JFIFC    $ &%# #"(-90(*6+"#2D26;=@@@&0FKE>J9?@=C  =)#)==================================================nK" }!1AQa"q2#BR$3br %&'()*456789:CDEFGHIJSTUVWXYZcdefghijstuvwxyz w!1AQaq"2B #3Rbr $4%&'()*56789:CDEFGHIJSTUVWXYZcdefghijstuvwxyz ??Z;YnINkOX6֥OG#rƠzh|Eh8&QC wʗW  'R!0q ĖjxYQ&$sX*ged-%{#Y隌0x~";c-ΡՖPr2}EY_ ޢm&RϺrcݐ%2x4x!Ia#͏HNy}W9FZhJPcq)/Sæ+EqқCW#Nܳsc<#'ᥔ mE8#38j^F\Z+$˞1{ULyJ${PmGSjܣNg Y\EI3ަM>{M&L]򗖍G$>zKam&"w/Z *A@<ӯћ\/í;g2O<{ֽ}# \12~kIYOU$ ^}u%ο:&*uѬG|VǵyHF#/A珛ڡ[c&dbݧ8ں; j]WI A `sduO"n[y̩$ t8$%Ѽ)schF۔!U}MgOg.K/${C1PG4*Vv7yfF_f `V]XG 5Vjc([8*KM!㷭 hYZ!2;pg5\!ANf<'WUS QMY&f EDflPIT " }m:Aڲib:޳w , ۑ޽63@+4d~pqӛ{TIZě*wATԥM\Sk)/BkO-$<.}k#Qc-J O*}χ/]:f"yp>E;6zke.uf8asd8uN6H3\ꮱNs7!a ,> \1X-aW'@I6kf˾)DݥP5r$~}+cG1ǡܰr0* ` ㊘{|U;zp~D- (lhwgz1$o* g tڧ# 듣IDʰ^H]P +LH@œw#_=ઑ?J[ >T)E9JpjecCԊ`t ȏ"1b>EA}âƬDQU(Xkľp(fPQ"Q,3C"1jdF kc?and died the following day.<br>I became particularly interested in the consequences of hazing when I had lunch last summer with a former athlete of mine, now a successful professional with a graduate degree. She told me that even though she has many good memories from high school, the emotional trauma caused from the hazing rituals she endured from joining a sorority in high school 15 years ago still affects her to this day. The impact that hazing has had on her peace of mind became clear to me as she described her hazing experience:<br> The hazing lasted six weeks, but it seemed like six months. Every day we had to do something degrading at school, such as singing stupid songs in the hallways or wearing ragged clothes. Wednesdays were the worst. On those days we were taken to a park  to prove our worthiness in front of a crowd of strangers and our fellow classmates. Typically we were forced to drink glasses of mineral oil and raw eggs until we vomited on ourselves, after which the senior sorority girls would pour trash and foul-smelling concoctions over our heads. Sick, smelly and always in tears, we then had to perform skits as the sorority screamed at us for being so pathetic. <br>Although hazing is commonly associated with high school and college students, the study by Alfred University found that 25 percent of those who admitted to being hazed said that they had first been hazed before the age of 13. At the high school level,