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SPEAKING UP: Worried that the
new policy might drive drinking underground, former
RAs Meyer, Gillespie, Tompkins and Cooper mounted
a petition drive.
Linda Cicero
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as a resident assistant in
an all-frosh dorm, Jeff Cooper was always on the lookout
for telltale signs of alcohol abuse. “If
you knew a kid was a bad drinker who tended to lose his
stuff after he’d had a few, then you’d keep a
real close eye on him,” he says. “Or if a kid
was in his room a lot, not hanging out with others, and you
saw
him take four or five shots, that was cause for concern.”
Those
kinds of problematic and inexperienced drinkers used
to worry Cooper the most. Today he is equally concerned
about a revision to the University’s alcohol policy
that he believes will drive some freshmen to drink irresponsibly
in the privacy of their rooms, where RAs and campus police
officers
cannot monitor what happens. The one-sentence change,
which
is scheduled to take effect in the fall, reads: “No
alcoholic beverages may be served at all-freshman house events
in
common area spaces (e.g., lounges, hallways, patios/outdoor
areas).”
It’s a time-honored student tradition
to complain about the alcohol policy; in fact, it was
the subject of the first
Stanford student protest, in 1908. This time, the protesters
took to the Internet. In April, Cooper, ’01, MS ’02,
along with former RAs Megan Tompkins, ’00, Nate Gillespie, ’00,
MA ’02, and Tim Meyer, ’03, MA ’03, collected
more than 2,300 signatures from students and alums
on an online petition that asks administrators to reconsider
their decision.
In addition to expressing concern about
students’ safety,
Cooper and others think the new policy will undermine
the trust that develops between students and the RAs
on their halls.
(Many also are frustrated that no students were included
on the ad hoc committee that issued the new rules.)
They worry
that RAs will be expected to take on the policing responsibilities
that characterize the job on many campuses, breaking
up informal gatherings where alcohol is being served.
Jane Camarillo, director
of Residential Education, insists that the RAs’ enforcement
responsibility will not change significantly, however. “Their
primary role will still be to be the role models, the
educators, the first response for students in crisis,” she
told students at a May town hall meeting about the
policy revisions. “But,
if a person is staggering around the hall, yeah, they
may stop [that person]. ”
In recent years, University
officers have taken a number of steps to control alcohol
abuse—declaring Admit Weekend
and New Student Orientation officially “dry” events;
prohibiting the use of residence funds to buy alcohol
for parties. After all, as assistant vice provost and
dean of freshmen and
transfer students Julie Lythcott-Haims pointed out
at the town meeting, “people under 21 are not allowed
to drink. That’s
the law, and University policy requires us to follow
the law.”
Administrators say that no single incident
prompted the latest revision. Rather, they say, the
time had
come for firmer measures to halt reckless drinking
and to
protect
the estimated
20 to 25 percent of students who constitute what they
describe as a “silent minority” of nondrinkers.
In the most recent campus health survey, some 72 percent
of Stanford undergraduates
said they had consumed alcohol in the past month, and
9 percent qualified as frequent binge drinkers.
“There was enough to make us feel that things were
trending in the wrong direction,” says Lythcott-Haims, ’89. “We’ve
taken the steps we have because we’re trying to tighten
up what seems to be a system that is a bit out of control.” Said
vice provost for student affairs Gene Awakuni at the
town hall meeting: “People are saying [the revision]
will drive drinking behind closed doors, but the fact
is, there
are already students drinking behind closed doors. ”
The
last alcohol-related death on campus happened in 1987,
when David Dunshee walked out of a Zeta Psi party,
intoxicated,
and drowned in nearby Lake Lagunita. There was a serious
accident in 1998 when Michael Howard, ’99, fell off
a balcony at the Phi Delta Theta house and was hospitalized,
comatose,
for several months. And RAs acknowledge there have
been other close calls in recent years. Administrators,
Camarillo explained
at the town hall meeting, are concerned both about
student safety and about University liability.
Liability,
Stephen Stedman recalls, was emphasized in his training
when he became a resident fellow six
years ago.
Stedman, ’79,
MA ’85, PhD ’88, acting co-director of the
Center for International Security and Cooperation and
the departing
RF for all-frosh Larkin, and his wife, Corinne Thomas,
developed a system of house rules that relied on understanding
and agreement
between students who drink and those who don’t. He
says the revision to the alcohol regulations has set
off “big
alarm bells” for him. “Our policy has been,
all along, that it is better for students to be drinking
in the
open and be seen—if they’re in distress, they
can be helped,” he says. “When we’ve
had problems with somebody drinking to real excess,
it’s
never been at a party. When people drink themselves
to harm, they do it
in their rooms with a small group of friends and much
harder alcohol —like
a big handle of vodka.”
The
RFs and former RAs interviewed for this article say
controlling alcohol abuse was challenging enough
under the previous policy. They say more and more freshmen
are
arriving
with drinking problems, and some parents even supply
their underage freshmen with cases of hard liquor.
Cooper also asks
why the University doesn’t work with county and city
officials to make liquor licenses harder to get, or
push for compliance from local retail outlets that
are known to sell
alcohol to students with fake IDs. “Those are the
kinds of things that will drive consumption down,” he
says. “Specifying
where [alcohol] can be drunk is not going to drive
down consumption, in and of itself.”
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