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WHAT DO YOU THINK? This week’s poll question:

Have you ever used hook up apps like Grinder? February 25, 2014

perspectives

answer at theprospectordaily.com Editor-in-Chief

Jasmine aguilera, 747-7477

Column

Smoking: nostalgia and allure By S. David Ramirez The Prospector Smoking was such an in-vogue habit. It stood for the style of so many people I admire: journalists, writers, academics, media professionals and the smoldering list goes on. With the recent ban of smoking on campus, I’ve been pushed to reflect on the nature of smoking. I’ve always had family, friends and colleagues that smoke. It was just part of the culture of our professions and city. I remember high school, having just turned 18. On that day we went out and bought a pack of cigarettes and a lottery ticket. It was a rite of passage for many of us from the Lower Valley. Smoking has always had a fashionable allure. Watching “Breakfast at Tiffany’s” for the first time with Audrey Hepburn sitting opposite George Peppard, a cigarette delicately clasped in her hand. She shares the weather report, he talks about writing and before she falls asleep he gently stubs out her smoke in the ashtray. Years ago, in my intro to journalism course, we were shown photos of the “quintessential journalist.” We were sold on the idea of an era where hardhitting reporters slumped in front of a typewriter, cigarette clenched between their teeth. In more recent years, cigarettes have been a catalyst for conversation. There is not a less threatening icebreaker than “do you have a light?” Business is often conducted in the smoking section. It is a chance to sit on even ground with your boss or coworkers and remove yourself from the world for 10 minutes. It would be asinine to attempt to justify smoking—given the great corpus of knowledge about its adverse effects—but have many studies been done on the positive social implica-

tions? Have people considered the nature of borderland culture? Academic culture? The ban on smoking doesn’t hurt the wealthy student. It will not bother the athletes. The ban will only inconvenience the deans, vice presidents and tenured professors. The ban hurts the student working two jobs to get themselves through college. It hurts the graduate student trying to break into the academic world. It hurts the student taking 18 hours, trying to pack in a few extra classes toward graduation. This ban hurts the people who look toward a small vice to ease the tension of a hard reality. It hurts the folks who have made the decision, as adults, to partake of a crop that has been a cornerstone of our country since its earliest years. In 2014, it is common knowledge that the use of tobacco products can have serious consequences, but many still use them. Cigarettes are not smoked out of ignorance. My willingness to smoke is my own decision, despite the consequences. A campus ban will not promote awareness or hinder my use of them; it’s merely an inconvenience. The tobacco-free UTEP website states “UTEP has a focus on promoting health and wellness among our community,” so maybe our next discussion should be on removing Pizza Hut and Chick-fil-A from campus. I won’t miss the cloud of smoke outside the Liberal Arts Building, or the sickly-sweet vapor of e-cigarettes in the library or the mass grave of cigarette butts outside the Union. I will miss the allure of fashion, camaraderie and choice. Take a deep drag, UTEP. Hold, then exhale. S. David Ramirez may be reached at theprospectordaily. news@gmail.com.

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STAFF Editor-in-Chief: Jasmine Aguilera Layout Editor: Diego Burciaga Assistant News Editor: Lorain Watters Sports Editor: Edwin Delgado Entertainment Editor: Andrea Acosta Copy Editor: Andrés Rodríguez Photo Editor: Michaela Roman Photographers: Cristina Esquivel, Tania Moran Video: Chris Zacherl Staff Reporters: Luis Barrio, Javier Cortez, Amanda Guillen, Lesly Limon, Ashley Muñoz, S. David Ramirez, Jose Soto, Maria Esquinca, Cassandra Adame Cartoonist: Blake A. Lanham

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