Early Fraternity History
In the history of the United States, 1913 was an eventful year.
Only a year before, Arizona had been admitted to the Union as
the forty-eighth state, completing the continental bounds of the
country. Woodrow Wilson was inaugurated President; the Federal
Reserve System was established to strengthen the banking system;
and the 16th amendment to the Constitution was adopted, providing
for the progressive tax on income. The Panama Canal, one of the
greatest engineering feats of modern times, was nearing completion
and would be in operation in 1914. In that same year, at the School
of Commerce of New York University, Alpha Epsilon Pi officially
made its appearance in the fraternity world.
There have been rumors that preliminary organization may have
taken place as early as 1911. This seems unlikely. However, it
is fairly certain that the work of establishing a new fraternity
at New York University began in the 1912-1913 academic year. Founder
Charles C. Moskowitz, speaking at a banquet in his honor on November
13, 1952, indicated that the winter of 1913 was the time when
organizational activity got into high gear. It appears certain,
therefore, that by late 1912 or early 1913 the founding of the
new fraternity was well under way.
Its Founders were
all young men of serious purpose, employed during the day, coming
from middle-class homes, who sought to get ahead by obtaining
the formal training offered at New York University in the evening
sessions. The catalyst for the founding of Alpha Epsilon Pi was
the transfer of Charles C. Moskowitz from the College of the City
of New York to New York University's School of Commerce.
While enrolling at C.C.N.Y.,Charles Moskowitz, a fine basketball
player, was heavily sought after for his athletic skills. When
he enrolled at New York University, his reputation had preceded
him, and he was immediately rushed and given a bid by one of the
fraternities. Which fraternity is not known, and nothing exists
to indicate its name. It is known that in 1913 the following fraternities
were in existence at the School of Commerce: Alpha Kappa Psi,
founded in 1905, and today one of the leading professional commerce
fraternities, with a chapter roll of 144 (1977); Delta Sigma
Pi, founded in 1907, and today Alpha Kappa Psi's chief rival,
with a chapter roll of 132 (1977); Lambda Sigma Phi, a
local, founding date unknown; Phi Sigma Pi, a local founded
in 1911; Phi Delta, a local, founded in 1912; Phi Sigma
Delta, which had placed its Delta chapter at N.Y.U.'s School
of Commerce in 1913, and which was later to relocate at the Heights
campus; Phi Delta Sigma, founded in 1913.
One of these seven fraternities rushed the young basketball star
intensely. However, when Charles Moskowitz asked whether bids
could also be extended to his friends, he was immediately told
that the bid was for him alone. Brother Moskowitz had a circle
of close Jewish friends which met after work for dinner before
going to class. Evidently, Founder Moskowitz discussed this with
his friends, and they decided that fraternities were good for
the students, and since there was no patent on the idea, they
would start one of their own.
The group had its meals at German rathskellar on Second Avenue,
within walking distance of the university. The specialty was frankfurters
and sauerkraut, and the price was fifteen cents. The basement,
was open to the public only in the evenings was business was especially
brisk. The young men talked with the owner who agreed that if
six or eight men would eat their regularly every school night,
he would give them a private area in the rathskeller. And that
is how Alpha Epsilon Pi began.
One of the topics of conversation was "fraternity":
its pros and cons. Could this impecunious group of young students,
busy with their daytime jobs and nighttime studies, successfully
launch a new fraternity when there were already seven well-established
groups at the School of Commerce, three of them nationals? They
decided to try. Brother Moskowitz is quoted as saying, "Our
aim was mutual assistance in our intellectual and social life
- to strengthen the democratic character of student life."
When the founding group finally jelled, there were eleven founding
members: I.M. Glazer, Herman L. Kraus, Arthur M. Lipkint, Benjamin M. Meyer, Hyman Schulman,
Emil J. Lustgarten, Arthur E. Leopold, Charles J. Pintel, Maurice Plager, David K. Schafer and Charles C. Moskowitz. Charles
Moskowitz was chosen as the first master.
By common consent, the name Alpha Epsilon Pi had been chosen
as best representing the ideals the founders wanted to express.
Coincidentally, just four years earlier, a Jewish sorority had
formed at Barnard College, a college for women related to Columbia
University, and had chosen for itself the name Alpha Epsilon Phi.
