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Can't compare (past to present, fraternities to sororities). Won't work. Bottom line: ZTA was not able to offer membership to their required number of qualified women, based on their membership selection criteria, which is private. |
Oh. Sorry, wasn't trying to compare, just stating how times have changed....
I know there is no comparison between then and now. It's amazing to see how much organizations have grown! Thanks Bg |
No problem BG! got it!!! When we think about how hard it was 150 years ago (thinking of Pi Phi, ADPi, Phi Mu) to get things going, it is amazing, huh? But then, the population today - the college enrollment - blah blah blah.
Speaking of founding, thinking of scholarship ... connecting the dots. |
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Colonies cost a lot of money! Just within the last 10 years I think they've sped this process up an amazing amount. Not long ago a semester long colony was (I think) the norm. Now it's weeks. If they didn't attract the girls they wanted and felt like they would be working at a deficit right out of the shoot, we're talking about thousands of dollars extra that would need to be spent.
And I think, just my opinion, that certain sororities have a reputation they have to meet right out of the gate. ZTA is so big all over the south that going in as bottom rung would be seen as a bigger failure than if a Phi Sig or other northern sorority did. I mean, what would you expect out of a fish out of water sorority? Of course it's going to take them time to get established. I don't know that ZTA would have been given the same grace period. |
There are tons of reasons that a sorority might decide not to proceed with colonization and we'll probably never know why Zeta did so at Tulane. As strong as Zeta is, they must have had major signals that it wasn't going to work. Quién sabe?
I recall a fairly recent story about 2 groups that were selected to present at a large Southern university. Now the third group apparently knew this ahead of time but the other 2 were shocked to see that a majority of the girls at their presentation were Goth/alternative types. These dozens of girls had decided that they were going to be the "alternative" sorority. Group 3 was okay with this. Groups 1 and 2 didn't want to deal with the ongoing problems that an alternative chapter can have. They put their heads together and gave very "blonde" presentations. As they hoped, group 3, with their presentation tailored for these girls, was selected. The chapter still exists but is very unlike the others and is much smaller than the rest. They're lucky because a chapter like that would struggle at most big Southern schools. Anyway, I have no idea what the girls at Tulane were like but I wanted to throw in this story to show that something other than numbers or grades or anything else you'd normally expect can be the dealbreaker. |
Thats an interesting story, carnation.
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I don't see where groups 1 and 2 were any worse for not wanting an alternative chapter than any other group is for deciding they're not interested in a certain group of girls. I don't see why 1 and 2 would've wanted to spend millions of dollars on a chapter that would always struggle--and they do--in many ways.
I don't think of Group 3 as being noble. One of their alums told several of us that really, what they wanted was a chapter on that campus and they hoped to gradually change the group. A few years out and that really hasn't happened. |
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*Yes I'm old. |
This alum is a regional officer whom I've known for years. She's hardly a pearl-clutcher and I've got to say, this woman has tried everything with this group.
The chapter doesn't do "excellent fundraisers". It's hard getting them to do much of anything because the girls don't appreciate being asked to do them or much that's social either. After all, they were going to be the un-sorority! This chapter has been a total frustration for their nationals. Getting a house is on hold. You think it's all about the black makeup? No, it was the attitude that went with the makeup. Those of us who have been around for awhile have seen what usually happens with un-sororities around her because their dislike of traditional sorority life makes them not want to participate in the usual Greek life (we can't figure out why they even wanted to pledge). This gets around and those groups often get disastrous recruitment results. |
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Well, thanks anyway for making those 150 girls at Tulane happy that they're not going to be in a sorority. |
Well GCers, this is what I was talking about. I'm acquainted enough with the un-sorority's doings that I know what has occurred and that they have cost their national buttloads of money and pain. 33 doesn't know the situation and can only make assumptions.
Same with Tulane. Something (some things?) told ZTA that the situation wasn't going to work out. Maybe it was numbers or scholastics or something we haven't dreamed of. *Zeta is there, we're not, so I wouldn't begin to make assumptions about what happened.* |
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