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KAPPA ALPHA PSI, Fraternity
Inc. was founded on January 5, 1911 at Indiana University in Bloomington
Indiana. The Fraternity is founded on the fundamental value of Achievement
in every field of human endeavor. Initialy founded as KAPPA
ALPHA NU, the Fraternity came about as a result of the acquaintance
of Byron Kenneth Armstrong and Elder Watson Diggs. They and eight other
Black men, frustrated by the racial prejudices at Indiana University,
resolved to form an organization that that would bring Black students
closer together. Brother Elder Watson Diggs prepared the rituals and
ceremonial forms himself, while Byron K. Armstrong was given the job
of creating the insignia and emblems. Diggs was made the permanent chairman;
John M. Lee, the secretary; and Byron K. Armstrong, the sergeant of
arms. These offices were later to be called Polemarch, Keeper of Records,
and Strategus. The application was filed over the signatures of Elder
Watson Diggs, Exra D. Alexander, Byron Kenneth Armstrong, Henry T. Asher,
Marcus Peter Blakemore, Paul Waymond Caine, George Wesley Edmonds, Guy
Levis Grant, Edward Giles Irvin, John Milton Lee and Fredrick Mitchell.
Mitchell subsequently withdrew from school and never returned to become
a member. Due to lack of housing for Black men on campus, Diggs leased
a five-room house at 721 Hunter Street (The First Fraternity House).
Living together under the same roof strengthened the brotherhood of
the chapter.
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History of the Nu Omicron Chapter The Nu Omicron Chapter was founded on February 4th, 1989, on the campus of Pembroke State University, now known as The University of North Carolina at Pembroke, by nine distinguished men: Cephus Edge, Marvin Jones, Lorenzo McCormick, Douglas Mack, Mark McWilliams, Kevin Hill, Cail Morris, Jr., Paul Montgomery, and Rodney Cannon. |