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Write for the AEPI Blog

Posted by Andy R. in Site Announcements
March 16, 2006 at 8:32 am

The Unoffficial AEPi Blog is seeking writers to help expand our content and bring more news and information to brothers and alumni throughout the country (and Canada!).

As far as qualification, if you can use Word and send e-mail then you can blog. It’s really that easy. Blogging makes you a better writer, more knowledgeable, helps you meet new people and make new friends, looks great on your resume, and it’s an excellent way to help out the fraternity.

If you are even remotely interested in writing for the AEPi Blog, please leave a comment with an e-mail address that you can be reached at or e-mail us at aepiblog@gmail.com.

And if there is anyone who isn’t looking for a long term commitment, we are always looking for people to write a guest post about anything that relates to AEPi. And if anyone has cool photos or videos, please drop us a line.


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AEPi Struggling at Dartmouth

Posted by Andy R. in Help AEPi, Individual Chapters
at 4:22 am

Bad news from the Dartmouth Newspaper:

The Interfraternity Council voted Tuesday night against allowing national Jewish fraternity Alpha Epsilon Pi to receive official College recognition. The vote marked the first time the Council has considered expansion since the Board of Trustees lifted its moratorium on new Greek organizations last June.

A small group of students interested in AEPi have been meeting weekly since late fall and now seek to be officially recognized by the College. Although IFC presidents seem reluctant to expand, members of the AEPi interest group believe there is a need for their fraternity within the Dartmouth social scene.

AEPi President Patrick Karas offered some comments in the article about why he thought the vote went the way it did:

Karas said he fears that the current fraternities of the IFC view a new fraternity as competition, but he stressed that “there are plenty of eligible undergraduates” interested in AEPi who are currently unaffiliated, and thus AEPi would not be competing with current fraternities for new members.

Cunningham believes that the vote against AEPi is not related to the fraternity’s official affiliation with Judaism. Rather, Cunningham believes that IFC presidents do not see a need for expansion at this time.

Karas said that some fraternity presidents expressed concern that a Jewish fraternity would segregate the Jewish community, but he believes that this will not happen due to the social, rather than religious, nature of the organization. Despite AEPi’s initial setback, the club plans to try once again for the IFC’s approval.

The Dartmouth fired back two days later with an editorial criticizing the decision, “Having the Players Call the Game

Karas said in the article that they will move forward with their plans, and that they hope to eventually gain university recognition. Brothers everywhere can help out their efforts be using the online rushee referral form from the International AEPi website to pass along information about any Jewish friends or relatives at Dartmouth.


4 Comments...

AEPi in Wikipedia

Posted by Andy R. in AEPi News, Help AEPi
March 15, 2006 at 7:04 am

For those of you who have been living under a rock unfamiliar with Wikipedia, it’s an online Encyclopedia that can be edited by anyone, and all the content has been added by individual users. [You can read more on the About page at Wikipedia.]

Alpha Epsilon Pi has its own page at Wikipedia. Right now, the entry has information on AEPi’s Mission Statement, History, Notable Alumni, List of Chapters, and External links. Most of these entries are very brief and could use some editing to bulk them up and provide more information.

For an example of a substantial fraternity entry in Wikipedia, check out the Delta Kappa Epsilon entry. For DKE there is a lengthy history of the fraternity, instead of the three paragraphs that the AEPi entry has. Our entry could also use some photos of other important fraternity items, such as the pledge pin. The notable alumni list could also be expanded, and organized by profession, similar to this.

Also, under the list of Chapters only a few link to the website of that chapter, and that is something that anyone can easily change so that the list on Wikipedia will always have the current links for all of the chapter websites. I’ll link to the site again in the future if it is improved upon.


1 Comment...

Hate Crime at Berkeley Chapter

Posted by Andy R. in Photos, Anti-Semitism
at 5:43 am

The Chi Alpha Chapter at UC Berkeley was recently vandalized with anti-Semitic grafiti. At the right, is a photos of the clean-up of the deck, which was then repainted. More photos of the vandalism and the clean-up can be seen here. The Daily Cal, the school newspaper, had an article about the incident, that began:

A Jewish fraternity on campus was the target of ethnically based vandalism when a racial epithet was painted on the house’s deck Sunday night, fraternity officials said.

The term “kike,” a racial slur against Jewish people, was painted in white on the deck of Alpha Epsilon Pi and was discovered by one of the fraternity’s members Monday morning, according to fraternity officials.

There was also an article in the Jewish News Weekly of Northern California titled, “Anti-Semitic Graffiti Jolts Berkeley’s Jewish Fraternity

The last major anti-Semitic incident in Berkeley was in 2002 when a cinder block was thrown through a window at the campus Hillel.

The President of the Jewish Student Union responded to the incident by writing a letter to the Daily Cal, which read in part,

This defacement transcends mere petty crime; it indicates an intolerance that is supremely disappointing to see on this campus.

The fraternity house and the Hillel building are the two most Jewish-related buildings near campus. To have one of them be the target of such an act really points not only to a crime against the brothers of the fraternity but also against the larger Jewish community.

The students here at Berkeley pride themselves on their diversity. Differences are celebrated here.

It is therefore all the more terrible and frightening to know that someone, perhaps someone from within our community, has so failed to understand what makes this campus great.

Berkeley teaches us to embrace those we might not otherwise have come into contact with. Someone missed this lesson.

Have any of you ever dealt with a hate crime on your campus?


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