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  1. Go to High School Go to College. The "Go-to-High-School, Go-to-College" program, established in 1922, concentrates on the importance of completing secondary and collegiate education as a road to advancement. Statistics prove the value of this extra impetus in making the difference in the success of young African-American men, given that school ...

  2. Alpha Phi Alpha chapters, college and alumni, also carried forth the Fraternity’s mission. Epsilon (University of Michigan), Gamma (Virginia Union University), Alpha Zeta (West Virginia College), Alpha Theta (University of Iowa), Alpha Rho (Morehouse College), and Alpha Sigma (Wiley University) Chapters all executed successful Go-to-High- School, Go-to-College, or similar educational ...

  3. 6. Chapter 6. The 1960s. By the time the 1960s arrived, Alpha Phi Alpha, as an organization and the brothers in the fold, had been fighting for more than half a century to uplift African Americans. This work was multi‐faceted, encompassing community service, philanthropy as well as efforts to shape public policy, and civil rights litigation.

    • Alpha Phi Alpha. Alpha Phi Alpha stands as the sole Black Greek-letter organization founded at an Ivy League institution—Cornell University. Amidst a campus marked by segregation and social isolation for Black students, a troublingly low retention rate prompted the remaining individuals to form a support and study group.
    • Alpha Kappa Alpha. Established on January 15, 1908, at Howard University, Alpha Kappa Alpha emerged as the first Greek-letter organization founded by Black college women.
    • Kappa Alpha Psi. Collection of the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture, Gift of Calvin M. Reaves, Polemarch (2012-2019), Smithfield (NC) Alumni Chapter, Middle Eastern Province.
    • Omega Psi Phi. With the formation of the first Black fraternity in 1906 at Cornell University, three students wanted to create something that Howard University could have of its own.
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  5. Feb 7, 2017 · Black activism on college campuses is not a new initiative. From there, Alpha established The Committee on Public Policy, which addressed issues of race, class, and employment in the black community, and the Alpha Phi Alpha Education Foundation, which sought to tackle the educational, economic, and societal needs of black people at the 24th General Convention in St. Louis, Missouri in 1933.

  6. Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc. ( ΑΦΑ) is the oldest intercollegiate historically African American fraternity. It was initially a literary and social studies club organized in the 1905–1906 school year at Cornell University but later evolved into a fraternity with a founding date of December 4, 1906. It employs an icon from Ancient Egypt ...

  7. Dec 7, 2015 · Nation’s first black fraternity built on social purpose and social action. 1 / 25. In 1906, seven students at Cornell University, recognizing a need to build an organization to nurture and ...

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