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Almost all campuses there are fewer sororities with bigger chapters. A sorority with 120 members is I think pretty normal in most tier 2 schools. (I personally don't like organizations much bigger than that because it becomes infinitely harder to maintain brotherhood/sisterhood, focus on the purpose of the organization, and give people a legitimate chance to lead.)
Fraternities on the other hand tend to have 50-100% more orgs than the sororities & half the members on average. The majority of greek systems in tier 1 universities have 15-20+ fraternity chapters that are over 100 members, and all the financial and campus influence aspects that come with it.
A&M is a tier 1 research university. It is supposed to be a premier undergrad school with top grad programs fed by tier 2 state schools. A&M's greek system (the fraternities in particular) is significantly different than any other greek system because of the Corps. The weird thing about that one location is sororities are top tier, while fraternities are mid-2nd tier in size and nature. This is all very black and white information. I'm not sure what the issue is.
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