Zeta Beta Tau (ZBT) fraternity will retain its house at 8 Eagle Row and Kappa Sigma (Kappa Sig) fraternity will retain its house on 20 Eagle Row for the 2014-2015 academic year if they maintain sufficient membership to fill their respective houses by Feb. 13, 2014, according to Jeff Tate, assistant director of operations for sorority and fraternity housing.

Depending on their membership numbers, Chi Phi fraternity may move to the Asbury House, a theme house on Peavine Creek Road, while Asian interest fraternity Xi Kappa may move from Asbury House to 13 Eagle Row, where Chi Phi currently resides.

ZBT – which received its official charter in fall 2008 after 10 years as a colony – first leased 8 Eagle Row after Chi Phi lost its charter in March 2009. Yet, Chi Phi, which returned to Emory last fall, still owns the house under the Phoenix Plan, which provides fraternities with long-term housing through signed agreements. Despite Chi Phi’s return to campus, when the issue came down to fraternity membership numbers and performance, the ResLife committee and director both favored ZBT remaining there if the chapter can successfully fill the house, according to Tate.

Meanwhile, Kappa Sig moved into 20 Eagle Row in fall 2012 following the four-year suspension of Phi Delta Theta fraternity due to hazing violations, according to an August 2013 Wheel article.

Through a year-to-year housing assignment process for fraternities without historical rights to a specific house, four students and five staff members involved in Residence Life and Housing discussed credentials of the chapters that applied for residence in each respective house, according to Tate. These credentials include a chapter’s ability to fill a particular house, as well as its accomplishments during the current academic year.

The students and staff then submitted their recommendations for the housing changes to Director of ResLife Operations Mary Romestant for final approval. While this recent decision remains tentative, official decision from ResLife will be determined after Feb. 13, 2014.

–By Lydia O’Neal

Correction 12/6/2013: This article was corrected to reflect the tentative nature of the housing changes.

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The Emory Wheel was founded in 1919 and is currently the only independent, student-run newspaper of Emory University. The Wheel publishes weekly on Wednesdays during the academic year, except during University holidays and scheduled publication intermissions.

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