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Susan Eisenhower (Epsilon Epsilon) – expert on international security, space policy, energy, and Russia–United States relations; granddaughter of U.S. President Dwight Eisenhower [3] Susan Johns ( Alpha Chi ) – former member of the Kentucky Senate (1990-1994) and Kentucky House of Representatives (1996-2000) [ 13 ] [ 14 ]
Louise Helen Coburn (September 1, 1856 – February 7, 1949) was one of the five founders of Sigma Kappa sorority, a pioneer for women's education at Colby College, where she served as the first female trustee, and an accomplished scientist and writer known for writing the two volumes of Skowhegan on the Kennebec.
Sigma Kappa annually celebrates November 9 as its Founders' Day. [3] Low was the first woman to appear on the sorority's rolls and the first to preside over an initiation, of which Coburn wrote a large portion. The first Sigma Kappa emblem was designed by Hoag, who died shortly thereafter of tuberculosis. Much of the original initiation music ...
Kappa Gamma: 1996–2004, Spring 2017 University of Dayton: Dayton, Ohio: Active Kappa Delta Unassigned Kappa Epsilon: 1997–2000 Pepperdine University: Malibu, California: Inactive Kappa Zeta: February 1, 1998 Elon University: Elon, North Carolina: Active Kappa Eta: April 19, 1998 Texas Christian University: Fort Worth, Texas: Active Kappa Theta
Mary Caffrey Low Carver (March 22, 1850 - March 4, 1926) was an American librarian and educator. She was one of the five founding members of the Sigma Kappa sorority and a pioneering advocate for women's education, along with being an accomplished library scientist and writer.
Over the next few decades, three other sororities—Delta Sigma Theta (1913), Zeta Phi Beta (1920), and Sigma Gamma Rho (1922)—and four other fraternities—Kappa Alpha Psi (1911), Omega Psi Phi ...
She was a legacy of Sigma Kappa sorority, as her mother, Katherine King Johnson, was a member of the Alpha Kappa Chapter. [2] She later attended the Forsyth School of Dental Hygiene at Tufts University in Boston, where she was voted Inter Fraternity Council Queen.
He was the first African American to chair the Ohio University board of trustees in 1979 and served on the Ohio University board from 1974 to 1983. He was also the charter member of the Beta Eta chapter of Kappa Alpha Psi, a predominantly African American fraternity, at the University of Cincinnati. He chartered the chapter in 1939. [1]