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W W W.O U DA I LY.C O M
2 013 PA C E M A K E R F I N A L I S T
T H U R S D A Y , N O V E M B E R 14 , 2 0 1 3
A SPECIAL REPORT FROM THE OKLAHOMA DAILY
o r B ken bones?
Part two: Hazing allegations in the greek community
A
CARMEN FORMAN ⢠SPECIAL PROJECTS EDITOR
fter allegations of injuries suffered during calisthenics and overly probing questions of new recruits at several OU fraternities, one campus chapter has been reprimanded for hazing.
A university investigation in September into alleged hazing at OUâs chapter of Delta Tau Delta found hazing did occur. The hazing itself involved âcalisthenicsâ and no physical abuse, Student Conduct director Steve Ashmore said. He refused to go into more
detail because the incident involved new fraternity members and because hazing is against the law in Oklahoma. âI donât perceive that the university has a broad hazing problem,â Ashmore said. âI was a drill sergeant in the army; I know all about hazing. Iâm a professional. The hazing that I have seen [at OU] has been primarily less physical than years past. Itâs primarily been calisthenics and house cleaning, things like that.â The chapter is being punished with an administrative fee and community service, and it is required to hold a chapter-wide hazing education program, Ashmore said. see HAZING page 2
Update: Student Conduct published an organizational strike on its website for Phi Delta Theta on Wednesday. This is the third organizational strike given to an OU fraternity this semester for violations of the Student Alcohol Policy.
PSYCHOLOGY RESEARCH
Study looks at origins of honor names Honor names are found more often in South and West US Separated band makes music from across the country
BENNETT HALL Campus Reporter
OU physics junior Steven McLean Hefnerâs middle name hails back two generations of men with the McLean name. By passing on the name, Hefnerâs parents demonstrated a male honor-based cultural phenomenon, according to a study recently released by OU psychology researchers. Psychology researchers Ryan Brown, Mauricio Carvallo and Mikiko Imura released a study last week showing the correlation between OU studentsâ and Americansâ naming habits and their cultural values. The researchers wanted to understand what causes people, as in Hefnerâs case, to pass names on from one male to another, and what this says about the culture theyâre living in. Brown said using patronyms and matronyms indicates a familyâs dedication to upholding its honor, known as âhonor naming.â Cultural values in some parts of the world â particularly the Americas, the Middle East and countries bordering the Mediterranean Sea â emphasize the continuation of male first names and the sense of masculinity and power they suggest, Brown said. âWe identify honor states in the U.S. as being in the South or the West, where, like in other honor cultures worldwide, reputation management is a key aspect of everyday social life,â Brown said. In these areas, there is a higher than average rate of men who are trying to maintain a reputation of being tough, strong and brave, Brown said. On the other hand, women try to retain a reputation of loyalty and chastity, but maybe only toughness secondarily. âI think honor culture influences are probably diluting with time, but theyâre still alive
L&A: While one member of Kinetic goes to OU, the rest of the band plays shows in Idaho. (Page 8)
Oklahoma football falls in rankings
Sports: OU dropped to No. 18 in this week in the BCS. It was a bug drop, but it was also deserved. (Page 10)
MICHELLE NEHRENZ/ THE DAILY
Psychology professor Ryan Brown conducted research about what names can tell us about society and culture.
prefer to name their future sons after themselves or their fathers or their grandfathers,â Brown said. âYou donât see the same pattern with girls and matronyms. Thereâs such a big influence on masculinity, male lineage.â The first study surveyed the honor value preferences of a sample of university students enrolled in RYAN BROWN, âIntroduction to Psychology,â a general education PSYCHOLOGY PROFESSOR course that provides a reliable and diverse cross and well, and you can measure them in OU stu- section of students, Brown said. âThere was a significant link between having dents,â Brown said. Brownâs lab maintains measurements of how these family honor values and desiring to use patprevalent honor-related names are present in the ronyms,â he said. The second study looked at the naming cycles of OU student body. âWe found in our research that guys tend to
âI think honor culture influences are probably diluting with time, but theyâre still alive and well, and you can measure them in OU students.â
SEE JUNIOR PAGE 3
VOL. 98, NO. 64 Š 2013 OU Publications Board FREE â Additional copies 25¢
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