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Live Like Lou
When faced with a terminal illness, Brother Lou Gehrig continued to live his life with courage, humility and gratitude. When faced with the same battle, Brother Neil Alexander set out to leave ALS better than he found it. Together, LiveLikeLou and Phi Delta Theta have joined forces to help make that happen. Learn more >>
Stop Campus Hazing Act
In partnership with the Max Gruver Foundation and as a member of the Anti-Hazing Coalition, Phi Delta Theta is fighting to eradicate hazing which has no place in our Fraternity or on our campuses. The Stop Campus Hazing Act (H.R. 5646) passed in the House of Representatives on September 24, 2024. This bipartisan bill brings us one step closer to creating safer campuses, increasing transparency on campus, educating about hazing, and protecting our students. More »
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“Anyone can get elected to a position; it’s what you do with it that matters.” #McKenzie25
Kickstarting the 2025 McKenzie Family Presidents Leadership Conference with wisdom from J. David Almacy (@almacy), Widener ‘92, General Council President.
#phidelt #phideltathetaHere's to the memories made and milestones achieved in 2024—and to the greatness ahead in 2025. Proud to be a Phi today and every day. ⚔️
Today we celebrate the holidays with loved ones, tomorrow we celebrate the founding of our great Fraternity.
Here's to 176 years of greatness and many more to come! #ProudToBeAPhiMay your season be as bright as the bond we share. ✨ From all of us at Phi Delta Theta General Headquarters, here's to a joyful and meaningful holiday!
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An Open Letter: “Love of the Flag…”
[A message from the Benjamin Harrison Presidential Site. Harrison was the 23rd President of the United States and a member of the Ohio Alpha Chapter of Phi Delta Theta at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio.]
January 6, 2021
Dear Presidential Site Friends, Neighbors, and fellow Citizens,
Today’s demonstrations began as an expression of first amendment rights. But the afternoon’s violence at the U.S. Capitol was an unacceptable assault on our American system of self-government, and merits formal condemnation and censure. We deserve better as a country, and we must hold each other accountable if we are to carry on this grand experiment in self-government started by the founders over two centuries ago.
Political strife has wracked our country before—and will again—but our greatest strength remains in the rule of law, and the bulwark of justice embodied in our constitution. Few American presidents have articulated these core principles as thoughtfully and persuasively as Benjamin Harrison, as he did post-presidency in Old Forge, New York, on July 27, 1895. The following excerpt, while lengthy, is well worth reading: