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I knew that APhi had to have a ton of chapters in CA. I feel like every other Greek in CA that I know is APhi (all at diff schools too.)
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I see what you're saying about the Mississippi thing, and it matches up with my impression of KD nationally when I was an undergrad. I don't know how it is now, but when I was 19, if you asked me to name a place where KD was crazy dominant, I would have said Ole Miss. |
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While not a state, I know that Alpha Gamma Delta has the most chapters in Canada (8), followed by Alpha Omicron Pi (7) and Alpha Phi (6).
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MISSOURI
23 – Total Campuses with NPC Greek Life 9 Chapters – ASA, TriSigma, 8 Chapters – DZ, ZTA, 7 Chapters – ADPi, 6 Chapters – SK, Chi O 5 Chapters – AGD, KD, 4 Chapters – APhi, GPhi, DG, 3 Chapters – TriDelta, Kappa, Pi Phi, Phi Mu, 2 Chapters – AXiD, AOPi, Theta Phi, Theta, 1 Chapter – DphiE, ~~~ I'm pretty sure Alpha Chi Omega has 4 chapters in Missouri (very good friend is Alpha Chi from Missouri) |
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I was doing a running count going through IrishPipe's lists, so it looks like I occasionally missed an organization (I did the same thing with KD and Indiana). Quote:
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It cracks me up that Phi Mu is a biggie in Mississippi, Georgia, Louisiana, Alabama, and...Maryland? How did that get in there?
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Happened with girls who were legacies to a certain GLO who didn't stand a strong chance of making Mother and Grandmother's sorority at certain Texas schools, because there would often be nearly 200 legacies to that chapter and the numbers were brutal. They would go to an out of state school, usually in the southeast or even to one of the Arizona schools, and pledge over there. After their freshman year, they'd transfer to Mother and Grandmother's alma mater back in Texas as an active and affiliate there. I'd never heard of it either, til I worked as a sponsorship chairman of a Dallas suburb's Alumnae Panhellenic. Darndest thing I ever saw. |
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And now it's devolved into how many chapters are in each state...which we have all been able to figure out for ourselves from irishpipes' rush threads for years, if you REALLY gave a shit. I guess I don't see the point of this thread when the majority of people posting in it can't figure out what was originally being asked in the first post. |
^^^^Lake:
Pre-GC, I wouldn't have thought it actually happened. I heard of it and thought "that's just bigger NPCs in the South, no one would ever actually transfer just to join a certain chapter of Sigma." Then I became a volunteer and started meeting alumnae in other states and was found to be wrong. Crazy. |
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Would strongholds also be represented by the proportion of women members (Alumnae or Collegiate) to the female population of a given state? Or maybe as a proportion to that states number of women members? That latter option takes care of the women that transfer back "home." Don;t think we'll ever see that kind of data analysis. The best you can on your own is review the sketchy chart on Wikipedia with numbers of initiates by GLO that is referenced to various sources.
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Is is all just about numbers?
I going to add a wrench into all of this.
I think that have the large amount of chapters in a given state is important. However, wouldn't it also be important to look at the given school/s in the state including the strength of the chapters, RMF issues, grades, campus/community involvement and quota/retention? So ABC has 27 chapters BIG STATE. However they are at
Alumnae are active to keep the chapters going. Occasional teas and toddlers programs. VS. XYZ in the same state
Alumnae mentor collegians, networking opportunities. Huge annual XYZ Debutante Ball that benefits the local children's hospital. Anchor of one of the television news stations is an alumna. |
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