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Founded:
March 9, 1856; University of Alabama at Tuscaloosa
Mission Statement: The mission of Sigma Alpha
Epsilon is to promote the highest standards of friendship,
scholarship, and service for our members based upon the ideals set
forth by our Founders and as specifically enunciated in our creed.
Membership: The Fraternity resides on college and
university campuses, as a guest of the host institution. The current
structure includes more than 8,200 undergraduates at more than 200
chapters in 48 states and Canada. Alumni are active in more than 75
alumni associations.
Governance Structure: The organization is governed
through a five-person executive board (Supreme Council) that is
elected at biennial conventions. An executive director (Eminent
Supreme Recorder) supervises a staff of approximately 30 at the
Fraternity Service Center in Evanston, Illinois, and eight regional
directors. The United States and Canada are divided into 30 regions
(provinces) overseen by regional volunteers called province archons.
Each chapter is required to have an active chapter adviser.
Sigma Alpha Epsilon Foundation: The SAE Foundation
was established in 1927 to create programs that promote the highest
ideals of academic and personal development. The existing programs
include named scholarships, a student-loan program and the
international Leadership School that has produced more than 25,000
graduates. The SAE Foundation awards $30,000 in scholarships
annually in support of its mission.
Prominent Alumni: William McKinley, Elliot Ness,
David Spade, Phil Jackson, Dennis Erickson, William Faulkner, Joe
Foss, Bob Ballard, General Richard Myers, Ernie Harwell, Tony
Boselli, Bo Schembechler, Nick Lachey, Fred Savage, and Joe Walt.
Fast Facts: SAE is North America’s largest social
fraternity with more than 280,000 initiated members. Fraternal
symbols include the lion, the phoenix, Minerva, and the
fleur-de-lis. Sigma Alpha Epsilon was the first fraternity to
establish a national headquarters (1929), a national Leadership
School (1935), a national Men’s Health Issues Committee (1980), and
a career-development program entitled the Leading Edge (1990).
Currently, the Fraternity offers a comprehensive member-education
program called The True Gentleman Initiative. The Fraternity
communicates through The Record magazine, a quarterly
publication that has been published continuously since 1880. New
members receive a copy of The Phoenix pledge manual for
educational development.
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