14 Friday, August 20, 1999 Scott Hicks EDITORIAL PAGE EDITOR Laura Stoehr UNIVERSITY EDITOR Jacob McConnico CITY EDITOR Board Editorials A Shot of Reality Let’s see if we can get this straight: officials are using the results of a recent study to give the impression that two out of three UNC students don’t drink alcohol. On the other hand, the Chapel Hill five-oh arrested 46 people on 56 alcohol-related charges Sunday night during a sting of underage booze buyers. Of those, 33 were college students. Nineteen of those go to UNC. And the University says most students don’t drink. To be sure, the whole point of the “two out of three, .00 BAC” campaign is to stop stu dents - such as the hapless 46 arrested Sunday - from drinking in the first place. The discrepancy, though, is between the laws and reality. Young people drink. Duh. Denying that is lunacy. Trying to keep booze out of students’ hands is even dumber. Remember Prohibition? That word should send bells ringing in anyone’s head that reg ulating alcohol doesn’t fix the problem. It only makes it worse. UNC isn’t alone in its efforts to stop stu dent drinking. Locally, both N.C. State and Duke universities are using a computer pro gram called “Alcohol 101.” It allows students to enter virtual-reality bars and order drinks. The program then shows students what their blood-alcohol con Clearly Overkill In light of the recent wave of violence sweeping the nation’s schools, office build ings and even day-care centers, it is clear that something needs to be done to protect the children. But what is less apparent is the answer to the question of when excessive caution becomes a problem. Schools nationwide have been installing metal detectors, requiring students to wear or carry identification badges and even banning backpacks in their efforts to keep guns out. One local school, A.L. Stanback Middle School in Hillsborough, has adopted a dif ferent take on the backpack ban, mandating that students carry transparent backpacks made of clear plastic or mesh. The intention is good, but we don’t need to turn our schools into prisons, and we don’t need to treat all children as if they are bud ding criminals. What’s next? Clear clothing? It would cer tainly prevent students from carrying gunS in their pockets, but it would at the same time mean that hormonally charged middle schoolers would be walking the halls naked, paying more attention to each other than to Get Your Name in Print The Daily Tar Heel wants to represent the voice of all its readers from students to professors to University workers to panhandlers on the street. A great way for that to happen is for you yes, you to put pen to page and submit a guest col umn to appear on this very page. You can take advantage of this opportunity every day the DTH hits the newsstands. Call Editor Rob Nelson or Editorial Page Editor Scott Hicks at 962-0245. If art is more your thing, apply to be a cartoonist. Come by Student Union Suite 104 before Aug. 27. Barometer Board This! The Carrboro Board of Aldermen's identity crisis continues. May we suggest the Carrboro Board of Chumps? Or maybe they should just kick the women out and it won't even be an issue. So(da) Long ... The joy of cola is no more Lenoir Dining Hall, the last oasis for Pepsi lovers on campus, has ditched the % taste of the next generation for Coke. Cheers to the real thing? Tar Heel Quotables “It’s a very emotional period.” Chi Omega President Leigh Marcus On fall rush. Yeah, Leigh, and so is being buried in an earthquake, ethnic cleansing in Kosovo and being shot at school or the office. “These buildings are going to be dramati cally nicer than the rest of the buildings on campus.” Vice Chancellor for Student Services Dean Bresciani On plans for new residence halls. Whoa,do you really mean to say that those beautiful South Campus high-rises aren't the best residence halls on campus? Rob Nelson EDITOR Office Hours Friday 3 p.m. - 4 p.m. Matthew B. Dees STATE & NATIONAL EDITOR Brian Murphy SPORTS EDITOR T. Nolan Hayes SPORTSATURDAY EDITOR tent would be after taking the drinks. The N.C. General Assembly has jumped on the crackdown-on-drinking bandwagon, too. Lawmakers last month stiffened the penalty for 19- and 20-year-olds caught with alcohol. What used to be a simple infraction is now a Class 111 misdemeanor that carries up to a SSOO fine. Taken together, these efforts show just how serious society is about curbing drinking in general and underage drinking in particular. Nothing happens in a vacuum, and that’s why UNC is so bent on stopping drinking. But even if state lawmakers won’t wake up and smell the coffee, the University with all its wealth of smart folks should -and that means conceding that students drink. Sunday night’s sting proved that. Officials should stop deluding themselves. If the honest-to-God truth is that 66 per cent of students don’t drink, fine. As the G.I. Joe cartoons said, knowing is half the battle. A better approach would be for UNC to provide information about the risks of drink ing to those who are considering it and offer counseling for those who abuse it. As long as there’s a legal age, there will be underage drinkers. As long as there are col leges, there’s going to be drinking. And despite legal ages and penalties, peo ple will decide on their own to drink or