omega Phi Alpha. Several Alpha Phi Omega chapters also had started "little sister" groups; some of which formed separate organizations (e.g. Jewels of Tau, Phyettes etc.).[16]
The first step in paving the way for women to join Alpha Phi Omega was the Constitutional Convention in 1967, which removed the requirement that members have affiliation with the Boy Scouts of America.[17]
In the early 1970s, co-ed membership was proposed by several chapters but failed to reach the two-thirds majority support at the National Conventions which was required to alter the organization's bylaws. Some chapters went co-ed prior to 1976, despite the fact that the national by-laws did not allow it. They did so by registering women by using only the first letter of their first name. Many chapters that attempted to register women with the national office would receive the paperwork and fees back for women initiates. The Alpha Chi chapter at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology ran their own printing press, and thus was able to generate certificates and membership cards for their own female initiates.[16]
At the 1974 National Convention, the Fraternity allowed chapters to have women as affiliate members of the fraternity, and during the 1976 National Convention in Atlanta, Georgia, the decision was made to formally welcome females as full members of the fraternity. As with many major changes, this one caused a great deal of consternation, especially among several long-established chapters. Many of these chapters threatened to disassociate with the national fraternity if they were forced to become co-ed. In order to preserve the unity of the fraternity as a whole, the amendment was crafted such that it did not require existing chapters to admit women as members albeit all new chapters had to. It was felt that with the course of time, all would go coed. This "gentleman's agreement" was formalized in a resolution at the 1998 Convention and includes the following points: "The fraternity continues to encourage all Chapters and petitioning groups to open their membership to all students. All Chapters and petitioning groups have the right to choose their own members using objective and open policies that are consistent with the Fraternity’s governing documents, the rules of the host institutions that they serve and the traditions of that Chapter, if any. Single-gender Chapters chartered before the 1976 National Convention may remain single-gender unless they become inactive or coeducational. All Petitioning Groups seeking to charter or re-charter will be and remain co-educational.[18] Allowing women members in 1976 reversed the continuing steep decline in membership of the Fraternity and started a growth cycle in the Fraternity.[19]
At the July 2005 National Board of Directors meeting a resolution was passed: "The actions of the 1976 and 1998 National Conventions have attempted to clarify the Fraternity’s open membership policy…The National Board is charged with…enforcing the membership policies of the Fraternity as well as ensuring compliance with applicable laws…and upon advice of legal counsel, all chapters must practice open membership without regard of gender".[20] A decision by the 2006 National Convention on December 30, 2006, has essentially upheld the Board's previous resolution, adding additional clarifications to the transitional process for the all-male chapters, including a timeline for completion of their transition to co-educational status by the 2008 National Convention, and the establishment of a committee consisting of active members and alumni to assist with the process.[21] In the spring of 2008, the Sigma Xi chapter at the University of Maine formally disassociated from the national fraternity, forming a new fraternity: Alpha Delta. They cited that their action was due to an "ideological split", claiming that the national fraternity allowed female members to join and took away the student-focus.[22] In addition, Brothers from Zeta Theta chapter at Drexel University and Pi Chi Chapter at Duquesne University have joined this new fraternity.[23][24]
On December 30, 2006, the 2006 National Convention in Louisville, Kentucky elected the first female National President of the organization, Maggie Katz.[25] Brother Katz was re-elected, without contest, on December 30, 2008 in Boston, Massachusetts.[26]
The International Council of Alpha Phi Omega (ICAPO) was created at the 1994 Dallas-Fort Worth Alpha Phi Omega (USA) national convention with the signing of the charter document. Meetings followed at the 1995 Alpha Phi Omega (Philippines) and the 1996 Phoenix Alpha Phi Omega - USA National Convention. At the 1996 convention, a formal set of operating policies for the council was signed and the first officers were elected. ICAPO meetings now occur in conjunction with Alpha Phi Omega national conventions in the USA and the Philippines.[27]
