Society for Collegiate Journalists
The Society for Collegiate Journalists (SCJ) is an American honor society for student journalists.
It was formed on June 1, 1975 as a merger between the two journalism honor societies Pi Delta Epsilon (ΠΔΕ) and Alpha Phi Gamma (ΑΦΓ).[1]
Many of its activities take place at the chapter level. At the national level, the SCJ runs a biennial national convention and publishes an online journal, The Collegiate Journalist, and a newsletter, The Reporter.
Chapters of Pi Delta Epsilon
These are some of the chapters of Pi Delta Epsilon, founded in 1909 at Syracuse University and existent in 1922; there may be others.[2]
Alpha Division
- Alpha Alpha chapter - 1909, Syracuse University
- Alpha Gamma chapter - 1910, Massachusetts Institute of Technology [3]
- Alpha Delta chapter - 19xx, Ohio Wesleyan University
- Alpha Epsilon chapter - 19xx, Columbia University
- Alpha Iota chapter - 19xx, Colgate University
- Alpha Kappa chapter - 19xx, University of Michigan
- Alpha Omicron chapter - 19xx, University of Illinois
- Alpha Nu chapter - 19xx, Dartmouth College
- Alpha Pi chapter - 19xx, University of Toronto
- Alpha Rho chapter - 19xx, Lehigh University
- Alpha Sigma chapter - 19xx, Hamilton College
- Alpha Tau chapter - 19xx, Swarthmore College
Beta Division
- Beta Alpha chapter - 19xx, Lawrence College
- Beta Beta chapter - 19xx, Coe College
- Beta Gamma chapter - 19xx, University of Arkansas
- Beta Delta chapter - 19xx, University of Tennessee
- eta Epsilon chapter - 19xx, University of Tennessee
Gamma Division
- Gamma Alpha chapter - 19xx, University of California
- Gamma Gamma chapter - 19xx, University of Utah
gollark: Purple is server failure.
gollark: ↓ you
gollark: There seem to be some weirdly regular patterns in this data, huh.
gollark: It's just doing a green of 255 * `max(min(100000.0 / float(latency), 1.0), 0.3)` right now.
gollark: I'm somewhat unsure about how precisely to map the latency (in microseconds) onto a color.
See also
References
- Name SEMO Journalists to Positions
- As listed in the 1923 MIT Technique yearbook, p.248, accessed 21 Jun 2020.
- In the era before the ΑΦΓ merger this was the Gamma chapter, first referenced in the MIT Technique yearbook in the 1915 ed., p.279.
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