Subjects:
Hazing (subjecting newcomers to abusive or humiliating tricks and ridicule) has always been seen as a secretive campus activity when it comes to fraternities and pledging. As a result, Dr. Mark Taff resorted in his article that, "..a series of 168 cases of injuries and deaths related to fraternity hazing activities...[occurred] in the United States between 1923 and 1982" (2113). Young college men are being hospitalized and even worse, dying, just for a couple of friends that give them a sense of belonging. The major causes of hazing are the students' wanting a sense of belonging in a big college campus, the college's infrequent knowledge of what occurs in fraternities, and the unwillingness of fraternities to change tradition. Since hazing has been around for more than a century, one cannot expect the practice of hazing to stop all together. It will probably take years before hazing perishes from the fraternity scene. Nevertheless, until an end is put to hazing, solutions can !
be used to make hazing less common, until it no longer exists. These solutions that may be able to put an eventual stop to hazing, in the long run, are better education about fratern
. . .
help of college administrators, anti-hazing laws are useless in preventing hazing incidents from happening. These supposedly bring the fraternity "together. It would not be out of the ordinary, upon opening the newspaper, to read the testimony of some fraternity pledges "'We were taken to a deserted park and blindfolded. Manley (a lawyer) states in an article written by Amy Marcus, “the students don’t realize “that they could end up in jail, in bankruptcy court, or spending the rest of their lives paying off a multimillion-dollar debt” (B1). Although warnings about the dangers of fraternity hazing were addressed in the 1980s with anti-hazing laws in some states, and punishments against such activities, the practice of hazing still exists in college campuses today. Together, these three solutions are able to prevent hazing now, end hazing in the long run. There are a number of college campuses, in which "fraternities and sororities have endorsed a plan to change, . Organizations like “CHRORUS, an acronym for Campus Hazing’s Offensive Rituals Undermine Schools,” formed by Leanghan helped inspire an anti-hazing law in Massachusetts, just as Eileen [Stevens] and Chuck [Committee to Hault Useless College Killings] has done in New York. an organization that stresses fund-raising and community service, as well as being a social outlet for members.
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