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Katie9999 06-24-2005 02:28 AM

boston college
 
Hey i'm trying to find a friend who goes to BC...what are all the types of sororities there?

thanks!

emily2228 07-01-2005 08:05 PM

I don't think BC has any sororities

Unregistered- 07-01-2005 08:54 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by emily2228
I don't think BC has any sororities
They don't. Social ones, anyway.

I'm pretty sure BC has a bunch of elite organizations which include professional and honor Greek societies.

KSigkid 07-19-2005 07:56 AM

Someone else just asked this a little while ago - not sure if it was the same poster...

BC does not have any social Greek life whatsoever. Boston University has a small (but thriving) Greek system, but Boston College does not.

Some people confuse the two schools, although I'm not sure how.

alum 01-08-2006 12:43 PM

BC is a private Roman Catholic University run by the Jesuits.
BU is a private university.

Catholic colleges rarely have GLOs because it promotes "social elitism".

Beryana 01-08-2006 01:12 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by alum
Catholic colleges rarely have GLOs because it promotes "social elitism".
ReallY?! I joined a sorority at a Catholic college. Marquette, Franciscan University, University of Detroit Mercy, Loyola, etc all have social greek organizations. . . . (I'm sure there are more out there, though are just those that I know of off the top of my head)

Sarah

Senusret I 01-08-2006 01:25 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by alum
BC is a private Roman Catholic University run by the Jesuits.
BU is a private university.

Catholic colleges rarely have GLOs because it promotes "social elitism".

Did you attend a Catholic college or university?

GeekyPenguin 01-08-2006 02:26 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by Beryana
ReallY?! I joined a sorority at a Catholic college. Marquette, Franciscan University, University of Detroit Mercy, Loyola, etc all have social greek organizations. . . . (I'm sure there are more out there, though are just those that I know of off the top of my head)

Sarah

DePaul! Duquesne! Creighton! John Carroll! Loras! Rockhurst! St. Louis! Santa Clara! Seton Hall! St. John's! St. Mary's in Texas! San Diego! Incarnate Word! Villanova! Xavier!

But yeah, Catholics are not so down with Greek life. Except for Theta Phi Alpha, Kappa Beta Gamma, Phi Kappa Theta...

dukedg 01-08-2006 02:59 PM

I know at Santa Clara, at least, the school no longer recognizes the greek system (happened a few years back). As an aside, once that happened sorority membership soared. :)

I'm not sure if that is the case at any of the other schools listed.

GeekyPenguin 01-08-2006 03:01 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by dukedg
I know at Santa Clara, at least, the school no longer recognizes the greek system (happened a few years back). As an aside, once that happened sorority membership soared. :)

I'm not sure if that is the case at any of the other schools listed.

Yeah, but they're still there and the school doesn't care that there are Greek members. :)

Beryana 01-08-2006 03:53 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by GeekyPenguin
But yeah, Catholics are not so down with Greek life. Except for Theta Phi Alpha, Kappa Beta Gamma, Phi Kappa Theta...
Please elaborate on this statement. Thanks!

GeekyPenguin 01-08-2006 03:58 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by Beryana
Please elaborate on this statement. Thanks!
It was sarcasm, meaning that many Catholic schools permit and even welcome Greek life, and those are Greek organizations that were founded by Catholics with the assistance of administration at their Catholic universities, where they were welcomed!

alum 01-08-2006 03:58 PM

Georgetown University, BC, College of the Holy Cross, University of Notre Dame don't have Greeks for the reasons I stated previously. There may be others.

GeekyPenguin 01-08-2006 04:00 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by alum
Georgetown University, BC, College of the Holy Cross, University of Notre Dame don't have Greeks for the reasons I stated previously. There may be others.
Yeah, those are four. We listed about 30 Catholic colleges that DO.

