merger fraternities brotherhood experience and rush
by: RushSerious question. I am a freshman planning to rush this fall. I don't care about tiers. I know the rankings here are meaningless. I want to rush fraternities that have good balance and solid brotherhood. I don't know what to think about merger fraternities. Reading comments here, it sounds like merger fraternities have to worker harder on making their brotherhood strong and it's not certain they can avoid cliques based on their previous identities. Should I avoid rushing them?
#3by: Questions
#4by: Senior
In my house, juniors and seniors still attend most social events and are involved in leadership. Houses with weak brotherhoods lack upperclassmen participation. Merger houses are a slap in the face to upperclassmen that are usually led by sophomores who want to try to quickly rise to the next tier and better PGPs the easy way. Think about it. If you can't recruit better guys during rush, a merger is an admission that the only way to improve is to try to take on the identity of another house.
#5by: Rush
Question about how a merger fraternity works after the merger. Do the merging brothers continue to identify with their old house, or do they actually refer to themselves as members of the new house? For example, are the Phi Delts who join Lambda Chi going to say they are still Phi Delts or will they say they are Lamdbas? Same question for Sig Eps at DU?
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by: Merge not
In three years I've been here, not one merger has succeeded in fully combining two brotherhoods. Throwing parties under the same name is not equal to being unified under the same traditions. Not saying don't rush them, but don't believe all the hype.