Delta Omega Epsilon

Coordinates: 40°36′00″N 74°09′00″W / 40.60000°N 74.15000°W / 40.60000; -74.15000
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Delta Omega Epsilon
ΔΩΕ
FoundedApril 15, 1985; 39 years ago (1985-04-15)
College of Staten Island
TypeProfessional and Honor
AffiliationIndependent
StatusActive
ScopeTri-State area
Mission statementTo spread knowledge of civic and its various professions to enhance its local communities. Civics for all!
Motto"Civic Delta Men of Excellence"
SloganSmooth Civic Souls of Delta
Colors  Black and   Silver
SymbolPhoenix, bottlenose dolphin, doubloons and key
FlowerBlack Petunia
TreeCalifornia redwood
JewelDiamond
MascotBottlenose dolphin
Patron Greek divinityAres
Patron Roman divinityMars
PublicationThe Civic Quarterly
PhilanthropyAiding and Lifting Misinformed Youth
Chapters8 active
Members369 lifetime
NicknamesCivic Souls
HeadquartersNew York City, New York
United States
40°36′00″N 74°09′00″W / 40.60000°N 74.15000°W / 40.60000; -74.15000
WebsiteDelta Omega Epsilon

The Delta Omega Epsilon Organization (ΔΩΕ) is a professional and honor-based fraternity. [1] Delta Omega Epsilon was founded on April 15, 1985, by Richard Pelestri and Sal Leone along with an inaugural class of 25 members at The College of Staten Island in New York City.

Delta Omega Epsilon was the first organization to be chartered at the university[citation needed] and was created to spread knowledge of the civics and its various professions to enhance its local communities.

Membership

As of 2024, Delta Omega Epsilon has more than 369 members who are civic-minded. Membership is open to any man who meets the requirements, regardless of religion, race, or nationality.

Being primarily a professional organization, Delta Omega Epsilon does not operate nor maintain an organization house as lodging quarters for members nor for any other persons. However, a chapter may maintain rooms for meetings at the discretion of its members.

Officers

The current Executive Board President and CEO is Aaron Calderon of the Eta chapter. The executive board consists of the President, Vice President, Sergeant at Arms, Secretary, Treasurer, Chapter Coordinator, Alumni Coordinator, & Event Coordinator. Following the 2020 ΔΩΕ Executive Board Elections and Constitutional Referendum, the Executive Board was elected to serve 25 year terms expiring on April 15, 2045. Each position has a two term limit. The executive board has been aggressively expanding in select geographic regions to make the organization national by the end of 2023 and international by 2024. [2]

History

  • On April 15, 1985 at 12:38pm, [3] the Delta Omega Epsilon Organization was founded by Richard Pelestri, Sal Leone, and an inaugural class of 25 members at the College of Staten Island, thus constituting the Alpha chapter.
  • On September 7, 1995, Seth Meyerson, Joseph Congedo, and an inaugural class of 12 members formed the Beta chapter of Delta Omega Epsilon at the State University of New York at Delhi.
  • On September 8, 1996, Chris Delgado and an inaugural class of 6 members formed the Gamma chapter of Delta Omega Epsilon at the State University of New York at Oneonta.
  • On November 15, 1998, Ralph Torres and an inaugural class of 7 members formed the Delta chapter of Delta Omega Epsilon at the State University of New York at Cobleskill.
  • On February 28, 2002, Mike Mansky, George Mawyin, and an inaugural class of 15 members formed the Epsilon chapter of Delta Omega Epsilon at the State University of New York at Morrisville.
  • On November 1, 2002, Dibar Gamboa and an inaugural class of 4 members formed the at-large Zeta chapter of Delta Omega Epsilon in Central New York.
  • Andre Lynch and an inaugural class of 4 members formed the Theta chapter of Delta Omega Epsilon at the State University of New York at Canton during the spring of 2011.
  • On February 10, 2011, the organization's Phoenix chapter was nationally incorporated by Dibar Gamboa, Ariel Pichardo, and Teru King.

Symbols

The official symbols of the organization are the Phoenix representing rebirth and the bottlenose dolphin representing the organization's roots at The College of Staten Island. Delta Omega Epsilon's colors are sterling silver and black.

Additional symbols include doubloons and key

Flower is the Black Petunia, tree is the California redwood, jewel is the Diamond and the mascot is the Bottlenose dolphin.

The Founding Coordinates of 40° 36′ 0″ N, 74° 9′ 0″ W is of great importance to the organisation and is a core component of essential organisation activities. [1]

Activities

The programs of the organization are centered around its mission statement: "To spread knowledge of civic and its various professions to enhance its local communities. Civics for all!"[citation needed]

Chapters

These are the chapters of Delta Omega Epsilon. Chapters at colleges do not require enrollment at the school. Active chapters are indicated in bold. Inactive chapters are in italics.

Chapter Charter date and range Institution Location Status References
Alpha 1985 College of Staten Island Staten Island, New York Active
Beta 1995 State University of New York at Delhi Delhi, New York Inactive
Gamma 1996 State University of New York at Oneonta Oneonta, New York Inactive
Delta 1998 State University of New York at Cobleskill Cobleskill, New York Inactive
Epsilon 2002 State University of New York at Morrisville Morrisville, New York Inactive
Zeta 2011 Central NY at large Central New York Inactive
Eta 2011 York College, City University of New York Jamaica, Queens, New York Active
Theta 2012 State University of New York at Canton Canton, New York Active
Iota 2015–2016 Housatonic Community College Bridgeport, Connecticut Inactive
Kappa 2017 New York/New Jersey/Maine at large New York City, New York Active
Lambda 2021 Utah at large Salt Lake City, Utah Active
Mu 2022 Alaska at large Juneau, Alaska Active
Nu 2023 Mississippi at large Jackson, Mississippi Active
Xi 2024 Iowa at large Urbandale, Iowa Active

References

  1. ^ a b Delta Omega Epsilon Constitution Page 1
  2. ^ Delta Omega Epsilon Records Year 35 Page 16
  3. ^ History of Delta Omega Epsilon Page 1 - 6