Beryana 01-08-2006 04:20 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by GeekyPenguin
It was sarcasm, meaning that many Catholic schools permit and even welcome Greek life, and those are Greek organizations that were founded by Catholics with the assistance of administration at their Catholic universities, where they were welcomed!
Thanks! I was getting confused! :)

To add to what GeekyPenquin said, yes, there are some schools that do not allow Greek Life - both public and private schools! To make a generalization that BC does not allow social greek organizations because it is a Catholic school is just plain silly! We have proven there are Catholic schools that allow social greeks (and as a recent example, Marquette is open for expansion!). One of the most orthodox Catholic universities in this country, Franciscan University of Steubenville, allows social greeks. Yes, for sororities it is Theta Phi Alpha which is a traditionally Catholic NPC group, but that disproves the theory that Catholic schools do not allow social greeks.

Sarah

Senusret I 01-08-2006 06:02 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by alum
Georgetown University...
...has Alpha Epsilon Pi and Sigma Phi Epsilon in their own self-contained chapters; and Alpha Phi Alpha, Alpha Kappa Alpha, Delta Sigma Theta, and Kappa Alpha Psi as part of city-wide or core chapters. None "recognized" but ALL exist and thrive there.

I am an alumnus of Georgetown University.

Unregistered- 01-08-2006 09:37 PM

GreekChat: 1
alum: 0

Signed,
OTW
(who would have gone to a Catholic university if I had the $$$ at that time)

Drolefille 01-09-2006 02:28 AM

St. Louis University (Jesuit) is also expanding with a new chapter (NPC) coming on in 2007. We also just chartered/colonized and all that a new fraternity in the past couple years and 4 years ago SAE was relatively new on campus. Greek life isn't huge there but it is by no means stifled.

(they haven't presented yet at SLU but there was an urge to bring Tri-Delt or DZ to campus a few years ago. Also, I don't know if there'll be an upside or a downside to having another chapter in the city at Wash U or UMSL. )

Tom Earp 01-09-2006 05:58 PM

Is it such a problem that a few Roman Catholic Schools do not allow Greeks?

In My Mind Yes, but I am sure they have their own agenda what ever it is with different Groups. I am sure they do not want for $$$ to The Colleges Funds.


Just being a Religious Affiliated School doesnt mean that We as Greeks have to be there as to many other Schools that We are welcomed! Some Schools are smarter and have bigger a scope than others
:cool:

So, lets not go to those that dont want us!:rolleyes:

kitten03 04-12-2006 01:22 PM

As an undergrad I attended BC (Go Eagles). There are no chapters of greek life on campus at all. As someone said, there are city wide chapters of sororities and frats but none in house at BC. I think the reasoning is several things. Liability for having a greek life system when we(as BC students) have a prominent drinking culture. Also, as other catholic schools don't have greek life, they streamline with other catholic institutions. :o

There was a question about whether BC students miss greeklife. Generally I would say no. I would have loved to go greek as an undergrad but that didn't happen and there's no love lost. There are so many things to do on campus that greeklife would just be more on top.

But back to the original poster, I might be able to help. I graduated 2003 :D

KSigkid 04-22-2006 10:12 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by kitten03
As an undergrad I attended BC (Go Eagles). There are no chapters of greek life on campus at all. As someone said, there are city wide chapters of sororities and frats but none in house at BC. I think the reasoning is several things. Liability for having a greek life system when we(as BC students) have a prominent drinking culture. Also, as other catholic schools don't have greek life, they streamline with other catholic institutions. :o

There was a question about whether BC students miss greeklife. Generally I would say no. I would have loved to go greek as an undergrad but that didn't happen and there's no love lost. There are so many things to do on campus that greeklife would just be more on top.

But back to the original poster, I might be able to help. I graduated 2003 :D

I actually had a couple of friends who graduated '03 as well; almost went there myself, but no journalism program to speak of (although I hear the communications department has made strides).

