Pi Delta Epsilon Explained

Pi Delta Epsilon
Letters:Greek, Ancient (to 1453);: ΠΔΕ
Birthplace:Syracuse University
Affiliation:Independent
Status:Merged
Successor:Society for Collegiate Journalists
Type:Honor society
Emphasis:Journalism
Scope:National
Colors: Olive green and Gray
Chapters:174
Lifetime:42,000+
Flower:White Carnation
City:Pittsburgh
State:Pennsylvania
Country:United States

Pi Delta Epsilon (Greek, Ancient (to 1453);: ΠΔΕ) was an American collegiate honor fraternity for journalism. It merged to form the Society for Collegiate Journalists in 1975.

History

Pi Delta Epsilon was established in 1909 at Syracuse University by ten students who were on the staff of The Daily Orange.[1] [2] The founders wanted to form a closer bond around their common interest in journalism. The founders of Pi Delta Epsilon were:The purpose of Pi Delta Epsilon was to advance journalism, support student publications, foster a fraternal bond, encourage loyalty to the university, and reward journalistic accomplishments. Its mission included "service and sacrifice of self".

Pi Delta Epsilon expanded to include chapters across the United States, beginning with a chapter at the University of Nebraska in 1910. It sponsored an annual national intercollegiate editorial and news story competition; winners received gold, silver, and bronze medals.[3] In later years, there was a prize and a trophy.

Pi Delta Epsilon was governed by a grand council, elected at biennial grand conventions. The fraternity changed its constitution at the 1937 convention to allow female members. It merged with the women's journalism society, Alpha Chi Alpha, on July 1, 1944, accepting all chapters of the former women's recognition society.[4] By 1963, Pi Delta Epsilon had chartered 135 chapters (103 were active) and had initiated 42,000 members.

In 1956, Louis Ingelhart, the president of a similar organization Alpha Phi Gamma, contacted Pi Delta Epsilon and other collegiate journalism organizations to propose a merger. It merged with Alpha Phi Gamma to form the Society for Collegiate Journalists formed on June 1, 1975. At the time of the merger, it was the oldest honorary collegiate journalism fraternity in the United States.

Symbols

The society's badge was a hexagonal gold key with a black enamel face. The Greek letters ΠΔΕ were inscribed on its face as an inverted triangle, with ΠΔ above Ε. Pi Delta Epsilon's colors were olive green and grey. Its flower was the white carnation. Its quarterly publication was The College Publisher.

Membership

Members of Pi Delta Epsilon were required to have served at least one year in the editorial or business department of an accredited campus publication. Thus, membership was open to sophomores, juniors, and seniors. It had four classes of members: active (student), faculty, honorary, and associate.

Chapters

See main article: List of Pi Delta Epsilon chapters. Pi Delta Epsilon chartered at least 174 chapters before its merger in 1975.[5]

Notable members

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2015-05-18 . History . 2024-05-10 . Society for Collegiate Journalists . en.
  2. Robson, John, ed. (1963). Baird's Manual of American College Fraternities (17th ed.). Menasha, Wisconsin: The Collegiate Press, George Banta Company, Inc. pp. 681-683
  3. News: 1923-02-15 . Pi Delta Epsilon is Offering Prize Medals . 2024-05-11 . The Davidsonian . Davidson, North Carolina . 4 . Newspapers.com.
  4. Recognition societies are a variant of honor societies, apparently allowing prospective members to request membership rather than being tapped. Requirements varied, and appear to have had a scholastic component, but perhaps were less vigorous than regular honor societies. Where they still exist independently, the Fraternity and Sorority Project within Wikipedia groups them under the "honor" type.
  5. [Jack L. Anson|Anson, Jack L.]
  6. News: 1938-12-14 . Pi Delta Epsilon Reinstallation Recalls Alumni Who Have Earned Success in Newspaper World . 2024-05-11 . The Coe College Cosmos . Cedar Rapids, Iowa . 1 . Newspapers.com.