North American collegiate agricultural women's fraternity
Ceres International Women's Fraternity is a social women's fraternity focused on agriculture founded on August 17, 1984, at the International Conclave of FarmHouse fraternity. [1]
History
The 1980 Conclave passed a proposal that pilot women's 4-H clubs be formed on select campuses and conducted an extensive survey of 4-H chapters and associations, with 65 percent in support of the creation a women's agricultural fraternity.[3]
A proposal for the “establishment of an agricultural-related women's sorority formed in the image of FarmHouse” was unanimously approved by delegates at the '84 Conclave.
The women involved and a committee of 4-H men selected the name Ceres Fraternity for the separate women's fraternity. Ceres is the Roman Goddess of agriculture.
On, October 12, 1985, chartered its first chapter at Colorado State University. The International Office for FarmHouse provided staffing and programming support until 1994, when Ceres had grown to the point that it could hire a part-time executive director to provide support for its chapters and members.[4]
Symbols
Ceres' mottos is "Commitment to Build". The fraternity's colors are violet and gold. Its flower is the sterling silver rose. Its jewels are amethyst and pearl. Its publication is The Rose and Scroll.
Chapters
The chapters of Ceres include the following. Active chapters in bold, inactive chapters in italics. [1][5][6][7]
Name
|
Chartered
|
Institution
|
Location
|
Status
|
Notes
|
Reference
|
Alpha
|
October 12, 1985–<2010
|
Colorado State University
|
Fort Collins, Colorado
|
Inactive
|
|
[8]
|
Beta
|
February 15, 1986–19xx, March 2007
|
University of Alberta
|
Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
|
Inactive
|
|
[9]
|
Gamma
|
March 1, 1986–<2010
|
California State Polytechnic University, Pomona
|
Pomona, California
|
Inactive
|
|
[10]
|
Delta
|
November 14, 1987–<2010
|
California State University, Fresno
|
Fresno, California
|
Inactive
|
|
|
Epsilon
|
April 15, 1989
|
University of Wisconsin–Platteville
|
Platteville, Wisconsin
|
Active
|
|
|
Zeta
|
April 22, 1989–<2010
|
Montana State University
|
Bozeman, Montana
|
Inactive
|
|
|
Eta
|
November 23, 1991
|
South Dakota State University
|
Brookings, South Dakota
|
Inactive
|
|
[11]
|
Theta
|
March 19, 1994
|
North Dakota State University
|
Fargo, North Dakota
|
Inactive
|
|
|
Iota
|
April 30, 1994
|
Illinois State University
|
Normal, Illinois
|
Inactive
|
|
|
Kappa
|
April 27, 1996–<2010
|
New Mexico State University
|
Las Cruces, New Mexico
|
Inactive
|
|
|
Lambda
|
November 23, 1996–<2010
|
Western Kentucky University
|
Bowling Green, Kentucky
|
Inactive
|
|
[12]
|
Mu
|
April 19, 1997
|
North Carolina State University
|
Raleigh, North Carolina
|
Inactive
|
|
|
Nu
|
April 26, 1997
|
University of Kentucky
|
Lexington, Kentucky
|
Inactive
|
|
[13]
|
Xi
|
September 16, 2000
|
Washington State University
|
Pullman, Washington
|
Inactive
|
|
[14]
|
Guelph Colony
|
>2000
|
University of Guelph
|
Guelph, Ontario, Canada
|
Inactive
|
|
|
SLO Colony
|
>2000
|
Cal Poly San Luis Obispo
|
San Luis Obispo, California
|
Inactive
|
|
|
OSU Colony
|
>2000
|
Ohio State University
|
Columbus, Ohio
|
Inactive
|
|
|
See also
References
External links