Quote:
Originally Posted by 33girl
Our letters and our pledge pin have an open meaning, which is our motto.
Our crest and our member badge have hidden meaning that are only revealed at initiation.
Ergo the letters/crest distinction.
I don't know what the rest of y'all do. 
|
Which raises a very fundamental point that should probably be in any list of what has been learned on GC: There are very,
very few statements that can be made that apply to
all GLOs. Everybody does things differently -- in some orgs, the meaning of the letters is open, in others it is not. In some orgs, the colors or other symbols have secret meaning, in others they don't. In some orgs, non-initiated members can wear the letters, in others they can't. An on, and on, and on . . .
About the only statement that would apply to
all fraternities and sororities is that they are all organizations with some kind of collegiate connection.
Quote:
Seriously, calling someone a pledge and/or not letting them wear certain items is not in any state hazing law - unless you stretch it like Rosie O'Donnell's underwear.
(That should kill this thread.)
|
I don't know about the thread, but it killed my appetite for the rest of the night.