Yes - all sorority women are blond bobbleheads.
Here is a list of some from the National Panhellenic Conference website:
http://www.npcwomen.org/parents/whos_who.aspx
Who's Who in the Panhellenic World
Panhellenic Women in:
Education
Arts and Communication
Business and the Non-Profit Sectors
Science, Medicine, and Aviation
Law, Politics, Government, Military & Public Service
Panhellenic Women in Education
Marinell Ash, BBC Educational Producer
Jahnae Harper Barnett, First Woman President of William Woods University
Barbara Aronstein Black, Former Dean, Columbia Law School
Jean M. Buckley, President/CEO, Phi Beta Lambda, Future Business Leaders of America
Dr. Joy Garrison Cauffman, Professor Emerita, University of Southern California
Ruth Colvin, Founder and President, Literacy Volunteers of America
Ada Louise Comstock, President, Radcliffe College
Peggy Gordon Elliott, President, South Dakota State University
Dr. Deborah Floyd, President Emerita, Prestonsburg Community College, Kentucky
Patricia Albjerg Graham, Dean of Graduate Education, Harvard University
Dr. Marsha Guenzler-Stevens, Director of Activities & Associate Director of the Stamp Student Union, University of Maryland, College Park
Anna Rose Hawes, Dean, Mills College, AAUW National President
Karen Holbrook, President, The Ohio State University
Betty Jacka, President, National Merit, Scholarship Corporation
Dr. May Lansfield Keller, Founding Dean of Westhampton College at the University of Richmond
Maria Leonard, Founder, Alpha Lambda Delta, National Scholastic Honorary Society
Franees Lucas-Taucher, President, Millsaps College
Kathryn Sisson Phillips, Organized the National Association of Deans of Women and was its first president
Dr. Shirley Raines, President, The University of Memphis
Patsy Bostick Reed, Chancellor, University of North Carolina at Ashville
Clyda Stokes Rent, President, Mississippi University for Women
Dr. Judith Rodin, President, University of Pennsylvania
Kayla Mays Stroup, Missouri State Commissioner of Higher Education
Nancy L. Zimpher, President, University of Cincinnati
[to top]
Panhellenic Women in Arts and Communication
Barbara Barrie, Actress, Author
Rita Braver, CBS News National Correspondent
Beth Brickell, Actress
Dr. Joyce Brothers, Psychologist and Advice Columnist
Pearl Buck, Author
Andrea Canning, ABC News National Correspondent in Washington D.C.
Kate Capshaw, Actress
Dixie Carter, Actress
Kristin Chenoweth, Actress
Shirley Christian, Pulitzer Prize winner
Lisa Colagrossi, Emmy Award-winning news anchor
Rita Coolidge, Grammy-winning Singer
Joan Ganz Cooney, Businesswoman and Television Producer; Creator of Sesame Street
Katie Couric, News Anchor
Sheryl Crow, Singer
Margaret Truman Daniel, Writer; Daughter of President Harry Truman
Faith Daniels, News Anchor, Media Personality
Agnes DeMille, Dancer, Choreographer
Joyce Dewitt, Actress
Faye Dunaway, Academy Award-winning Actress
Nanette Fabray, Actress
Donna Fargo, Singer
Barbara Feldon, Actress; Game show panelist of the 1960s and model
Ruth Ford, Actress
Nancy Foreman, Actress
Jennifer Garner, Actress
Phyllis George, News Anchor
Leeza Gibbons, Talk Show Host
Nancy Grace, CNN News Anchor
Sue Grafton, Author
Amy Grant, Singer
Cathy Guisewite, Cartoonist; Created comic strip Cathy
Edith Head, Academy Award-winning Costume Designer
Patricia Heaton, Actress
Eileen Heckart, Academy Award and Tony Award-Winning Actress of Stage, Screen and Television
