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Alpha Phi Omega's "Beauty and the Beast" contest at the University of Texas at Arlington in Arlington, Texas, c. 1960s. Alpha Phi Omega was founded on the 2nd floor of Brainerd Hall, now Hogg Hall, at Lafayette College in Easton, Pennsylvania on December 16, 1925, [10] [1] by Frank Reed Horton and 13 other students who were former Boy Scouts and scouters.
This is a category for images of the coats of arms of fraternities and sororities, which includes social fraternities and sororities as well as service fraternities and sororities, professional fraternities, and honor societies.
Phi Mu Alpha's coat of arms was adopted at the 10th National Convention in 1910. [27] The escutcheon (shield) consists of a red saltire (or Saint Andrew's Cross) on a field of gold. Centered is a symbol similar to the fraternity's membership pin, though differing in that instead of 7 red and white circles/stones along each side of the triangle ...
At the time, Alpha Phi Omega was an all-male national service fraternity and it was not clear if the amendment applied to the organization. At the 1976 national convention of Alpha Phi Omega, the fraternity voted to become coeducational in compliance with these new university rules and regulations.
File talk:Alpha Lambda Epsilon coat of arms.png; File talk:Alpha Lambda Mu crest.png; File talk:Alpha Lambda Zeta crest.jpg; File talk:Alpha Omega Epsilon Coat of Arms.jpeg; File talk:Alpha Omicron Pi logo.png; File talk:Alpha Omicron Sigma Symbol.png; File talk:Alpha Phi Beta coat of arms.png; File talk:Alpha Phi coat of arms.png
The Alpha Phi Omega in the United States was established by Frank Reed Horton on December 16, 1925, at Lafayette College. [5] In 1950, professional scouter Sol George Levy, an APO member from the University of Washington in Seattle, went to the Philippines to generate interest in the scouting movement in the country.
The colors of Alpha Psi Omega and Delta Psi Omega are moonlight blue and bastard amber, from the names of the shades of lighting gels commonly used in theatre lighting. [3] Its flower is the violet. [3] The fraternity's badge is monogram of the Greek letters ΑΨΩ. [3] The Alpha Psi Omega coat of arms is designed to represent a Greek theater's ...
The Phi Delt was the bi-monthly magazine. Butterfield (p. 42) described the coat-of-arms as "...sable a sinister bend or, superimposed by a white open book proper on which in turn is superimposed a torch palewise, or, flamed argent. [With a] Crest. An eagle displayed, or" ("or" meaning "golden", in heraldry). The motto was the sorority's name ...