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-   -   Biggest Greek Schools? (https://greekchat.com/gcforums/showthread.php?t=78674)

Scandia 06-15-2006 07:10 PM

Tim Curry is so hysterical. And he narrates the "A series of unfortunate events" books.

Anyhow, UF's Greek System is huge. It has 16 NPC sororities, A LOT of IFC fraternities, nearly every NPHC organization, a lot of multicultural ones, various service and academic ones, and then some.

SmartBlondeGPhB 06-15-2006 07:16 PM

The largest is I do believe, the University of Illinois - Urbana-Champagne. I believe they have most every group on campus.

Drolefille 06-15-2006 07:30 PM

I think they have everyone but Tri Sigma now.... Unless I've confused that. 25/26

Ok according to this Sorority Founding Dates I counted 21 NPC sororities. Anyone want to double check that?

irishpipes 06-15-2006 11:25 PM

University of Illinois does not have Sigma Sigma Sigma, Alpha Sigma Tau, Alpha Sigma Alpha, Alpha Xi Delta, Zeta Tau Alpha, Delta Phi Epsilon, or Theta Phi Alpha. (But we have had all but AST at some point - they are not currently active.) ZTA, DPE, AZD, and SSS all closed while I was there.

By the way, AlphaFrog, at U of I, Panhellenic was referred to as "Panhel" by everyone. A colloquialism of sorts. It was not considered disrespectful at all. Perhaps the OP comes from a similar environment.

ETA: U of I brags that it is the largest Greek system in the world. That would be because of our Fraternities too - not just NPC sororities. When I was there we had 66 men's fraternities and 22 NPC sororities. Plus, in addition to the large number of chapters, the campus is largely (ridiculously) Greek with many, many, single-letter chapters, a couple of Alpha chapters, and very large average membership sizes. For example, Penn State I think has the same number of NPC chapters as U of I, but quota at Penn State last year was 18 - at U of I it was 53. I think the sheer numbers at Illinois are amazing.

Illinois
Pi Beta Phi 1895
Kappa Alpha Theta 1895
Kappa Kappa Gamma 1899
Alpha Chi Omega 1899
Chi Omega 1900
Alpha Xi Delta 1905-?/1983-1988?
Delta Gamma 1906
Sigma Kappa 1906
Alpha Omicron Pi 1911
Alpha Delta Pi 1912
Gamma Phi Beta 1913
Alpha Gamma Delta 1918
Theta Phi Alpha 1919-1953
Alpha Epsilon Phi 1920
Delta Delta Delta 1920
Kappa Delta 1921
Phi Mu 1921
Delta Zeta 1921-?/1988
Zeta Tau Alpha 1921-1988
Alpha Phi 1922
Phi Sigma Sigma 1923
Sigma Delta Tau 1926
Delta Phi Epsilon 1927-1988
Sigma Sigma Sigma 1957-1987?
Alpha Sigma Alpha 1982-1992



Penn State
Chi Omega 1926
Alpha Omicron Pi 1929-1973/1982
Phi Mu 1929
Theta Phi Alpha 1929-1969
Delta Gamma 1930
Kappa Kappa Gamma 1930
Kappa Alpha Theta 1931
Alpha Chi Omega 1932
Gamma Phi Beta 1932
Alpha Epsilon Phi 1937-1978
Kappa Delta 1939
Zeta Tau Alpha 1939
Alpha Xi Delta 1942
Sigma Delta Tau 1943
Delta Zeta 1946
Phi Sigma Sigma 1946-1970
Alpha Gamma Delta 1947-2000
Delta Delta Delta 1947
Pi Beta Phi 1953
Sigma Sigma Sigma 1954
Alpha Phi 1958
Alpha Delta Pi 1958-?/1991
Delta Phi Epsilon 1960-1966
Alpha Sigma Alpha 1962
Sigma Kappa 1992

Those lists aren't from any official source, so they probably are not 100% accurate.

shinerbock 06-16-2006 12:36 AM

I don't know about sororities, but I think Auburn has like 27 national fraternities. I'm sure Alabama has a lot as well.

