Categories
Hazing News

NPR interviews the Piazza family

Here is the link and an excerpt

 

Evelyn Piazza wears a heart-shaped pendant around her neck. It has her son Timothy’s thumb print on it. When she runs her finger across it she says it’s like holding his hand.

Piazza’s son was a sophomore at Penn State last year, when he died from injuries suffered after fraternity hazing rituals. Now she dreads the days leading up to the first anniversary of Timothy’s death on Sunday.

“It’s going to be a rough three days because each day is going to be, ‘This is the day that he was hazed and got hurt.’ ‘This is the day that we spent in the hospital — that nightmare.’ And, ‘This is the day that he died,'” Piazza says while sitting in her Readington, N.J. home.

“You don’t send your child off to school thinking they could come home in a casket,” Jim Piazza says.

“One of the things we’d like to do is look at legislation across the country and see if we can influence legislation in states that may not have significant or any hazing laws whatsoever,” Jim says. Working collectively, he says the families hope they can bring even more attention to the country’s hazing problem.

Much of what happened to 19-year-old Timothy at the Penn State Chapter of Beta Theta Pi fraternity was caught on surveillance cameras.

Prosecutors say pledges were run through something called “the gauntlet.” They drank large amounts of alcohol very quickly. As NPR previously reported, Piazza was given 18 drinks in 82 minutes.

At around 11 p.m. Timothy fell head-first down a flight of stairs. He was moved to a couch where he stayed for a few hours. Then prosecutors say he stumbled around the house before again falling down the same stairs. His new fraternity brothers didn’t call for help until about 12 hours after the first fall.

Some of the fraternity brothers were charged with crimes — ranging from involuntary manslaughter to aggravated assault and hazing. But a new Centre County district attorney was sworn in late last year and he has forwarded the case to Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro because of an unspecified conflict. Shapiro’s office says the case is still under review.

The Piazza case has brought new attention to the hazing issue.

Elizabeth Allan, professor of higher education at the University of Maine, studies how prevalent hazing is and how to prevent it. She defines hazing as, “Any activity expected of someone joining or participating in a group that humiliates, degrades, abuses, or endangers them regardless of a person’s willingness to participate.”

Allan surveyed college students and found many of them don’t even know that they have experienced hazing.

“When we asked students what they had experienced in order to become a member of their club, team or organization, 55 percent reported behaviors that would meet the definition of hazing,” Allan says. But only about 1-in-10 of those students said they had been hazed.

Categories
Hazing News

Hazing at Washington State: by Wilson Criscione

Here is the link and an excerpt

 

On one October night last fall, the newest members of the Alpha Kappa Lambda fraternity at Washington State University were allegedly told to line up in the “party room,” with their knees and nose touching the wall. The lights went dark. Pillowcases were put over their head. Forty-ounce bottles of Hurricane malt liquor were tied to their hands.

Finish the bottles, the members were told, and they’d be let off the wall. It was a game they called “Edward Forty-Hands.”

The alleged incident described above is one of several allegations of hazing at the Alpha Kappa Lambda fraternity found in WSU student conduct records obtained by the Inlander.The investigation, by the university and the fraternity’s national headquarters, eventually led to the frat being shut down in December. Until now, the specifics of the alleged hazing have not been made public.

The university, in October, began investigating several incidents that took place starting near the beginning of the first semester. Two new fraternity members had been hospitalized — one in August 2017 for alcohol poisoning, and one in October with a concussion. The investigative records also described how the fraternity would take the belongings of new members and force them against the wall to berate them, force them to do wall sits, or tape alcohol to their hands for them to drink.

Those initial allegations were all confirmed to be true, WSU dean of students Kathy MacKay says. In December, days before the fraternity was shuttered, members “admitted to everything,” she says. MacKay says what was concerning was that upperclassmen pressured new, underage members into drinking and they used physical restraint.

“This was clearly hazing,” MacKay tells the Inlander.

On Aug. 20, the last night of rush week — when fraternities recruit students — one upperclassman at AKL heard about a new member who was sick. The upperclassman walked into the bathroom, according to the upperclassman’s account of the incident, and found the new member “flopping” around, “vomiting and throwing his upper body around while staying seated.”

