Quote:
The Greek life office did NOT send out those letters, since there ISN'T a Greek life office at Princeton.
|
But so what? What magical change happens when a university employee is labeled "Greek life advisor" instead of "dean of students" or "president"? How does s/he become bound by NPC rules?
Quote:
Plus, the Greek life director at the above named schools is most likely an NPC member herself. Therefore, she should be following NPC rules.
|
Even if she is an NPC member (the director is just as likely to be an IFC or NPHC member), most sorority alumnae wisely put loyalty to their employer above loyalty to the NPC. The "above named schools" are public schools, and the Greek Life director is a state employee with a duty to serve the taxpayers of the state, who pay her to look after the interests of their college-age kids. She has no business prioritizing the NPC's directives above telling the truth to those kids.
And on a practical level, what is NPC going to do besides get PO'd? Sure, the constituent GLOs would pull charters if houses had wet rush. But the advisor's sorority would never in a million years kick her out of alumna status for telling PNMs the truth that they need to seek recs on their own. Nor would it de-recognize the college panhellenic over something the local Greek advisor said...because, as stated above, that person is not under Panhellenic control.
________
ROLL A JOINT