College chiefs urge new debate on drinking age

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College chiefs urge new debate on drinking age

(AP)- College presidents from about 100 of the nation's best-known universities, including Duke, Dartmouth and Ohio State, are calling on lawmakers to consider lowering the drinking age from 21 to 18, saying current laws actually encourage dangerous binge drinking on campus.

The movement called the Amethyst Initiative began quietly recruiting presidents more than a year ago to provoke national debate about the drinking age.

"This is a law that is routinely evaded," said John McCardell, former president of Middlebury College in Vermont who started the organization. "It is a law that the people at whom it is directed believe is unjust and unfair and discriminatory."

Other prominent schools in the group include Syracuse, Tufts, Colgate, Kenyon and Morehouse.

But even before the presidents begin the public phase of their efforts, which may include publishing newspaper ads in the coming weeks, they are already facing sharp criticism.

Mothers Against Drunk Driving says lowering the drinking age would lead to more fatal car crashes. It accuses the presidents of misrepresenting science and looking for an easy way out of an inconvenient problem. MADD officials are even urging parents to think carefully about the safety of colleges whose presidents have signed on.

"It's very clear the 21-year-old drinking age will not be enforced at those campuses," said Laura Dean-Mooney, national president of MADD.

Both sides agree alcohol abuse by college students is a huge problem.

Research has found more than 40 percent of college students reported at least one symptom of alcohol abuse or dependence. One study has estimated more than 500,000 full-time students at four-year colleges suffer injuries each year related in some way to drinking, and about 1,700 die in such accidents.

But some other college administrators sharply disagree that lowering the drinking age would help. University of Miami President Donna Shalala, who served as secretary of health and human services under President Clinton, declined to sign.

"I remember college campuses when we had 18-year-old drinking ages, and I honestly believe we've made some progress," Shalala said in a telephone interview. "To just shift it back down to the high schools makes no sense at all."

Duke senior Wey Ruepten said university officials should accept the reality that students are going to drink and give them the responsibility that comes with alcohol.

"If you treat students like children, they're going to act like children," he said.

(Copyright 2008 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)

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Thursday, Dec 18 at 7:17 PM Kenneth Anderson wrote ...

There is a new group out which promotes harm reduction for alcohol for college students which is definitely worth checking out http://www.collegedrinking.org

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Wednesday, Oct 1 at 10:58 PM light wrote ...

I am a college student and I do see underage alcohol usage. However, I still highly support the 21 year old drinking age. It has to deal with the psychological trauma of alcohol on the brain. At 21 the brain is more fully developed and less likely to be altered chemically. Of course some may say that a glass or two wouldn't hurt, but who really stops at a glass or two in college?

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Wednesday, Oct 1 at 1:48 PM Brandon wrote ...

Its pathetic that ive served a total of 18 months in Iraq but i cant legally drink a beer with my friends. There shouldnt be ANY rights withheld until any age greater than 18, let alone something as common as drinking alcohol.

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Saturday, Aug 23 at 8:56 PM STEVE wrote ...

BE A GOOD REASON.DRINKING NOT GOOD FOR HEALT

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Saturday, Aug 23 at 4:02 PM Anonymous wrote ...

how about we stop pretending that the law exists to protect us, our children etc. The government could care less, if they did then shouldn't cigarettes which lead to helluva more health risks then a 20 yr old getting drunk not be available for sale when you are 18? I mean don't we want to protect our youth from the evils of the world? And MADD is full of themselves....ok being 18 or 21 and driving drunk...thats not an age issue thats a stupidity issue -

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Saturday, Aug 23 at 11:29 AM Control Freaks wrote ...

It's not the government's job to restrict our freedom with arbitrary drinking ages. Have a little more faith in yourselves, in society.

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Saturday, Aug 23 at 7:19 AM bill wrote ...

getting alcohol on campus is easy. my college daughter and others all know 21 law is broken. immaturity regarding alcohol is a family / culture issue not a legal one. We pushed responsibility for drinking out to 21 along with many other of life's realities, many 20 somethings are "babies" shirking responsibility. Alcohol is just another wait till i am 21 to worry about it and do it illegally now. Alcohol consequences like sex are far too important to defer to 21 before taking responsibility.

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Saturday, Aug 23 at 7:06 AM joseph wrote ...

Let the laws match reality, drinking at college is underground but pervasive. Reminds me of sex ed in the 70's it was very controversial but now common in schools. We need alcohol ed and how to not be immature about it starting at home. Its widespread and happening, fix the real social attitude issue, 18 law is irrelevant and not solving anything.

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Wednesday, Aug 20 at 11:08 AM Peter Batrous wrote ...

College deans should stick to the business at hand. That's teaching not social engineering. The drinking age should stay as it is. In fact if they enforced the Laws as they should it would make for a better campus environment. Binge drinking is a sign of immaturity and sounds like to me they are to young to understand the ramifications of drinking. So why make it easier for them.

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Wednesday, Aug 20 at 9:18 AM sionan wrote ...

i think lowering the age would be good for young adults. i began drinking at college away from my family. part of me wishes that i began drinking at home so that i could learn to be responsible while drinking earlier. learn from my parents not to be stupid instead of learning from other people

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Tuesday, Aug 19 at 11:25 PM Mike wrote ...

About time, kids in europe grow up with alcohol and handle it much better. No wonder Americans are viewed as a bunch of moronic children over there.

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Tuesday, Aug 19 at 10:32 PM Chuck Hoskins wrote ...

uhh,,,excuse me,,,but if you lower the drinking age to prevent binge drinking at 21,,,won't the binge drinking just start at 18. I mean the idea of binge drinking is that you are legally able to do it.

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Tuesday, Aug 19 at 1:15 PM shortma68 wrote ...

I think they should look into lowering the age not just for scholl purposes but over all. They say you are an adult at 18 but you don't get all the privledges of an adult. You can serve in the military branches, you can vote, you can even be tried as an adult when committing crimes so what is the difference? If you make it more open then maybe there won't so much use of it. Some will think different about this but that is what makes USA so great you can agree to dissagree.

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