[16851] in APO-L
Re: your mail
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Randy Finder)
Thu May 8 12:55:18 1997
Date: Thu, 8 May 1997 12:52:04 -0400
Reply-To: Randy Finder <naraht@DRYCAS.CLUB.CC.CMU.EDU>
From: Randy Finder <naraht@DRYCAS.CLUB.CC.CMU.EDU>
To: Multiple recipients of list APO-L <APO-L@VM.CC.PURDUE.EDU>
In-Reply-To: <01IIMKG32GGG018YAU@DRYCAS.CLUB.CC.CMU.EDU>
On Thu, 8 May 1997, Chelsea Oller wrote:
> Hey brothers in cyberspace!
>
> I've been thinking about something for a while and haven't been able to
> come up with an answer myself, so I'm asking if anyone on this lovely list
> could answer this question for me: If you are an active brother in APO,
> and you transfer to a college that has an inactive chapter or no chapter,
> are you still a brother? If anyone could shed a little light on this for
> me I'd really appreaciate it.:)
To quote another response to this: "Once a brother, Always a brother".
However it does get a little more complicated.
The only way to have your brotherhood in APO taken away is by a vote of
the National Convention and that is generally only limited to extreme
cases. (Anyone want to fill me in on what the guy did who was voted on in
Phoenix?)
However if you transfer to a school with an inactive chapter or no
chapter, you no longer have active membership. This is the same as if you
had graduated or left school for a semester or two. You are treated as an
alumnus.
The only way to be at that school and be an active member again is to
bring an active Alpha Phi Omega chapter to that school. (However while the
group is petitioing, you may go to having petitioning membership with
them)
So I guess the best way to put this is
"Once a brother, always a brother, and to be active, you have to be at an
active chapter"
ANy questions?
YiLFS
Randy FInder
Section 84 staff
>
> In LFS,
> Chelsea Oller, Omega Epsilon chapter
>
>
>
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--
Leadership, Friendship and Service - Alpha Phi Omega