An even more remarkable coincidence, for coincidence it seems
to have been, is that the badges of the two organizations were
very similar. In both the three Greek letters are horizontally
attached, and the only major difference is that there is a bar
through the letters of the women's group. Research has failed
to discover any link between the two groups, and it now appears
that the young men at New York University who founded Alpha Epsilon
Pi were completely unaware of the existence of Alpha Epsilon Phi.
After months of meetings and perfecting the organization, the
young group decided it was time to obtain recognition from the
university as an official School of Commerce fraternity. To gain
recognition, it was decided to address a letter to Dean Joseph
French Johnson of the School of Commerce, outlining the aims and
ideals of the fledgling fraternity and asking of his consideration
and approval. David K. Schafer was the only member who could type,
so he, as secretary, was chosen to draft the request and type
it, to give it a businesslike appearance. The letter was submitted,
probably about early October, after which the waiting period began.
As is the case today, the wheels of the decision-makers turned
slowly. At last, however, the long-awaited reply came on November
7, 1913. It was in the affirmative. Alpha Epsilon Pi was a recognized
fraternity at New York University.
The Immortal Eleven
It is interesting to learn something about these earnest young
men. Through the courtesy of Past Supreme Master and Founder
David K. Schafer, the fraternity archives have been enriched
with copies of the 1915 and 1916 Violet, the yearbook of the School
of Commerce.
It has already been stated that Founder Charles C. Moskowitz
was an outstanding basketball player, and he played on the Commerce
team for three years and managed it for one of those years. Charles J. Pintel was a publication man. He was circulation
manager of both the Commerce Record and the Washington
Square Dealer, the downtown campus newspaper. The staff of
the Commerce Record, a weekly paper devoted to the activities
of that school and its students, listed Brothers Lustgarten, Shulman,
and Kraus as staff members. Founder Herman L. Kraus
was a debater and helped the N.Y.U. Commerce team achieve victory
in a debate over the Wharton School team of the University of
Pennsylvania. He served as secretary of the Commerce debating
society, of which founders Lustgarten and Shulman were also members.
In voting for class personalities in the 1914 class, Brother
Moskowitz ranked third for best athlete; Brother Shulman second
for best nature. Founder Kraus was also a member of the staff
of the Violet, a member of the Triad League, an advertising society,
and editor for the Menorah Society, while Founder Shulman was
the class historian.
Expansion
The young fraternity lost no time attracting new recruits. The
first pledges were Aaron Rubin, Samuel Epstein, Morton Davis,
Nathan Katz and Sidney Picker. Tradition has it that Aaron Rubin
was the first pledge, although there is some reason to believe
it may have been Samuel Epstein.
Of the five pledges, Samuel Epstein was a member of the debating
society and of Delta Mu Delta, the honorary scholastic fraternity;
Morton I. Davis was already working as an accountant, and was
to become a very successful C.P.A. heading up a very prominent
firm; Aaron Rubin was to become a very successful investor and
real estate tycoon, and one of the great names in Alpha Epsilon
Pi; and Sidney Picker was also destined to make his mark in the
fraternity, as he did at Commerce, where he was on the Executive
Committee of the Class of 1915 and vice-president of the Debating
Society. Very little is known about Nathan Katz. Later that year
Henry Rosenblum appears to have been added. He became a successful
C.P.A. and attorney.
In 1914 the following men graduated, leaving the fraternity with
a nucleus of eight men to carry on: Morton Davis, Samuel Epstein,
Nathan Katz, Benjamin Meyer, Charles Moskowitz, Charles Pintel,
Maurice Plager and Hyman Shulman. Weaker men might have faltered
at this mass exodus which included many of the leaders and founders
of the fraternity. This was not the case with the men of Alpha
Epsilon Pi.
Although the treasury was quite small, Founder Schafer recalled
later that dues were fifty cents a month, the men pressed ahead
with what had been their goal from the outset, the founding of
a new national fraternity. Plans toward this end had actually
started when the fraternity was first organized, and the Violet
carries the designation "Alpha chapter" with the listing
of members in the very first edition (1915) where Alpha Epsilon
Pi is included. A young law student, unfortunately nameless, agreed
to draft articles of incorporation for Alpha Epsilon Pi Fraternity,
Inc., under the Act of the Legislature of the State of New York,
Chapter 40, Laws 1909, entitled "An Act Relating to Membership
Corporations." Evidently the founders were most impressed
with the organization and growth of Alpha Kappa Psi and Delta
Sigma Pi, which limited their membership to students in the Schools
of Commerce of the universities where their chapters were placed,
and decided to emulate them.