Florence Henderson, Actress
Jane Henson, Co-creator of The Muppets Show
Marilyn Horne, Opera Singer
Kate Jackson, Actress
Ashley Judd, Actress
Nancy Kulp, Actress
Christine Lahti, Actress
Sherry Lansing, Former CEO, Paramount Pictures; First woman to head a major studio
Carol Lawrence, Actress
Cloris Leachman, Academy Award, Emmy and Golden Globe-winning Actress
Nell Harper Lee, Author
Lucy Liu, Actress
Heather Locklear, Actress
Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Actress
Joan Lunden, Broadcaster, Former "Good Morning America" Host
Victoria MacKenzie-Childs, New York Yankees Co-owner
Patricia Pritzkau MacLachlin, Author; Winner of 66th John Newberry Medal
Ann-Margret, Singer, Dancer
Rue McClanahan, Actress
Bette Midler, Actress, Singer
Donna Mills, Actress
Mary Ann Mobley, Actress, Former Miss America
Patricia Neal, Academy Award-winning Actress
Agnes Nixon, Emmy Award-winning Writer and Producer
Deborah Norville, Television Broadcaster and Journalist
Georgia O'Keeffe, Artist
Jane Pauley, Television Journalist
Kyra Phillips, CNN News Anchor and Correspondent
Sylvia F. Porter, Columnist
Paula Prentiss, Actress
Dorothy Provine, Singer, Dancer, Actress, Comedian
Gena Rowlands, Actress
Atoosa Rubenstein, Editor in Chief, Seventeen magazine
Charlotte Rue, Author
Jeri Ryan, Actress
Eva Marie Saint, Academy Award-winning Actress
Gail Sheehy, Cultural Observer and Author
Cybill Shepherd, Actress
Dinah Shore, Singer, Actress
Anne Rivers Siddons, Author
Jean Smart, Actress
Jennifer Smith, Producer of CNN's "Crossfire"
Suzy Spafford, Cartoonist
Marlo Thomas, Actress
Marcia Wallace, Actress
Carrie Underwood, Singer
Sela Ward, Actress
Carole Warner, Pulitzer Prize Winner
Dawn Wells, Actress
Ruth Whitney, Former Editor in Chief, Glamour Magazine
Judy Woodruff, TV Newscaster
Joanne Woodward, Actress
Kimberly Williams, Actress
Liz Winstead, Creator of Comedy Central's "The Daily Show
Helen Levison Worth, Author
[to top]
Panhellenic Women in Business and the Non-Profit Sectors
Betty Stanley Beene, President/CEO, United Way of America
Carol Bellamy, Executive Director, UNICEF
Bridget Ryan Berman, Retail Group President, Polo Ralph Lauren
Sara Blakely, Founder, Spanx
Nancy Goodman Brinker, Founder, Susan G. Komen Foundation
Lee Ducat, Founder, Juvenile Diabetes Foundation
Paula Garrison, Founder, National Sleepwear
Elizabeth Meyer Glazer, Founder, Pediatric AIDS Foundation
Dr. Ruth Hartgraves, President, American Women's Association
Betsy Holden, CEO, Kraft Foods
Betsey Johnson, Fashion Designer
Susan Kinder, President, American Express, Travelers' Cheques
June Kummer, Co-owner, Adam's Mark Hotels
Alice Sheets Marriott, Co-founder, Marriott Corp.
Jennifer Biddulph Maxwell, Co-creator, the Power Bar
Patricia Miller, Co-owner/President, Vera Bradley Designs
Pat Mitchell, President, PBS
Margaret Moffat Toy, Founder, Meals-on-Wheels
Elisa Lee Morgan, President/CEO, MOPS International, Inc.
Anita Morris Pearlman, Founder, B'nai Brith Girls
Ann Potter Person, Founder, Stretch and Sew
Donna Stone Pesch, Founder/President, Prevent Child Abuse America
Mimi Halper Silbert, Founder, Delancey Street Foundation
Melvynne Sommers, Founder, Save Our Seniors
Kate Spade, Designer
Henrietta Szold, Founder, Hadassah
Rhoda Morrow Tomasco, Founder, Sunshine Kids Foundation
Patricia Pulliam Upton, President/ Chairman, AROMATIQUE
Donna Wolfe, President, Jockey Inc.
