![]() |
School Forcing Locals to go National
I go to a school where there are only 3 fraternities. One local, one national, and one dissafiliated. The school recently passed a rule saying that all of the local organizations have to go national. Has anyone ever heard of this?
|
Quote:
Your situation is not unique. |
All meaning the only one? And clearly yours or you wouldn't say "all" to make it so dramatic.
I don't know, I go to a school with no locals. It does make sense though since nationals provide a lot from a risk management standpoint that a local by its nature can't (oversight, rules, consultants and probably most importantly pool liability insurance). |
It happens more often than you think.
|
Yes.
Around 2000 Joh Carroll University (Ohio) told their locals that they had to go NPC or disband. Kappa Delta Gamma became Kappa Kappa Gamma (my boss helped with the installation) Theta Kappa became Kappa Delta; Pi Sigma Phi became Kappa Alpha Theta; Lambda Gamma Sigma became Gamma Phi Beta; Delta Delta Xi became Chi Omega. Lambda Chi Rho did not go national. The girls then merged with Kappa Delta The fraternities did the same: Alpha Rho Omega became Sigma Phi Epsilon. Phi Beta Phi became Sigma Alpha Epsilon, which went inactive in 2004 Delta Kappa Psi became Phi Kappa Tau, which is inactive Phi Alpha Tau became Kappa Sigma Iota Beta Gamma and Iota Chi Upsilon did not affiliate with a national. Since then, Beta Theta Pi has formed a colony. |
Quote:
|
Yes, this happened at my school. Sigma Kappa Nu, or the SKNs (pronounced as "skins") were forced to go national, but they chose not to, and they are no longer recognized by campus. However, they do still attend some Greek events, they have a house and host parties that are attended by many students, and they have an annual football game that they play against Delta Chi (which they used to play against KDR up until 3 years ago). They are still prominent on campus, they still wear their letters, they do still recruit and get new members (although no one is really sure how) and they show up at Greek events open to all students, but they can not actively participate in them.
As CrackerBarrel mentioned, one of the main reasons for my campus doing this was the concern with a lack of insurance. It's a liability issue for the school that they don't want put on their shoulders. And actually, the Delta Chi chapter was originally a local fraternity, Beta Upsilon Nu (or the BUNs! haha) and they chose to go national, although I'm not sure if this was a result of pressure from the university. |
Quote:
Not that I'm advocating this, but I've seen locals do this and it's worked out nicely for them - better than when they were affiliated with campus. |
I'm apart of a local frat.
My university doesn't recognize any sororities or fraternities. Currently we have: Alpha Delta Pi Alpha Phi Sigma Chi and ourselves We broke off from Beta Theta Pi, which also was not recognized. We still go around advertising we are the fraternities and sororities of our university. The University basically just doesn't give us any sort of cash or other benefit. We think it would be beneficial to get the school to recognize us, so all 4 groups are working together to get it done. It looks like it might happen in the next handful of years. ... now im worried we will be forced into a national. :S |
It happened at Wake Forest many years ago, too. Something about the original charter would not allow sororities, so there were societies. The societies had to go NPC due to risk management.
|
?? whaaat
I dont know what school you go to but I am a sister in a local, disafilliated sorority. Basically on our town/schools shitlist, but everyone loves us. We've been asked to reafilliated multiple times, but refuse due to us doing fine on our own. This is why your school rule confuses me and I think is wicked lame, if it is true. I know New Hampshire does not have that rule! Good luck and dont give in. Being disafilliated KICKS ASS!!!
|
Quote:
We are like soo wicked cool!! Awesome. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
what school?
Quote:
|
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 04:51 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.