<p>@HSAnon1997 - Looking at the list @3togo references just reinforces my statement. First of all, 24% still means 3 out of 4 students are not Greek. That’s a lot more than are by almost any standard I am familiar with. Second and what was most interesting to me, is that right around Stanford on that list were a few schools I know very well. Tulane is obviously one of them, and I can tell you quite definitely that Greeks do not dictate the atmosphere at Tulane. They throw parties that are usually open to all and have a few events from time to time, but virtually all the time you have no idea who is Greek and who isn’t. There is no segregation between Greeks and non-Greeks. The students talk all the time here on CC about having Greek and non-Greek friends.</p>
<p>I also see WUSTL there, another school I know very well, and you would hardly know there are frats a lot of the time. Finally there is Truman State, where my son went undergrad. You cannot find a more rural school than this, and usually that is where Greek tends to dominate. But once again, while it was a little more apparent than at Tulane or WUSTL, there was no issue between Greeks and non-Greeks. My son was not Greek and he says probably about 1/3 his friends were. The biggest difference between Tulane/WUSTL and Truman is that the frats were much more responsible for the parties on the weekends at Truman, because the school is so rural.</p>
<p>All of which is to say, once again, that your worries about Greeks at a school like Stanford are most likely exaggerated. Best of luck going forward.</p>