The programs of the fraternity are centered around developing its three Cardinal Principles: Leadership, Friendship, and Service. Many chapters plan a several local service projects throughout the year, including blood drives,[28] tutoring,[29] charity fundraising events,[30] Scouting events,[31] used book exchanges,[32] Boy Scout Merit Badge days,[7] campus escort initiatives,[33] and housing construction/rehabilitation.[29] Signature projects include the annual National Service Week, in the first full week of November, and the Global Spring Youth Service Day in April.[34][35] Many of the operations of individual chapters are left to their own discretion, though most chapters have membership requirements which require a certain number of hours of service each semester. In the United States, on April 14, 2003, the fraternity received Daily Point of Light Award #2397 in recognition of its members, who give unselfishly of their time and energy on a daily basis, and who cumulative donate an average of over 300,000 hours of community service each semester.[36][37]
APO LEADS is a leadership development program organized by the national organization of Alpha Phi Omega in the United States. The APO LEADS program consists of five individual modular components of leadership development. Each of these modular components focus on skills that will help the participant be a successful leader and team member in Alpha Phi Omega and in life. The five components of APO LEADS are Launch, Explore, Achieve, Discover, and Serve. Launch is a pre-requisite for participation in any of the other four courses.[38] At the completion of the series of courses, the participant will have a set of transferable skills that are applicable to Alpha Phi Omega, to the working world, as well as to leadership in other organizations. APO LEADS has its roots in an earlier program, the Leadership Development Workshop (LDW). The LDW was an all day, eight hour leadership development course that was offered to members during the 1980s and 1990s. It was reorganized into the current APO LEADS program, which was rolled out in 2002.[39]
In the US, Alpha Phi Omega organizes National Service Week (NSW), a project collaboration encompassing all chapters across the nation. The original concept of a "national service project" dates back to the 1948 national convention, in which delegates approved the rebuilding of the Scout Hut at Hallows Church in London after World War II.[40] There were several other national service efforts outside of NSW, including a recent international book drive in 2001, in which chapters collected approximately 100,000 books for schools in the Philippines.[41]
NSW began in 1987 as National Service Day, and later expanded to National Service Week in 1997 to allow for greater flexibility and increased participation while retaining the sense of unity of the original concept. NSW is always held during the first full week of November.[40]
A theme for NSW is selected by the delegates of each national convention. Past NSW themes include:[42]
Spring Youth Service Day is Alpha Phi Omega's effort in participating in the Global Youth Service Day project with its partner organization, Youth Service America. During one weekend in April, millions of youth participate in this project, which bills itself as the largest service event in the world. Projects include tutoring young children, disaster relief, voter registration, nutritional awareness, distributing HIV/AIDS prevention materials, and more. Global Youth Service Day supports youth on a lifelong path of service and civic engagement, and educates the public, the media, and elected officials about the role of youth as community leaders.[44][45][46]
The International Council of Alpha Phi Omega (ICAPO) is the coordinating council of the Alpha Phi Omega National Organizations. During the 1980s, contact between Alpha Phi Omega (USA) and Alpha Phi Omega (Philippines) increased. National presidents Earle Herbert (USA) and Carlos "Caloy" Caliwara (Philippines) as well as other leaders in the two organizations concluded there was a need for an international coordinating body to promote the ideals of the fraternity around the world.[27]
As stated in the charter of ICAPO:[27] "The purpose of the ICAPO is to promote the principles and ideals of Alpha Phi Omega, as originally exemplified by Frank Reed Horton, around the world. To this end, the Council aids in introducing and establishing collegiate-based Alpha Phi Omega organizations in countries where it is not now located and assists in institutionalizing Alpha Phi Omega organizations in countries where it is currently introduced or established. It serves as an official link among the variously established independent national Alpha Phi Omega organizations, and works to promote a deeper understanding and an increased working relationship among the independent national organizations."
