ALPHA DELTA PHI


'Alpha Delta Phi'
'Coat of Arms'
Crest adp.gif
'Founded' 1832 at Hamilton College
'Founders'
Samuel Eells
Lorenzo Latham
John S. Underwood
Oliver Andrew Morse
Henry Lemuel Storrs
'Motto' Manus multæ cor unum (Many hands, one heart).
'President' Jon Vick, HAM '64 (Fraternity), Craig Cheslog, BDN '93 (Society)
'Colors' Emerald and Pearl
'Flower' The Lily of the Valley
'Chapters' 24 chapters and 5 affiliates (Fraternity), 5 chapters (Society)
'Scope' United States, Canada
'Homepage' Fraternity: http://www.alphadeltaphi.orgSociety: http://www.adps.org

'Alpha Delta Phi' ('ΑΔΦ') is a Greek-letter fraternity in the United States and Canada. Today the name refers to both an all-male fraternity that was founded in 1832 by Samuel Eells at Hamilton College in Clinton, New York and a "society" that broke off from the fraternity in 1992 which permits co-educated chapters. The Fraternity and the Society both come out of Eells's vision for a "literary society," although Alpha Delta Phi's original academic focus is preserved to varying degrees by individual chapters.
From its early days, Alpha Delta Phi sought students of a decided literary orientation. In the founder's own words, the literary pursuit of the fraternity must "be built on a more comprehensive scale than other societies, ... providing for every taste and talent and embracing every department of literature and science... It must be national and universal in all its adaptations, so as not merely to cultivate a taste for literature or furnish the mind with knowledge but with a true philosophical spirit looking to the entire man, so as to develop the whole being -- moral, social and intellectual." Today, the literary tradition is carried on the international level in the form of annual literary competitions sponsored by the Samuel Eells Literary and Educational Foundation, which awards cash prizes in each of five categories.
Alpha Delta Phi was the first fraternity to establish a chapter west of the Allegheny mountains when it formed a chapter at Miami University in 1835. This chapter inspired the formation of three national fraternities at Miami in the 19th Century.
Alpha Delta Phi was a charter member of the North-American Interfraternity Conference (formerly known as the National Interfraternity Conference) (NIC), and a member of Alpha Delta Phi, Hamilton W. Mabie (Williams College, class of 1867), was the first President of the NIC.
(Source: )

Contents
The Split
The Fraternity
Chapters
The Society
Chapters
Notable alumni
Athletics
Business and Finance
Clergy
Education
Entertainment
Government and Military
Law and Judiciary
Literature and Journalism
Science and Engineering
See also
External links
The Split

Since the 1992 split, the Fraternity and the Society are completely separate and independent legal entities with separate governing bodies, and are not separate or parallel divisions of the same organization. The two groups share a license to use the name and intellectual property.

The Fraternity


The Fraternity is a retronym used now to distinguish the all-male Alpha Delta Phi Fraternity from the co-ed Alpha Delta Phi Society. In general parlance, the Fraternity refers to itself simply as "Alpha Delta Phi", since the Society is required to add "Society" to the end to distinguish itself.
Chapters

As of 2006 the Fraternity has 24 chapters and 5 affiliates, the oldest chapter at Hamilton College and the most recent affiliate at Duke University.

★ Hamilton Chapter, Hamilton College - Clinton, NY (1832-active)

★ Miami Chapter, Miami University - Oxford, OH (1835-1873, 1951-active)

★ Yale Chapter, Yale University - New Haven, CT (1836-1873, 1888-1935, 1990-active)

★ Amherst Chapter, Amherst College - Amherst, MA (1836-1989, 2002-2006)

★ Peninsular Chapter, University of Michigan - Ann Arbor, MI - 1846

★ Rochester Chapter, University of Rochester - Rochester, NY - (1850-active)

University of Virginia - Charlottesville, VA - 1855

★ Kenyon Chapter, Kenyon College - Gambier, OH (1858-active)

Union College - Schenectady, NY - 1859

Cornell University - Ithaca, NY - 1869

★ Phi Kappa Chapter, Trinity College - Hartford, CT - 1877

Johns Hopkins University - Baltimore, MD - 1889

University of Minnesota - Minneapolis, MN - 1892

University of Toronto - Toronto, Ontario - 1893

University of Chicago - Chicago, IL - 1896

★ Memorial Chapter, McGill University - Montreal, Quebec - 1897

University of Wisconsin-Madison - Madison, WI - 1902

★ California Chapter, University of California, Berkeley - Berkeley, CA - 1908

University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign - Champaign, IL - 1911

