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End of story for hazing chapter at American University: Chronicle of Higher Ed. By Katherine Mangan

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American University has expelled 18 students and disciplined one more for their involvement with Epsilon Iota, an underground student group that has been linked for years to physical violence, hazing, sexual abuse, underage drinking, and drug use.

The actions, announced Monday, are final and follow unsuccessful appeals by many of the accused. The university had been warning students for more than a decade to stay away from the rogue fraternity, which formed in 2002 after the university and the national office of Alpha Tau Omega both withdrew recognition of the Epsilon Iota chapter because of drinking, hazing, and other violations.

Last year the university amended its student conduct code to ban involvement with unrecognized groups that violate university rules. That allowed it to discipline students who had essentially been thumbing their noses at the university by keeping the banned chapter alive. With no oversight, such underground fraternities can be even more dangerous and hard to control, national experts say.

“This group has perpetuated and systematically presented a threat to the safety and well-being of our students,” Fanta Aw, the university’s interim vice president for campus life, said in a prepared statement on Monday. “This should send a strong message to anyone involved with groups engaged in activities prohibited by the conduct code.”

The expulsions will be permanently recorded on the academic records of the 18 students. The 19th student was placed on disciplinary probation, which excludes him from holding campus leadership positions, as well as participating in certain other student activities.

Hank Nuwer, a professor of journalism at Franklin College and a national expert on hazing, called the expulsions “a highly unusual sweeping punishment for a group.” He said that if the move “causes renegade undergrounders at other schools to either clean up their behaviors or face similar expulsions … well then, hurrah for AU.”

In 2000, hazing and alcohol violations prompted the national fraternity to suspend the campus chapter several times. American University also filed student conduct charges against members.

Faced with a further crackdown by the national fraternity, the chapter voluntarily surrendered its charter and the university withdrew recognition in 2001.

That should have been the end of it, but the following year, former members created a group they called Epsilon Iota — the name of the chapter that had been banned from campus.

Over the years, it continued to recruit, haze new members, and hold loud, raucous parties, according to the university. Complaints against the members began with relatively minor matters like public urination and littering and expanded to include assault and rape. Most of the behavior happened off campus.

By Hank Nuwer

Journalist Hank 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, the Alaska Press Club awarded him first place in the Best Columnist division and Best Humorist, second place.

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 Warsaw, Poland and 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 and in his weekly column "Far from Randolph" in the Winchester Star-Gazette of Randolph County, Indiana.

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