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lol this is ridiculous. i can't believe that these people want to be greek and don't understand the first rule...keep ya mouth shut. anyone who is bloggin their desires that early is not someone i would want on my line or in my chapter...
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Re: What in the hell are they thinking?
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This is vaguely related to the thread and I didn't really feel like starting another one... my sister graduated high school yesterday and I was at her honors assembly on Tuesday. They read all the scholarships that each student got (its a small school, so its do-able). One of the African-American girls got some kind of "Delta Sigma Theta" scholarship - I didn't hear exactly what it was because I wasn't paying that much attention, but I noticed because of the Greek letters. Is that common, for BGLOs to give scholarships to incoming freshman? Would that imply their interest in the girl, so that she might say to someone "well I'm going to be a DST in college"? Or might it just be because her mom/sister/grandma was a DST?
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The scholarships are awarded solely on merit (and need) and have nothing to do with the applicant's interest in or familial connections to our organizations. One of the participants in our Beautillion became a Kappa. Nobody would really assume that she wants to be in a certain sorority because she won that sorority's scholarship. (Unless she broadcasts herself in that manner.) |
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Thanks for clearing that up for me! :D
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As far as soliciting membership, I can't even count on all my fingers and my toes how many people I know who recieved scholarships from one org and pledged another. Not to memtion the greeks I know who are still benefiting from another orgs scholarship program, and they got these scholarships AFTER they pledged. |
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I've only heard of "red shirt" in regards to football.
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You can redshirt any sport. It allows you to practice with the team for a year, but not compete. Then you have an extra year of eligibility. Like if I was on the track team...and I was good, but freshman year there were a TON of seniors way better than me...I could redshirt my freshman year and not play, but still get the work outs in. Then I could compete my sophomore, junior, senior, and super senior year.
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you need a medical reason and doctor's note to redshirt-it can be a big process. if you just don't want to compete and not participate in the season, you would still have the extra season of eligibility. end hijack// |
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You do not need a medical reason to be redshirted. NCAA Redshirt Definition Quote:
Definition of a "Medical Redshirt" Quote:
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