MD

News

Friday, May 25, 2012

Advertise with us »

Greek execs push for racial unity

BY ALEX DZIADOSZ

Published December 4, 2006


Part two in a two-part series on race in the Greek system. Read the first installment in our archives.

Mike Hulsebus
LSA freshman Keith Binion (left) and LSA sophomore Seth Wittman (right), members of Pi Lambda Phi, in their house on Wilmont Court on Saturday. The fraternity was founded in 1985 at Yale University with commitments to diversity and open-mindedness among

More like this

When Randal Seriguchi, the National Pan-Hellenic Council's vice president, talks about the Greek system's capacity to cultivate campus diversity, he is more blunt than most executives.

"It's kind of inherently known by students that Greeks have a great deal of influence within the student body," he said. "But I don't think a lot of Greeks exercise that influence - correctly, anyway."

Seriguchi seems determined to change this.

A movement toward integration that encompasses all four Greek councils is growing - from the culture-specific chapters of the relatively young Multicultural Greek Council to the centuries-old majority-white houses of the massive Interfraternity Council.

Jared Averbuch, president of the IFC, said the integration movement is occurring on two fronts: across the Greek system's four councils and within its individual chapters.


ACROSS COUNCILS

Ask Greek executives to identify the key to an integrated system and most will tell you it is interaction between the different councils. Press for specifics and the conversation will inevitably wind toward Greek Week, the mid-March burst of activity that transforms campus into a playground of volleyball tournaments, Diag dunk tanks and dance contests.

Traditionally, Greek Week has been the domain of the mostly white Interfraternity Council and Panhellenic Association. But other chapters are increasingly eager to join in.

Last year, Kappa Alpha Psi was the only historically black group to participate. Even this was a step forward, said Tony Saunders, the president of the National Pan-Hellenic Council.

Kappa Alpha Psi partnered with Alpha Chi Omega, a Panhellenic Association sorority that was initially unfamiliar with the other's mission and history.

Over the course of the week, Saunders said, the sorority's interest in the fraternity blossomed, setting a positive precedent for future involvement.

According to Seriguchi, at least four NPHC chapters will participate next March.

Multicultural Greek Council President Sejal Tailor said that MGC chapters were also enthusiastic, but that the chapters' small sizes often constrict their ability to build adequately large teams to compete in the Greek Week activities.

This year, Brian Millman, IFC's vice president of public relations, and his Panhel counterpart, Andi Reich, said they were aggressively reaching out to MGC and NPHC chapters.

Both described an increasing trend toward integration within the councils, citing mutual programming.

Over the past year, NPHC has planned and staged involvement with K-Grams and the School of Education, often incorporating the other councils.

"Historically, this has never happened before," Saunders said. "All of our four councils getting together and doing actual work together to benefit the broader U of M community - a step in the right direction."

Seriguchi, for example, maintains a list of planned joint programs, including a Chinese auction - a raffle-like fundraising event.

With time, he hopes it will involve all four of the Greek system's councils - regardless of their cultural or ethnic focus.


WITHIN CHAPTERS

Reid Benjamin, president and main founder of the year-old University chapter of Pi Lambda Phi, lives with three of his fraternity brothers in a Wilmot Court house's living room.

Since its birth at Yale University in 1895, Pi Lambda Phi has billed itself as a "fraternity in which ability, open-mindedness, farsightedness, and a progressive, forward-looking attitude would be recognized as basic attributes."

Near the end of fall semester last year, Benjamin and a group of Mary Markley and Alice Lloyd residents brought the chapter and its mission to the University.

Yesterday, gathered in the living room were 12 of the fraternity's 32 members, a broad spectrum of skin tones and talents. One was a champion bowler, another an expert piano player, another an accomplished aeronautics engineer.

Most, he said, stray far from the "Animal House" stigma associated with traditional fraternities.

Each member of the house's pioneering class had flirted with a more traditional role in the Greek system.

Pi Lambda Phi is different, he said.

Boyer was raised in a suburban school in Rochester, with one black student in his graduating class. Now, he said, he's found his role reversed. Next year, he'll be the lone white student in a house of four.

LSA freshman Keith Binion, who is black and was raised in Detroit, attended a Grosse Pointe high school.


|