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Marjorie Arizona Hill (May 1886 – December 17, 1910) was an American educator and one of the nine founders of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Inc. at Howard University. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Alpha Kappa Alpha was the first sorority to be founded by African-American women.
Zeta Alpha: 1970 Arizona State University: Tempe: Arizona Active Zeta Beta: 1970 ... Kappa Alpha Omega: April 16, 1974: Itta Bena: Mississippi Active [216] Kappa Beta ...
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]
Nancy Coleman (Alpha Lambda, Washington) – actress [1] Jane Connell (Omega, UC Berkeley) – actress [1] Joan Ganz Cooney (Beta Delta, Arizona) – founder of the Children's Television Workshop and creator of Sesame Street [1] DaNae Couch (Epsilon Epsilon, Baylor) – Miss Texas 2012; Sheryl Crow (Alpha Mu, Missouri) – Grammy Award-winning ...
Members of Congress, all of whom are Alpha Kappa Alpha sisters, among them then-Senator Kamala Harris, the first female Vice President of the United States. This list of Alpha Kappa Alpha sorors (commonly referred to as AKAs [1]) includes initiated and honorary members of Alpha Kappa Alpha (ΑΚΑ), the first inter-collegiate Greek-letter sorority established for Black college women.
Kappa Alpha Psi (ΚΑΨ), an international historically Black fraternity, has chartered over 400 undergraduate chapters in the continental United States, plus alumni and international chapters. The fraternity has over 150,000 members and is divided into twelve provinces (districts/regions), with each chapter under the aegis of a province.
Pi Kappa Alpha is a North American collegiate social fraternity founded at the University of Virginia in 1868. [1] In the following list of chapters, active chapters are indicated in bold and inactive chapters and institutions are in italics .
Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Inc. (ΑΚΑ) is the first intercollegiate historically African American sorority. [3] The sorority was founded on January 15, 1908, at the historically black Howard University in Washington, D.C. , by a group of sixteen students led by Ethel Hedgemon Lyle .