-W -g V V V V V COVER STORY Greek: Are they involved - or induent? By Melissa Birks N THE 1960s, it seemed like no one on campus wanted to be Greek. While student activists were highly visible-protesting around the coun- try and staging vigils, rallies, and sit- ins - membership in fraternities and sororities plunged to an all-time low. Many Greek houses were forced to rent out their houses, and several left the campus altogether. Today, one in five undergraduates is affiliated with a fraternity or sorority. And membership is steadily growing. During the 1984-85 academic year, fraternities accepted 750 pledges; 10 years earlier, only 398 men pledged. And since 1975, at least nine fraternities that left during the '60s have returned. Sororities, too, are on the upswing. Three new chapters have been started since 1984, bringing the total number of sororities on campus to 21. The greater number of Greeks means more than frequent parties. By virtue of sheer numbers and their in-~ terest in social organizations, Greeks play a major role throughout the University. Almost 40 percent of the University Activities Council executive council - which controls the largest student organization on campus - is in a fraternity of sorority. Nearly half of all resident advisors and resident directors are Greek,and many orientation leaders are in the system. "Greeks tend to be some of the major contributors to student life on campus," said Student Organization Development Council consultant Cin- dy Straub. "Greeks tend to be leaders or members of volunteer organizations. They contribute in that sense." Not everyone, however, thinks of the Greek system in such positive terms. The growing number of mem- bers and houses has prompted action by the central administration and within the Greek system itself. The University also has created a task force to explore the relationship bet- ween the University and the Greek system. "Right now it's real loose," Straub says. "There is no relation- ship." "Most major organizations have a formal relationship with the Univer- sity. There is no one to do that for the fraternities. There has been some discussion to give them more help than they have had," Straub says. The task force, which includes housing officials and officers of the In- ter-Fraternity Council, the Pan-Hellenic Association, and the Black Greek Council, was created to discover how the University should exercise control over and work with the Greek system. "With that many students, it's a marvelous opportunity to influence growth and personal development outside the classroom," said Jo Rum- sey, assistant director of housing, and a member of the task force. The task force has recommended that the University create an Office of Greek Life to aid the fraternities and sororities and protect the interests of good either." "Some don't have good reputations: They're really ugly, fat, tall, or no fun. They'll go to a party and just talk to each other. If you get stuck with them, you'll be upset," said Broucek. "So you have a pre-party and get really drunk so you're prepared." D ESPITE ALL the politics - which, members point out, go on in most social circles - the system con- tinues to thrive, attracting people who are looking for a surge in their social lives or just a group to belong tW. The ready-made social life of the Greek system is very attractive to some people. "For incoming fresh- man not from around the area, it's an excellent way to meet people," says Sizemore. "You gain 100 friends right off the bat." But many pledges don't realize what they're getting into when they decide to wear the letters of a frater- nity or sorority. "They think it's all fun and no work," says Sizemore. Ac- tually, all Greek houses require ac- tives and pledges to work on fun- draisers for their charity. (Each fraternity and sorority raises money throughout the year for a particular charity. Last month, the activities of Greek Week raised more than $30,000 for local and national charities.) "A lot come through and they don't know what fraternities are about," says Tschampel, who admits to having been "anti-Greek" before he rushed last fall. "Usually people have been to the parties before. They're in- terested in the parties, or had people they know in fraternities that they join." In addition, Kavanagh says, many prospective pledges don't realize the financial responsibilities of joining the Greek system. Several houses require their members to live in the house, and actives make a poiint during rush to explain how much money will be involved. "It's important to know about the financial obligations," Kavanagh said. "We don't want someone to drop out because of money." S P Ur H- N- H, 0' V V Giree'ks have traditional/v been active in a vietyof fundraisin hativities for variocs HI { 11e Jello Junp, oneo / the more drumutic Gr which the more daring Greeks do their part foi ;< .-m V The bed race, a mainstav of Greek H eek festivities, attracted a huge croi d/in March. the University. In the fraternities and sororities themselves, growing numbers mean more competition. Rush remains a rigorously scheduled activity which can be cruelly selective. Fraternity rush is far less structured than sorority rush, but it is just as time- consuming and just as nerve- wracking. Rushees spend three to four hours each night visiting parties1 at some of the 32 houses on campus. 