Awards

Chapters recognized for their achievements at the 64th Biennial Convention

Collegiate members from Indiana Alpha Gamma (Trine University) with their awards at the 64th Biennial Convention in Lexington, Kentucky.

Fraternal Development Award

  • Indiana Alpha Gamma (Trine University)

  • Nebraska Pi (University of Nebraska - Lincoln)

  • Missouri Kappa Upsilon (University of Missouri - Columbia)

Intellectual Development Award

  • Indiana Alpha Gamma (Trine University)

  • Nebraska Pi (University of Nebraska - Lincoln)

  • Missouri Kappa Upsilon (University of Missouri - Columbia)

Leadership Development Award

  • Indiana Alpha Gamma (Trine University)

  • Nebraska Pi (University of Nebraska - Lincoln)

  • Massachusetts Lambda (Worcester Polytechnic Institute)

Societal Development Award

  • Indiana Alpha Gamma (Trine University)

  • Missouri Kappa Upsilon (University of Missouri - Columbia)

  • Georgia Gamma Tau (Georgia Institute of Technology)

Spiritual Development Award

  • Indiana Alpha Gamma (Trine University)

  • Nebraska Pi (University of Nebraska - Lincoln)

  • New York Tau (Syracuse University)

Bronze Excellence Award

  • Iowa Xi (Iowa State University)

  • Michigan Omega (University of Detroit Mercy)

Silver Excellence Award

  • Missouri Kappa Upsilon (University of Missouri - Columbia)

  • Massachusetts Lambda (Worcester Polytechnic Institute)

  • Georgia Gamma Tau (Georgia Institute of Technology)

  • New York Tau (Syracuse University)

Gold Excellence Award

  • Indiana Alpha Gamma (Trine University)

  • Nebraska Pi (University of Nebraska - Lincoln)

Founder’s Cup

  • Indiana Alpha Gamma (Trine University)

Kevin Lampe to Receive Prestigious Fraternity Award

Kevin Lampe (Western Illinois University, ’83)

Indianapolis, IN. May 26, 2023 – Kevin Lampe (Western Illinois University, ’83) will be presented with the Edward R. Solvibile Distinguished Service Award at the 64th Biennial Convention at an evening event on Saturday, August 5, 2023, at The Hilton Hotel in Lexington, Kentucky, 369 W Vine St. Lexington, KY.

The Edward R. Solvibile Distinguished Service Award is the highest honor awarded to a Fraternity brother and is voted on by the National Fraternity’s Board of Trustees. The award recognizes brothers who have demonstrated outstanding service and leadership for the betterment of Phi Kappa Theta Fraternity. Phi Kappa Theta’s Distinguished Service Award was recently renamed in honor of Brother Solvibile; Lampe will be the first Brother to receive the award since it was renamed.

Lampe will be recognized during the Convention’s closing banquet on Saturday, August 5, in Lexington, KY, where alumni and collegiate members from chapters nationwide will gather to celebrate and honor his contributions to Phi Kappa Theta Fraternity.

“Brother Lampe exemplifies the ideals of Phi Kappa Theta Fraternity. I look to him as a role model to become a better brother and more fully ‘give, expecting nothing thereof.’ I'm thrilled our Fraternity can honor his consistent, decades-long commitment to our Fraternity with Edward R. Solvibile Distinguished Service Award,” said National Fraternity President Matthew Runkle.

“I am deeply honored to receive this award from the Brotherhood of Phi Kappa Theta. Brother Ed Solvibile was a mentor and an inspiration in my fraternity life. It is humbling to receive this award that is a tribute to Ed’s legacy,” said Lampe. “Since 1979, the servant leadership of the Brothers of our fraternity has guided and shaped my life.”

In 1979, Lampe joined Phi Kappa Theta at Western Illinois University. As a collegiate, Lampe served as his chapter’s president, recruitment, and chapter installation chair, as well as ritual chair. He began his service to the National Fraternity on the Undergraduate Advisory Council (UGAC) in 1980. First elected to the Fraternity Board in 1999, he served as National Fraternity President from 2009 to 2011. Lampe currently serves on the Phi Kappa Theta Fraternity Foundation Board of Trustees.

Lampe is recognized internationally as a political strategist, media/speech trainer, and media relations expert. He co-founded Kurth Lampe Worldwide, a strategic communications firm with clients across the United States, Europe, and Africa. He is well-known as a crisis manager helping his clients through difficult and complex situations.

In his career, he has worked on campaigns from US Presidents to local school boards. A few of his clients include civil rights icon Rosa Parks, former President Barack Obama, and President Joe Biden.

Iowa Delta chapter earns "IFC Chapter of the Year" from the University of Iowa

Iowa Delta post.png

The 2020 - 2021 academic year has been immensely tough for everyone, including those involved in Fraternity life.

