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Hazing: How did we get here? - Times Gazette
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John Grindrod: Frats and hazing, how did we get here?
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Hazing, drug abuse and harassment allegations plagued San Diego State fraternities for years, documents show
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Two East Tennessee State University students are among 20 area college and high school students to receive the 2021 Appalachian Highlands Twenty Under 20 Award, presented earlier this year by Kingsport-based STREAMWORKS, an educational program delivering enhanced opportunities to participate in mentor and project-based programs focused on science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) skills.
In a virtual awards ceremony streamed live from ETSU on May 29, students Sam Garcia and Caitlyn Ison were among recipients to receive the honor, which celebrates the outstanding accomplishments of 20 of the regionâs individuals who are under the age of 20. To receive the honor, these individuals must have demonstrated exemplary achievements in community service, entrepreneurialism, leadership, academics, and STEM activities, setting examples of personal excellence as a model for other young people.
September 5, 2018
It was an unseasonably cool day in August 1949 when a local construction firm picked up the Sigma Phi Epsilon house at 2395 Piedmont Avenue in Berkeley, California, and put it down less than half a mile away in a vacant lot at 2240 Piedmont. There it was to serve as the headquarters for IPAR Berkeley’s new Institute of Personality Assessment and Research. The move, which cost the university $34,500, was not altogether successful. As the building crawled down Piedmont Avenue, the stucco cracked, the plaster buckled and peeled, and when the house finally came to rest on its new foundations, the moldings collapsed into the street. But when the institute’s director, Dr. Donald MacKinnon, stepped through the dust and around the debris to open the door to 2240 for the first time, he believed he could see the future of personality testing with greater clarity than ever before.