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Catchy name for pledge dance?
I'm a 15 for kkg and we need to come up with a clever name for our pledge dance. Last year they did "kappa keys over seas" and then everyone dressed according to the theme, any suggestions?
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If it's anything like at my school, '15 is the name of the new member class. Every year the incoming new member classes are named by the year that they will graduate (assuming that the new members are all freshmen and will graduate in 4 years). My brother is freshman, so his pledge class is called '15s when they are referred to as a group. I was a junior when I joined my chapter, so I would have been a '12 (even though I graduated in '10).
Would have made more sense if she said "I'm a Kappa new member". |
Well, that makes sense. It's probably a thing that varies by campus culture.
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Yeah sorry hahaha it depends on the year your pledge class graduates so like my pledge mom is a 14 cause she graduates in 2014, my bad
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I know it's campus culture (in other words OP, I am not yelling at you) but I REALLY detest this form of pledge class naming. It creates an inhospitable environment for anyone other than a freshman rushing.
How about Kan Kan with Kappa? |
Welcome to Kappa, Kappakeys.
I got nothing to help you with themes...we always did our Monmouth Duo with Pi Phi as our pledge formal, and I'm utterly lacking in creativity. |
Kappa Kotillion? (formal)
KKG's Tropical Breeze? (beach) Fleur de Lis Zzzzz's? (pj party) |
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For exmaple: Warren Beatty, Northwestern 1959 Drew Brees, Purdue 2001 Mike Ditka, Pittsburgh 1961 Woody Harrelson, Hanover 1983 David Letterman, Ball State 1969 Urban Meyer, Cincinnati 1986 Brad Pitt, Missouri 1986 John Wayne, Southern California 1929 |
^^ That's what we would do with individuals, except we would use chapter designation (without school or with school in parentheses) and year of initiation, not graduation. E.g., Andy Griffith, Alpha Rho 1946.
But that's different from what the OP described and from what 33girl reacted to. They're not talking about describing an individual after he or she graduates; they're talking about a designation for a pledge/new member class -- specifically, designating the class by the year its members will graduate (which assumes they are all the same year and will graduate at the same time). In other words, this fall's pledge/new member class would be referred to as the pledge/new member class of 2015. That presumes all members of the class are freshman and will graduate in four years. We don't have a standard for that. In my experience, most of our chapters will either designate probationary member classes by the season and year of pledging (e.g., the Spring 2012 class) or by Greek letters (e.g., the Gamma PM class, meaning the third in the chapter's history). |
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When Kappakeys said the following … Quote:
In some cases, pledges and initiated members are described by (lumped by) their (anticipated) graduation year – even during their undergraduate years. So “14s” would simply be another way of saying “sophomores”. Which is what I thought she meant with respect to her pledge mom. :o |
What types of themes are you interested in? I think it is easiest to come up with the theme first, and then work backwards to come up with a name.
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