Quote:
Originally Posted by Drolefille
It's literally in a cornfield. APO will most certainly be the first.
It appears there are city-wide chapters, but I would suspect that demographics/numbers are the reason why there aren't collegiate chapters of the D9. They've only recently graduated their first freshman class and have been oriented toward more CC students finishing their degrees and many non-traditional students.
Aye there's no anti-greek movement on campus that I've seen.
Just trying to be helpful 
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I wouldn't call the capital of the 5th most populous state with core population of 110k and a metro area of over 180k "literally in a cornfield" by any stretch. The fact that it's not a more urban area has almost nothing to do with the lack of NPHC greeks on campus, since most other public campuses in Illinois actually are in the middle of cornfield (population areas of 20k - 40k), yet have active NPHC chapters. I'm very confident that the incredibly unique culture of the campus compared to the other major 4-year public institutions that has kept most GLOs (NPHC or not) from expanding to the school. I'm not sure if any of them have even tried yet; I haven't seen or heard of anybody else trying to extend to the campus, but that doesn't mean they're not
The extension effort has been a Petitioning Group for over three years now, and took quite a while to get to that point as well. As I recall, and I'm sure some other R6 staffers will correct me on this, it was a cold start extension effort. I also recall that since APO approached the administration first we were going to be the standard by which they evaluated other GLOs coming to campus, but that may have been the sponsor's opinion at the time.
I do know the campus is researching and discussing how social greek life would be integrated into the campus community:
http://www.uis.edu/journal/archives/...opinion.html#3
(Disclosure: I work for the University of Illinois, attended UIUC and have taken classes at UIS)