Cornell Insider

a blog by the writers of the Cornell Review

Posts Tagged ‘Greek Life’

University Suspends SAE Fraternity

Posted by Oliver Renick on March 1, 2011

Cornell has imposed an interim suspension of Sigma Alpha Epsilon, the fraternity where sophomore George Desdunes ’13 was a brother, according to the Cornell Chronicle. He was found unresponsive in the chapter’s house Friday morning and later died at Cayuga Medical Center.

The article says that SAE was determined to have violated the university’s recognition policy, which outlines the rules and methods a Greek chapter must abide by to remain active. The policy recently underwent changes last semester regarding rush and pledge processes.

Cornell officials said that information they have received about the use of alcohol during the events of Feb. 25 is sufficient to conclude that the fraternity had likely violated the university’s recognition policy.

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IFC To Create Bro-led ‘Task Force’

Posted by Oliver Renick on February 8, 2011

Incoming Interfraternity Council President Dan Freshman ’12 is hard at work cleaning up the Greek scene. After keeping an eye on Cornell’s frats during their first hard-alcohol-free week of rush, he is now looking to create a committee that will oversee the implementation of last semester’s changes to the Recognition Policy, a.k.a ‘Prohibition Policy.’ Freshman contacted fraternity members on Monday looking for brothers to apply to be a part of his ‘Greek Task Force.’

Members of the task force would meet weekly with IFC executive board members to discuss means of implementation and the interests of the Greek student body.  These ideas would then be presented to chapter presidents and delegates at IFC general body meetings to vote on legislation and put policies into action.  These meetings would be closed discussions that would encourage honesty and realistic expectations for the Greek system.

It’s not apparent whether the Greek Task Force (GTF) will more closely resemble S.W.A.T or Best Buy’s Geek Squad, but the good news is hopefully the head bro of GTF will have a little more insight into the college social scene than Frat-star Hubbell ’67 or renowned C-town socialite Apgar.

Of course, as is with any legit task force, Freshman said the group will be “represent a diverse field of houses and perspectives.”  No word if butt-chugging is a requirement.

Hat tip to JPMITB

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Greek Grade Reports

Posted by Cornell Insider Staff on January 27, 2011

Check out the recently released fraternity and sorority grade reports. When comparing the average house GPAs between the spring and fall semesters, one unusual trend sticks out: GPAs were actually higher during the spring semester than the fall semester. For sororities the differences was .08 (3.317 vs 3.237) and fraternities had a positive gap of .086 (3.247 vs 3.161). While it’s not clear whether these differences are statistically significant (even without estimating standard errors, my guess is that they are), it’s still surprising that GPAs were not significantly lower during the pledging-intensive spring semester. Any guesses as to why?

[UPDATE]: For some reason the grade report PDFs are no longer available on Cornell’s website.  Above are the originally reported, correct figures.

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Cornell Top Stories of 2010 – #3: This is Sparta

Posted by Oliver Renick on December 29, 2010

From vltalvastudios.com

Much to the dismay of fratboys everywhere, Cornell’s Greek system came under attack this August when the administration announced its desire to rework the University’s fraternity system. Associate Dean of Students for Fraternity and Sorority Affairs Travis Apgar lead the Big Fat Greek Crackdown that was met with vehement opposition by Cornellians. Animosity brewed and students protested that Cornell officials were out of touch with students’ social life.

On August 25, The Daily Sun ran the first article detailing the possible restructuring of the Greek system. The change that received the most attention was the claim that by 2012-2013, freshmen would be barred from attending open frat parties with alcohol. Rushing processes would be without alcohol, and frat-sorority mixers would be eliminated during the pledging process. Dennis gave some analysis on the announcement, highlighting points that would be echoed throughout the debate that would ensue over the following months.

