Delta Phi Epsilon (professional)
Delta Phi Epsilon | |
---|---|
ΔΦΕ | |
Founded | January 25, 1920Washington, D.C. Georgetown University | ,
Type | Professional |
Affiliation | Independent |
Status | Active |
Emphasis | Foreign service |
Scope | National |
Motto | λατρεύωLatreuo Greek:(I Serve) |
Colors | BlackandGold |
Flower | Morning glory |
Chapters | 12 (active) |
Headquarters | 3401 Prospect Street, NW PO Box 25401 Washington, D.C.20007 United States |
Website | Official website |
Delta Phi Epsilon(ΔΦΕ) orDelta Phi Epsilon Foreign Service Councilthe largest national Americanprofessionalforeign servicefraternity and sorority. Founded on January 25, 1920, it was the first fraternity dedicated to careers in foreign diplomacy in trade.[1]ItsAlpha chapterwent on in the first half of the twentieth century to colonize new chapters at many other universities throughout the country, although most chapters went defunct in the latter half of the century. In 1973 Delta Phi Epsilon Foreign Service Sorority was founded, with itsAlpha chapterat Georgetown University. As of 2021, there remained ten active collegiate chapters, half of which were created between 2016 and 2018.
History[edit]
Fraternity[edit]
The fraternity was founded in the wake ofWorld War I,in a time of increased interest in world politics and solving global issues with diplomacy. In 1919, Fr.Edmund A. Walsh,S.J.atGeorgetown Universityfounded theSchool of Foreign Service(SFS) and in 1924, theRogers Actformed the basis of theUnited States Foreign Service.During this time, other groups with similar missions, such as theCouncil on Foreign Relations,were founded, along with international bodies such as theLeague of Nations.
The four founders of the fraternity were Alfred O. Arseneau, Wesley O. Ash, Samuel C. Bartlett, and T. J. Patrick O'Connell. At first, three of them, all undergraduates in Georgetown's SFS living together on 10th Street, held in common only their experience in overseas military service and their interest in foreign service careers. Soon they met the fourth, Pat O'Connell, who thought of founding a foreign service fraternity independently. They were drawn together by their common vision for a professional foreign service fraternity for future graduates of the School of Foreign Service and others in the field.
Later these men joined with seven other interested undergraduates (future brothers Sandager, Butts, Ash, MacKenzie, Brooks, Sullivan, Scott, and Bates) and signed theArticles of Agreement.After choosing a name and nominating officers, Delta Phi Epsilon Foreign Service Fraternity was formally founded at the Catholic Community House at 6th and E Streets, NW, on January 25, 1920. The group was incorporated in the District of Columbia on April 20, 1920. Early expansion focused on both East and West Coast schools. The fraternity's activities and expansion ceased duringWorld War II.[2]After the war, the fraternity saw even greater expansion into institutions across theUnited States.and by the 1960s, the fraternity began to see a decline in the number of its chapters.[3]During the 1970s most of the fraternity's collegiate chapters went inactive, leaving only the originalAlpha.This decline is attributed to two major factors: a national decline in professional fraternities and a negative perception generally of foreign service. During theVietnam War,foreign service was closely associated in many minds with current United States foreign policy, which was protested against at many member institutions.[3]
After some attempts during the 1990s, several of these defunct chapters were revived in the 2000s. TheAlpha chapterat Georgetown University went defunct but was revived in 1990 after ten years of inactivity and revived again in 1998 after another five years of inactivity.[4]In the summer of 2003, the first reactivation of a dormant chapter,Epsilon chapterat UC Berkeley, occurred. In 2016, the first co-ed chapter,Delta chapter,was founded at USC by Jacob Lokshin and eleven other USC students.[5]This was soon followed by the creation ofPi chapter,Psi chapter,Chi chapter,Eta chapter,Gamma chapter,andMu chapter.
Alpha chapterwas the longest-lived collegiate chapter of Delta Phi Epsilon; its undergraduate officers all resigned in 2018 and suspended all chapter activities in protest to actions of national leadership.[6]The chapter three successive one-person initiations over the succeeding eighteen months. In late February 2020,Alphainitiated the chapter's 200th line of ten initiates, just before the fraternity's 100th Founders' Day Banquet.
