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Hazing News

Sons of the Dawn interview with the Indianapolis Star

Very grateful to reporter Vic for his interest. Go here for the photo and story–Moderator Hank Nuwer

Franklin College hazing expert pens Western novel
By Vic Ryckaert, vic.ryckaert@indystar.com 12:13 a.m. EST December 15, 2013

Franklin College professor Hank Nuwer has built a national reputation and become an outspoken crusader against hazing in all its forms.

The associate professor for Franklin College’s Pulliam School of Journalism has written articles and four books about hazing in his long academic career.

Long after sundown when he’s not working on serious, scholarly missives, Nuwer’s been writing a literary Western novel inspired by time he spent “trailing” sheep with migrant Basque herders in 1979. “Sons of the Dawn: A Basque Odyssey,” published by Shalako Press, will be available in print and ebook in January.

Nuwer, 67, Waldron, credits the “bloody red pen” of his ex-wife and copy editor Jenine Howard for making his novel “leaner, tighter and cleaner.”

Nuwer talks about Westerns, the Basque region of Spain and his inspiration for the novel.

Question: Why did you write a Western novel?

Nuwer: Once, long ago, I took leave of my senses and decided that getting a Ph.D. at Nevada-Reno was a great idea. My two main doctoral areas were the New Journalism and Western American Literature. One of the guest speakers in a Western Lit class was the great American novelist Wallace Stegner who wrote “The Big Rock Candy Mountain,” and I interviewed him and went out to dinner with him and Bobby Clark, the son of Walter Van Tilburg Clark of “The Oxbow Incident” fame. I vowed then and there at that very table that I would write a literary Western. A mere 43 years later, I have written one. And no, I never got that Ph.D. Instead, a hazing death happened at Nevada-Reno right before I quit the program, and my life’s course as a writer took a turn I never had wished for and certainly never expected.

Question: How did your sabbatical in the Basque Country of Spain inspire you?

Nuwer: The Guernica Peace Museum (Museo de la Paz de Gernika) may be one of the last thoughts on my mind when I leave this world. It affected me so. In one exhibit the floor is glass and underneath is the actual rubble of Hitler’s bombing — things such as a child’s shoes, a rosary, everyday things charred and burnt. There were very old people from Guernica who had survived the bombing, and they were crying so hard. The museum used red stage lighting to make it seem like the room was afire. It was an astonishing experience. Last January, while in Madrid on Franklin College business, I saw Pablo Picasso’s masterpiece “Guernica,” and the sabbatical experience in Guernica made that painting all the more inspiring and meaningful for me.

Question: Are any of the characters based on people you met?

Nuwer: Yes, and no. The old sheep herder and camptender Tubal in “Sons of the Dawn” was based on Jacinto Madrieta, a Basque I “trailed” sheep with from the high country of Nevada to the low country of Nevada on two magazine assignments when I was young — and on Lucien Millox, a Basque herder who brought in 2,000 sheep with a broken neck after a twister lifted up his sheepwagon and rattled it like corn in a popper.

Question: You have built a reputation as a national expert on hazing and more generally, bullying. Are there any bullies in this novel?

Nuwer: Oh, yes, there is a savage rancher named Faro Sinclair who has lone shepherds burned in a circle of fire. That really happened, by the way, and I read about it in an old newspaper clipping as a graduate student at Nevada. Another character who works for Faro tried to cut off the queue of a Chinese miner, which is a horrific insult for someone of a certain culture at that time. My hero Anton Ibarra steps in as a bystander and dumps the would-be hazer into a water trough.

Question: Name some of your favorite authors.

Nuwer: Well, Kurt Vonnegut is the most meaningful, and I am writing his biography for Indiana University Press, stressing his life as a Hoosier, author and war veteran. A small grant from Franklin College sent me to Dresden, Germany, and I retraced Vonnegut’s own steps as a prisoner of war before and after the bombing of Dresden by the allies.

But in terms of Western authors, I have a great deal of respect for the work of Louis L’Amour who wrote “Hondo” and Jack Schaefer who wrote “Shane.”

Question: After authoring so many scholarly articles and books, was writing fiction a litle more fun?

Nuwer: Nearly every word of the novel was written between 2 and 6 a.m. It was my dog Casey, me and the coffee pot. The academic garb is gone, replaced by baggy sweats, a gimmee cap and a T-shirt badly in need of washing. I’d read a passage aloud and my dog Casey would look at me with these stern eyes. “You’re right, Casey,” I joked once. “Too many adverbs.” To just have the freedom to do your best work at a crazy hour day after day was exhilarating.

