- In a Sept. 5, 2001, article in the New York Times, Maria Newman reported that 14 senior players from the Northern Highlands (New Jersey) Regional High School girls' field hockey team had been suspended after it was revealed that they had "forced sophomores to bark like dogs, simulate oral sex on a banana and play hockey with syrup in their pants. Some of the students had even videotaped the hazing and had been showing the tape around town."
- In May 2003, 31 students (28 of whom were girls) were expelled after a non-school-sanctioned football game devolved into a hazing incident that would eventually gain worldwide attention. The online encyclopedia Wikipedia reported that about 20 junior girls "were covered in paint, urine, feces, and animal guts. Some were shot with paintball guns, others were kicked and beaten. After it was over, at least five of the participants had injuries requiring medical attention, including one receiving stitches to her head."
- In July 2008, a group of Morton Ranch (Texas) High School cheerleaders were accused of subjecting members of the junior varsity cheerleading squad to a series of humiliating and potentially dangerous abuses, including being bound with duct tape and thrown into a swimming pool.
Labels: high-school, hazing, trends
Posted By: Aspen Education Group







