Pubdate: Tue, 21 Mar 2000 Source: Centre Daily Times (PA) Copyright: 2000 Nittany Printing and Publishing Co., Inc. Contact: http://www.centredaily.com/ Forum: http://vh1615.infi.net/chat/world/html/index.html Address: P.O. Box 89, State College, Pa. 16804 Fax: (814) 238-1811 EDITORIAL: WILL TRAGEDIES BE FORGOTTEN BY STUDENTS? Sadly, Fire, Overdoses Were Similar To Past Incidents Our View Perhaps one of the reasons that so many tragedies seem to strike college students is the fact that they lack collective memory. Every four years or so, the tragic slate gets wiped clean as the students who faced the tragedies move onward and new students without a hint enter the cycle. The weekend incidents at Penn State and Bloomsburg universities point to two perpetual problems on campuses across the nation - drug abuse and fire hazards. At Penn State, six young people overdosed on liquid ecstasy, a popular "club drug" that is popping up with greater frequency in the Centre Region. And at Bloomsburg, an early morning house fire Sunday claimed the lives of three students. Sadly, both are repeat performances. Although the victims are different and the story line varies from older incidents, the results are disturbingly reminiscent of the not-so-distant past. At Bloomsburg on Sunday, three young men died in a fire at an off-campus fraternity house that just a few months before had been cited for fire code violations. Six years may seem like yesterday to Jessica Kozloff, president of Bloomsburg University, who in 1994 had the sad duty of addressing the student body and several heartbroken parents after a fire leveled a former fraternity house and killed five young people. But to the current crop of college juniors and seniors, six years might seem like eons ago. Immediately after the 1994 fire, Kozloff and Bloomsburg town officials tackled the issue head on, cracking down on fire-trap student housing and stepping up enforcement of fire-safety codes (in that fire, none of the smoke alarms in the house were operational, fire officials later discovered). But last October, a town codes inspector cited the Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity for a dozen violations, including a discharged fire extinguisher, five electric heaters plugged into the house's inadequate electrical system and a smoke alarm without a battery. A January inspection found the house in compliance, but clearly fire safety wasn't much of a concern before the inspection. And that house is probably not the only one in the college town where fire safety has been ignored. At Penn State, the six young people were rushed Sunday from an off-campus home to the hospital for an apparent overdose of liquid ecstasy. Police suspect they intentionally took the drug (also known as GHB), which has killed at least 58 people nationwide in recent years and was recently made illegal under federal law. Unfortunately, Penn State has a track record with GHB that the current crop of students may have overlooked. In the summer of 1998, two 20-year-old Penn State students were found unconscious and unresponsive in their Beaver Avenue apartment after taking some ecstasy they whipped up at home using an Internet recipe. At the time, GHB-related emergencies were rare, local police and hospital officials said. In light of the Sunday incident, campus and community authorities are raising concerns that ecstacy is a club drug that is popping up more frequently in Centre County. Efforts to warn college students about the potentially deadly drug have stepped up since the 1998 incident. Apparently, there are quite a few people who aren't listening to the warnings and as such are flirting with tragedy. The investigations continue into the fire and the overdoses, and there is no telling at this point whether the students themselves were responsible for the incidents. And to be honest, these wounds are still far too tender to start laying blame and making harsh judgments. But surely the high-profile nature of both cases will raise awareness on these and other campuses. Perhaps now, faced with a "real" ecstasy overdose, more students will heed the warnings that this drug can do a lot of damage, even kill. And sobered by the horrors of dying in a house fire, maybe more students will be more diligent about fire safety. The concern is whether that awareness will stick beyond a few semesters and will save lives for years to come without the need for painful reminders. - --- MAP posted-by: Allan Wilkinson