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10-09-2008, 06:59 AM
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Greek life at the Southern Ivies
I'm doing some research. Could all of you who know answer my questions on three southern schools: Vanderbilt, University of Virginia, and Duke.
Which one has the largest Greek life (Vanderbilt, University of Virginia, or Duke)?
Which one has the largest percentage of students involved in Greek life?
Which one has the most active (by active I mean Greeks who are involved in student government, homecoming, etc.) Greek life?
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10-09-2008, 09:24 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by MsFoxyLoxy77
Greek life at the Southern Ivies
I'm doing some research. Could all of you who know answer my questions on three southern schools: Vanderbilt, University of Virginia, and Duke.
Which one has the largest Greek life (Vanderbilt, University of Virginia, or Duke)?
Which one has the largest percentage of students involved in Greek life?
Which one has the most active (by active I mean Greeks who are involved in student government, homecoming, etc.) Greek life?
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/hijack/ Sorry, I have to giggle at the term "Southern Ivies". The schools you reference are not Ivy League, for two reasons: The term "Ivy League" originally referred to a eight private schools in the NCAA athletic conference. More contemporary usage of the term "Ivy League" referrences the group as the country's oldest, academically prestigious universities. (Thank you WIKI). As someone who has lived in the northeast my entire life, I had never heard the term "southern ivies" until about a year ago, and it was here. It just seems like an odd concept to me. /end hijack/
As to your questions - you can look up the answers online; I am sure that there are stats on size/percentage of Greek life, and anecdotal evidence of positions, clubs, participation, etc.
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10-09-2008, 09:26 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ree-Xi
/hijack/ Sorry, I have to giggle at the term "Southern Ivies". The schools you reference are not Ivy League, for two reasons: The term "Ivy League" originally referred to a eight private schools in the NCAA athletic conference. More contemporary usage of the term "Ivy League" referrences the group as the country's oldest, academically prestigious universities. (Thank you WIKI). As someone who has lived in the northeast my entire life, I had never heard the term "southern ivies" until about a year ago, and it was here. It just seems like an odd concept to me. /end hijack/
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The term "public ivies" is now bandied about to describe academically prestigious universities. In much the same way as "Xerox" is used to describe any copier, or any soft drink in the south is a "Coke", "ivy" is used to describe a school with a good academic reputation.
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10-09-2008, 09:49 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ree-Xi
/hijack/ Sorry, I have to giggle at the term "Southern Ivies". The schools you reference are not Ivy League, for two reasons: The term "Ivy League" originally referred to a eight private schools in the NCAA athletic conference. More contemporary usage of the term "Ivy League" referrences the group as the country's oldest, academically prestigious universities. (Thank you WIKI). As someone who has lived in the northeast my entire life, I had never heard the term "southern ivies" until about a year ago, and it was here. It just seems like an odd concept to me. /end hijack/
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And yet it's a concept that has been around for at least 50 years or so. In the late 50s/early 60s, Vanderbilt invited four other Southern private schools -- Southern Methodist, Rice, Duke, and Tulane -- to form a new athletic conference: a "Southern Ivy League" (also called the "Magnolia League"). While there was some interest for a while, it never came to pass. SMU and Rice didn't want to lose their share of Cotton Bowl income, and Duke was not willing to forgo its traditional rivalry with the University of North Carolina. Since that time, the term "Southern Ivies" has been used widely in the South, though without an established definition or list of schools, to refer to schools that can be seen as Southern counterparts to the (northern) Ivy League. Sometimes it is used to to refer only to private schools, sometimes public schools like UVa or UNC (both included in Richard Moll's original 1985 list of "public ivies").
Too bad that your lifelong confinement to the northeast has led to ignorance and giggles.
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10-09-2008, 09:56 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ree-Xi
/hijack/ Sorry, I have to giggle at the term "Southern Ivies". The schools you reference are not Ivy League, for two reasons: The term "Ivy League" originally referred to a eight private schools in the NCAA athletic conference. More contemporary usage of the term "Ivy League" referrences the group as the country's oldest, academically prestigious universities. (Thank you WIKI). As someone who has lived in the northeast my entire life, I had never heard the term "southern ivies" until about a year ago, and it was here. It just seems like an odd concept to me. /end hijack/
As to your questions - you can look up the answers online; I am sure that there are stats on size/percentage of Greek life, and anecdotal evidence of positions, clubs, participation, etc.
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Uhm thanks...I guess...I know what Ivy league is and the terms Southern Ivies & Public Ivies is commonly used to describe academically rigourous schools in various locations...perhaps you can look that up....
I can look up stats on Greek Life as well as ask GCers.
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10-09-2008, 10:58 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ree-Xi
/hijack/ Sorry, I have to giggle at the term "Southern Ivies". The schools you reference are not Ivy League, for two reasons: The term "Ivy League" originally referred to a eight private schools in the NCAA athletic conference. More contemporary usage of the term "Ivy League" referrences the group as the country's oldest, academically prestigious universities. (Thank you WIKI). As someone who has lived in the northeast my entire life, I had never heard the term "southern ivies" until about a year ago, and it was here. It just seems like an odd concept to me. /end hijack/
As to your questions - you can look up the answers online; I am sure that there are stats on size/percentage of Greek life, and anecdotal evidence of positions, clubs, participation, etc.
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Pretentious much?'
edit: And if you're considering UVa, you mind as well consider UNC as well.
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10-09-2008, 11:08 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Elephant Walk
Pretentious much?'
