0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 6 U. THE NATIONAL COLLEGE NEWSPAPER News Features NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 1988 NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 1988 Student Body U. THE NATIONAL COLLEGE NEWSPAPEF HAING:M F- C How far will students go in search of acceptance? A persistent wave of hazing inci- dents over the past decade - some of them fatal - has prompted indi- vidual group, university and state leaders to enforce anti-hazing poli- cies. Will what some consider a rite of passage soon become a federal crime? Greek leaders reinforce laws to stop hazing By Junda Woo The Daily Texan U. of Texas, Austin A district president for Tau Kappa Epsilon (TKE) fraternity has been praised for bringing to light a hazing incident and set- ting an example for the crack- down on hazing. Jay Bohner, the fraternity's district president for Texas and Oklahoma, said he discovered members had led pledges to think they would have to drink a dis- tasteful concoction and teased them with questions that had no correct answers. He alerted U. of Texas (UT) administrators, and the fraternity was placed on prob- ation because of the incident. Bohner's action was praised by TKE chapter officials on campus and marks the first time a fraternity adviser has initiated a UT hazing investigation. "It speaks really well of our fraternity and shows how hard we're trying to fight it (hazing)," said chapter Vice President Dar- ryn Finn. "What we're trying to do is get the whole thing stopped," said Finn, a business junior. "Every- thing that we can do to help, we will." Bohner said he reported the in- cident, which he characterized as "mild," to set an example. "It's a cyclical thing, it gets worse every year," Bohner said. "Hazing undoes all the good soror- ities and fraternities do." Bohner said the chapter will submit details of its fall rush plans to the university and insti- tute a new, workshop-oriented program for pledges. Fii ~2~hm2Iflf ~h~aa~Heisman Program eases tensio by accInmatficniathletes nhe y Toage2 By Kevin Blocker ity, with a pair of Los Angeles guns li ByKeioBlckl------ ----"The beneficiaries of this program ing the way. Troy Aikman was the o) Colorado Daily o will be this year's freshman class. whelming pick, leading UCLA to an U. of Colorado The whole idea is to provide positive pressive start, but a cross-town-q U. of Colorado (CU) athletes will minority role models - male and terback named Rodney Peete could receive some additional advice about female - for our athletes, in order to sent a problem after the two mee how to cope with student life under a 1 build a cultural identity leading to their annual Pac-10 showdown. program proposed by the CU Athle- self-esteem for the individual," he Barry Sanders was probably the tic Department.