Black sororities/fraternities at top colleges(especially in Cali)

<p>HEyy!</p>

<p>Well,
I really want to be in a sorority (black of course) when I go to college. But what is throwing me off, is that I don't want to go to a school with a minor sorority/frat force. </p>

<p>I want the frat/sorors to be a present force.</p>

<p>And the schools I'm interested in, I want to know is there a strong,weak, neutral force there.</p>

<p>I am really interested in </p>

<p>USC
the UCs(the top ones like UCLA UC Irvine UC Davis)
Stanford
UC Santa Barbara
Columbia U
Georgetown
U of Miami</p>

<p>Those are the main ones.
But if you guys know of any schools of those calibers that have black sorors n Frats..please let me know!</p>

<p>Thanks!</p>

<p>Hey! Idk about the other schools, but I know that Columbia has Deltas on campus. My interviewer was a part of the sorority and she said that they have their own house on campus. Overall though I heard that frats don’t dominate the scene there as much as at public universities or universities in the South.</p>

<p>Georgetown is jesuit, no greeks. I dont know about the others, but USC has a sizable minority greek presence.</p>

<p>A Delta sorority house at Columbia University? That’s news to me. Check your facts.</p>

<p>That’s what my interviewer said… it was news to me too. Assuming that she didn’t lie, which would be a stupid thing to lie about.</p>

<p>She didn’t lie, she’s simply mistaken. Egregiously mistaken. The only National Pan Hellenic Council organization (the Devine Nine) to have posessed a house on the Columbia campus was Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, which ‘lost’ its house across from the W. 114th Street gate years ago. Maybe Barnard College gave the gals a house. I don’t know.</p>

<p>actually it seems like there are a number of divine nine at Columbia,</p>

<p>aka-<a href=“http://lambdaaka.org/”>http://lambdaaka.org/&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

<p>dst-<a href=“DST/Rho Chapter”>http://www.columbia.edu/cu/dst&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

<p>isn’t it kind of weird that there can be sororities for just black people, but if a sorority was only exclusive for whites it would be considered racist? unless you just mean like predominantly black, but anyone can join. idk, I was just wondering about that.</p>

<p>The divine 9 are predominately black but anyone can join. At most campuses where the student body is diverse, the chapter members can be just as diverse.</p>

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<p>The historically Black Greek organizations, like HBCUs, originated at a time in which African-Americans were not accepted into historically White organizations. And like HBCUs, they are now historically and predominantly African-American, but open to students of all backgrounds.</p>