sohotrightnow wrote:9. Tennessee
Go Vols! My alumni pride is at an all-time high!
McGill is also a great time but is Canadian, so why are they on the list?
DanGenck wrote:Did anyone notice that UCSB Lacrosse is in the Top 10 of this website? Ouch.
http://badjocks.com/archive/2006/Univer ... iation.htm
When did hazing become cool again?
StrykerFSU wrote:To get back on topic...you don't have to be forcing someone to do something for it to be considered hazing. Any of you who were ever pledgemasters should know that. I suggest everyone talks to their players about the dangers of posting these kinds of photos because it is no joke. Just ask those boys up at Marquette.
That being said, Jason Whitlock posted another fabulous column on Page 2 about this issue.
http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/page2/story?page=whitlock/060518
Rob Graff wrote:http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/page2/story?page=whitlock/060518
Best Article I've Seen On This Topic.
Wade wrote:Here I go dating my self, but I'm amazed at the younger set (are we at Generation Z yet?) and what they will post on the internet. People in my office have MySpace pages with rather scandalous pictures posted along side the name of the firm for which they work.
Ravaging Beast wrote:The question is how do you punish teams for photos taken two or three years ago. You can punish individuals. Maybe a coach. It doesn't seem fair to suspend a program either. Just some thoughts.
From the LA Times...http://www.latimes.com/sports/la-sp-hazing19may19,0,5591191.story?coll=la-home-sports
"Our coaches are not responsible 24 hours a day, seven days a week for the behavior of our student-athletes," Husak said. "Our student-athletes have to assume responsibility for their own behavior." -LMU Athletic Director, Bill Husak
UCSB Looks Into Case of Alleged Team Hazing
By Aria Miran — Staff Writer
Published Monday May 22, 2006
After seeing photographs on the Internet of what might potentially be hazing, the university has suspended the UCSB Women’s Lacrosse team pending an investigation into the matter.
The photographs in question were posted on www.badjocks.com and were subsequently brought to the attention of university administrators. The website, the slogan for which is “Where COPS meets SportsCenter,” posts articles or pictures documenting alleged illegal activity committed by athletes or their coaches, from little league to professional teams.
Taken in 2004, the eight pictures posted on the site were supposedly obtained from www.webshots.com, and depict various players at a team party, on the playing field or in the hallway of a campus residence hall. In a couple of pictures, some team members appear to be taking shots of alcohol, while in another, two team members lift up their skirts. Other pictures show smiling team members wearing uniforms with writing scrawled across the shirts and on their skin.
According to campus policies, hazing is defined as “any method of initiation or pre-initiation into a student organization or any pastime or amusement engaged in with respect to such an organization which causes, or is likely to cause, bodily danger, physical harm, or personal degradation or disgrace resulting in physical, or mental harm to any student or other person.”
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