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No Greek Letters Allowed on One Public Campus
This article appeared in .
A student group at a public university in Utah has been told that it may not use Greek letters in its name. Why? Because the university believes that Greek letters will give the public the impression that it is a 鈥減arty school鈥 and, according to a lawyer for the university, the school has a 鈥渃ompelling interest鈥 in avoiding that perception.
But, as Dixie State University student and founder of Phi Beta Pi Indigo Klabanoff points out, the school has already chosen to recognize 鈥淭he Organization of Good Parties鈥 and other student organizations that explicitly promote partying in their listings on the school鈥檚 website.
So, there seems to be a little bit of a disconnect here.
As my colleague at the (果冻传媒app官方), Susan Kruth, in the waning days of summer:
For nearly a year, Dixie State University senior has been working to start a local sorority at her public Utah university that would be dedicated to providing services for the community and learning opportunities for its members. Dixie State administrators have flatly stated that Klabanoff鈥檚 sorority, Phi Beta Pi, will as an officially recognized student group as long as it has Greek letters in its name. The university went so far as to retroactively amend its student club bylaws to prohibit such groups from recognition.
FIRE in August:
FIRE recognizes Dixie State University鈥檚 desire not to be seen as a 鈥減arty鈥 school, and the principles by which it declines at this time to establish chapters of national fraternities and sororities. The maintenance of this image, however, must be balanced with its students鈥 rights to freedom of expression and association in accordance with Dixie State鈥檚 legal and moral obligations under the First Amendment. FIREasks that Dixie State promptly reject this unconstitutional restriction on the rights of its students to form clubs using Greek letters and to assemble in exercise of their First Amendment right to freedom of association. Dixie State must amend the ICC bylaws in accordance with the First Amendment and, if Phi Beta Pi meets all requirements for recognition, it must recognize the organization.
Even after FIREbecame involved in the case, Dixie State has still refused to budge and Indigo, a senior, is running out of time to make a university-recognized Phi Beta Pi a reality. The unrecognized group has a Women鈥檚 Career Conference planned for next month and they would love to host the event with the school鈥檚 support. For the conference, that support would mean a waiver of the $225 fee to reserve a room on campus.
Check out (also shot, edited and produced by 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 Susan Kruth) to learn more about Indigo鈥檚 story:
Dixie State鈥檚 creative approach to keeping Greek organizations off campus is not surprising to those of us who work in student rights. Earlier this year, FIREbecame involved at Trinity College in Connecticut after the administration that requires opposite sex membership quotas for all campus groups and prohibits selective membership. Since most national fraternities and sororities are single-sex by charter and selective by nature, this effectively expels such organizations from campus. Trinity鈥檚 approach is one of the sneakier ways I鈥檝e seen a college to try to placate former-Greek donors but at the same time undo the college鈥檚 Greek system. In contrast, Dixie State鈥檚 war on an entire ancient alphabet is remarkably direct.
As 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 Peter Bonilla said in a press release today:
In this instance, Dixie State students seek only to establish a normal student club with a Greek letter name. But administrative hostility towards students interested in Greek life is becoming a disturbing trend nationwide. Trinity College from participating in unrecognized social organizations. Wesleyan University from 鈥渢aking meals鈥 in houses owned by unrecognized groups. And the University of North Carolina at Wilmington鈥檚 kangaroo-court treatment of a fraternity sparked the legislature to pass a bill in campus hearings. While people may object to aspects of Greek life on many campuses, sacrificing freedom of association and expression is not the answer.
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