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Phi Mu at the Georgia Institute of Technology. Phi Mu was founded on January 4, 1852 – though not publicly announced until March 4, 1852 – originally as a literary society referred to as The Philomathean Society at Wesleyan College by Mary Ann Dupont (Lines), Mary Elizabeth Myrick (Daniel), and Martha Bibb Hardaway (Redding).
This is the list of chapters and colonies of Phi Mu, a National Panhellenic Conference sorority, in order of formation. In some cases a naming convention appears to utilize a first letter indicative of a state or region, thus many Pennsylvania chapter designations begin with "Phi"; however there are some exceptions to this rule where a name was derived from a predecessor local.
Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia was founded as the Sinfonia Club by Ossian Everett Mills, the bursar of the New England Conservatory of Music in Boston, Massachusetts. [5] Mills was profoundly interested in the physical, mental, moral, and spiritual development of the conservatory's students and had a tradition of hosting devotional meetings going back as far as 1886. [8]
The Phi Mu Sorority House is a historic sorority house at the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign in Urbana, Illinois.The sorority house was built in 1928 for the university's Delta Beta chapter of the Phi Mu sorority, which formed in 1921; the sorority itself was founded in 1852 and is one of the oldest sororities in the United States.
ΦΜ – Phi Mu sorority, Gamma Tau chapter, founded 1982 ΠΒΦ – Pi Beta Phi sorority, Maryland Gamma, chartered November 20, 2010 [ 18 ] ΚΑΘ – Kappa Alpha Theta sorority, Zeta Chi chapter, founded April 20, 1997, disbanded April 14, 2009, reorganized March 1, 2014 [ 19 ] [ a ]
Delta Kappa Mu: Southwestern Christian University: Bethany, Oklahoma: Active Delta Lambda Pi: DePaul University: Chicago, Illinois: Active Delta Phi Lambda: Waubonsee Community College: Sugar Grove, Illinois: Active Delta Chi Omega: Wilmington University: New Castle, Delaware: Active Zeta Omega Phi: University of Michigan–Dearborn: Dearborn ...
Rutgers University is home to chapters of many Greek organizations; however, only a small percentage of the undergraduate student body is active in Greek life. Several fraternities and sororities maintain houses for their chapters in the area of Union Street (known as "Frat Row") in New Brunswick within blocks of Rutgers' College Avenue Campus.
Fountain of Reflection (sometimes referred to as Phi Mu Fountain) [1] is a 1962 [2] fountain and sculpture by George Tsutakawa, installed on the campus of the University of Washington, in Seattle. [3] The work is installed outside McMahon Hall. [4]