MSU Frats Call for Alcohol Ban
BY AUTUMN J. KUCKA
Free Press Special Writer
EAST LANSING -- Three MSU fraternities aim to be alcohol-free by the year 2000. And some dare suggest the campus itself -- known for party guzzling -- might someday ban alcohol from dorms and student hangouts.
"If we were to eventually go to substance-free housing, or dry houses, I can see the university using us as a prime example," said Kelli Milliken, president of MSU's Panhellenic Council of fraternities and sororities.
Going dry won't happen overnight, but alcohol will be a topic this weekend as some of MSU's 3,000 fraternity and sorority members meet with national representatives and school officials to ponder ways to dispel the image of greek houses as drunken party dens.
One frat house, Phi Gamma Delta, is already dry. Two others -- Phi Delta Theta and Sigma Nu -- have been asked by their national organizations to dry out by 2000.
In recent months, fraternities and sororities nationwide have received much attention for drinking exploits.
A 1996 MSU report found that its students drink more than the national average.





