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missdiscretion 08-16-2007 03:44 PM

Most Popular Sororities & Fraternities
 
This is from 2002 but thought was interesting.

It's Greek to Me
September 6, 2002

With September here, and students returning to college, a lot of terms begin to rise on the Lycos search logs. One of those staples of college life is Greek life, and Lycos gets a fair number of searches for fraternities and sororities. We decided to see which were the most popular with our users.
Here are the top 20 Greek organizations searched on Lycos. We combined searches from the first six months of 2002 with searches from the last two weeks, since students returned to school. As you'll see later in this article, the top eight terms make a strong statement:
1) Alpha Kappa Alpha
2) Delta Sigma Theta
3) Omega Psi Phi
4) Kappa Alpha Psi
5) Zeta Phi Beta
6) Alpha Phi Alpha
7) Phi Beta Sigma
8) Sigma Gamma Rho
9) Phi Delta Kappa
10) Sigma Phi Epsilon

11) Phi Beta Kappa
12) Phi Theta Kappa
13) Sigma Alpha Epsilon
14) Chi Omega
15) Pi Kappa Alpha
16) Sigma Chi
17) Kappa Kappa Gamma
18) Sigma Theta Tau
19) Kappa Alpha Theta
20t) Delta Zeta
20t) Zeta Tau Alpha

Not all of these organizations are conventional fraternities. Phi Beta Kappa, of course, is a student honor society, and Phi Theta Kappa is a similar society for students at two-year colleges. Phi Delta Kappa is an professional society for teachers, while Sigma Theta Tau is a professional society for nurses.
The remaining organizations are split pretty evenly between the men and the women, with eight fraternities and nine sororities (including the two tied for #20). But what really stands out is that the top eight most-searched Greek organizations are all historically African-American, led by the sororities Alpha Kappa Alpha and Delta Sigma Theta (with almost, but not quite, the same number of searches).
The top two black sororities get more than 10 times the number of searches as the top "conventional" sorority, Chi Omega. The difference is a bit less pronounced for the men, but Omega Psi Phi gets about four times as many searches as the top "conventional" frat, Sigma Phi Epsilon.
Many readers will find this surprising, but delving deeper into the culture of these organizations shows why they get so many searches. Black Greek life holds a very important place in African-American history. One hundred years ago, Americans of European ancestry had plenty of lodges, societies, and professional unions to connect them, many of which dated back to before 1776. But African-Americans did not -- so fraternities and sororities were some of the strongest, earliest national African-American organizations, dedicated to community service and political activism as well as life on and off campus.
That strength has continued to the present day. The alumni chapters of black Greek organizations are much more active than those of corresponding "conventional" fraternities. A majority of members consider themselves active even after graduation, with up to 60 percent of active membership made up of alumni.
And most historical African-American leaders were members of these organizations. The most famous is Martin Luther King Jr., who gets a whole section on the Alpha Phi Alpha website dedicated to building an MLK memorial.
Modernity brings changes, of course. Now "conventional" fraternities are open to all races, and so are historically black fraternities. Like MLK, former Vice-President Hubert H. Humphrey was a member of Alpha Phi Alpha.
Of course, fraternities aren't the only searches that involve Greek letters. Check out today's bonus list to the right for more searches that are Greek to me.
MONDAY: Speaking of Greek, the latest health fad has a Greek tinge to it.
http://50.lycos.com/090602.asp (Source)

AlphaFrog 08-16-2007 03:49 PM

IN BEFORE THE LOCK!

Little32 08-16-2007 04:13 PM

I think this has been posted before.

Unregistered- 08-16-2007 04:19 PM

Is Lycos even still around? I can't remember when it was last that I used Lycos to search for anything. 8-9 years, maybe?

Tom Earp 08-16-2007 05:56 PM

So, a new poster, let it go?;)

Asking a question.


AlphaFrog, so, what is your post about? So, You like big Letters or what?:rolleyes:

BlueNYC2 08-16-2007 05:57 PM

lmao @ the iotas not even bein on that list....DAMN SON!!!!


but yo, #7????? i'm sayin tho...whats really good?

wow @ lycos...yeah this is definitely old...lycos aint been relevant SINCE 2002

Animate 08-16-2007 06:41 PM

I just love the term "conventional".

