By Michael Popke - Athletic Business
Transcription
By Michael Popke - Athletic Business
11/13/03 H A 11:08 AM I G Page 101 H RASH OF UGLY HAZING INCIDENTS IS LEADING SCHOOL AND ATHLETIC ADMINISTRATORS TO ADOPT MORE-STRINGENT PREVENTIVE MEASURES. www.athleticbusiness.com S C H O O L S P O R T S T he Bellmore-Merrick (N.Y.) School watched. One of the victims was injured so Board sent a strong message to the badly that he reportedly required surgery. Mepham High School football team, stu- Fueling the controversy were former dents and fans this fall when it canceled the Mepham players publicly recalling their own Pirates’ season three days before the sched- hazing episodes, including one who said uled opener. The board’s bold move came in older players dunked his head in a toilet at the wake of allegations that three varsity the beginning of the 1995 season and later players sodomized three junior-varsity play- beat him with cleats and helmets. Another ers at a preseason training camp in Penn- former player told reporters that those kind sylvania, reportedly using a broomstick, of “swirlies” were “just the usual thing.” pinecones and golf balls while other players Kevin McElroy, Mepham’s football coach for By Michael Popke December 2003 ATHLETIC BUSINESS 101 Getty AB DEC-hazing AB DEC-hazing 11/13/03 11:09 AM Page 102 17 years, publicly apologized for the most recent books about hazing. He adds that nearly 50 hazing incident, claiming he was not aware of the hazing incidents involving sexual misconduct have come — coaches reportedly slept in a different cabin to light since 1983 — most of them after 1995. than the players at the Pennsylvania camp — and In October, Athletic Business surveyed high that he also did not know of any previous hazing school athletic directors to find out how they’re incidents. In November, McElroy was fired. addressing hazing, if at all. One in five of 58 All players and parents signed a letter prior to respondents reported that their school had expe- the team leaving for the camp, rienced what they consider a hazing incident dur- specifically stipulating that play- ing their tenure there. (Defining hazing can be ers not participate in hazing dicey, but according to Nuwer’s 2000 book, High Tale of the Tape ideotape proved to be the damning evidence last May against 33 senior girls expelled from Glenbrook North High School in Northbrook, Ill., after a powderpuff football game turned ugly. But adhesive tape has become the modus operandi among high school hazers this fall. Consider these reports from the first two months of the 2003-04 school year: V • In Wisconsin, at least seven Port Washington High School students were each issued disorderly conduct fines ranging from $81 to $500 for a homecomingrelated hazing incident that included binding cheerleaders to a tree with duct tape and then covering them with syrup, eggs, flour and other items. One football player and one cheerleader were suspended from the homecoming game for their involvement in the incident, and a cheerleading coach was placed on administrative leave. • In Pennsylvania, four Lakeland-Lehman High School varsity football players received 10-day suspensions for taping the head, arms and legs of a 15-year-old junior-varsity quarterback to a wheeled chair, then allegedly rubbing painreliever cream in his eyes and face. When they tried to wheel the boy into the school’s gymnasium, the chair got caught on a door threshold and tipped over, leaving the boy with a broken jaw. • In Ohio, seven Bellefontaine High School football players faced criminal charges after they allegedly taped a sophomore player to a locker room bench and broke his hand, sidelining the player for the rest of the season. • In Fulton, Md., seven Reservoir High School soccer players were suspended for taping a freshman to a goal post and then kicking soccer balls at him. — M.P. 102 ATHLETIC BUSINESS December 2003 activities, according to Saul School Hazing: When Rites Become Wrongs, hazing Lerner, athletic director for the “involves activity that requires new members to district. “The expectations are show subservience to older members of the everywhere — and in print. The group, lowering the self-esteem of newcomers.” message is out there,” Lerner Another common rule of thumb: “If you have to told New York’s Newsday. “Is ask if it’s hazing, it is.”) that enough to stop a crime?” Nearly one in three respondents indicated that Apparently not, as McElroy, either they do not have a specific hazing-preven- four other coaches who accom- tion policy in place or their school’s code of con- panied the team to the camp duct does not address hazing in any way. Several and the three accused players respondents are in the process of updating their were called to testify before a policies, and one — who encountered hazing this Wayne County, Pa., grand jury fall but isn’t offering details — is creating a policy. this fall. The players were also “No matter what you do, you’re never going to suspended from school but will stop everything that’s possible from occurring. be tried as juveniles on charges Hazing does happen, and it could happen any- ranging from