Quote:
Originally Posted by MysticCat
Really interesting. Thanks for the info. Are these groups single-sex?
And as for the bolded, that's certaily not without precedent in North America. While the vast majority of fraternities and sororities use Greek letter names, not all do, or did. Consider Triangle, Acacia, FarmHouse, Ceres, . . . . And, of course, there's the case of Sinfonia, a name which our tradition says was taken from the name of a German student organization that the Director of New England Consevratory, George W. Chadwick, had been initiated into while studying at the Royal Conservatory in Leipzig.
|
Most are single-sex, there are a few mixed groups. The larger associations are even same-sex in a few cases, though in a lot of cities two same-sex groups have formed a larger coed association (up to 2700 members in some cases
). It seems so work very well here. Membership has been growing steadily in the past 10 years.
I completely blanked on the non-Greek letter fraternities and sororities in the US. Their names are very similar to those in the Netherlands. There's even a group here called Ceres, though it's a larger association not a sorority but it is associated with a university that specializes in agriculture.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Trèves
I visited some websites of fraternities in the Netherlands (Maastricht). They look very similar to American fraternities.
I will do some more research and maybe I am going to start something like that at my university.
|
Good luck, if you need any more info feel free to send me a PM.