Sorority[edit]
In the 1950s, some members suggested that the fraternity accept women.[4]Gregory Creutz (Alpha 1921), national general secretary led the way to a compromise.[4]In 1956 the National Board of Directors of the fraternity created the Delta Phi Epsilon International Society of Business and Foreign Affairs which was to be open to both men and women.[7][4]However, that society failed to develop,[8]
Another movement to make the fraternity coed emerged in the late 1960s.[4]During the 1972 National Convention, members voted to amend the bylaws to admit female members.[4]However, the amendment ultimately failed because the members did not approve it a second time at either of the next two conventions.[4]
In June 1972, theAlpha chapterat Georgetown changed to include both a fraternity and a sorority of the Delta Phi Epsilon Professional Foreign Service.[4]The two groups operated separately when it came to recruiting and initiating members.[4]However, the two groups worked together for professional and social programs.[4]
TheAlpha chapterof the sorority held its first initiation on February 24, 1973.[9]A second chapter of the sorority,Epsilonchapter, was founded at UC Berkeley in 2003.
In January 2021, theAmerican University chapterwithdrew from the national organization, saying that the national board "was unrepresentative of its values."[10]The group continued as the local organization Sisterhood for International Engagement.[10]
Co-educational[edit]
In 2016, the fraternity's National Convention endorsed a proposal for joint fraternity-sorority projects, including publishing a peer-reviewedDelta Phi Epsilon Journal of Foreign Affairs,operating a scholarship competition for students who had been initiated into Delta Phi Epsilon, and holding an annual symposium promoting alumni and student international relations research. This project developed into theDelta Phi Epsilon Foreign Affairs Council,incorporated and recognized as a 501(c)(3) nonprofit educational organization in 2016.[11]The council originally selected its leaders from Delta Phi Epsilon members to support international relations education, promote public engagement in foreign policy, and provide career development tools to Delta Phi Epsilon brothers and sisters.[12]
In 2016, the first co-ed chapter,Delta chapter,was founded at the University of Southern California by Jacob Lokshin and eleven other USC students.[5]TheGamma chapteralso merged the sorority and fraternity into a single co-ed chapter in 2016.[13]However, some of the national fraternity's leadership continue to oppose the admission of women.[14]
Scandals[edit]
In July 2018,The Chronicle of Higher Educationpublished several accounts of student and alumni fraternity members, accusing Terrence Boyle of sexism and bigotry.[14]Boyle has served as the fraternity's general secretary for nearly 40 years, controlled the alumni newsletter, and oversaw pledge recruitment for theAlpha chapter.[1]Charges included making the sorority members clean the bedrooms and wash the socks of the fraternity members.[14]In addition, no females had held national leadership positions.[6]In the article and in a petition shortly following it, leaders from most fraternity chapters, along with many non-DPE Fraternity members, called for Boyle's resignation.[15][16]In August 2018, theAlphachapter officers resigned and closed the chapter's activities after Georgetown University's student newspaper,The Hoya,published an opinion piece authored by presidents ofEta,Chi,andPi chapterscalling for Georgetown students to boycottAlpha chapter.[17][18]Boyle appointed new student leadership for theAlpha chapterfrom outside of Georgetown; however, several of the fraternity's other chapters indicated that they would not recognize this new leadership.[6]
D.C. Attorney General Litigation.[edit]
On June 1, 2020, Terrence J. Boyle, the Treasurer of DPE, Inc., donated Alpha House to a separate corporation named the Delta Phi Epsilon for Foreign Service Education. Mr. Boyle was the treasurer of both corporations. This was deemed to be a conflict of interest.
In 2021, the District of Columbia Attorney General,Karl Racine,filed a case against the foundation and the Delta Phi Epsilon corporation.[1]The complaint alleged that funds belonging to the foundation were used by Boyle, to buy a house on 34th Street NW in 1990.[19][1]In addition, Boyle sold the fraternity's chapter house for $2.6 million when it was appraised for $4 million.[1]Mr. Boyle, the Treasurer of DPE, and Matthew W. Schmidt, the President of DPE, secretly transferred ownership of the fraternity house from the fraternity to the Foundation. Mr. Boyle was the treasurer of both organizations. This was deemed a conflict of interest.
Journalists Fredrick Kunkle and Jonetta Rose Barras published several articles about the scandals.
