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Is it bad to sign up for two interviews?
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Then generally speaking, it should not matter.
In my opinion, you did the right thing by being honest with them about the other interview. They may have already known you had interviewed with the other fraternity and were ok with it. But the reason they asked you if you had other interviews was to see if you would be honest about it. So it is good that you were. If the campus culture is such that rushees do not sign up for more than one - or perhaps the other fraternity is the chapter's "rival" - then hopefully you were able to convey your reasons - that you felt obligated to sign up for the other interview. And you followed that by letting them know that your interest truly lies with them. |
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I for one would wonder why they are giving that kind of interview.
If it is overly oppresive, I would wonder why? Recruitment/rushing is a two way street. Each side has to feel each other out to see if there is a fit there. |
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Why not? If I was applying to any other organization, school related or not, you have the right to shop around. In fact, I'd encourage a new member to closely evaulate all their options, so they know what to expect and where they fit.
The worst thing you can do is committ yourself to one GLO and either not get in, or discover it's different than what you thought, and of course with the short pledge periods we now have, you may be initiated before you really realize the pros and cons. I spent over a year as a pledge and was very happy with my GLO (I was part of the initial pledge colonization and am a founding father) and see lots of guys sign up and sixty days later decide they chose poorly and end up deaffiliating. That said, one of our first EC members of the colony was a Fiji pledge. And he's now got an award named after him. Tom |
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