Cleland
continues, "And seven years later . . . in response to the suggestion of
Benjamin Ide Wheeler, the President of the University of California, we organized
our house club as a national fraternity of one chapter." Past
National President William B. Herms (Alpha) described the origins of Alpha Kappa
Lambda in THE LOGOS in 1925: "Distinguished scholars contributed to the building
of the new Fraternity. (President Wheeler) gave advice and encouragement, Professor
Charles Mills Gayley and Professor James T. Allen suggested the name 'Alpha Kappa
Lambda' and the motto 'Alethia Kai Logos'." The
founders of Los Amigos were a diverse group, but they all had the common desire
for studious living in their college environment and continued integrity after
their formal education concluded. On
April 22, 1914, a formation banquet was held in the Hotel Shattuck in Berkley,
with members of the new Fraternity and many guests from the community of the University
of California in attendance. Alpha
Kappa lambda became the first Fraternity to be founded on the West Coast, indeed
west of the Rocky Mountains! Besides being born in the West and spreading east,
Alpha Kappa Lambda was unique in another way. "Of
particular novelty is statement that the Ideals of the Fraternity are to develop
the 'social, intellectual, moral, and religious welfare of it members, (and) to
foster and encourage among its members Christian principles, service, higher education,
culture, and refinement'," reported The Berkeley Gazette (April 27, 1914)
a few days following the formal installation of the Alpha Chapter of Alpha Kappa
Lambda. The
Oakland Examiner, in reporting the founding of Alpha Kappa Lambda, said, "Alpha
Kappa Lambda was launched with a membership of forty-three and has the hearty
sanction of a number of the foremost members of the faculty. The membership comprises
largely the roster of Los Amigos Club, an organization which has often ranked
first in scholarship standing in the annual reports of the University of California.
It is considered significant that many prominent members of the faculty not only
endorsed the new fraternity, but assisted in its formation." The
eleven founding members were "typical" college men in many ways, yet
atypical in their desire to foster brotherhood, scholarship, and service. Their
legacy lives on today in chapters across the nation.
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