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Lambda Chi Alpha (ΛΧΑ), commonly referred to as Lambda Chi, is a collegiate fraternity in North America. With over 300,000 initiates as of 2024, it is the third-largest social fraternity in the world by number of initiates.
The list of Lambda Chi Alpha members includes notable initiated and honorary members of Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity.. Founded at Boston University in Boston in 1909, Lambda Chi Alpha is one of the largest social fraternities in North America with over 300,000 lifetime members and active chapters and colonies at 195 universities in the United States, Canada, and Australia.
When Theta Kappa Nu merged with Lambda Chi Alpha in 1939, former Theta Kappa Nu chapters were assigned chapter designations prefixed with Θ, Κ, or Ν. The second letter of their chapter name was assigned in the order mentioned above and applied to the chapters in order of their precedence in Theta Kappa Nu; e.g., Theta Kappa Nu's Alpha ...
Cole had three more children during his second marriage. His two sons, Albert and Nathan, never became Lambda Chi Alpha members. [4] In addition to holding Lambda Chi Alpha’s highest office, he was the administrative and traveling secretary and the editor and treasurer of Purple, Green, and Gold magazine throughout World War I.
Psi Chi: May 18, 1950: Honor society, psychology Active [14] Alpha Beta 1951–1956 Social fraternity Merged [1] [q] Tau Kappa Epsilon 1956–1972 Social fraternity Inactive [1] Alpha Chi Epsilon 1960–1964 Social fraternity Merged [1] [r] Beta Beta Beta: 1971 Honor society, biology Active [15] Phi Tau 1971–20xx ? Social fraternity, local ...
This is a list of Arizona State University fraternities and sororities, organized by their national umbrella organizations.In 2023, the university recognizes more than seventy Greek letter organizations. [1]
Theta Kappa Nu Fraternity was a collegiate fraternity founded on June 9, 1924, by the merger of eleven local fraternities. [1] [2] It went defunct in 1939 when it merged with Lambda Chi Alpha. [1]
The smoot / ˈ s m uː t / is a nonstandard, humorous unit of length created as part of an MIT fraternity pledge to Lambda Chi Alpha by Oliver R. Smoot, who in October 1958 lay down repeatedly on the Harvard Bridge between Boston and Cambridge, Massachusetts, so that his fraternity brothers could use his height to measure the length of the bridge.