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Hazing News

Alpha Phi Omega of the Philippines announces it intends to end hazing

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Excerpt

HE Alpha Phi Omega (APO) International Philippines will now be adopting a no-hazing policy in the recruitment of new members.

Magleo V. Adriano, national APO president, said they have already pledged to campaign for a national resolution in 2007 supporting Republic Act 8049, or the Anti-Hazing Policy.

“Death cases due to hazing during initiation rites before the resolution was adopted have soared high,” Adriano said during a press conference at Limketkai Center Thursday.

He, however, did not specify the number of deaths due to hazing, claiming there were no official tracking of the victims.

Adriano added that hazing victims and the “hazers” would definitely not admit the wrongdoing while doctors may not recognize their case as hazing.

“There is no difference between hazing and non-hazing practice to check the commitment and loyalty of our new members. It is not through hazing that we contemplate to the upcoming new members. They will undergo a series of programs to determine their dedication,” Adriano said.

He admitted though that as of the moment, only 40 percent of their chapters have adopted the no-hazing policy.

Since Thursday, around 2,000 members of APO in the Philippines gathered in Cagayan de Oro for their 26th National Biennial convention dubbed “One vision in the second decade of the third millennium.”

“Here in Mindanao, most of the chapters apply minimal hazing but that can be changed since during this year’s four-day convention, we will discuss and strictly implement a no-hazing policy to all our chapters,” Adriano said.

The constitution and by-laws of APO mandates to conduct a biennial general assembly to tackle legislative and constitutional issues on hand, and the convening of the Electoral College to elect new officials to govern the APO organization.

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Hazing News

Chubak Bakyt Uulu, 18, Kyrgyz army hazing victim

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BISHKEK — The Kyrgyz Defense Ministry has launched an investigation into the beating of a young recruit in a military unit, RFE/RL’s Kyrgyz Service reports.

Toktogul Kakchekeev of the Defense Ministry told RFE/RL that on May 26, Chubak Bakyt Uulu, 18, who was drafted to the Kyrgyz army just eight days ago, was hospitalized with serious injuries after a sergeant beat him.

Bakyt Uulu told RFE/RL that the sergeant beat him after he told him that he felt unwell and was not able to clean a toilet.

Bakyt Uulu was suffering abdominal pains and could not move. When he said he might have appendicitis, the sergeant kicked him twice in the belly and he passed out

Bakyt Uulu was hospitalized and diagnosed with a burst appendix. He was immediately operated on, and his condition is now satisfactory.

Bakyt Uulu said he was surprised to learn that the beating of young army recruits is a common occurrence.

“I voluntarily joined the army thinking that I would serve my motherland. I am still ready to serve my motherland, but my current state of health does not allow me to do so,” he said.

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Hazing News

Jackson High School (Mill Creek, Washington) punishes cheerleaders for hazing

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Cheerleaders allegedly made newcomers wear diapers. They also supposedly threw hotdogs at them.

Update: Mill Creek incident took place at home of a cheerleader.

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Hazing News

Hazing in Marching Bands: Ebony excerpt

BEHIND THE MUSIC;
Hazing or Brotherhood?

BYLINE: LYLE V. HARRIS

SECTION: FEATURES; Pg. 92 Vol. LXVI No. 5

LENGTH: 1883 words

HIGHLIGHT: When it comes to star performance, HBCU bands can bring the funk like no other. The flip side? They can also bring the pain.

“There are two things I learned at Grambling,” says Michael Cofield. “How to dance while playing and how to get my ass kicked.”

As a freshman tuba player for the university’s “Marching Tigers,” Cofield says, he was slapped, punched, pummeled with drum sticks and forced to march atop a mound of stinging fire ants during unsanctioned hazing sessions led by upperclassmen.

“I was put in the hospital several times because of the band,” he recalls. “My kidneys were bruised and I was urinating blood, but I didn’t tell anybody because I didn’t want people to think I was a punk.”

Cofield didn’t report the abuse, not even to his mother. Eventually, however, school officials launched an investigation and disciplined the students who beat him.

After leaving Grambling State University in 2005 (for unrelated financial reasons), Cofield transferred to Norfolk State University (NSU), where he’s now a drum major with the “Spartan Legion,” the school’s marching band.

As an upperclassman and bandleader, Cofield, 25, has vowed to stand up and speak out against hazing in marching bands, a practice that, he claims, is commonplace at Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs).

Most of the 105 HBCUs nationwide boast marching bands whose reputations and halftime exploits often outshine their schools’ athletic teams. The growing popularity and high-pressure intensity of this art form was memorably portrayed in Drumline, the 2002 movie starring Nick Cannon.

Long before the movie hit theaters, the inside joke among HBCU students and alumni was that football games–unlike those at predominantly White schools–are merely a sideshow. For many, the main attraction is the marching band’s halftime performance.

However, hazing–defined as any initiation ritual that entails abuse, harassment or intimidation–is no laughing matter for the HBCU administrators, band directors, students and parents who have been dealing with its consequences.

The practice is expressly illegal in nearly every state. On top of that, schools such as Grambling and other HBCUs have all students sign contracts that require them to report abuses, even if they are victims. The schools have also adopted strict policies to protect their students from being hazed and implemented anti-hazing penalties that include suspension and expulsion for violators.

Despite those sanctions, hazing remains a persistent problem on college campuses, including in the close-knit community of HBCU marching bands. Although the best of these bands have earned worldwide fame for fusing precision drill routines with stadium-shaking music and exuberant dance numbers that range from classic to crunk, a number of them are confronting hazing traditions that have proven difficult to eradicate.

In recent years, high-profile incidents involving HBCU marching bands have resulted in students being sued, jailed and, in some extreme cases, hospitalized for serious, life-threatening injuries.

Awareness about the problem reached fever pitch last November when the award-winning HBO show Real Sports with Bryant Gumbel aired a segment on hazing within marching bands.

The show focused on the case of Marcus Heath, 20, a former freshman at Southern University in Louisiana. Along with two other band-mates, Heath was hit repeatedly with wooden two-by-fours during an initiation into Mellow Phi Fellow, an unofficial fraternity of French horn players.

Heath, hospitalized for organ failure and other injuries, was released along with another student hurt in the same incident; a third victim did not require treatment.

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Hazing News

Shoshone (ID) parents blast board at Kellogg HS for keeping alleged attackers in school with alleged victim in hazing incident

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