| I believe in the American college Fraternity.
I believe in Sigma Phi Epsilon. I believe in this Fraternity
because it would have me strive in every way to live up to
the high principles for which it stands. These are Virtue,
Diligence, and Brotherly Love.
I believe that the word Virtue is an inclusive term;
that it is not enough that I be merely passively virtuous:
I must be positive on virtue's behalf. Therefore, I will stand
aggressively for honesty in all walks of life, and I will
speak cleanly, play cleanly, and live cleanly. Whenever I
can, I will oppose lawlessness and vice.
I believe that unless I succeed in being Diligent,
I cannot be a good Fraternity member. Believing that my Fraternity
can be no greater than any of its members, I shall strive
to make it so high and so worthy that men will consider it
an honor and privilege to belong to it and will strive to
be admitted to it. I will not offer concessions to an individual
to secure his affiliation, for thus making concessions makes
the man more note worthy than the Fraternity and hence only
succeeds in lowering it in his estimation as well as mine.
I believe that Brotherly Love must be given in order
to be received, and that it cannot exist without triumph of
the principles of Virtue and Diligence, for
these are essential parts of it.
I believe that a man will be made better for having been
a member of my Fraternity. I know that I cannot expect the
neophyte to be a finished product. Rather I will try to discover
whether or not the environment and contact with men of high
ideals will make of him a good Fraternity man.
I believe that as a good Fraternity member I must share a
rich kinship of spirit with my brothers. Yet I realize that
the members must be men of diversified abilities and talents.
Among them are to be found the scholar, the athlete, the builder
and craftsman. The good Fraternity member must be par excellent
in manhood.
I believe that to be a good member I must be loyal to my
Fraternity. In order to be loyal to it, I must love it. In
order to love it, I must strive constantly to make it worthy
of my love. To be loyal to my Fraternity, I must gain a knowledge
of it so that I may understand it. I have an obligation to
understand what brotherhood means.
I believe that in any organized society group rights and
privileges are based on individual rights and privileges;
that in my Fraternity I possess the same rights and privileges
and have the same duties as my fellow members. Therefore,
I shall at all times respect duly the rights of others.
I believe that obedience to the laws of my community and
my country is essential to good citizenship; that the laws
and rules of my Fraternity and my chapter are intended to
regulate the actions of its members, one with another, and
that without fidelity to those laws and rules I cannot be
a good citizen and a worthy member of Sigma Phi Epsilon.
I believe I should be generous with the faults of a brother,
as I should wish him to be with mine.
Oscar E. Draper
Grand President, 1928-1929
Washington State '19 (Washington Alpha)
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