Difference between pages "Zeta Mu" and "Zeta Chi"

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{{Infobox Fraternity
 
{{Infobox Fraternity
|Name= Zeta Mu
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|Name= Zeta Chi
|GreekSymbol= ZM
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|GreekSymbol= ZX
|Image= [[File:Zeta_Mu.jpg|200px]]
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|Image= [[File:Zeta_Chi.jpg|200px]]
|Founded= {{start date and years ago|1985|11|16}}
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|Founded= {{start date and years ago|1993|11|20}}
|College= [http://www.vt.edu/ Virginia Tech]
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|College= [https://www.marist.edu/ Marist College]
|Location= Blacksburg, VA
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|Location= Poughkeepsie, NY
|Homepage= [http://chapters.kappakappagamma.org/zetamu/ Zeta Mu Homepage]
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|Homepage= [https://marist.kappa.org/ Zeta Chi Homepage]
|Media= [http://wiki.kappakappagamma.org/index.php?title=Category:Zeta_Mu Media related to Zeta Mu Chapter]}}
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|Media= [https://wiki.kkg.org/index.php?title=Category:Zeta_Chi Media related to Zeta Chi Chapter]}}
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'''Marist College, established in 1929 in Poughkeepsie, NY.'''
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Marist College was established in 1929 with the first college level courses offered that year.  It was granted its charter as a four year college from the state of New York in 1946.
  
'''Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, popularly known as Virginia Tech (VT) established in 1872.'''
 
  
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'''Zeta Chi founded November 20, 1993'''
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Zeta Chi had 50 charter members and was a local sorority which petitioned KKG for colonization.
  
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'''571 initiates (as of June 2018)'''
  
'''Zeta Mu founded November 16, 1985 -- 73 charter members.'''
 
  
  
'''1,495 initiates (as of June 2017)'''
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==Zeta Chi on Social Media==
  
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The Zeta Chi chapter is very active on several forms of social media. We regularly post photos, upcoming events, fundraisers, and birthdays on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram. Zeta Chi also has a blog that sisters contribute posts to each several times each month. Topics that have been covered on the blog include study abroad experiences, big/little week, i-week, philanthropy events, and more.  
Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, popularly known as Virginia Tech (VT), is a public land grant university with the main campus in Blacksburg, Virginia with other research and educational centers throughout the Commonwealth of Virginia. Founded in 1872 as an agricultural and mechanical land-grant college, Virginia Tech is a research university with the largest full-time student population in Virginia and one of the few public universities in the country that maintains a corps of cadets.  
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In addition to these social media handles, our chapter also appeared in Poughkeepsie Journal last semester for the RIF event we held at an after school program.
  
In 1872, the Virginia General Assembly purchased the facilities of Preston and Olin Institute, a small Methodist school in rural Montgomery County with federal funds provided by the Morrill Land-Grant Colleges Act. The Commonwealth incorporated a new institution on that site, a state-supported land grant military institute called the Virginia Agricultural and Mechanical College.  
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[https://twitter.com/ZetaChiKKG Twitter]
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[https://www.facebook.com/zetachikkg Facebook]
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[http://instagram.com/kkgmarist Instagram]
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[http://maristkkg.tumblr.com/ Tumblr]
  
Under the 1891–1907 presidency of John M. McBryde, the school organized its academic programs into a traditional four-year college. The evolution of the school's programs led to an 1896 name change to Virginia Agricultural and Mechanical College and Polytechnic Institute. The "Agricultural and Mechanical College" portion of the name was popularly omitted almost immediately, and the name was officially changed to Virginia Polytechnic Institute in 1944. During those years, there was a short-lived merger with Radford College which at the time was a women's college.
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To visit our blog please visit KKGmaristcollege on the Wordpress website.
  
VPI President T. Marshall Hahn, whose tenure ran from 1962 to 1974, was responsible for many of the successes that have shaped the modern institution of Virginia Tech. His presidential agenda involved transitioning the school into a major research university. To achieve this, the student body was increased by roughly 1,000 additional students per year, new dormitories and academic buildings were constructed, faculty were added (In 1966, for instance, the faculty added more than 100 new professors) and research budgets were increased. During the Hahn Presidency Virginia Tech dropped the two-year Corps training requirement for its male students and allowed women to join the Corps. It was the first school in the nation to open its corps of cadets to women.
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== About Marist College ==
  
One of Hahn's more controversial missions was only partially achieved. He had visions of renaming the school from VPI to Virginia State University, reflecting the status it had achieved as a full-fledged research university. As part of this move, VPI would have taken over control of the state's other land-grant institution, a historically black college in Ettrick, Virginia, south of Richmond, then called Virginia State College. This plan failed to take root, and as a compromise, VPI added "and State University" to its name in 1970, yielding the current formal name of Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University.  
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Over a century ago, the Marist Brothers came to New York's Hudson River Valley to train young men to continue the Brothers' vocation as great educators. What started as a seminary for the training of future Marist Brothers has developed into one of the leading colleges of the arts and sciences in the country.
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Marist College is now home to approximately 4,100 traditional undergraduate men and women, 1,100 adult continuing education students, and another 1,000 graduate students. In 1947, the first graduating class of modern-day Marist College consisted of four Marist Brothers. Today, close to 30,000 alumni and alumnae call Marist alma mater. Marist has a proud tradition that laid the foundation for a state-of-the-art campus for students preparing to enter the work force of the 21st century.  
  
In the late 1970s, the shorthand name "Virginia Tech" was adopted as the proper identification of the university's athletic teams over the acronym "V.P.I." and the media were requested to use "Virginia Tech" in their reporting of sport scores. In the early 1990s, the school authorized the official use of Virginia Tech as equivalent to the full VPI&SU name. Many school documents today use the shorter name, though diplomas and transcripts still spell out the formal name. Similarly, the abbreviation VT is far more common today than VPI or VPI&SU, and appears everywhere, from athletic uniforms, to the university's Internet domain name vt.edu.
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Marist College follows in the tradition of great institutions like Harvard University and the College of William and Mary that were founded as seminaries and developed into independent academies of higher learning.
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Marist can trace its roots to 1905, when the Marist Brothers purchased property and a house from Thomas McPherson along the eastern shore of the Hudson River in Poughkeepsie, NY. The Brothers named the building and property St. Ann's Hermitage. In 1908, the Brothers purchased the Edward Bech estate to enable the Hermitage to expand. The College purchased additional property to the north and east and now consists of more than 150 acres.  
  
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In 1929, college-level courses were first offered. In 1946, the State of New York granted the institution an official, four-year charter under the leadership of founding president Brother Paul Ambrose Fontaine, FMS. The Brothers set about to construct several buildings on the grounds of what was then called Marian College.
  
'''Some of Zeta Mu’s Outstanding Alumnae:''' (If you have chapter alumna who have received recognition in any of these three categories, please list them with the date(s) of recognition.)
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Dr. Linus Richard Foy became president in 1958 and became, at age 28, the youngest college president in the United States. Marian College became Marist College in 1960. In that same year, the mission of the College was broadened to include the wider community. Lay male students were admitted to pursue undergraduate studies. An evening division was also introduced to serve the educational needs of the surrounding communities.
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Women were admitted to the evening division in 1966. In 1968, women entered the day division, making the College fully coeducational. Ownership of the College was transferred in 1969 to the Marist College Educational Corporation with an independent, predominantly lay board of trustees. Nonetheless, the Marist Brothers' legacy of service and striving for excellence continues to inspire and enrich the academic life of the College.  
  
  
'''Fraternity Council Officers:'''
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==Highlights from 2000-2009==
  
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Chapter members were proud to have worked hard through diligent financial management to clear their debt to the Fraternity by fall 2004.
  
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While the Zeta Chi chapter was small throughout most of this decade (25-31 members), they remained active on campus, promoting a positve impact of Greek life and sorority membership on the other students.  They were consistent participants in Greek Week activities, winning the rope pull many times.  There were 3 NPC groups on the Marist campus during this decade.  In 2009 and 2010, Zeta Chi had their largest new member classes to date and grew their chapter total to 47 members.
  
'''Fraternity Loyalty Award Recipients:'''
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Sisterhood events were an important part of the chapter’s activities.  These included movie nights, picnics on the Hudson River, pasta parties, shopping trips, makeup parties, cosmic bowling and holiday dinners.  Seniors completed a scrapbook page which was then placed in the chapter scrapbook as a part of the archives.
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Zeta Chi members were active in philathropy activities throughout the school years.  These included Relay for Life, Easter Egg Hunt with the Poughkeepsie Children’s Home, Alex’s Lemonade stand, school supply drives, formal dress drive for Cinderella’s closet, Miles for Medals, breast cancer walk as well as activities supporting RIF and raising funds for the Rose McGill fund.
  
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The chapter held a Mother-Daughter brunch, Father-Daughter BBQ,  Senior Sendoff, Sapphire Ball and celelbrated Founders Day each year.  Early in the decade, Founders Day was held in conjunction with Parents weekend, allowing their parents to learn more about KKG.  Later in the decade, Founders Day was celebrated with the alumnae association at a local alumnae’s home
  
  
'''Fraternity Alumnae Achievement Award Recipients:'''
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==Highlights of 2010==
  
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In 2010, Zeta Chi was awarded Honorable Mention for Standards at Kappa’s Biennial Convention.
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Members were consistent recipient of Foundation Scholarships throughout this decade.
  
'''Additional Outstanding Zeta Mu Alumnae:'''
 
  
Caroline Gates, Chapter Consultant, 1987-1989; Carmen Donohue-Centamore, Chapter Consultant, 1993-1994; Rebecca Shaw, Leadership Consultant, 2012-2013; Megan Ladley Shields, Province Director of Chapters - Zeta South, 2011-2013; Kelly Fowler Nylund, Province Director of Chapters - Lambda East, 2002-2006, Fraternity Philanthropy Chairman, 2010-2012, Fraternity History Chairman, 2014-2016.
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==Highlights of 2011==
  
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Host of Alpha/Rho Province Meeting, NYU Installation, recognized for our new member program, Sisterhood and Morale Award, RIF event at a local children's center, top 10 fundraising teams for Relay for Life, second place in greek week, first successful off campus initiation event, exceptional growth in the chapter.
  
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'''Campus:''' New Hancock Center for technology built on campus, as well as the underpass which connects the east and west sides of campus. Greek life is expanding rapidly, this past fall during informal recruitment, we gained 14 new members, which is a higher number than we have ever had for informal recruitment. Chapter: The chapter has grown phenomenally. We have 80 members now, where last year at this time we had around 45. Because of this, the chapter is very young. Most of our members are sophomores (more than half) and therefore most of those in leadership positions are very young - which has been great for our chapter!
  
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The chapter struggles with the growth, but along with the growth, the chapter struggles with losing so many seniors in the coming year. We are overcoming these challenges by learning to accept the growth and understanding that growth is not a bad thing. We work hard to maintain the "small chapter feel" that we are all so used to.
  
==The Early Years - Installation==
 
  
Dateline: Blacksburg, Va. ... campus of Virginia Tech University:  Zeta Mu Chapter was formally installed November 16, 1985 and 72 charter members were initiated. Big sisters from six Lambda Province chapters of West Virginia, William & Mary; George Washington; Maryland; Duke; Virginia ..impressive Fireside Service, followed by gift-opening at reception held at Sheraton Red Lion Inn, hosted by Roanoke Alumnae Association. The beautiful initiation and chapter installation service was held at the  magnificent German Club facility. The installing officers included Marian Klingbeil Williams, Missouri, Fraternity president; Juliana (J. J.) Fraser Wales, Ohio State, director of chapters; current Lambda Province officers, Sally Hamilton Staub, Mississippi, PDA; and Beverly Shumaker Blew, Arizona, PDC; Many special Fraternity guests participated: Marjorie Matson Converse, Purdue, Extension Chairman; Polly Tomlin Beall, George Washington, 1978 Loyalty Award recipient; former province officers, Mary O. Shumate Cumberpatch, Maryland, and Jane Boswick, Duke; Maureen Kelly, Lafayette, and Kimberly Schlundt, Miami, Traveling Consultants; Jane Coombs Chadwell, Miami, Superviser of Chapter Finance; Gilly Chamberlain, Tulane, Chapter Consultant.
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== Highlights of 2012==
  
The weekend was highlighted by a campus reception for 400 guests; Candlelight Banquet featuring Dr. Sandra Sullivan, Virginia Tech Vice-President of Student Affairs; presentation ofthe New River Alumnae Clubcharter to its first president,  
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This previous year, the Zeta Chi chapter was very involved in philanthropy. Events we participated in included RIF events, Relay for Life, Marist Hunger Walk, The KKG Foundation, and The National Eating Disorders Association. This past spring Marist College's greek community also held their annual Greek Week olympic-style games, in which Kappa Kappa Gamma placed first out of four sororities. Individually, one of our members Robyn Crabtree made the 19th annual World Maccabiah Games and will be playing water polo for team USA.  
Katherine Autrey Quinn, Georgia, and presentation ofthe chapter president's badge by New River to Deanna Claybourne, first ZM president; model chaptermeeting and installation of the first ZM officers. Installation weekend was chaired by GiniAnding La'Chartte, IWilliam & Mary, Fraternity History Chairman and Coordinator of Chapter Development for  
 
Zeta Mu.
 