While the ICAPO binds both Alpha Phi Omega (USA) and Alpha Phi Omega (Philippines) into one larger international organization, the respective national organizations operate as individual organizations with a high degree of autonomy. Alpha Phi Omega (USA) has committed to the establishment of Alpha Phi Omega in Canada, and Alpha Phi Omega (Philippines) has committed to the establishment of Alpha Phi Omega in Australia.[47]
In the United States, Alpha Phi Omega is organized into five levels.[8]
Alpha Phi Omega of the United States has 738 chartered chapters. It currently has 367 chapters that are active, 14 Petitioning Groups, 19 Interest Groups, and 343 that are inactive. (Petitioning and Interest groups include both those at schools which have previously had active chapters and those that have not. In addition Alpha Phi Omega has 16 charters at schools which have closed or merged with another school with an older charter.[48]
In the United States, the fraternity is headquartered out of a National Office located at 14901 E. 42nd St., Independence, Missouri 64055-7347. The building was dedicated on November 17, 1990, following a four year fundraising campaign during the 1980s.[49] Fundraising for the building continued during the early 1990s, through matching gifts and a national fundraising event entitled, "Burn the Mortgage", raising over $28,000. Thanks to these donations, the fraternity paid the 10 year mortgage in only four years, and National President Jerry Schroeder ceremonially burned the mortgage at the 1994 National Convention in Dallas - Fort Worth, Texas.[50]
The move to the Kansas City area was decided by the 1931 National Convention.[51]
Past locations of the National Office in the United States include:[52]
Years | Location |
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1927 – 1928 | Carnegie Library of Homestead, Munhall, Pennsylvania |
1929 | 606 W. Cork St, Winchester, Virginia[53] |
1930 – 1931 | Box 360, Winchester, Virginia (Frank Reed Horton's mailbox) |
1931 – 1933 | Ivanhoe Club Building, 3215 Park Avenue, Kansas City, Missouri |
1934 | 410-11 Land Bank Building, Kansas City 6, Missouri |
1935 – 1936 | 505 Land Bank Building, Kansas City 6, Missouri[54] |
1936 – 1938 | 410 Land Bank Building, Kansas City 6, Missouri[55] |
1938 – 1949 | 407 Land Bank Building, Kansas City 6, Missouri[56] |
1949 – 1961 | 419 Columbia Bank Building, Kansas City 6, Missouri (Building imploded[57])[58] |
1961 – 1986 | 1100 Waltower Building, 823 Walnut Street, Kansas City, Missouri 64106[59][60] |
1986 – 1990 | 400 Mainmark Building, 1627 Main Street, Kansas City, Missouri 64108[61] |
1990 – current | 14901 E. 42nd St., Independence, Missouri 64055-7347[62][63][64] |
The national organization of Alpha Phi Omega in the Philippines maintains a four layer administrative structure:[65]
The National Office for Alpha Phi Omega of the Philippines is at 301-A Two Seventy Midtower Condominium 270 Ermin Garcia, Brgy Silangan, Cubao, QC[66] Past locations of the Alpha Phi Omega of the Philippines office include:[67][68]
Years | Location |
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1950 – 1975 | Office of Godofredo Neric, Boy Scouts of the Philippines building at Ermita, Manila.[69] |
1975 – 1977 | Residence of Dr. Librado I. Ureta in Taytay, Rizal[69] |
1977 – 1978 | Residence of Mel S. Gonzales Jr. in Tondo, Manila |
1978 – 1983 | Office of Jose V. Cutaran in Cubao, Quezon City |
1983 – 1986 | Office of Efren Neri at Comfoods building in Buendia, Makati City |
1986 – 1988 | Office of Col. Oscar V. Lazo Jr. at Borres building in Cubao, Quezon City |
1988 – 1993 | Don Calvo building in Escolta, Manila (Leased) |
1993 – 1999 | V.V. Soliven Complex, 2nd Floor, Epifaniode los Santos Avenue, San Juan, Manila[70] (Leased) |
1999 – current | 301-A Two Seventy Midtower Condominium,270 Ermin Garcia, Brgy Silangan, Cubao, QC |
Alpha Phi Omega of the Philippines has charters (either fraternity, sorority or both) at 243 colleges and universities.[71]
Alpha Phi Omega of the United States offers active membership (brotherhood) to be granted to all students enrolled at colleges and universities with active chapters of Alpha Phi Omega.[8] Individual chapters are granted flexibility in determining the level of activity of Graduate Students at their institution.[8] Honorary membership may be granted by either active chapters or by the National Board of Directors.[8]
Until the 1967 Constitutional Convention, current or former membership in Scouting was a requirement to become an active brother. For example, in the Alpha Phi Omega National Constitution in 1957:
Article III, Section 2: Active membership shall be granted to college students who are or have been previous affiliated with the Boy Scouts of America or any Boy Scout Movement recognized by the International Association, and no restrictions as to Scout rank attained shall be imposed as a membership qualification.[72]
Being a boy scout as a youth was not required. For example, Bill Clinton was a cub scout,[73] but not a scout while growing up and was able to join Alpha Phi Omega as a student, and the bylaws also allowed for men to qualify by registering with their local council as a merit badge counselor, in the College Scouter Reserve, or other similar positions.