not. their studies. WTien not carried to their logical end, bans and restrictions on backpacks seem like good ideas. But they have the potential to aggra vate the problem. Face it, kids will be kids. And kids like to break rules. Harsh restrictions to keep children from sneaking guns into schools could backfire in a big way. The rules present a challenge, and kids will be tempted to sneak a gun, be it a toy or the real thing, into the classroom to see if the new rules can be broken. The preventive measures being taken by schools across the nation are nothing more than remedies designed to cure a symptom of a much larger problem. Real change will not occur just because school children have to carry ID badges and tote around clear bags. While those measures might help trim the number of massacres that happen in the nation’s classrooms and on its playgrounds, they will not stop the underlying cause. For that to occur, a fundamental societal change must take place. Let’s not hamper that with precautions that become problems. Of Rush and Rom God bless technology UNC's sorority houses now have a computer program to match rushees to houses. Does it take into account hair color, bust size and number of tank-tops? Welcome Change Department of University Housing officials say there won't be any construction in residence halls this xKp- year. Maybe we'll be able to sleep past 6:30 a.m. this year without backhoes rumbling outside. “The young people that we met (Sunday night) were pleasant. Nobody got hurt.” Chapel Hill Police Chief Ralph Pendergraph On a weekend bust of underage booze buyers. Makes you wonder how often the cops rough up those underagers. “(At age 18) teenagers are ... old enough to get married. Why can’t they, if they want to, buy alcohol?” N.C. Sen. Ham Horton Jr., R-Forsyth Even Republicans make a damned good point once in a while. Editorial aln> Da% aar Established 1893 • 106 Years of Editorial Freedom www.unc.edu/dth Leigh Davis FEATURES EDITOR Erin Wynia ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT EDITOR Carolyn Haynes COPY DESK EDITOR _ SUV Appeal Stems From Penis Envy Some years ago, a car commercial ran on TV that depicted a flock of geese flying over a field. Suddenly, the background shifted, and they were flying inside a Buick sedan. The gist of the accompanying voice-over was this: “Americans love big things, so here’s a big car for them.” It seemed innocent enough. After all, who doesn’t need a little extra room to stretch out in the car? Flash forward to the present, however, and the demand for larger automobiles seems a lit tle more insidious. Carmakers haven’t confined their augmen tations to the interiors of vehicles (or even to cars, for that matter). Instead, they’re adding on where the frills will be most noticeable - the outside. Asa result, sport-utility vehicles are at the forefront of a sickening new trend in American con sumerism. All Americans know that Ronald McDonald makes a better apple pie than mom, just as everyone knows that Wal-Mart is the convenient alternative to the grocer, tailor and bric-a-brac shop. So why disparage a product like the sport utility vehicle, which also exists solely on the basis of the public’s demand for them? Because SUVs are more than just a result of market forces. They are indicative of deep er defects in the collective American psyche, namely, the inability of the bourgeoisie to think socially. Practical cars seem to have gone the way of the dinosaur as far as the middle-class is con cerned. The bottom line in car buying is that bigger is almost never better, and yet there are waiting lists for some of the most popular SUVs. Many of the people willing to shell out for these monstrosities rationalize their purchase with such excuses as needing a large towing capacity or off-road capabilities. Some even insist that they need room for Take Advantage of Safety Services As we begin another school year, we all have a lot on our minds: buying books, getting those last minute classes, catch ing up with old friends. But there is one more thing we should all think about. Over the past few days, two assaults have occurred on campus. While we are all aware that these things happen, too often we think that they will not happen to us. Unfortunately, incidents like this can happen to anyone, even when you think you are being safe. These things are not caused by the actions of the victim; they are the result of disturbed individuals who absolutely do not belong on this campus. In light of all of this, we can all take precau tions to better protect ourselves and others. The University has responded to these unfortunate assaults in several ways. After the incidents, we implemented an emergency alert system as soon as we could. Administrators made the first calls to a pre arranged residence hall phone tree, so that someone in each residence hall knew what had happened and alerted residents. They also used a similar phone tree to con tact all Greek houses, so that people living in the houses could not only take extra precau tions themselves, but inform anyone who was coming over to the house for a social event or to visit friends. Vicky Eckenrode & Courtney Weill MANAGING EDITORS Miller Pearsall PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR Thomas Ausman DESIGN EDITOR Megan Sharkey