Buttonz 06-16-2006 12:37 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by AlphaFrog
And if you threw a party
Invited everyone in town
You would see the biggest gift would be from me
And the card attached would say
"Thank you for being a friend"

(Ok, you know it's bad when you know the extended theme song lyrics:p :p )

I love the show!

macallan25 06-16-2006 02:15 AM

At Texas, we have:

21 Fraternities (IFC)
14 Sororities (University Panhellenic)
7 African American
5 Latino
3 Asian

4 Affiliates (awaiting acceptance into one of the organizations)

AlphaFrog 06-16-2006 07:08 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by irishpipes
By the way, AlphaFrog, at U of I, Panhellenic was referred to as "Panhel" by everyone. A colloquialism of sorts. It was not considered disrespectful at all. Perhaps the OP comes from a similar environment.


Ok, but I still think there's a difference between "Panhel" and "Panhell".

texgal 06-16-2006 08:30 AM

Oh yes, one letter makes a *world* of difference. :rolleyes:

In either instance, it's just a shortening of the name. Just depends on when you stop writing, some will stop after the first "l" and some after the second.

irishpipes 06-16-2006 08:40 AM

TexGal - since "Panhel" isn't really a word, I have no idea if the proper spelling would be "Panhel" or "Panhell" so I agree with you!

Quote:

Originally Posted by macallan25
At Texas, we have:

21 Fraternities (IFC)
14 Sororities (University Pan-Hellenic)
7 African American
5 Latino
3 Asian

4 Affiliates (awaiting acceptance into one of the organizations

The hyphen, however, does change things. Pan-Hellenic is the governing body for historically African-American sororities. Panhellenic, Panhell, Panhel (no hyphen) is for NPC sororities. Of course there aren't 14 historically African-American sororities so it was obvious what you meant anyway!

Sister Havana 06-16-2006 11:05 AM

IU has 19 of the Panhellenic sororities right now. They had 22 when I went there, but Alpha Sigma Alpha, Sigma Sigma Sigma, and Sigma Kappa all closed in 1993-1994. The other chapters not at IU are Delta Phi Epsilon, Phi Sigma Sigma, Theta Phi Alpha, and Alpha Sigma Tau. Like Illinois, IU has had chapters of all of the Panhellenic groups except for AST.

IU also has 25 IFC fraternities, 8 of the Divine Nine NPHC groups (all but AKA, which must have closed recently!), two Latina sororities, a Latino fraternity, an Asian interest fraternity, an Asian interest sorority, and Theta Nu Xi.

irishpipes 06-16-2006 04:29 PM

I think that "Biggest Greek Schools" could have other meanings too. I would consider DePauw and Miami (Ohio) as MAJOR Greek campuses - not because of the number of chapters, but the historical aspects of their Greek systems and the strong influence of Greek Life. I know less about Syracuse, but possibly it would fall into that category as well.

Greekopedia 06-16-2006 05:45 PM

similar to this question..

which schools have the most Local GLOs??

Tex1899 06-18-2006 04:33 PM

similar to this question..

which schools have the most Local GLOs??



I would think Dartmouth has to be near the top. It seems like nearly every fraternity is a local or went local at some point in their history. Not sure about the sororities.

macallan25 06-18-2006 04:48 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by irishpipes
TexGal - since "Panhel" isn't really a word, I have no idea if the proper spelling would be "Panhel" or "Panhell" so I agree with you!



The hyphen, however, does change things. Pan-Hellenic is the governing body for historically African-American sororities. Panhellenic, Panhell, Panhel (no hyphen) is for NPC sororities. Of course there aren't 14 historically African-American sororities so it was obvious what you meant anyway!


noted, i'll fix that


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