aggravated and where,” says John Morgan, athletic director for simple assault to involuntary Bexley (Ohio) City Schools, which implemented a deviate sexual intercourse. new anti-hazing policy June 1 for its three elemen- In the wake of Mepham’s inci- tary schools, one middle school and one high dent — and perhaps because of school. “We just have to create an environment it — numerous other hazing that makes it less likely to occur. If kids are out reports made headlines in there, getting hurt and intimidated, we can’t just newspapers around the country brush it off. We have an obligation to make a safe during the first two months of learning environment for them.” the 2003 high school fall sports “I have been in education long enough to know season. (See “Tale of the Tape,” that we’ve probably had some incidents,” says left.) Don Patrick, athletic director at Newton-Conover As these stories demon- (N.C.) High School, who admits his school should strate, the victims aren’t the have a written hazing-prevention policy in place only ones who suffer in a hazing but doesn’t. “We have always asked our coaches episode. The Bellmore-Merrick to take a strong no-tolerance rule toward hazing. School Board has paid a high We let student-athletes know that they face the price for canceling the football possibility of being eliminated from any team if season, not only financially but found guilty of any form of hazing, we try to teach also publicly, in the form of a ‘togetherness’ approach and let student-athletes irate parents, student protests and parents know that hazing violates that expec- and potential lawsuits. tation, and we hope tomorrow is as good as yes- “Anytime a hazing incident — terday.” especially one involving sexual There’s no question in Nuwer’s mind that misconduct — occurs at a administrators in schools across the country need school, it’s the biggest problem to implement some sort of hazing-prevention pro- that school will ever have,” says gram to make students aware of the consequences Hank Nuwer, a professor at Indi- that come with violating it. An effective policy ana University and Franklin Col- accomplishes four major objectives, he says. It lege, and author of several protects a school legally, it makes students aware athleticbusiness.com AB DEC-hazing 11/13/03 11:47 AM Page 104 that their actions will not go unpunished, it demon- Since last spring, officials from Glenbrook North large that hazing will not be tolerated and it invites and its school district developed a task force to input from victims and concerned observers. examine the factors that contribute to hazing, such Says Morgan, “Having a policy is like having as underage drinking, bullying and parental insurance: You need it, but you hope you never involvement. (At least two parents were charged have to use it.” with providing alcohol to students prior to the W powder-puff football game.) The task force ith a history that dates back to ancient Greece, includes officials from other schools, teachers, par- hazing as a rite of initiation takes many forms, from ents, students, state representatives, community playful foolishness (requiring newbies to carry leaders and police officers. older players’ equipment, for example) to danger- The Glenbrook North debacle was the last ous and sometimes fatal practices (forcing exces- straw for Bill Stanley, a business teacher and head sive alcohol consumption). Once the domain of boys’ tennis coach at West Aurora High School, college fraternities and sororities, hazing has now located about 45 miles southwest of Northbrook. become common — some experts may When he realized his school did not have a writ- argue even more common — in college ten policy against hazing, he created his own task and high school athletics. force of sorts. As a class project, Stanley encour- “ANYTIME A HAZING INCIDENT — ESPECIALLY ONE INVOLVING SEXUAL MISCONDUCT — OCCURS AT A SCHOOL, IT’S THE BIGGEST PROBLEM THAT SCHOOL WILL EVER HAVE.” That trickle-down effect is illustrated aged the 29 students in his spring semester Busi- by a series of major incidents that came ness Law II class to search the Internet for to light at all three levels this year. Wal- anti-hazing policies at other high schools and ter Dean Jennings, an 18-year-old fresh- school districts around the country, compile man at the State University of New York them, solicit input from classmates and other Plattsburgh and a pledge to Psi Epsilon teachers, and develop a district-wide policy for all Chi, an underground fraternity without students. The school board welcomed the input, campus recognition, fell unconscious made a few alterations to the policy, and put it and died in March after a 10-day hazing into effect this summer. ritual known as “water torture,” during Stanley also has a personal stake in the policy. In which he drank so much water (some- 1990, his friend Nicholas Haben, a freshman at times via a funnel) that his brain swelled. ATHLETIC BUSINESS December 2003 Western Illinois University, died from alcohol poi- Around the same time the Mepham story was soning after a lacrosse club drinking ritual. In fact, breaking, news came from the University of Mary- Haben’s mother, Alice, who speaks to groups land that 44 members of the men’s and women’s about the hazards of hazing, was instrumental in lacrosse teams were suspended for all or part of providing information and insight to Stanley’s the fall season because of hazing allegations involv- class. (See “Rite Answers,” May 2000, p. 32.) ing underage drinking. 