UW-Superior is a small public university situated on the tip of Lake Superior in Duluth's Wisconsin neighbor, and its Greek presence reflects that intimate campus size. This isn't a school with a sprawling Greek Row or a system that dominates social life — it's a much smaller, more concentrated setup with just one active sorority currently operating on campus.
That organization is Phi Sigma Sigma, a national sorority with chapters across the country. ΦΣΣ has roots in philanthropy, with a focus on service and sisterhood that tends to show up in chapter events and community involvement. At a school this size, a sorority chapter like this tends to be pretty close-knit by default — you're not dealing with massive pledge classes or a highly competitive formal recruitment process. It's generally a more personal experience than you'd find at a big state flagship.
There's no active IFC presence right now, which means the fraternity side of things isn't a factor on campus at the moment. Panhellenic activity exists through Phi Sigma Sigma, but there's no multi-chapter council structure operating the way you'd see at a larger institution. UW-Superior overall is a Division III school with a student body in the low thousands, so the scale of everything — sports, clubs, Greek life — is proportionally smaller than what you might picture when you think "college Greek system."
Chapter housing in the traditional sense isn't really part of the picture here the way it would be at a Big Ten school. Social life at UWS tends to center more around the broader campus community, and Greek membership is more of a personal involvement choice than a defining feature of the overall campus culture. The community is tight because the school itself is tight.