Alpha Omicron Pi

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AOΠ - Alpha Omicron Pi
Motto One Motto, One Badge, One Bond, and Singleness of Heart
Colors Cardinal Red
Symbol Rose and Sheaf of Wheat
Flower Rosa 'Jacqueminot'
Founded January 2, 1897 at Barnard College
Type Social
Scope International
Headquarters 5390 Virginia Way
Brentwood, Tennessee, USA
Members 126,000 + currently
lifetime
Philanthropy American Juvenile Arthritis Foundation
Jewel Ruby
Homepage http://www.alphaomicronpi.org/

Alpha Omicron Pi (ΑΟΠ, AOII) is an international women's fraternity that was founded on January 2, 1897 at Barnard College on the campus of Columbia University in New York. Its founders were Stella George Stern Perry, Helen St. Clair Mullan, Elizabeth Heywood Wyman, and Jessie Wallace Hughan, four women who were determined to make a democratic, ostentatious society. The four founders met in the Columbia Law Library to begin their fraternity. Today, Alpha Omicron Pi is an international women's fraternity, with respective chapters in Canada and the U.S.A. Its international headquarters is located in Brentwood, Tennessee.

Contents

Alpha Omicron Pi is an international women's fraternity promoting friendship for a lifetime, inspiring academic excellence and lifelong learning, and developing leadership skills through service to the fraternity and community.

The object of this Fraternity shall be to encourage a spirit of Fraternity and love among its members; to stand at all times for character, dignity, scholarship, and college loyalty; to strive for and support the best interests of the colleges and universities in which chapters are installed, and in no way to disregard, injure, or sacrifice those interests for the sake of the prestige or advancement of the Fraternity or any of its chapters.

Believing in their beginnings in Greek tradition, AOΠ does not have a coat of arms, but uses a Jacqueminot rose as their symbol. Their single color is cardinal and their single stone is the ruby. Their unofficial mascot is the panda. The AOΠ badge comprises the Greek letters, Α (Alpha), Ο (Omicron), and Π (Pi) superimposed on each other. To Dragma (meaning "the sheaf"), AOΠ's magazine, is published three times per year, and has won numerous awards since its inception. The wheat sheaf is a prominent symbol in Alpha Omicron Pi. The fraternity teaches its members never to use the abbreviation "AOPi" but instead to use "AOII" or "AOΠ."

Like many other Greek organizations for women, Alpha Omicron Pi is technically a fraternity, not a sorority, although both terms are often used. The term sorority was not yet in widespread use at the time of Alpha Omicron Pi's founding, and therefore it is officially a "fraternity for women." Also, the term Sorority has Roman origins where the word Fraternity is Greek in origin, adding to the concept of an international women's fraternity.

Since 1897, Alpha Omicron Pi has had over 131,500 initiates and maintains 181 chapters, with its oldest existing chapter (Omicron) at The University of Tennessee Knoxville (founded 1902) and its newest chapter at the University of Arkansas (installed January 20, 2007). Its Alpha chapter at Barnard College of Columbia University in New York closed in 1914 when Greek Life was abolished at the school. AOΠ remains one of the fastest growing sororities, and currently has colonies at Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology in Terre Haute, IN, the University of La Verne in Southern California, and the University of Waterloo in Ontario, Canada. The fraternity has plans for recolonization of Rho Beta Chapter at Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA, in Fall of 2007.

AOII's chapter names are unique compared to other Greek groups. Most sororities and fraternities are named sequentially, with the first chapter being Alpha, the second Beta, and so on. Breaking from this tradition, AOII does not dictate its chapter designations. Each colony of the fraternity selects its own chapter name and corresponding sub-motto. In this way, chapter designations have special meaning for the members. For example, AOII's newest chapter at the University of Arkansas chose the designation "Xi Omicron" with the sub-motto meaning "excellence overall." AOII's oldest operating chapter is Omicron at the University of Tennessee, which was the fraternity's fourth chapter. (The first three chapters were Alpha at Barnard/Columbia, Pi at Sophie Newcomb/Tulane, and Nu at New York University.)

