Alpha Chi Sigma is a professionalfraternity specializing in the fields of the chemical sciences. It has both collegiate and professional chapters throughout the United States consisting of both men and women and numbering more than 70,000 members. The fraternity aims to bring together students and professionals pursuing a wide variety of chemistry-related careers.
History
Founding
The Alpha Chi Sigma fraternity was organized at the University of Wisconsin–Madison by a group of undergraduates who were fellow students in chemistry at that time. Later documents set the date of founding as December 11, 1902. The original founders were:
To bind its members with a tie of true and lasting friendship.
To strive for the advancement of chemistry both as a science and as a profession.
To aid its members by every honorable means in the attainment of their ambitions as chemists throughout their mortal lives.
The Five Obligations of a Member:
That a member will remember the Objects of the Fraternity and endeavor always to further them.
That a member will pay promptly all financial obligations.
That a member will so act so as never to be a reproach to Alpha Chi Sigma.
That a member will cheerfully fulfill any assigned fraternal tasks.
That a member will maintain as satisfactory a scholastic record as possible.
Membership
Membership to the Alpha Chi Sigma professional fraternity in the chemical sciences is open to collegiate and professional men and women with a strong interest in any of the chemical sciences related fields. Membership is for life. Those who are interested in becoming a member should contact their local collegiate chapter or professional chapter or group for further information about pledgeship and membership.
"for his contributions to our knowledge of molecular structure through his investigations on dipole moments and on the diffraction of X-rays and electrons in gases."
Joel Henry Hildebrand, Sigma 1913,. Replaced nitrogen in scuba tanks with helium and oxygen, the American Chemical Society's Joel Henry Hildebrand is named for him, president of the Sierra Club from 1937 to 1940. Winner of virtually every chemical award except the Nobel Prize.
Darleane Hoffman, Sigma 1988,. Also winner of ACS Award in Nuclear Chemistry, US Medal of Science.
Warren K. Lewis, Alpha Zeta 1925,. Called Father of Modern Chemical Engineering. Also won first American Chemical Society of Award in Industrial and Engineering Chemistry, the AIChE Founders Award, and the Perkins Medal. Introduced the concept of the unit operation.
M. Frederick Hawthorne, Beta Delta 1949 Noted Boron Chemist, Director of the International Institute of Nano and Molecular Medicine at the University of Missouri. Also won the King Faisal Award for Science.
Other notable brothers
Gilbert N. Lewis, Sigma 1913, known for dot diagrams of bonding and acid/base theory
Mary L. Good, Beta Phi 1976, 1993 Under Secretary of Technology, 1987 president of the American Chemical Society
F. Albert Cotton, Beta Eta 1978, noted transition metal chemist
Dr. Donna J. Nelson, Beta Nu 1982, National Organization for Women "Woman of Courage Award" 2004, Society for Advancement of Chicanos and Native Americans in Science "Distinguished Scientist of the Year" 2006, Nelson Diversity Surveys author