I'm not sure I would say BC has anymore prominent of a drinking culture than any other university in the area. Part of it may be that the school is in a wealthy area (Newton/Chestnut Hill), and the neighbors would raise a ruckus (although I imagine many of them were Greek at their schools). I do think however that it will be a cold day in you know where before that administration would allow Greek Life on campus.

sdbeta1 04-22-2006 10:27 AM

I think generalizations are arising by the fact that the two most prominent catholic universities, Notre Dame and Boston College do not allow greek life. I would have to argue that catholic universities do not have anything to gain from greek life, they both possess similar missions in dealing with academics and the community. As a matter of fact, I come from a catholic university with a greek system. They live!

cp00 05-28-2006 11:57 PM

I graduated from BC was in a fraternity. One night I went to a party at BU's Sigma chi house with some girls I was friends with. My brother has been a Sig at Tulane and i ended up meeting some of the brothers. As it turned out, they had a history of periodically giving bids to guys from BC and offered me one. I liked the guys and figured why not? Anyway, i ended up getting initiated. It ended up working out very well. I still lived at BC (and most of my closest friends were there), but I still had the EX side to my life as well. It helped me meet more people and hooked me up with a great job as a barback at a club in downtown boston. I even became great friends with a guy who had been a Sig at GW in DC and transferred to BC suring our junior year. BC is a school where greek life would flourish. all it would take would be for some enterprising undergrads to get a group of people together and petition some national fraternities to start a colony. I know that both Sigma Chi and SAE were very interested a few years back. The administration will never go for it, but that really idn;t a deal breaker. Sigma Chi has a few chapters that aren't affiliated with a university - Harvard for one, comes to mind. I also know that both EX and SAE at BU will give bids to BC students as well. SAE is a "boston wide" chapter at the moment which means tha they'll accept anyone from any school. People could just pledge there, get initiated and start chapters back at BC if they want. just an idea...

firecracker08 05-29-2006 07:16 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by KSigkid
I do think however that it will be a cold day in you know where before that administration would allow Greek Life on campus.
I think this is much more of a concern than having national sororities and frats petition to start a colony(forgive me if I'm not using the proper phrasing). The greek system is not new so I believe that plenty of students have tried to make BC open to Greek Life. The administration is deadset against it though.:confused:

KSigkid 06-14-2006 05:16 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by cp00
I graduated from BC was in a fraternity. One night I went to a party at BU's Sigma chi house with some girls I was friends with. My brother has been a Sig at Tulane and i ended up meeting some of the brothers. As it turned out, they had a history of periodically giving bids to guys from BC and offered me one. I liked the guys and figured why not? Anyway, i ended up getting initiated. It ended up working out very well. I still lived at BC (and most of my closest friends were there), but I still had the EX side to my life as well. It helped me meet more people and hooked me up with a great job as a barback at a club in downtown boston. I even became great friends with a guy who had been a Sig at GW in DC and transferred to BC suring our junior year. BC is a school where greek life would flourish. all it would take would be for some enterprising undergrads to get a group of people together and petition some national fraternities to start a colony. I know that both Sigma Chi and SAE were very interested a few years back. The administration will never go for it, but that really idn;t a deal breaker. Sigma Chi has a few chapters that aren't affiliated with a university - Harvard for one, comes to mind. I also know that both EX and SAE at BU will give bids to BC students as well. SAE is a "boston wide" chapter at the moment which means tha they'll accept anyone from any school. People could just pledge there, get initiated and start chapters back at BC if they want. just an idea...

Interesting - I got to deal a bit with the Sigma Chi president when I was president of my chapter at Boston U., and he was always a great guy to deal with in interfraternal situations.

I didn't realize SAE was a city-wide chapter. Since when has that been the case? When I was in school (99-03), it was a BU-only chapter (not recognized by the university, but recognized by SAE international office). I didn't realize Sigma Chi had a policy of giving bids at other schools.

We had a guy from BC, but he started out at BU, pledged while at BU, and then transferred to BC after he had been initiated.

I agree that the administration would never go for it. It would take having houses off-campus (similar to what Boston U. does), and the organizations would have to be self-sufficient, i.e. able to run with no help at all from the college. I'm not sure how Rush would work, as BC would almost certainly restrict advertising on campus. It may even have to be a word-of-mouth thing.

