Newsweek
December 8, 2003 issue
Frat Hazing: A Dangerous New Drinking Game
By Sarah Childress
Even as Alpha Phi Alpha pledge Braylon Curry became incoherent, fraternity members
urged him to keep chugging from a gallon jug, threatening to beat him if he
stopped, Curry's parents say he told them. Hours later, the Southern Methodist
University junior had a seizure and was rushed to the hospital, becoming the
second reported victim this year of a prank that experts worry could become
a new hazing ritual.
Curry wasn't drinking whisky or beer, but water. Drinking as much as 15 liters
of water in a short period of time--the body processes only six to eight in
24 hours--causes hyponatremia, a potentially fatal sodium imbalance in the body,
says Dr. Kenney Weinmeister, who treated Curry at Presbyterian Hospital of Dallas.
(Curry has since recovered. The
fraternity's national office is investigating; local members could not be reached.)
The condition is seen in marathon runners and ravers on ecstasy, who can overcompensate
for their thirst.
But as hazing, "water torture" is more dangerous because fraternity
members may assume that if the pledges aren't drinking alcohol, they can take
drinking to the extreme with impunity, says expert Hank Nuwer. And like other
hazing activities that dehumanize pledges, it's easy for members to sanction
suffering in the name of brotherhood. Freshman Walter Jennings died in March
after he was forced to chug water while pledging an underground fraternity at
the State University of New York at Plattsburgh.
A student from another Eastern school, astonished to learn about Jennings, told
Nuwer that his fraternity forced its pledges to drink hot water until they vomited.
That frat was disbanded, but as SMU's frustrated officials have learned, hazing's
a long way from being expelled.
Copyright 2003 Newsweek