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And now for something completely different...
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Speaking of BAMA fans - pretty sure their new interim president will mention which sorority she's in.....
http://blog.al.com/spotnews/2012/03/...dy_bonner.html |
It depends...
I do remember hearing a story from an Ole Miss Chi Omega alumna who owns a vacation home in Montana -- She met a wonderful, beautiful, classy woman (not at all unlike herself). This woman and her family owned the house next door in Montana. The two women became great friends and one day talked about their college sorority experiences. My friend was understandably proud of her Chi Omega affiliation (Chi Omega having a very strong reputation in the state of Mississippi). The new friend shared with great pride that she was an Alpha Phi from (I think it was) Univ. of South Dakota. Long story - short, neither was very impressed by the other woman's affiliation. My friend Mary Lee had never heard of Alpha Phi and Meredith, the other lady, was not at all impressed with Chi Omega. Both were thinking their sorority was "the best" and surprised that the other was from a group that wasn't very good.
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I recently read the novel Whistlin' Dixie in a Nor'easter because the author is a KD from Alabama--in fact, she mentions in info in the back of the paperback edition that the main character's friends are modeled after her own sorority sisters--but as in The Help, the main character is a Chi Omega from Ole Miss. I wonder why these writers wouldn't take the opportunity to give a little PR to their own sororities, but maybe the Chi O at Ole Miss represents to them the epitome of southernness.
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I wonder how many other people would share this view. |
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My daughter was married last Saturday, March 3. The groom's sister was in a sorority in a prominent Big 10 school. I knew the reputation of her group (like it or not) because of positive comments from members of my fraternity at their chapter at that school at a recent national convention. I complimented her on the strength and prominence of her sorority, and placed a guess at which other houses she returned to for her final three. She nearly dropped her plate--"How could you have known that?!" I told her it was a lucky guess based on strength and reputation of her own chapter and which other houses they competed against.
So strongholds on certain campuses (and towns and states) do not change quickly, and she had been out of school 10 years. We had a terrific conversation about Greek life on her campus and--now that she lives on the East Coast--how much she values conversations with her sorority sisters and how much those bonds mean to her. She was thrilled that my daughter was also a sorority woman, and commented in a positive way about my daughter's sorority chapter at her school. When I saw this thread, it just presented the opportunity to mention my recent experience and help prove the point of this thread |
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I've made connections with other women who are in a sorority, but it was not dependent on which GLO and/or chapter.
Example: When I was in grad school I had to turn in some paper work to the auditor for grants in my department. I walked in her office wearing one of my lettered sweaters and she asked if I was in a sorority. I said yes, and then she told me she was in one too, AGD. After that we became much better friends. We bonded over the fact that both of us are in sororities. And, I can't tell you the number of women who frequent my favorite needlepoint shop who are in sororities - there a lot of them! |
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I kind of equate plder alumni truly caring about another's affiliation (to a point where they're "bat shit crazy".. and mean, in some instances) with the people who never left their hometown and still talk about people from high school and who's dating whom.
Who cares. I actually get excited when I see/meet a member of a GLO other than my own.. and I imagine others do too, as you'll notice in the 'Finding Your Letters Somewhere You Didn't Expect' thread, where everyone talks about seeing letters other than their own most of the time. As someone mentioned earlier, we all have a connection (even if it's a minor one in some cases) and an understanding of what it means to be Greek.. That should be what matters. |
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