
10-10-2008, 09:26 PM
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GreekChat Member
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Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Atlanta area
Posts: 5,372
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Quote:
Originally Posted by MysticCat
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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This would have made so much sense to me. I didn't know it had been tried.
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