Susan Bernstein Zeegan, Founder, Pediatric AIDS Foundation
[to top]
Panhellenic Women in Science, Medicine, and Aviation
Dr. Linda Hawes Cleaver, First Woman Governor, American College of Physicians
Rita Colwell, Director, National Science Foundation
Dr. Gladys Henry Dick, Co-discoverer, Test for Scarlet Fever and the anti-toxin used in its treatment
Jan Davis, Astronaut
Bonnie Dunbar, Astronaut
Dr. Marion Fay, First Woman President of a Medical College (The Womens Medical College in Philadelphia)
Anna Fisher, Astronaut
Dian Fossey, Pioneer Zoologist
Dr. Jessie Gray, First Woman elected to the Royal Academy of Surgeons of Canada
Mary Kathryn Hammock, Neurosurgeon & Founder of National Brain Research Association
Susan Helms, Astronaut
Carolyn Huntoon, Astronaut
Jerrie Mock, First woman to successfully fly solo around the world
Julia Morgan, Architect, San Simeon
Dr. Valerie Neal, Curator, Smithsonian Institution, National Air & Space Museum, Department of Space History
Judith Resnik, Astronaut
Donna Shirley, Mars Project Manager, NASA, Jet Propulsion Laboratory
Mary Ellen Weber, Ph.D., Astronaut
[to top]
Panhellenic Women in Law, Politics, Government, Military & Public Service
Eva Bertrand Adams, Director of the first U.S. Mint
Gracia Backer, Missouri State House of Representatives
Jane H. Barrett, First Woman on the Board of the American Bar Association
Kathleen Babineaux Blanco, Governor of Louisiana; First woman governor of Louisiana
Barbara Levy Boxer, U.S. Senator (D-CA)
Margaret A. Brewer, Brigadier General, Marine Corps
Carol Laise Bunker, U.S. Ambassador to Nepal 1966-1973; First woman Director General, Foreign Service
Jocelyn Burdick, U.S. Senator (D-ND)
Laura Welch Bush, First Lady, U.S.
Shelley Moore Capito, U.S. House of Representatives (R-WV)
Jean Carnahan, U.S. Senator (D-MO)
Carrie Chapman Catt, Suffragist & Founder of the National League of Women Voters
Lynn Cheney, Wife of U.S. Vice President Dick Cheney
Martha Layne Collins, Governor of Kentucky; First and only woman governor to date in Kentucky
Grace Goodhue Coolidge, First Lady, U.S.
Elizabeth Dole, U.S. Senator (R-NC); Former President, Red Cross of America
Marianne Blackburn Drew, Rear Admiral, Navy
Terri Walter Gabreski, Brigadier General, Air Force
Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Justice, U.S. Supreme Court
Mary Gladwin, Red Cross nurse who served in three wars from 1898 to 1919, decorated by the United States, Russian, Japanese and Serbian governments
Shirley Mount Hufstedler, Former U.S. Secretary of Education
Karen Hughes, Presidential Spokesperson
Kay Bailey Hutchison, U.S. Senator (R-TX)
Nancy Landon Kassebaum, U.S. Senator (R-KS)
Yvonne Kauger, Chief Justice, Oklahoma Supreme Court
Claudia Kennedy, General, Army
Mary Landrieu, U.S. Senator (D-LA)
Blanche Lambert Lincoln, U.S. Senator (D-AR)
Bessie Margolin, U.S. Labor Department Appeals Attorney
Lynn Martin, Former U.S. Secretary of Labor
Virginia Dill McCarty, Former U.S. Attorney General; First Woman named to a full term as the Attorney General
Betty Montgomery, Attorney General of Ohio; First woman Attorney General
Lisa Murkowski, U.S. Senator (R-AK)
Offira Navon, First Lady, Israel
Francine Neff, Former U.S. Secretary of the Treasury
Maurine Brown Neuberger, U.S. Senator (D-OR)
Dr. Condoleezza Rice, U.S. Secretary of State
Margaret Chase Smith, U.S. Senator (R-ME)
Ivy Baker Priest Stevens, Former U.S. Secretary of the Treasury
Annette Greenfield Strauss, Mayor, Dallas, Texas; First woman mayor of Dallas
Jane Swift, Governor of Massachusetts
Alma Bell Wilson, Justice, Oklahoma Supreme Court
I see a some minorities in the bunch. Of course, there are also sororities established
by and for minorities as well as those who are members of the NPC groups.