The fraternity's chosen philanthropy is Juvenile Arthritis and Arthritis Research and Education, to which it donates hundreds of thousands of dollars each year.

AOΠ is a member group of the National Panhellenic Conference, which is the governing council of the 26 member women's fraternities and sororities.

  • Margaret Bourke-White (Omicron Pi) - photographer and journalist, joined Alpha Omicron Pi while at the University of Michigan. Her works were donated to Alpha Omicron Pi upon her death in 1971, and today are displayed at the international headquarters.[1]
  • Courtney Kupets (Lambda Sigma) - Olympic and World Champion Gymnast at the University of Georgia.[2]
  • Hailey Bright (Omicron)- Actress[3]

Links to chapter websites provided when available

Alabama

Arizona

Arkansas

California

  • Sigma, University of California Berkeley, 1907
  • Delta Sigma, San Jose State University, 1948
  • Lambda Beta, California State University Long Beach, 1965
  • Sigma Phi, California State University Northridge, 1967
  • Chi Psi, California Polytechnic State University, 1986
  • Colony, University of LaVerne, 2006

Colorado

Florida

  • Kappa Gamma, Florida Southern College, 1946
  • Gamma Omicron, University of Florida, 1948
  • Gamma Theta, University of South Florida, 1985
  • Pi Theta, Florida International University, 2001
  • Mu Lambda, Rollins College, 2002

Georgia

Illinois

Indiana

Iowa

Kentucky

Louisiana

  • Delta Beta, University of Louisiana at Lafayette, 1956
  • Lambda Tau, The University of Louisiana at Monroe, 1958
  • Kappa Tau, Southeastern Louisiana University, 1963
  • Kappa Chi, Northwestern State University, 1997

Maine

  • Gamma, University of Maine, 1908

Maryland

Massachusetts

  • Delta, Tufts University, 1908

Michigan

Minnesota

  • Tau, University of Minnesota, 1912

Mississippi

  • Nu Beta, University of Mississippi, 1958

Missouri

  • Delta Pi, Central Missouri State University, 1962

Montana

Nebraska

  • Zeta, University of Nebraska Lincoln, 1903
  • Phi Sigma, University of Nebraska Kearney, 1969

New York

  • Epsilon, Cornell University, 1908
  • Theta Pi, Wagner College, 1951
  • Sigma Chi, Hartwick College, 1952
  • Delta Psi, University at Albany- State University of New York, 1989

North Carolina

Ohio

Oklahoma

  • Xi, University of Oklahoma, 1924
  • Chi Theta, Northeastern State University, 1997

Pennsylvania

South Carolina

  • Chi Phi, University of South Carolina - Aiken, 2006

Tennessee

  • Omicron, University of Tennessee Knoxville, 1902
  • Nu Omicron, Vanderbilt University, 1917
  • Kappa Omicron, Rhodes College, 1925
  • Omega Omicron, Lambuth University, 1957
  • Tau Omicron, University of Tennessee Martin, 1966
  • Rho Omicron, Middle Tennessee State University, 1985
  • Lambda Omicron, Cumberland University, 1999

Texas

Virginia

  • Gamma Alpha, George Mason University, 1978
  • Rho Beta, Virginia Commonwealth University, 1985, Recolonizing 2007

Washington

West Virginia

  • Sigma Alpha, West Virginia University, 1986

Wisconsin

  • Kappa Sigma, University of Wisconsin River Falls, 1993

Alberta, Canada

Ontario, Canada

Quebec, Canada

  1. ^ Margaret Bourke-White Papers. Syracuse University (July 20, 2005). Retrieved on 2007-02-04.
  2. ^ Courtney Kupets: Info: Biography. Got-Chalk.com. Retrieved on 2007-02-04.
  3. ^ Hailey Bright: IMDB Page. imdb.com. Retrieved on 2007-03-31.


National Panhellenic Conference
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