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This page and the pages linked here contain content that has
been archived from a Geocities-based memorial page for Brad.
Bradley J. McCue
This article, that was written by the local media,
DOES NOT necessarily represent the view points of, that of, the
family and friends of Brad. Yet, at this time, they would like to
speak out on the dangers of binge drinking.
Bradley McCue turned 21 at the stroke of midnight
Wednesday and, like college students across the country, celebrated
his rite of passage by drinking with friends.
Two hours later, his friends helped put him in bed
and apparently topped off the evening's celebration by painting
McCue's nose red and the message "24 shots" across his face.
They didn't know that as they were painting his face,
Bradley McCue was dying. The 24 shots he drank pushed his blood
alcohol level up to 0.44 percent, a lethal level.
McCue, a junior from Clarkston, was dead by the time
his roommates called for help at 8:45 a.m. Thursday. The acute alcohol
poisoning leads to a suppression of the medulla, the part of the
brain that controls breathing, and that cuts off the oxygen supply,
said Dean Sienko, Ingham County's chief medical examiner. McCue
was probably dead or dying by 3 or 4 a.m., Sienko said.
Now the police are trying to decide whether anyone
connected with the party will face criminal charges.
News of the tragedy rippled across MSU's campus Friday.
University and East Lansing officials were unanimous in their plea
to students and the community for a fundamental change in values
that would lead to students partying without dying.
"There can be a rite of passage without passing out,"
MSU President Peter McPherson said. "We must challenge traditions
and behaviors that now seem socially acceptable."
The tragedy is more painful for MSU after student,
campus and community leaders spent most of the summer developing
a plan that would lead to that kind of change. A combination of
education and enforcement on alcohol-related issues will be in place
by May 1.
Too late for Bradley McCue.
Even if she hadn't seen McCue in months, high school
friend Heather Pattison said he'd always greet her like old times.
"If there's anything I could say about Brad, it's that he was everyone's
friend," said Pattison, an MSU student. "If it was anyone it had
to happen to, it shouldn't have been Brad."
"Brad was one of those people with a large group
of close friends," said Peter Bertling, another MSU student who
shared McCue's home town. "He was totally outgoing, always putting
on a show. There was no way to bottle up the energy he had.
"Everybody loved him."
The death has caused McCue's family "unspeakable pain,"
according to a statement released late Friday through the funeral
home. Bradley was pursuing an education in youth-related recreation
management, and was a youth camp counselor and soccer coach, referee
and player, the family said. He had worked for Independence Township
Parks and Recreation. "Bradley was a wonderful son and brother....
His death was an example of an alarming trend on too many college
campuses," the statement said. It asked young people to learn from
the tragedy, concluding, "Please BE SAFE and help others be safe
as well."
Student leaders brought by the administration to
a news conference acknowledged the death hit close to home. Nate
Smith-Tyge, chairman of the Associated Students of MSU, said he
helped a friend celebrate turning 21 by drinking the same night
McCue drank himself to death.
"It was a little scary. It could have been anyone,"
Smith-Tyge said. His message: Friends should be responsible for
friends. "No people who have gone and done this have done it alone,"
he said of students who have drunk too much.
The medical examiner ruled McCue's death accidental,
but that doesn't preclude the Ingham County prosecutor from pressing
charges. Police declined to say whether those partying with McCue
or the owners of any bars McCue may have been in would face charges.
Witnesses told police McCue consumed 24 shots of alcohol,
but police did not release details such as what alcohol McCue was
drinking, whether he drank in a bar or who was with him.
MSU isn't alone in battling student drinking.
MSU, the University of Michigan, Massachusetts Institute
of Technology, University of Virginia, Louisiana State University
-- all have had alcohol-related deaths. Studies have found up to
40 percent of college students binge drink.
"The prevalence and tacit acceptance of these behaviors
explain why alcohol-related deaths occur among college students
and why people fail to intercede and stop the fatal cascade of heavy
drinking," Sienko said.
Despite alcohol-free dorms and stadiums and alcohol
counseling, Michigan colleges and universities are losing the fight
to curb student drinking, an earlier Free Press survey showed.
Michigan's 15 public universities say they have stepped
up alcohol education and counseling. U-M, Eastern Michigan and Central
Michigan have received national recognition for their efforts, which
include peer, group and individual counseling; mandatory alcohol
education for students who violate campus alcohol policies; alcohol-free
campus events; preventive education during Alcohol Awareness Week,
and confidential alcohol assessment testing.
Critics say universities aren't making the obvious
decision: banning alcohol from dorms, activities and all areas of
campus.
But educators and administrators say a total ban
is unrealistic when anyone age 21 or older can legally buy and drink
alcohol.
In East Lansing, the white and brick house where McCue
died looks much like the other run-down duplexes that give this
section of Albert Avenue the nickname "the student ghetto." It's
just around the corner from Gunson Street, scene of a drunken riot
in 1997. Beer cans, bottles and caps are everywhere.
"I think more so with guys on their twenty-first birthdays,
they go crazy," said Michelle Joboulian, 20, of Northville.
Students living near McCue's duplex were not as shocked
to learn a student died from drinking as they were to discover how
close it was to them. "I think it hits harder home when it happens
right across the street," said 20-year-old Adam Tuttle, from Tompkins.
But most students said friends generally look out
for each other in social situations, such as at the bar.
"It's like an unwritten rule that when you go out
with friends that you look out for each other," said Rachel Beck,
20, of West Bloomfield Township. "Not just how much you drink, but
where the drinks are coming from."
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