I agree that the students would be all for Greek life. It seems like the perfect place to start up from that perspective, but the administration would be a hurdle.

irishpipes 06-16-2006 08:30 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by sdbeta1
I think generalizations are arising by the fact that the two most prominent catholic universities, Notre Dame and Boston College do not allow greek life. I would have to argue that catholic universities do not have anything to gain from greek life, they both possess similar missions in dealing with academics and the community. As a matter of fact, I come from a catholic university with a greek system. They live!

I would have to argue that BC is not one of "the two most prominent" Catholic universities! Nothing against BC, but others come to mind as more prominent. :)

Peaches-n-Cream 06-16-2006 10:05 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by irishpipes
I would have to argue that BC is not one of "the two most prominent" Catholic universities! Nothing against BC, but others come to mind as more prominent. :)

I'm thinking Notre Dame and Georgetown.

alum 06-16-2006 10:18 AM

The College of the Holy Cross in central Mass is considered to be much more academic than BC.

33girl 06-16-2006 10:25 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by alum
The College of the Holy Cross in central Mass is considered to be much more academic than BC.

"academic" doesn't = "prominent." I've never heard of this Holy Cross place.

SiempreCansada 01-25-2007 03:37 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by GeekyPenguin (Post 1167891)
DePaul! Duquesne! Creighton! John Carroll! Loras! Rockhurst! St. Louis! Santa Clara! Seton Hall! St. John's! St. Mary's in Texas! San Diego! Incarnate Word! Villanova! Xavier!

But yeah, Catholics are not so down with Greek life. Except for Theta Phi Alpha, Kappa Beta Gamma, Phi Kappa Theta...

There are several Catholic Women at Rockhurst that are in Delta Xi Phi, Alpha Sigma Alpha, and Zeta Tau Alpha.

Drolefille 01-25-2007 10:14 AM

Siempre Cansada, that was sarcasm...

Quote:

Originally Posted by GeekyPenguin (Post 1167931)
It was sarcasm, meaning that many Catholic schools permit and even welcome Greek life, and those are Greek organizations that were founded by Catholics with the assistance of administration at their Catholic universities, where they were welcomed!


AlexMack 01-25-2007 11:25 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by 33girl (Post 1266326)
"academic" doesn't = "prominent." I've never heard of this Holy Cross place.

It's part of the Worcester 12 college consortium. Not even kidding, there are 12 colleges in the area. At least 3 of them are catholic. Not sure about greek life there though.

KSigkid 01-25-2007 01:58 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by alum (Post 1266315)
The College of the Holy Cross in central Mass is considered to be much more academic than BC.

Where are you getting that info from? Holy Cross is an excellent school, but I've always heard of (and regarded) BC as being on a higher level academically.

AlexMack 01-25-2007 10:59 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by KSigkid (Post 1389155)
Where are you getting that info from? Holy Cross is an excellent school, but I've always heard of (and regarded) BC as being on a higher level academically.

BC is better than Holy Cross. You are correct. Take it from a native.

jon1856 01-25-2007 11:37 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by KSigkid (Post 1265430)
Interesting -.........

I didn't realize SAE was a city-wide chapter. Since when has that been the case? When I was in school (99-03), it was a BU-only chapter (not recognized by the university, but recognized by SAE international office). I didn't realize Sigma Chi had a policy of giving bids at other schools. ....

IIRC, City wide program/policy started a few years ago.
From what I have heard, seems to be working well.

KSigkid 01-26-2007 10:55 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by centaur532 (Post 1389494)
BC is better than Holy Cross. You are correct. Take it from a native.

I was going to say, I was in Boston for 7 years, grew up in New England, and had never heard that.

Again, nothing against Holy Cross, as it is a very good school. But, I'd always heard BC was better (not that BC isn't overrated in some ways, in my opinion).

Now, if we're going to get into a BU/BC debate, I'll just have to keep my mouth shut...


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