As reported by The Temple News, Sigma Phi Epsilon, the residents of 2012 North Broad St., lost its Temple and national charters in Jan. 2005 for allegations including hazing and indecent assault. Sigma Phi Epsilon will be eligible to regain its university recognition next semester. Members of the fraternity declined comment.
The university had made attempts to work with those unaffiliated fraternities, according to Associate Dean of Students Kathryn P. D'Angelo.
"We've continued to stress working with them," but D'Angelo continued, "If you're affiliated with Temple as an organization, it is your responsibility to put forth what this community values, the university values."
D'Angelo said those fraternities have not shown those values.
"[The Temple community is] frustrated with the activity that's continuing to go on, and it's stemming from those three dissolved organizations that have been recognized as fraternity houses … they are those three properties located … at 2000, 2012 and 2022 Broad St.," D'Angelo said. "That behavior placed other students at risk."
Maybe a fundraiser with proceeds allocated to the "Dean Wormer Memorial Discretionary Fund" would turn some heads.
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