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Originally Posted by naraht
Alpha Phi Omega has chapters at Cornell, Penn and Yale, we have inactive chapters at Brown, Columbia and Princeton. No clue why we haven't gone to Dartmouth and as for Harvard, our bylaws require that for a chapter to be at a school it must be recognized by the administration. However should Harvard change their rules enough to allow Alpha Phi Omega on campus, we have a strong chapter at MIT and experienced staffers in Boston who would jump at the chance to go.
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I'm a bit puzzled as to why Harvard wouldn't recognize APO. My understanding is that Harvard will not recognize single-sex organizations aside from singing groups and sports teams - hence the NPC sororities there are not recognized - but APO is coed.
To weigh in on the Ivy+ side, MIT has six NPC chapters, 25+ NIC chapters, at least 3 NPHC chapters, a handful of local orgs, and (as naraht pointed out) a chapter of APO.