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I would guess that for more people, "underground" means a group that was formerly a chapter of a national org that continues to operate under the national org's name without their or the school's blessing. |
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I always thought that an underground chapter was one that still used the images and letters of their org. after their charter had been pulled... |
As I said somewhere, there are Schools who while they do not Recognize Greeks, do tolerate and behind the scenes support them as part of The Campi. It is called $$$ from Alums.
If THE SCHOOL gives approval to said NHQs, they will be willing to work within the peramiters. I checked with Our IHQ, and there is no statement policy for underground groups. Again, the saddest part is the new young people who come in maybe hoping or not being actually told!:( Again as I said, Schools such as Alfred in NY flat said You are not welcome here. Off damn spot. So All Did! Sorry, that to me is their lose as a school.:confused: |
SLightly off topic
Quick Question:
Here is the situation If a chapter is not recognized by the university for a specific period of time, lets say Jan to Dec 31, 2005. The sorority was a recognized colonized chapter but got penalized for some time of infraction. Now this sorority has a house that is considered off campus, freshman have to live in the dorms and can not live in the sorority house. So, here is the question: Can this sorority members 1) live in the house, 2) still behave as a chapter as in have in house sisterhood events, ect, even though they may not particpate in campus activities like greek week (for example) 3) have ritual (again in house) say like members going through active to alumni ceremony. Would these activities be considered an underground chapter, cause they are not recognized by the university, until their probation is over? |
I guess it would depend on whose definition you use. I think it depends on their National organization's view on it. If they haven't pulled their charter, as far as I'd be concerned, they're still an official chapter. Apparently there are some differences whether the university is public or private too. It sounds like, from a legal standpoint, private institutions have more power because public universities can't restrict the freedom of association. If students are free to choose where they live after their freshman year, then they should be free to choose where they live, whether its an off campus apartment or an off campus house owned by a sorority. That whole thing seems weird to me because Eastern Michigan never knew where I was living once I was out of the dorms. I used my parents' address since I was moving all the time, so how does the University even know where you're living? You could be commuting from home for all they know.
Since I have a lot of experience with a chapter (U of Toronto) where no NICs/NPCs/NPHCs are recognized, but they are in great standing with Alpha Gamma Delta, they are not underground in my eyes. I wouldn't consider them underground unless they were closed by our headquarters and continued to function as a sorority, either using our letters or switching to a local. The danger in the latter situation is that they have no liability insurance, no alumnae/advisor guidance and are putting the national organization at risk by their very existance. Dee |
Of course, it also depends on why the host institution doesn't recognize them. In AGDee's example, I wouldn't define the U of Toronto chapter as an underground chapter, because the school doesn't recognize Greek organizations in general.
But at my school, we have a national organization who has lost university recognition (and has not regained it after several years) but continues to maintain their charter from their national. Because there are other Greek orgs that are recognized on campus, our IFC and Greek advisor discourage men from rushing that house because they do not have any of the benefits of university affiliation. Although they are still recognized as a chapter, I would consider this more of an "underground" situation than the first. |
Re: SLightly off topic
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As for 2 & 3 - is the chapter being recolonized? Is the sorority OK with its nationals but not the school? I mean, the main thing here is whether the sorority's HQ still says they are an active chapter. I doubt they would let them take members or do Greek week if the school says no, but they would probably still be doing everything else (meetings, ritual etc) if the national considers them an active chapter. |
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My chapter is a fully chartered chapter. We are paid visits by our HQ officials. We send in our dues, reports, etc. We have an organized alumnae advisory committee. We are 100% recognized by our HQ's. I feel that the underground implies that you are operating in secret. While the GLOs are not recognized by my university. No group is operating in secret. The university knows we are there, and as long as we follow university policy, they cannot touch us. |
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An underground chapter is one that is NOT chartered by our NHQ. If a chapter is not recognized by its host institution, they also loose their charter, as that is a requirement to be chartered. We do not charter chapters that the host school won't recognize. That is one of the first requirements to (re-)chartering a chapter. |
Re: SLightly off topic
I can reply with respect to three different fraternities on three different campuses that should be applicable to sororities as well.
Background: One chapter was on probation for grades, another for a "prank" that was not *appreciated* by the host institution, and the other because of a "minor infraction". I don't recall what it was but most likely either alcohol or hazing related. Each chapter was put on "social probation" by their HQ, their university and their IFC. In two cases, they owned their houses, but were on campus. The other the house was off campus. Quote:
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However... The chapters were allowed to have limited activities & raise money for their philanthropy. The activities were limited to service. One chapter was allowed some limited house events. I think it was for parents weekend and for alumni at homecoming and their founder's day. And one chapter had a tradition where alumni hosted a dinner at a local banquet hall or restaurant. Since this was an "up and up" kind of event - parents, university officials, other invited Greeks, community folk in attendance, i.e. well behaved - approval was given for the chapter to attend. Quote:
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The reason why a former chapter is not an underground chapter is simple. A chapter, of anything, implies that it is part of a division of a parent organization. If it is no longer chartered, it is no longer a chapter of anything. |
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If there is some defining relationship between your chapter and your university (i.e. "as long as we follow university policy, they cannot touch us") then you are not underground. |
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In my chapter's case, nothing is secret. The university knows we are there. We are simply unrecognized. We receive no funds from the university, we have no rights to promote ourselves on university property (aside from the basic promotion that ALL students have, i.e painting the cannon). That's what I mean by following university policy. If the university says we cannot advertise in certain places, like residence halls, then we don't. Again, we aren't engaged in any clandestine behaviour, as the term underground would imply. |
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I love how secret societies are a security risk, meanwhile the prision is just down the street. /hijack |
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