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  1. 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 completion is the single best ...

  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 ...

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  4. During an era when most Black teenagers did not graduate high school or pursue college education, Alpha Phi Alpha intervened. It devised programs offering tutoring, financial aid, and heightened educational opportunities for Black youth.

  5. The oldest one is the NAACP’s Crisis Magazine, which was started by W.E.B. Du Bois, a member of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity. Alpha Chapter encouraged the Fraternity to adopt its signature program “Go-to-High School, Go-to-College” in 1919 to increase the number of black students eligible for college enrollment.

  6. 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.

  7. 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. Learn More Project Alpha

  8. In the second decade of the Twentieth Century, Alpha Phi Alpha was still in its nascent stage as a national organization. In 1910, the Fraternity held its Third General Convention in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania from December 27 to December 30.34 The Howard University Journal stated that the convention marked the moment where the Fraternity “passed form the formative and constructive stage ...