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Frank Quilici (Beta Theta 54), former manager of the Minnesota Twins. Bob Schaefer (Alpha Pi 570), former manager of the Kansas City Royals. Jerry Tagge (Alpha Epsilon 916), National Championship American football quarterback for the 1970 and 1971 Nebraska Cornhuskers and the Green Bay Packers.
Tau Epsilon Phi is an American collegiate social fraternity that was founded at Columbia University in 1910. [1] Since its establishment, the fraternity has chartered 144 chapters and colonies, chiefly located at universities and colleges on the East Coast. [2] [3] Following are some notable alumni. [4]
Tau Epsilon Phi (ΤΕΦ), commonly known as TEP or T E Phi, is an American collegiate social fraternity that was founded at Columbia University in 1910. [2] Since its establishment, the fraternity has chartered 144 chapters and colonies, chiefly located at universities and colleges on the East Coast.
Theta Epsilon: May 19, 1984: University of South Alabama: Mobile: Alabama ... Epsilon Mu Alumnae Chapter: Hays: Kansas Active Epsilon Nu Alumnae Chapter: Edmond: Oklahoma
Gamma Epsilon: April 7, 1984: Southeast Missouri State University: Cape Girardeau, Missouri: Active [cq] Gamma Zeta: May 15, 1987 – 1991 Valdosta State University: Valdosta, Georgia: Inactive [cr] Gamma Eta: February 10, 1989 – 2014 Nicholls State University: Thibodaux, Louisiana: Inactive [cs] Gamma Theta: September 16, 1989 – 2011 Lake ...
Tau Kappa Epsilon members (commonly referred to as Tekes) [1] are individuals who have been initiated into Tau Kappa Epsilon (ΤΚΕ) Fraternity. The fraternity was founded by five men – Joseph Lorenzo Settles, James Carson McNutt, Clarence Arthur Mayer, Owen Ison Truitt, and Charles Roy Atkinson on January 10, 1899, at Illinois Wesleyan ...
Theta Epsilon: September 30, 1911 Southwestern University: Georgetown: Texas: Active [x] Theta Theta: February 23, 1912 ... Alumnae chapters Notes. References ...
Theta Nu Epsilon was an American sophomore collegiate class society. Founded at Wesleyan University in 1870 as a chapter of Skull and Bones. [1] The society expanded into a new national organization that accepted members regardless of their fraternity status. [2]