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The Official Web Site of the Gamma Epsilon Chapter of Zeta Beta Tau
Fraternity at Marshall University, Huntington WV
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The History of Gamma Epsilon
When Kieve Pearlman,
Paul Mayer and Ken Cohen started what would much later become Gamma
Epsilon, they had no idea what would follow. Maybe surprising to some,
the earliest formation of the group was a knee-jerk reaction to a
perceived injustice. They did not think the world should be
unfair or that people would be cruel to each other, nor that they
should just sit back and do nothing. Inaction simply was not an
option for a puny few, untested freshmen - as one of the three liked to
described themselves.
The precipitating event for what followed was not the stuff of legends.
The three friends went to a rush party for another
fraternity, although
none intended to join. They felt that fraternities were elitist
groups, wasted time, participated in crass rituals including hazing,
and could not justify the expense. In other words,
fraternity rush was purely for entertainment.
And good times were, indeed, had by all until one fraternity member
informed them that while they were welcome to the party, they could not
join the fraternity -- they were Jewish. They were told that
“fraternities at Marshall did not take blacks,
Jews or five eyed
Martians.”
In retrospect, they are not quite sure about the last
part of that claim since the room was noisy and they probably lost
concentration after the first two non-qualifiers. However, there
were two surprises in this rush policy: first they found out that
they must have “looked Jewish” and second that anyone really gave a
damn.
Moral outrage in the abstract is one thing, but having injustice
crammed right into gullet gives real taste to this sense of evil.
Liquid vitamins unquestionably fortified their courage that night, but
they also decided they had to do something.
While a few individuals can be important, real strength comes in
numbers working together to accomplish common goals. These three
guys were not tall, good looking, rich, or brilliant. Hell, they were
not even the right religion!
But they had a social consciousness
which said “this cannot stand." They would not allow a corrupt
Greek system to decide the future for others on the basis of religion
or the color of skin.
Of course, they did not know that once the
battle started it would evolve into a multi-front and complex war.
While this is not the proper forum for full revelation of the conflicts
that ensued, suffice it to say that change always threatens existing
power structures and a new group embracing societal change proved to be
extremely worrisome to some of the more deeply entrenched and some times
highly prejudiced "leaders" on campus and in the community.
Kieve, Ken, and Paul recruited a few others, making the original ten,
who worked to become a common brotherhood with ideals that could be
contagious and worth defending. Once this group was started, it would
become totally different from any existing campus groups and would
attempt to sustain its founding ideals. The original premise
triumphed by affecting the lives of those who followed and
reverberating around Marshall University in a manner that, at least
partially, changed the institution forever.
In the spring 1963, ten brothers became Beta Tau Colony of Zeta Beta
Tau. Why ZBT? It had a history of tolerance and would
invest in a
campus where there were few Jewish students, knowing in advance that Gamma Epsilon would become
a minimally Jewish chapter in this traditionally Jewish Fraternity.
And ZBT was willing to talk to the ten guys with an idea...a
process which would
legitimize their efforts. At that moment in time, none of
the ten founders really thought much at all about
actually becoming a nationally recognized fraternity.
So nine Jews and Roy Huffman...the first brave gentile who in effect
proved that religion just did not matter in the construct... became the core of a grand experiment.
The group grew and eventually gained support from the local community
as well as a small cadre of campus advisors. It gained respect
for doing things differently…positively…actually quite innocently.
Indeed, pure fortuitous circumstances led to the foundation of Gamma
Epsilon.
For many, Gamma Epsilon chapter of ZBT changed lives; for others it was
simply a social experience. At each reunion or upon personal
reflection, many are moved by the depth of the emotion from those who
became part of this fraternity. Each has his own particular take on what
happened. Each carries within him memories that either do or do
not matter in his own life today.
Today, the ZBT - Gamma Epsilon Scholarship Fund is a testimony to the
character of those who participated in this grand experiment. An
endowment that supports others and lives forever demonstrates the
relevance of what was learned.
Kenneth R. Cohen
March 5, 2008 |
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Copyright ZBT Gamma Epsilon Fraternity 2008 - All rights
reserved
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