![]() |
Latino Greeks can literally not afford to be fighting
I am writing this after much observation of my fellow latino greeks dogging on each other. According to the latest stats, there are only about a million Latinos in college, a rather small number especially in comparison to our population. Latino GLO's are overall a very new phenomena (the first being in 1931 Phi Iota Alpha, but not springboarding until Lambda Theta Phi and Lambda Theta Alpha came about in 1975).
Since 1975, there have been over 70 Latin Greek Orgs established, alot of orgs for a very small pool. I have a feeling that some latino greeks are comparing themselves to the NPHC orgs, but the crucial difference is that they have alot more undergrads, alumni, history, and a larger pool. Who knows if in 10 years more than half of the 70+ orgs dissolve and join with another organization. Point is, we all share the same goals, and i have seen and heard of Latin orgs trying to get other orgs off campus if not get their members EXPELLED....SERIOUSLY how is that abiding by our values. I want to hear opinions from others.... LGLO's don't be in such a rush to grow up, I suggest we take our time to perfect what we already have so we can better what we will have in the future. |
Do you know how many latino fraternities are currently operating? Is 70 the present number?
|
the best bet would be to visit www.latinogreeks.com and see the listings though I doubt ALL of them are active. The main orgs I know of are either very large or heavy on the East Coast, for some reason West Coast LGLO's don't get heard of much in comparison to East Coast Greeks, why I don't know
|
Quote:
Totally Wicked brings up an interesting point: With so many groups out there, do you see any orgs being absorbed (for a lack of a better word) by larger groups? |
Quote:
|
misscaramella, what org are u in? i used to go to UCF
|
Quote:
I'm on the west coast, and I didn't start hearing about the east-coast founded organizations until there was more of a presence on the internet. Quote:
|
Quote:
|
STOP THE HATE
wow
|
Quote:
The only reason I asked is because I see that some organizations are huge on the East Coast, whereas others are mainly on the West Coast. I just thought it was interesting :cool: |
Quote:
I just wanted to respond to this. We (all of our organizations) need to do a better job of educating our members, particularly at the undergraduate level, on how to have pride in your own organization without putting others down. I often wish undergraduate members of the various LGLOs could see what it's like to be on the alumni side of things. I've met some outstanding individuals from other LGLOs in my professional life, and our LGLO membership is a common bond that we share. I'm always thrilled when I find out that an associate is a member of a fellow Latino fraternity or sorority. |
i agree that we do need to work together rather than dividing ourselves. It's very hard, though, because I think a lot of the fighting/competition stems from the fact that there is a such a small pool for any to recruit from, and most chapters have very low # members. When you co-sponsor an event with another organization that is recruiting from the same pool as you, it's hard for potentials to be able to differentiate if a lot of what you do involves working with another org. We don't want to share our recruitment strategies, and whatnot, because we don't want to lose that "advantage."
You see IFC and NPC orgs with 50+ members, and each year, their recruitment strategies, rush, allows for them to rarely worry about becoming defunct. That is not true with many non-IFC/NPC orgs, who don't intake on a normal basis, and many of us do not rush. Another reason why we may not be getting along is due to the fact that working with another organization can be a huge risk. I've seen orgs trying to co-sponsor an event or party with another org, but somewhere along the way someone doesn't fulfill their aspect of responsibilities, and it leaves a sour note for future collaboration. |
Quote:
Quote:
You may also try attending functions that have already been set, as opposed to actually hosting/creating new events. Whenever one of our orgs has a social or service type event, we make it a point to send out some representatives to show support. |
Bumping because this blog reminded me of this thread. It's sad that the "Greek Hate" blog received 124 comments while the "Greek Love" one received 16. Some of these comments show us why our (LGLO) community is the way it is now.
Greek Hate: http://greekstand.com/blog/2009/02/g...last/#comments Greek Love: http://greekstand.com/blog/2009/02/greek-love/#comments |
I saw the "hate" blog and I was just...WOW. People really, really need to grow up.
|
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 11:14 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.