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Well, given where she said she's from, isn't this question somewhat redundant?
[ducking and covering]
And I agree -- if UVa is to be considered, it makes sense to include UNC as well, although I figured that the OP had her reasons for asking about 3 specific schools.
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10-09-2008, 03:23 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by SWTXBelle
The term "public ivies" is now bandied about to describe academically prestigious universities. In much the same way as "Xerox" is used to describe any copier, or any soft drink in the south is a "Coke", "ivy" is used to describe a school with a good academic reputation.
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Ouch.
I was looking at it specifically from a "brand identity" perspective. "Ivy League" has specific connotations, especially in the northeast. I have heard people use the word "Coke" for any kind of soda (in Arkansas), and it still confuses me when I get Pepsi.
Quote:
Originally Posted by MysticCat
And yet it's a concept that has been around for at least 50 years or so...Too bad that your lifelong confinement to the northeast has led to ignorance and giggles. 
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I don't feel "confined" geographically, and yes, I have been out of state further than New Jersey. I take offense to the term "ignorant". The term, as you have used it here, implies that I am lacking (all) knowledge, when the issue - which I admitted - is that I had only recently heard of the term "southern ivies". Would it be okay to mock you for not understanding the terms "tonic" or "bubbler"?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Elephant Walk
Pretentious much?
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How does my unfamiliarity with a phrase make me pretentious? I didn't make any judgments.
Quote:
Originally Posted by MysticCat
Well, given where she said she's from, isn't this question somewhat redundant? [ducking and covering]
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What is this animosity to the northeast? I thought the civil war was over. Good grief.
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10-09-2008, 03:27 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ree-Xi
/hijack/ Sorry, I have to giggle at the term "Southern Ivies".
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Giggle all you want to -- you're the one who has never heard the term.
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10-09-2008, 03:35 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ree-Xi
Would it be okay to mock you for not understanding the terms "tonic" or "bubbler"?
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This has nothing to do with this thread.... but I love the word bubbler!
I had no idea until I was like 8 that not everyone else called it that...
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10-09-2008, 03:43 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ree-Xi
I don't feel "confined" geographically, and yes, I have been out of state further than New Jersey. I take offense to the term "ignorant". The term, as you have used it here, implies that I am lacking (all) knowledge, when the issue - which I admitted - is that I had only recently heard of the term "southern ivies". Would it be okay to mock you for not understanding the terms "tonic" or "bubbler"?
How does my unfamiliarity with a phrase make me pretentious? I didn't make any judgments.
What is this animosity to the northeast? I thought the civil war was over. Good grief.
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Bless your heart. Some people can be just a little touchy when other folks are having a bit of fun at their expense, can't they? (And no, it would not be okay for you to mock me for not understanding the terms "tonic" or "bubbler," because I do know what they mean.)
And yes, the War Between the States is over. (Sorry, I usually call it the Civil War, but sometimes it's more fun this way.) Unfortunately, the experience of too many of us is that Yankee arrogance did not end with it. (That's a joke, BTW.)
Seriously, if you're going to come on a forum and "giggle" at "odd concepts" that are quite familiar to lots of people, and if you're then going to treat the OP as if she is ignorant by not knowing what the Ivy League really is, then you really can't be surprised to receive a reply in kind, can you?
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10-09-2008, 03:44 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by NutBrnHair
Giggle all you want to -- you're the one who has never heard the term.
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She's not the only one who hasn't heard the term.
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10-09-2008, 03:52 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ree-Xi
Would it be okay to mock you for not understanding the terms "tonic" or "bubbler"?
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Yay for tonic and bubbler!
And I didn't know that other people didn't use these terms until I went to college!
Along with "wicked pissah", "packie", and "carriage" (which is what you push around in the grocery store)
And yes, to say that someone is ignorant because of this is a little much. Quite frankly, I've never even heard of "Southern Ivies", and the Ivy League schools I know are the ones that are most commonly referred to as such.
Would I automatically assume that someone was wrong because they called these schools Southern Ivies? Probably not. But would I say that everyone from one particular region of the country is pretentious because of a comment that one person made? Definitely not.
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10-09-2008, 04:04 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ASTalumna06
But would I say that everyone from one particular region of the country is pretentious because of a comment that one person made? Definitely not.
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Just for the record, I never would have said it she hadn't brought it up first:
Quote:
Originally Posted by ree-Xi
As someone who has lived in the northeast my entire life, I had never heard the term "southern ivies" until about a year ago, and it was here.
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and if her post hadn't had the tone of "you obviously don't know what the Ivy League is; let me instruct you." But those two things just bring out the mischievous side of me, I reckon.
ETA: And for the record, the only reason I threw in ignorance was because of what ree-Xi said that I quoted in this post -- that having lived all her life in the northeast, she had never heard the term (and presumably was therefore ignorant of the term, not ignorant of all things) until hearing it here. To paraphrase Sissy Spacek in "Coal Miner's Daughter," being ignorant ain't being stupid. My comment was accompanied by a  and  , intended to show that I was not in the least being serious. Sorry if that was lost on anyone.
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Last edited by MysticCat; 10-09-2008 at 04:26 PM.
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10-09-2008, 04:38 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by AOEforme
This has nothing to do with this thread.... but I love the word bubbler!
I had no idea until I was like 8 that not everyone else called it that...
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hijack/
Blubber- that's a Judy Blume book
Doesn't it just mean fat, or am I missing something?
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