The demand for weekend boozing is not going anywhere, but once freshman are barred from attending open frat parties, there’s going to be a big discrepancy between supply and demand. Think about it: on a given night early in the semester, 500-1000 freshmen (maybe more) will now be looking for a new outlet for boozing. Where will they all go?…

…There are a couple of possible sources of supply: dorm rooms, Collegetown, the woods behind Jessup? Collegetown seems like the most likely destination for the freshmen swarms, but this presents a new problem

Freshman looking for alcohol in less safe locations proved to be the most common argument against the new policies. When the IFC hosted a forum on August 8th with University officials, fraternity representatives repeatedly tried to convince Apgar, VP Susan Murphy ’73, and Dean of Students Kent Hubbel ’67 that they were putting students in danger. With IFC President Allen Miller ’11 leading the discussion, things got heated pretty fast. Frat bros lined up out the doors in a packed Uris basement auditorium to air their grievances with the panel. Boos and hisses flew, and it was generally kinda embarrassing from an outsider’s perspective. But Hubbel, disgraced Alpha Delt alumnus, and his team held firm.

The University is “faced with a set of rising expectations with regard to abuse of alcohol on campus, and we are obligated to do something.  We’re not here to advocate for a dry campus or a dry Greek system,” he said. Then gave advised the fraternities that “if you want to see success of the Greek system, you should join with us.”

Later that night, President Vince Andrews ’11 – Phi Gamma Delta member – and his Student Assembly wrote a letter to Dean Hubbel expressing their anger over the University’s lack of communication with student government about the decision.

All of the forums and gripes proved to be in vain. The Board of Trustees reviewed the proposed policies on October 28th and approved. In yet another exhibition of futility, students’ voices and the Student Assembly were overrun by administrative power. Ripples from the conflict reached other Ivy League schools, where students braced for the possibility of the same policies being enacted at their Universities. In September Harvard students called Cornell admins dangerous, and Princeton admins hinted at a copy-cat policy.

As we said then, hopefully they’ll wait until 2012 to see the effects of 2010′s epic Prohibition Policy.

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SA ‘Troubled’ by Administration’s ‘Lack of Consultation’ Over Prohibition Policy

Posted by Oliver Renick on September 8, 2010

In a letter today to Dean of Students Kent Hubbell, the Student Assembly expressed their discomfort with the manner in which the administration has gone about pursuing revisions to the University Recognition Policy for Greek chapters.

“We are troubled by the administration’s lack of consultation with student governance and relevant stakeholders,” said SA leaders, who believe there should be greater student involvement and dialogue before action is taken.  While Cornell’s admins have met with IFC leaders on the subject, there has yet to be any extensive involvement with the student body at large.

“We aim to offer a comprehensive, multi-faceted perspective on this issue by incorporating the opinions of students not represented by the Greek governing bodies into the discussion as these changes may come to affect the broader student experience. Because the Student Assembly was not consulted, undergraduate participation has been limited in a decision that may ultimately affect anyone,” the letter said.

Hubbell responded by saying “it seemed reasonable to us to begin the discussion with the students and alumni of Cornell’s Greek system.  We look forward to having the SA begin their work, and will facilitate the process as we go forward.”

The letter to Hubbell, along with the SA’s plan for approaching the prohibition policy, will be discussed in tomorrow’s assembly meeting in Willard Straight at 4:45 pm.

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Don’t Haze Me, Bro!

Posted by Oliver Renick on September 8, 2010

In a plaid-laden auditorium, University admins are met with interrogation, hisses, boos, bros, and even a Keystone reference as Greek members battle new Prohibition Policy.

From vltalvastudios.com

In response to the University’s recent crackdown on Greek social life, Cornell fraternity members held a forum this evening to voice their concerns against the campus-wide movement to minimize alcohol abuse.  With a single unanimous mission, a Greek Phalanx of speakers soon assembled against Cornell administrators Travis Apgar, Dean Kent Hubbel ’67 and Susan Murphy ’73.

The scene in Uris G01 was certainly a fratty one, with the entire auditorium filled by Greek members and lines of angry bros waiting behind police for seats to become available.  What gavel-tapping IFC President Allen Miller ’11 planned as a calm, collected meeting quickly morphed into a mild hazing of the three administrators and what was labeled as their ill-conceived plan.

The proposal, spearheaded by Apgar, is designed to “amend [fraternity] recognition policies in a few simple ways,” by requiring alcohol-free rushing and pledging, as well as disallowing freshman from attending fraternity parties involving alcohol.  Each objective is planned in such a way as to slowly wean the frats off of alcohol, and all changes will be fully implemented by Spring 2012.  However, Apgar made it clear that the University doesn’t want to “control [the Greek system],” and that they “still need to work out details.”