  
In April of 1985, 73 new members were recruited to form Zeta Mu chapter at Virginia Tech. This was the 10th NPC group to colonize on the campus which only opened to women twenty years ago. Fraternity President Marian Klingbeil Williams, Missouri, was on hand during installation weekend, Alumnae from Blacksburg and Roanoke were present as were actives from the College of William and Mary and the University of Virginia, who served as Big Sisters to the new members.
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Active member Amber also gave birth to healthy baby girl on December 19th!  Unfortunately, the chapter also came together that same month after the Sandy Hook shooting, as two of our members were from the town and personally connected to many involved. Though a difficult time, the Zeta Chi chapter is a group of very supportive girls and has been helping the members to cope.
  
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Marist College has been undergoing many  changes on campus with the renovations to the Lowell Thomas Communications Center last spring and now the beginning of a major addition to the Student Center.  Marist's student population is growing rapidly with each passing year, and so is the Zeta Chi chapter of Kappa Kappa Gamma. This past week we were proud to welcome  26 new members! The Zeta Chi chapter is a group of amazing girls who have all been very involved in making improvements to our chapter in areas including academics, philanthropy, and campus involvement.
  
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==Highlights of 2013==
  
==Highlights of the 1980s:==
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In the past year the Zeta Chi Chapter of Kappa Kappa Gamma has become an even closer group of girls through scholarship, leadership, and philanthropy. At the Province Meeting in 2013, Zeta Chi was honored with the Sisterhood and Morale Award. Two members of the Chapter, Lauren Garner and Deanna Clark, also received the Undergraduate Kappa Scholarship for 2013. We continued our tradition of attending the Marist Singers and Marist Dance Ensemble shows in order to support our sisters, while we also had fun at other sisterhood events such as ice skating, having a picnic at the Vanderbilt mansion, taking a self defense class, and having a Kappa Kindergarten day where we distressed with coloring and other fun, nostalgic activities. Philanthropy events that Zeta Chi had the opportunity to take part in included visiting a nursing home within Poughkeepsie, taking the Polar Plunge for the Special Olympics, having a Bake Sale for Relay for Life, running a RIF event at Clinton Elementary School reading to children, creating a reading carnival for Bridges to Hope tutoring program, hosting a Bake Sale for Breast Cancer Awareness, and donating Christmas gifts to children through participating with Marist’s Giving Tree program.
  
From chapter’s History Report: A huge challenge in 1986 was going through our first Winter rush but we were prepared through various workshops and help from the Fraternity. Our biggest challenge in 1988 was being on our own for the first time without a Chapter Consultant. Our goal was “RSVP,” Reliability, Scholarship, Value and Policy. We had several girls in Honor Societies and active around campus. We had a lot of fun at the second annual Greek Sing competition, with a skit that was a take-off on “Hee Haw,' complete with country versions of Kappa songs led by our own “Minnie Pearl.” By participating in Tri Delta's Greek Decathlonwe were able to donate our $200 winnings to Women's Resource Center in Radford. At Province Meeting in Arlington in March we were introduced to the new Keep Safe program on safety tips and awareness for women and won the Chapter Finance Award for the second year in a row, as well as Honorable Mention in Philanthropy.
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One of the challenges that the Zeta Chi Chapter had to overcome was the large group of new members in the Spring of 2013. The Chapter had never taken in so many new girls at once and it was difficult to get used to the larger pledge class size. The Chapter overcame this challenge by trying even harder to get to know one another, meeting with owl pals, bonding the pledge class of 25, and attending sophomore, junior, and senior events to get to know the girls in each grade even better. Activities put on by Standards in our Core Groups, like Jeopardy focusing on Kappa facts and history, brought the Chapter and the new girls even closer together.  
  
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The recent changes on the Marist College campus the construction of the new Marist academic music building. The construction included the addition of the following departments, offices, and committees: academic affairs, faculty affairs, student affairs, information technology, the Student Government Association, dining services, alumni, and the Board of Trustees.
  
'''Housing:'''
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The planning process for this project was guided by a keen awareness of and commitment to sustainable practices as evidenced by the inclusion in the project of features such as a vegetative roof and rain garden for storm water control and energy efficient lighting, windows, curtain wall, and appliances. The new academic building also includes: three classrooms, a band rehearsal hall, a choral rehearsal and recital hall, nine practice rooms, a string ensemble room, a music library, a piano lab, a computer lab, a conference room, and four faculty offices. There was also the addition of a new and improved dining hall where there are large wooden trusses that support the cathedral ceiling and plenty of seating to fit hundreds of more students compared to the previous cafeteria.
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The overall nature of the Zeta Chi Chapter is welcoming. We strive to welcome in girls that have dedication to academics and scholarship, leadership potential, and characteristics of a loving and caring friend that will make a memorable lifelong sister. Going from 14 Chapter Council Positions to 16, represents our passion to be a leader within the Chapter that can positively affect and bring together each and every sister. We love to have fun, involving ourselves within Chapter activities, and create memories that will last a lifetime.
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The Special Purpose Housing located behind the duckpond especially for fraternities and sororities will soon include a Kappa house, sponsored by the University. Our house is planned for completion in 1990, and will join Phi Kappa Sigma, Zeta Tau Alpha and Pi Kappa Alpha. Seven additional houses will be built including Kappa Alpha Theta, Pi Beta Phi, Delta Zeta, Delta Delta Delta, Delta Gamma, Sigma Chi and Kappa. An issue of The Key ran an article about the groundbreaking. Our new home will accommodate 36 Kappas and include large rooms for meetings and rush functions.
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==Highlights of Spring 2014==
  
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This semester, Spring 2014, our recruitment was "Kappa and the City!" We to highlighedt all of the great resources that Kappa has to offer internationally. Of course, we demonstrated to the PNMs the bonds of sisterhood and the strength of our sorority. Over the past year standards has created kore groups, passed around the hoots jar, supportive sister and celebrated sisters are announced each week, as well as weekly standards meetings to check in with the sisters. So far this semester we hosted a Kappa Kappaccinos sale in order to raise money for the Special Olympics and the Polar Plunge that we took apart in February.
  
'''Philanthropy:'''
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The Spring 2014 semester was filled with events to welcome the new pledge class, the Alpha Pi’s, and to unite our growing chapter of 111 women! Sisterhood events of the semester included supporting our sisters apart of the dance ensemble at the MCDE Dance show, we had some delicious chocolate fondue, relaxed before finals week with a yoga class and participated in an Off-Campus Safety Seminar. An especially exciting time, for our new members was the superhero-themed Greek Week! After a week filled with eating competitions, an adorable talent show, and a few sporting and field events, Zeta Chi was victorious and came in first place for sororities! This was a great time for new members to bond and show some Kappa spirit. Zeta Chi sent off our seniors with best wishes and few tears down by the river with a picnic.
  
A new philanthropy was started in 1988, “Chairs for Charity,” with 3000 people showing up for this huge version of musical chairs. Proceeds went to the American Cancer Society. In 1989 Zeta Mu was awarded the SPIRIT award at Zeta Tau Alpha's philanthropy event, and placed third in Phi Mu's Annual Greek Sing.
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The chapter was extremely active when it came to philanthropy and community service. Zeta Chi made teams for both Relay for Life and Autism Speaks Color Run. At Relay for Life Kappa raised $4,795 for the American Cancer Society and was the second highest fundraising team! Other events included participating in the Polar Plunge and selling Kappa Kappacchinos to support the Special Olympics, a bingo brunch at a local nursing home, and a Poughkeepsie cleanup with Marist’s fellow Greek organizations. For our spring RIF event, our philanthropy chair, Amera Labib, used her creativity and organized our first annual Kappa Kickball Tournament. Teams donated one book per team member, which was then donated to our reading carnival. The reading carnival, at a local elementary school’s after school program featured face painting, coloring, and each child went home with several books, a bookmark of their own creation and a smile on their face.
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==Highlights of Summer 2014==
  
'''Chapter Convention Awards:'''
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Zeta Chi's president Lauren Garner and advisor, Kait Smith attended the Kappa Kappa Gamma National Convention in Houston, Texas. Zeta Chi was very excited to receive honorable mentions in Panhellenic and Public Relations.
  
At the 1988 Convention in Boca Raton, Florida, Zeta Mu received the Efficiency Award and Chapter Finance Award.
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As the Fall Semester of 2014 progressed at Marist College, the Zeta Chi chapter continued to be as busy as ever. One challenge that our chapter had to overcome this semester was not holding recruitment and taking a new member class. However, the Zeta Chi chapter planned many events to keep the sisters involved and engaged! In September the Zeta Chi Chapter visited The Hudson Valley Animal Rescue Sanctuary (HVARS), which is a charity organization that specializes in rescuing and rehabilitating domestic wildlife as well as farm animals. The members of Zeta Chi helped with everyday activities such as cleaning, feeding, and playing with animals such as dogs, cats, and horses. Zeta Chi was also very active on the Marist Campus, having set up a booth at both the activity fairs and the parents weekend carnival.  
  
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Also in the month of September, Zeta Chi participated in their first sisterhood event, which was a private shopping trip to Francesca’s Boutique at the Poughkeepsie Galleria Mall. The girls found many cute owl, key, and fleur-de-lis items. During National Hazing Prevention Week, the Zeta Chi chapter along side other clubs at Marist College participated in a walk to raise awareness. All club members drew their hands on a large sign saying “These Hands Do Not Haze,” which is now hung up in the Champagnat (dormitory) breezeway.
  
==Highlights of the 1990s==
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In the month of October, the Zeta Chi Chapter participated in a philanthropy unity event with the other Greek organizations on campus called Habitat for Humanity Hut Awareness.  This involved each Greek organization building a hut with cardboard. At the end, the cardboard that was collected by the Greek organizations was then recycled by the Habitat for Humanity club. Zeta Chi continued their tradition of having a Founder's Day event with alumni on October 13th, 2014. The education chair and registrar chapter council member planned the event on the Marist College campus in the Student Center. Members and alumni sat with their big/little family members and each family made a scrapbook page to be included in the end of semester scrapbook. Kappa also planned a sisterhood event for apple picking and pumpkin picking. The girls of Zeta Chi drank apple cider, picked apples, and took cute fall pictures with some pumpkins.
  
From chapter’s History Report: Moving into our new house in 1990 was a unifying event, with 36 sisters living together and a central place where all sisters could gather. October 13 was the formal dedication of the house, on top of Initiation and Founders Day...three events in one day! The pledge class of 1990 combined their efforts and created the chapter flag carried by our delegate at the Biennial Convention during the Parade of Flags.
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In the month of November, the girls of Zeta Chi were very busy. The next philanthropy event that Zeta Chi participated in was their annual Time to Be Thankful event. The girls of Zeta Chi visited the Pines Nursing Home in Poughkeepsie. They played games with the patients there and painted their nails. Kappa participated in another sisterhood event, Boxing, taught by Ron Lipton. There were two sessions of girls learning self defense and it was a great work out for all of those who participated. Another sisterhood event the girls participated in was going to Bounce, which is a indoor trampoline park. Also in the month of November, Leadership Consultant, Jo, came to visit. Many girls met with her and showed her the Marist College campus and the Poughkeepsie area. Zeta Chi participated in their semi-annual philanthropy event, Reading is Fundamental. This year, Zeta Chi held a Newlywed Game event between bigs and littles from all Greek organizations at Marist. We were able to raise $260 for Reading in Fundamental. The following weekend, Zeta Chi visited a local Poughkeepsie Youth Mission Outreach program and held a carnival for the children to participate in that included face painting, basketball, crafts, educational games and of course reading! Both events were very successful. On November 20th, Zeta Chi celebrated its 21st birthday. The girls of Zeta Chi walked around campus in their letters showing their love for their chapter, posted on social media and took pictures with a fun photo frame.
  
We achieved our goal of “Unity through Committed Kappas” by enforcing a new attendance policy, stressing sister only events, having a positive attitude toward our sisterhood and by having fun together. The “Kappa's Kappa Award” was established as a Standards Award going each year to a member who exemplifies high standards in all aspects of her life.
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The first weekend of December, Zeta Chi held their annual Sapphire Ball at the Villa Borghese in Wappingers Falls. Each sister received a fun Kappa supperlative and enjoyed dancing the night away. Approaching finals week, we co-hosted a study break with Kappa Lambda Psi which included offering free coffee, hot chocolate and snacks to students in the library foyer. The weekend before finals, Zeta Chi held a holiday party which included a secret santa gift exchange and the first ever Kappa kash auction. Throughout the semester members earned "cash" for attending events and assisting chapter council members. They could then "bid" on various kappa goodies. The year was finished off with the election of a new Chapter Council.
  
In March of 1995 Zeta Mu hosted Province meeting in Roanoke. In the Fall we celebrated our tenth anniversary with a semi-formal dance on November 11, inviting alumnae to help us celebrate. We gained 30 new pledges in January formal rush and another 14 members in the Fall informal rush.  
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Zeta Chi holds their weekly chapter meetings in a Marist College classroom in Donnelly Hall. Zeta Chi does not have housing for its members.
In 1997 we hosted our first annual Oktoberfest philanthropy and welcomed a new sorority to campus in the fall of 1998, Alpha Chi Omega. Many of our members are in honor societies on campus.  
 