Remarkably, members of the Iowa Delta Chapter found ways to remain engaged on campus. As a result, the Fraternity & Sorority Life (FSL) office within the University of Iowa's Division of Student Life recognized Iowa Delta as the "Interfraternity Council (IFC) Chapter of the Year" for their commitment to upholding their values and responsibilities.

"Since we had so much time free with fewer opportunities for social events, we chose to look inward and focus on growing ourselves as men and brothers. We worked hard to put on virtual events, recruitment, and philanthropies such as our 24-hour live stream and Buffalo Wild Wings profit-share, which contributed funds to Children's Miracle Network," said Jacob Olson, current Chapter President for Iowa Delta.

The chapter identified ways younger members could accelerate their leadership experience and sought assistance from campus resources.

"We encouraged younger brothers to take on leadership positions as our executive board received all but one new member. We also worked closely with the FSL office and IFC to get through the pandemic and engage in activities within our community. We worked hard as brothers to not lose focus on our goals even during the most challenging times," Olson added.

Brothers of the Iowa Delta chapter safely attending a Brotherhood event.

Brothers of the Iowa Delta chapter safely attending a Brotherhood event.

A Part of Something Bigger

Brother Ali Soufan Receives Phi Kappa Theta’s 2018 John F. Kennedy Award

by Matthew R. Miller
University of Nebraska, ‘12

Brother Ali Soufan (Mansfield University, ‘94) during a Q&A at IMPACT18 in Orlando, FL ).

Brother Ali Soufan (Mansfield University, ‘94) during a Q&A at IMPACT18 in Orlando, FL ).

Ali Soufan (Mansfield University, ‘94) applied to the FBI on a dare.

“When I joined the Bureau I didn’t think in a million years I’d be an FBI agent,” he said. “Literally it was a bet with fraternity brothers. Most of the guys in my fraternity were in law enforcement and ROTC. It was a joke to see if I would last in the application process. Actually I bet against myself.”

But Soufan did last. Over the next decade he was involved in a number of high-profile anti-terrorism cases around the world and has been described as the person who came closest to preventing the attacks of September 11, 2001. He has published two books, Anatomy of Terror: From the Death of Bin Laden to the Rise of the Islamic State and The Black Banners: The Inside Story of 9/11 and the War Against al-Qaeda. A recent Hulu miniseries, The Looming Tower, is based on his time in the FBI. Soufan is now CEO of The Soufan Group and founder of The Soufan Center – a “nonprofit organization dedicated to serving as a resource and forum for research, analysis, and strategic dialogue related to global security issues and emergent threats.”

Mr. Soufan is also the most recent recipient of Phi Kappa Theta’s John F. Kennedy Award – given to brothers who have thrived in their professional careers and who inspire others to live lives of service of others, improving the world around them.

In his acceptance speech Soufan noted John F. Kennedy once said leadership and learning are indispensable to each other. Soufan explained leadership isn’t about words and lectures but about action and attitude. Those actions and attitudes are themselves shaped by our experiences and our values – which is why his time in Phi Kappa Theta was so valuable.

“When I joined Phi Kaps, like I think most of you, I joined for the fun, for the parties, but then I realized it was way more than that,” he said. “It meant something to me to be something bigger than I am, and I’m very honored for that and will always be honored to be a brother of Phi Kappa Theta.”

The values he first felt full force in college – loyalty, trust, sacrifice friendship were things he said were vital to his work in counter-terrorism and the FBI.

“Many of my colleagues who were with me in places like Yemen and Afghanistan, the streets of the Middle East or north Africa, a lot of these guys we developed our own kind of brotherhood but it’s all based on my experience that I had before in college.”

Soufan believes many people today still see that stereotypical fraternity life of parties and mindless fun, but a deeper, honest look reveals the values Phi Kappa Theta possesses, values that can and will stay with a person forever if they take them seriously.

That’s a theme Soufan keeps returning to – the time a young man spends in college does not exist in isolation from the rest of his life. Phi Kappa Theta was so important for Soufan and can be for others because it’s a framework during a foundational time. The choices made, values acquired, the people one allows themselves to be shaped by, are all building towards a future life.

“The values of loyalty, friendship, courage, fortitude, love, faith - these things nobody can take away from you,” he said. “These things won’t stop the moment you graduate and you leave for real life. These values will continue with you. They continued with me through my professional life… These values are the true test of brotherhood and these values are the true test of leadership and these things will continue with us forever.”

Soufan said Phi Kappa Theta made his college experience far richer than it otherwise would have been. He was shaped, and continues to be shaped, by his college and especially his fraternal experience. It’s taken him where he is today and has given him the foundation to persevere when he needed to the most.

“If you have the brotherhood and the loyalty and sacrifice and you put them with these other values, I think you’ll be on a very strong personal and moral ground to fight and stand up against any difficulties in life,” he said.

Main Image: The 2018 John F. Kennedy Award recipient, Brother Ali Soufan (Mansfield University, ‘94), speaking with brothers at IMPACT18 in Orlando, FL this past August.

Watch Brother Soufan’s speech from IMPACT18 in Orlando, FL: