Source: New York Times Contact: Mon, 5 Jan 1998 Website: http://www1.nytimes.com/ Editors note: Because of the size, I must post it in two parts. This is not in two parts in the magazine. This is part one. BINGE NIGHTS: THE EMERGENCY ON CAMPUS By MICHAEL WINERIP CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. -- Getting in to see John Casteen III is no easy matter. As president of the University of Virginia, one of the nation's premier colleges, he is often on the road, raising money for a $750 million capital fund drive that does not end until the year 2000. When he is on campus, he is tightly scheduled. Early in the morning, appointments begin to back up in the elegant waiting room outside his Madison Hall office. Alumni, faculty, undergraduates, doctoral candidates, state legislators, bankers, the student reporter from The Cavalier Daily Q -- they all want a few minutes. But one afternoon in early December, the busy president abruptly canceled his appointments and drove two hours from the Charlottesville campus to Reston in northern Virginia, to visit the parents of Leslie Baltz, an honors student in the Class of '98. Casteen makes these visits once or twice a year, though he is never sure if the parents will want to see him, given the circumstances. That previous weekend, Ms. Baltz, a 21-year-old senior who was on the dean's list every semester, was drinking heavily. There are some who believe she was doing her "fourth-year fifth," the longstanding practice of University of Virginia seniors to consume a fifth of liquor for the last home football game. Seeing how drunk she was that Saturday afternoon, her girlfriends left her on a couch upstairs at one of their apartments, then went to the game against Virginia Tech. When the friends returned at 9:30 that evening, they opened the apartment door and there was Ms. Baltz at the foot of the stairs, unconscious, face up, her legs slanting up the stairway. The friends called 911, and she was rushed to the university medical center. This is not a rare occurrence. Every weekend, between 3 and 10 University of Virginia students arrive in the emergency room with alcohol poisoning or an alcohol-related injury. That same day, another student had such severe poisoning from bingeing on bourbon at a tailgating party that he stopped breathing and was placed on a respirator in the same intensive care unit as Leslie Baltz. A blood sample showed Ms. Baltz's alcohol level was .27 -- more than three times the state limit for intoxication. From the internal injuries to her brain, authorities surmised that the honors student had risen from the upstairs couch at some point, then fallen down the apartment stairs, head first. "Generally speaking, the families don't want to see me, but some do," Casteen said. "One comes into the family's life as an invader. You go in the family's home, and what you're dealing with is their awareness it will never be the same again. A child who was a treasure, who was precious, and you see the physical leavings are all over the family's lives. All the remnants of their achievements in grade school, their clothing, their awards, their photographs -- sometimes an automobile -- they're all there. A family is dealing with that lost child and you know that it will never be the same. "In my family," continued Casteen, the father of two teen-agers, "the way we deal with grief or joy is through religious practices, but that's not part of what we can do; this is a public institution. The culture is very secular. What I can say is, I feel sorrow. I offer whatever help. Mostly what I do is listen, often for a couple of hours." On Nov. 30, Leslie Baltz became the fifth Virginia college student to die in a month's time in alcohol-related accidents. Three -- from Virginia Tech, Virginia Commonwealth and Radford University -- were killed in drunk driving crashes. Another, an 18-year-old Virginia Tech freshman who was sleeping off a night of heavy partying, rolled off her bed, out her dorm window and fell eight stories. This string of death followed the much publicized drinking deaths earlier in 1997 at MIT and Louisiana State University, and numerous less publicized ones at Fordham University; Hartwick College in Oneonta, N.Y.; Clarkson University in Potsdam, N.Y.; St. Mary's University in Winona, Minn.; the University of Massachusetts at Amherst; Pennsylvania State University; the State University College at Cortland, N.Y. Virginia officials were spurred to take action: they convened a daunting number of task force committees and subcommittees on ways to curb binge drinking by students. State Attorney General Richard Cullen led the way, assembling a 38-member task force that includes 14 of Virginia's college presidents. But while there is no shortage of alcohol task forces across America -- like tombstones, they tend to appear wherever a student dies -- there is a noticeable shortage of solutions. It is not even clear whether more college students are dying from alcohol these days, or if it's a matter of the media paying more attention to the issue lately because of a few sensational cases. Several public health experts say they know of no long-term national statistics on college alcohol fatalities. Indeed, in some respects it appears that a substantial number of today's students have a more conservative attitude toward alcohol than the previous generation. In 1980, 9.5 percent of college students nationwide said they abstained from alcohol; by 1996, 17 percent did, according to an annual survey by Professor Lloyd Johnston of the Institute for Social Research at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor. In 1980, 6.5 percent reported drinking daily; today, 3.2 percent do. Even the number of binge drinkers may be declining: in 1980, 44 percent reported binge drinking; today, 38 percent do. At the University of Virginia, which has a reputation as a hard-working, hard-partying school (one of the unofficial mascots is the wahoo, a tropical fish that can drink twice its weight), the administration appears to have made some headway. During the 1980s, it got rid of Easters, the massive, weekend-long drunken fraternity block party that was held on Rugby Road each spring and attracted wahoos from all over the East Coast. As Chris Jeffries, the head of the Inter-Fraternity Council, put it: "I really do believe it's calmed down some. You don't see kegs flying through the windows any more." The university has a substance abuse center, a program to train bartenders how to keep drinking under control, classes in alcohol abuse, an alcohol awareness week, a free taxi program so drunken students don't have to drive, nonalcoholic social events and student alcohol patrols. Each year, Virginia runs national conferences to teach other universities how to handle substance abuse in their athletic programs. Indeed, a 1996 report, "Promising Practices: Campus Alcohol Strategies," by David Anderson, an associate research professor at George Mason University in Fairfax, Va., singles out the University of Virginia as having one of the dozen best campus programs in the country. Still, Ms. Baltz died in November, and Lumsford McGowan died in a drinking accident the year before, and Brian Cook the year before that. What university officials here and across the country fear they are seeing is a substantial number of students who drink excessively and dangerously, and don't seem reachable. The most recent survey at the University of Virginia reports that of students who drink, 25 percent were binge drinking three or more times in the previous two weeks. "It's one thing to drink a little to get buzzed," said Cheryl Battles, a senior, "but I'm amazed at how many people here drink to get wasted -- 'Oh man, you were bombed last night, you were hysterical, you were throwing up all over the place.' " Dr. James Turner, head of the university's student health services, said that while the number of drinkers may be down, "we're seeing more serious problems in our emergency room." He said a generation ago, a significant number of students wanting to get high used marijuana, while today it is mainly alcohol. "Now, please don't make it sound like I'm endorsing marijuana," he said. "I'm not. But the problems of marijuana are different. They're not as severe. You don't have the violent behavior; you don't have the sexual aggression; you don't have the poisoning." As part of their training, upper-class students who are chosen to supervise dorms as resident assistants are taught how to keep very drunk students alive. "We have an ER doctor teach them how to lie the drunk students on their side and hold their heads up, so they don't choke on their own vomit," Turner said. When adults hear that 3 to 10 drunken students at one of the finest universities in America wind up in the emergency room each weekend, they are shocked, but it does not make much of an impression on the young. "We have 18,000 students on campus," Turner said. "If 40 percent are bingeing, that's thousands and thousands, so to them, the risk is low. Fear-based education -- getting up in their faces and saying, 'You're going to die" -- isn't going to work. They don't believe it." When it comes to alcohol, educators have found that every solution is accompanied by a fresh set of problems. To control drinking on campus, Louisiana State University banned liquor at fraternities and campus events. Then, in August, 20-year-old Benjamin Wynne drank himself to death at an off-campus fraternity party at a local bar. Suddenly, LSU officials found themselves wondering if it might be better to allow drinking on campus again, so they would at least have some say in regulating it. The 21-year-old drinking age is a major headache for college administrators. In the mid-1980s, the federal government threatened to cut off highway funds to any state that did not raise the drinking age from 18 to 21; by 1988, all 50 states had complied. That policy has measurable benefits: the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration estimates that the older drinking age saves the lives of 800 18- to 20-year-olds each year. On the other hand, a drinking age of 21 makes it very hard for administrators to teach students to drink moderately, when three-quarters of the campus is not supposed to be drinking at all. At colleges across America, the legal drinking age may be a joke, but it is not a joke that university administrations can participate in. At the University of Virginia, the most recent health survey indicated that over 75 percent of under-age students drank, and over half of the under-age students had been intoxicated in the previous two weeks. Turner said 70 percent of the drunken students they see in the emergency room are under age. As a parent, University of Iowa president Mary Sue Coleman let her son, Jonathan, now 26, drink at home when he was under age. "We didn't want him to think alcohol was a totally forbidden substance," she said. "We'd have a glass of wine or beer with dinner. Always in moderation." Would President Coleman say this to her 18,000 undergraduates at Iowa? "Oh no," she said. "I'm not going to tell students I expect you to drink if you're under 21. I don't want them to get the message that we're winking at state law." Students mock the hypocrisy of their elders, as administrators try to figure out where to draw the line on alcohol. At Iowa and Virginia, the campus police do not enforce drinking rules at tailgate parties before football games, but are aggressive about limiting alcohol in the stadiums. "The students see all our efforts to control the flow of liquor into the stadium," Casteen said, "which seems comical in light of all the tailgate drinking in the parking lots. They see a place where we control things and where we don't." The students also see pervasive, often dangerous under-age drinking at the private, off-campus fraternities being ignored by the administration, but what they rarely see these days is a responsible professor or administrator taking a casual drink at a social event. "We don't have sherries," Casteen says. "It's orange juice and bottled water." One of the last vestiges of a social drink together, the architecture department's Friday afternoon beer gathering with students, was ended in 1995. Robert Canevari, the dean of students at the University of Virginia, said when the drinking age was 18, his staff would keep beer in the office refrigerator and on Fridays, and at the end of the work day, sit with students and have a drink. Now, he said: "I try to avoid all occasions where undergrads have alcohol. I don't want to see it." Casteen added: "I'm not the funniest character in town. But I don't even joke about drinking any more." In forming the statewide task force, Attorney General Cullen, a Republican, had suggested exploring whether it would make sense to lower the drinking age. "It's worth at least asking if more problems aren't being created by the forbidden-fruit mentality," he said. But before he could even fax assignments to all his subcommittees, newspapers across the state were carrying articles quoting outraged legislators who were dead set against any change in the drinking age. A headline in The Cavalier Daily summed up the prospects succinctly: "Not gonna happen." The university formed its own task force after the Baltz death, and one of its focuses is the fraternities, which even fraternity brothers acknowledge are the biggest source of under-age binge drinking. For years, the college has generally taken a hands-off approach, reasoning that fraternities are private, off-campus residences. [continued in Part 2]