  
In closing out the '90s, Zeta Mu is active on campus, participating in the philanthropies of other Greek groups as well as our own. We recruit two pledge classes a year. In1999, we participated in a Christmas store sponsored by Salvation Army where families can apply to buy Christmas gifts. We worked hard to get the store ready, stocking shelves, checking parents while others watched the children. We began a new tradition and started the first Annual Kappa Klassic Golf Tournament, raising money for the Kappa Foundation and our local YMCA.
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==Highlights of 2015==
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'''Spring 2015'''
  
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Zeta Chi started the spring semester off with a bang! In February we held recruitment and our theme was Garden/Lilly for the first and third night. This year Panhellenic decided to show greek unity by having each sorority select a decade to theme their second night of recruitment. We were excited to represent the 1920s. Simultaneously we were also pleased to have Jo, our Leadership Consultant return to Marist to assist us with recruitment and improving our chapter. Though we did have to change the dates of recruitment and a couple weekly meetings due to the tremendous amount of snow we received, we were happy to welcome 20 new members into our sisterhood. We held a new member celebration in the student center which included taking pictures with huge Kappa Balloons and socializing. To get to know the new members better, we held a sophomore event at which the sophomores and new members decorated cookies and played just dance. We also enjoyed ice skating at the Hudson Valley Civic Center as one of our sisterhood events. As for Philanthropy we raised $100 for the American Heart Association at our bake sale. Three of our sister, Kelly, Colleen and Emily also jumped in the river at the Polar Plunge in Fishkill. This semester the Standards committee started choosing a Kappa Klassy Value of the Week. This value is chosen from a list of qualities that we compiled as a chapter that every kappa should uphold.
  
'''Housing:'''
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We started March off with a sisterhood event which was a private shopping trip at Francesca's in the Poughkeepsie Galleria. We also continued to hold events to welcome and integrate our new members into the chapter. These included a Junior ice cream sundae social with the new members, new member picture day (take pictures of new members around campus wearing letters) and big/little week. This year for big little reveal the bigs left socks in their littles room on the last day of big little week. Then at reveal the bigs wore matching socks and lined up with blankets covering them. The littles stood in front of the person with matching socks and the bigs let down their blankets to reveal themselves. At the end of March we were excited to officially welcome them into our sisterhood at initiation.
  
Morale was exceedingly high in 1990 due to our new house where we finally have a place to call home. In 1995 our house received some new carpet and wallpaper and reupholstered sofas, among the changes made by the House Board.
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In April we partnered up with Hoopla, a local frozen yogurt place, to donate some of every purchase one afternoon to the Kappa Kappa Gamma Foundation. Christina our President, Meghan our VPO and Katie our head of Standards donated this money when they attended the Province meeting in Hartford, Connecticut. We had a lot of sisterhood events this month. The first was a tye dye event where everyone got the chance to tye dye a shirt. The sisters of Zeta Chi also attended the semi annual dance ensemble show, Serendipity which a large number of our chapter performed in. As the weather started to warm up, we went on a morning hike at Ferncliff Forest. The trail had a huge observation tower that we nervously climbed to the top of to the amazing views of the Hudson Valley. Our Philanthropy events this month included making crafts and playing sports at the Children's Home of Poughkeepsie as well as participating in Relay for Life. At Greek Week, we fought hard at the field games, eating contests, and trivia and placed third for our efforts.
  
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In May Zeta Chi participated in their semi-annual philanthropy event, Reading is Fundamental. We held a Kappa Kickball event to raise money for RIF. Following the game we headed over to the Children's home of Poughkeepsie where we did crafts, distributed books, did face painting and plaid basketball with the kids. We were sad to bid our seniors farewell at our senior sendoffs. We shared memories, took pictures and celebrated all that our seniors have contributed to Zeta Chi over lunch. We certainly ended the year on a high note receiving the first ever Marist Greek Excellence Award.
  
'''Philanthropy:'''
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'''Fall 2015'''
  
New philanthropies in the early '90s were a Tug-of-War with various fraternities and sororities, Adopt a Grandparent program at a local Blacksburg nursing home. Other philanthropies include the Golf Classic, volunteering in the William Byrd House where children can participate in activities such as arts and crafts, a Fall carnival for inner city kids, selling Hershey's Kisses on Valentine's Day and many other events sponsored by Greek houses.
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Zeta Chi started off the new semester much smaller than last year, we had about 30 seniors graduate and we had 13 of our sister studying abroad all over the world. We did not hold fall recruitment, this was a challenge for us because the sixe of our chapter seemed so small this semester but we grew closer as whole because of it. We held our first philanthropy event of the semester the day of move in which was to help at the Children’s Home or Poughkeepsie’s 5k race and hand our water bottles to the runners. Even through all of the chaos of move in we were able to have some of our sisters represent Kappa at the race.
  
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We held our first sisterhood event in September at the Vanderbilt Mansion in Hyde Park, NY. We had a lovely picnic on the grass and gardens outside the historic mansion. It was a great way to catch up with sisters from the summer break and start the semester off strong. Shortly after that Marist held their activities fair and we represented Kappa to potential new members for the spring semester. Also in September we held a video shoot for our recruitment video that we will play during recruitment in the upcoming Spring. At Marist we are located right on the Hudson River, so we filmed down by the riverfront on a beautiful Sunday morning. Our footage will show the potential new members everything Kappa is about. We also participated in Marist’s Campus wide hazing awareness week. Greek council held an Instagram contest with the theme these hand don’t haze. The person with the most creative post and most likes won a gift card to a local restaurant. One of our fellow Kappa’s Kacey O’Brien won the prize.
  
'''Chapter Convention Awards:'''
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October rolled around soon and it was busy month for our chapter. We started the month off with another sisterhood event called “Paint Your Sisters.” This event was create to bnd our sisterhood together even close than it was before. All the girls who participated wore white t-shirts and sat in a circle. One girl would stand inside an they would touch a sister who inspires them most (etc.) with their painted hand. They went around a few times so every sister had handprints all over them, showing that they are loved by every single one of their sisters. We plan to make this annual event for our sisterhood. Shortly after that we had about ten of our members represent Kappa at taping of the Meredith Vieira Show in NYC, an alum from Marist reached out to Kappa to see if any girls wanted to see a taping of the show, we had a small number of girls go only because it was held during the week as classes were going on. It was great for Kappa to show support at the show.
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We held our Founder Day celebration two days before Founders Day to ensure that, as many of our sisters could be present at the event. Our education chairman. Meghan Gleason and our registrar, Cara Guerin planned the event. We ordered shirts for the vent, made some adorable Kappa themed desserts and host a raffle with great prizes for our sisters. Also to show some history of the chapter we traced our chapters big and little trees as far back as we could and put the trees on display at our event. All of the sisters loved the idea and are excited to see most of those trees grow in the springtime.
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Our second sisterhood event of the month was apple and pumpkin picking at a local farm. The girls of Zeta Chi drank apple cider, picked apples, and took cute fall pictures with some pumpkins.
  
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We held our first Philanthropy event in October; we hosted a baked sale to benefit breast cancer awareness and partners with another sorority on campus Kappa Lambda Psi. Together we raised over $400 donated to breast cancer research. On October 22nd and 23rd we held our annual RIF Fundraiser. On the 22nd we hosted a pasta dinner and all the proceeds from the dinner were donated to RIF and on the 23rd Zeta Chi went to the Family and Children Center of Poughkeepsie and held a reading carnival for the kids in the after school program there. All of the girls enjoyed reading and doing crafts with the kids, we could tell that it brightened up their day because they brightened up ours. Our last sisterhood event of the semester was a paint party. Zeta Chi met up and recreated a picture of a sunflower on our canvases. It was a great fun and creative event to have and everyone walked home with a new piece of artwork to decorate their dorm with.
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To start off November we had our first philanthropy of the month. Caitlyn Flynn, Philanthropy chair organized a workshop with a company called Bright Pink, they help educate women about their bodies and raise awareness for breast cancer and other women’s cancers. We also hosted a blood drive and partnered with another fraternity on campus, Zeta Psi for it. Many sisters donated and helped make sure all the people who donated had a good recovery. We had a few sisterhood event this month. One event that was not hosted by Kappa but many sisters take part in was the Marist College Dance Ensemble, one member of Kappa, Samantha Soprano is the president of the dance ensemble and she put on a great show with the talents of dancers from the entire school. Many other Kappas’ who are not in the Dance Ensemble went to the show to show their support. Another one of our sisterhood events we had in November was a mani pedi spa night. It was a great night to watch movies, paint our nails and hang with our sisters. As a senior sisterhood event we held a zumba class for all the seniors to participate in, it was a fun and healthy way for the seniors to get some of their last moments with their sisters.
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Once we came back from Thanksgiving break, the end of the semester didn’t seem too far away but we had plenty events planned before the end. We hosted a hot chocolate sale on campus to raise money for a gift to buy for the giving tree here at Marist. One of our last sisterhood events as yoga and it was a great way to distress right before finals started. On the December 7th, we held our annual Sapphire Ball at Villa Borghese in Wappingers Falls. Each sister received a fun Kappa superlative and enjoyed dancing the night away. All of the sisters looked beautiful for the event. To end the semester we held our Kappa Kash Raffle and Holiday party. Kappa Kash is a point system we have and every event a sister attends they will get points and those points get transferred into raffle tickets that they can use at the party to get Kappa themed gifts. Almost all the sisters walked away with a gift and we did secret Santa between the sisterhood. Everyone had a great time exchanging gifts and hanging out right before finals. The year was finished off with the election of a new Chapter Council.
  
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On campus Marist is just completing their new science building, which will be the home to the new science gradate programs and home to the biology department. Marist also began construction for a new dorming facility, which will house juniors and seniors.  The hall will have four single dorms to a suite and also have a gym and new dining hall in the building too. The president of Marist College also announced his retirement at the end of the spring semester for this year in 2016. He has done a great job building up Marist College to what it is now and Kappa is sad to see him leave.
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Our chapter is becoming relatively small due to the large amount of seniors gradating and the burden of not having fall recruitment due to our school’s policies. But we have prevailed and have become so close as a whole. We always support one another and try to attend other club events to support sisters who are in those clubs. Our chapter does not have a house but we always have fun meeting at other places on campus or other sisters suites on campus.
  
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What organization(s) has your chapter historically/traditionally raised money for, or donated hours to, in your community?
  
==Highlights of 2000-2010==
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We typically raise money for the Kappa Kappa Gamma Foundation and Reading is Fundamental.
  
From chapter’s History Report: Zeta Mu continues to be involved on campus in athletics, honor societies and other Greek philanthropies as well as our own. We support Pi Beta Phi's Links for Literacy, Alpha Chi Omega's Mock Rock supporting our former philanthropy, the Women's Resource Center in Radford, Va. We participate in Panhellenic's Oak Lane Trick or Treat where many of our members chaperoned local children around Oak Lane. Our intramural soccer team, in partnership with Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity, won first place in Virginia Tech's competition. We held sisterhood retreats, including one at Mountain Lake where we went paddle boating, hiking, went on a hayride, ending with a movie at the chapter house.
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Why did your chapter choose this organization(s) to support?
  
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Our chapter chose these organizations because we would like to focus heavily on two organizations versus more so that we can give more to each because if we spread ourselves too thin its difficult to give a lot to each organization. These two organizations represent Kappa Kappa Gamma to the highest and we appreciate everything they do, which is why we donate to them.
  
2005 was a stellar year for Zeta Mu. We were ranked first in grades for Spring semester out of all Panhellenic groups. Participating in many Greek and campus events, we placed first in Delta Gamma's Anchorsplash for talent and swimming and second overall. We placed second in Take Back the Night, a campus-wide service project. At Province Meeting, we received eight awards; for outstanding risk management, house board, outstanding adviser, outstanding advisory board, philanthropy, new member programming, recruitment, finance, scholarship and chapter excellence. During campus Greek Awards we received an award for Community Involvement and were inducted into the Academy of Excellence. In 2006, our Kappa Klassic Golf tournament raised more than $2,100 for the Kappa Kappa Gamma Foundation.
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==Highlights of 2016==
  
Tragedy struck on April 16, 2007, in two separated attacks, approximately two hours apart. Seung-Hui Cho killed 32 people and wounded 25 others before committing suicide. The massacre is the deadliest shooting incident by a single gunman in U.S. history. Sadly, Zeta Mu lost a sister, Caitlin Hammaren, 19, of Westtown, New York, a sophomore in International Studies/French. The outpouring from the Fraternity was amazing.
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Zeta Chi started off our semester with Spring Recruitment! We welcomed 30 new members to our biggest new member class, Alpha Sigma. To unite our growing chapter of 68, we had many sisterhood events including: roller-blading, hiking, supporting our sisters at the Marist College Dance Ensemble spring showcase, and "Paint Your Sisters". We also participated in Philanthropy events including: Relay For Life, Autism Speaks Color Run, The Polar Plunge, a RIF Dinner Fundraiser, and our RIF Carnival. Over the summer Zeta Chi's president, Colleen Gaughran, attended the Kappa Kappa Gamma National Convention in San Diego. We were excited to have won the Philanthropy Award for our RIF event for 2014-2016. As the fall semester of 2016 began, Zeta Chi planned for Fall Recruitment. We welcomed 12 new members. Together we participated in sisterhood events including: a picnic at the Vanderbilt Mansion, pumpkin/apple picking, supporting our sisters at the Fall dance showcase, cookie decorating, and celebrating Founders day together. We participated in philanthropy events including: a bake sale for the Socktober Drive, collecting Loose Change Jars and donating our proceeds to the Hurricane Matthew Relief Fund, having a Burrito Bowl RIF fundraiser, reading to children at The Children's Home of Poughkeepsie every other week, and having a RIF Carnival at The Poughkeepsie Youth Mission Outreach. We ended the semester with our annual Sapphire Ball!
  
