Wednesday, March 17, 2004

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W E D N E S D A Y MARCH 17, 2004

THE BROWN DAILY HERALD Volume CXXXIX, No. 33

An independent newspaper serving the Brown community since 1891

www.browndailyherald.com

Peer counselor program will be reexamined for 2005-2006

Gay marriage debate draws range of opinions

BY LISA MANDLE

BY BRIAN SCHMALZBACH

One year after the traditional first-year unit system was reorganized to distribute counselors’ workloads more evenly, administrators are considering revamping the peer counseling program. The Office of Student Life plans to review the entire peer counseling program and look at issues of staffing and compensation once a permanent Vice President of Campus Life and Student Services has been found, according to Director of Student Life Jean JoyceBrady. The University is considering changing the responsibilities of minority peer counselors and possibly not housing MPCs within first-year units, she said. Counselors and organizers have “seriously discussed” whether living in dorms facilitates minority peer counseling, Joyce-Brady said. MPCs have historically had both residential and campus-programming responsibilities, she said. Most MPCs agree they need direct interaction with first-years, said Brian Lee ’06, an MPC in Andrews Hall, but some counselors question whether the MPC program should be part of the cocounselor structure in conjunction with residential and women’s peer counseling, he said. MPCs are working to more clearly differentiate their roles from those of other peer counselors, he said. MPCs will continue to live in dorms but will be less involved with planning birthday

“There is a growing movement, a growing number of people in the U.S. who believe that the war on drugs is doing more harm than good,” he said. “Building a powerful national advocacy organization is fundamental to our success.” Nadelmann compared marijuana legalization efforts to the gay rights movement, saying “cultural transformation” can result in acceptance for drug users. Media images of drug users as moral, successful people are crucial to the effort, he said. Nathaniel Lepp ’06, vice president of Students for Sensible Drug Policy, which organized the lecture, said Nadelmann’s message begins with awareness of current drug policy. “We’re hoping that people understand the importance of opposing the drug war as it’s currently being waged,” Lepp said.

Opinions on gay marriage varied widely at a debate that drew a diversity of campus groups. “Marriage is changing, and that’s OK,” said Seth Magaziner ’06, representing the College Democrats. Thousands of gay couples have married in the past month, yet the institution of marriage has not collapsed, he said. Groups including the Brown College Democrats, College Republicans, Brown ACLU and Students for Liberty came together last night in Salomon 001 for “Gay Marriage: A Debate.” Arguing against the inevitability of gay marriage in the United States, Herald opinions columnist Stephen Beale ’04, representing the Brown Spectator, said such an idea precludes debate. “We should be able to choose our future,” he said. Eric Neuman ’04, of Students for Liberty, began the debate for the pro-gay marriage side by stating that “privileges must be equally applied by the government.” There is no traditional definition of marriage, so the way one defines marriage determines how one feels about the issue, Neuman said. Beale said the issue of gay marriage is about culture and tradition, not rights. “There is no right to marry in the Constitution. People claim rights that aren’t rights,” he said. “Tradition is self-justifying,” and the traditional definition of marriage in our society is “the union of one man and one woman for the purpose of begetting children,” Beale said. Later, he added that his definition of marriage could be justified without reference to tradition through moral philosophy. Ethan Ris ’05, president of the College Democrats, asked why the benefits conservatives see in marriage could not be expanded to the LGBT population. Beale said when a previously limited group of privileges is expanded, “it loses appeal.” Herald comic artist Will Newman ’04, of the Brown Debating Union, redirected the issue to the role of government. Marriage is not a right, and “the government won’t provide me a spouse,” he said. He also warned of the danger of enacting progressive change and spending political capital before the majority is ready to accept an issue. Newman said he supported civil unions for gay couples. When asked by Brian McGuirk ’06 if “separate could ever be equal,” Newman and Beale disagreed. “If you’re going to give everyone the privileges of marriage, just call it marriage,” Beale said. Newman disagreed and favored extending those privileges but said, “We call the tradition for creation of children marriage.”

see SSDP, page 6

see MARRIAGE, page 4

see COUNSELORS, page 4

Nick Neely / Herald

At a Tuesday night debate on gay marriage, representatives of several campus groups defended their views. Clockwise from top left, Eric Neuman ’04,Will Newman ’04, Stephen Beale ’04 and Seth Magaziner ’06 all debated.

Nadelmann puts drug policy reform in historical perspective BY ZACH BARTER

The fight to reform drug policy parallels other movements in United States history, according to a national leader of the effort. “We see ourselves standing on the shoulders of and learning from other movements for political and social justice in American history,” said Ethan Nadelmann, founder and executive director of the Drug Policy Alliance, in a Tuesday night lecture in C.V. Starr Auditorium. The lecture, which drew about 80 students and community members, began with Nadelmann asking how many people in attendance supported the war on drugs. One student raised his hand. Nadelmann provided a litany of reasons for his opposition to the war on drugs, including its creation of a violence-ridden black market, its effect on HIV transmission and its incarceration of millions of Americans.

But he said the core principle driving his work is his belief in people’s sovereignty over their own bodies. “No one deserves to lose what’s precious to them — their freedom, their families, their livelihood — because of what they choose to put in their body,” Nadelmann said. The anti-drug camp in the United States has taken on a fanatical character, he said, calling the war on drugs “the dark side of the American psyche.” “It’s a quasi-religious feeling,” he said. “It’s this conviction that there’s something viscerally, morally, biblically wrong” with putting drugs in one’s body, he said. Nadelmann, who taught at Princeton University before moving into drug policy, also spoke about the origins and future of the movement. He stressed the importance of building coalitions with a wide range of communities and keeping a long-term focus.

W E AT H E R F O R E C A S T

I N S I D E W E D N E S D AY, M A RC H 1 7 , 2 0 0 4 Students at other universities face different types of housing woes campus watch, page 3

Northeastern University cancels annual spring concert, citing Super Bowl riot campus watch, page 3

Ellen Hunter ’04 writes that Iraq’s history must be considered when planning its future column, page 11

W. tennis has successful weekend, despite star player’s injury sports, page 12

Doubles teams key to m. tennis team’s success in weekend tournament sports, page 12

WEDNESDAY

snow high 33 low 20

THURSDAY

snow high 34 low 20


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Wednesday, March 17, 2004 by The Brown Daily Herald - Issuu