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Alpha Omicron Pi is
pleased to announce that the Fraternity has installed a new chapter
at the University of Waterloo.
The newest AOP chapter was
installed on Feb 2, 2008!
For 13 of the past 14 years, the UW has been ranked most innovative
among 47 universities across the country. In 2005, for the second
year in a row, the school also ranked best overall.
Lambda Epsilon
lifts the total number of Alpha Omicron Pi chapters in Ontario to
four, the most of any NPC group.
The campus currently
has five Greek organizations, including three fraternities - Sigma Chi, Alpha
Epsilon Phi, and Zeta Psi; one NPC organization - Kappa Kappa Gamma; and one local
sorority - Sigma Lambda Gamma.
AOP is proud
to have six active Canadian chapters. They are:
1930 Beta Tau / U of Toronto
1939 Kappa Phi / McGill
U
1985 Kappa Lambda / U of Calgary
1986 Iota Chi / UWO
1992 Gamma Chi / Carleton
U
2008 Lambda Epsilon / Waterloo
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Frats and sororities hit campus with recognition
from CUSA
By Maggy Ma
Fraternities and sororities will be stepping out of the shadow
this fall at Carleton.
The Carleton University Students’ Association (CUSA) has
offered fraternities and sororities formal recognition on campus
through the creation of the Greek Council, a club representing four
fraternities and two sororities.
“There was no recognition of [fraternities and sororities]
whatsoever through us or through the university prior to this,”
said Brittany Smyth, CUSA vice-president (internal affairs).
Smyth is also one of the people who will sit on the council. The
council is aimed at promoting activities and events hosted by fraternities
and sororities to erase the stereotypes of those social organizations
at universities, said Smyth.
“[Greek Council] gives them the opportunity, as fraternities
and sororities, to show people [...] the things that they get involved
in,” she said. “It gives them the chance to take part
at the university as a Greek community.”
Although fraternities and sororities have now been given formal
status by CUSA, the university administration has made no move towards
recognizing these groups on campus, she said.
“We’re hoping to get recognition through the administration
and not just be a club or society, but something unique —
just for Greeks,” said Corinne Woods, president of the Phi
Sigma Sigma sorority.
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