In Spring of 2009, we hosted former Fraternity President Marian Klingbeil Williams who attended Fireside and Initiation, playing a key role in our ritual. Philanthropy activities included a Kappa Kaddyshack putt-putt to raise funds for Reading is Fundamental. Chapter challenges include attendance and academics, which the Standards and Academic committees are addressing with incentives in both areas.  
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The Marist campus is growing along with our chapter! A new science building was built as well as two new dorm buildings. Our chapter is continuing to grow larger. We now have 80 members.  
  
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Zeta Chi has raised money for The Kappa Kappa Gamma Foundation, The Grace Smith House, American Cancer Society, Reading is Fundamental, and Autism Speaks. We donated hours to The Children's Home of Poughkeepsie and The Poughkeepsie Youth Mission Outreach as well as volunteering our time at different events on campus.
  
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We chose these organizations to support because we love helping our surrounding Poughkeepsie community, our campus community, and the organizations that are fundamental to Kappa Kappa Gamma's philanthropy.  In addition, we choose to support those organizations that other Greek and non-Greek groups support on campus, such as the American Cancer Society and Autism Speaks in order to foster a sense of community at Marist.
  
'''Housing:''' 
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Zeta Chi holds their weekly chapter meetings in a Marist College classroom in Donnelly Hall; this academic building is central on campus and includes several lecture halls as well as a newly renovated student lounge and cafe. Zeta Chi does not have housing for its members.
  
In 2005 renovations to our house included carpeting the first floor after the flood  in December. The chapter room, kitchen and study have been re-tiled and the chapter room has all new furniture and accessories.
 
  
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==Highlights of 2017==
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During Spring Recruitment! We welcomed 30 new members to our chapter!  This was one of our biggest new member class, the Alpha Upsilon’s. To unite our growing chapter, we had many sisterhood events, including Galentine's Day, an ice cream social, apple picking, the Walkway Over the Hudson hike, paint our sisters, cookie baking, as well as supporting our sisters in the Marist College Dance Ensemble spring and fall showcase. We also participated in Philanthropy events, such as the Polar Plunge, Relay for Life, Up Till Dawn to support St. Jude’s, and bi-weekly reading buddies at the Poughkeepsie Children’s home. Our annual RIF events included a taco dinner and a RIF carnival. The chapter also donated the loose change jar money to the Kappa Kappa Gamma Foundation. We ended the semester with our annual Sapphire Ball!
  
'''Philanthropy:'''
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The Marist campus is growing along with our chapter! A new science building was built along with a new art building. Marist is also in the process of creating a new fashion building.
  
Greek Week, Reading is Fundamental, Relay for Life, Delta Sigma Phi's Egyptian Expedition, Pi Beta Phi's Hoopfest, Alpha Chi Omega's Mock Rock, Lambda Chi Alpha's Watermelon Bash, Boy's and Girl's Club, Oak Lane Trick or Treat.
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Zeta Chi has raised money for the Kappa Kappa Gamma Foundation, Reading is Fundamental, the Polar Plunge and St. Jude’s. We also donated hours to the The Children's Home of Poughkeepsie and Real Skills of Poughkeepsie. As a chapter we have also volunteered our time at different events on campus, such as Relay for Life.  
  
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We chose these organizations to support because we want to help our local community. We love to help the surrounding city of Poughkeepsie, our campus community, and organizations that are fundamental to Kappa Kappa Gamma. We also decided to participate in St. Jude’s Up Til Dawn to support our fellow sister who belong to this club.
  
'''Chapter Convention Awards:'''
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==Highlights of 2018==
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Zeta Chi started off the year with Spring Recruitment! We welcomed 35 new members to the chapter! This has been one of the biggest new member classes, the Alpha Phis. We had many sisterhood events that united the chapter as a whole, including a sisterhood hike, apple picking, movie night, flower pot decorating, an ice cream social and a holiday party. We also supported our sisters that were in the Marist College Dance Ensemble shows in the spring and fall. The chapter has participated in many philanthropy events, such as the Polar Plunge, St. Jude's Up Till Dawn, and bi-­‐weekly reading buddies at the Poughkeepsie Children's Home. We also held our annual RIF events which included a movie night, a newlywed game and the RIF Carinval. The chapter also donated money from the loose change jars to the Kappa Kappa Gamma Foundation. Zeta Chi also celebrated 25 years with a special Founder's Day event. We ended the year by celebrating our chapter with the annual Sapphire Ball!
  
==Highlights of 2011-2019==  
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==Highlights of 2019==
  
From chapter’s History Report: Scholarship, group honors/awards, traditions, special events, changes on campus or within chapter, overall nature of the chapter, chapter goals, challenges and how they were overcome, etc.:
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[[File:Zeta Chi 2019.jpg|thumb|Zeta Chi new member class 2019.]]
  
In 2012, Virginia Tech has eight colleges and graduate school; 65 bachelor's degree programs;• 150 master's and doctoral degree programs; 30,000+ full-time students; 16:1 student-faculty ratio; main campus includes more than 125 buildings, 2,600 acres, and an airport; computing and communications complex for worldwide information access; ranked 44th in university research in the United States and has an adjacent corporate research center.
 
  
Virginia Tech has approximately 25,000 students, 17% of which belong to the Greek system. There are 16 active sororities on campus, 12 of which participate in formal recruitment. Of the female population, approximately 13.4% are involved in Greek sororities. There are more than 30 fraternities.
 
  
==Highlights of 2013==
 
  
We started off our calendar year with a very successful recruitment by welcoming in 79 new members. We ended up initiating around 65. We received an award from our Panhellenic Council of the People’s Choice Sisterhood Award that recognized us for showing particular excellence in exhibiting the true bonds of sisterhood. Our chapter goals included building up a bigger public image on campus through social media and creating more alumni events. We accomplished our social media goal by creating a website and pinterest, promoting our twitter, and encouraging girls to take photos in letters on letter days. We accomplished our alumni goal by making plans for events that alumni could come to during football season.  
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Zeta Chi began the year with our Spring recruitment! We welcomed 35 new members into the chapter! The new pledge pledge class is named the Alpha Chis.  
  
One challenge we overcame was the large new member class we welcomed in on bid day. We were expecting around 60 girls to walk through the door, but when 79 came in we were a bit surprised. The high volume of new members forced us to watch our every penny to make sure that the new member all got their gifts and that they were properly educated in all things Kappa.  
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We had many bonding experiences this year including the sister events such as apple picking, board game night, a picnic by the Hudson river and many more. Additionally, we supported our sisters that are in Singers as well as Dance Ensemble. On April 6th, the Alpha Chis were initiated as official sisters of Kappa Kappa Gamma.
  
We participated in a variety of philanthropies that included Delta Gamma’s Anchorsplash, Alpha Chi Omega’s Mock Rock, Tau Kappa Epsilon’s TKE Week, GERMAN Club’s Goldrush, Phi Sigma Kappa’s Special Olympics. We placed first in both Alpha Delta Pi’s Safari Hunt and Pi Beta Phi’s Angels In the Outfield. We placed second in Beta Theta Pi’s Deck the Halls. Both Anchorsplash and Mock Rock had dances as a way to earn points toward winning their respective philanthropies and we had at least 50 girls participate in each dance.  
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At the end of the Spring semester, we had a Senior Send off brunch for all of the graduating sisters in our chapter.  
  
There have been a multitude of changes to our campus, most of them regarding the construction of new buildings and/or remodeling of old ones. One notable change to the football season was that of the school opening up season ticket sales to all members of the student body instead of just limiting it to sophomores, juniors, and seniors.
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For Philanthropy, we raised money for RIF by donating children's books as well as creating a hot cocoa sale to donate to Reading is Fundamental. We also had reading buddies throughout the Spring semester. In January, we had a karaoke RIF event where each sorority and fraternity donated children's books to the local library.
  
The overall nature of our chapter is that of a real sisterhood. One of the aspects that our new members have told us coming in is that they decided to go Kappa because they could really see that we actually got along with each other. The Zeta Mu chapter prides itself on being diverse and taking in members from all different majors and walks of life.
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This past year we had a few sisters attend the Leadership Conference as well as a sister attend the Leadership Academy.
 
 
 
 
==Highlights of 2014==
 
In the spring of 2014 the Zeta Mu Chapter welcomed 47 new members into our chapter. They were initiated on March 23, 2014. That semester we participated in XXX PHILAN and placed in XXX of them. We also held our PHILAN, Kaddy Shack in which XXX organizations participated.
 
 
 
During informal recruitment in the fall of 2014 we welcomed 8 new members who were initiated on November 8, 2014. During the fall we participated in XXXX PHILIAN and placed in XXX of them.
 
 
 
This year, with the change in the GPA requirement at Convention, we are hoping to get off of our academic focus plan. The change really helped us by being able to recruit really academically strong women. 
 
 
 
Recently the PHC executive board at Virginia Tech decided to change the timeframe for our Formal Recruitment process. In the past Formal Recruitment has been over the weekend before classes start and then also the first weekend after classes start. PHC announced Fall 2014 that Formal Recruitment for Spring 2015 would happen the week before classes started, enabling both sisters and new members to focus and get a good start on the semester. 
 
 
 
PHC also removed the GPA requirement for Formal Recruitment in spring of 2014 and onward. This allows all campus women the chance to participate in Formal Recruitment, but the drawback to this is the amount of girls participating with unacceptable GPAs.
 
 
Virginia Tech also offered a Legacy Report which at last check (2/13/2015) is stated to be from information collected in 2013. All subjects are listed as above average except for the conduct section marked 'violation'. This violation has since been removed for the past year and a half. This information has been made available to PNMs and there is also no specification on what the violation is or the severity which has been a bit problematic.
 
 
 
Over all the Zeta Mu chapter of Kappa Kappa Gamma is characterized on campus as a diverse group of collegiate women who are welcoming and sisterly to all who enter our doors.
 
 
 
Chapter for the Spring 2014 Semester was held in Hahn Hall North, a university owned building. Fall 2014 Chapter was held in Hancock Hall, also a university owned building. We do have housing where members have the opportunity to live together. The house is university owned with 16 rooms there is space for up to 32 girls at one time.
 
 
 
 
 
==Highlights of 2015==
 
  
Summary:
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In the Fall semester, we had our 150th Founders Day. Our chapter celebrated by holding a brunch for the chapter with photos and tokens of our chapters history.
  
Over the past year, Zeta Mu has done a lot. We’ve participated in a variety of philanthropies, had ourselves a new different internal philanthropy, and celebrated our chapter’s 30th anniversary. Our Academic committee did a lot of work as well, creating new programs to help the chapter, such as a group study event called Books Over Bars, and starting a team competition between varied groups of members of the chapter. Our house furthermore participated in a campus-wide competition for using the least amount of electricity during a three week period called Turn Down For Watt, and won, gaining $500 to the charity of our choice. We were also honored to have one of our members represent us on the Homecoming Court. We were also selected to participate in LEADToday by headquarters, which allowed us to not only get to know people outside of our immediate friend groups, but also really look forward and grow as a unit, something we all really enjoyed.
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For our 2020 celebration of Founders Day, we will hopefully have a larger group of attendance and welcome more alumni who can come to next year's Founders Day! The Zeta Chi Chapter ended the year with their annual Sapphire Ball!
  
When our leadership consultant came to visit in November, we learned about the different ways that every chapter of Zeta Mu does and uses Oh Patt, and learned how ours is particularly quick. As I said, we also celebrated our chapter’s 30th anniversary. We had a big weekend for the alumni, culminating in a celebration at our football stadium September 26th. Something we’ve traditionally prided ourselves on our sisterhood, but that is something we’ve worked on a lot this year.
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==Highlights of 2020==
  
At our first chapter of the fall semester, we had a whole chapter activity where we all let people know how much we cared and respected them, and for our fall mandatory sisterhood retreat, we split up into random groups and bonded with people we maybe had never had a chance to get to really know before. Our main internal philanthropy event in April was a new one, called Hit the Fleur, in which we hosted a swing dance competition. The first day we hosted a percentage night, but then our second night we had the swing dance competition, in which we taught them the basics, and then let them at it. We also started a new bond with an organization on campus called Soma Sasa, led by a student from Tanzania which runs a library there, hosting a percentage night with him in December. Also in December, we hosted an online trunk show with Trend Tribe.
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The Zeta Chi chapter of Kappa Kappa Gamma has had yet another amazing year, despite the circumstances, showcasing the graciousness and resiliency of our sisterhood. This year, we learned that being sisters is more than weekly meetings or bi-monthly events. We showed up for each other in multiple ways - both virtually and in person. Guiding our newest (33) members that were initiated virtually in the Spring, sending off our graduating seniors even though their time on campus was cut short, and maintaining the bonds of sisterhood throughout the rest of the school year were no small feats. Zeta Chi persevered, got a little creative, and worked our way through to make the best of this year!
  
While there were not really any major changes on our campus, the overall nature of our chapter is a wide variety of types of young women who are involved all over campus in different things. Not one is a copy of another, and no one feels like they have to achieve that.
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[[File:Zeta Chi CH 2020.png|thumb|A Zeta Chi, Marist, chapter event in 2020, before Covid hit and everything went virtual.]]
  
