The ladies of Zeta Phi Beta Sorority, Incorporated Theta Rho Zeta Chapter, hosted the 10th Annual Oratorical Scholarship Competition Saturday, April 1, 2023, at Capitol Area District Library, Downtown Lansing. This event is a long-standing tradition, which encompasses the core principles of Zeta Phi Beta. These principles are service, sisterhood, promoting scholarship, and allowing finer womanhood.
Every year Greater Lansing High School Seniors have the chance to compete for college scholarship funding, by researching and presenting to an audience. This year’s topic was ‘Gun Violence in America.’ During these competitions, students speak openly in front of an audience and are evaluated by judges on their presentations. Judges evaluate how well students present, and relate to the experience, and/or the topic at hand. Four judges participated in this year’s oratorical competition and evaluated four candidates:
Kennedy Perkins-1st Place
Wesley Davis-2nd Place
Michael Thomas-3rd Place
Tori Trambu-4th Place
Zeta Phi Beta Sorority Inc. Theta Rho Zeta chapter is happy to be of service and help provide resources to youth pursuing their educational endeavors. The women of Zeta Phi Beta Sorority Inc. Theta Rho Zeta chapter exude the qualities of Finer Womanhood, through the willingness to serve and lend a hand within the community.
About Zeta Phi Beta Sorority, Incorporated
Zeta Phi Beta Sorority, Incorporated was founded on January 16, 1920, at Howard University, Washington, D.C. The Klan was active during this period, and the Harlem Renaissance was acknowledged as the first important movement of Black artists and writers in the U.S. This same year the Volstead Act became effective, heralding the start of Prohibition and Tennessee delivered the crucial 36th ratification for the final adoption of the 19th amendment giving women the right to vote. The worst and longest economic recession to hit the U.S. would define the end of the decade-The Great Depression.
Within this environment, five coeds envisioned a sorority that would directly affect positive change, chart a course of action for the 1920s and beyond, raise people’s consciousness, encourage the highest standards of scholastic achievement, and foster a greater sense of unity among its members. These women believed that sorority elitism and socializing overshadowed the real mission of progressive organizations and failed to address fully the societal mores, ills, prejudices, and poverty affecting humanity in general and the black community in particular.
Since its inception, Zeta has continued its steady climb into the national spotlight with programs designed to demonstrate concern for the human condition both nationally and internationally. The organization has been innovative because it has chronicled several firsts. It was the first National Pan-Hellenic Council organization to centralize its operations in a national headquarters, the first to charter a chapter in Africa, the first to form auxiliary groups, and the first to be constitutionally bound to a fraternity, Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity, Incorporated. The sorority takes pride in its continued participation in transforming communities through volunteer services from members and its auxiliaries. Zeta Phi Beta has chartered hundreds of chapters worldwide and has a membership of 100,000+.
Zeta’s national and local programs include the endowment of its National Educational Foundation community outreach services and the support of multiple affiliate organizations. Zeta chapters and auxiliaries have given untotaled hours of voluntary service to educate the public, assist youth, provide scholarships, support organized charities, and promote social and civic change legislation.
As the sorority moves toward its centennial, it retains its original zest for excellence. It espouses the highest academic ideals, resulting in its members serving in groundbreaking roles in all fields of endeavor. Zeta Phi Beta Sorority, Incorporated is poised for perpetual service to mankind into her second century and beyond.
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