-W w ~,w w ,7w _w _w- The campus alcohol problem: We may be taking too much for granted... David Baum, a second-year law student and president of a small campus group of People Acting to Reduce the Abuse of Alcohol and other Drugs through Education (PARAADE), says he understands why the number of drinkers is so high. "Students don't perceive hangovers and these other bad effects as being a danger in their lives." There is one statistic, Herzog notes, that does reflect a truly negative consequence. The leading cause of death for young adults in America is the alcohol-related accident. According to Herzog, "that speaks for itself." But some educators would rather look for the drinking "problem" within the psychology of campus drinking - a cultural phenomenon that equates alcohol with fun on campus. "Most social activities on this campus still center (around) alcohol," observes Associate Director of-Housing John Heidke, who has watched this trend in the residence halls for the last three years. The observation would hardly shock most University students. And it would hardly sway them to stop drinking, says Associate Director of Residence Education And campus peer pressure, cited all too often as a rationalization for student drinking, is still being mentioned by educators as a "sign that students are perhaps unable to make their own decisions about life," Herzog says. Dr. Beverlie Conant Sloane, an alcohol educator at Dartmouth College and national authority on student health issues, wrote in a 1986 American College Health Association bulletin on campus drinking that "today, many students don't think they have the option not to drink." Parnes agrees. "Of course students think they're exercising their options. But ask yourself; have you made a conscious choice to drink, or are you so sucked into the cultural norms that you haven't ever really made a decision?" Yet with the emphasis on the social implications of campus drinking, it is all too easy to ignore what Conant Sloane calls the "normal health factor." "It surprises me when campus educators fail to mention that, quite simply, alcohol is no more a normal part of health than is a heart attack." She illustrates the dangers of even once- a-week "binge drinking" with stories of students whose blood By Lisa Pollak The recruiters said college would teach us to expa minds with knowledge. They neglected to say college teach us to alter our minds with alcohol. After all, expect the glossy college brochure to mention that up percent of students nationwide will have learned to drink leaving college. It is with some irony, then, that University HealthS Substance Abuse Education Coordinator Teresa Herzogi to "Be There. Be Aware" when National Collegiate A Awareness Week (NCAAW) begins Monday. On a c where the word "party" is synonymous with "alcohol,' non-drinkers are the minority, where national averages i that half of us have had five or more drinks in a row wit last two weeks - it would seem we are already "there," very "aware" of alcohol. But what the campus events of Oct. 19-25 will Herzog explains, "is that people on this campus can themselves without drinking." Her statement is ca worded, free of moral judgement; she knows what we an Photos by Scott Lituchy nd our this weekend. One question remains. would Can we? who'd p to 95 Trying to determine whether we before have an alcohol "problem" on this campus is a little like trying to Service stumble home after downing one too. tells us many drinks; the outlook is fuzzy. klcohol Many health and alcohol educators ampus have a vague sense there must be 'where something wrong with the amount of ndicate partying that occurs each weekend, thin the but even Herzog says it's hard to already document if and how many of us are drinking too much. stress, "Still, we know that society has an n enjoy alcohol problem, so it logically arefully follows that we have a problem on *e doing campus," Herzog says. But different people have different perceptions of what a "problem" act- ually is. According to Terry Dunivan, director of Ann Arbor Services - an outpatient mental health clinic - "the 'problem' of college drinking may be a misperception." "If you look at the heavy partiers in college, it's really a smaller percentage of students than society is led to think," Dunivan says. "And then many get blamed for the faults of a few." Herzog, widely considered the campus' most informed alcohol educator, does punctuate her description of the campus drinking problem with plenty of "it varies," "it depends," and few definite statistics. For University Housing Facilities Manager George SanFacon, the campus alcohol problem can be found in each "trashed out corridor that my people have to clean after a weekend of partying." He adds that there's no way to quantify the number of damages, repairs, or filthy bathrooms his maintenance workers must clean each week. He does know "there's a definite difficulty as far as motivating my staff. There's trouble with morale. And why not? Cleaning up vomit is not meaningful work," SanFacon says. Of the 117 resident advisors who responded to a substance abuse survey conducted by Herzog last March, 67 percent considered alcohol "a problem" on their hall, and 77 percent agreed that residents' alcohol use made their jobs more difficult. Janet Hackel, a second-year resident director at Couzens, explains that "alcohol itself is not a problem. People, when they are drunk, are problems. Drunk people are not rational...and less considerate." Herzog's argument has additional evidence. Representatives at the University's Sexual Assault Prevention and Awareness Center cannot say how many sexual assaults on campus are in part attributable to alcohol. A recent