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The brothers of the Mu Tau (MIT) chapter of Alpha Epsilon Pi have
obtained the perfect balance between academics, social life, and
brotherhood. Though we often have the highest GPA on campus, we
also enjoy a thriving social program that has something for
everyone and fraternal bonds that last far longer than
college.
We
live in a beautiful four-story brownstone house in Boston's
historic Back Bay. Accomodations include a big-screen TV, pool and
foosball tables, a piano, a large kitchen used by our
master chef to prepare our nightly dinners, and much more.
Brothers remain extraordinarily active inside and outside the
house. When not running fraternity affairs, brothers in recent
years have held such positions as IFC vice president; Hillel
president, vice president, secretary, and treasurer; and even UA
president. Our intramural sports teams have enjoyed great success
lately in billiards and bowling, with other active teams in
hockey, softball, frisbee, water polo, badminton, unihoc, and
more; while the varsity crew, volleyball, sailing, skiing, and
swim teams have all benefitted from our athletic prowess. We also
show great diversity academically, with brothers studying in more
than a dozen different departments and excelling in each.
But we also know how to have a good time. We have frequent social
events such as our weekly Cider Night, home of our legendary
banana bread; large events such as toga parties, pirate parties,
and highlighter parties; private date events such as Halloween
parties and semiannual formals; mixers with local sororities;
brothers-only retreats; and spontaneous trips and study breaks
whenever we need a break from the rigors of MIT.
Alpha Epsilon Pi is the only remaining national Jewish
fraternity. The brothers of the Mu Tau (MIT) chapter are all proud
of our heritage and practice to varying degrees, but we are a
secular chapter. We have many close ties with Hillel and host
occasional events for the MIT community like a Passover seder and
the breaking of the fast after Yom Kippur. AEPi, in both the MIT
chapter and the international fraternity, does not discriminate by
religion or in any other way.
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