The upperclassman took him to the hospital, and the new member was released by early the next morning. (In the records provided to the Inlander through a public records request, names of students were redacted.)

Many of the incidents alleged to be hazing took place in what the frat called the “party room.” There, records say, new members were lined up against the wall and yelled at, forced to do wall sits and finish bottles of beer.

When they did “Edward Forty-Hands,” one new member reported that his hand was taped to another member’s hand with a bottle in between. Each person had another bottle taped to their free hand. They were told to finish all three bottles between the two of them.

At least once, the upperclassmen dumped out bean bags and made the new members clean all of it up while taped to one other person. In another incident, a new member had his finger burned by an upperclassman’s lighter used to illuminate the dark party room, according to records.

In early October, days before WSU launched their investigation of hazing, a new fraternity member, after drinking, fell out of his bed and got a concussion. He was taken to the hospital.

WSU officials interviewed dozens of people in its investigation. Initially, members said they didn’t feel like any of it was hazing, records show. One investigator noted that a member “didn’t think what we were doing was wrong,” that it was “not meant with malicious intent,” and instead was supposed to be about teaching accountability. He said the “definition of hazing has become muddy.” Even a couple victims told university investigators that they didn’t feel like it was hazing.

Nearly all the fraternity members initially told investigators that nobody was forced to drink. “There’s the door,” for anyone who chose not to, one member said. Consistently, they told investigators that they didn’t know where the underage members got the alcohol they were drinking.

But despite what they may have said, MacKay says new fraternity members still were pressured into drinking.

“The upperclassmen were pressuring new members to do this,” she says. “In these situations, there’s not really a way for them to say no.”

The frat was put on interim suspension in mid-October. The fraternity’s national chapter was involved in their own investigation and said there would be repercussions.

“What was done was not bonding or character building,” wrote Jeremy Slivinski, CEO of the fraternity, in an email to members of WSU’s AKL chapter. “Instead it was abusive and a demonstration as to why fraternities are viewed poorly in this day and age. Brothers don’t hurt each other to prove or receive a demonstration of loyalty.”

By December, MacKay says, the fraternity members at WSU had changed their tune. No longer denying the allegations, they agreed to a “negotiated resolution,” MacKay says. Less than a week later, the national headquarters of the Alpha Kappa Lambda fraternity sent out a press release announcing WSU’s chapter had closed for “various potential risk management violations,” without sharing any details.

The AKL frat revoked the charter, and WSU took away the frat’s affiliation from the university. The AKL frat had a 90-year history at the university, the press release said.

“Closing a chapter is never an easy or ideal situation however student safety is a priority for both the Fraternity and the University,” the press release said. (Slivinski, the frat’s CEO, says he cannot provide any additional information for this article.)

Categories
Hazing News

Buffalo State College’s “Hank Nuwer Hazing Collection” has been updated

Here is the link to all research materials for students and researchers and journalists.

Categories
Hazing News

FRANKLIN COLLEGE PROFESSOR HANK NUWER EDITS HAZING PREVENTION BOOK

Hank Nuwer on panel at Florida A & M
Malgorzata Wroblewska-Nuwer

Contact: Deidra Baumgardner (317) 738-8189
dbaumgardner@FranklinCollege.edu
FRANKLIN COLLEGE PROFESSOR EDITS HAZING PREVENTION BOOK

 FRANKLIN, Ind. – Hank Nuwer, a Franklin College journalism professor and internationally recognized scholar in hazing education, has edited a new book on hazing and hazing prevention, published by Indiana University Press.

Hazing: Destroying Young Lives is a compelling anthology of 26 essays that look at how universities, the military and other social groups can learn from past mistakes and protect their members in the future. The book addresses the numerous, significant, and often overlooked impacts of hazing, including sexual exploitation, mental distress, depression, and even suicide.

In addition to investigative journalism essays written by Nuwer, the book contains interviews with acclaimed attorney Peter Lake and sociologist Michael Kimmel, as well as practical essays on the best science to prevent hazing. These include pieces by University of Maine professor Elizabeth Allan, Alfred University dean of students Norm Pollard, legal expert Douglas Fierberg and Greek professionals Tracy Maxwell, Travis Apgar, Robert Biggs and David Westol. Nuwer’s Franklin College colleague Ray Begovich, professor of journalism, also contributed an essay to the book, as did Debbie Smith, the mother of Chico State hazing victim Matt Carrington.

