<p>Any of these colleges have actual sorority housing for all members? Any that don't or any that have housing just for officers? Do any of these not have sororities at all?</p>
<p>Brown University
Columbia University
Cornell University
Dartmouth College
Duke University
Emory University
Northwestern University
Princeton University
Stanford University
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
University of Wisconsin, Madison
Vanderbilt University
Washington University in St. Louis</p>
<p>Thanks a bunch!</p>
<p>Stanford has sorority housing...constructed mostly within the past decade.
Duke has sororities, but they do not have housing...interestingly, fraternities at Duke are housed in West Campus dorm groups. At the admissions information session, they said this may change in the near future.
For information about any school's sorority housing, you can google the name of the school and "panhellenic."</p>
<p>All of these colleges have sororities. Go to their websites and do a search for "Greek life" or "Panhellenic" and you should find the necessary information.</p>
<p>No colleges in North Carolina can have sorority housing because of an antiquated "Brothel Law". Apparently, any house with more than a certain number of women living in it is considered a brothel and therefor illegal.</p>
<p>UNC Chapel Hill has sorority houses...we just drove by them last week and they are beautiful.</p>
<p>I've been duped! Two different tour guides in NC (Duke & Wake? Wake & Elon?) told us the brothel story. Being from New England, home of antiquated "blue laws" that make it impossible to buy beer after 8 pm or on Sunday, I fell for it hook, line & sinker. Good thing those were free tours, or I'd ask for my money back.</p>
<p>^Those laws are probably still on the books, its just that they are probably not enforced or UNC found a loophole.</p>
<p>^No, I checked Snopes.com and apparently it's an urban legend passed around about a lot of different schools in different states.</p>