GRAPHICS EDITOR ■ JOSH FENNELL CAUSTIC CORNER several passengers. Here’s a tip: Buy a mini van. Even better, take the bus. It may not have a great stereo system, but it seats 60. Besides, at a base sticker price of $27,396, it’s a safe bet that nobody is four-wheeling in a Jeep Grand Cherokee. For that same 27 grand, a poor family could have bought a house. Maybe not in a neighborhood littered with sport-utility vehi cles, but hey, who wants to live with people who are so easily ordered about by popular culture anyway? Larger-than-average vehicles are more than socially irresponsible; they’re also a danger to everyone on the road. Every driver who has been behind one knows that SUVs block out a great deal of vis ibility for other drivers, making it nearly impossible to pass or to judge stopping dis tances. Also, while it is well-known that SUVs pro vide excellent protection for their drivers, it is a rarely discussed fact that when an SUV and a car collide, the driver of the smaller vehicle is probably going to die or at least be badly injured. Running a stop sign no longer results in a fender-bender; it now ends in a trip to the morgue. Asa matter of fact, Ford has had to install a four-foot steel bar under its newest SUV to prevent it from driving over a car in an acci dent. That’s not just death; it’s decapitation. Such ■ NIC HEINKE AND MONIKA MOORE GUEST COLUMNISTS Finally, University officials used a database to send a mass e-mail message to users of the University e-mail system informing them of what had occurred and listing certain safety tips. University Police also responded quickly. Along with recruiting help from extra officers and informing Point-2-Point drivers to not refuse anyone a ride, they swept all of the bars and late-night establishments on Franklin Street and informed owners, bouncers and some club patrons of the incident. These efforts were done in hopes that peo ple on or near Franklin Street would make a special effort to see that no one was walking home alone. Student government took a few steps as well. We contacted all resident assistants in Granville Towers and asked them to inform their residents. Also, we went door-to-door at bars and fra ternity houses that looked especially crowded, reminding them of the incident and asking them to be safe when returning home. (Tljr Saily (Tar Uppl Allison Burns ONLINE EDITOR Whitney Moore WRITING COACH Terry Wimmer OMBUDSMAN disregard for fellow humans is more than just the consequence of greed or stupidity - it’s ghoulish and perverse, and it indicates a will ful desire to harm others. With all of the facts in mind, it would seem that SUVs are both the problem and instru ments of a larger one: the drivers who own them. Naturally, those drivers would be men. Let’s not kid ourselves - when the words “bad” and “driver” are used together, we are usually speaking of men or little boys mas querading as such. But, oddly enough, the perusal of any busy intersection yields this fact: The majority of SUV drivers are women. How did that happen? Why would a woman want to drive something so obviously useless and obnoxious? The answer is this: penis envy. Fact is, women want to be men and vice versa. In exercising her new-found rights at the turn of the century, the American woman, though still bound by myriad taboos and the influence of a husband, is attempting to distin guish herself from faceless and silenced gener ations of the past. And the way she does that is by exerting her will on others, specifically men. Freud would have it that the SUV phenomenon is the expression of an inferiority complex gen erated by the lack of a phallus. In the “mine is bigger than yours” game, the winner now can be a woman, since mid dle-class, homebound wives have both plenty of disposable income and no other means of power. As Simone de Beauvoir wrote in her book “The Second Sex,” when a woman responds to being humiliated by men through “mascu line protest,” she masculinizes herself. Those who own cars had better watch out. Josh Fennell is a junior biology major from Charlotte. You can send hate mail to fen nell@email.unc.edu. The University is doing all it can to ensure our safety, but we must also play a part. While not foolproof, there are certain things which we can do to reduce our risk. ■ Ride P2R If you are not near a P2P Xpress stop, call for a van to pick you up. While we all get in a hurry and sometimes do not want to wait, it is always worth a few extra minutes to get home safely. ■ Use SAFE Escort to get home if you are in the library late. ■ Use the buddy system. There is safety in numbers; do not walk anywhere alone! ■ Stay in well-lit areas, and know the loca tions of emergency call boxes near you. ■ Do not let strangers into residence halls - the main entrances are locked for a reason! While we have all heard these before, we must realize that this is not an arbitrary list. Being on such a peaceful campus, we often fall into a false sense of security. But bad things do happen. If you have questions, or suggestions of other things we could do, please call the stu dent government office at 962-5201. Remember, nothing is more important than your safety. Reach Student Body President Nic Heinke at nheinke@email.unc.edu. Reach Student Body Vice President Monika Moore at moni kal@email.unc.edu.