collegiate survey by Ms. Magazine, however, showed that some 73 percent of men and 55 percent of women describe "alcohol use" as a characteristic of their involvement in a sexual assault. Leo Heatley, who heads the University Department of Public Safety, notes that inebriated college students - "with their tendency to react more to the alcohol" - initiate much of the malicious assault and destruction reported on campus each weekend. He cites alcohol as a contributor to about 70 percent of campus assaults, fights, property destruction, and robberies. But are such statistics decisive enough to indicate that campus drinking is at an "unsafe" level? Captain Robert Conn, a member of the special services team at the Ann Arbor Police Department, doesn't think so. "What happens is that a few create the problems, and then all get accused," says Conn, echoing Dunivan's words. "Alcohol contributes to a lot of things, but it isn't the sole fault of any crime." Those two ideas go a long way towards putting the "problem" of campus drinking into perspective. Conant Sloane stresses in her writings that we shouldn't be more concerned with the drinking habits of college students than the drinking habits of any other member of the population. "I'm actually surprised at the number of college students who don't drink," Parnes notes. And rather than "unsafe" drinking levels, West Quad Building Director Alan Levy has seen his residents exhibit more and more responsible drinking habits over the last three years. He attributes this responsibility to the enforcement of a residence hall alcohol policy that prohibits residents to drink in public areas. And he can prove it. Before the policy took effect in 1984, Levy estimates, alcohol-related property damages in West Quad totaled eight to ten thousand dollars a year. Since 1984, however, damages are no more than one thousand dollars a year. But Levy won't give much of the credit for this improvement to the students themselves. "It's simple," he says. "We're pushing drinkers out of the buildings." Both Levy and Heidke think they know where these drinkers are going. e Alcohol and drinking games plays a large part in the social activity of a majoruty of stuents. How much thought do most give it? According to her, however, we don't need numbers see that our drinking habits are problematic. Herzog fears that during college we will learn to ignore our hangovers, increased tolerance to alcohol, regrettable sexual experiences, and poor academic performance - all early symptoms for the one in ten Americans who will contract the disease of alcoholism - and all attributable to "irresponsible drinking habits...habits that produce negative consequences." If Herzog's assertion that "the majority of college students do not use alcohol in an appropriate way" is true, then these negative consequences should be enough to drastically lower the campus drinking statistics. But the liquor keeps flowing - and 95 percent of the campus still drinks, a figure that has remained constant for ten years, according to the National Clearinghouse on Alcohol Statistics in Maryland. Pollak is a Daily staffer; Lituchy a Photo Editor "When it comes to al definitely becoming more re "But in virtually every siti problem this year...they rep fraternity party." Housing Security Superv at the Greeks. "In residence campus doesn't have a han( says. No doubt about it, the ac system when it comes to problem" is a sharp one. He possible sexual assaults duri with the alcohol consumed course, that the Greeks are on this campus. But sometirr "When a frat is requesti and at the same time kegs...Come over and drin1 they don't know what they the problem," Herzog expla But what Interfraterna Seitanakis does want is fo blaming the Greeks for a Greek system. This year more than eve Association of sororities are programs to teach their cc drinking. The Greeks are al9 NCAAW, including an a University Club next Friday See COV Marvin Parnes, who believes that to accurately see the "problem," we must look below the phenomenon's surface - deep into the mind of the student social drinker. "Any time alcohol is an inherent part of your life, or your social life, we're looking at a problem," Parnes says. "Even if you're not a full-fledged alcoholic; if the bulk of your social experiences are always alcohol related, what does that say about your feelings about yourself and your social abilities?" Parnes allows that alcohol justifiably can serve as a social relaxant for students. But his observation and experience has shown "that on campus, alcohol is too central to too many social experiences," and is used abusively to control social and sexual anxieties. "As a person concerned with human behavior, I worry that many college students are missing out on some important emotional experiences because they are covering them up with alcohol," he adds. alcohol levels proved fatal at their first college parties. "Once you get to .05 you're already drunk, and don't need any more," she adds. For a 160-pound male, a blood alcohol level of .05 is roughly equivalent to two cans of beer. But let's say we don't see the risks to our own physical, social, and mental health as a "problem" resulting from campus drinking. Herzog isn't finished making her point. "If drinking was really at a safe level, we wouldn't see (as much of) the damages, the destruction, the sexual assaults that we do" she maintains. "Students are doing a lot of drinking without being aware of the ramifications," Baum agrees. These "ramifications" focus on the public, rather than personal, consequences of our inappropriate drinking habits. Taps flow at the typical weekend bash. PAGE 6 WWEEKEND/OCTOBER 16, 1987 WEEKEND/OCTOBER 16, 1987