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Following is a list of Kappa Kappa Gamma members (commonly referred to as Kappas). It includes initiated and honorary members of Kappa Kappa Gamma . This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness.
Beta Kappa (Charter member: Kappa Chi) U.S. House of Representatives member from Virginia [32] James Perkins, Jr. Gamma Phi: First African-American Mayor of Selma, Alabama [38] Edward J. Perkins: Alexandria-Fairfax (VA) Alumni: US Ambassador to Liberia, South Africa, the United Nations, and Australia [39] Kwame Raoul: Theta Zeta
Chapter Charter data and range Institution Location Status References Alpha: November 11, 1874: Syracuse University: Syracuse, NY: Active: Beta: 1882 –2007, 2015: University of Michigan
Gamma Phi Beta is a member of the Syracuse Triad, the name given to the three women's sororities founded at Syracuse University. [9] Alpha Phi was founded first in 1872 by 10 of the original 20 women admitted to Syracuse University.
Mike Johnson (Alpha Gamma) – member of the Louisiana House of Representatives for Bossier Parish; Joe Kennedy III (Alpha Pi) - Member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Massachusetts's 4th district; Bill Lee (Nu) – Governor of Tennessee; Buddy MacKay (Beta Zeta) – former governor, lieutenant governor, and US Representative from Florida
Gamma Kappa / Miami (OH) Professional wrestler, actor, reality TV star Mark Murphy: Iota/Colgate Former All-Pro defensive back for the Washington Redskins, 1977–84, former Athletic Director for Northwestern University, President and CEO of the Green Bay Packers: Johnny Norlander: Beta Kappa / Hamline
AKA boasts more than 360,000 initiated members and has 30 Ohio-based chapters. Kamala Harris' AKA sisters have long rallied around her, once referred to by the New York Times as her " secret weapon ."
The Minnie Stewart House in Monmouth, Illinois, where the sorority was founded Kappa Kappa Gamma's headquarters from 1952 to 2018 at 530 E. Town Street in Columbus, Ohio. In 1869, two students at Monmouth College in Monmouth, Illinois, Mary Louise Bennett and Hannah Jeannette Boyd, were dissatisfied with the fact that, while men enjoyed membership in fraternities, women had few equivalent ...