While fraternity speakers were complemented with vehement applause and finger-snapping, the sometimes roundabout responses from Cornell’s administrators were often met with grumbling and hissing.  The group of disgruntled Cornellians became especially lively when Dean of Students Kent Hubbell prefaced a circumventing answer by reminding the crowd of his membership in the Alpha Delta Phi fraternity.

A red-faced Hubbell laughed off the hisses and boos, and went on to remind the students that this is a “national problem,” and that the University is “faced with a set of rising expectations with regard to abuse of alcohol on campus, and we are obligated to do something.  We’re not here to advocate for a dry campus or a dry Greek system.”  In a stern voice, he advised fraternities that “if you want to see success of the Greek system, you should join with us.”

Regardless of the administrators’ claims, IFC members continued to demand explanations for how the number of Greek recruits would be maintained, how safety would be improved, and why fraternities were being targeted in the first place.  One student asked why co-ops were ignored, claiming “an attack on the Greek system,” while Ryan Lett ’12, president of Phi Gamma Delta ‘Fiji’ asked if the university was merely trying “to move liability away from Cornell.”

Alpha Sigma Phi’s Doug Durant ’11 said that drinking “was not a keystone part of my recruitment.  I see an affront on Greek traditions.  I can see no other result from this besides shrinking of the Greek system.”

Murphy attempted to reassure fraternity presidents, saying “This will not result in a shrinking of the system.  It’s not up to me to decide your social life on a Friday or Saturday night.  All we’re doing is changing policy – not practices or habits. I take issue with the claim that frats provide the only safe place to drink.”

Although the initiative aims to maximize safety, spokesmen from the fraternities echoed sentiments that abolition of recruitment boozing would lead to more dangerous drinking environments in dorms and in Collegetown.  Rohan Siddhanti ’12, president of Sigma Pi, bluntly told the panel “fraternities and sororities will adapt.  We will find ways to take these kids.  To Collegetown, to Turningstone… they’ll be drinking in their dorms.  It’s not changing the culture – it’s not changing the roots.”

While Murphy quickly reminded Siddhanti of his own chapter’s rocky past, the latter half of the forum was a rather raucous tag-team assault on the amendments proposed to redefine the University Recognition Policy.  At one point forum leader Allen Miller reminded guests to “keep this professional… to a point.”  With the Fraternities’ extensive laundry list of complaints and a single unanimous voice against the new policy, one almost expected an administrator to beg, “don’t haze me, bro!”

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Ithaca Greeks Under Siege: Initial Reactions

Posted by Cornell Insider Staff on August 26, 2010

Yesterday the Sun ran an article on the administration’s new plan to crack down on the Greek system. By 2012-2013, freshmen will be barred from attending open frat parties with alcohol, rush will be completely alcohol free, and frats and sororities will be prohibited from having mixers during the pledging/initiation process. Here are some initial reactions/observations on the crackdown:

1) The demand for weekend boozing is not going anywhere, but once freshman are barred from attending open frat parties, there’s going to be a big discrepancy between supply and demand. Think about it: on a given night early in the semester, 500-1000 freshmen (maybe more) will now be looking for a new outlet for boozing. Where will they all go?

2) There are a couple of possible sources of supply: dorm rooms, Collegetown, the woods behind Jessup? Collegetown seems like the most likely destination for the freshmen swarms, but this presents a new problem. From the Sun article: “Dean of Students Kent Hubbell ’69, who was also involved in creating the new rules, said that trying to curb underage drinking and alcohol abuse is ‘a safety issue, not a moral issue.’” Right, but regardless of which new venue freshmen chose, they will be drinking in more potentially hazardous locations than open fraternity parties.

3) Cornellians join fraternities for a number of reasons, but one major draw is the opportunity to attend closed mixers during the spring semester. With this bit of immediate gratification out of the picture, the appeal of Greek life will take a serious hit.

4) Alumni giving certainly won’t go up if Greek alumni feel that the university is trying to drive their houses out of existence.

