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Delta Kappa Phi (ΔKΦ) is a professional-social, textile fraternity in the United States. ==History== Delta Kappa Phi was formed by six students at the Philadelphia Textile Institute (now Philadelphia University) in 1899. Though its founders initially planned to seek affiliation with a national fraternity, that plan was soon shelved and the organization expanded to other schools, focusing on institutions with textile programs. Its second chapter was chartered in 1902 at the Lowell Technological Institute (now the University of Massachusetts Lowell, or UMass Lowell), and the organization gradually established chapters at New Bedford Institute of Textiles and Technology, the Rhode Island School of Design, North Carolina State University, Georgia Tech, and the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth (UMass Dartmouth). By 1979 the fraternity had contracted to just its UMass Lowell and North Carolina State chapters, however, in 1998 the UMass Dartmouth chapter was reactivated, only to be subsequently shuttered again. In 1980 Steve Call, a pledge of Delta Kappa Phi at the University of Massachusetts Lowell, died after falling ill as the result of an intense program of hazing-related calisthenics he had been required to perform. The character of the fraternity has significantly differed from school to school. While many of its chapters have been social fraternities with some characteristics of a professional fraternity, the chapters at North Carolina State and Georgia Tech have been primarily oriented as professional fraternities. As of 2014 only the UMass Lowell chapter is still active. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Delta Kappa Phi」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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