<p>[The</a> Crimson White | Board of Trustees members speak out on sorority segregation](<a href=“http://cw.ua.edu/2013/09/13/board-of-trustees-members-speak-out-on-sorority-segregation/]The”>http://cw.ua.edu/2013/09/13/board-of-trustees-members-speak-out-on-sorority-segregation/)</p>
<p>They are on it.</p>
<p>Roll Tide!</p>
<p>A step in the right direction. Let’s see if the thousand-mile journey has begun.</p>
<p>Make me proud, 'Bama.</p>
<p>I’m hopeful but not convinced.</p>
<p>we’ll see, think they had to say something as her grand father is a trustee</p>
<p>It’s a national story now. It’s a scandal. It’s coming at a time when the University is making inroads into being taken seriously on a more national stage. </p>
<p>They will never have a rush without young women of color getting offers again.</p>
<p>THIS!</p>
<p>“You know the most important thing about this whole episode, it is that much of what’s happening — much of the action that is being taken to address segregation among fraternities and sororities — it comes from the students. And see, that’s what makes me have hope — that it’s the students who initiated it.”</p>
<p>Exactly why our young ladies that are in the houses now that are such a vital part of making the neccessary changes need to stay put.</p>
<p>Maybe the media will take away from this and won’t be afraid to put in print that our students are NOT behind the discrimination. We shall see. But that does not make for a good news story, sadly.</p>
<p>The students are clearly NOT the problem. UA really should nominate that article in the CW for the Pullitzer.</p>
<p>Moving in the right direction. Good. Keep it up.</p>