Alpha- Phi Could Be First Sorority to Get a House- by Reuven M

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Alpha- Phi Could Be First Sorority to Get a House- by Reuven M ,: "' I *,*;r:I -A , -""- - .1- ' --.: vr~5' X7' ,~ r;· X · - - - ~~~~~~~~--- A· ~ ~~-- i I. I Alpha- Phi could be first sorority to get a house- By Reuven M. Lerner W2A, which used to house the According to members, Alpha non-resident student association. Phi is close to obtaining a house The Zeta Phi chapter of Alpha for the sorority. If true, the pur- Phi was founded on Saturday, chase would mark the end to the February 11,' 1984. Then Asso- sorority's five-year search for a ciate Dean Stephen D. Immer- house. It would be the first so- man predicted that the sorority rority house at MIT. would find a house later that se- Alpha Phi President Ann E. mester. Immerman, now Director I Rhee '90 declined to comment on ofActivities for the Campus Ac- the housing search and said that tivities Complex, could not be even sorority members were not reached for comment. fully aware of the situation. As- Neal H. Dorow, advisor to Fra- sociate Dean for Student Affairs ternities and Independent Living James R. Tewhey said he was un- Groups, has been active in the aware of any changes in Alpha search for sorority housing. In Phi's housing search. October, he said that Institute of- The Oflice of the Dean for ficials would be meeting to "dis- Student Affairs has been helping cuss the real prospects of sorority sororities to find housing since housing," and that "we're getting they began five years ago. Alpha close to arriving at a conclusion." Phi, Alpha Chi Omega, and Sig- In May, he said that he was an- ma Kappa now meet in building ticipating "sororities being · b·--r--e I _-_-p-LII-- housed." Dorow was not avail- 7 able for comment. Blackout 'New pledges in all sororities -are required to pay "building strikes IVIIT funds" in addition to dues to Ken ChurchlThe Tech support the eventual purchase of Problems with aligning a Feeding frenzy! Freshmen went out to dinner last night with the upperclassmen. a house. Alpha Phi charges $200 -- -- -·- cl_ C ---- L_ ---- I- C1PI II I --- ------ ·C new system at Canbridge fund, along with Electric caused all of MITr for the building initial $170 charge and $90 west of Ames Street to ex- an dues each semester. Alpha Chi Freshmen, can- select Chocolate Ciot perience an eight-minute Omega charges $100 for their Byv Irene C. Kuo fraternities." scribed their experiences as gen- long power outage shortly building fund, a $70 one-time Freshmen may now designate "Right now, all residents are erally negative or mixed. It found after 2:30 pm yesterday. fee, and $25 monthly dues. Sig- "Chocolate City," currently an all black, and thus our ,oal is to that students who lived in pre- Thomas Shepherd, asso- ma Kappa, which was formally black, all male section of New provide a cultural support group dominat ely black living groups Physical ciate director of installed in February, charges House 1,on their housing prefer- for them, but you dodn't have to were "unanimrusly . positive" said that the utility's Plant, $20 for -the--- buildg {fupld, a. -enoe-crds.- In-the past,-,.students ---be - aminority meember,- to, livye, --about their exppeen;es there. in -procedure, failure lay oneftime $19S chages and-a total', 'iriiertestedm'Xcikig on ihesettise`' here,; Dodd -ddcd. "it ate Niiety percent 'of~ our -resz- not equipment. Cambridge detlys are from,, urban areas where Of $25 monthly dues. floors first had to select New or Asian stirdent-joined, *we was in the process are not all -that Electric Sorority housing could greatly House', -then choose Chocolate would expect them to participate '1ninorities' "But at of switching the power relieve dormitory overcrowding, City during the dormitory's inter- in our activities," which include small," Dodd explained. the Blackstone a small popu- load from a major problem in recent years. nal rush. functions with other schools in MIT they do form stations to the lation." and-Putnam A sorority house would open for- This plan equalizes the rush the area. Dodd said no non- station "Black students in Chocolate new 115 kilovolts ty to sixty places in on-campus procedures of Chocolate City and minority person has lived in at Alewife. City had a more comfortable ex- located housing, many of them single sex the language houses at New Chocolate City in the past three one perience at MIT," Tewhey con- The power failure is places which are often hard to House. "It allows those who real- years. cur-ed. "Living in that kind of of several which have ef- obtain. Women would be able to ly want to live in Chocolate City The 1986 Racial Climate Re- 'environment was helpful.?' fected