I go to Stanford and all of the houses are fairly integrated, with at least one or two East Asians in each one (and I believe considerably more of South Asian heritage). Our chapters are pretty independent-minded and it's popular to say that most of them operate almost inverse to their national or regional reputations. Kappa Alpha Order, for example, is one of the most integrated fraternities (though with a heavy concentration of water polo and volleyball players) and some of its members take pride in being the "anti-fraternity" type (which, for a school that is fairly anti-Greek, has made KA very popular).
Still, for a school that is roughly a fifth Asian, we're not entirely there yet. The one Asian fraternity (LPhiE) and two Asian sororities (aKDPhi/SYZ) aggressively recruit in the Asian circles, and the community as a whole does not mingle with the traditional (NIC/NPC) Greek scene. In fact, as far as minorities go, I would dare say that East Asians are the least represented in the ten traditional houses we have on campus.
Phi Kappa Psi/Sigma Nu and Delta Delta Delta/Chi Omega have the majority of the Asian-Americans who do decide to enter the traditional Greek system. This year there are quite a few Asians pledging everywhere, including the more conservative houses (i.e. SAE/Theta) so there's definitely been an upswing since my freshman year. I think the base problem is getting people to rush: once we get more Asian-Americans into the scene, especially in Panhellenic recruitment, it'll work out from there.
-Jeff L.
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