104 coming “tradition.”) strates to other students and the community at West Aurora has never experienced a serious But the story that really caught the nation’s hazing incident, Stanley says, and he wants to attention — and that of Oprah Winfrey, who aired make sure it never does by heightening hazing a video of the incident in its entirety on her show awareness. “I figured if the kids created it, the kids — happened last May during an off-campus pow- would follow it,” he says of the policy, adding that der-puff football game at Glenbrook North High teachers and coaches emphasized the policy to School in the Chicago suburb of Northbrook, Ill. students at the beginning of the school year and Caught on tape were senior girls beating junior each sports season. classmates and smearing mud, paint, garbage and Following that credo, Bexley, Ohio, officials last feces on them. Five victims were hospitalized, 16 spring developed a community-wide committee to students were charged with misdemeanor battery update that district’s previously vague policy. In and 33 seniors were expelled after the incident — addition to including administrators, coaches, the which generated hundreds of e-mails and phone mayor and the police chief as members, about 20 calls to Glenbrook North administrators during the or so students invited by Bexley High School’s stu- final weeks of the academic year, lambasting the dent council participated in updating the policy. school, its students and staff. (The incident was “The only way that kids’ behavior is going to not an isolated one: In September, as many as 60 change is to empower kids,” says Morgan, head of upperclassmen boys and girls from Huron High the committee. “Hazing is related to athletics, but School in South Dakota allegedly dumped vomit, it’s not an athletics-only issue. However, if you can urine and cow manure on 20 freshman girls at an get the message to the athletes, you go a long way off-campus site as part of an unsanctioned home- toward changing the behavior of a lot of other stuathleticbusiness.com AB DEC-hazing 11/13/03 11:09 AM Page 105 dents, as well. The main thing the committee did Catholic Diocese. Athletic directors are responsi- was take hazing and make it something that was ble for enforcing the policy. OK to talk about. People knew we were working on To at least one parent, that policy is not enough. this. That, in and of itself, was probably a deterrent The victim’s father told the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette to hazing behavior.” that the policy was a case of “too little, too late as Bexley’s policy — which requires students, far as I’m concerned,” while the boy’s lawyer called faculty, administrators and other employees to the policy “damage control” and said one should report possible hazing incidents and was explained have been in place long before his client to individual high school classes during sessions became a victim. with the school principal — does not spell out the T consequences for specific actions, because each case is different. Instead, it simply states that disci- hat said, the mere existence of a DO, YOU’RE NEVER GOING policy doesn’t guarantee compliance. plinary action, including civil and criminal penal- At SUNY Plattsburgh, such anti-hazing ties, is possible. measures as a hotline for anonymous Neither West Aurora nor Bexley officials waited tips, education workshops, a bill of for an ugly incident to occur to jump-start their rights for fraternity and sorority mem- new hazing policies. But last January, Central bers and a pamphlet distributed to all Catholic High School in Pittsburgh adopted one students titled “Hazing: A Trust after a 2002 football practice during which a Betrayed” were in place at the time of sophomore and junior restrained another boy and Jennings’ death. Glenbrook North reportedly touched his face with their genitals. reportedly had an anti-hazing policy in After teammates refused to talk to school officials place, too. So what went wrong? about what happened, administrators withdrew “NO MATTER WHAT YOU TO STOP EVERYTHING THAT’S POSSIBLE FROM OCCURRING. WE JUST HAVE TO CREATE AN ENVIRONMENT THAT MAKES IT LESS LIKELY TO OCCUR.” “Having a policy is certainly not the team from the Western Pennsylvania Inter- enough,” says Elizabeth Allan, professor of higher scholastic Athletic League football playoffs. The education leadership at the University of Maine new policy requires athlete supervision at all times and co-founder of StopHazing.org, an Internet and is in place at all schools within the Pittsburgh resource with the motto “Educating to eliminate CIRCLE 91 ON REPLY CARD athleticbusiness.com December 2003 ATHLETIC BUSINESS 105 AB DEC-hazing 11/13/03 11:48 AM Page 106 hazing.” “The issue of