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'''Campus Life in the 1970s'''
Student population at the time of Epsilon Sigma’s founding was more than 14,000 with teacher population around 1,500. Prior to 1970, female students were admitted only at the graduate and professional level. By 1974, 41 percent of the student population was female. These women were entering a strong fraternity system, with 35 chartered fraternities. As the enrollment of women increased, the desire among women to form their own Greek-letter groups grew. National Panhellenic Conference groups already on campus in 1976 included Zeta Tau Alpha, Delta Delta Delta, Gamma Phi Beta and Kappa Alpha Theta. Epsilon Sigma Chapter of Kappa Kappa Gamma was the fifth national women’s fraternity to be installed at the University of Virginia.
One of the most exciting things our chapter did as the decade comes to a close was the involvement in the initiation and installation of the charter members of Zeta Tau chapter at Washington and Lee. Our chapter was chosen to be their big sister chapter. In addition to becoming more involved in the community and campus life, we have become more involved with other sororities with exchange dinners and with fraternities with mixers, allowing us to get to know a lot of new people. We hosted a Mardi Gras dinner to raise funds for the child we sponsor through the Christian Children's Fund, held four parties at the Barrett Day Care Center. We also played bingo at a nursing home and painted cartoon characters on the walls of the Kluge Rehabilitation Center.
'''Housing:'''