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[ National History ] In 1958, Eastern Michigan University in Ypsilanti wrote to Bowling Green State University about how to form an Omega Phi Alpha chapter. The material was sent to Michigan, and that group held its first meeting on April 22nd, 1958. The women of Eastern Michigan's new OPA chapter conducted several service and fund-raising activities. They took their first pledge class the following fall. Communication began between the two groups about the possibility of becoming a national organization, but the formation of a national sorority did not materialize. In late 1962, a group of women at the University of Bridgeport in Connecticut communicated with the group in Ypsilanti about becoming an Omega Phi Alpha chapter. The Bridgeport and Ypsilanti groups continued communication, with the women in Ypsilanti acting as "big sisters" to the women in Bridgeport for an induction ceremony. The new group was designated Beta Chapter, Omega Phi Alpha. The Ypsilanti group called itself Alpha Chapter, Omega Phi Alpha. In the spring of 1966, Bowling Green's dean of women, Fayette Paulsen, notified the chapter that a letter was received from the Omega Phi Alpha chapter at Ypsilanti. The letter said the Michigan chapter had combined with the chapter in Connecticut and were now a national sorority. They wanted Bowling Green to affiliate with them. It was then discovered that the chapters in Ypsilanti and Bridgeport were not legally registered as a national sorority. As a result, Omega Phi Alpha in Bowling Green registered their petition first and asked the other two chapters to affiliate. Thirteen months of hard work and organization began. A national convention was scheduled at Bowling Green in June 1967. At the convention, the three groups discussed ideas and found compromises that led to the formation of Omega Phi Alpha National Service Sorority. They decided that the Bowling Green group would be the Alpha chapter, since it had been in existence the longest and had filed the proper papers to register the Omega Phi Alpha name nationally first. Bridgeport retained the name of the Beta Chapter to avoid confusion. Ypsilanti became the Gamma chapter. The consolidation of the three groups into a national service sorority was finalized on June 15th, 1967. Alpha, Beta and Gamma chapters continued for several years as a national sorority until women at Texas A&M University formed Delta chapter in 1971. Omega Phi Alpha continues to promote service in various areas through young women in university communities. There are four areas of service that the sisters commit to: university-community, community-at-large, nations of the world, and the members of the sorority. Omega Phi Alpha is consistently growing in the numbers of active chapters at the national level, as well as the number of memberships at the local level. |
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Alpha Zeta
Chapter | Kennesaw
State University Omega Phi Alpha is a student organization and a member of KSU Student Life. Website created and maintained by Christina Yuhas, fall 2008 |
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