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-   -   NPHC Greeks - how do you feel about this? (https://greekchat.com/gcforums/showthread.php?t=88105)

Boom_Quack13 07-05-2007 06:17 PM

^^^^is out of his mind, if he thinks someone "stalks" him.

You can't come up with 10 posts, including this one, that I've ever even made to you. Don't flatter yourself, Toots.

Cruise4fun 07-05-2007 07:07 PM

beanies
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Wolfman (Post 1480051)
This is a scene from Howard Univ. in the 1950s. Pictured are Ques and a coed. Note the "beanies," a fairly common item for Black Greeks at the time. This is a tradition but would current members of BGLOs today understand this? (Personally, I like the style.)

http://groups.msn.com/NPHCArchivePho...o&PhotoID=1471


I think the beanies were popular across many GLO's at that time. I remember an alumna on our Housing Corp. showing us her purple beanie.

Wolfman 07-05-2007 07:17 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Cruise4fun (Post 1480260)
I think the beanies were popular across many GLO's at that time. I remember an alumna on our Housing Corp. showing us her purple beanie.

Exactly. There's always been cross-pollination across GLOs in terms of trends in dress and other traditions. This is nothing new. A diachronic look at this phenomenon will put to rest the "exclusivist" notion about certain things of this nature.

AKA_Monet 07-05-2007 07:42 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Wolfman (Post 1480267)
Exactly. There's always been cross-pollination across GLOs in terms of trends in dress and other traditions. This is nothing new. A diachronic look at this phenomenon will put to rest the "exclusivist" notion about certain things of this nature.

I have seen sweaters circa 1950's through the late 60's or early 70's. I think the beanies migrated into caps as time went on. I think both my grandfather and father had beanies. My mother did not and she pledged the Pi Chapter at Fisk University.

Looking through my parent's Fiskites yearbooks, I do distinctly remember they made all the men who pledged Omega shave their heads and that was early 1960's. In the Bethune-Cookman books that are circa 1970's I saw the line ups based on height of all the pledges.

Little32 07-05-2007 07:52 PM

/hijack

Man, that is the one piece of 'nalia that I really want. A letter sweater.

/end hijack

L.O.C.K. 07-05-2007 08:31 PM

Wolfman, you should write a book dude. You know your shit. :D:D

DSTCHAOS 07-05-2007 09:08 PM

A 60s Soror gave me her college sweater when I crossed. It's a keepsake and not something I would wear. :)

ladygreek 07-05-2007 09:13 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Wolfman (Post 1480051)
This is a scene from Howard Univ. in the 1950s. Pictured are Ques and a coed. Note the "beanies," a fairly common item for Black Greeks at the time. This is a tradition but would current members of BGLOs today understand this? (Personally, I like the style.)

http://groups.msn.com/NPHCArchivePho...o&PhotoID=1471

Even I wouldn't understand it because it was not around when I pledged in '69. The only beanies were freshman beanies. LOL

ladygreek 07-05-2007 09:15 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by starang21 (Post 1480068)
is that what would really be happening?

:thinking:

Unnecessary :mad:

ladygreek 07-05-2007 09:20 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by AKA_Monet (Post 1480280)
I have seen sweaters circa 1950's through the late 60's or early 70's. I think the beanies migrated into caps as time went on. I think both my grandfather and father had beanies. My mother did not and she pledged the Pi Chapter at Fisk University.

Looking through my parent's Fiskites yearbooks, I do distinctly remember they made all the men who pledged Omega shave their heads and that was early 1960's. In the Bethune-Cookman books that are circa 1970's I saw the line ups based on height of all the pledges.

On my yard it just wasn't the Omegas who shave the "dogs" heads--the term used for all NPHC frats going into the probate period. It wasn't until my senior year that they all got to keep their hair (afros) out of respect to the Black Power movement.

ladygreek 07-05-2007 09:23 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DSTCHAOS (Post 1480317)
A 60s Soror gave me her college sweater when I crossed. It's a keepsake and not something I would wear. :)

I wanted a sweater so badly, but they were so dang expensive. LOL

starang21 07-05-2007 09:28 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Boom_Quack13 (Post 1480232)
Toots.

LOL

AKA_Monet 07-05-2007 09:32 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ladygreek (Post 1480321)
Even I wouldn't understand it because it was not around when I pledged in '69. The only beanies were freshman beanies. LOL

I heard the same thing in the late 60's and early 70's. I bet it is one of those things that the NPHC organizations did back in the day, and then the schools adopted them to provide "unity".

It's the same now as with "stepping, handsigns and calls". LOL :rolleyes:


Quote:

Originally Posted by ladygreek (Post 1480330)
On my yard it just wasn't the Omegas who shave the "dogs" heads--the term used for all NPHC frats going into the probate period. It wasn't until my senior year that they all got to keep their hair (afros) out of respect to the Black Power movement.

You know, it may be that they kept there afros because of the "draft". If one shaved their hair, then the military would be looking for you. At that time, you think the "police" would be interested if you actual were inducted during the "drafting days"?

It may have been an "overt inadvertant protest" against the draft the war... Same way these kids wear baggy pants to look like they are felons these days. We do not understand it and these kids do not know how to articulate it. But, where we are these days, may be we need to explain how "thangs" were done back in the day during the ole skool...

And ain't that ole skool!!!

My folks are ole skool and still pimp out. Hayle my aunt wears much more fashionable clothes than me. :eek:

starang21 07-05-2007 09:38 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ladygreek (Post 1480324)
Unnecessary :mad:

*scoots to corner*

LOLOLOL

UGAalum94 07-05-2007 10:08 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Cruise4fun (Post 1480260)
I think the beanies were popular across many GLO's at that time. I remember an alumna on our Housing Corp. showing us her purple beanie.

All male freshman at my dad's college in the late 50s had beanies. I think they all had to have their heads shaved too. At the time it was an all white school, so it would have been odd if they had copied the tradition from NPHCs.


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