the MIT campus this between dormitories, so- the chance to din so," said Choc- port revealed three guarters- ok" choose Chocolate City will continue to summer, all of approxi- rorities, and independent living olate City co-chair Robert Dodd those who lived in predominantly have space for 28 residents. mately the same duration. groups once the house were es- '90. white living-group settings de- _ - r. pll··-e ·CIIII -P-ll 9--C -----·I 9bC· U---- I L9I tablished. Chocolate City residents met with Associate Dean for Student Fraternity expects pledging Affairs James R. Tewhey to re- quest a change in this procedure practice -will check hazing last spring, after which they sub- him. from hazing. At MIT, Delta Kap- mitted a formal proposal to By Linda D'Angelo housing pref- pa Epsilon pledge Thomas Lynn While this year's "Beginning with the class of erence cards could not be 1993, freshmen who chose to live Clark drowned in 1956 when he was unable to find his way back changed, Tewhey said that next at Zeta Beta Tau will be made yea3's cards will list Chocolate said MIT after being dropped off far from brothers immediately," City- separately. chapter president Rob M~trtello the-fraternity as part of a hazing 191. This followsc the- annaulnce Q-r-up- ers clCltur-r suppert" As an "official effort by the ment'last week by both the ZBT "We are not separatists," Dodd national national chapter to say that haz- and Tau KappaEpsilon stressed. "Our residents partici- the pledge ing will not be tolerated," the chapters that this fall pate in a wide range of campus system would be replaced with policy change was applauded by Martello. Dorow described the activities; they are members of new rules to emphasize more pos- Number Six [Delta Psi] and black itive -behavior. - (Pleaseturn fo- page 2) In the past ZBT, like most fra- ternities on campus, used an "ex- Reports of bicycle thefts tended pledge period,' Dorow said. "Pledges for the fall semes- double in past year ter were initiated as full members prior to the spring semester," he By Irene C. Kuo ones at that. "Most thefts were explained. Approximately 25 bicycles or of mountain bikes and other ex- bikes," she said. Taken independently by both parts of bicycles have been re- pensive ZBT and TKE, which has no ported stolen since August 1, "Thieves have found ways to U-shaped locks,' she ex- MIT chapter, this action marked more than double the figure for defeat many owners the first time any national frater- the same period last year. Since plained. "Also, in random nity fundamentally changed the January 1, the- Campus Police park their bikes has received 120 such, reports. places, since they are not allowed manner in which new members ,.· are enrolled. The main impetus Patrolman Cheryl Vossmer said to secure them to stairwells or - - .·-" halls or in labs." i to this change .was 'the great at- that fewer thefts occurred near keep them in the :. 1. Amherst Alley than near the aca- ' Her recommendations include i \( i tention -focused r~ecenatly on =r-·;.. ·· e;i -buildings. Only a very using a plumber's OTT with a U- .·:c.·? :·;::`· -· r deinic :?, '''`- abuses im the fraternity,"system, ?i-· : bikes with the 3\ z ···- . t,.; :· . ·, specificallyy iniures and -deaths smiall-^^nutmber of bikes have -been' lock, registering Police, and parking resulting from .,Y;ing. rscovered, she added. Three 'Campus were -of -- bikes -in the special. compound, last year alone, two students fournts'- 'af the -thefts, others were behind Building 13. at Rutigs- University and two a't complete bikes, the She stressed the unportance of I Rider College died, while a Of parts. Ken ChurchlTlhe Tech Princeton University student One reason she offered for the 'reporting bike thefts so that the Lisa Primiano '92 rehearses her sPi-H for the RIO . s Police can locate theft lapsed into a coma due to alco- theft m 'irease 'is *at.t more stub-:- .-sklts .- . e + * * - m s ; ; l He l g L od hol-related incidents' resulting dent-'aisiis-ekes and'prone areas. I l M l Lo l 1 :, ,, I , . .. I I I ,. I f .1 s . · '=-:- -- --i-- _ apl I - ,,I ,I _.- PAGF 2 The Tech FRIDAY. SEPTEMBERR ' .'.1989' x~ect } m ina8" * f-ALLL § I Lw-IV I L L.. I Int i - Fraternity expects pedging notices practice will check hazing Contin~edfrm page ")trig period' for, both brothers I at - - bdolfd step forward and pledges to re-evaluate their The Elizabeth Peabody House of Somer- move as a " stepbold forward" ecson. A.+ Announcements ville is looking for adult volunteers who Free Information of their time with a re prob- It is this last aspect which is ., are willing to share some which confronts , Testing Program sponsored a child who needs their special attention.
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