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The following historically African American fraternities and sororities at Vanderbilt are members of the National Pan-Hellenic Council. [4] Alpha Kappa Alpha (sorority) Alpha Phi Alpha (fraternity) Delta Sigma Theta (sorority) Kappa Alpha Psi (fraternity) Omega Psi Phi (fraternity) Phi Beta Sigma (fraternity) Sigma Gamma Rho (sorority) Zeta Phi ...
University of Richmond: Richmond, Virginia: Inactive [p] Pennsylvania Gamma: December 4, 1875 – 2020 Washington & Jefferson College: Washington, Pennsylvania: Inactive Tennessee Alpha: January 20, 1876 – 2004; 2010–2017; 2023 Vanderbilt University: Nashville, Tennessee: Active Pennsylvania Delta Prime (see Pennsylvania Eta) 1876 –1877 ...
Pages in category "Vanderbilt University" The following 52 pages are in this category, out of 52 total. ... List of Vanderbilt University fraternities and sororities;
But this hostility had waned by 1920. One century later, Georgetown has several fraternities and sororities, independent of the university, and a few all-male, all-female, and co-ed secret societies. [35] The Stewards Society, or The Stewards at Georgetown, is an anonymous, all-male service fraternity, often considered a secret society.
Sigma Nu is an American college fraternity founded at the Virginia Military Institute in 1869. [1] ... Vanderbilt University: Nashville: Tennessee: Active Tau: 1886 ...
Indiana University Bloomington: Bloomington: Indiana Active [7] 21 Eta: 1917–1942 University of Wisconsin–Madison: Madison: Wisconsin Inactive 22 Alpha Phi: 1917 Montana State University: Bozeman: Montana Active [n] 23 Nu Omicron: 1917–2021 Vanderbilt University: Nashville: Tennessee Inactive [8] [o] 24 Psi: 1918–1958 University of ...
List of Marquette University fraternities and sororities; List of University of Maryland, Baltimore County fraternities and sororities; List of Massachusetts Institute of Technology fraternities and sororities; List of Michigan State University fraternities and sororities; University of Minnesota fraternities and sororities
By 1959, 76 percent of male students and 79 percent of female students were involved in social fraternities and sororities. [4] Then-Chancellor Harvie Branscomb sought a reformation to shift students' sense of belonging from their fraternities and sororities to the university itself. The reform, which began in early 1951, faced significant ...