Nuwer graduated from Buffalo State College (now State University of New York) with a bachelor’s degree in English secondary education. He received his master’s degree from New Mexico Highlands University. He was awarded an honorary doctorate from the State University of New York in 2006. In 2010, Nuwer, a former journalism faculty member at Ball State University, was inducted into the BSU’s Journalism Hall of Fame.  In 2017, Nuwer won Franklin College’s scholar of the year award for the second time in his 15 years here.

Nuwer is the author of four previous books on hazing, all of which have won wide acclaim and one was adapted into a television movie. Nuwer has been featured on the CBS News, MTV, ESPN’s “Outside the Lines,” the “Today Show” and other major news outlets worldwide. He was a founding member of HazingPrevention.Org, an advocate for creating hazing awareness. As an investigative reporter, Nuwer has been reporting on hazing incidents since 1978. His last book was the 2014 Sons of the Dawn: A Basque Odyssey from Shalako Press, and one of its themes is an examination of hazing in the old American West.

Nuwer is married to Malgorzata Wroblewska-Nuwer, the chief accountant for an international firm. They reside in Waldron, Indiana, and Warsaw, Poland.

Malgorzata Wroblewska-Nuwer

Hazing: Destroying Young Lives can be ordered in both hardback and paperback formats through Indiana University Press at: www.iupress.indiana.edu.

 

For more information, contact Franklin College’s Office of Marketing and Communications at (317) 738-8185.

 

Founded in 1834, Franklin College is a residential four-year undergraduate liberal arts institution with a scenic, wooded campus located 20 minutes south of downtown Indianapolis.  The college prepares men and women for challenging careers and fulfilling lives through the liberal arts, offering its approximately 1,000 students 36 majors, 39 minors and 11 pre-professional programs.  In 1842, the college began admitting women, becoming the first coeducational institution in Indiana and the seventh in the nation.  Franklin College maintains a voluntary association with the American Baptist Churches USA.  For more information, visit

www.FranklinCollege.edu.

###

 

 

 

Deidra Baumgardner
Franklin College
Director of Communications
101 Branigin Blvd.
Franklin, IN   46131
Phone: (317) 738-8189
Fax: (317) 738-8175
Email: dbaumgardner@FranklinCollege.edu

Categories
Hazing News

Florida State: Inside Higher Education today

https://www.insidehighered.com/news/2018/01/31/new-rules-florida-state-sororities-fraternities-hard-enforce-experts-say

 

Florida State has allowed fraternities and sororities to operate on campus again under strict new measures, but experts say many will be hard to enforce.

After a hazing death at Florida State University, President John E. Thrasher shut down fraternities and sororities in November and promised major reforms. Those new rules have now been announced, but experts in Greek life aren’t convinced they can be enforced, however well intentioned they may be.

The death of Pi Kappa Phi pledge Andrew Coffey, 20, prompted Thrasher to ban alcohol among the Greek chapters and student-run organizations. He halted the activities of all fraternities and sororities, proclaiming the entire network of 50-some Greek chapters needed to be reworked with the help of students.

Notable among the stringent new measures announced this week were restrictions on the ways and how often Greek organizations can serve alcohol at parties.

Academics and experts have often cited alcohol and the pledging period as the two factors that lead to hazing and deaths among Greek organization members.

Florida State now requires all fraternities and sororities to use a third-party vendor to supply their booze. Students can’t stand behind the bar and serve it themselves, and in theory this would eliminate underage drinking, as those outside providers would check IDs. Only a certain number of events with alcohol are allowed per semester — four socials in the fall and six in the spring. Greek chapters need to hire approved security for parties with alcohol, too.

The “rush” recruitment period has also been reduced from eight weeks to six.

While these steps can improve the health of the Florida State Greek system, true change will only come with the total elimination of pledging and alcohol-fueled parties, said Hank Nuwer, a journalism professor at Franklin College who has written extensively about hazing.

“That is not going to be attractive to a lot of undergraduates, but that will be the return to values, a return to what we hoped for,” Nuwer said.

