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09-19-2023, 12:05 PM
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GreekChat Member
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Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: In the Land of Entrapment
Posts: 1,134
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I also think it depends on the campus. There was only 1 PNM that put her legacy status when she signed up but so many PNMs stated they were a legacy during the rounds.
The 1 PNM that put her legacy down was highly targeted by the other chapters to get. They saw her as a trophy. She's a double legacy by her sisters. Both were chapter President. One was President last year and the other President about 5 years ago.
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09-19-2023, 05:57 PM
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GreekChat Member
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Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: Sweet Home Alabama
Posts: 4,594
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The ones I know about, Navane, weren't prepared because they didn't think they needed to be. I'm a 5 time legacy so I have it made syndrome.
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09-19-2023, 08:12 PM
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Super Moderator
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Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: naples, florida
Posts: 18,495
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Many mothers, sisters, aunts, grandmothers, are not active alumnae and are relying on information ( often incorrect) they heard as collegiate members. They don’t keep contact info up to date with their national offices, they don’t write recs, don’t hold membership in alumnae chapters, volunteer, or otherwise support their org, nor do they receive their org’s magazine. If they do receive it, they don’t read it. In other words, they are completely out of touch with current sorority policies, and assume that if their legacy shows up saying she is a legacy, that is enough. And from what I see, this is more often the norm than the exception.
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09-20-2023, 01:01 AM
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Join Date: Sep 2001
Location: San Diego, CA
Posts: 2,899
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Titchou
The ones I know about, Navane, weren't prepared because they didn't think they needed to be. I'm a 5 time legacy so I have it made syndrome.
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Quote:
Originally Posted by FSUZeta
Many mothers, sisters, aunts, grandmothers, are not active alumnae and are relying on information ( often incorrect) they heard as collegiate members. They don’t keep contact info up to date with their national offices, they don’t write recs, don’t hold membership in alumnae chapters, volunteer, or otherwise support their org, nor do they receive their org’s magazine. If they do receive it, they don’t read it. In other words, they are completely out of touch with current sorority policies, and assume that if their legacy shows up saying she is a legacy, that is enough. And from what I see, this is more often the norm than the exception.
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Right.
Many GLOs took away legacy status privileges on the account that legacy PNMs were thought to have advantages that other PNMs from non-collegiate families or differing socioeconomic backgrounds didn't have.
Not showing up prepared, mom is uninformed or has outdated information, getting cut right away by non-legacy chapters who assume the PNM wants the legacy chapter, having a poor attitude....
So, based on your observations, maybe being a legacy isn't the big leg-up that many GLOs seem to think it is?
It sounds like a detriment.
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09-20-2023, 05:02 PM
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GreekChat Member
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Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: Sweet Home Alabama
Posts: 4,594
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I think it depends on location - Ole Miss they still count. And it's a good excuse for the legacy who gets dropped - either side of the coin: dropped because everyone thought I'd go legacy or national did away with legacy preference so I got cut...
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