Ottawa Citizen

U.S. COLLEGES CRACK DOWN ON FRATERNITI­ES

University of Oklahoma not alone in dealing with bigotry

- KIMBERLY HEFLING AND JESSE J. HOLLAND

Their reputation­s sullied by race-tainted incidents, many colleges are clamping down on campus fraterniti­es. Despite some swift and tough actions by schools — and in some cases, public humiliatio­n — episodes such as the racist chants by members of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon chapter at the University of Oklahoma keep surfacing.

In recent years, numerous other fraterniti­es have been suspended and students expelled from school for racially tinged parties or behaviour, such as hanging nooses or shouting racial profanitie­s.

“All too often the outcry has been, ‘Look at those bad apples we need to root out,’” said Nolan Cabrera, a professor in the Center for the Study of Higher Education at the University of Arizona. “When in fact the conversati­on we need to have is, ‘Why is this occurring on such a widespread level throughout the country?’”

Many incidents come to light after the students themselves post pictures or videos online, drawing public attention; others are reported by onlookers or whistleblo­wers.

Either way, “it’s hard to ignore a current on many, many campuses of behaviours that are just offensive and disgusting at the far end and maybe just lack common sense at the other end,” said Kevin Kruger, president of NASPA: Student Affairs Administra­tors in Higher Education, a profession­al organizati­on.

For example, Sigma Alpha Epsilon suspended all activity at Clemson University in South Carolina in December after white students dressed as gang members at a “Cripmas” party. That same month Phi Delta Theta halted its chapter at the University of Pennsylvan­ia for issuing a holiday card with members posing with what it called a Beyoncé sex doll.

Sororities have had similar problems. In 2014, Chi Omega closed its Penn State chapter in connection with a photo appearing on the Internet showing members wearing sombreros and fake moustaches and holding offensive signs — one read, “Will mow lawn for weed + beer.” Two sororities at the University of Alabama were accused of denying membership to black women, prompting the university to announce in fall 2013 that more than 20 minority women were being offered membership in historical­ly all-white sororities.

At Oklahoma, the university quickly expelled two students and banned Sigma Alpha Epsilon last week after fraternity members were filmed engaging in a racist chant that referenced lynching and indicated that black students never would be admitted to that university’s chapter.

Two students identified in the video have apologized publicly.

The national fraternity condemned the incident and started investigat­ing racism allegation­s at universiti­es in Louisiana and Texas after hearing that young men at two schools sang or knew of the same racist chant.

But the damage was done. The school’s president, former Sen. David Boren, said the fraternity “won’t be back — at least not as long as I’m president of the university.”

Fraterniti­es, both historical­ly white and those mostly made up of minorities, long have been a fixture of university life. Defenders point to the system’s charitable works and social and profession­al benefits for members.

Research by Nella Van Dyke, a professor at University of California, Merced, found that ethnic and racially biased hate crimes are more likely to be reported at predominan­tly white campuses and those with a large fraternity population.

She said the problems are not everywhere, but they do exist.

Beyond racism, fraterniti­es in recent years had to confront issues of sexual assault, binge drinking and hazing among their members. “I think many fraterniti­es have a culture that makes them prone to conflict and kind of bigoted interactio­ns, whether it’s against women or against minorities,” Van Dyke said.

Matthew Hughey, a sociology professor at the University of Connecticu­t who studies racial identity, estimated that about three per cent or four per cent of the members of the majority-white fraterniti­es and sororities are non-white.

“We shouldn’t be surprised when unequal and segregated organizati­ons say racist things. Of course they do,” Hughey said.

The national fraterniti­es are working to eliminate this kind of behaviour and to train members to speak up instead of being pressured to conform, said Peter Smithhisle­r, president and chief executive officer of the North-American Interfrate­rnity Conference.

Fraterniti­es have about 372,000 members among 7.7 million male undergradu­ate college students, according to the North-American Interfrate­rnity Conference.

They also have outsized influence on their campuses, with fraterniti­es claiming major college donors, state lawmakers, governors, members of Congress and presidents as members. Nineteen presidents have held undergradu­ate or honorary fraternity membership, the conference said.

I think many fraterniti­es have a culture that makes them prone to conflict and kind of bigoted interactio­ns.

 ??  SUE OGROCKI/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? University of Oklahoma students march to the now closed University of Oklahoma’s Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity house during a rally in reaction to an incident in which members of a fraternity were caught on video chanting a racial slur.
 SUE OGROCKI/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS University of Oklahoma students march to the now closed University of Oklahoma’s Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity house during a rally in reaction to an incident in which members of a fraternity were caught on video chanting a racial slur.

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