Rem Myers 37 states that the purpose of college is education
[and there is] no reason why this should not include alcohol. While
alcohol may not be incompatible with education, its abuse does adversely
affect the quality of the educational environment.
In the wake of an automobile accident in March 1987, I was assigned my
freshman year to a first-floor dorm room in Blair Hall East with a nearby
handicapped-accessible bathroom. I am fortunate to have made a strong
recovery by the time I got to Princeton, because the facilities served
me little.
Every night of each weekend, binge-drunken students returned to fill the
sink and toilet with vomit, to block them up, to cause them to overflow,
or quite often to simply destroy them. I have no idea what Princeton spent
to replace the porcelain and mirrors in that one bathroom alone, but I
know it was hardly the only one.
As a nondrinking student, I failed to see why my education or the education
of any student had to be compromised to fit the habits of the bingers.
I applaud Brian Muegge
05s proposal for alcohol-free housing, and only regret
that it comes 15 years too late for me to take advantage of.
I was pleased to read the article in the April 10 PAW describing Brian
Muegge's proposal for alcohol-free
housing. In my experience at Princeton the majority of my friends
and acquaintances did not participate in the binge drinking culture that
seemed to dominate the lives of a significant and often destructive minority
of my peers. I quite purposely made housing arrangements that minimized
my contact with the effects of such over-indulgance, and would have appreciated
university housing policy supporting those efforts. One of the few things
of which I am ashamed from my time at Princeton is the number of stories
I heard about friends and cleaning staff being forced to deal with the
aftermath of alcoholic intake. I question the character of someone who
would leave a drink container full of urine outside of his or her door
for someone else to dispose of and I do not accept that being intoxicated
is any excuse. My hope would be that the university community will be
pleasantly surprised by the level of interest that students express in
living in substance-free housing. I find it simply mind-boggling that
bright, blessed people such as those fortunate and hard-working enough
to be students at Princeton can tolerate and in fact encourage the kind
of disrespect for their fellow human beings that the "secondary binge
effects" described in the article represent. I applaud Mr. Muegge
and hope that he is successful in his quest.
The purpose of college is education. No reason why this should not include
alcohol. One can experience drinking, or not, as one prefers, but I do
not think Big Brother should be telling us what we must do. Not make the
others in the dormitory drink or abstain, either. Teach yourself!
And think about this one. In 1940 there was a great movie, telling of
an actual event during World War II, when on a remote island in the outer
Hebrides they ran completely out of liquor. Perhaps you know the film,
called Tight Little Island in the U.S., and Whisky Galore
in England.
Toward the end of the film, there is (thank goodness a cocktail party,
where one of the guests is a local physician. And he is beard to say,
'It is a well-known medical fact that some people are born two drinks
below par."