Chi Delta Chi
Established 1928

One of the first sororities on Greyson's campus, Chi Delta Chi once had a distinguished reputation, producing alumni of grace and character who went on to stand beside some of the most distinguished men of the twentieth century. After a brief period of open rebellion against this outmoded ideal in the 1960s and 70s, however, that all began to change. For a time, the sorority was staunchly feminist and pro-women's lib, as the daughters of the rich and distinguished fought their constraints and forged new paths for themselves, but within a few years, as new, ever more freespirited women flocked to the sorority, it began to devolve into one of the campus' party houses. The ideals of both preceding generations of leadership were lost, and Chi Delta Chi turned into something of a joke, swiftly disowned by its founders and would-be revolutionaries.

Today, the Chi Deltas are thought of as Greyson's answer to the Hollywood stereotype of a modern sorority house -- filled with uniformly attractive, catty women who are notoriously sexually charged and frequently throw wild parties where booze, sex and drugs all go freely. This reputation isn't entirely deserved, but it is true that the Chi Delts are frequently cited for parties that get outrageously out of hand, and the sorority's record is filled with rampant alcohol violations. It's common knowledge on campus: if you want to go to a party, try Beta Kappa Mu. If you want to get wasted enough and high enough to forget your own gender, let alone your name, hit Chi Delta Chi. Naturally, this particular sorority shares an off-and-on affiliation with the Psi Delta Xi fraternity.