Our Lady of the Lake University is a small, Catholic liberal arts school on the west side of San Antonio, and its Greek system reflects that intimate campus environment. OLLU enrolls a few thousand undergrads, so most student organizations here operate on a smaller scale, and the Greek community is no different.
Right now, the two active organizations on campus are Omega Delta Phi, a Latino-interest fraternity, and Kappa Delta Chi, a Latina-interest sorority. Both are nationally recognized organizations with roots in multicultural Greek councils, and their presence at OLLU fits naturally with the university's predominantly Hispanic student body and its broader mission of serving underrepresented communities in higher education.
Because the system is smaller, recruitment here tends to be more personal and low-key compared to large state schools with formal IFC or Panhellenic rush weeks. Interest events, word of mouth, and campus connections matter a lot more here than the high-production recruitment processes you'd see at a school like UT Austin or Texas A&M. Getting involved usually means reaching out directly or attending events these chapters host throughout the year.
Greek life at OLLU is more of a niche part of campus culture than a dominant social force. There's no Greek Row, and chapters don't have dedicated housing. Social life on campus tends to center around the university's student organizations, athletics, and community service — and the Greek chapters here generally align with that, with philanthropy and cultural programming being a core part of what they do.
If you're expecting a traditional large-school Greek experience, this isn't that. But for students who connect with the values and cultural identity that Omega Delta Phi and Kappa Delta Chi represent, membership tends to be a close-knit, meaningful commitment.