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BTW Sistermadly, I agree with your assessment of Spelman! ;) |
I hadn't heard about the name-change possibility, but if it's changed to Welty Univ. then it can still be called the "W"!
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There is also Stephens College in Columbia, MO. They have two NPC groups- Kappa Delta and Sigma Sigma Sigma.
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Here's a question....maybe someone more PHC-savvy than me could answer it.
I remember reading somewhere that Chatham College (in Pittsburgh) used to have a Kappa Delta chapter. It was more than likely closed because a lot of women's colleges wanted alums to be more loyal to the school than to their Greek organization. So.......could KD ever go back on that campus? I've been reading some threads over the past couple months where the GLO (not necessarily KD) is recognized by National Headquarters, but not the school itself. |
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I think it's more rare for this situation to occur with sororities. I've NEVER heard of it happening with KD. Chatham doesn't have any sororities at all, so I highly doubt that KD would ever go back there. I'd love it if they did though! It's only a couple blocks from my apartment and there's a ton of support in the area! |
One point on point, and one tangent
Wellesley College, one of the most prominent women's colleges in the country, doesn't have sororities, but it does have selective "societies" which have a great deal in common with the early literary societies that grew into sororities. I believe that one or more of them actually have Greek-letter names.
>I've been reading some threads over the past couple months where the GLO (not necessarily KD) is recognized by National Headquarters, but not the school itself. This is the case right now with both Harvard (which has chapters of DG and Theta) and the University of Chicago (which has AOII, DG, and Theta). UC basically tolerates the groups; they can poster on campus, their web pages are linked as "other groups" on the student organizations site, etc., even though they are officially unrecognized. Harvard, on the other hand, is extremely hostile to Greek groups and won't allow them to use school resources in any way (they can't meet in the dorms, etc.). It was my understanding that these national orgs generally do not allow chapters on campuses without university support, but that they made exceptions for these campuses because of their academic reputations. Ivy |
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Princeton and Yale are two more schools with non-recognition of their NPC sororities. I believe Princeton has Tri Delta, Kappa Alpha Theta, Kappa Kappa Gamma, and Pi Phi. Yale has Kappa, Pi Phi and Theta. However, I think the NPC headquarters of most sororities would be reluctant to establish any chapter on a campus without university consent unless the school was one with such undeniable national prestige as the Ivies or UChicago have. |
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My impression has been that Greek life is strong at Dartmouth?? |
Dartmouth
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OK, I'm reviving this really old thread because I'd like to make a list of
-women's colleges that had Greek life and banned it -why they banned it -the times the chapters were initially founded -when they banned it -which chapters where there -which women's colleges still have GLOs or social clubs I know I can steal a lot of this information from that huge thread in the recruitment forum... but are there campuses that haven't been mentioned? |
Sweet Briar doesn't have women's GLOs but it does have selective social societies called "Tap Clubs".
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I was just going to come in here and mention Sweet Briar College in Virginia. I went there for a semester, and from what I know of the "tap"clubs, they are very much like sororities. It is a rather small college that is full of lots of traditions. |
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