Tri-Delta closing at University of Arizona
Sad to report that Tri-Delt is closing its Arizona chapter in May 2018.
Now here's a question I have for my Greek sisters with more knowledge of re-colonizing than me. The press release announcing the closing seems to indicate that Tri-Delt nationals will look to reorganize and perhaps open again down the road. But this chapter has folded already one (either in the late 80's or early 90's) and then re-colonized so this is the second time to be closed. I think they only waited four years after the first closing before re-colonizing which, in my opinion, is too soon, too many students still remember a weak chapter. The times I've seen a chapter successfully re-colonize is when they're waited longer. So here's the question: how many times does a national re-colonize before calling it a day at that school? To my knowledge Tri Delta has struggled for decades to make quota, going back to at least the 70's. Here's the press release: https://www.tridelta.org/news/operat...ended-arizona/ |
So your question about multiple recolonizations got me wondering, and I (cursorily) glanced at irishpipes' list to see which chapters had recolonized at least twice. And then, of course, I got entirely too in-depth with it, like all the other research projects I do:P There's some precedent for it even at Arizona, with AXO coming back and taking quota plus I think every year since they recolonized in 2013:
University of Alabama Sigma Kappa Alpha Omega 1932-1943/1988-1995/Colony Fall 2018 University of Arizona Alpha Chi Omega Beta Lambda 1930-1969/1980-2008/2013 University of Arkansas Phi Mu Alpha Beta 1923-1933/1978-1995/2012 University of Connecticut: Delta Zeta Gamma Beta 1943-1972/1980-2014/Colony Fall 2017 Alpha Epsilon Phi Alpha Xi 1944-1970/1976-1983/2007 George Washington University Alpha Epsilon Phi Alpha Gamma 1930-1937/1959-1970/1985 Florida State University: Sigma Sigma Sigma Rho 1920-1935/1960-1990/1992-1998 (I think I remember a poster on here saying they'd actually recolonized the chapter five times?) Alpha Omicron Pi Alpha Pi 1928-1939/1949-1980/2013 University of Illinois: Alpha Xi Delta Kappa 1905-?/1983-1995/2008 Phi Mu Delta Beta 1921-1939?/1946-2011/2016 Phi Sigma Sigma Theta 1923-1975/1975-2011/2013 Sigma Kappa Theta 1906-1941/1946-1968/1975-2016 University of Michigan: Alpha Omicron Pi Omicron Pi 1921-196?/1978-1993/2017 Sigma Kappa Alpha Mu 1924-1934/1955-1971/1984 University of Minnesota Phi Mu Zeta Eta 1925-1935/1946-1970/2016 Mississippi State University Alpha Delta Pi Epsilon Eta 1966-1983/1985-1988/2013 University of Missouri Sigma Kappa Epsilon Mu 1968-1973/1990-2004/2012 Adelphi University Delta Phi Epsilon Lambda 1926-1937/1958-1971/2011 Syracuse University Delta Phi Epsilon Gamma 1921-1923/1949-?/2014 Duke University Alpha Phi Beta Nu 1935-1970/1994-2001/2003 Kent State University Sigma Sigma Sigma Alpha Beta 1925-1947/1975-1981/? Miami University (OH): Alpha Sigma Alpha Alpha Alpha 1914-1936/1950-?/1992-2000 Alpha Epsilon Phi Alpha Kappa 1940-1980/1986-2004/2007 (Did not participate in FR) Ohio State University: Delta Phi Epsilon Sigma 1928-?/1948-1987/1990-2001 Phi Sigma Sigma Rho 1928-1938/1947-1952/1952-1958/1974-1977 Oregon State University Alpha Omicron Pi Alpha Rho 1926-1935/1946-1992/2014 Pennsylvania State University Sigma Sigma Sigma Beta Upsilon 1954-1969/1989-1992/1994-2013 San Diego State University Delta Zeta Gamma Omicron 1950-1973/1989-1995/2007 Stanford University : Pi Beta Phi California Alpha 1893-1897/1905-1944/1978 Alpha Phi Kappa 1899-1944/1978-1993/2011 Shepherd University (WV) Sigma Sigma Sigma Beta Delta 1945-1948/1960-1985/1988 University of Wisconsin Alpha Xi Delta Theta 1905-1972/1980-199?/2015 |
So, what these chapters tell me is that multiple recolonizations are usually done at schools with:
-large and prestigious Greek system -flagship university or similar prominence -old chapters -lots of opening and closure of chapters My theory is that when the prestige and alumni support of having a chapter at a particular campus is greater than the cost of recolonizing again, national orgs will recolonize. Unfortunately for Directional State U, once a chapter has been closed twice it's not coming back again. The exception here is Shepherd University, and I have a friend who went there so I'll have to ask him if he knows any history of that chapter. It's clearly possible for a group to come back a third time and make it; most of the chapters on here who had quota numbers had made or exceeded it. I do think it requires a lot of soul-searching on the part of nationals to figure out what went wrong in keeping that chapter open and what they're going to do differently this time. There's a famous quote attributed to Einstein that says "Insanity is doing the same thing twice and expecting different results." |
Phi Mu has been at the University of Arkansas three times.
IM (IFC guy) O- looking at the dates, it would appear that groups that waited a longer period than 4 years have been the most successful when recolonizing. (Not always the case, but sometimes.) Also, when did RFM begin to be implemented? That could also affect the success of a recolonized chapter in the long run. |
My question is: why were some of these chapters closed in the first place?
