GreekChat.com Forums  

Go Back   GreekChat.com Forums > Greek Life
Register FAQ Community Calendar Today's Posts Search

Greek Life This forum is for various discussion topics regarding greek life. If you are posting a non-greek related message, please do so in one of the General Chat Topic forums.

» GC Stats
Members: 329,722
Threads: 115,665
Posts: 2,204,962
Welcome to our newest member, abrandarko6966
» Online Users: 1,901
1 members and 1,900 guests
No Members online
Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1  
Old 07-07-2004, 07:15 PM
hoosier hoosier is offline
GreekChat Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2002
Location: Now hiding from GC stalkers
Posts: 3,188
Rebuilding at Iowa State

DOUG WELLS/THE REGISTER
Refusing to give up: Tau Kappa Epsilon's membership shrank so much last year that members considered selling the house. "With the aspect of not being in a house, I think people miss out a lot," said Jeff Engh, above.
------------------------------------------------------------------------

Ames, Ia. - College fraternities survive on tradition.
But the men of Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity at Iowa State University knew they needed to toss tradition to survive.
Their first target is the oldest and largest symbol of their brotherhood: the fraternity house.
This month , as fraternity recruiting reaches its peak, crews have gutted Tau Kappa Epsilon's 70-year-old house for the summer. Suites with private bathrooms eventually will replace tiny rooms.

Next on the list is the fraternity's image. Leaders will overhaul some rules to make sure grades and leadership come before beer. They'll add new scholarships and a program to help members pick classes, whip up resumes and find jobs.
Call it a new marketing plan. Fraternities and sororities across the country are developing them as membership continues to plunge.
"We're trying to set ourselves up for the future," said Ryan Burchett, a 1997 graduate who advises the Tau Kappa Epsilon chapter.

The makeover isn't cheap. Private donations, most of them from Tau Kappa Epsilon alumni, are expected to cover the $1.5 million price tag. The fraternity's board of directors also will change its nonprofit status to make money.
Nationally, fraternity membership has dropped 30 percent in the past decade. At ISU, where fraternities and sororities have strong roots, membership has slipped by 14 percent since 2000. The University of Northern Iowa has seen a similar dip, while numbers are more stable at the University of Iowa.

Explanations for the trend vary:
• Fraternity leaders have found a new competitor nationally in university housing programs, which spent about $1.5 billion in 2002 alone to replace small, outdated dormitory rooms with suites and private bathrooms. Universities also carved a niche with learning communities, where students with similar academic or social interests take the same classes, live together and study together.
At the same time, apartment complexes have multiplied in university towns.

"The universities are really targeting the market that used to be monopolized by the fraternities and sororities," said Rod Barleen, marketing director for Pennington and Co. in Lawrence, Kan., which specializes in fund-raising and public relations for fraternities and sororities. The company formed in 1993 and has grown as student membership has declined.
• A University of Nebraska survey of new freshmen showed some students assume they don't have the time or money to join fraternities and sororities, which groom leaders and philanthropists.

• Fraternities also have battled a public relations problem spurred by a series of high-profile student deaths, lawsuits and hazing reports in the 1990s. A subsequent crackdown on alcohol, parties and other longtime rituals has turned off potential members, some students believe. More than half of ISU's fraternities went dry. U of I officials gave fraternities an ultimatum: no booze or no university recognition.
Barrels of "jungle juice," a homemade liquor concoction, disappeared from the lawns of fraternity houses. Student fraternity councils started saying no to toga parties.

Low membership and financial problems have prompted at least two ISU fraternity chapters to close since 2000, ISU officials said. More closed in the late 1990s. One fraternity house recently turned into a women's shelter. An Ames landlord took over another defunct fraternity house and rented rooms to students.
Tau Kappa Epsilon's membership had shrunk so much last year that "some members of our board were like, 'Should we sell the place and move into a smaller house?' " said Burchett, a television meteorologist from Marion. "But it's a great piece of property that we've been in for almost 70 years. We weren't ready to give that up."

Tau Kappa Epsilon's members and alumni agreed to follow the lead of ISU's department of residence, which has pumped millions into dormitory renovations.
Today's students "have grown up with their own bedrooms at home, cable TV, their own computer . . . for most of their lives," Burchett said. "Trying to get them used to communal living isn't the easiest thing to do."
The fraternity house closed, and old trophies and photographs were tucked away in storage.

Construction began in April. Fraternity brothers use e-mail to stay in touch.
"With the aspect of not being in a house, I think people miss out a lot," said Jeff Engh of Ankeny, an ISU senior who is Tau Kappa Epsilon's chapter president.
Two other ISU fraternities have followed suit.
Phi Kappa Psi is making a comeback after low membership in the mid-1990s forced the fraternity to close.
Alumni and members will launch a fund-raiser this summer to renovate the old house. They expect to get a charter next year.

Lamda Chi Alpha members borrowed about $750,000 for fraternity house renovations. Construction started last month.
Members "are itching to move in," said ISU senior Nick Renner, the fraternity chapter's president.
The trend has picked up at UNI, where members of at least one fraternity expanded their house, while other fraternities beef up volunteer work in Cedar Falls. U of I fraternities are more focused on updating fire prevention systems and Internet access, but advisers predict the renovation trend will pick up in a few years.