1 "I didn't open a book the whole week of rush," said Takeshi Hatanaka, a sophomore in engineering who joined Sigma Phi, Epsilon. Said LSA freshman G. M. Broucek, a member of Sigma Phi Epsilon: "'From 7 p.m. to 10 p.m., five days of that, you drink.and you don't feel like going to classes. When you rush, you don't feel like doing anything." The competition occurs not only between rushees, but between houses as well. In the latter competition, bigger seems to be better. Smaller houses or those that are far from Cen- tral Campus often have to resort to special measures - like free steak dinners - in order to attract prospec- tive pledges. "The bigger houses are more competitive," acknowledged In- ter-Fraternity Council President Dennis Kavanagh, an LSA junior, and a member of Phi Delta Theta. The competition among the rushees may be even more fierce. Broucek noted that "good connections" in a fraternity can help a rushee get a bid, but there are no guarantees. "One of my best friends rushed, and he didn't get in," says Broucek. "He knew people in the house. It's kind of a downer." The key to getting into a house, members say, is making friends - no matter how superficially - with as many people as possible. .Kavanagh said he has noticed an upsurge in "suiciding," when rushees go to only one fraternity in an attempt to ingratiate themselves with the active members. "I think it's silly," he says. "They know someone who they think can get you in, or they may not know a lot of other houses." "Knowing someone" in itself doesn't necessairly earn a bid. During. sorority rush, which is far more struc- tured than fraternity rush, several hundred women spend almost 30 hours pounding the pavement during September, visiting every single sorority house. Events progress from "mixers" to "final desserts" in just a few days. After that, the houses make their picks. Inevitably, not everyone gets a bid. "Cuts were really bad," said School of Nursing sophomore Vickie Sizemore, who joined Zeta Tau Alpha last fall. "The competition was really ferocious. Everybody was trying to outdress everybody else. The rushees were callous and cold. They didn't want the competition." LSA freshman Melisia Taylor also rushed last fall. She didn't make it. And even though she says she wasn't "totally upset," she regrets the time she wasted as she and her roommate, LSA freshman Kris Matthews, who got a bid from Alpha Phi - hurried back from classes, changed clothes, and joined the sorority actives. "It was like going to a job interview or auditioning," Taylor said. Matthews agreed that rush con- sisted mainly of actives and potential pledges trying to impress each other, judging personalities without really knowing each other. "There's so many girls it's hard to know them, which is one weakness of rush," she said. "But I have no idea what a bet- ter idea would be." Looking ahead to next year, when she will be more in charge of the selection process, Matthews said, "I'll definitely feel bad if I know girls who didn't get in. I don't see that it's going to change unless they open up new houses." But how will Matthews - and hun- dreds of other women in her position - decide who gets in and who doesn't? Is it fair to make that decision based on so few meetings? Sizemore said there is always the risk of finding that a sorority sister has "changed" after rush is over. "Everybody puts on a phony at- titude," she says. "They're not sure you're in the house, and they're trying to make their house look the best. Now that I'm in the house, they're laid back and cool." (.harfties. T HE LOBBYING to get the< 'best" pledges really begins before rush even starts, as potential1 pledges decide which fraternity orI sorority they think they want to join. Stereotypes play a huge role in this. IFC President Kavanagh says frater- nities don't fit their stereotypes, but like all generalizations, fraternities and sororities' reputations have at least a grain of truth in them. Said Matthews: "When I rushed, I didn't know the sterotypes. I just went. Whichever one I liked, I figured out for myself. When I found out (the reputations) afterwards, they pretty much corresponded," she said. Most fraternity and sorority mem- bers would agree that stereotypes flow freely through the system. And while they cite "being labeled" as the worst part of being Greek, for many the stigma attached to their house directly affects how many pledges a house gets and what parties they are invited to. "There are a lot of reputations. You can't avoid it," says LSA sophomore Rick Tschampel, a member of Sigma Chi. "They're categorized on progression - that's just the way it is. I think that most might be true a lit- tle." For fraternities, reputations are based largely on the size of the house, its location, and the parties they have. Sororities are often at the mercy of stereotypes that perpetuate the social calendar that attracts or repels women during rush. Because sorority charters do not allow alcohol in the houses, sororities rely on fraternities to throw parties, and that means more competition. "We call up the fraternity and ask for a party. There's competition with other houses, because you want to party with the big houses, the popular ones," said Sizemore. Fraternities, in turn, vote for the sororities they want to party with. The requirements? "They have to be fun to party with, and it's better if they're good- looking," said Tschampel. "If they're good-looking but deadbeats, that's not He added that he has only known of one fraternity member in the past three years who has had to quit because he couldn't carry the monetary burden. . Even in the '60s, when the Greek system plummeted to an all-time low, Greek housing was a popular alter- native because of the cheap prices, according to Rumsey. ar av ar pl int in A at, be otb to isc sh spy too ds for pr ce sy ML pa sa no of an ci Al re in Un ex pe no ds th 'Tr the A recent Sigma A lpha Al party which/fatured Bi// "The Fox "Foster, the world's fastest beer drinker, generated negative pu/icitr.v 6 Weekend-April 4, 1986