Pubdate: Mon, 05 Jun 2000 Source: Chronicle of Higher Education, The (US) Copyright: 2000 by The Chronicle of Higher Education Contact: http://chronicle.com/ Author: Julie L. Nicklin ARRESTS AT U.S. COLLEGES SURGE FOR ALCOHOL AND DRUG VIOLATIONS Alcohol arrests at American colleges rose 24.3 percent in 1998, the largest increase in seven years. Arrests for violations of drug laws grew at their sharpest rate in three years, increasing 11.1 percent. This marks the seventh consecutive year that arrests for liquor- and narcotics-law violations have gone up, according to an annual survey of campus crime by The Chronicle. Liquor arrests grew nearly seven times as fast in 1998 as in 1997, when they edged up just 3.6 percent. And drug arrests experienced a much bigger jump in 1998 than in 1997, when they rose 7.2 percent. Some health researchers say that the increases reflect their findings that alcohol and drug use on college campuses has risen in recent years. Campus police officials, as they have for years, insist that the increases result mainly from tougher enforcement of alcohol and liquor laws. Many campus police officers and safety experts also attribute the increase to changes in the reporting guidelines, passed by Congress in the fall of 1998, to require colleges to include crimes that take place just beyond the campus. The number of murders, forcible and nonforcible sex offenses, aggravated assaults, and arson and hate crimes also increased, according to The Chronicle's survey. A smaller rise was seen in arrests for violations of weapons laws. At the same time, the number of burglaries, motor-vehicle thefts, and robberies declined slightly. The Chronicle's crime survey, which has been conducted for the past eight years, is based on the most recent statistics that colleges and universities are required by federal law to disclose annually. The survey is based on the responses of 481 four-year institutions, each enrolling at least 5,000 students. (Community colleges are not included because they are largely commuter campuses, and typically do not experience as many crimes as do four-year institutions.) Liquor, drug, and weapons arrests are among the most-watched crimes, though campus-crime experts monitor all the categories. In the most recent survey, four institutions -- Michigan State University, the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, the University of California at Berkeley, and the University of Wisconsin at Madison -- were among the campuses with the most arrests or the largest increases in two or more of those categories. The total number of liquor arrests on all campuses rose to 23,261, up from 18,708 in 1997. Wisconsin, Michigan State, the University of Minnesota's Twin Cities campus, Western Michigan University, and Berkeley each reported more than 380 liquor arrests. Wisconsin, with 792 liquor arrests, placed No. 1 by a large margin. In 1997, it had ranked fifth, with 342. Wisconsin's increase of 450 arrests also put it at the top of the chart for year-to-year change. The university was followed by Washington State, Florida State, San Diego State, and Ball State Universities. Each reported increases of more than 175 liquor arrests in 1998. In the narcotics category, five institutions -- Berkeley, Rutgers University at New Brunswick, U.N.C. at Greensboro, the University of Arizona, and Virginia Commonwealth University -- made 122 or more arrests in 1998. U.N.C. at Greensboro, Berkeley, San Diego State and Clark Atlanta Universities, and the University of California at Davis experienced the largest numerical increases in drug arrests from 1997 to 1998, with each reporting a rise of more than 50. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D