Quote:
Originally posted by hoosier
Maybe something new and different will lead to improvement.
Usually the smaller and weaker chapters will be saying "we have a great brotherhood - friends are more important to us than faculty teas and sports trophies." They make up excuses. Maybe an outside opinion - in public - will spur improvements.
Maybe they'll work harder to get more pledges, more programs, and more achievements.
|
but as I pointed out...
the sorority that was closed partly due to low membership scored higher than some of the still-existing chapters with more members. Some of the "poor" fraternities are bigger than the "silver" groups, and one "poor" group was a co-winner of Greek Week. I think in this case, size really doesn't matter.