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Update (4/24/08):
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2007-08 Fraternity Basketball Champions
The Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity was founded at the University
of Alabama on March 9, 1856 by eight students who wished to form
an organization built on brotherhood. As the size of the brotherhood
grew, so did its boundaries. Soon chapters were formed at other
southern universities.
With the start of the Civil War in 1861, most brothers answered
the call to arms. At the end of that tragic war, only one Sigma
Alpha Epsilon chapter survived. But the strength and power of SAE
could not be denied and soon, more chapters were formed.
Sigma Alpha Epsilon soon expanded from the South into the North
and the West, becoming the first southern fraternity to do so. With
this expansion, the values of the True Gentleman, that the fraternity
was molded after, found a home on other campuses.
As early as 1927, Sigma Alpha Epsilon established its 125th chapter,
but the Depression held its grip on the country. Even with the economic
woes of the time, Sigma Alpha Epsilon managed to construct the college
fraternity's national headquarters. It was built in Evanston, Illinois,
just north of Chicago, and was named the Levere Memorial Temple.
The Temple remains the headquarters of Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
In 1935, Sigma Alpha Epsilon once again held true to its reputation
as the leading innovator of the fraternity system by developing
an annual leadership school. The school brings together SAE brothers
from across the nation for a week long school that teaches leadership
skills. It also allows brothers to find out what other chapters
are doing in such areas as pledge programming, rush, social programming,
scholarship and more. It now has over 250,000 graduates and nearly
every other fraternity has copied the concept.
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