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Originally Posted by AlphaGamUGAAlum
What do you mean? The why was someone really released part? That I'm with you on: if you validly know it because you were there, then you shouldn't be saying here.
But just talking about legacies and the policies that would be ideal doesn't seem in any way forbidden.
My GLO's legacy policy is pretty open. I'm not completely sure that it should be this easily retrievable, but you can google and get a copy of the policy and form itself.
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I'm just saying you're not going to get the other half of the conversation, because it's not one that you (or anyone who was not present) as the right to know. Quite frankly I don't think that a chapter and its advisors would toss a VIP legacy aside for because her nose was too big or for some other frivolus reason. "Fit" is simply that. Yes, girls can be shallow as hell but no one wants to make that phone call. It is a shame that the mother in this case chose to turn her back on her sorority when they only did what she herself had done in MS during her college years.
I think it speaks more toward the entitlement of parents who think that their special snowflake daughter is more deserving than 50 other girls there. If it were me I would be sad that my daughter would not also be my sister, but I would also move on. Particularly if my daughter found her home elsewhere, whether in another sorority or on campus group. (Hell I'm a legacy that didn't go where I was supposed to.)