Friday, September 09, 2005

Asian Frat in Spotlight After Death

Roy Rivenburg:

The new millennium hasn't been kind to the brothers of Lambda Phi Epsilon.

In recent years, the nationwide Asian fraternity has been linked to a fatal stabbing in San Jose, a drug raid in Riverside and gunplay in Texas.

With the death Aug. 30 of a 19-year-old pledge after a football game in Irvine — a rough, no-pads, no helmets tackle contest for pledges — the fraternity again finds itself in an unflattering spotlight.

The latest incident, which is being investigated by Irvine police as a possible hazing case, could also damage the reputation of other Asian fraternities, said Walter M. Kimbrough, a college president who has written about ethnic fraternities.

Media coverage of the San Jose and Irvine fatalities has provided the public's first real exposure to Asian Greek organizations, Kimbrough said, and this could pose a public relations nightmare that could stall or sink the burgeoning movement.

Indeed, following the death of 19-year-old Kenny Luong of Rosemead in the football game, fellow pledges, some from Cal Poly Pomona who were rushing the UCI fraternity, swore off Greek life. They decided to launch a university community service club in their friend's name instead.

Members of Lambda Phi Epsilon acknowledge that Luong's death will make it tougher to recruit members this fall. But they insist it's too soon to write off their group or other Asian fraternities.

"It's going to affect all of us across the nation," said Matt Sun, president of Lambda's UC Santa Barbara chapter. "But we've been in this situation before [after the San Jose killing]. We've just gotta prove to people that our organization represents so much more than what happened…. It's always the bad news that gets media attention, but we do countless service projects to help the university and community."

None of this was envisioned by the students who founded Lambda Phi Epsilon in 1981 at UCLA.

"We were just a bunch of guys starting another fraternity," said Neil Miyazaki, one of the original 19 members. "It wasn't even expected to grow."

The concept wasn't original. Asian fraternities date back to 1916, said Kimbrough. But none caught on.

In another era, Lambda Phi Epsilon might have remained similarly obscure. But in the 1980s, with Asian enrollment climbing at California colleges — and fraternities enjoying a renaissance inspired in part by the 1978 movie "Animal House" — Lambda Phi Epsilon tapped into something larger.

Following the rise of black fraternities in the early 1900s, and Latino groups in the mid-1970s, Lambda Phi Epsilon helped inaugurate "a third wave of multicultural fraternities and sororities," Kimbrough said.

By 1990, spinoff chapters were operating at six California universities and one in Texas. From there, the movement exploded. Today, the fraternity has 44 chapters across the U.S. and Canada, according to its website.

But that rapid growth set the stage for trouble.

Unlike older fraternities, Lambda Phi Epsilon chapters don't answer to a centralized national office.

"It's more like a federation of local fraternities," said Sally Peterson, dean of students at UCI. When a traditional frat gets out of line, "we call the national office and they come in and really clean house," she said.

Older fraternities, worried about possible lawsuits, have full-time staffs and impose strict policies to keep a lid on the potentially volatile Greek mixture of booze, youth and machismo.

Independent frats such as Lambda Phi Epsilon, which also doesn't belong to UCI's fraternity council, are typically harder to discipline, Peterson said.

That doesn't mean they're rowdy, however. UCI's Lambda chapter, formed in 1989, had a clean slate before the fatal football game, she said: "That's why this was such a shock to us."

Lambda Phi Epsilon's track record at other campuses is mixed.

In 2003, San Jose State University Lambdas were involved in a midnight melee that left one member fatally stabbed in the heart and several others hospitalized. Police said about 60 frat brothers faced off against rivals from Pi Alpha Phi, another Asian fraternity.

Part of the dispute revolved around which group was the first Asian fraternity to spread nationally.

Both frats, which had also clashed at UC Davis, were suspended by San Jose State. A warrant has been issued for a man who has never been caught, according to the San Jose Mercury News. Police said a "code of silence" among witnesses had made it tough to crack the case.

In 2002, police in Austin, Texas, arrested a Lambda member after he allegedly fired six shots at the frat house during a fight, according to the campus newspaper.

And Riverside police seized LSD, ecstasy and other drugs during a 2001 raid on Lambda's house at UC Riverside, according to news reports. The chapter president, who police said sold drugs to an undercover cop, later pleaded guilty to possession of ecstasy.

Family speaks out about pledge death

7 Comments:

At 1:18 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Note the causualness about the existence of this particular non-white, ethnically based fraternity.

Of course it would be impossible to found a fraternity for whites, although some guys would probably like to.

 
At 1:13 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

"In 2002, police in Austin, Texas, arrested a Lambda member after he allegedly fired six shots at the frat house during a fight, according to the campus newspaper."

I'd like to point out to you, that you dont have your facts straight. The criminal police arrested that night fired six shots at the Lambda Phi Epsilon house. The criminal was not a Lambda member, but was indirectly affiliated with a rival asian fraternity. Get your fact straight. And there is "allegedly." The criminal was charged and convicted.

 
At 5:19 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

all "traditional greeks" are all white, the excuse "we have a black guy...we have a latino or asian too" works for everyone...even ethnic greeks have the token white guy...the prominant role of rascism in greek life is the born from the all-white tradition.

 
At 1:00 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

It's unfortunate that the media focuses on the few negative incidents that Lambda Phi Epsilon has been involved in when thousands of Lambdas have contributed in many positive ways to the community nationwide.

Tragic events and senseless acts happen all the time and even more so in college enviroments. We should remember that it isn't good to solely place the blame for these acts on the fraternity as a whole when a chapter or individuals within that chapter are to blame.

For example, people worldwide hate Americans because it seems like we're pro-war but a lot of us aren't. We have to accept this stereotype - there's nothing we can do about how the worlds sees us.

Nevertheless as members of Lambda Phi Epsilon we stand side by side, good or bad. I just hope the media and readers understand that the world isn't just black and white - there are a lot of shades of grey in between.

In regards to the "casualness of the existence of this particular non-white, ethnically based fraternity:" What's the problem? Pledge the fraternity you want to pledge - if you're welcome to the group stay if not then don't. You can found a fraternity for white people you just can't put it in writing. But trust me, if you do found a white fraternity and people "know" it's a white fraternity I'm pretty sure minorities won't pledge.

 
At 11:10 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

I pledged for Lambda Phi Epsilon and refused to cross.

 
At 10:03 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

I agree Lambda Phi Epsilon are loser!!

 
At 1:27 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

I'm laughing so hard at the comment before I pledge and refused to cross more like you pledged and couldn't make it.

And its such a shame because Lambdas do such great things for the community its just a couple of bad acts that completely out shines the hundreds of great things they do but never get the attention for, because media does not report things that are good they report the stuff that gets them ratings like a death.

 

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