QEBH is a senior honor society at the
University of Missouri. Founded in 1898, it is the oldest of six recognized secret honor societies that participate in the annual tradition of Tap Day on campus. The meaning of the society's name is known only to the members.[1]
QEBH
The winged sphere is the primary symbol of the QEBH Society.
The society was founded in November 1898 by eight men. They were Royall Hill Switzler, Thomas Benton Marbut, Gurry Ellsworth Huggins, William Frank Wilson, Clarence Martin Jackson, Horace Beckley Williams, Antoine Edward Russell, and Galius Lawton Zwick. Royall Hill Switzler organized the first class of the society, and he is therefore credited as being the founder of QEBH.[2]
QEBH's workings, purposes, and affairs are known only to its members.
Throughout its history, QEBH has maintained a rivalry with MU's
Mystical Seven society. This rivalry has often involved the two societies playing pranks on each other. In one instance in 1985, members of QEBH disguised themselves as members of Mystical Seven and surprised Mystical Seven's yet-to-be-initiated candidates at 4:30am one morning. The new candidates were convinced the activity was part of their initiation process, and they were taken to
Jefferson City, Missouri where they were dropped off and abandoned by the disguised QEBH members.[3]
Symbolism
The primary symbol of QEBH is the winged sphere. The symbol's origin is that of the winged sphere that was once the distinctive mark of
Jesse Hall. The wings broke from the top of the dome when a patriotic student scaled the dome one night around the time of
World War I and fastened the staff of a large American flag to the structure. The flag caught enough wind to tear the wings from the dome, leaving only the golden sphere, which is still in place. The destruction of the wings from the dome was foreshadowed in the 1901 Savitar where mention is made of QEBH's secret meetings at the top of the dome, but it was later stated that "QEBH didn't take the wings off the dome."[4]
Victory Bell
The tradition of the Victory Bell originated in 1927. The bell was originally stolen from a church in
Seward, Nebraska by
Phi Delta Theta and
Delta Tau Delta in 1892. The two fraternities shared housing at the time, but when the groups later acquired their own individual houses they began an annual tradition of awarding the bell as a trophy to the winner of a specified athletic or academic contest. When then Missouri athletic director Chester Brewer suggested a trophy be established for the winner of the annual
Missouri–Nebraska Rivalry football game, the bell was chosen to fill the role. An "M" was then engraved on one side of the bell and an "N" was engraved on the opposite side. QEBH is the caretaker of the bell at Missouri, and the
Innocents Society is the caretaker of the bell at Nebraska. Due to conference realignment, there has been a hiatus of the Missouri-Nebraska rivalry since 2010.[5][6]
Harvey P. Eisen (Chapter of 1964), Chairman of Bedford Oak Advisors
Martin Frost (Chapter of 1964), Democratic representative to the U.S. House of Representatives for Texas's 24th congressional district from 1979 to 2005
John R. Gibson (Chapter of 1950), Senior Federal Judge, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
Kellen Winslow (Chapter of 1987), NFL Hall of Fame Tight End
Hardin Cox (Chapter of 1952), Missouri House of Representative (1964-1974), Missouri State Senator (1974 1982), Member of 1945 Missouri Tiger's Football Team and Big Six Champions
Tim Kaine (Chapter of 1979), Senator (VA), former Governor of Virginia and U.S. Vice Presidential Candidate
Clyde Lear (Chapter of 2007), chairman of Learfield Communications, Inc.
Darwin Hindman (Chapter of 2004), former mayor of City of Columbia (MO)
Brady Deaton (Chapter of 1999), former University of Missouri chancellor
Richard Wallace (Chapter of 1998), former University of Missouri chancellor
R. Bowen Loftin (Chapter of 2015), former University of Missouri chancellor
James Spain (Chapter of 2003), vice provost for undergraduate studies at the University of Missouri
Michael Alden (Chapter of 2001), former director of athletics at University of Missouri
Arvarh Strickland (Chapter of 1996), former MU history professor, first African American professor at the University of Missouri
H. Clyde Wilson Jr. (Chapter of 1972), former MU anthropology professor, former Mayor of City of Columbia (MO)
Gary Pinkel (Chapter of 2016), Mizzou football head coach from 2001-2015. Winningest football coach at both University of Toledo and University of Missouri.
Robert G. Bailey (Chapter of 1984), assistant dean emeritus University of Missouri School of Law
Dr. Melvin George (Chapter of 2013), beloved professor, founder of MU's Core Values, and two-time interim president of the University of Missouri System
José Gutiérrez (Chapter of 2016), executive vice president at AT&T, vice chairman of the Thompson Foundation for Autism and Neurodevelopmental Disorders, and member of the World Affairs Council