Omicron Alpha Tau

Omicron Alpha Tau (ΟΑΤ) was a historically Jewish Fraternity founded in 1912. It merged with Tau Delta Phi in 1934.[1][2][3]

History

Omicron Alpha Tau was founded at Cornell University in the Spring of 1912. No intention at this time was made to forming a Greek Letter Fraternity which would develop into a national. Founders were Joseph Seidlin, James Castelle, Jack Grossman, Benjamin Brickman, Nat Shiren, Jules Jokel and Abraham Haibloom. The fraternity remained a local fraternity until 1915, when David Browman founded a chapter at the College of Dental and Oral Surgery of New York.

Omicron Alpha Tau was particularly known for their houses having adherance to traditional Jewish dietary laws

In 1934, Tau Delta Phi absorbed the chapters at Rutgers, NYU, Marquette and Cornell. The chapter at Syracuse was absorbed by Phi Epsilon Pi and University of Pennsylvania by Phi Beta Delta.

Magazine

The magazine, as of 1923, was called the OAT digest and distributed Monthly. Later, the magazine's name was changed to "The Oath" issued three times a year.

Conventions

  • 9th - Milwaukee, Wisconsin - April 28, 1935[4][5]

Chapter list

The Chapters of Omicron Alpha Tau were:[1][2]

Honorary members

gollark: (note: this is sarcasm; <@319753218592866315> bad)
gollark: Oh, because Macron TOTALLY has a consistent design and spec.
gollark: More so than Macron, which is nonexistent and bad.
gollark: Gravel is inevitable.
gollark: Hmm. This is taking *significant* fractions of a millisecond in my highly approximate benchmarks.]

References

  1. William Raimond Baird (1991). Baird's Manual of American College Fraternities. Baird's Manual Foundation, Incorporated. p. VIII-8.
  2. Baird's Manual of American College Fraternities. G. Banta Company. 1923. p. 216.
  3. Sanua, Marianne Rachel (2003). Going Greek: Jewish College Fraternities in the US, 1895- 1945. Wayne State University Press. ISBN 978-0-8143-2857-6. Retrieved 2008-11-14.
  4. Milwaukee is site of 9th Fraternity Parley
  5. Hitlerism was assailed by three speakers before...
  6. Radio Personalities 1935 - p142
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