Contact was soon made with a group of men at Cornell University
who had organized a local fraternity there called Phi Tau. They
and the brothers at NYU had a meeting of the minds and formed
the Beta Chapter - truly our fraternity could now be called a
national fraternity.
A new national fraternity, probably the only major social fraternity
in existence today for undergraduate men which was founded in
an evening school, had come into being, less than one year after
its official recognition by Dean Johnson of New York University.
The Survival of Alpha Epsilon Pi
It must be taken into consideration that our fraternity was a
World War I phenomenon. Counting the Beta Chapter only 52 men
had been initiated by April 6, 1917, the date the United States
formally declared war on Germany and her allies. Almost every
undergraduate and alumnus answered the call of the colors causing
the fraternity to become nearly inactive during the war years.
The fraternity would have easily disappeared, like so many other
locals, if not for the efforts of brothers Theodore Racoosin and
F. Nathan Wolf who shouldered the burden of keeping the fraternity
alive and planning for the future.
In the years between the world wars, Alpha Epsilon Pi had grown
to 28 chapters. But tough times were known to be forthcoming at
the 1941 convention, and many knew that undergraduate and alumnus
would again be called to duty. Expansion remained dormant throughout
World War II.
With the end of the war, the fraternity gained new life and momentum
in its reopening of inactive chapters, expansion to new campuses
and the merging with other locals that had been hit hard by the
war.
The next two decades were a time of steady growth and prestige
for Alpha Epsilon Pi as well as other fraternities. Expansion
was occurring at an incredible rate for the Greek system as a
whole. However, with the onset fighting in Vietnam in the early
60's, fraternity life faltered. Liberal student bodies revolted
against authority and the Greek system, which was seen as a conservative,
elitist group.
Ironically, the roots of fraternity itself lie in revolution
against authoritarianism. Membership plummeted and nearly half
the chapter roll was lost. It almost looked as if it might have
been the demise of Alpha Epsilon Pi. However, due to perseverance
and outstanding leadership, the fraternity was able to reverse
the trend and stabilize following the Vietnam War. Re-identifying
with its Jewish heritage, the fraternity refused to say die. Possessed
with faith and courage to believe this too would pass, they were
determined that the national strength could be regained and that
the fraternity would once again be able to pursue its mission
of shaping young Jewish men into community leaders. In honor of
its 75th Anniversary, the Alpha Epsilon Pi Foundation constructed
a building in Indianapolis, Indiana to serve as the headquarters
for the fraternity. For the first time, Alpha Epsilon Pi had a
permanent home.
It has been nearly 83 years since Alpha Epsilon Pi began to build
its special form of brotherhood. The fraternity has survived four
wars, the great depression, several recessions, changes in the
standards of morality, and a revolution in personal behavior and
conduct. It has seen more changes occur in this time than had
occurred in the entire history of the world prior to its founding.
It has seen the birth of television, the jet plane, space travel,
and the computer. Through it all the fraternity had remained true
to the ideals of the founders - honesty, courage, brotherhood,
love of country, and faith in Jewish ethics and values. If these
ideals continue to have meaning in the years to come, then Alpha
Epsilon Pi will be able to carry its message to college generations
yet unborn. It will have been true to the ideals expressed in
the motto emblazoned on its coat of arms,ESPONDA.
Recently, Alpha Epsilon Pi celebrated its 90th anniversary, with
123 chapters and colonies on its roll. Its membership had grown
to over 77,000. The greatness Alpha Epsilon Pi has achieved springs
from the vision of that group of 11 young Jewish men going to
night school in pursuit of a better life. Many times a chapter
will blame its lack of success in part because of low membership.
But if there is one thing that every brother should learn from
our history is that Alpha Epsilon Pi started with eleven
men, ended the first year with eight due to graduation,
and flourished into the fraternity it is today. It's not the numbers
that make us great, it's the spirit and motivation to create something
unique and the ability to implement a positive program based on
Jewish ethics and values. |