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词条 Alpha Zeta (professional)
释义

  1. History

  2. Chapters

  3. Notable members

  4. References

  5. External links

{{more citations needed|date=April 2011}}{{Infobox Fraternity |
  letters = ΑΖ |  name = Alpha Zeta |  crest = AZCoatofArms.png |image_size=220px |  mission = Alpha Zeta is the professional agricultural organization dedicated to the highest levels of scholarship, leadership, integrity and service. |  vision =  Alpha Zeta is a global network of diverse agricultural professionals recognizing, developing and promoting leaders with common values and integrity. |  colors = Mode and Sky Blue |  symbol = |  flower = Pink Carnation |  jewel = |  founded = {{start date and years ago|1897|11|4}} |  birthplace = Ohio State University, Columbus, OH |  type = Professional and Social |  scope = International |  address = 16020 Swingley Ridge Road, Suite 300 |  city = Chesterfield |  state = Missouri |  country = USA |  chapters = 74 |  members = 3,000 students |  lifetime = 115,000 |  publication= ''Alpha Zeta News'' |  homepage = Alpha Zeta Website |  free_label = |  free = }}

Alpha Zeta (ΑΖ) is a professional fraternity for students and industry professionals in the agriculture and natural resources fields. Founded in 1897 at Ohio State University, Alpha Zeta is the first and oldest collegiate society for agriculture. Today, Alpha Zeta has over 117,000 alumni and 3,000 student members at 74 universities.

History

The fraternity was founded on November 4, 1897 by Charles Burkett, John Cunningham, and ten other agriculture students at Ohio State University.[1]

Chapters

Chapters are named for individuals prominent in some way with respect to agriculture or after the locality of the chapter.

  • Townshend - Ohio State University - 1897
  • Morrill - Pennsylvania State University - 1898
  • Morrow - University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign - 1900
  • Cornell - Cornell University - 1901
  • Kedzie - Michigan State University - 1902
  • Granite - University of New Hampshire - 1903
  • Nebraska - University of Nebraska-Lincoln - 1904
  • North Carolina - North Carolina State University - 1904
  • Wilson - Iowa State University - 1905
  • Green Mountain - University of Vermont - 1905
  • La Grange - University of Minnesota - 1905
  • Centennial - Colorado State University - 1906
  • Babcock - University of Wisconsin–Madison - 1906
  • Maine - University of Maine-Orono - 1906
  • Missouri - University of Missouri - 1907
  • Elliott - Washington State University - 1907
  • Purdue - Purdue University - 1908
  • California - University of California-Berkeley - 1908
  • Kansas - Kansas State University - 1909
  • Dacotah - North Dakota State University - 1909
  • Montana - Montana State University - 1912
  • Scovell - University of Kentucky - 1912
  • Georgia - University of Georgia - 1914
  • Delaware - University of Delaware - 1916
  • Oklahoma - Oklahoma State University - 1916
  • Florida - University of Florida - 1922
  • Cook - Rutgers University - 1922
  • South Dakota - South Dakota State University - 1924
  • Virginia - Virginia Tech - 1932
  • Nevada - University of Nevada, Reno - 1963
  • California Eta - California State University, Chico - 2004
  • California Epsilon - California State University, Fresno - 2005

Notable members

  • Morris N. Abrams - Louisiana educator (LSU)
  • John R. Block - Secretary of Agriculture under Ronald Reagan
  • Norman Borlaug - Nobel laureate
  • Earl Butz - U.S. Secretary of Agriculture (1971–1976) (Purdue, '31)
  • Robert C. Baker - Professor Emeritus of Food Science, Cornell University; Inventor of the chicken nugget (Cornell '43)
  • Herman Cain - former chairman and CEO of Godfather's Pizza
  • Walter Clore - Father of the Washington Wine Industury
  • Dwight D. Eisenhower - U.S. President
  • Arthur Rose Eldred - Agriculturalist, first Eagle Scout recognized by the Boy Scouts of America (Cornell '16)
  • Dan R. Glickman - U.S. Secretary of Agriculture (1995–2001); current president of the Motion Picture Association of America
  • Edwin Jackson Kyle - Former U.S. ambassador to Guatemala (1945–1948), namesake of Texas A&M's Kyle Field (Cornell, '02)
  • Henry C. Wallace - U.S. Secretary of Agriculture (1921–1924) (Honorary, '22)
  • William Jardine - U.S. Secretary of Agriculture (1925–1929) (Kansas, '11)
  • Henry A. Wallace - Vice President of the United States, U.S. Secretary of Agriculture (1933–1940), Founder of Pioneer Hi-Bred, Secretary of Commerce (Wilson, '08)
  • Ezra Taft Benson - U.S. Secretary of Agriculture (1953–1961) (Honorary, '53)
  • Orville Freeman - U.S. Secretary of Agriculture (1961–1969), Minnesota Governor (Honorary, '62)
  • Clifford Hardin - U.S. Secretary of Agriculture (1969–1971) (Purdue, '53)
  • Richard Lyng - U.S. Secretary of Agriculture (1986–1989) (Wilson, '74)
  • Albert Schatz - Co-discoverer of streptomycin with Selman Waksman (Cook)
  • Selman Waksman - Discoverer of streptomycin and coined the word "antibiotic", Nobel laureate (Cook)
  • Kenneth E. Wing - President (1992–2002) of SUNY Cobleskill (Cornell '58)
  • Clayton Yeutter - U.S. Secretary of Agriculture (1989–1991) (Nebraska, '50)
  • Lester Brown - Founder of the Earth Policy Institute (Cook)

References

{{More footnotes|date=June 2009}}
1. ^Baird's manual of American college fraternities. Volume 19. 1977. p 558

External links

  • http://www.alphazeta.org/ - Official Page
  • http://www.alphazeta-cornell.org/ - Cornell Chapter Website
{{Professional Fraternities}}

4 : Student organizations established in 1897|Professional fraternities and sororities in the United States|1897 establishments in Ohio|Professional Fraternity Association

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