In January 2022,Brian Schwalbbecome the second elected attorney General of he District of Columbia.
In April 2022, the Office of the Attorney General filed a motion for summary judgment in the case.
In September 2021, D.C. Superior Court issued an Order for Partial Summary Judgment. The court ruled that the defendants breached their fiduciary duties. The Order was signed by D.C. Superior Court Judge, JudgeShana Frost Matini.
On November 30, 2023, the D.C. Office of the Attorney General and the defendants signed aConsent Judgment,which was approved by the D.C. Superior Court. Under the terms of the Consent Judgment, Mr. Boyle was required to make a restitution payment in the amount of $100,000. Mr. Boyle was barred for 10 years from being an officer, director, trustee or employee of any nonprofit organizations operating in the District of Columbia. Matthew W. Schmidt was barred from being an officer or director of DPE in the future.
Chapter house[edit]
The fraternity purchased the former Seymour House in Georgetown as a chapter house for $27,500 in 1940.[1]Constructed in 1869 by merchant William E. Seymour, 3401 Prospect Street Northwest was home to theAlpha chapteruntil 2020.[1]The three-story brick chapter house had fifteen rooms.[1]It is acontributing propertyto theGeorgetown Historic Districtand became aNational Historic Landmarklisted on theNational Register of Historic Placesin 1967. For decades, theAlpha chapterof Delta Phi Epsilon was the only fraternal organization at Georgetown University with its own house. It was used for keg parties and social events.[1]
During the February 2020 annual meeting of Delta Phi Epsilon, its members voted to sell 3401 Prospect Street for as much money as possible.Alpha chapter'shistoric house purportedly had to be sold because it was believed that Georgetown University implemented a rule requiring undergraduates to live on campus for four years. A new house might be purchased by the foundation, not the fraternity or the Delta Phi Epsilon corporation. It would be based on a clubhouse model and would be owned by the foundation. It would not be a boarding house and would not be owned by the Delta Phi Epsilon corporation, which had owned 3401 Prospect Street.
Organizational structure[edit]
Several distinct and separate corporations use the name Delta Phi Epsilon.
Delta Phi Epsilon, Incorporated is a professional foreign service fraternity that is a 501(c)(7) nonprofit corporation. This corporation is a member-based nonprofit corporation. This organization is rare, and perhaps unique, among American fraternal organizations in that its membership as a whole does not elect the members of its board of directors. The board is self-appointed. Sitting board members select replacements to fill board seats as seats become vacant.
The Delta Phi Epsilon Foundation for Foreign Service Education is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization established in 1960.[1]Its purpose is to give scholarships to students.[1]In September 2021,The Washington Postreported that the foundation stopped issuing scholarships in 1984, including withholding $52,000 in bequests that were designated for scholarships.
Chapters[edit]
Active chapters are listed inbold.Inactive chapters are listed initalic.[20]
Notes[edit]
- ^This chapter was male-only when established. Now, the fraternity and sorority operated as a single co-ed entity.
- ^The sorority consolidated with the fraternity to form a co-ed chapter.
- ^Originally formed from the local Seven Seas Club
- ^Chartered as a male-only chapter. It became co-ed when it was re-established in 2016.
- ^Originally formed from the local Pacific Foreign Tradesmen organization
- ^This chapter was established as male-only. It became co-ed sometime after 2003.
- ^This chapter merged with the fraternity to create a co-ed chapter.
- ^This chapter was formed from the local organization, the Cosmos Club of the University of Detroit
- ^This chapter was created from the local fraternity Delta Phi.
- ^This chapter ceased operations duringWorld War II.
- ^This chapter began as the local group American Institute for Foreign Trade, also known as the Foreign Trade Club.
- ^This chapter disaffiliated from the national organization in 2021, becoming the local group Sisterhood for International Engagement.
Notable members[edit]
The fraternity initiates Line Brothers, those who pledge when they are students, and National Brothers, mostly those already out of school who only go through the required final initiation ritualistic ceremonies.
See also[edit]
References[edit]
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- Student organizations established in 1920
- Professional fraternities and sororities in the United States
- Georgetown University student organizations
- New York University
- George Washington University
- University of the Pacific (United States)
- University of California, Berkeley
- American University
- 1920 establishments in Washington, D.C.