University of British Columbia - Vancouver, BC - 1926

★ Lambda Phi Chapter, M.I.T. - Cambridge, MA - 1976

★ Massachusetts Chapter, University of Massachusetts - Amherst, MA - 1978

★ Adelphos Chapter, Chapman University - Orange, CA (1987-active)

★ Nittany Chapter, Pennsylvania State University - State College, PA - 2001

★ Nu Epsilon Zeta Affiliate, Northeastern University - Boston, MA - 2004

★ Omega Theta Chi Affiliate, York College of Pennsylvania - York, PA - 2005

★ Brandeis University Affiliate, Brandeis University - Waltham, MA - 2006

★ Phi Alpha Affiliate, Duke University- Durham, NC - 2006
(Source: )

The Society


Several Alpha Delta Phi chapters began co-educating in the 1960s, starting with the California Chapter. Not all chapters approved of this change, and several decades of disputes followed, with some members lobbying for full admission of women, and others wanting to ban women altogether or grant them some form of associate membership. By 1992, the chapters agreed to bifurcate Alpha Delta Phi, creating the Alpha Delta Phi Society alongside the existing Fraternity. The Society espouses "home rule," letting each chapter decide whether or not to co-educate. To date, all of its chapters are co-educated.
Chapters

As of 2005 the Society had four undergraduate chapters and two alumni chapters.
The Society was founded in 1992 by four chapters: Brunonian (at Brown University), Columbia (at Columbia University), Middletown (at Wesleyan University), and Stanford (at Stanford University). The Bowdoin chapter, which had been required to withdraw from the Fraternity by the administration of Bowdoin College, joined the Society a year later.
In 1994, the Society's first new chapter was formed at Middlebury College, becoming Alpha Delta
Phi's first chapter to be co-educated from the beginning. Bowdoin College later abolished its fraternity system, and the Bowdoin chapter became alumni-only. In 2005, Middlebury's undergraduate chapter went under, and it became alumni-only as well.

Notable alumni


Athletics


Bernard W. Bierman -- University of Minnesota, 1915, Athlete, University of Minnesota Football Coach

Otto Everett Graham Jr. -- Northwestern University, 1944,Pro Football Hall of Fame quarterback. In 1999, he was ranked number 7 on The Sporting News' list of the 100 Greatest Football Players, the highest-ranking player who had played in the AAFC

Jackie Jensen -- University of California, 1949, Athlete, former Major League Baseball outfielder

Walter A. Haas, Jr. -- University of California, 1937, former owner of Oakland Athletics, Honorary Chairman of Levi Strauss & Co.

Francis "Fay" T. Vincent -- Williams College, 1960, former Commissioner, Major League Baseball
(Source: )
Business and Finance


C.F.W. Bruce -- University of Toronto, 1926, President of the Aluminum Company of Canada.

Henry Clay Folger -- Amherst College, 1879, President of Standard Oil and Founder of the Folger Shakespeare Library

G. Keith Funston -- Phi Kappa Chapter, 1932, President of the NYSE, 1951-1967.

William R. Grace -- Colgate University, 1900, Founder of W.R. Grace & Co.

Elbert Hand -- Hamilton College, 1961, CEO of Hartmarx

Scott Hand -- Hamilton College, 1964, Chairman & CEO of INCO

Arthur B. Homer -- Brown University, 1917, President of the Bethlehem Steel Company.

Kevin Kennedy -- Hamilton College, 1970, Managing Director, Goldman Sachs; President, Hamilton College Trustees

David Packard -- Stanford University, 1934, Founder of the Hewlett-Packard Computer Corporation

Charles H. Percy -- University of Chicago, 1941, U.S. Senator, Chairman of Bell & Howell Corporation

Phillip W. Pillsbury -- Yale University, 1924, President of The Pillsbury Company

Elwyn L. Smith -- Cornell University, 1917, Founder and President of the Smith Corona typewriter company

Allan Sproul -- University of California, 1919, Director, Kaiser Aluminum.

Grant Tinker -- Dartmouth College, 1949, President of NBC.

Frederick K. Weyerhaeuser -- Yale University, 1917, Chairman of the Weyerhaeuser Company.

