http://www.businessinsider.com/donald-trump-high-school-classmates-what-he-was-like-2015-10
The victim, however, succumbed to death due to the multiple contusions in the different parts of his body.
Journalist Hank Nuwer tracks hazing deaths in fraternities and schools. Nuwer is the Alaska author of Hazing: Destroying Young Lives; Broken Pledges: The Deadly Rite of Hazing, High School Hazing, Wrongs of Passage and The Hazing Reader. In April of 2024 and April 2025 , the Alaska Press Club awarded him first place in the Best Columnist division.
He has written articles or columns on hazing for the Sunday Times of India, Toronto Globe & Mail, Harper's Magazine, Orlando Sentinel, The Chronicle of Higher Education and the New York Times Sunday Magazine. His current book is Hazing: Destroying Young Lives from Indiana University Press. He is married to Malgorzata Wroblewska Nuwer of Fairbanks, Alaska. Nuwer is a former columnist for the Greenville (Ohio)Early Bird and former managing editor of the Fairbanks Daily News-Miner in Alaska.
Nuwer was named the Ohio Society of Professional Journalists columnist of the year in 2021 for his “After Darke” column in the Early Bird. He also won third place for the column in 2022 from the Indiana chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists. He and his wife Gosia, recently of Union City, Ind., have owned 20 acres in Alaska for many years. “The move is a sort-of coming home for us,” said Nuwer. As a journalist, he’s written about the Alaskan Iditarod sled-dog race and other Alaska topics. Read his musings in his blog at Real Alaska Daily--http://realalaskadaily.com
ZAMBOANGA CITY, Philippines – A college student died following fraternity initiation rites in a village in this city, according to police official.
Police Superintendent Haywien Salvado, Police Station 7 chief, identified the victim as Anthony Javier, 18, a resident of Atis Drive, Barangay Baliwasan and a student of Computer Science at the state-run Western Mindanao State University (WMSU).
Salvado said seven of the fraternity members of the Tau Gamma Phi WMSU-chapter involved in the hazing were arrested and detained at the police station.
Police investigation disclosed that the hazing was done at the Abong-Abong Park in Upper Pasonanca about 2:45 p.m. Wednesday.
The incident was only discovered when the victim was brought to the private hospital for treatment.
The victim, however, succumbed to death due to the multiple contusions in the different parts of his body.
I met with Harrison’s mother Lianne Kowiak in New York City when we were both filming a TV episode for a Cable program later canceled w/o running. She strongly felt that the important role that Lenoir-Rhyne plays in the local community led to a decision not to charge the young men of Theta Chi involved in their long-standing tradition of big strong football players and other athletes tacking a small number of pledges charged with carrying “sacred stones” [rocks] from one end of the field to the other.
?
By Katherine Mangan
When Lianne Kowiak read about the fraternity ritual that killed a 19-year-old Baruch College freshman on an icy field in the Poconos, terrible memories of her own son’s death in 2008 came flooding back.
In both cases, young pledges succumbed to fatal head injuries after being pummeled by their fellow fraternity members as they ran a gantlet on a cold, dark night.
No criminal charges were filed in connection with Harrison Kowiak’s death during what some Theta Chi fraternity members referred to as a team-building activity.
What happened in a darkened pasture near the Lenoir-Rhyne University campus in Hickory, N.C., remained in dispute as the stories kept changing. The local prosecutors concluded there wasn’t enough evidence to bring charges.
A far different response is playing out in the case involving the Pi Delta Psi fraternity at Baruch, part of the City University of New York. (The university has since banned the fraternity from its campus.)
Acting on a grand jury’s recommendations, prosecutors in Pennsylvania this monthbegan bringing charges against 37 members of that fraternity for their alleged roles in the 2013 death of Chun Hsien (Michael) Deng. Third-degree murder charges have been recommended for five current and former members, as well as for the fraternity itself. The others face criminal charges including assault and hazing.
The men are being arraigned in waves so the local court isn’t overwhelmed. Ten of them have already been charged, with more arraignments continuing this week.
The case is widely viewed as one of the most sweeping criminal cases ever against a fraternity. It’s also being closely watched by those who have been pushing for tougher enforcement against hazing.
Relatively few hazing-related deaths and serious injuries result in criminal charges, and charging the fraternity itself, as was recommended in the Baruch case, is extremely rare, according to experts who track hazing cases.
But attitudes are starting to change, said Douglas E. Fierberg, a Washington-based lawyer who is representing Mr. Deng’s family.
“For serious cases and serious wrongdoing,” he said, “the concept of ‘boys will be boys’ is a remnant of the past.”
That’s a message that Mr. Kowiak’s mother has been spreading this week at schools and colleges as part of their anti-hazing-week activities.