Call Star reporter Vic Ryckaert at (317) 444-2701. Follow him on Twitter: @VicRyc.

Categories
Hazing News

Disgusting hockey hazing is the shame of Canada. It’s been going on three decades.

Here is the story link. Moderator

Categories
Hazing News

Enough is enough. Pi Delta Psi Has Some Explaining to Do

 

 

By Hank Nuwer

 

Journalists rarely get angry. But once in a while they get outraged. I am outraged, but close to being angry. Why can’t certain individuals get it? A human body can only take so much punishment. Smash them on the ground, throw in a fist and elbow, and you can kill a healthy young male. Simple enough?

 

No, I guess not. For a young man at Baruch College is dead.

 

Back in the early days of collegiate football, deaths piled up. The only rule was score, and the teams used the flying wedge, flying elbows, and exposed faces and heads of their opponents to win games with brutal strength, not finesse.

 

Many players died. The game of football was in jeopardy.

 

President Theodore Roosevelt came close to an executive order banning football if the game couldn’t clean itself up.

 

Of course, football being a physical sport, not all deaths could be prevented.

 

But the almost 100 percent certainty a death might occur was averted.  Because one man, President Teddy, shook his Big Stick.

 

So now the fraternity deaths have sent a message.

 

–J. B. Joynt, ill and fatigued by pledging, died after a pile-up fraternity game at Frostburg State in Maryland.

 

–Harrison Kowiak, a promising golfer, died in a Theta Chi chapter night “game” at Lenoir-Rhyne in North Carolina.

 

–Kenny Luong, a pledge for the University of California’s Lambda Phi Alpha chapter, died in a mock football game that was nothing more than a planned pile-on event.

 

And now we add, in December 2013, the pummeling death of Chun Hsien “Mike” Deng at Baruch College for a 20-year-old national Asian fraternity Pi Delta Psi.

 

They, typically, delayed and filibustered before rushing Mike to a hospital when they saw him, not just down, but dying.

 

Thirty males were present when the event occurred, according to press reports.

 

Thirty males need to be charged. Police and the courts and local prosecutor must examine evidence carefully to see if 30 males need to do hard time and if alums of this shamed chapter had any knowledge this hazing ritual was continuing. Alums of fatal-death chapters have skated way too long. Nail them.

 

The national fraternity, ignoring all requests for comment, may need to be shut down and sued out of existence if culpability can be found. Governance seems totally lacking in Pi Delta Psi.

 

Yes, I am outraged. But if I were Mike’s parents, I’d be sad and angry. Here is how the father and siblings of Chad Meredith felt after losing him in a similar stupid “athletic” contest for Kappa Sigma at the University of Miami. His story is here, done by my students: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wAMklMPP2ag

 

Here is Lianne Kowiak, mother of Harrison Kowiak, describing what it is like to lose a wonderful son like Mike.

http://www.frequency.com/video/mother-of-hazing-victim-tells-her-story/109599914

And George Starks, whose son died in a stupid sorority-fraternity ritual at Utah State, wants schools like Baruch College to be put under the microscope.

Here is what Mr. Starks wrote me yesterday: “One would hope, however, that actual laws and violations thereof were actually conceded and prosecuted to the maximum extent. Lawsuits against fraternities are in abundance – both successful and unsuccessful. A successful major lawsuit against a tacitly-approving college administration would add a concrete reality to schools heretofore content to let corporate Greek associations take the hit. Distancing has become an art. Absolution and a thorough erasing of fingerprints continue to allow knowing school administrations to plead and, equally-importantly, feign ignorance. This must change.”

Every possible investigation into Baruch College’s record of discipline on Pi Delta Psi needs to be examined. Who knew what and when at Baruch? Did Baruch College know it had a ticking time bomb on its hands?

Those are the questions journalists NEED to ask. So far, they have not.

 

 

 

 

 

Categories
Hazing News

Putting an Asian fraternity under scrutiny: initiation death this week/

Headquarters:

 

Death of an Asian student in Texas: link

Categories
Hazing News

University of Miami’s Kappa Sigma back on campus. A video remembrance of Chad Meredith

Moderator:  My multimedia journalism class elected to create a short video recalling the life of deceased pledge Chad Meredith of Kappa Sigma. He drowned in a lake while partaking in a hazing stunt. His family lobbied to get the Florida hazing law tightened and toughened. Produced by Micahel Icenogle, Gabrielle Sully, Hannah Troyer, Carney Gillin and Will Reno.

See the video at http://youtu.be/MxwmqUL8jbA

–Moderator Hank Nuwer