I was slender when I pledged as a sophomore, but my first roommate in the house was overweight. It didn't matter - she was our friend and was a beautiful person.
I am not handicapped, but we did have a member who had lost a leg in the house when I was there.
We had minorities; black, hispanic and Asian. One of them was and still is one of my best friends.
I was not from a wealthy family. My dad worked in a machine shop & my was a clerk in an A/R department. I paid for extras by working all my breaks and earning scholarships. My parents were also pretty protective & would not have been ready for me to move into an apartment my sophomore year....with me being VERY ready to move out of the dorms, living in the house was a good solution. A great solution. My little brother died when I was in my first semester in the sorority....those sisters pulled me through a very rough time. Without them, I would NOT have even stayed in school. I had kept in touch with many high school and dorm friends, but it was my sorority sisters who supported me. I won't ever forget their kindness and love.
I have seen both sides of things. I didn't pledge as a freshman - I spent my first year very involved in dorm life. I was president of the two dorm floors supervised by my RA. I never was a big partier & those students who stayed in my dorm were very into that scene. I rushed as a sophomore have never regretted my decision. I had an active social life both before, in and after the sorority & the bond with my sorority friends is very special.
As far as "buying" friendships - that isn't even true from a financial statement. My dd is in a sorority now; her social dues and her room & board added together are quite a bit less in total than her dorm bill her freshman year. The house is closer to campus than any apartments (and also less expensive). She can easily walk to class and has parking included. In an apartment, she would have to drive & play the parking game on campus or ride a bus. The house is brand new - her private space is larger & much nicer than her dorm room (come to think of it, it is nicer than her room at home

). She has one roommate & has access to an excercise room, a tv lounge, a study area with provided computers and printers, a snack kitchen, a full dining room with 3 meals a day prepared by a professional cook. Much tastier than the dorm food she says. All of this AND several very nice parties provided each year (and it's not like Greeks are the only ones partying on college campuses - the keg parties in my dorm basement made any frat or sorority look like a tea party). And the financial comparison isn't unusual; I am involved on a regional oversight level and this is the situation on most campuses that I see.
I agree that sororities are primarily a social organization - and I don't think there is anything wrong with that. The selection process is not intended to be exclusionary; it is intended to find women with like values, goals and interests. Always some fun mixed in - these are students, what is wrong with that? These social organization also hold their members to high expectations for academic acheivement, community and organizational leadership and philanthropy. Do some fail - sure, but that isn't the norm on all campuses.
It has been too many years for me to recall the exact charities we assisted when I was in college, but we raised money annually for women's cardiac care. The funds went to local hospitals, research and the American Heart Association. We also donated money and clothing regularly to a local battered women's shelther. We adopted families at Thanksgiving and Christmas. We tutored local elementary students. We organized and manned a campus-wide clean up and improvement day. Relay for Life, Susan Komen, etc., etc. These are/were in addition to participating with other Greek groups in their fundraisers for their chosen charities.
The point of this thread was to help the OP help her daughter feel better. I don't think pointing out perceived negatives is doing anyone any good - for the OP or her dd. The dd had a desire & I don't think it helps to dismiss or invalidate it. Sorority life is not right for everyone, but it is what that young lady wanted. Does it help her hurt to belittle her choice?
She got a tough break and I am very sorry. As a mom, all I can do is suggest the OP hold her daughter tight through the hurt and suggest alternative groups/activities for her when she is ready to move on. Let her know she is a valued and wonderful person, no matter what went wrong in the recruitment process for her.