There was nothing bonding about the night that her son spent dodging hits across a pitch-dark field in pursuit of a “sacred” fraternity rock, or the pain that Mr. Deng felt as he was repeatedly knocked to the frozen ground, she said.
“When I heard that charges were being filed in the Baruch case, frankly I was glad to hear that some sort of action was being taken,” said Ms. Kowiak. “I hope this will be a wake-up call that these traditions and cultures are not all fun and games,” that people die, and others’ lives are ruined. “Either way, it is sad for all parties involved.”
The facts in the Baruch case have trickled out over two years as law-enforcement officials have tried to make sense out of changing and conflicting versions of events from dozens of students.
According to the account presented to the grand jury, Mr. Deng was blindfolded, weighted down with a heavy backpack, and told to cross a frozen yard while others body-slammed him during a ritual called the “glass ceiling.”
“This event was not intended to hurt anyone,” said Hugh H. Mo, a lawyer for one of the defendants charged with a lesser crime.
“The idea is that these students,” as Asian-Americans, Mr. Mo said, “will have a tough road ahead of them, and running the gantlet is a way to help them in their struggle to assimilate and become successful.”
Pi Delta Psi is one of more than a dozen Asian-American fraternities that are generally not part of national mainstream umbrella groups like the North American Interfraternity Conference. National leaders of Pi Delta Psi did not respond to emails requesting comment.
The ritual is part of a disturbing pattern of violent hazing among Asian-American fraternities, according to experts interviewed by The Chronicle.
Some are trying to break out of the stereotype that Asian-American men aren’t physically strong or masculine enough and that they spend all of their time studying, according to Mitchell J. Chang, a professor of education and of Asian-American studies at the University of California at Los Angeles and co-author of the article “To Be Mice or Men: Gender Identity and the Development of Masculinity Through Participation in Asian American Interest Fraternities.”
“These social groups respond in a very naïve way,” he said, “the way young men and adolescents would, with extreme hazing, thinking this would give the young men more willpower and strength to overcome those stereotypes.”
In Mr. Deng’s case, the results were tragic. After he lost consciousness, fraternity members told authorities they brought Mr. Deng inside, laid him down by the fire, and changed his clothes. Instead of calling for an ambulance, they looked up his symptoms on the Internet and called the fraternity’s national president, who told them to hide fraternity materials like notebooks and paddles that were in the house, according to police.
They eventually drove him to the hospital, but more than two hours had passed by the time he was treated, police said.
Several facts set this case apart from the vast majority of others where authorities have opted not to file charges, according to Mr. Fierberg. Police swooped in quickly to gather cell phones and track messages and Internet searches that implicated the students in Mr. Deng’s death, said Mr. Fierberg, who has represented families in a number of high-profile hazing cases. The extent of Mr. Deng’s injuries and attempts to cover up the incident also worked in prosecutors’ favor.
Hank Nuwer, a professor of journalism at Franklin College and the author of several books and articles about hazing, said that while it may be too late to bring charges in the Kowiak case, the general public should “speak out and demand a thorough investigation the next time a fatal pummeling masquerades as team building and allows participants to walk arrest-free.”
But while many, like Mr. Nuwer, have applauded the arrests in Michael Deng’s case, others have accused the prosecution of overreach.
“My biggest problem with the way this investigation was handled was its broad sweep.” said Mr. Mo, the lawyer representing one of the Baruch defendants.
“Whether you were inside or outside, whether you slept through the weekend, everyone was charged. I don’t think that’s going to hold up in a court of law.”
He likened the arrests of dozens of Baruch students that night to arresting an entire team of football players if one of them took off his helmet and clobbered an opponent.
“Even assuming the player who got whacked died from his injury, no one in his right mind would say all of the players from the team should be prosecuted, even though they were all engaged in the same activity,” Mr. Mo said.
If there was a turning point in the prosecution of hazing, it might be the cases filed against 15 former members of Florida A&M University’s marching band after the death of Robert Champion, a drum major who succumbed after being pummeled with fists and instruments during a brutal hazing ritual aboard the band’s parked bus. At least three wereconvicted of manslaughter.
The case was a test of Florida’s anti-hazing law and sent a message to prosecutors elsewhere that hazing abuses could be criminally prosecuted. Forty-four states now have anti-hazing laws, and Florida’s is one of the toughest.
“I think what happened at Florida A&M has influenced prosecutors to think they can successfully prosecute certain hazing events they might have been wary about pursuing before,” said Peter F. Lake, director of Stetson University College of Law’s Center for Excellence in Higher Education Law and Policy.
Still, most cases end up resulting in lawsuits or are settled out of court.
