Signing the Amethyst initiative is weighed with life experiences

I agree with your recent editorial that there should be an honest and candid conversation on campus about alcohol use.

I disagree that I need to sign the Amethyst Initiative for such a conversation to occur.

There is a good deal more complexity in this issue than so far has been discussed.

On Sept. 18, for example, I attended the Memorial Service for Scott Leister, an undergraduate who was killed in an automobile accident in California by a drunken driver. Throughout my career I have attended other services for victims of drunken driving and feel passionately that I want to support every step that reduces the incidence of such terrible tragedies and every step that protects our students’ health. For me, signing an initiative, when the evidence is at best ambiguous as to whether this would reduce student alcoholism is not an abstraction, but has to be weighed against too many real life incidents that I have experienced here and elsewhere.

This is a serious issue worth further investigation and reflection. I think we can agree on that. We are all concerned about student safety and the responsible consumption of alcohol.

Joel Seligman
UR President



Letters to the Editor

Slayyyter is but one of many pop artists utilizing club aesthetics in her music as the 2020s march into untold chaos, and it’s not hard to see why. Read More

Letters to the Editor

As we near the end of the semester and the assignments and expectations begin to pile high, it is easy to feel overwhelmed and dehumanized. Whenever I attempt to do something to relax, such as seeing my friends or taking a walk in the warmer weather, I cannot seem to shake the guilt that accompanies unproductivity.  Read More

Letters to the Editor

New research conducted by URMC’s cancer researcher Dr. Isaac Harris, who oversees a lab that studies the role of antioxidants in cancer development, showed some of the drawbacks antioxidants can have for your health. Read More