In the past we have always dedicated much of our time to the children at Prices Fork Elementary School. We host our Reading is Key event there every year, but beyond that we aim to be a point of contact any time the parents or teachers should need assistance. We have lent sisters to work at craft shows and various festivals at this school. We feel that by being so present, it’s a constant reminder that our organization cares for them and that our mission is not based solely in money.
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Jessica Gardinier won the Kay Beasley Martin 2020 Scholarship on behalf of the Kappa Kappa Gamma Foundation in February for excellence in academics. Our chapter was awarded the Rosa Parks Raising the Village Award by REAL Skills Network in Poughkeepsie in February 2020. This award was given to us for our bi-weekly Reading Buddies program and book donations. There is an annual gala held to celebrate the recipients of the Rosa Parks awards, as they all honor community icons. Both the 2020 and former Philanthropy chairs were invited to attend. Kappa Kappa Gamma Zeta Chi was lucky enough to be included!
  
Prices Fork is one of the most under served elementary schools in the county and is just outside of the reach of most other help from campus organizations, so we are happy to go out and do our part there.
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Zeta Chi was also awarded a Convention award this year. We were a recipient of the Gracious Living Award (Unhoused). Our amazing visit with LC Emma brought us all closer as a chapter. We consistently provide a warm and inviting environment for both sisters and guests both in and outside of campus.Kappa events quickly shifted to virtual events during the mid-spring semester and into the fall.  
  
==Highlight 2016==
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Virtual events were implemented to ensure everyone’s safety and included but are not limited to, meditation workshops, Netflix parties, virtual trivia, virtual Founder’s Day, and mental health checks with Behind Happy Faces. We made sure that events were accessible to everyone and would be enjoyed by all sisters. Mental health events were our top priority this semester because many of our sisters felt stressed and anxious due to the pandemic. Sisterhood involvement was supported and engagement was increased with trivia nights which allowed sisters to win a Kappa water bottle. Polls and Google Forms were sent out to gauge our chapter’s interests related to events.
  
This year we accomplished many things as a campus organization and as a sisterhood. We held a very successful new philanthropy event, held extra sisterhood events and continually worked towards contributing to the Virginia Tech community. With each day and the new challenges it brought each and every sister stepped up to improve themselves and our chapter as a whole.
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[[File:Zeta Chi CH 2020 2.png|thumb|Zeta Chi, Marist, transitioned to virtual events after Covid hit in March 2020.]]
  
From the beginning of the semester we had a strong focus on sisterhood and wanted to offer additional ways for stronger connections to form. We held a Super Bowl potluck, a “singles awareness day” brunch, a Halloween movie night and a Thanksgiving potluck, all optional in addition to our mandatory sisterhood event each semester. The house has facilitated much growth in sisterhood and as a place for all sisters to come and enjoy each other’s company.  
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This year we supported the KKG Foundation, RIF, and St. Judes. For the KKG Foundation, we participated in the founders day giving challenge by reaching out to friends,family, and alumni and posting Instagram bingo boards on our stories and we raised $783. For RIF, we partnered with Everrow and did an online fundraiser where people who used our code at their website gave us 10% back to donate to our philanthropy. Through this, we raised $31.60 and we also created more read-aloud videos that were sent to the Poughkeepsie Children’s Homeand Real Skills Poughkeepsie to replace the reading carnival we usually have in-person. For St. Judes, we created Kappa teams to help fundraising in preparation for the Marist event in the spring.
  
Virginia Tech will be gaining a sorority this coming spring, Kappa Alpha Theta. Many of our sisters are working to be Theta ambassadors and our Panhellenic delegate is working with Panhellenic council to help Theta’s recruitment following formal recruitment go smoothly.  
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This past semester the DEI committee was able to implement in-person and online learning with our Student Government DEI committee. We were able to let the chapter know about a Black Lives Matter Vigil run by the Student Government where we could take a moment as a community to mourn the lives lost not only over the past year but over the course of many years. Our committee made all of our sisters aware of where they could mail in their absentee ballots for the presidential election this year. We promoted DEI education for our Zeta Chi Chapter through Minerva, and also through our Marist’s Professors. The Student Government held a series of lectures over zoom addressing social justice, our college's history, reconciliation, and healing. We were able to inform our sisters about how Zeta Chi could raise money for a local organization called Nobody Leaves Mid-Hudson. This organization helps people in the Mid-Hudson area with affordable housing, immigrant justice, climate and energy justice, and more civic engagement. Lastly, we made our chapter aware of the MISA petition, which raised awareness for international students who were having issues with winter housing at Marist.
  
We participated in many external philanthropy events and enjoyed supporting so many great causes. In April we held a concert and cookout one night and a kickball tournament for our spring philanthropy event benefiting RIF. It was a great way to raise money and enjoy each other’s company; all the organizations that participated enjoyed the events. In the fall we held our reading is key event at the Blacksburg Children’s Museum, this change in venue from a school allowed us to reach a larger number of children and offer different activities.
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In the future, we hope to permanently implement DEI learning for new member education as well as already initiated members. As a committee, we think our whole chapter could benefit from a sensitivity talk regarding diversity, equity, and inclusion before 2021recruitment. During recruitment, we would like to ask our sisters if they would feel comfortable sharing their pronouns in person or over zoom to encourage potential new members to share their pronouns.
  
==Highlights of 2020s:==
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To celebrate the traditions of Founder’s Day while maintaining  COVID safety guidelines, we held our sesquicentennial celebration virtually through zoom this year. All active members, alumnae, advisory board members, and district team members were sent an invitation.We opened the ceremony with the virtual version of the Founder’s Day ritual provided by our district specialist. We also had two guest speakers that are Zeta Chi Chapter Alumnae, one of whom is a founding member of our chapter, and the other a former advisory board member.Following this, members who submitted their own “What Kappa Means to Me” shared how Kappa has affected their life and were able to ask questions to the Alumni who spoke to their own experiences. We wrapped up the event with an interactive trivia game that focused on the chapter’s members and the accomplishments we’ve achieved as a whole.
From chapter’s History Report: Scholarship, group honors/awards, traditions, special events, changes on campus or within chapter, overall nature of the chapter, chapter goals, challenges and how they were overcome, etc.:
 
  
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==Highlights of 2021==
  
'''Housing:'''
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The Zeta Chi chapter of Kappa Kappa Gamma has had a fantastic year! We have begun to make our way out of the virtual environment and back to socially distanced, in person meetings and events. Although the transition has been slow, we are so glad to see everyone’s beautiful faces and truly experience the bonds of our sisterhood to the greatest extent. Through the ups and downs of the pandemic and Marist going on lockdowns, we now, more than ever, appreciate the gifts of friendship and love that Kappa has brought to all of us. As we welcomed 34 new, amazing, members, we also said goodbye to our senior class who has guided the chapter through their time at Marist.
  
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[[File:Zeta Chi 2021.jpg|thumb|Zeta Chi hosts an online chapter event 2021.]]
  
'''Philanthropy:'''
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Although we have struggled through these many changes in the ways that we are allowed to meet and gather, we, as a chapter, have pushed on and made the best of it! Our sisters have excelled in every aspect as young women and bring great empowerment to the chapter. We were able to not only empower our chapter, but many organizations around us. As a chapter, we hosted many Instagram bingo board fundraisers for organizations such as the KKG foundation and National Brain Tumor Society. We also held a book drive for REAL Skills Poughkeepsie and sent videos of sisters reading children’s books to the Poughkeepsie Children’s Home and REAL Skills.
  
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It is our mission this year to continually bring a loving and caring environment to not only the sisters of our chapter, but to all we interact with. This is something that we pride ourselves on and hope to continue to do as a sorority, getting better and better each year. In order for us to do this in the virtual environment, before being back in person, we created many opportunities for the chapter to stay in contact and have fun. Some of the ways we did this was by hosting Netflix parties, meditation workshops, themed Kahoot parties, and virtual hangouts. As we slowly began to meet in person, our sisterhood events followed, such as pumpkin picking at our local farm, socially distanced big-little reveal, our annual picnic at the Vanderbilt Mansion and Sapphire Ball. We also made sure to offer both in-person and virtual events as the transition started, making sure that none of our members felt pressured to go outside of their comfort zone in terms of Covid-19, although all guidelines were properly met. We hope, as we move forward into the new year, that we are able to continue to strengthen the bonds between us and cherish the time that we have together as a chapter.
  
'''Chapter Convention Awards:'''
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This year we supported the KKG Foundation and St. Judes. We also raised awareness about the new philanthropy, focusing on mental health and well-being. For St.Judes, we, as a chapter, made multiple teams to compete to raise money for the foundation. These teams have not only helped to raise money, but also promote awareness about St.Judes’ cause and how people outside of the Marist community can show their support and make contributions. Additionally, we, as a chapter, sent cards to patients at St. Judes and connected with other organizations at the school to do the same. In regards to our philanthropy on mental health and well-being, we publicly made a statement addressing our support to those struggling with mental health issues and abuse, giving out resources to local and national helplines, as well as Marist resources, including the Title IX office. We have also promoted the use of Talkspace to our sisters and brought back mental health groups. These groups bring together the members of our chapter and give them a comfortable place for them to share what they might be going through and get the support they need. We also had a private session with Christi Lukasiak, who spoke on the importance of mental health, confidence, and the strength in being a young woman. Lastly, every week at our in-person chapter meetings, we passed around spare change jars, which raised money for both the KKG Foundation and Mental Health and Well-Being through NAMI.
  
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This year, we have been able to fully implement the DEI committee and chair as a permanent role! This has been a great experience for the chapter and has allowed us to connect more with other organizations as the school. Through this new role, we have worked hand-in-hand with the African Student Association of Marist, Marist Multicultural Affairs, as well as Marist Asian Alliance, among other groups that have hosted DEI events. As the committee grows, we plan to bring as much awareness to our sisters as possible, highlighting the areas for improvement and education among us.
  
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As a part of making our sisters more aware, the DEI committee consistently brought social issues to light during meetings and gave out many resources to get involved. The chapter also celebrated many important holidays and cultural events, such as Black History Month. Aside from social justice awareness, the committee also made the chapter away of absentee ballot eligibility and voter registration for their specific states and how important it is not vote in smaller elections, not just the presidential election. In order to not only help the members of our chapter become more involved and aware, but the entire Marist community, the committee submitted ample resources to be posted to our Instagram page, which reaches over 1,300 followers. In addition, our Instagram was used to promote various causes and important events and spread our message of acceptance of all people, regardless of their race, gender, or sexual orientation. We also promoted DEI education for our Zeta Chi Chapter through Minerva and through Marist’s Professors.
  
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As this committee has grown immensely from last year, we are proud to be leaders in Greek life at Marist in this role. We hope to continue to grow in this area and become more aware as a chapter in the coming years. Overall, the DEI position has greatly benefited our chapter and the Marist community as a whole, bring the school together in a positive way to focus on what is important.  
'''Note to Chapter Registrar:'''
 
Please refer to your chapter archives including chapter meeting minutes and back issues of The Key to fill in any gaps in the above historical highlights. If your chapter archives are not complete, please research your university library, campus newspaper and yearbook archives for newsworthy information about your chapter. Please double check your work for accuracy. Contact chapter Advisory or House Board members, local Alumnae Association members, or your Province Director of Chapters for assistance.  
 
  
Your efforts will ensure a complete and accurate history of your chapter for future generations to enjoy!
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To celebrate the traditions of Founder’s Day while maintaining COVID safety guidelines, we held our celebration socially distanced, with masks this year. All active members, alumni, advisory board members, and district team members were sent an invitation and invited to also join virtually. We opened the ceremony with a brief history of the founding sisters of Kappa Kappa Gamma, highlighting their amazing achievements and life stories. We also showed a video from Kappa Kappa Gamma headquarters, explaining the importance of our rich history as a sisterhood. Additionally, we had the senior class share their personal “What Kappa Means to Me.” We also served light refreshments and closed the ceremony with story sharing and fun facts about the fraternity, celebrating its inspiring history.

Latest revision as of 19:07, 12 April 2022

 

Zeta Chi
ZX
Zeta Chi.jpg
FoundedNovember 20, 1993 (1993-11-20) (32 years ago)
CollegeMarist College
LocationPoughkeepsie, NY
HomepageZeta Chi Homepage
Media related to Zeta Chi Chapter

Marist College, established in 1929 in Poughkeepsie, NY. Marist College was established in 1929 with the first college level courses offered that year. It was granted its charter as a four year college from the state of New York in 1946.


Zeta Chi founded November 20, 1993 Zeta Chi had 50 charter members and was a local sorority which petitioned KKG for colonization.

571 initiates (as of June 2018)



Zeta Chi on Social Media[edit]

The Zeta Chi chapter is very active on several forms of social media. We regularly post photos, upcoming events, fundraisers, and birthdays on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram. Zeta Chi also has a blog that sisters contribute posts to each several times each month. Topics that have been covered on the blog include study abroad experiences, big/little week, i-week, philanthropy events, and more. In addition to these social media handles, our chapter also appeared in Poughkeepsie Journal last semester for the RIF event we held at an after school program.

Twitter Facebook Instagram Tumblr

To visit our blog please visit KKGmaristcollege on the Wordpress website.

