Writer Claims Cornell is Biased Against Students in Fraternities While Indulging Left Wing Students
“has been waging a determined war on frats for years, wielding an arsenal of nitpicky, draconian, and sometimes openly unfair policies”
After the last few weeks, this is an easy claim to believe.
Ani Wilcenski writes at Tablet Mag:
Normal Kids Get F*cked
At Cornell University, a third of the student body (including my own brother and cousin) belongs to Greek life and frat parties are a major part of the social scene, largely because there is effectively nothing else to do in Ithaca, New York, on a Saturday night. But their social centrality means little to the university administration, which has been waging a determined war on frats for years, wielding an arsenal of nitpicky, draconian, and sometimes openly unfair policies to keep many fraternities in a near-perpetual state of punishment.
At Cornell, the school uses an anonymous reporting system in which anyone can submit a complaint against a frat, even people who don’t attend the university—which can then become near-immediate grounds for a formal investigation during which the fraternity may very likely be suspended. This happened as recently as February, when Cornell’s Office of Student Conduct and Community Standards (OSCCS) received “an anonymous incident report” making unspecified allegations against at least 10 fraternities. By 9 p.m. the same day, OSCCS emailed every new member of those fraternities encouraging them to come forward with their own reports; three days later the school began suspending the accused chapters. The frats were prohibited from all social activity during the investigation, which included banning new members from eating at the house, even though they were paying for the fraternity meal plan, and limiting events at campus apartments occupied by graduating seniors, some of whom even had to cancel their birthday parties. I talked to one senior who wrote to the university, explaining that their guidelines were making it impossible to hold even small gatherings among friends and asking for additional clarity so seniors could find approved ways to enjoy their final days as students—especially since the anti-Israel protests were making campus life notably unenjoyable.
“It was frustrating because most people in our frat are Jewish, and the frat really was essential for us while there were swastikas being drawn on school sidewalks and people were yelling ‘From the river to the sea’ every day,” he said. “I said in my email to the school that campus is divided, isolating, and even threatening for Jews sometimes, so having the fraternity social network is actually a critical part of our lives. They didn’t even respond to my message.” The school lifted his frat’s suspension nearly a month later after the university found insufficient evidence for the allegations.
This incident—and the myriad other times the school leaped to penalize even unsubstantiated infractions—is still fresh in the minds of Cornell fraternity brothers as they watch the university’s noisy Gaza encampment enter its second week, despite multiple statements from the school pointing out its many rule violations. “It’s pretty clear the school views a certain type of rule break as honorable and just, and other rule breaks as violations by entitled jerks, so this was not surprising to me,” the senior said.
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Comments
Something I have wondered since my college days: what actual good are frats in the first place?
I mean, aside from a place to get barf-your-guts-out drunk, live like slobs, and then in later life be able to look down your nose at those who weren’t one of your “brothers”?
sounds like the typical lefty elites
I am a proud member of the Phi Kappa Psi fraternity. I joined freshman year at Michigan and it was a life changing experience. Let me give an overview on how fraternities help young men develop socially and financially.
To start fraternities have a national organization that set codes of conduct that all chapters must follow. The biggest stick they control the endowment and the umbrella liability tied to it. This is how they buy and maintain homes. Fail to follow the code and your charter will be cancelled and you will be evicted.
So as an undergrad you have to live by the code including managing the budget for the home expenses: rent from members, property taxes, payments to the national and food.
I managed the kitchen for three years including managing the cook, build a menu with the cook, ordering bulk food and auditing everything to feed 60 men.
We hosted a party about once a month. The Animal House party days were in the sixties.
selective enforcement is nothing new
obamas dear colleague demand letter set it all straight for the feminist run
dei hr crt woke affrimaction agenda
I’ll take a frat bro any day over a Hamas youth , at least the frat kids aren’t spewing hate and lies , are having fun ( remember fun? ! College is supposed to be fun!) and don’t prevent others from getting an education. Maybe if the Hamas fan club went to more frat parties they’d actually meet people with different ideas and viewpoints and learn how not be narcissistic little zombies.
“if they went”
lol
then it would only be to surveil the area for future “activities” that they will take against the frat/universities
I was the faculty adviser to a frat for a number of years. The frat emphasized doing well in school and getting good grades. They had a system of upperclassmen serving as subject tutors for the freshmen, and each frosh was assigned a Junior or Senior brother to keep tabs on them. That brother would also look at the frosh essays and papers before they were turned in, and often handed them back for a re-do.
Yes, I’ve seen frats that were party groups, and the good students avoid them. Because of legal problems, all of the frats I know of have rules that the frat cannot provide alcohol. (But the members can BYOB.) That’s minimized the “barf-your-guts-out” keggers.
Many colleges are trying to get rid of frats. I can understand how that would make life easier for Dean Wormer, but there are certainly students who make it through college better in a frat. Freshmen in particular are much better off in an environment with upperclassmen than they are in segregated freshman dorms. The upperclassmen can help with homework, grammar in compositions, and instructors to avoid when they sign up for classes.
Several colleges tried to get rid of them and they went off campus. These colleges then realized that they were still liable even if the frat was technically unaffiliated because the students met through the university. Frats were promptly moved back on campus and have been brow beaten ever since. The university will likely try to suspend anyone that tries to move back off campus.
the frats that they realllly want to stop ..of course ,, are anything assocaited with white people
frats =kkk to them and an ORGANIZED GROUP OF WHITES
WHEREAS POC ORGANIZED IS JUST A BROTHER AND SISTERHOOD