"Toga, toga, toga!" yelled the audience as the Greek God candidates sauntered on stage in their red, white, black and green robes.
The Kappa Delta sorority held their 18th annual Greek God contest last Thursday night at UNH's Granite State room in the MUB. The sorority charged a $5 admission for students to cheer on their favorite fraternity brothers in their attempts to become the next campus Greek God.
All the proceeds of the event went to support Prevent Child Abuse America. Twenty percent of the money will be sent to the PCAA national office, while the other 80 percent will go toward the support of the PCAA chapter in New Hampshire, said Kappa Delta's Megan Schmid.
"It was pretty much just a glorified male beauty pageant," said Mark Jonus. "But all in all it was a great event for a great cause."
For the talent portion of the competition the contestants participated in a variety of different performances. A tenor saxophone number was performed by Alpha Gamma Rho's Dan Noyes. Lambda Chi Alpha's Alex Alvarez created a marker caricature drawing of a girl from the audience, and Sigma Nu's Jason Busby lip synced lead vocals in an air band playing "All Night Long" by AC/DC, as men in drag formed a mosh pit around the stage.
"My favorite part of the night was watching the guy from Pi Kappa Alpha lip sync and dance," said Beth Kelley, referring to Chris Zanni's skillfully choreographed performance to Destiny Child's "Bootylicious."
Alpha Tau Omega's Joe Young and Tau Kappa Epsilon's Kyle Zorawowicz showed off their skills on acoustic guitar and vocals, causing ear-shattering screams to emit from the female audience while the crowd clapped in unison.
By the end of the evening, a scene reminiscent of "The Bachelorette" was visible on stage as the eight men stood in suit and ties awaiting the female judges' decisions. In third place was Jason Busby of Sigma Nu, Joe Young of ATO in second, and the proclaimed Greek
God was Chris Zanni of Pi Kappa Alpha.
"The total amount of proceeds raised from the charity event has yet to be tallied, but the attendance this year was higher than the previous Greek God event, which had raised around $3,000 to $5,000 for PCAA," said Schmid.


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