Quote:
Originally posted by AlwaysDivine:
do you see this as a problem. And if so, why?
Does your interest lie with Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc. or Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Inc.? Officially, my sorority has no constitutional requirement with Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc. If you know our concurrent histories, then you know our founding order. That's why we talk to "frat" or call them "pham". Personally, my phamily is entrenched with being phirst in everything.
What I know about graduate advisors is limited to what is written in my university's student handbook - which clearly states that they should be accesible to the student body. I have quite a few general questions that I'd like to ask that would only be properly be answered by the person governing the particular chapter...since it has been stated that each chapter's pracrices vary.
Am I mistaken?
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Think about it, why would a university ask that there would be a national organizational's alumni representative affiliated with an undergraduate chapter? Maybe because some members may be under 17 or 21? That is the difference between the "2-lettered" greek organizations and the NPHC's...
Then ask yourself about why there are undergraduate and graduate chapters in our organizations with the same name. Should we be separate from each other? Have you considered the "magnitude" of my sorority? Do you know who some of our members are? For that matter, do you know who some of the Alpha's members are? If some of our members didn't graduate from college, you would not be able to ask this question today...