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So, question.....
If so many (looks like waaay more then half) "Soroities" are actually Women's Fraternities....how come it's called Soroity Recruitment? Shouldn't it be "Women's Greek Recruitment"? Ok....now I'm just being silly.... I know the main reason is so it's distinguished from Men's Recuitment...but still...anyone have any beter reasons why??? |
Because Joe and Jane Shmo on the street think of sororities when they think of women's Greek groups. "Sorority" is a good example of a created word that has stayed around. :)
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Well Alpha Phi Omega was founded in 1925 by 14 Men. We didn't go co-ed until 1976. Some chapters are still all male though. Either way, we are still a fraternity.
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We are Tau Delta Sorority.
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who cares as long as have mixers
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Just to clarify, Gamma Phi Beta was founded as a women's fraternity. Dr. Frank Smalley didn't coin the word "sorority" until our Beta chapter was installed in 1888.
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We are Sigma Sigma Sigma sorority. Just an interesting note-all the other groups on our campus are fraternities. I think it's interesting how some of us are different. :)
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Kappa Delta started out as a Fraternity. It was later changed to a sorority.
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Have there ever been groups to have chapters in countries other than the US and Canada? I seem to remember something about a SSS chapter being in Germany, I think, at a college somehow associated with an Air Force base that was closing down. Although, I could in all likelihood be wrong. It happens. |
Beta Sigma Phi is an "international women's friendship network", but we use the term sorority.
And we are truly international, with chapters in 30 countries! |
We were founded as a sorority, but they changed our name to "fraternity" in the 1920s.
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According to our history we were founded at Colby COllege (Maine) on November 9, 1874 and JOINED NPC in 1904. BUT we have always been a sorority Also in terms of "Nationals" that is SUCH a pet peeve of our national headquarters and Nationals does not exsit. we have a national council, national officers, and a headquarters :) |
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I've never heard of any other NPC chapter, other than USA or Canada locales. I've heard of Kappa Sigma having Italy ties, and of NPHC GLOs having ties to Liberia, but that's about it. |
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I thought we were Alpha Delta Pi Secret Society for Women. But, whatever, I guess I need to do my homework too.
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DKE has/had some sort of partner chapter at a school in the UK. |
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OK here is some Greek history about the phrases Sorority and Fraternity I found on a document called American College Fraternities and Sororities. On May 15, 1851 at Wesleyan Female College in Macon, Georgia, a group of women founded the Adelphean Society, which later adopted the Greek letters Alpha Delta Pi. 1852 saw the founding of the Philomathean Society at the same college, which adopted the letters Phi Mu. In 1870, Kappa Alpha Theta became the first Greek-letter women's fraternity and was founded at DePauw University, Greencastle, Indiana. The term "sorority" actually was first used by Gamma Phi Beta, founded in 1874 ant Syracuse University, New York and is used to describe women's Greek-letter societies, though many of the earlier women's societies use the term "fraternity" in their name. Today there are over 25 national sororities in existence, all members of the National Panhellenic Council (NPC). The development of “sororities,” as they are more commonly called, has followed a course parallel to the chartered by men’s organization. Gamma Phi Beta, Founded on November 11, 1874, the word “sorority” being based on Latin for “sister.” All the other groups are “fraternities,” the word being based on greek, “phratar,” meaning member of a group. |
I may be wrong here, but I believe the word sorority was actually used in 1882, by a journalist, when describing the beginning of our Beta chapter.
:-) |
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