National conventions in Alpha Phi Omega are biennial gatherings of the respective national organization of the fraternity, in which official business is conducted and brothers from the various chapters in the organization meet to share ideas, expanding leadership, friendship, and service. In the very early years, decisions of the National Fraternity were conducted by mail. The first actual assembly of delegates in a convention was held in St. Louis, Missouri, on March 1–2, 1931. Seven of the fraternity's eighteen chapters were represented at this convention by a total of 23 students and advisors.[2]
Alpha Phi Omega of the United States hosts biennial national conventions during even-numbered years.[74] As of 2010, Alpha Phi Omega has conducted forty-one national conventions, the most recent in Atlanta, Georgia. Conventions were not held in 1942 and 1944 due to World War II, and a special Constitutional Convention was held in 1967. Alpha Phi Omega of the Philippines conducts biennial national conventions in odd-numbered years, and as of 2007, twenty-four conventions have been held.[2]
In the US, national conventions are officially called to order by an opening ceremony in which the Eternal Flame of Service is brought forth by members of the Delta Omega chapter at the University of Houston. This tradition was started after the twenty-first national convention in Dallas, Texas. In the early hours of December 30, 1970, the delegates of the Delta Omega chapter met in a ceremony in the suite of H. Roe Bartle, with the newly-elected members of the National Board of Directors and National President Aubrey B. Hamilton. Bartle lit a small blue candle that he in turn used to light a hurricane lamp, which was then passed from the blue candle to each of the board members' candles. He then joined the board members to light two four foot candles. The flame was then taken to Houston and allowed to burn while awaiting the completion of the Eternal Flame site.[75]
Convention attendance has grown considerably through the years. The largest convention attendance in the US to date has been 2,316 in New Orleans, Louisiana in 2002, and the largest number of chapters represented was 235 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in 2000.[2]
The official publication of the fraternity is the Torch & Trefoil.[1][74][76] First published as the Lightbearer in February 1927,[9] the name was changed to the Torch & Trefoil by the decision of the Fifth Alpha Phi Omega national convention in December 1934. The new name was from the Torch as the emblem of Education and the Trefoil as the emblem of Scouting.[77] A version is published quarterly by the national organization of the United States, as well as a separate version by the national organization of the Republic of the Philippines. Copies of recent Torch & Trefoils are available on the Alpha Phi Omega National Web site.[78]
The Lightbearer has been published since 1966 as a separate daily publication during Alpha Phi Omega National Conventions, and distributed to convention attendees.[79][80]
The monthly mailing from the fraternity to its chapters was the Chapter Bulletin from 2004 to 2008.[74] Copies of recent Chapter Bulletins are available on the Alpha Phi Omega National Web site.[81] The Chapter Bulletin has been replaced by the Torch Topics in April 2008.[81]
Alpha Phi Omega (USA) National Presidents |
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Frank Reed Horton, 1925-1931 | H. Roe Bartle, 1931-1946 | Arno Nowotny, 1946-1950 | Daniel Den Uyl, 1950-1954 | M.R. Disborough, 1954-1958 | William S. Roth, 1958-1962 | Lester R. Steig, 1962-1964 | Tom T. Galt, 1964-1966 | E. Ross Forman, 1966-1968 | Glen T. Nygreen, 1968-1970 | Audrey B. Hamilton, 1970-1972 | Lucius E. Young, 1972-1974 | Lawrence L. Hirsch, 1974-1978 | Lorin A. Jurvis, 1978-1980 | C.P. Zlatkovich, 1980-1982 | Earle M. Herbert, 1982-1986 | Stan Carpenter, 1986-1990 | Gerald A. Schroeder, 1990-1994 | Wilfred M. Krenek, 1994-1998 | Jack A. McKenzie, 1998-2002 | Bobby Hainline, 2002-2004 | Fred Heismeyer, 2004-2006 | Maggie Katz, 2006-2010 | Mark A. Stratton, 2010-present |
Alpha Phi Omega (Philippines) National Presidents |
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Librado I. Ureta, 1951-1953 | Ignacio J. Sevilla, Sr., 1953-1968 | Librado I. Ureta, 1968-1977 | Amancio Donato 1977* |Melchizedek Y. Maquiso, 1977-1981 | Francisco P. Brosas, Jr., 1981-1983 | Mama S. Lalanto, 1983-1985 | Geoffrey A. Pungutan, Al-Haj, 1985-1986 | Oscar V. Lazo Jr., 1986-1987 | Carlos M.E. Caliwara, 1987-1989 | Jose Antonio L. Dimaano, 1989-1991 | Rolando B. Baluyot, 1991-1993 | Felix J. Marinas, Jr., 1993-1995 | Ismail Michael A. Abantas, 1995-96 | Agaton C. Labrador, Jr., 1996-97 | Mariano R. Alquiza, 1997-1999 | Teddie Elson E. Rivera, 1999-2001 | Blo Umpar Adiong, 2001-2003 | Rodrigo V Mapoy, 2003-2005 | Jimmy De Castro 2005-2007 | Mel Adriano 2007-2011
* Donato was Officer-in-charge. |
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