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ETA
XI CHAPTER
The
Eta Xi chapter was chartered on March 15, 1980 at Louisiana Tech University.
Robert C. Joyce was the installation officer who brough Kappa Kappa Psi
to the Tech Campus. This chapter became the 182th chapter to be installed.
The
Eta Xi chapter honoraries: Robert Cheatham, Dr. John Heard, Raymond G.
Young, Lawrence Gibbs, Dr. F. Jay Taylor, Bart Ghent, Danial Pittman,
Dr. Edmund W. Winston, Harold Gray Barrier, Norwood Meiners
Currently,
Dr. John Heard is the Eta Xi chapter's sponsor.
KAPPA
KAPPA PSI
In the years that followed World War I, a movement developed among college
and university bands, searching for some motivating force that would create
a greater interest in band music. This movement sought expression in an
effort to develop good will, fellowship and understanding among bands
and their members, and to recognize the value of dedicated leadership.
Seizing upon this idea, ten members of the Oklahoma A & M College (later
to be known as the Oklahoma State University) Band, led by William A.
Scroggs and their director, Bohumil Makovsky, drew up a plan for a national
honorary society for college bandsmen.
Director
Makovsky selected nine men to work with Scroggs to organize the first
local club. These ten charter members were: A. Frank Martin, Raymond D
Shannon, Clyde Haston, Clayton Soule, Carl Stevens, William Coppedge,
Dick Hurst, Asher Hendrickson, and Ira H Nelson. Officers for the local
club were elected and William Scroggs was selected as president.
With the local organization complete, a corporation was formed which petitioned
the Oklahoma Corporation Commission for a charter. The charter was granted
November 27, 1919, and "Kappa Kappa Psi, Honorary Fraternity for College
Bandsmen," was established on the Oklahoma State University campus with
the local group being known as the "Alpha Chapter." During the first year
of operation as an honorary society the members were kept busy working
out and adopting a national constitution, creating and developing the
Ritual ceremony, designing the jewelry needed to provide distinctive recognition
for the organization, and setting up plans for the expansion of the Fraternity.
The Greek name and symbols, "Kappa Kappa Psi," were furnished by Dr. Hilton
Ira Jones of the OSU Chemistry faculty, and assistance in the final organization
was furnished by Col. F.D. Wickham of the OSU Military Department. No
person is so important to any organization as its constant companion,
inspiration, and source of support. Such a man was Bohumil Makovsky, Director
of Bands and Head of the Music Department at Oklahoma State University
from 1915 until 1945. Affectionately referred to by all who knew him as
"Boh," Makovsky provided the strength and encouragement needed by William
Scroggs and those nine other bandsmen which saw them successfully through
the establishment of a national fraternal society.
Founded by bandsmen for the band member, Kappa Kappa Psi was (and is)
a tribute to the dynamic personality of one man. For around this personality
there grew a core of student leaders committed to assist him in a program
of developing the best college band with the highest performance standards
possible. "Boh" was that man, and each incoming member of this Fraternity
should be familiar with the man who was officially recognized by the Grand
Chapter in Convention assembled as "The Guiding Spirit of Kappa Kappa
Psi."
-www.kkytbs.org
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