Gerald B. Zornow -- University of Rochester, 1937, Chairman of Eastman Kodak

Colin Angle -- Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1989, Founder and CEO of iRobot Corporation
(Source: )
Clergy


★ Bishop Henry D. Aves -- Kenyon College, 1878.

★ Bishop Frederick Burgess -- Brown University, 1873.

★ Bishop Sheldon M. Griswold -- Union College, 1882.

★ Bishop John. Kendrick -- Kenyon College 1859.

★ Bishop Theodore B. Lyman -- Hamilton College, 1837.

★ Bishop H. Clifford Northcott -- (N 1919).

★ Bishop Lyman C. Ogilby -- Hamilton College, 1943.

★ Bishop Lauriston L. Scaife -- Phi Kappa Chapter, 1931.

★ Bishop Herbert Shipman -- Colgate University, 1890.

★ Bishop Dudley S. Stark -- Phi Kappa Chapter, 1917.
(Source: )
Education


Joseph S. Ames -- Johns Hopkins Chapter, 1886, President of Johns Hopkins University

Charles W. Eliot -- Harvard Chapter, 1853, President of Harvard University

William Watts Folwell -- Geneva Chapter, 1857, President of the University of Minnesota

Louis Agassiz Fuertes -- Cornell Chapter, 1987, Naturalist and Artist

G. Keith Funston -- Phi Kappa Chapter, 1932, President of Trinity College

Daniel Coit Gilman -- Yale Chapter, 1852, President of Johns Hopkins University

Kent Hubbell -- Cornell University, 1967, Cornell University Dean of Students

Emory W. Hunt -- Rochester Chapter, 1884, President of Denison University; President of Bucknell University

Robert M. Hutchins -- Yale Chapter, 1921, President of the University of Chicago

Robert G. McKelvey -- Middletown Chapter, 1959, Secretary, American Rhodes Scholars Association

Har Barry Mills -- Bowdoin Chapter, 1972, President of Bowdoin College

Andrew Van Vranken Raymond -- Union Chapter, 1875, President of Union College

Eugene V. Rostow -- Yale Chapter, 1933, Dean of the Yale School of Law, Adviser to the US Department of State

Thomas B. Rudd -- Hamilton Chapter, 1921, President of Hamilton College
(Source: )
Entertainment


MacDonald Carey -- University of Wisconsin-Madison, 1935, Actor

Stephen Collins -- Amherst College, Actor, '', ''7th Heaven''

Roger Faxon -- Johns Hopkins University, 1970, C.O.O. of Columbia Pictures

Monica Louwerens -- Middletown Chapter, 1995, Actress[1]

Fredric March -- University of Wisconsin-Madison, 1920, actor

Chris Miller -- Dartmouth College, 1963, co-screenwriter, ''Animal House''

Hayden Schlossberg -- University of Chicago, 2000, co-screenwriter, ''Harold & Kumar Go To White Castle'' and ''Scary Movie 3'' (Rewrite)

Ben Stein -- Columbia University, 1966, actor and author

Raymond Joseph Teller (of Penn and Teller) -- Amherst College, 1970, actor and magician

Franchot Tone -- Cornell University, 1927, Actor

Monte Woolley -- Yale University, 1911, Actor
(Source: )
Government and Military


Hon. John Black Aird -- University of Toronto, 1945, Lieutenant Governor of Ontario; Canadian Senator

Richard R. Burt -- Cornell University, 1969, U.S. Ambassador to the Federal Republic of Germany from 1985 to 1989; U.S. Chief Negotiator in the Strategic Arms Reduction Talks (START) with the Former Soviet Union

Michael N. Castle -- Hamilton College, 1961, Governor of Delaware; US Congressman

Joshua L. Chamberlain -- Bowdoin College, 1852, hero of the Battle of Gettysburg; received Confederate surrender at Appomattox Courthouse; Medal of Honor; Governor of Maine; President of Bowdoin College

Salmon P. Chase -- Dartmouth College, 1826, Secretary of the Treasury under President Lincoln; Chief Justice of the United States

Joseph H. Choate -- Harvard University, 1852, Ambassador to Great Britain

Bainbridge Colby -- Williams College, 1890, Secretary of State; founder of Progressive Party

Dwight F. Davis -- Harvard University, 1900, Secretary of War; donor of the Davis Cup.