When it comes to filing criminal charges, “It appears that the line has been drawn at beating someone to death, which is sad,” said Gentry R. McCreary, chief executive officer of Dyad Strategies, a research and assessment firm that helps fraternities and sororities develop anti-hazing policies.
One reason, he said, is that fraternity members tend to circle the wagons when tragedy strikes.
“The veil of secrecy that happens in these cases makes it difficult to gather information,” Mr. McCreary said.
That’s exactly what investigators said stymied them in trying to unravel the mystery of Tucker Hipps’s death one year ago this month during a morning run with other Sigma Phi Epsilon pledges at Clemson University.
He died after falling head-first off a bridge, and no one has come forward to explain how that happened. The local police contend that many of the dozens of people they’ve interviewed are lying or withholding information.
Prosecutors say the same about many of the students implicated in Mr. Deng’s death, and they’re hoping the criminal charges will make the fraternity members come clean. No one can argue that the freshman pledge was participating in the ritual willingly, the family’s lawyer said.
“The evidence exists that he was fighting back,” Mr. Fierberg said, “and because he was fighting back, he was getting it worse.”
Katherine Mangan writes about community colleges, completion efforts, and job training, as well as other topics in daily news. Follow her on Twitter @KatherineMangan, or email her atkatherine.mangan@chronicle.com.
Moderator: The Swarthmore paper conducted a fine investigation into an outdated Bryn Mawr college custom called Hell Week. It is a throwback to an era when first-year students, in the name of class bonding and “fun” and no little amount of domination, allowed upperclass students to prank and to order newbies about. Some of the week’s activities such as “Punishments” harken back to once common kangaroo courts on campus where new students judged “guilty” by upperclassmen were made to perform stunts. Read more here at the Swarthmore Phoenix:
Excerpt: According to Joyce*, a member of the class of 2016 who serves on Bryn Mawr’s Self-Government Association, Hell Week is a sort of welcoming for first year students, where a first year, or “Hellee,” would be paired with a “Heller,” or “Hell mom,” who would come up with tasks for their Hellee to perform throughout the week. Joyce said that students were allowed nearly unrestricted access and freedom to pursue various all-campus and Heller-Hellee activities. but that the spaces on campus and the types of activities allowed to take place have been limited in recent years, and that there is fear that they will become even more restricted after the working group finishes its work.
“During my freshman year, one of my tasks was to rate the Haverford guys coming off of the Blue Bus,” Joyce said. The Blue Bus is another name for the Bi-College shuttle between Haverford and Bryn Mawr. Joyce described how she and other first-years would hold up signs reading “You’re cute” or other messages as the shuttle arrived at Bryn Mawr from Haverford.
Despite the Hellee-Heller relationship’s similarities to the sorority practice of matching new sisters (“Littles”) with older ones (“Bigs”), Bryn Mawr students insist that no hazing occurs as a part of Hell Week.
“Everything is optional. You consent to everything. We send a questionnaire beforehand that you fill out and your Hell Mom goes off of that,” Maria*, an anonymous member of the class of 2017 at Bryn Mawr and also a member of Bryn Mawr’s Self-Government Association, said.
“A lot of the tasks are OK’d through committees to make sure they don’t appear as hazing,” she explained, “really, there was nothing that could even be considered hazing.”
Despite the insistence of several Bryn Mawr students that Hell Week is consensual and thus does not resemble hazing, Hell Week activities have incited media coverage in the past. According to a post by Gawker, The Dean’s Office presented Radnor Hall, a residence hall, with a list of community violations that occurred during Hell Week 2013. The violations included “Requiring first-year students to swear allegiance to Radnor over a keg,” “Requiring first-year students to go outside for a ‘class photo’ but in reality dumping water on them,” and “Shouting at first-year students with and without [a] bullhorn.”
The Dean’s’ Office leveraged several sanctions against the student leadership in Radnor hall for these community violations. They relieved all Radnor customs people, the general term at Bryn Mawr for various student mentors, of their duties, forced the Radnor Dorm Presidents to resign, and required upperclass students in Radnor to write a letter of apology to Radnor first-years. The Dean’s’ Office then gave the Radnor community two options for further sanctions: the opportunity to either ban first years from living in Radnor in the 2013-2014 academic year, among other sanctions, or to prohibit current upperclass residents from participating in the planning of Hell Week traditions for the remainder of their time at Bryn Mawr. Gray confirmed that Radnor Hall was only populated with returning students in the 2013-2014 academic year, an indication that the residence hall chose to ban first-years from living in Radnor, one of the options given to them by the Dean’s Office as a possible sanction for the community violations during Hell Week the year prior.
