Anonymous wrote:Sororities ask "What does your daddy do? Seemingly unimpressed with how successful one's mother is. OP didn't ask about "coveted" in which case one needs more than a rich daddies and other posters are right about SEC schools being competitive. However, they are COMPLETE liars by saying I wasn't in a sorority and that I made up the term "snap bid". At UVa there was a pretty blond who got callbacks from every sorority but rejected from all upon financial revelation.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sororities need member dues to pay nationals and afford to keep their houses. If your husband is rich, she doesn't even have to rush-she can get a snap bid where they stalk her until she joins.Anonymous wrote:As someone who never participated in Greek Life (my college did not have sororities/fraternities) I am curious how students choose which ones to rush or how it works in general. Let's say a kid goes to school in the south and decides to rush for a fraternity, has no family who has ever done it and no idea which one is which, how does one select? Or do you rush and hope one selects you?
Your husband?
Sororities ask "What does your daddy do? Seemingly unimpressed with how successful one's mother is. OP didn't ask about "coveted" in which case one needs more than a rich daddies and other posters are right about SEC schools being competitive. However, they are COMPLETE liars by saying I wasn't in a sorority and that I made up the term "snap bid". At UVa there was a pretty blond who got callbacks from every sorority but rejected from all upon financial revelation.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sororities need member dues to pay nationals and afford to keep their houses. If your husband is rich, she doesn't even have to rush-she can get a snap bid where they stalk her until she joins.Anonymous wrote:As someone who never participated in Greek Life (my college did not have sororities/fraternities) I am curious how students choose which ones to rush or how it works in general. Let's say a kid goes to school in the south and decides to rush for a fraternity, has no family who has ever done it and no idea which one is which, how does one select? Or do you rush and hope one selects you?
Your husband?
Anonymous wrote:As someone who never participated in Greek Life (my college did not have sororities/fraternities) I am curious how students choose which ones to rush or how it works in general. Let's say a kid goes to school in the south and decides to rush for a fraternity, has no family who has ever done it and no idea which one is which, how does one select? Or do you rush and hope one selects you?
Anonymous wrote:Sororities need member dues to pay nationals and afford to keep their houses. If your husband is rich, she doesn't even have to rush-she can get a snap bid where they stalk her until she joins.Anonymous wrote:As someone who never participated in Greek Life (my college did not have sororities/fraternities) I am curious how students choose which ones to rush or how it works in general. Let's say a kid goes to school in the south and decides to rush for a fraternity, has no family who has ever done it and no idea which one is which, how does one select? Or do you rush and hope one selects you?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sororities need member dues to pay nationals and afford to keep their houses. If your husband is rich, she doesn't even have to rush-she can get a snap bid where they stalk her until she joins.Anonymous wrote:As someone who never participated in Greek Life (my college did not have sororities/fraternities) I am curious how students choose which ones to rush or how it works in general. Let's say a kid goes to school in the south and decides to rush for a fraternity, has no family who has ever done it and no idea which one is which, how does one select? Or do you rush and hope one selects you?
Not necessarily true. I know wealthy girls who didn't get a bid by the house they wanted. One friend's daughter dropped out b/c she didn't a bid by coveted sorority. They are cut-throat in the south with sorority rush.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sororities need member dues to pay nationals and afford to keep their houses. If your husband is rich, she doesn't even have to rush-she can get a snap bid where they stalk her until she joins.Anonymous wrote:As someone who never participated in Greek Life (my college did not have sororities/fraternities) I am curious how students choose which ones to rush or how it works in general. Let's say a kid goes to school in the south and decides to rush for a fraternity, has no family who has ever done it and no idea which one is which, how does one select? Or do you rush and hope one selects you?
Clearly you were not in a sorority. This is not how it happens in general. One off it ,any happen but this is really not the case.
It totally depends on the school. A school in the South where Greek life is huge is a totally different animal than a chocolate that has Greek life but it’s not the center of student life.
Anonymous wrote:Sororities need member dues to pay nationals and afford to keep their houses. If your husband is rich, she doesn't even have to rush-she can get a snap bid where they stalk her until she joins.Anonymous wrote:As someone who never participated in Greek Life (my college did not have sororities/fraternities) I am curious how students choose which ones to rush or how it works in general. Let's say a kid goes to school in the south and decides to rush for a fraternity, has no family who has ever done it and no idea which one is which, how does one select? Or do you rush and hope one selects you?
Anonymous wrote:Sororities need member dues to pay nationals and afford to keep their houses. If your husband is rich, she doesn't even have to rush-she can get a snap bid where they stalk her until she joins.Anonymous wrote:As someone who never participated in Greek Life (my college did not have sororities/fraternities) I am curious how students choose which ones to rush or how it works in general. Let's say a kid goes to school in the south and decides to rush for a fraternity, has no family who has ever done it and no idea which one is which, how does one select? Or do you rush and hope one selects you?
Sororities need member dues to pay nationals and afford to keep their houses. If your husband is rich, she doesn't even have to rush-she can get a snap bid where they stalk her until she joins.Anonymous wrote:As someone who never participated in Greek Life (my college did not have sororities/fraternities) I am curious how students choose which ones to rush or how it works in general. Let's say a kid goes to school in the south and decides to rush for a fraternity, has no family who has ever done it and no idea which one is which, how does one select? Or do you rush and hope one selects you?