Complicating matters are the innumerable spaces — the off-campus apartments and houses — where fraternity and sorority members can go to drink, outside the purview and watch of the university. Thrasher acknowledged this at a press conference this week.

“One of the things we’re asking the fraternities and sororities to do themselves is monitor those kind of things,” Thrasher told reporters. “And understand the ramifications … We can’t necessarily control that. What we control, though, is the idea that this is a bad activity that resulted in a terrible, terrible tragedy. And I hope that’s what’s getting through.”

The university can crack down to an extent if campus police step up to monitor Greek housing more than they have in the past, said John Hechinger, a senior editor at Bloomberg News and author of True Gentlemen: The Broken Pledge of America’s Fraternities.

Hechinger said he was particularly impressed with Florida State’s new policies on alcohol, saying they could reduce overdoses and sexual assaults. Many of the national branches of fraternities have in their rule books that the chapters must serve alcohol via these vendors, but that’s hardly ever followed, he said. Some of the nationals also permit a BYOB system that limits how much alcohol members can bring to social events, but again, it’s rarely enforced, he said.

“It’s very elaborate, with wristbands, and you’re supposed to track each beer and limit them per person, but it’s never done correctly — that’s a joke,” Hechinger said.

Doing away with the pledging period would also be more effective, Hechinger said.

Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity did this four years ago, and the number of injuries — and thus their insurance rates — dropped, Hechinger said.

Nuwer was skeptical that a two-week reduction in the recruitment period would make any sort of difference, but he said the constituencies to which Florida State answers would have objected to a complete ban. Prominent donors and alumni would likely withdraw their cash.

“It’s all about money at this time,” he said.

Thrasher also announced changes to the academic and philanthropic requirements of Greek chapters. Every fraternity and sorority must maintain an average 2.5 grade point average, and every member must complete 10 hours of service per semester. National chapters will visit Florida State to help chapters review all their members. Nick Altwies, founder of the Society Advocating Fraternal Excellence, a pro-Greek group, likened the reviews to an annual employee evaluation — “making sure they’re adding something to the company.”

A new “scorecard” is being published on the Florida State website with information about all the chapters. This emulates a system put in place by Penn State University, which also had a high-profile hazing death, that of Beta Theta Pi pledge Timothy Piazza, last year.

Florida State’s database will include details of a chapter’s conduct violations — if it hazed its members, or if a member committed a sexual assault, said Amy Hecht, Florida State’s vice president for student affairs.

It will also list average member GPA, chapter size and the adviser-to-member ratio, average hours of community service and amount of money raised for charity, as well as awards and achievements.

Currently at least two fraternities are suspended pending an appeal, and another is on social probation, according to the Florida State website.

The university is also adding four new employees to its Office of Fraternity and Sorority Life, funded by new membership dues. Their titles, roles and salaries have yet to be determined, Hecht said.

Chapters are also now being required to create individual advisory boards — Hecht said the university hasn’t figured who will sit on these panels yet.

Hecht said during the press conference that she was confident the chapters would “hold up their end of the deal,” but if they flouted the rules they would be subject to punishment under the university’s conduct code.

“We will remain vigilant in assessing our campus community, the effectiveness of programs, policies, and initiatives, and we will hold our students accountable per our student and student organization codes of conduct. Sanctions include probation, suspension and dismissal for both students and organizations depending on the violations,” she said via email.

Previously, a five-student panel would hear conduct cases involving Greek organizations, but the university is adding faculty and staff members to those.

The alcohol ban remains in effect, but Hecht said that it could be lifted by the end of the semester if the fraternities and sororities show they’re following the new rules.

Heather Kirk, a spokeswoman with the North-American Interfraternity Conference, which represents many fraternities nationally, provided a statement to Inside Higher Ed: “While we have concerns about the implementation of a student fee and ensuring an economically inclusive fraternal community, the national fraternity organizations look forward to continuing to work collaboratively with local stakeholders to enhance health and safety in the FSU community through these measures.”

Altwies said as long as the restrictions are enforced, they could change the Greek life system for the better — he said the university was clearly intent on transparency, too, with the scorecard.

“It’s impossible to create a policy that’s completely going to eliminate problems — it’s really, really, really tough to do, but with the expectations they’ve outlined, with more university staff, problems can be solved if you work through them,” he said.

Read more by