According to Joyce and Maria, a complaint received from a transfer student who felt uncomfortable with some of the aspects of Hell Week last year prompted the college to begin a substantial review and restructuring of the tradition. No sources could confirm this information, and in an undated email to the student body sometime before the beginning of the 2015-16 academic year, President Kim Cassidy explained that the creation of a Hell Week working group was originally recommended by the Bryn Mawr Board of Trustees. In the email, President Cassidy shared a report written by the Hell Week working group and said she had accepted the report and its recommendations and also shared it with the Board. The Phoenix was not able to gain access to this report.
Bryn Mawr students were unwilling to disclose exactly what is being changed about Hell Week for 2016, because the working group’s discussions are still ongoing and are only open to members of the Bryn Mawr student body, faculty, and staff.
“The name is being changed to something unknown, we will be having a vote soon. There are meetings happening all this week, but… planning [for Hell Week] starts all in October,” Joyce said.
However, in an email sent out by Traditions Mistresses, an elected position on Bryn Mawr’s SGA that is tasked with planning and administering all Bryn Mawr-related traditions, Celeste Lesdema ’17 and Jasmine Rangel ’18 indicated that certain parts of Hell Week have already been changed at the outset of the 2015-2016 academic year. In addition, the email states that “Trials”, “Punishments”, “Confinement,” and “Warm-ups” will no longer be occurring this year.
The email from the Traditions Mistresses also states that the parameters for the working group will be in keeping with Pennsylvania Laws regarding hazing on college campuses. Such laws define hazing as: “any action or situation which recklessly or intentionally endangers the mental or physical health or safety of a student or which willfully destroys or removes public or private property for the purpose of initiation or admission into or affiliation with, or as a condition for continued membership in, any organization operating under the sanction of or recognized as an organization by an institution of higher education.”
The email also includes a statement: “…there will be no mention of a duck pond run on Saturday morning.” This points to a discrepancy between the officially posted schedule on Bryn Mawr’s website and the actual series of events that occur during Hell Week. According to the Bryn Mawr website, there was a “Duck Pond Run” scheduled for 5:00 a.m. on Saturday, February 21, but sources told the Phoenix that this “Duck Pond Run” did not, and has never, actually taken place.
Furthermore, the email sent out also assures returning Bryn Mawr students that the Traditions Mistresses “…expect to keep the happy surprise on Friday evening.” There is no mention of a “happy surprise” anywhere on Bryn Mawr’s website, and all the sources the Phoenix contacted, including the Dean’s Office, President’s Office, and the Bryn Mawr Self-Government Association, did not mention anything regarding a “happy surprise” on Friday. However, according to a Bryn Mawr senior who prefers to remain anonymous and will be referred to as Susan*, the “happy surprise” is actually the “Secret of Bryn Mawr” to which all alumnae/i are sworn to keep.
“The real secret of Bryn Mawr, that they swear you to secrecy to keep for the rest of your life, is that Hell Week does not really exist. There is no Duck Pond run. None of the events after Friday night exist. The real tradition is one that only people who have gone through and survived Hell Week know, is Flower Day,” Susan said.
During the Friday of Hell Week, Susan explained, upperclass Bryn Mawr students typically wear flower-related clothes and tell each other “Happy Flower Day!” or “Happy Friday” as a secret indication of the day. Susan also could not deny that Bryn Mawr students also wear lizard-related items on Friday as a part of recognition that there is a secret mascot associated with Bryn Mawr College: the lizard. When presented with this information, Gray denied the claim that there is another mascot associated with Bryn Mawr.
“Flower day is the day you reveal the secret of Hell Week, and then, in your dorms, all of the upperclassmen are standing around you, shirtless, in their bras, and they encourage you if you are comfortable to take off your shirt. It’s about body positivity, but I didn’t take off my shirt,” Susan said. Gray was not able to confirm the existence of Flower Day as a tradition that occurs at Bryn Mawr or that Flower Day is the “special surprise” referred to in the email sent out by the Traditions Mistresses, but did not deny these claims either. Susan also explained that the upperclassmen in dorms at this time will show the first years “Lizards,” or strings of paper with messages on them that say things such as “Welcome to Bryn Mawr!” Afterwards, Susan said that the first-years receive cake and champagne to celebrate.
Susan also confirmed that Hell Week was undergoing significant changes this year and said that the tradition was being shortened to only three days, but she was unsure of the other outcomes of the working group because the discussion is ongoing. This shortening has not yet been confirmed or denied by any official Bryn Mawr staff.
Bryn Mawr is administering a survey to the student body to select a new name for Hell Week, and the email states that the name will be decided by October. Precisely what other practices and policies are being restructured remains to be seen while the Hell Week Working group continues its deliberations through October.
*Names have been changed at the request of the individuals for the sake of anonymity.
Visit the new HazingPrevention.org update on hazing laws