William R. Day -- University of Michigan, 1870, Secretary of State

Charles S. Fairchild -- Harvard University, 1863, Secretary of the Treasury

James R. Garfield -- Williams College, 1885, Secretary of the Interior

Frederick H. Gillett -- Amherst College, 1874, Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives

Alastair W. Gillespie -- McGill University, 198?, Member of Canadian Parliament; Minister of Industry, Trade and Commerce (Canada)

Alger Hiss -- Johns Hopkins University, 1926, clerk to fellow fraternity alumnus Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr.; influential U.S. State Department official; convicted of perjury in House Un-American Activities Committee investigation into communist spying.

Edward M. House -- Cornell University, 1881, politician, Presidential adviser and diplomat

William Luther -- University of Minnesota, 1967, U.S. Congressman

Charles H. Percy -- University of Chicago, 1941, U.S. Senator

Thomas C. Reed -- Cornell University, 1956, 11th Secretary of the Air Force; author of ''At the Abyss: An Insider's History of the Cold War''

Franklin Delano Roosevelt -- Harvard University, 1904, President of the United States

Theodore Roosevelt -- Harvard University, 1880, President of the United States

John S. Wold -- Union College, 1938, U.S. Congressman, oil man, and philanthropist
(Source: )
Law and Judiciary


Henry B. Brown -- Yale University, 1856, Justice, U.S. Supreme Court.

Salmon P. Chase -- Dartmouth College, 1826, Chief Justice, U.S. Supreme Court.

William R. Day -- University of Michigan, 1870, Justice, U.S. Supreme Court.

Oliver Wendell Holmes -- Harvard University, 1861, Justice, U.S. Supreme Court.

Dana H. Porter -- University of Toronto, 1921, Chief Justice of Ontario.

William B. Scott -- McGill University, 1912, Chief Justice, Superior Court of Quebec.

George Shiras, Jr. -- Yale University, 1853, Justice, U.S. Supreme Court.

Harlan F. Stone -- Amherst College, 1894, Chief Justice, U.S. Supreme Court.
(Source: )
Literature and Journalism


Samuel Hopkins Adams -- Hamilton College, 1891, author.

John Perry Barlow -- Middletown, 1969, poet, essayist, retired Wyoming cattle rancher, co-founder of the Electronic Frontier Foundation[1]

Philip Barry -- Yale University, 1918, author.

Francis Bellamy -- University of Rochester, 1876, author of the original Pledge of Allegiance

Stephen Vincent Benet -- Yale University, 1919, poet.

Richard G. Eberhart -- University of Minnesota, 1926, poet.

David Eisenhower -- Amherst College, 1970, Author of Eisenhower at War

Sean Ellis -- University of British Columbia, 1934, author and playwright

John Farrar -- Yale University, 1918, poet, publisher.

Pagan Kennedy -- Middletown, 1984, author, pioneer of '90s Zine Movement.

Henry R. Luce -- Yale University, 1920, publisher; founder of Time, Life.

Robert Ludlum -- Middletown, 1959, novelist

Chris Miller -- Dartmouth College, 1961, Co-author of Animal House

Col. Robert R. McCormick -- Yale University, 1903, editor and publisher of the Chicago Tribune.

P. J. O'Rourke -- Miami University, author

Daniel Pearl -- Stanford University, 1985, journalist WSJ editor and victim of terrorism

Scott Turow -- Amherst College, 1970, novelist

Thornton Wilder -- Yale University, 1920, author and playwright
(Source: )
Science and Engineering


Dr. Frederick M. Allen -- University of California, 1902, Pioneer in Diabetes.

Farrington Daniels -- University of Minnesota, 1910, Pioneer in Solar Energy; Chairman, Chemistry at University of Wisconsin-Madison.

David P. Faxon MD -- Hamilton College, 1967, President of the American Heart Association

Dr. Hans Lisser -- University of California, 1907, Pioneer in Gland Disorders.

William H. Masters -- Hamilton College, 1938, Researcher, Human Sexuality.

★ Lt. Colonel Steven R. Nagel -- University of Illinois, 1969, NASA Astronaut, Space Shuttle Discovery.

Louis Nicot Ridenour -- University of Chicago, 1932, Member, United States Atomic Energy Commission.

Daniel M. Tani -- Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1984, NASA Astronaut, Space Shuttle Endeavour

Michael Gazzaniga -- Dartmouth College, 1961, Founder of the field of Cognitive Neuroscience
(Source: )

See also



Alpha Delta, former chapter at Dartmouth College.

External links



Alpha Delta Phi Fraternity



Alpha Delta Phi Society



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