About Marist College[edit]

Over a century ago, the Marist Brothers came to New York's Hudson River Valley to train young men to continue the Brothers' vocation as great educators. What started as a seminary for the training of future Marist Brothers has developed into one of the leading colleges of the arts and sciences in the country.

Marist College is now home to approximately 4,100 traditional undergraduate men and women, 1,100 adult continuing education students, and another 1,000 graduate students. In 1947, the first graduating class of modern-day Marist College consisted of four Marist Brothers. Today, close to 30,000 alumni and alumnae call Marist alma mater. Marist has a proud tradition that laid the foundation for a state-of-the-art campus for students preparing to enter the work force of the 21st century.

Marist College follows in the tradition of great institutions like Harvard University and the College of William and Mary that were founded as seminaries and developed into independent academies of higher learning.

Marist can trace its roots to 1905, when the Marist Brothers purchased property and a house from Thomas McPherson along the eastern shore of the Hudson River in Poughkeepsie, NY. The Brothers named the building and property St. Ann's Hermitage. In 1908, the Brothers purchased the Edward Bech estate to enable the Hermitage to expand. The College purchased additional property to the north and east and now consists of more than 150 acres.

In 1929, college-level courses were first offered. In 1946, the State of New York granted the institution an official, four-year charter under the leadership of founding president Brother Paul Ambrose Fontaine, FMS. The Brothers set about to construct several buildings on the grounds of what was then called Marian College.

Dr. Linus Richard Foy became president in 1958 and became, at age 28, the youngest college president in the United States. Marian College became Marist College in 1960. In that same year, the mission of the College was broadened to include the wider community. Lay male students were admitted to pursue undergraduate studies. An evening division was also introduced to serve the educational needs of the surrounding communities.

Women were admitted to the evening division in 1966. In 1968, women entered the day division, making the College fully coeducational. Ownership of the College was transferred in 1969 to the Marist College Educational Corporation with an independent, predominantly lay board of trustees. Nonetheless, the Marist Brothers' legacy of service and striving for excellence continues to inspire and enrich the academic life of the College.


Highlights from 2000-2009[edit]

Chapter members were proud to have worked hard through diligent financial management to clear their debt to the Fraternity by fall 2004.

While the Zeta Chi chapter was small throughout most of this decade (25-31 members), they remained active on campus, promoting a positve impact of Greek life and sorority membership on the other students. They were consistent participants in Greek Week activities, winning the rope pull many times. There were 3 NPC groups on the Marist campus during this decade. In 2009 and 2010, Zeta Chi had their largest new member classes to date and grew their chapter total to 47 members.

Sisterhood events were an important part of the chapter’s activities. These included movie nights, picnics on the Hudson River, pasta parties, shopping trips, makeup parties, cosmic bowling and holiday dinners. Seniors completed a scrapbook page which was then placed in the chapter scrapbook as a part of the archives. Zeta Chi members were active in philathropy activities throughout the school years. These included Relay for Life, Easter Egg Hunt with the Poughkeepsie Children’s Home, Alex’s Lemonade stand, school supply drives, formal dress drive for Cinderella’s closet, Miles for Medals, breast cancer walk as well as activities supporting RIF and raising funds for the Rose McGill fund.

The chapter held a Mother-Daughter brunch, Father-Daughter BBQ, Senior Sendoff, Sapphire Ball and celelbrated Founders Day each year. Early in the decade, Founders Day was held in conjunction with Parents weekend, allowing their parents to learn more about KKG. Later in the decade, Founders Day was celebrated with the alumnae association at a local alumnae’s home


Highlights of 2010[edit]

In 2010, Zeta Chi was awarded Honorable Mention for Standards at Kappa’s Biennial Convention. Members were consistent recipient of Foundation Scholarships throughout this decade.


Highlights of 2011[edit]

Host of Alpha/Rho Province Meeting, NYU Installation, recognized for our new member program, Sisterhood and Morale Award, RIF event at a local children's center, top 10 fundraising teams for Relay for Life, second place in greek week, first successful off campus initiation event, exceptional growth in the chapter.

Campus: New Hancock Center for technology built on campus, as well as the underpass which connects the east and west sides of campus. Greek life is expanding rapidly, this past fall during informal recruitment, we gained 14 new members, which is a higher number than we have ever had for informal recruitment. Chapter: The chapter has grown phenomenally. We have 80 members now, where last year at this time we had around 45. Because of this, the chapter is very young. Most of our members are sophomores (more than half) and therefore most of those in leadership positions are very young - which has been great for our chapter!

The chapter struggles with the growth, but along with the growth, the chapter struggles with losing so many seniors in the coming year. We are overcoming these challenges by learning to accept the growth and understanding that growth is not a bad thing. We work hard to maintain the "small chapter feel" that we are all so used to.


Highlights of 2012[edit]

This previous year, the Zeta Chi chapter was very involved in philanthropy. Events we participated in included RIF events, Relay for Life, Marist Hunger Walk, The KKG Foundation, and The National Eating Disorders Association. This past spring Marist College's greek community also held their annual Greek Week olympic-style games, in which Kappa Kappa Gamma placed first out of four sororities. Individually, one of our members Robyn Crabtree made the 19th annual World Maccabiah Games and will be playing water polo for team USA.

Active member Amber also gave birth to healthy baby girl on December 19th! Unfortunately, the chapter also came together that same month after the Sandy Hook shooting, as two of our members were from the town and personally connected to many involved. Though a difficult time, the Zeta Chi chapter is a group of very supportive girls and has been helping the members to cope.

Marist College has been undergoing many changes on campus with the renovations to the Lowell Thomas Communications Center last spring and now the beginning of a major addition to the Student Center. Marist's student population is growing rapidly with each passing year, and so is the Zeta Chi chapter of Kappa Kappa Gamma. This past week we were proud to welcome 26 new members! The Zeta Chi chapter is a group of amazing girls who have all been very involved in making improvements to our chapter in areas including academics, philanthropy, and campus involvement.

Highlights of 2013[edit]

In the past year the Zeta Chi Chapter of Kappa Kappa Gamma has become an even closer group of girls through scholarship, leadership, and philanthropy. At the Province Meeting in 2013, Zeta Chi was honored with the Sisterhood and Morale Award. Two members of the Chapter, Lauren Garner and Deanna Clark, also received the Undergraduate Kappa Scholarship for 2013. We continued our tradition of attending the Marist Singers and Marist Dance Ensemble shows in order to support our sisters, while we also had fun at other sisterhood events such as ice skating, having a picnic at the Vanderbilt mansion, taking a self defense class, and having a Kappa Kindergarten day where we distressed with coloring and other fun, nostalgic activities. Philanthropy events that Zeta Chi had the opportunity to take part in included visiting a nursing home within Poughkeepsie, taking the Polar Plunge for the Special Olympics, having a Bake Sale for Relay for Life, running a RIF event at Clinton Elementary School reading to children, creating a reading carnival for Bridges to Hope tutoring program, hosting a Bake Sale for Breast Cancer Awareness, and donating Christmas gifts to children through participating with Marist’s Giving Tree program.

One of the challenges that the Zeta Chi Chapter had to overcome was the large group of new members in the Spring of 2013. The Chapter had never taken in so many new girls at once and it was difficult to get used to the larger pledge class size. The Chapter overcame this challenge by trying even harder to get to know one another, meeting with owl pals, bonding the pledge class of 25, and attending sophomore, junior, and senior events to get to know the girls in each grade even better. Activities put on by Standards in our Core Groups, like Jeopardy focusing on Kappa facts and history, brought the Chapter and the new girls even closer together.

The recent changes on the Marist College campus the construction of the new Marist academic music building. The construction included the addition of the following departments, offices, and committees: academic affairs, faculty affairs, student affairs, information technology, the Student Government Association, dining services, alumni, and the Board of Trustees.

The planning process for this project was guided by a keen awareness of and commitment to sustainable practices as evidenced by the inclusion in the project of features such as a vegetative roof and rain garden for storm water control and energy efficient lighting, windows, curtain wall, and appliances. The new academic building also includes: three classrooms, a band rehearsal hall, a choral rehearsal and recital hall, nine practice rooms, a string ensemble room, a music library, a piano lab, a computer lab, a conference room, and four faculty offices. There was also the addition of a new and improved dining hall where there are large wooden trusses that support the cathedral ceiling and plenty of seating to fit hundreds of more students compared to the previous cafeteria.

The overall nature of the Zeta Chi Chapter is welcoming. We strive to welcome in girls that have dedication to academics and scholarship, leadership potential, and characteristics of a loving and caring friend that will make a memorable lifelong sister. Going from 14 Chapter Council Positions to 16, represents our passion to be a leader within the Chapter that can positively affect and bring together each and every sister. We love to have fun, involving ourselves within Chapter activities, and create memories that will last a lifetime.


Highlights of Spring 2014[edit]

This semester, Spring 2014, our recruitment was "Kappa and the City!" We to highlighedt all of the great resources that Kappa has to offer internationally. Of course, we demonstrated to the PNMs the bonds of sisterhood and the strength of our sorority. Over the past year standards has created kore groups, passed around the hoots jar, supportive sister and celebrated sisters are announced each week, as well as weekly standards meetings to check in with the sisters. So far this semester we hosted a Kappa Kappaccinos sale in order to raise money for the Special Olympics and the Polar Plunge that we took apart in February.

The Spring 2014 semester was filled with events to welcome the new pledge class, the Alpha Pi’s, and to unite our growing chapter of 111 women! Sisterhood events of the semester included supporting our sisters apart of the dance ensemble at the MCDE Dance show, we had some delicious chocolate fondue, relaxed before finals week with a yoga class and participated in an Off-Campus Safety Seminar. An especially exciting time, for our new members was the superhero-themed Greek Week! After a week filled with eating competitions, an adorable talent show, and a few sporting and field events, Zeta Chi was victorious and came in first place for sororities! This was a great time for new members to bond and show some Kappa spirit. Zeta Chi sent off our seniors with best wishes and few tears down by the river with a picnic.

The chapter was extremely active when it came to philanthropy and community service. Zeta Chi made teams for both Relay for Life and Autism Speaks Color Run. At Relay for Life Kappa raised $4,795 for the American Cancer Society and was the second highest fundraising team! Other events included participating in the Polar Plunge and selling Kappa Kappacchinos to support the Special Olympics, a bingo brunch at a local nursing home, and a Poughkeepsie cleanup with Marist’s fellow Greek organizations. For our spring RIF event, our philanthropy chair, Amera Labib, used her creativity and organized our first annual Kappa Kickball Tournament. Teams donated one book per team member, which was then donated to our reading carnival. The reading carnival, at a local elementary school’s after school program featured face painting, coloring, and each child went home with several books, a bookmark of their own creation and a smile on their face.  

Highlights of Summer 2014[edit]

Zeta Chi's president Lauren Garner and advisor, Kait Smith attended the Kappa Kappa Gamma National Convention in Houston, Texas. Zeta Chi was very excited to receive honorable mentions in Panhellenic and Public Relations.

As the Fall Semester of 2014 progressed at Marist College, the Zeta Chi chapter continued to be as busy as ever. One challenge that our chapter had to overcome this semester was not holding recruitment and taking a new member class. However, the Zeta Chi chapter planned many events to keep the sisters involved and engaged! In September the Zeta Chi Chapter visited The Hudson Valley Animal Rescue Sanctuary (HVARS), which is a charity organization that specializes in rescuing and rehabilitating domestic wildlife as well as farm animals. The members of Zeta Chi helped with everyday activities such as cleaning, feeding, and playing with animals such as dogs, cats, and horses. Zeta Chi was also very active on the Marist Campus, having set up a booth at both the activity fairs and the parents weekend carnival.

Also in the month of September, Zeta Chi participated in their first sisterhood event, which was a private shopping trip to Francesca’s Boutique at the Poughkeepsie Galleria Mall. The girls found many cute owl, key, and fleur-de-lis items. During National Hazing Prevention Week, the Zeta Chi chapter along side other clubs at Marist College participated in a walk to raise awareness. All club members drew their hands on a large sign saying “These Hands Do Not Haze,” which is now hung up in the Champagnat (dormitory) breezeway.

In the month of October, the Zeta Chi Chapter participated in a philanthropy unity event with the other Greek organizations on campus called Habitat for Humanity Hut Awareness. This involved each Greek organization building a hut with cardboard. At the end, the cardboard that was collected by the Greek organizations was then recycled by the Habitat for Humanity club. Zeta Chi continued their tradition of having a Founder's Day event with alumni on October 13th, 2014. The education chair and registrar chapter council member planned the event on the Marist College campus in the Student Center. Members and alumni sat with their big/little family members and each family made a scrapbook page to be included in the end of semester scrapbook. Kappa also planned a sisterhood event for apple picking and pumpkin picking. The girls of Zeta Chi drank apple cider, picked apples, and took cute fall pictures with some pumpkins.

