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Old 08-13-2009, 10:34 PM
BlueCarnation BlueCarnation is offline
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Join Date: Jan 2009
Posts: 399
Quote:
Originally Posted by UGAalum94 View Post
I don't always know, but when I do, I've listed it.

I've come to believe that legacies mean very little unless the sister is currently in the house or has very recently graduated. If I know how little being a legacy seems to matter, I can't believe that the other chapters don't.

I'm not sure that the perception that revealing them is damaging isn't really caused by other unrelated factors: bigger releases with RFM, more legacies being out there as more women have gone to college in the last few generations, grade inflation in high school and "the organization kid"(http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200104/brooks) type become ubiquitous, making it harder for any girl to really seem outstanding. It's hard for girls, their parents, and the alumnae they know to predict what will happen, and it seems to me that more PNM feel entitled to only join the very "top chapters."

I think sometimes people who are unhappy with their immediate outcomes see systematic failure where none may really exist, and we might be projecting that on to legacy status.
I agree. We had a quota of 45 and one of the chapters on our campus allegedly had over 150 legacies go through recruitment. Obviously you are not going to take a pledge class full of legacies. They ended up taking 3, and all 3 had sisters in the house already. I think legacies are just another way to get you a second look, but don't matter that much. If a chapter likes you, whether or not you are a legacy will usually make little difference.
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