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College Paper Calls Gays Freaks
by The Associated Press
Posted: October 8, 2007 - 1:00 pm ET
(Columbus, Missouri) Ah, college life.
All-night study sessions in the library. Professors challenging the conventional
wisdom. Snowball battles on the quad.
Get real.
For students at the University of
Missouri-Columbia, college is all about casual sex, meddling parents,
foul-mouthed friendships and partying until you puke -- that is, if you believe
the portrayal in The Booze News, a new weekly newspaper that glorifies the
wonders of heavy drinking.
The publication's founders, a pair of University
of Illinois graduates, call The Booze News (motto: "Today's News ... Under
the Influence") an over-the-top satire modeled after The Onion, the popular
parody newspaper started by college students in Madison, Wisconsin, that has
since gone global.
But some Missouri students and local business
owners aren't laughing. A Booze News book review about interracial gay adoption
that referred to the two male parents as "freaks" drew a formal
protest and request that university officials censure the paper.
Several downtown business owners have thrown out
the free paper, which has published seven issues, afraid of offending customer
sensibilities. Even some campus fraternity houses deem the material too edgy for
members.
"The paper is not for 8-year olds,"
said co-founder Atish Doshi, a 2004 Illinois graduate from suburban Detroit.
"It's about being immature college kids. That's what makes it successful.
We don't take ourselves seriously."
Success has come quickly for Doshi and Derek
Chin, who said they started the paper three years ago "as a complete
joke."
The Booze News can now be found at Illinois
State, Indiana, Iowa and the University of Wisconsin-Madison, along with
Missouri and Illinois.
Doshi, who works in Chicago with a full-time
staff of six, said he expects to expand to another dozen campuses in the next
year.
"I would love to be at as many schools as
possible," Doshi said. "There will always be college students."
For Missouri senior Kyle Ali, a Chicago native,
such a scenario is troubling. As a peer educator who works to control drug and
alcohol abuse, Ali said The Booze News sends the wrong message, humorous or not.
"This is a publication that clearly condones
high-risk behavior," he said. "There's nothing that talks about
alcohol poisoning, or drunk-driving."
A recent issue of the Missouri edition does
contain a public service announcement by the U.S. Department of Transportation
about the dangers of drunken driving. There's also a small disclaimer that the
paper "in no way promotes, encourages or supports binge drinking and/or
underage drinking."
"This newspaper is designed for
entertainment purposes only," the disclaimer reads.
More prominent, though, are features on the local
bartender of the week, alcohol reviews, drink recipes, drinking game
instructions and guidelines on how to beat hangovers.
The paper's Web site boasts that its writers,
editors and advertising sales crew members "are drunk at least four hours a
day, six days a week" but assures readers that "we are not obnoxious
drunks."
The recent article about the adoptive gay couple
-- a supposed book review in which the unidentified author looked solely at the
cover of the children's book -- crossed the line from satire to threatening
speech, said Ali.
He wrote a letter to other campus activists and
the university's vice chancellor of student affairs urging a potential boycott
of local businesses that distribute the weekly paper.
"That article was specifically threatening
to the social environment on this campus," he said.
The paper's managing editor, who has since
stepped down, acknowledged in a note to readers that the article, though
intended as humor, "went a little far." Doshi said he regretted
publishing it, adding that the writer has since been fired.
Broader community acceptance in Columbia will
come with time, Doshi said.
"Everyone thinks and does the same thing at
some point in life," he said, "but when they see it in print and have
it become a realization, all of a sudden it's morally wrong."
©365Gay.com 2007
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