Pubdate: Thu, 13 Feb 2003 Source: Cornell Daily Sun, The (NY Edu) Copyright: 2003 The Cornell Daily Sun, Inc. Contact: http://www.cornelldailysun.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1758 AWARDING ABUSE RESEARCH Grant Gives Needed Opportunity To Voice Opinions The School of Industrial and Labor Relations' R. Brinkley Smithers Institute for Alcohol-Related Workplace Studies' will present the newly created Harrison M. Trice Award to the student authors of a research project focused on campus opinions about alcohol and drugs. The Institute seeks to highlight the important issue of substance abuse, a topic which students and faculty urgently need to discuss openly. The Trice award will grant $1,000 to the undergraduate student or students who compose the year's best research project concerning the use and/or abuse of alcohol and drugs in a college environment. Unlike some of the past programs Gannett: Cornell University Health Services has employed to call attention to the prevalence of drugs and drinking, most of which focus on the after-effects of usage, the Trice award may be able to look deeper and bring about a better understanding of how and why the Cornell environment promotes these behaviors. On the surface, Cornell students seem to cherish their ability to consume alcohol (naturally, drug use is less obvious to those surveying the college climate). Last semester, 21 people were arrested during an Ithaca Police crack-down on unruly behavior by college students. The reasons for arrest included possession of an open container of alcohol and possession of marijuana. At the time, both City officials and the University clearly announced that while they understood the motivations behind "party behavior," both institutions would seek to lower the degree of alcohol and drug consumption on campus through police presence and intervention procedures. However, on a campus where students are currently working to keep drinking a part of Slope Day, the annual celebration of the last day of classes, more needs to be discovered about the connection between the use of alcohol and drugs and some students' conception that these behaviors are harmless. Most of the interventions the University have utilized to combat this issue focus only on the situations surrounding drinking and drugs, or present impersonal facts about the rates of drinking on campus. The latest initiative, the University Medical Amnesty Protocol is another example of this type of program that responds to rather than prevents life-threatening situations. In an effort to facilitate prompt medical attention, the Protocol grants immunity from Judicial Administrator prosecution to both the victim of alcohol poisoning and the student who calls for medical assistance. While these types of programs have the potential to save more lives, they do nothing to discourage students from entering these dangerous situations in the first place or uncover why students involve themselves in these risky behaviors. The University needs to take the opportunity the Trice award represents to give students a chance to research these problems and voice possible solutions. Campus Life and Gannett posters often state that many students on campus drink only moderately. Perhaps hearing this message from a student voice rather than the administration will help convince those members of the community who do not ascribe to this principle. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens