Quote:
Originally Posted by irishpipes
UIUC was definitely the largest when I was in school, too. Now, Alabama is certainly the largest. I believe UIUC would fall in at about #3 or 4.
This is just for fun, but if campus total meant anything (which we all know it really doesn't), the largest greek systems would be:
1. Alabama 268*17=4,556
2. Auburn 183*17=3,111
3. Missouri 220*14=3,080
4. Illinois 170*18=3,060
5. Georgia 170*17=2,890
6. Florida 161*16=2,576
7. Oklahoma 211*11=2,321
8. Arizona 200*11=2,200
9. Ole Miss 232*9=2,088
As well as Indiana, which would fall in there somewhere, but with 20 chapters and no established total, who knows where.
Of course since chapters may have way over total, or under total, this is not scientific at all.
|
So much interesting information in the last few posts! I knew that Penn State didn't have houses for sororities, do the fraternities have houses?
As far as Indiana goes, there are 19 chapters currently and most have close to 120 members (appox. 2280). There is no total, which is part of the whole Indiana situation. While there is no official total, of the 19 chapters, I believe that only 7 of them allow live outs. The largest of the chapter houses hold 110-120 women. Therefore if a chapter holds 120 and doesn't allow live outs, they have a self imposed cap of 120. As much as I love Indiana, I think all of the chapters need to allow a certain number of live outs. It would keep many of the chapters from losing their senior leadership just because they are tired of communal living.
I am not sure if Theta Phi Alpha will take that many (120) since they are part of the university's new Greek plan. They will colonize in September and then participate in the open house round in December and then recruit again after formal is over in January. From talking to a former student who is on campus in and Greek leadership, Indiana would
eventually like to expand to all 26 NPC chapters. This is many years down the road, but it's a long term goal.