In the month of November, the girls of Zeta Chi were very busy. The next philanthropy event that Zeta Chi participated in was their annual Time to Be Thankful event. The girls of Zeta Chi visited the Pines Nursing Home in Poughkeepsie. They played games with the patients there and painted their nails. Kappa participated in another sisterhood event, Boxing, taught by Ron Lipton. There were two sessions of girls learning self defense and it was a great work out for all of those who participated. Another sisterhood event the girls participated in was going to Bounce, which is a indoor trampoline park. Also in the month of November, Leadership Consultant, Jo, came to visit. Many girls met with her and showed her the Marist College campus and the Poughkeepsie area. Zeta Chi participated in their semi-annual philanthropy event, Reading is Fundamental. This year, Zeta Chi held a Newlywed Game event between bigs and littles from all Greek organizations at Marist. We were able to raise $260 for Reading in Fundamental. The following weekend, Zeta Chi visited a local Poughkeepsie Youth Mission Outreach program and held a carnival for the children to participate in that included face painting, basketball, crafts, educational games and of course reading! Both events were very successful. On November 20th, Zeta Chi celebrated its 21st birthday. The girls of Zeta Chi walked around campus in their letters showing their love for their chapter, posted on social media and took pictures with a fun photo frame.

The first weekend of December, Zeta Chi held their annual Sapphire Ball at the Villa Borghese in Wappingers Falls. Each sister received a fun Kappa supperlative and enjoyed dancing the night away. Approaching finals week, we co-hosted a study break with Kappa Lambda Psi which included offering free coffee, hot chocolate and snacks to students in the library foyer. The weekend before finals, Zeta Chi held a holiday party which included a secret santa gift exchange and the first ever Kappa kash auction. Throughout the semester members earned "cash" for attending events and assisting chapter council members. They could then "bid" on various kappa goodies. The year was finished off with the election of a new Chapter Council.

Zeta Chi holds their weekly chapter meetings in a Marist College classroom in Donnelly Hall. Zeta Chi does not have housing for its members.

Highlights of 2015[edit]

Spring 2015

Zeta Chi started the spring semester off with a bang! In February we held recruitment and our theme was Garden/Lilly for the first and third night. This year Panhellenic decided to show greek unity by having each sorority select a decade to theme their second night of recruitment. We were excited to represent the 1920s. Simultaneously we were also pleased to have Jo, our Leadership Consultant return to Marist to assist us with recruitment and improving our chapter. Though we did have to change the dates of recruitment and a couple weekly meetings due to the tremendous amount of snow we received, we were happy to welcome 20 new members into our sisterhood. We held a new member celebration in the student center which included taking pictures with huge Kappa Balloons and socializing. To get to know the new members better, we held a sophomore event at which the sophomores and new members decorated cookies and played just dance. We also enjoyed ice skating at the Hudson Valley Civic Center as one of our sisterhood events. As for Philanthropy we raised $100 for the American Heart Association at our bake sale. Three of our sister, Kelly, Colleen and Emily also jumped in the river at the Polar Plunge in Fishkill. This semester the Standards committee started choosing a Kappa Klassy Value of the Week. This value is chosen from a list of qualities that we compiled as a chapter that every kappa should uphold.

We started March off with a sisterhood event which was a private shopping trip at Francesca's in the Poughkeepsie Galleria. We also continued to hold events to welcome and integrate our new members into the chapter. These included a Junior ice cream sundae social with the new members, new member picture day (take pictures of new members around campus wearing letters) and big/little week. This year for big little reveal the bigs left socks in their littles room on the last day of big little week. Then at reveal the bigs wore matching socks and lined up with blankets covering them. The littles stood in front of the person with matching socks and the bigs let down their blankets to reveal themselves. At the end of March we were excited to officially welcome them into our sisterhood at initiation.

In April we partnered up with Hoopla, a local frozen yogurt place, to donate some of every purchase one afternoon to the Kappa Kappa Gamma Foundation. Christina our President, Meghan our VPO and Katie our head of Standards donated this money when they attended the Province meeting in Hartford, Connecticut. We had a lot of sisterhood events this month. The first was a tye dye event where everyone got the chance to tye dye a shirt. The sisters of Zeta Chi also attended the semi annual dance ensemble show, Serendipity which a large number of our chapter performed in. As the weather started to warm up, we went on a morning hike at Ferncliff Forest. The trail had a huge observation tower that we nervously climbed to the top of to the amazing views of the Hudson Valley. Our Philanthropy events this month included making crafts and playing sports at the Children's Home of Poughkeepsie as well as participating in Relay for Life. At Greek Week, we fought hard at the field games, eating contests, and trivia and placed third for our efforts.

In May Zeta Chi participated in their semi-annual philanthropy event, Reading is Fundamental. We held a Kappa Kickball event to raise money for RIF. Following the game we headed over to the Children's home of Poughkeepsie where we did crafts, distributed books, did face painting and plaid basketball with the kids. We were sad to bid our seniors farewell at our senior sendoffs. We shared memories, took pictures and celebrated all that our seniors have contributed to Zeta Chi over lunch. We certainly ended the year on a high note receiving the first ever Marist Greek Excellence Award.

Fall 2015

Zeta Chi started off the new semester much smaller than last year, we had about 30 seniors graduate and we had 13 of our sister studying abroad all over the world. We did not hold fall recruitment, this was a challenge for us because the sixe of our chapter seemed so small this semester but we grew closer as whole because of it. We held our first philanthropy event of the semester the day of move in which was to help at the Children’s Home or Poughkeepsie’s 5k race and hand our water bottles to the runners. Even through all of the chaos of move in we were able to have some of our sisters represent Kappa at the race.

We held our first sisterhood event in September at the Vanderbilt Mansion in Hyde Park, NY. We had a lovely picnic on the grass and gardens outside the historic mansion. It was a great way to catch up with sisters from the summer break and start the semester off strong. Shortly after that Marist held their activities fair and we represented Kappa to potential new members for the spring semester. Also in September we held a video shoot for our recruitment video that we will play during recruitment in the upcoming Spring. At Marist we are located right on the Hudson River, so we filmed down by the riverfront on a beautiful Sunday morning. Our footage will show the potential new members everything Kappa is about. We also participated in Marist’s Campus wide hazing awareness week. Greek council held an Instagram contest with the theme these hand don’t haze. The person with the most creative post and most likes won a gift card to a local restaurant. One of our fellow Kappa’s Kacey O’Brien won the prize.

October rolled around soon and it was busy month for our chapter. We started the month off with another sisterhood event called “Paint Your Sisters.” This event was create to bnd our sisterhood together even close than it was before. All the girls who participated wore white t-shirts and sat in a circle. One girl would stand inside an they would touch a sister who inspires them most (etc.) with their painted hand. They went around a few times so every sister had handprints all over them, showing that they are loved by every single one of their sisters. We plan to make this annual event for our sisterhood. Shortly after that we had about ten of our members represent Kappa at taping of the Meredith Vieira Show in NYC, an alum from Marist reached out to Kappa to see if any girls wanted to see a taping of the show, we had a small number of girls go only because it was held during the week as classes were going on. It was great for Kappa to show support at the show.

We held our Founder Day celebration two days before Founders Day to ensure that, as many of our sisters could be present at the event. Our education chairman. Meghan Gleason and our registrar, Cara Guerin planned the event. We ordered shirts for the vent, made some adorable Kappa themed desserts and host a raffle with great prizes for our sisters. Also to show some history of the chapter we traced our chapters big and little trees as far back as we could and put the trees on display at our event. All of the sisters loved the idea and are excited to see most of those trees grow in the springtime.

Our second sisterhood event of the month was apple and pumpkin picking at a local farm. The girls of Zeta Chi drank apple cider, picked apples, and took cute fall pictures with some pumpkins.

We held our first Philanthropy event in October; we hosted a baked sale to benefit breast cancer awareness and partners with another sorority on campus Kappa Lambda Psi. Together we raised over $400 donated to breast cancer research. On October 22nd and 23rd we held our annual RIF Fundraiser. On the 22nd we hosted a pasta dinner and all the proceeds from the dinner were donated to RIF and on the 23rd Zeta Chi went to the Family and Children Center of Poughkeepsie and held a reading carnival for the kids in the after school program there. All of the girls enjoyed reading and doing crafts with the kids, we could tell that it brightened up their day because they brightened up ours. Our last sisterhood event of the semester was a paint party. Zeta Chi met up and recreated a picture of a sunflower on our canvases. It was a great fun and creative event to have and everyone walked home with a new piece of artwork to decorate their dorm with.

To start off November we had our first philanthropy of the month. Caitlyn Flynn, Philanthropy chair organized a workshop with a company called Bright Pink, they help educate women about their bodies and raise awareness for breast cancer and other women’s cancers. We also hosted a blood drive and partnered with another fraternity on campus, Zeta Psi for it. Many sisters donated and helped make sure all the people who donated had a good recovery. We had a few sisterhood event this month. One event that was not hosted by Kappa but many sisters take part in was the Marist College Dance Ensemble, one member of Kappa, Samantha Soprano is the president of the dance ensemble and she put on a great show with the talents of dancers from the entire school. Many other Kappas’ who are not in the Dance Ensemble went to the show to show their support. Another one of our sisterhood events we had in November was a mani pedi spa night. It was a great night to watch movies, paint our nails and hang with our sisters. As a senior sisterhood event we held a zumba class for all the seniors to participate in, it was a fun and healthy way for the seniors to get some of their last moments with their sisters.

Once we came back from Thanksgiving break, the end of the semester didn’t seem too far away but we had plenty events planned before the end. We hosted a hot chocolate sale on campus to raise money for a gift to buy for the giving tree here at Marist. One of our last sisterhood events as yoga and it was a great way to distress right before finals started. On the December 7th, we held our annual Sapphire Ball at Villa Borghese in Wappingers Falls. Each sister received a fun Kappa superlative and enjoyed dancing the night away. All of the sisters looked beautiful for the event. To end the semester we held our Kappa Kash Raffle and Holiday party. Kappa Kash is a point system we have and every event a sister attends they will get points and those points get transferred into raffle tickets that they can use at the party to get Kappa themed gifts. Almost all the sisters walked away with a gift and we did secret Santa between the sisterhood. Everyone had a great time exchanging gifts and hanging out right before finals. The year was finished off with the election of a new Chapter Council.

On campus Marist is just completing their new science building, which will be the home to the new science gradate programs and home to the biology department. Marist also began construction for a new dorming facility, which will house juniors and seniors. The hall will have four single dorms to a suite and also have a gym and new dining hall in the building too. The president of Marist College also announced his retirement at the end of the spring semester for this year in 2016. He has done a great job building up Marist College to what it is now and Kappa is sad to see him leave.

Our chapter is becoming relatively small due to the large amount of seniors gradating and the burden of not having fall recruitment due to our school’s policies. But we have prevailed and have become so close as a whole. We always support one another and try to attend other club events to support sisters who are in those clubs. Our chapter does not have a house but we always have fun meeting at other places on campus or other sisters suites on campus.

What organization(s) has your chapter historically/traditionally raised money for, or donated hours to, in your community?

We typically raise money for the Kappa Kappa Gamma Foundation and Reading is Fundamental.

Why did your chapter choose this organization(s) to support?

Our chapter chose these organizations because we would like to focus heavily on two organizations versus more so that we can give more to each because if we spread ourselves too thin its difficult to give a lot to each organization. These two organizations represent Kappa Kappa Gamma to the highest and we appreciate everything they do, which is why we donate to them.

Highlights of 2016[edit]

Zeta Chi started off our semester with Spring Recruitment! We welcomed 30 new members to our biggest new member class, Alpha Sigma. To unite our growing chapter of 68, we had many sisterhood events including: roller-blading, hiking, supporting our sisters at the Marist College Dance Ensemble spring showcase, and "Paint Your Sisters". We also participated in Philanthropy events including: Relay For Life, Autism Speaks Color Run, The Polar Plunge, a RIF Dinner Fundraiser, and our RIF Carnival. Over the summer Zeta Chi's president, Colleen Gaughran, attended the Kappa Kappa Gamma National Convention in San Diego. We were excited to have won the Philanthropy Award for our RIF event for 2014-2016. As the fall semester of 2016 began, Zeta Chi planned for Fall Recruitment. We welcomed 12 new members. Together we participated in sisterhood events including: a picnic at the Vanderbilt Mansion, pumpkin/apple picking, supporting our sisters at the Fall dance showcase, cookie decorating, and celebrating Founders day together. We participated in philanthropy events including: a bake sale for the Socktober Drive, collecting Loose Change Jars and donating our proceeds to the Hurricane Matthew Relief Fund, having a Burrito Bowl RIF fundraiser, reading to children at The Children's Home of Poughkeepsie every other week, and having a RIF Carnival at The Poughkeepsie Youth Mission Outreach. We ended the semester with our annual Sapphire Ball!

The Marist campus is growing along with our chapter! A new science building was built as well as two new dorm buildings. Our chapter is continuing to grow larger. We now have 80 members.

Zeta Chi has raised money for The Kappa Kappa Gamma Foundation, The Grace Smith House, American Cancer Society, Reading is Fundamental, and Autism Speaks. We donated hours to The Children's Home of Poughkeepsie and The Poughkeepsie Youth Mission Outreach as well as volunteering our time at different events on campus.

We chose these organizations to support because we love helping our surrounding Poughkeepsie community, our campus community, and the organizations that are fundamental to Kappa Kappa Gamma's philanthropy. In addition, we choose to support those organizations that other Greek and non-Greek groups support on campus, such as the American Cancer Society and Autism Speaks in order to foster a sense of community at Marist.

Zeta Chi holds their weekly chapter meetings in a Marist College classroom in Donnelly Hall; this academic building is central on campus and includes several lecture halls as well as a newly renovated student lounge and cafe. Zeta Chi does not have housing for its members.


