ZTA selects house for coming schoolyear
Zeta Tau Alpha will soon have a home to call its own, within only a few months of arriving at Penn.
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Zeta Tau Alpha will soon have a home to call its own, within only a few months of arriving at Penn.
Pseudonyms were used in this article to protect the identities of the two students as they go through the uncertain rush process.
For Zeta Tau Alpha, rush is in full swing with the new sorority’s first bid day at Penn coming up this Friday.
For Zeta Tau Alpha, rush is in full swing with the new sorority’s first bid day at Penn coming up this Friday.
With colonization well underway, Zeta Tau Alpha — Penn’s newest sorority — is making an effort to target upperclassmen women for recruitment.
Although the Tau Epsilon Phi national organization filed for bankruptcy last month, Penn’s chapter has remained unaffected.
Phi Kappa Sigma fraternity’s charter has been suspended by its national headquarters, according to Executive Director of Phi Kappa Sigma Toby Smith.
Flaunting turquoise banners and buttons, Zeta Tau Alpha has officially arrived on campus.
At the Circle of Sisters ceremony Sunday night, the new Panhellenic Council Executive Board received a warm welcome to their 2011 term.
After losing one sorority and introducing another, the Greek community welcomed a target number of new members into its seven existing sorority chapters.
On Monday night, the Palestra was filled with hundreds of prospective fraternity boys waiting to formally receive their bids and become official members of Penn’s Greek community.
The thunderous cheers and screams that could be heard down Locust Walk last night could only mean one thing: sorority bid night.
Sorority rush week has officially started at Penn — at least for the seven established sororities on campus.
Although Please Take Me Off the Guest List may seem like an uninviting title for a book, those who attended the Wednesday evening book-related event agree it was worthy of a larger audience.
Just in time for LGBT History Month, Penn alumni and authors Audrey Beth Stein and Tom Mendicino — who write lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender-genre literature — held a book reading and discussion at the Penn Bookstore Monday night.
To most, spending the weekend working non-stop on a computer does not sound ideal.