5) Cornell owns many of the large houses on campus, which will make it extremely difficult to create any sort of private-IFC.

Look for a complete story with reactions from Greek and University officials in the next issue of the Review.

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MRM #62

Posted by Cornell Insider Staff on August 16, 2010

- That Crime Alert email about the Ithaca College assault was a scam.

- I remember the good old days of dead pillows in Pscyh 101.

- Cornell Hockey unveils its 2010-2011 schedule.

- Congrats, 2014′s, H1N1 should not be an issue for your first semester.

- Cornell researchers say companies cranking the thermostat are stifling productivity.

- Cornell makes the list of “Top Weird Science Stories of 2010.”

- Scali signs with the Laredo Bucks.

- Ithaca leads the way with private sector growth.

- The Cornell hazing tradition.

- Cornell Gov. Department continues to roll.

- The Class of 2014 has record high SAT stats (via MetaEzra).

- Cornell’s Johnson Graduate School of Management sees the biggest drop in applications among all top 30 business school programs.

- Cornell researcher finds that men who earn less money than their spouses are more likely to cheat.

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Voices From the Fraternity Scene

Posted by Oliver Renick on April 19, 2010

Brosephstalin.com

Last week,  Stun columnist Munier Salem wrote a provocative article denouncing the Cornell Greek community for being arrogant, somewhat bullyish, and generally unimaginative.  The article of course was met with some serious opposition; the online version has accumulated over 30 reader comments and is still rolling.

One response from the Greek community aired in today’s Stun, titled ‘In Defense of the “Doucheoisie.”‘ Author Joseph Pantoga delivers what frat critics may deem to be a surprisingly articulate, entertaining, and what I believe to be a spot-on analysis of the Cornell fraternity scene and stereotype.  He airs some of the some complaints Salem did, namely that many frat brothers have become caricatures of themselves (and ladies are no exception either, apparently).

As history has shown time and time again, stereotypes can be exaggerated very easily. They do very little but breed resentment and, especially at Cornell, continue to encourage divisiveness between the Greek system and the rest of campus. Yes, everyone has met the laughable guy who joined his fraternity for its “alumni connections” and social reputation of throwing liquor and money at only the hottest “biddies,” or the makeup-laden sorostitute frat-rat who incessantly displays the letters of her sorority to conceal her own personal insecurities. But students at Cornell only do themselves a disservice when they allow people like that to determine how they view the Greek system as a whole.

The column points out that Pantoga is a member of “hte Sigma Chi fraternity (sic).” Being from a generally well-respected and somewhat ‘fratty’ house, it will certainly be interesting to see the Greek community’s response to the article.

What I wonder is whether or not these ‘Brosef Stalins’ Pantoga mentions are in fact cognizant of their communist status.  I personally think most are – it is in fact their goal, not a side-effect that leeches on somewhere during the quest for ‘awesomeness.’  The question is, do they have the desire (or capacity) to defend themselves, or will they in fact take the lazy way out and keep bro-in’ out with their stunner shades?

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Monday Reading Madness #35

Posted by Cornell Insider Staff on February 7, 2010

- Months later, Maine highlights the underutilization of our emergency alert system.

Lego competition in Duffield.

- The Ivy League is apparently immune to such problems, but here’s an analysis of what happens when you have a 60-40 ratio on campus.

- Another big weekend for men’s basketball, while hockey goes 1-1.

- Two Cornell professors discuss gender equality in engineering.

- This was from last week, but in case you didn’t hear, tuition is going up. (Via METAezra).

- How did I miss this?

- New Pew research says blogging is down among young adults.

- Our friends at the Stanford Review blog cover an interesting on-campus debate about Christianity and capitalism.

- Another reminder that Cornell’s fraternity mishaps pale in comparison to the stuff that unfortunately goes on at other schools.

- It’s an old story now, but kudos to Pi Phi for getting their fashion guide picked up by… Fox News!

- Some sort of spiderman device, brought to you by Cornell researchers.

- Stephen Hayes argues that the White House is politicizing intelligence.

- We might have two more sets of confirmation hearings on our hands in the near future.

- Finally, I can’t help but pass along this fascinating bit of experimental research. Hat tip to JP.

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