Barleen, of Pennington and Co., says success will take time.
ISU fraternity members have been patient.
"It's the old saying with marketing," said Renner, 20. "If you have a good product, it will sell."
Reply With Quote
  #2  
Old 07-07-2004, 08:51 PM
bluefish81 bluefish81 is offline
GreekChat Member
 
Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: Ohio
Posts: 946
Send a message via AIM to bluefish81
Re: Rebuilding at Iowa State

Quote:
Originally posted by hoosier
Low membership and financial problems have prompted at least two ISU fraternity chapters to close since 2000, ISU officials said. More closed in the late 1990s. One fraternity house recently turned into a women's shelter. An Ames landlord took over another defunct fraternity house and rented rooms to students.
That's not quite right - the women's shelter was formerly a sorority that closed, not a fraternity. And two of the fraternities have been turned into apartments since 1998. One of the fraternities moved into a closed sorority and the other left campus.
Reply With Quote
  #3  
Old 07-07-2004, 09:33 PM
IowaStatePhiPsi IowaStatePhiPsi is offline
GreekChat Member
 
Join Date: Jun 2004
Posts: 2,624
Rumor around campus is that the co-founder of Hooters is paying most of the cost for the TKE renovation (he's one of their alums).

Lambda Chi had a labor union picketing infront of their house- the contractor might not be able to get all the work done before fall term starts.

Other rumor I heard is that if AKL does really good on rush this summer that their alumni are set to do renovation work next summer.
Reply With Quote
  #4  
Old 07-11-2004, 10:59 PM
IowaStatePhiPsi IowaStatePhiPsi is offline
GreekChat Member
 
Join Date: Jun 2004
Posts: 2,624
FIJI at ISU is doing a 2.5 Million dollar renovation project sometime soon.
Reply With Quote
  #5  
Old 07-11-2004, 11:13 PM
bluefish81 bluefish81 is offline
GreekChat Member
 
Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: Ohio
Posts: 946
Send a message via AIM to bluefish81
Quote:
Originally posted by IowaStatePhiPsi
FIJI at ISU is doing a 2.5 Million dollar renovation project sometime soon.
Really??? I'm going to have to talk to some of the FIJIs that I know and get more details on that
Reply With Quote
  #6  
Old 07-12-2004, 12:23 AM
ISUKappa ISUKappa is offline
GreekChat Member
 
Join Date: Oct 2003
Posts: 3,464
Re: Re: Rebuilding at Iowa State

Quote:
Originally posted by bluefish81
That's not quite right - the women's shelter was formerly a sorority that closed, not a fraternity. And two of the fraternities have been turned into apartments since 1998. One of the fraternities moved into a closed sorority and the other left campus.
Which one? AXiD?

You have to admit, though, some of the houses need renovations--not just to appeal to the incoming students but because many of them are 50-70 years old and haven't seen updates in quite some time. Fraternity houses see more wear and tear than sorority houses do.

Point of interest, the TEKE house was built on land that the Kappas bought originally to build our house on. We even had blueprints drawn up, but we decided to stay where we currently are (thank goodness!). I have an old Rush book from the 1960s which is so interesting to read through.
__________________
It's gonna be a hootenanny.
Or maybe a jamboree.
Or possibly even a shindig or lollapalooza.
Perhaps it'll be a hootshinpaloozaree. I don't know.
Reply With Quote
  #7  
Old 07-12-2004, 01:04 PM
bluefish81 bluefish81 is offline
GreekChat Member
 
Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: Ohio
Posts: 946
Send a message via AIM to bluefish81
Re: Re: Re: Rebuilding at Iowa State

Quote:
Originally posted by ISUKappa
Which one? AXiD?

You have to admit, though, some of the houses need renovations--not just to appeal to the incoming students but because many of them are 50-70 years old and haven't seen updates in quite some time. Fraternity houses see more wear and tear than sorority houses do.

Point of interest, the TEKE house was built on land that the Kappas bought originally to build our house on. We even had blueprints drawn up, but we decided to stay where we currently are (thank goodness!). I have an old Rush book from the 1960s which is so interesting to read through.
Yes, AXiD. Large privacy fences have been put up for security.

I would agree that some houses do need some major renovations. Our house needs to be rewired in the worst way and has needed to for quite some time, but I think that's going to be further down the line. We're too busy focusing on other needed areas right now. I think it's great that so many chapters are undergoing renovations - FIJI definetely needed to. And Phi Kappa Theta is redoing their first floor sometime in the near future I believe.

I'd have to agree that your chapter's decision to maintain their current location years ago was a good decision - no one's closer to campus than you.
Reply With Quote
  #8  
Old 07-12-2004, 06:14 PM
Tom Earp Tom Earp is offline
GreekChat Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2000
Location: Kansas City, Kansas USA
Posts: 23,584
Question

Being lazy, and busy, is there a link to all of the building!
__________________
LCA


LX Z # 1
Alumni
Reply With Quote
Reply


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off



All times are GMT -4. The time now is 07:50 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.