If you look at the chapters below, each of them has a recolonization that occurred within 2 or 3 years of them closing. Why did they close? Was it a "The chapter will close in 2003 but will have the opportunity to return to campus in 2006" type of situation? Are these closures due to numbers or risk management? Either way, a chapter returning to campus within a few years of closure is likely in for an uphill battle. It means that seniors were freshman or sophomores when the chapter closed, and current students (both Greek and non-Greek) remember what happened and saw it first-hand. It's much more likely that rumors will fly, tent talk will be harsh, and some upperclassmen will continue to hold negative feelings about the sorority (or fraternity) that are hard to shake. Quote:
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From this presentation that Julie Johnson, the NPC delegate for Kappa Delta and Panhellenics chairwoman, has online here, it looks like it was piloted in 2003 and then rolled out everywhere over the next couple years. Only a few groups have closed again after that time. |
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I got curious about Arizona's chapters re: founding dates/closures. The majority of strong houses were founded in 1920's - Pi Phi, Gamma Phi, Kappa, Theta, Chi O, DG and Alpha Phi. No surprise, usually the chapters founded earliest are the strongest. Tri-Delt was founded in 1946. Other chapters founded in the 40's were Alpha Epsilon Phi (still there, but smaller house), ADPi - which did well but closed at some point and has re-colonized; and AOPi - no longer there. Delta Zeta and AXO founded in the 1950's, but DZ is no longer there and AXO has re-colonized twice. Sigma Kappa came on board in the late 1970's and to my knowledge has done well. I think Phi Mu was there, but closed in the 1970's. What's interesting is how a chapter becomes a struggling chapter when sororities founded much later - like Sigma Kappa - succeed. I guess by then the image of a struggling chapter is so embedded that it's hard to turn it around whereas if a new chapter comes on board with great support, it can be more appealing to PNM's. My question is this: when a re-colonized chapter starts struggling again, what can national do that really will turn things around? To my knowledge, Tri-Delt struggled for decades re: quota and recolonizing didn't change things or didn't change them enough. |
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https://dailyillini.com/news/2005/04...es-a-comeback/ https://dailyillini.com/uncategorize...-recolonize-2/ The first one is from 2005 but says they've been a colony since 2004, which sounds like a reorganization or recolonization of the chapter? The article says they also closed due to low numbers in Fall 2004 so it's not really clear what's going on. I also appreciate that they say the women in the colony advertised on "thefacebook.com" :D In the second one, it sounds like they wanted to recolonize as soon as the lease a fraternity had signed for their house was up and they had time to prepare it. I imagine at a school like Illinois, part of the motivation might be "if we don't take this opportunity when we get it, we get bumped to the back of the line for recolonizations". Phi Mu also closed that year and didn't return until 2016. Plus, the second article mentions that their national president was an alumna of this chapter. That probably didn't hurt. ETA: this demonstrates that the concept of being "open" or "closed" isn't always as simple as we'd like it to be... |
As detailed as Irishpipes's list is, there are also "immediate recolonizations" (which used to be known as reorganizations) that may not have made the list. I don't think those are done anymore, because they usually don't work well and they create bitter feelings. However, if a chapter had a physical house and they didn't want to lose it, it was probably worth a try.
In those efforts, the current members would all be given alum status (and sometimes an opportunity to be interviewed by the national reps and remain active with the newly reconstituted group), and then nationals would recruit a whole new "clean slate" group of PNMs the next semester. Sigma Kappa did this at Maryland when I was there, and it worked great. That would have been 1984, I think. Both my chapter of initiation (Michigan) did this, and so did Maryland. Both times, the chapters eventually closed for real and they've both sucessfully recolonized after 10-15 year hiatuses. None of these intermediary reorganizations appear in Irishpipe's thread, and I know of 2-3 more with other groups at Michigan that aren't noted either. Does anyone remember the big brouhaha a few years ago when Delta Zeta tried to reorganize at a school in illinois or Indiana due to low numbers and there was a big media spash because disgruntled members who were given alumnae status publicly complained about the process? I think RFM has helped, and staying off for 4+ years helps, too. |
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I suppose there's different levels of closure: there's closed and gone and no members for 4+ years, closed and no members for less than four years, close down for a year or two and come back with all the same members (a couple sororities at UConn did this with mixed results), make all the current members go early alum and recruit a whole new chapter, pull out of recruitment and have a "colonization" but keep the current members. I suppose it comes down to how badly a sorority wants to be on that campus, how difficult it is to recolonize if you're gone more than four years, and whether a new group can overcome the previous reputation of the chapter or if they need to wait for that to go away before they try to return. |
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I can't remember exactly when our Miami-Ohio chapter closed before recolonizing in 1992, but I'm pretty sure there were sisters from the closed chapter still on campus. Hot mess ensued. I think we learned our lesson from that one and I can't think of a recolonization we've done since then (except IU, which is always the exception to everything ever) where the living alumnae were younger than Social Security age. It sucks because AA is one of our 4 reorganization chapters and very important in ASA, but you gotta know when to throw in the towel. I don't think all the Risk Mgmt kerfuffles at Miami in recent years have helped either.
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I think the only time an immediate recolonization (imo, when you get all new members, it's a recolonization even if it's immediate, because the group has the same level of knowledge a colony would) can work is when all the current members TRULY are done and fried after years of trying, even with full HQ support, and have requested the closure. They have their memories and relationships and are happy with that, but they don't want the stress of having to rush anymore. (Speaking of DePauw DZ this is supposedly what they wanted to do.) That way the sorority does not "move their feet, lose their seat." |
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