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I don't REALLY think you are comparing helping fraternity men pass out drinks to pnm to working at a soup kitchen, are you?:rolleyes: I have this image of the homeless being helped, and fraternity boys . .. not needing it. And for what it is worth, I did a great deal of volunteering for a chapter of Sigma Chi, but I did not become a little sister. Why? Well, even then my sorority frowned upon it, and because I wanted to do what I did because I wanted to do it - not so I could wear their letters. I'm glad, 33, you had a good experience. I'm sure there were many groups that were above board and did not take advanage of the girls. But there were many who did. At any rate, there's no sense getting into a debate as the question has been decided.
So bring on the little sister group memories, all you Belles and Sweethearts and Little Sigs. |
Not little sisters...but...had to love our Big Brothers who went by the nickname "Moonshiners" They were mostly the GDI boyfriends of the girls in the house, the hashers, a few baseball players, friends who didn't go to school with us..and a smattering of fraternity guys. The different Big Bro groups played broom ball against each other. We usually had a mixer with them. They would have a box dinner auction and the girls would bid for their dinners- which were usually very good..quite elaborate picnic dinners. I remember buying one box dinner where the guys wore tuxes and really did it up!
They were really nice guys. I'm not in any way advocating big brother groups but the guys themselves were truly sweethearts. And it worked out well for more than a few of them who are now happily married to my sisters!;) |
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For the record, I was not a little sister...several of my good friends were. anyhoo.... One of the Sig Eps decided to grow a ponytail and we referred to him as FirstName "I Think I'm Bono" LastName. |
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1978 - 82 - Small midwestern college in Nebraska
Well, it was towards the end of Disco, thank goodness. I hated dancing to disco music, made all my curl go flat.
The song "We Are Family" was our pledge class theme. It was the only disco song I knew the words to - but I did like Meatloaf and STILL know all the words to "Paradise by the Dashboard Lights". I can related back to colors - our pledge class sweatshirts where white with red writing. Fraternity Sportswear would send a rep with promo pieces and you would order your navy blue sweatshirt with embroidered letters. It was a big deal when in about 1980 they had a light blue hoodie. Woo Hoo! Quarters was fun...fraternities would steal composites, and serenades were a big deal. We would take our pledge classes around to sing to the fraternities after we got our pledge classes and had a dinner. Animal House came out around then - so then we all had......TOGA PARTIES!!! Rush had lots of skits and song. We thought we were all that when we revised our Theme Day skit to a Grease Theme and wore 50's style costumes. And the slide show was made from pictures turned into slides! Took a lot of work! |
AOII Angel - Let me guess - replace "Gamma Phi" with AO II, and you've got your pref song!:)
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A-O-II It is for always and not just college years |
Well, it took some chapters a LONG time to get rid of candles. My chapter was using them really up until my presidency or maybe the one before me (can't remember). I don't mind using them for certain things, but honestly, and this is just my opinion, using them for things in pref ceremony is super-super lame. We used to do a candle-lighting thing and it wasn't as cool with electric candles. Plus many of the PNMs don't realize why you'd be using electric candles and it seems weird to them too. I think we ended up changing our preference night ceremony when our alumnae got more involved and we had to quit using real candles.
I understand no candles in situations where there are a LOT of candles and maybe fabric around, or even when the candles are 'background items,' but I honestly think that if you're just using one candle, and the candle itself is the focus of the ceremony (as in candle passes or our old preference ceremony) it's pretty stupid to ban it. I just think it's taking risk management too far. I mean with one candle you can pretty quickly respond to any issue that arises. I did my best to obey the rule when I was leading my chapter, and I would in the future if I were in a Pi Phi leadership position, but I just think a lot of the beauty of the ceremony is taken away by using electric candles. |
From MysticCat:
The music would almost always have included hits by groups like The Tams, The Embers, Maurice Williams and the Zodiacs, The Showmen, Bill Deal and the Rhondells, The Drifters, The Band of Oz, and General Johnson and the Chairmen of the Board. "Be Young, Be Foolish, Be Happy" (The Tams) was sort of the unofficial anthem, although the girls all flocked onto the dance floor for "Carolina Girls" (General Johnson and the Chairmen of the Board); the guys preferred "Sixty Minute Man" (The Dominoes). Oh, my yes! Along with "Mrs. Grace," "39-21-40 Shape", "Myrtle Beach Days," "Johnny Dollar," "Monkey Time", "Far Away Places", "Rainy Day Bells","Little Red Book,"etc. I still listen to this music when I run! Billy Stewart, Georgia Prophets. (And BTW, this was still the music for all of us when hubby was in medical school. We still shagged, and still do to this day. Weddings are always fun!) And gold and cloisone add a bead necklaces-completely forgot about those, though I know I have saved mine somewhere. Candlelights, yes, rush w/ everything, dresses all alike, pledge books we had to carry everywhere. |
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This, of course, was in the days before TiVo, but there were programmable VCRs. I went to high school in the Bronze Age, not the Stone Age. :p |
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