USAO — the University of Science and Arts of Oklahoma in Chickasha — is a small public liberal arts school, and its Greek system reflects that scale. With a tight-knit campus community and a relatively modest total enrollment, the Greek presence here is more intimate than what you'd find at a large state university like OU or OSU.
The one active fraternity on campus is Phi Lambda Chi, which operates as a local organization. There's no active IFC council in the traditional sense given the size of the system, and there are currently no active sororities listed. That means the overall footprint of organized Greek life is pretty small compared to most four-year institutions in Oklahoma.
Because USAO is a liberal arts school that emphasizes hands-on learning and small class sizes, the campus culture tends to center more around academic programs, student organizations, and community engagement than around a Greek social calendar. Greek life exists here, but it's not the dominant social structure the way it might be at a flagship research university or a school with a strong Greek Row tradition.
There aren't dedicated fraternity or sorority houses lining a street near campus the way you'd see at bigger schools. Recruitment is generally a much more personal, low-key process at a school this size — less formal rush week programming and more getting to know people through everyday campus life.
Phi Lambda Chi has historically been involved in campus events and community service, which tends to be a consistent thread for Greek organizations at smaller schools where each chapter's visibility depends heavily on showing up and being present on campus.