The members
of the Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc. in Prairie View join Alphas around the
world in commemorating its 106th Anniversary with a special
Founders’ Day Observance Program on December 2, 2012. The program begins at
3:30 p.m. in the Johnson Phillip All Faith Chapel at Prairie View A&M
University. The speaker for the occasion is Dr. Roderick L. Smothers, Sr., Vice
President for Southwest Region of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc., and the Vice
President for Institutional Advancement at Huston Tillotson University (HTU) in
Austin, Texas. Prior to joining HTU,
Roderick served as Vice President for Institutional Advancement six years at
Langston University in Langston, Oklahoma.
Smothers is a native of Baton Rouge,
Louisiana, where he completed his early education. He holds the Bachelors, Masters and Doctorate
of Philosophy degrees from Louisiana State University (LSU).
He is a life member of the Alpha Phi
Alpha Fraternity, Inc., and was initiated in 1993 at the Nu Psi Chapter at LSU. Smothers has served in various leadership
capacities in the fraternity to include Chapter Presidents (College and
Alumni), Assistant Regional Vice President, Chapter Advisor, District Director
and the Board of Directors. Smothers is
one time candidate for General President of the Fraternity. Smothers’ motto: “Good men have good ideas, but great men take
good ideas and put them into action!” has guided him through his tenure in the
fraternity leadership.
Since its
founding, the fraternity has provided leadership and service during the Great
Depression, World War II, Civil Rights Movements, and addressed social issues
such as apartheid and urban housing, and other economic, cultural, and
political issues affecting people of color. Under its charge manly deeds,
scholarship, and love for all mankind, it has established programs for
mentoring, academic achievement, voter education, Big Brothers Big Sisters and
Boy Scouts and has made community service priority number one. Some of its
major programs include the Million Dollar Contribution to the National Urban
League, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP),
and the United Negro Scholarship Fund. The fraternity led the management and
construction of the Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial on the Washington
Mall. Dr. King was one of the most revered brothers of the fraternity. Attorney
Harry E. Johnson, Sr., the fraternity’s 31st General President serves as the
President of the MLK Foundation.
The
fraternity’s membership is more than two hundred thousand college trained men
dispersed in more than 1,500 college and 900 alumni chapters throughout the
United States, Korea, Europe and the Caribbean. Some of its prominent members are
Justice Thurgood Marshall, Congressmen Emmanuel Cleaver, Al Green, William
Gray, Ralph Metcalf, Charles Rangel; Ebony Publisher John H. Johnson, former
PVAMU presidents Alvin I. Thomas, E. B. Evans and Charles Hines, Mayors Lee P.
Brown, David Dinkins, Maynard Jackson, Frank Jackson, Raymond E. Carreathers, Jiles P. Daniels, Sr., Michael Wolfe and Ernest
Morial, Texas State Representatives Al Edwards, Sylvester Turner and Boris
Miles, musicians Duke Ellington, Quincy Jones and Lionel Richie; Rhodes Scholar
and Activist Paul Robeson, W. E. B. DeBois, Olympian Jesse Owens, and legendary
coaches Eddie Robinson and Lenny Wilkins, to name a few.
The
fraternity is headquartered in Baltimore, Maryland with Mr. Aaron Crutison, Sr.
as the Acting General President and Brian E. Rowland is president of Epsilon
Tau Lambda Chapter.
The program
is open to the public and is being hosted by the Epsilon Tau Lambda (Prairie
View), Pi Omicron (TAMU) and Pi Alpha Lambda (College Station) Chapters, and Sigma Gamma Lambda (Cypress-Katy), all members of Area IX of the
Fraternity.
Contact:
Frederick
V. Roberts
unitancommunications@yahoo.com
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