hazing is far too complex to sored by a local Coca-Cola bottler and an area just think that having something written on a piece newspaper. Three times a year (once per season), of paper will be the answer.” two players from each school and each sport are A policy’s effectiveness depends on the people invited to dine with their peers and discuss impor- placed in the position of enforcing the policy, she tant issues like hazing and ways in which it can be says, including their title and authority, their prevented. understanding of hazing Additionally, Nuwer suggests athletic directors and their morals regard- apply for grant money to help train administrators ing hazing. Indeed, some about hazing-related issues. They should also hazing incidents report- interview students involved in hazing to find out edly occur in the pres- why they did it, and even rally judges to include as ence of coaches, who part of a convicted student’s community-service either turn a blind eye to agreement talking to groups at surrounding the behavior or consider schools about the cold realities of hazing. “Kids it a good-natured and tra- aren’t going to listen to someone my age, who’s ditional component of almost 58,” Nuwer says. “They’re going to look to participating in team their peers.” sports. SUPPORT FOR THE HAZING VICTIMS AT MEPHAM HIGH SCHOOL IN BELLMORE, N.Y,. INCREASED AS SOME RESIDENTS CALLED FOR THE have mentoring programs in place that match tors hope they have older players with younger players, similar to the found successful ways to buddy system. “Usually, a freshman’s first contact mitigate hazing. For with the high school is athletics,” Morgan says, example, in addition to referring to fall sports programs that start practice enforcing a district-wide prior to classes beginning. Every upperclassman zero-tolerance policy football player at Bexley this fall was assigned two against hazing, Clovis (Calif.) freshmen to help ease the transition to high West High School athletic school. “If they can develop positive relationships director Karen Sowby also with older students before they get into those makes her student-athletes halls, they’ll feel more comfortable, and the older sign and abide by a co-curricu- ones will be looking out for them,” Morgan says. REMOVAL OF HEAD lar code of ethics. If anyone Because many hazing incidents occur off school FOOTBALL COACH violates the code, that stu- property, some of the latest hazing-prevention dent-athlete and his or her methods focus on camps and road trips. By imple- parents must face an athletic menting policies that make varsity and junior var- board comprised of Sowby, sity players travel on different buses, stay in the school’s deputy principal, the learning director separate cabins and require coaches to sleep in and the coach. A first-offense violation of the “Haz- the same rooms as or in close proximity to their ing/Intimidating/Harassment” section of the code players, schools are trying to convey the point that results in a suspension from athletics ranging in hazing will not be tolerated. Top photo by David L. Poress, bottom photo by Karen Wiles-Stable/Copyright, 2003 Newsday. Reprinted with permission. Distributed by Tribune Media Services. KEVIN MCELROY. IN EARLY NOVEMBER, THEY GOT THEIR WISH. 106 That’s why some schools and districts now Many athletic direc- ATHLETIC BUSINESS December 2003 length from two to 18 weeks, depending on the The National Federation of State High School severity of the violation. A second offense can Associations hopes to boost its involvement in result in a 19- to 36-week suspension, while a third hazing-prevention tactics next year by developing offense will likely force a student-athlete to sit out a handbook for all athletic directors that defines for one to two years. hazing, offers suggestions for coping with a hazing “Coaches remind their athletes weekly about incident and provides resources to combat hazing. proper behavior,” says Sowby, who also makes her Developed with input from Nuwer, the handbook coaches sign a code of conduct. “Many coaches is expected to be available in time for the begin- end their Friday practice by reminding their ath- ning of the 2004-05 school year. letes to ‘Have a safe weekend,’ ‘Remember to do “We’ve always had a position that hazing is the right thing,’ stuff like that. We tell our athletes unacceptable, but it’s just getting worse and to use the code as their excuse for just saying no. worse,” says Elliot Hopkins, director of educational ‘Sorry, I am an athlete and I can’t do that. I want to services for the federation. “This handbook is not stay on the team.’ ” going to be a cure-all. We just want to give those On the other side of the country, student-ath- schools that have no policy a point of reference.” letes from the Eastern Connecticut Conference Other points of reference include laws against participate in student leadership luncheons spon- hazing that are on the books in no fewer than 43 athleticbusiness.com AB DEC-hazing 11/13/03 11:48 AM Page 107 states. But “a lot of them aren’t worth the paper Harmless or not, these incidents are sending they’re written on,” Nuwer says, adding that some the wrong message to high school student-ath- are too specific while others remain too vague. letes who emulate the pros, Nuwer claims. Some state laws aren’t even invoked in hazing “There’s been no leadership at all from profes- cases because prosecutors focus on the heftier sional sports teams,” he says. “They’ve been charges, such as involuntary manslaughter, under- totally derelict in this area.” age drinking or sexual assault. Even more galling to Nuwer is the sexual nature C of some hazing practices. This is an area he’s cur- rucial to combating hazing is understanding why rently researching, but his preliminary findings students haze in the first place. In an Alfred Univer- indicate that many male hazers engage in sexual sity study of more than 1,540 high school students misconduct as a means to prove their masculinity. published in 2000 — in which 48 percent of respon- “At that age, there is a great concern to not be con- dents admitted they’d been subjected to activity sidered insecure sexually. Students actually partic- they consider hazing — students revealed that the ipate in this deviant conduct to show that they’re top three reasons they haze is because it’s “fun not gay,” Nuwer says, his voice expressing some of and exciting,” to feel “closer as a group” and “to the frustration his research has wrought. “It’s a dis- prove myself.” Such responses as “I wanted tasteful topic. I mean, we’re talking sodomy.” revenge” and “I was scared to say ‘no’ “ received fewer responses. One day after Nuwer made his comments, the sordid details of another hazing involv- Yet consider what 16-year-old Josh Jackson told ing sexual misconduct, this one in The Virginian-Pilot last spring in a story the paper Friendship, N.Y., began to emerge. published about hazing: “I believe hazing makes A 17-year-old soccer player for Friend- athletes strive to become stronger physically so ship High School was charged with sex- one day, they can haze others.” That mind-set can ual abuse after a locker room incident be one of the most damaging factors at play when during which the boy allegedly held a trying to empower students to fight hazing among 14-year-old player to the floor, and their peers, experts say. exposed his genitals to the side of the Almost all of the Alfred University study respon- younger boy’s face. Following the Bell- dents (98 percent) thought dangerous hazing was more-Merrick School District’s lead, wrong, 86 percent considered humiliating hazing Friendship administrators canceled the wrong and 43 percent assumed it was illegal. That remainder of the soccer team’s season. said, 35 percent of the students still indicated that “FRATERNITIES AND SORORITIES ARE BETTER ARMED AND BETTER PREPARED THAN THEY’VE EVER BEEN. THAT WILL HAPPEN WITH HIGH SCHOOL ATHLETIC DIRECTORS, TOO.” Don’t be surprised to hear about hazing was socially acceptable. (For more results even more canceled seasons. If the news stories from the study, go to www.alfred.edu/news/html/ that broke nearly every week this fall are any indi- hazing _study.html.) cation, hazing appears to have reached a new level That’s not surprising, Nuwer says, considering of acceptance among high school student-athletes. that professional athletes engage in hazing on a And judging by the radically different reactions by regular basis. In a well-publicized 1998 incident, for schools and communities affected by those inci- example, three rookies were injured on the final dents, there appear to be no easy answers. night of the New Orleans Saints training camp at But change eventually comes about. For proof, the University of Wisconsin-La Crosse while run- Nuwer points to the Greek organizations on college ning a gauntlet of veterans and being struck with campuses. “What’s happening in high schools par- bags of coins. During NFL training camp this year, allels what happened with fraternities and sorori- veteran members of the Minnesota Vikings, ties in the ’70s, only then there was a rash of according to a lighthearted story in the Minneapo- alcohol-related hazing deaths,” Nuwer says, adding lis Star Tribune, taped rookies to a goal post, pulled that many organizations — despite what hap- down their shorts and poured water and Gatorade pened at SUNY Plattsburgh — now have strong on them. The Oakland Raiders of late have report- leadership programs in place that don’t tolerate edly made a practice of physically overpowering hazing. “Fraternities and sororities are better rookies, restraining them and giving them unap- armed and better prepared than they’ve ever pealing haircuts, and Houston Texans rookies been. That will happen with high school athletic were bound with tape and doused with Gatorade directors, too. I would bet it’s going to take during the preseason. Even LeBron James, the between eight and 10 years for it to happen — NBA’s No. 1 draft choice, isn’t immune, as his fel- unfortunately, it will take one death or more low Cleveland Cavaliers have made him carry their sodomy cases to shorten that amount of time — bags and buy them doughnuts. but it will happen.” ■ athleticbusiness.com December 2003 ATHLETIC BUSINESS 107