Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Having new players or freshman shave their heads seems to be a pretty standard practice over the years. I'm almost certain all of the other IAC schools do the same thing to their freshman players.
+1. I went to an elite private girls school in another city. We had a weeklong "Fish-inish," which was freshman initiation (and hazing). It was such a fun week. As freshmen, we eagerly looked forward to it.
Anonymous wrote:Having new players or freshman shave their heads seems to be a pretty standard practice over the years. I'm almost certain all of the other IAC schools do the same thing to their freshman players.
Anonymous wrote:Dude. What? This is not OK. I don't care what you call it, unless the freshmen boys voluntarily show up and are allowed to opt out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Apparently it is a "tradition" at SSSAS for the seniors on the boys' lacrosse team to shave the heads of the freshman boys (buzz cuts, designs, silly shapes, etc.). This is defended by the Head Coach, also the Athletic Director. I would call that hazing, not tradition. Why is it being allowed? It calls into question the values and philosophy of the institution as a whole.
Please get a grip. Every school does it. The freshman see it as a badge of honor that they made varsity. It does not call into question values or philosophy. It bonds the boys on the team.
Anonymous wrote:Every school does NOT do it. Stop trying to defend ridiculous behavior. Its hazing ...plain and simple.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Apparently it is a "tradition" at SSSAS for the seniors on the boys' lacrosse team to shave the heads of the freshman boys (buzz cuts, designs, silly shapes, etc.). This is defended by the Head Coach, also the Athletic Director. I would call that hazing, not tradition. Why is it being allowed? It calls into question the values and philosophy of the institution as a whole.
Please get a grip. Every school does it. The freshman see it as a badge of honor that they made varsity. It does not call into question values or philosophy. It bonds the boys on the team.
Anonymous wrote:Apparently it is a "tradition" at SSSAS for the seniors on the boys' lacrosse team to shave the heads of the freshman boys (buzz cuts, designs, silly shapes, etc.). This is defended by the Head Coach, also the Athletic Director. I would call that hazing, not tradition. Why is it being allowed? It calls into question the values and philosophy of the institution as a whole.