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Hazing News

China stewardesses hazed by airline security officers

Excerpt: BEIJING: Photos showing Chinese stewardesses stuffed into an airplane’s luggage compartment by security officers has sparked widespread condemnation, media reports said on Tuesday.

The photos were posted online from a personal account of Weibo account, China’s twitter-like social networking platform, People’s Daily reported. The stewardesses were from Yunnan province-based domestic carrier, Kunming Airlines.

The post said attendants were forced to be carried into the luggage rack by the security officer of the airplane. The practice, which was called a tradition by the officers, has been conducted for four or five years. These stewardesses were reluctant to do it but still lifted to the rack due to the concerns of being not cooperative with their colleagues.

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Hazing News

Hard-hitting editorial on hazing in Greek life

Here is the link

Excerpt:

If ever a lawsuit was justified, it is the one filed by the family of Nolan M. Burch, killed by alcohol given him in routinely reckless fraternity hazing.

Burch, just 18, apparently guzzled a bottle of liquor, was laid on a table and later turned blue. Efforts to revive him failed. Two days later, the Amherst teen was pronounced dead. He was a student at West Virginia University and, like many young men, came under the sway of senior members of a fraternity he wanted to join, Kappa Sigma. They told him to drink, according to the family’s lawsuit, and he did.

It was foolish, no doubt, but foolish in the way to which 18-year-olds are especially prone. Voter laws and military regulations may presume 18-year-olds to be adults, but by the time those teenagers reach 30, they know better.

Nolan Burch won’t have that opportunity, because 11 months ago, some people took advantage of his immaturity. Others who know better did too little to ward off an obvious threat.

Those, at least, are the complaints of Burch’s family, and they are eminently plausible. The targets of their lawsuit include West Virginia University, Kappa Sigma fraternity and fraternity members. The overarching complaint is negligence.

Fraternity hazing has been, and remains, a toxic stain on American university life, and it spreads across cultures and regions. Some fraternities have been noted for brutal hazing rituals, including one that occurred in Syracuse where a pledge faced, but ultimately avoided, amputation of his frostbitten fingers. In Alabama, Jacksonville State University’s chapter of Sigma Phi Epsilon had its charter revoked over hazing allegations.

It’s a pestilence. The tradition of vicious hazing tests accomplishes nothing useful. It feeds older students’ need to dominate – and to impose the same cruelties they endured – while taking easy advantage of the desperation of younger students who want to be accepted. Fitting in is more than merely important at that age, and the adults who administer the nation’s universities must know that. Too often, though, they do too little to account for it. And young men’s safety is put at risk. Some die.

The issue of responsibility has yet to be determined in this case, and other details may yet emerge. Regardless of the ultimate verdict, though, universities and fraternities across the country should see this lawsuit for what it is: not just a shot across the bow, but a cannon aimed at the ship.

Changing any institutional culture is a daunting task, but that’s the need, and it was recognized after Burch’s death by none other than West Virginia University President E. Gordon Gee. “It is a culture that needs to be changed at nearly every institution of higher education across this country,” he wrote.

 

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Hazing News

IU student paper challenges administration to punish ATO individuals

Link to hard-hitting editorial   Excerpt

 

ATO received more than its fair share of warnings to get it together.

The greek organization made national headlines in 1992 after forcing pledges to drink copious amounts of alcohol to induce vomiting. This hazing landed a sophomore in the hospital with an almost deadly .48 blood alcohol content. The pledge luckily survived.

We thought they would learn their lesson after that train wreck but, unfortunately, ATO doesn’t take second chances seriously.

The Editorial Board has come to an impasse, where we have to do ?something we absolutely hate to get the point across: use a cliché.

Fool us once, shame on you. Fool us twice, shame on us. IU is partly at fault for letting an organization get to this level of recklessness and maltreatment.

A report of sexual assault was filed in 2013. Speculations about a “Ménage Tau” party ATO plays host to every year — where “body shots, threesomes and much more magic follows” — were printed in 2013 by brobible.com.

Reports of sexual assault, battery, alcohol violations and even a man falling off the three-story house have plagued the fraternity since its temporary ?suspension in 1992.

The time for an ATO redemption has come and gone. But the rest of this school still has a fighting chance.

If we want to learn anything from these events, it’s that inaction from our administration or action that comes too late isn’t going to cut it.

You want to fix this, IU? Start by holding every single person present during the filming of that video ?responsible.

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Hazing News

Former Western Kentucky swimmer criticizes school’s handling of women’s swim team after hazing incident

Here is the link Excerpt:

Western Kentucky’s swimming and diving program had violated the university’s Student Code of Conduct, Discrimination and Harassment Policy and Title IX’s Sexual Misconduct/Assault Policy.

Physical abuse such as forced use or consumption of alcohol or drugs, paddling, lineups and calisthenics (physical exercises) was also reported.

Although there weren’t any witnesses to the abuse, police found enough evidence to conclude the team had engaged in the conduct,

 

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Hazing News

4 hazing deaths in Asian-American fraternities–a report

Find the link to the New York Times investigation here.  Excerpt:

Amid growing concerns over hazing, members of Lambda Phi Epsilon and other Asian-American fraternities and sororities say their organizations have actively promoted no-hazing policies, increased training for members and replaced potentially abusive pledging rites, such as strenuous runs around campus, with talks on Asian-American issues and walks for cancer.