Highlights of 2017[edit]

During Spring Recruitment! We welcomed 30 new members to our chapter! This was one of our biggest new member class, the Alpha Upsilon’s. To unite our growing chapter, we had many sisterhood events, including Galentine's Day, an ice cream social, apple picking, the Walkway Over the Hudson hike, paint our sisters, cookie baking, as well as supporting our sisters in the Marist College Dance Ensemble spring and fall showcase. We also participated in Philanthropy events, such as the Polar Plunge, Relay for Life, Up Till Dawn to support St. Jude’s, and bi-weekly reading buddies at the Poughkeepsie Children’s home. Our annual RIF events included a taco dinner and a RIF carnival. The chapter also donated the loose change jar money to the Kappa Kappa Gamma Foundation. We ended the semester with our annual Sapphire Ball!

The Marist campus is growing along with our chapter! A new science building was built along with a new art building. Marist is also in the process of creating a new fashion building.

Zeta Chi has raised money for the Kappa Kappa Gamma Foundation, Reading is Fundamental, the Polar Plunge and St. Jude’s. We also donated hours to the The Children's Home of Poughkeepsie and Real Skills of Poughkeepsie. As a chapter we have also volunteered our time at different events on campus, such as Relay for Life.

We chose these organizations to support because we want to help our local community. We love to help the surrounding city of Poughkeepsie, our campus community, and organizations that are fundamental to Kappa Kappa Gamma. We also decided to participate in St. Jude’s Up Til Dawn to support our fellow sister who belong to this club.

Highlights of 2018[edit]

Zeta Chi started off the year with Spring Recruitment! We welcomed 35 new members to the chapter! This has been one of the biggest new member classes, the Alpha Phis. We had many sisterhood events that united the chapter as a whole, including a sisterhood hike, apple picking, movie night, flower pot decorating, an ice cream social and a holiday party. We also supported our sisters that were in the Marist College Dance Ensemble shows in the spring and fall. The chapter has participated in many philanthropy events, such as the Polar Plunge, St. Jude's Up Till Dawn, and bi-­‐weekly reading buddies at the Poughkeepsie Children's Home. We also held our annual RIF events which included a movie night, a newlywed game and the RIF Carinval. The chapter also donated money from the loose change jars to the Kappa Kappa Gamma Foundation. Zeta Chi also celebrated 25 years with a special Founder's Day event. We ended the year by celebrating our chapter with the annual Sapphire Ball!

Highlights of 2019[edit]

Zeta Chi new member class 2019.



Zeta Chi began the year with our Spring recruitment! We welcomed 35 new members into the chapter! The new pledge pledge class is named the Alpha Chis.

We had many bonding experiences this year including the sister events such as apple picking, board game night, a picnic by the Hudson river and many more. Additionally, we supported our sisters that are in Singers as well as Dance Ensemble. On April 6th, the Alpha Chis were initiated as official sisters of Kappa Kappa Gamma.

At the end of the Spring semester, we had a Senior Send off brunch for all of the graduating sisters in our chapter.

For Philanthropy, we raised money for RIF by donating children's books as well as creating a hot cocoa sale to donate to Reading is Fundamental. We also had reading buddies throughout the Spring semester. In January, we had a karaoke RIF event where each sorority and fraternity donated children's books to the local library.

This past year we had a few sisters attend the Leadership Conference as well as a sister attend the Leadership Academy.

In the Fall semester, we had our 150th Founders Day. Our chapter celebrated by holding a brunch for the chapter with photos and tokens of our chapters history.

For our 2020 celebration of Founders Day, we will hopefully have a larger group of attendance and welcome more alumni who can come to next year's Founders Day! The Zeta Chi Chapter ended the year with their annual Sapphire Ball!

Highlights of 2020[edit]

The Zeta Chi chapter of Kappa Kappa Gamma has had yet another amazing year, despite the circumstances, showcasing the graciousness and resiliency of our sisterhood. This year, we learned that being sisters is more than weekly meetings or bi-monthly events. We showed up for each other in multiple ways - both virtually and in person. Guiding our newest (33) members that were initiated virtually in the Spring, sending off our graduating seniors even though their time on campus was cut short, and maintaining the bonds of sisterhood throughout the rest of the school year were no small feats. Zeta Chi persevered, got a little creative, and worked our way through to make the best of this year!

A Zeta Chi, Marist, chapter event in 2020, before Covid hit and everything went virtual.

Jessica Gardinier won the Kay Beasley Martin 2020 Scholarship on behalf of the Kappa Kappa Gamma Foundation in February for excellence in academics. Our chapter was awarded the Rosa Parks Raising the Village Award by REAL Skills Network in Poughkeepsie in February 2020. This award was given to us for our bi-weekly Reading Buddies program and book donations. There is an annual gala held to celebrate the recipients of the Rosa Parks awards, as they all honor community icons. Both the 2020 and former Philanthropy chairs were invited to attend. Kappa Kappa Gamma Zeta Chi was lucky enough to be included!

Zeta Chi was also awarded a Convention award this year. We were a recipient of the Gracious Living Award (Unhoused). Our amazing visit with LC Emma brought us all closer as a chapter. We consistently provide a warm and inviting environment for both sisters and guests both in and outside of campus.Kappa events quickly shifted to virtual events during the mid-spring semester and into the fall.

Virtual events were implemented to ensure everyone’s safety and included but are not limited to, meditation workshops, Netflix parties, virtual trivia, virtual Founder’s Day, and mental health checks with Behind Happy Faces. We made sure that events were accessible to everyone and would be enjoyed by all sisters. Mental health events were our top priority this semester because many of our sisters felt stressed and anxious due to the pandemic. Sisterhood involvement was supported and engagement was increased with trivia nights which allowed sisters to win a Kappa water bottle. Polls and Google Forms were sent out to gauge our chapter’s interests related to events.

Zeta Chi, Marist, transitioned to virtual events after Covid hit in March 2020.

This year we supported the KKG Foundation, RIF, and St. Judes. For the KKG Foundation, we participated in the founders day giving challenge by reaching out to friends,family, and alumni and posting Instagram bingo boards on our stories and we raised $783. For RIF, we partnered with Everrow and did an online fundraiser where people who used our code at their website gave us 10% back to donate to our philanthropy. Through this, we raised $31.60 and we also created more read-aloud videos that were sent to the Poughkeepsie Children’s Homeand Real Skills Poughkeepsie to replace the reading carnival we usually have in-person. For St. Judes, we created Kappa teams to help fundraising in preparation for the Marist event in the spring.

This past semester the DEI committee was able to implement in-person and online learning with our Student Government DEI committee. We were able to let the chapter know about a Black Lives Matter Vigil run by the Student Government where we could take a moment as a community to mourn the lives lost not only over the past year but over the course of many years. Our committee made all of our sisters aware of where they could mail in their absentee ballots for the presidential election this year. We promoted DEI education for our Zeta Chi Chapter through Minerva, and also through our Marist’s Professors. The Student Government held a series of lectures over zoom addressing social justice, our college's history, reconciliation, and healing. We were able to inform our sisters about how Zeta Chi could raise money for a local organization called Nobody Leaves Mid-Hudson. This organization helps people in the Mid-Hudson area with affordable housing, immigrant justice, climate and energy justice, and more civic engagement. Lastly, we made our chapter aware of the MISA petition, which raised awareness for international students who were having issues with winter housing at Marist.

In the future, we hope to permanently implement DEI learning for new member education as well as already initiated members. As a committee, we think our whole chapter could benefit from a sensitivity talk regarding diversity, equity, and inclusion before 2021recruitment. During recruitment, we would like to ask our sisters if they would feel comfortable sharing their pronouns in person or over zoom to encourage potential new members to share their pronouns.

To celebrate the traditions of Founder’s Day while maintaining COVID safety guidelines, we held our sesquicentennial celebration virtually through zoom this year. All active members, alumnae, advisory board members, and district team members were sent an invitation.We opened the ceremony with the virtual version of the Founder’s Day ritual provided by our district specialist. We also had two guest speakers that are Zeta Chi Chapter Alumnae, one of whom is a founding member of our chapter, and the other a former advisory board member.Following this, members who submitted their own “What Kappa Means to Me” shared how Kappa has affected their life and were able to ask questions to the Alumni who spoke to their own experiences. We wrapped up the event with an interactive trivia game that focused on the chapter’s members and the accomplishments we’ve achieved as a whole.

Highlights of 2021[edit]

The Zeta Chi chapter of Kappa Kappa Gamma has had a fantastic year! We have begun to make our way out of the virtual environment and back to socially distanced, in person meetings and events. Although the transition has been slow, we are so glad to see everyone’s beautiful faces and truly experience the bonds of our sisterhood to the greatest extent. Through the ups and downs of the pandemic and Marist going on lockdowns, we now, more than ever, appreciate the gifts of friendship and love that Kappa has brought to all of us. As we welcomed 34 new, amazing, members, we also said goodbye to our senior class who has guided the chapter through their time at Marist.

Zeta Chi hosts an online chapter event 2021.

Although we have struggled through these many changes in the ways that we are allowed to meet and gather, we, as a chapter, have pushed on and made the best of it! Our sisters have excelled in every aspect as young women and bring great empowerment to the chapter. We were able to not only empower our chapter, but many organizations around us. As a chapter, we hosted many Instagram bingo board fundraisers for organizations such as the KKG foundation and National Brain Tumor Society. We also held a book drive for REAL Skills Poughkeepsie and sent videos of sisters reading children’s books to the Poughkeepsie Children’s Home and REAL Skills.

It is our mission this year to continually bring a loving and caring environment to not only the sisters of our chapter, but to all we interact with. This is something that we pride ourselves on and hope to continue to do as a sorority, getting better and better each year. In order for us to do this in the virtual environment, before being back in person, we created many opportunities for the chapter to stay in contact and have fun. Some of the ways we did this was by hosting Netflix parties, meditation workshops, themed Kahoot parties, and virtual hangouts. As we slowly began to meet in person, our sisterhood events followed, such as pumpkin picking at our local farm, socially distanced big-little reveal, our annual picnic at the Vanderbilt Mansion and Sapphire Ball. We also made sure to offer both in-person and virtual events as the transition started, making sure that none of our members felt pressured to go outside of their comfort zone in terms of Covid-19, although all guidelines were properly met. We hope, as we move forward into the new year, that we are able to continue to strengthen the bonds between us and cherish the time that we have together as a chapter.

This year we supported the KKG Foundation and St. Judes. We also raised awareness about the new philanthropy, focusing on mental health and well-being. For St.Judes, we, as a chapter, made multiple teams to compete to raise money for the foundation. These teams have not only helped to raise money, but also promote awareness about St.Judes’ cause and how people outside of the Marist community can show their support and make contributions. Additionally, we, as a chapter, sent cards to patients at St. Judes and connected with other organizations at the school to do the same. In regards to our philanthropy on mental health and well-being, we publicly made a statement addressing our support to those struggling with mental health issues and abuse, giving out resources to local and national helplines, as well as Marist resources, including the Title IX office. We have also promoted the use of Talkspace to our sisters and brought back mental health groups. These groups bring together the members of our chapter and give them a comfortable place for them to share what they might be going through and get the support they need. We also had a private session with Christi Lukasiak, who spoke on the importance of mental health, confidence, and the strength in being a young woman. Lastly, every week at our in-person chapter meetings, we passed around spare change jars, which raised money for both the KKG Foundation and Mental Health and Well-Being through NAMI.

This year, we have been able to fully implement the DEI committee and chair as a permanent role! This has been a great experience for the chapter and has allowed us to connect more with other organizations as the school. Through this new role, we have worked hand-in-hand with the African Student Association of Marist, Marist Multicultural Affairs, as well as Marist Asian Alliance, among other groups that have hosted DEI events. As the committee grows, we plan to bring as much awareness to our sisters as possible, highlighting the areas for improvement and education among us.

As a part of making our sisters more aware, the DEI committee consistently brought social issues to light during meetings and gave out many resources to get involved. The chapter also celebrated many important holidays and cultural events, such as Black History Month. Aside from social justice awareness, the committee also made the chapter away of absentee ballot eligibility and voter registration for their specific states and how important it is not vote in smaller elections, not just the presidential election. In order to not only help the members of our chapter become more involved and aware, but the entire Marist community, the committee submitted ample resources to be posted to our Instagram page, which reaches over 1,300 followers. In addition, our Instagram was used to promote various causes and important events and spread our message of acceptance of all people, regardless of their race, gender, or sexual orientation. We also promoted DEI education for our Zeta Chi Chapter through Minerva and through Marist’s Professors.

As this committee has grown immensely from last year, we are proud to be leaders in Greek life at Marist in this role. We hope to continue to grow in this area and become more aware as a chapter in the coming years. Overall, the DEI position has greatly benefited our chapter and the Marist community as a whole, bring the school together in a positive way to focus on what is important.

To celebrate the traditions of Founder’s Day while maintaining COVID safety guidelines, we held our celebration socially distanced, with masks this year. All active members, alumni, advisory board members, and district team members were sent an invitation and invited to also join virtually. We opened the ceremony with a brief history of the founding sisters of Kappa Kappa Gamma, highlighting their amazing achievements and life stories. We also showed a video from Kappa Kappa Gamma headquarters, explaining the importance of our rich history as a sisterhood. Additionally, we had the senior class share their personal “What Kappa Means to Me.” We also served light refreshments and closed the ceremony with story sharing and fun facts about the fraternity, celebrating its inspiring history.