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E.O. Smith Hosts Forum On Underage Drinking

Brittany Dorn

Issue date: 3/7/08 Section: News
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Miles Wilkerson, an E.O. Smith sophomore, asked the panelists how they would respond to people who claimed that alcohol and drug abuse was a victimless crime.
Media Credit: Matt Lin
Miles Wilkerson, an E.O. Smith sophomore, asked the panelists how they would respond to people who claimed that alcohol and drug abuse was a victimless crime.

The atmosphere of the E.O. Smith High School cafeteria Thursday night was one of frustration but also of hope as community members discussed ways to decrease underage drinking.

Here high school students, concerned parents and community members came together for a two-hour presentation that combined a variety of mediums to get the point across.

During most of the presentation, a slideshow in the background showed anonymous quotations from students at the school.

"My dad is an alcoholic and he's tried to get me to drink, but I don't want to end up like him," read one. "I got raped because I got so drunk that I blacked out at a party with strangers," another said.

The quotations - like most of the event - attempted to make the dangers of underage drinking tangible and personal.

Annie Grunwald, a junior at E.O. Smith who helped organize the event, introduced the assembled crowd with optimism.

"Tonight, we're all a part of history," she said. She explained that the event - called "Take It Back" - was part of a national movement to reduce alcohol abuse. According to Grunwald, over 20 other towns in the state are holding similar community meetings this week.

Grunwald emphasized that underage drinking wasn't the responsibility of a single entity - such as parents or the school system - but instead the community as a whole.

"We're calling all community members to claim this problem and take action," she said.

As part of the presentation, six high school students performed a skit showing the way a typical drinking situation might play out.

In the skit, a college student takes her two high school friends to a college party. Despite her warnings, both friends make poor decisions: one drinks even though she's taking medicine, the other blacks out and gets sexually taken advantage of.

"This wasn't supposed to happen," one of the students laments. "I barely remember how I got home … I let some guy take me up to his room and I honestly don't remember what happened next."
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shame

posted 3/07/08 @ 11:11 AM EST

""I got raped because I got so drunk that I blacked out at a party with strangers," another said. "

you never get raped because you drink, even if you did black out at a party. (Continued…)

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