GTFOH!

AnchorAlumna 08-16-2007 07:01 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by AlphaFrog (Post 1503472)
IN BEFORE THE LOCK!

Me too!!
Hey...how about we try this: Google your favorite or least favorite Greek name, and "Ax Murderer," and then report the results on greekchat. LOLOLOLOLO!!!

PrettyBoy 08-16-2007 07:13 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by BlueNYC2 (Post 1503559)
lmao @ the iotas not even bein on that list....DAMN SON!!!!

LMAO!:D

banditone 08-16-2007 07:42 PM

what is this "Lycos" you speak of?

Knoxstudent 08-16-2007 07:55 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by banditone (Post 1503621)
what is this "Lycos" you speak of?

Having no idea what Lycos was myself, I stumbled upon it once last year.
Lycos is a search engine similar to Google. Actually, it worked better than Google the time I used it.

icelandelf 08-16-2007 08:09 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by missdiscretion (Post 1503464)
This is from 2002 but thought was interesting....


why? :p

Unregistered- 08-16-2007 08:14 PM

Before Google pretty much took over, there were lots of search engines people could choose from.

Lycos, AltaVista, InfoSeek, DogPile, Excite, and WebCrawler all come to mind.

Senusret I 08-16-2007 08:49 PM

Webcrawler used to be my shit!!!!

Scandia 08-16-2007 09:05 PM

I found an Internet book from 1998. I knew it was dated not from what it contained:

Yahoo, Infoseek, Webcrawler, Altavista, Lycos

but from what was missing:

GOOGLE!!!!!!!!

AnchorAlumna 08-16-2007 10:49 PM

Alta Vista used to be my fave.

DSTRen13 08-16-2007 10:54 PM

A lot of those engines still exist, and since they work differently than Google (different algorithms, etc.), if you're doing an indepth search it can really benefit you to run it on several of them - you'll find things you never would just using Google or Yahoo. (Yes, I am a geek, lol.)

honeychile 08-16-2007 10:57 PM

And a five year report is revelant how?

AnchorAlumna 08-16-2007 11:40 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DSTRen13 (Post 1503715)
A lot of those engines still exist, and since they work differently than Google (different algorithms, etc.), if you're doing an indepth search it can really benefit you to run it on several of them - you'll find things you never would just using Google or Yahoo. (Yes, I am a geek, lol.)

Yeah, I'm finding that Google is more and more crammed with ads and isn't all that great.

yangstar 08-17-2007 12:12 AM

Dogpile was where it was at. Taking all the search engines and finding all the searches. Yea SIGGGGGEP. :]

mystikchick 08-17-2007 04:04 AM

Oh man, this brings back memories of being taught how to use the internet and search engines in computer class back in the day (meaning middle school :P) - Alta Vista used to be my favorite, along with Ask Jeeves, Lycos, Metacrawler, Dogpile, and Freeality and I know there's one I'm forgetting. Now I just use Google though...still serves me well. But I will always be grateful to Alta Vista for Babelfish.

AlphaFrog 08-17-2007 06:13 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mystikchick (Post 1503788)
Oh man, this brings back memories of being taught how to use the internet and search engines in computer class back in the day (meaning middle school :P) - Alta Vista used to be my favorite, along with Ask Jeeves, Lycos, Metacrawler, Dogpile, and Freeality and I know there's one I'm forgetting. Now I just use Google though...still serves me well. But I will always be grateful to Alta Vista for Babelfish.

Jeeves brought up too much porn. We weren't allowed to use it at my school.

And I think there are several companies that will be always grateful for BabelFish, since that appears to be how they get their "Spanish" or "French" instructions for their products....

mystikchick 08-17-2007 09:38 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by AlphaFrog (Post 1503803)
And I think there are several companies that will be always grateful for BabelFish, since that appears to be how they get their "Spanish" or "French" instructions for their products....

Haha it's so true. My roommate is Taiwanese, and she once posted an LJ entry in Chinese that I went to BF to translate - the original entry had been about a typhoon hitting Taiwan, but the translation came out reading something about giant urine drops from the sky...now I use WordReference - much better resource for the not-so-beginning language speaker.

Glitter650 08-17-2007 11:23 AM

I still go to jeeves once in a blue moon.


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