Posted on 11/17/2005 11:52:35 AM PST by lilylangtree
CHARLESTON, W.Va.--West Virginia is doing away with high-proof grain alcohol citing safety concerns raised by college officials and others.
The state's Alcohol Beverage Control Administration has stopped stocking 190-proof grain alcohol at its warehouse, which provides all liquor sold in the state. Although it announced the ban Wednesday, it asked liquor retailers more than a month ago to pull the potent product from their shelves.
Agency officials said they are responding to concerns by college officials, law enforcement agencies and community groups about the alcohol, which at 95 percent pure is significantly more potent than other distilled spirits.
"If you just pay attention, you'll notice that people don't drink grain at a cocktail party," said Carla Lapelle, associate dean of Student Affairs at Marshall University. "They don't go into a bar and order grain alcohol."
Lapelle said she was unaware of any incidents involving grain alcohol among students at Marshall, which already bans all alcohol on campus, but she considered the move prudent.
West Virginia University spokeswoman Becky Lofstead applauded the agency's efforts, but she also could recall no specific episodes blamed on grain alcohol abuse.
At least a dozen other states ban or limit the sale of 190-proof grain alcohol. Neighboring Pennsylvania and Virginia, for instance, sell it only for medicinal or commercial use, and require a permit for its purchase.
The owner of a liquor store near WVU's main campus in Morgantown said the product was not particularly popular among students.
"People can get drunk on beer. Anything in high doses is going to be a problem," said Joseph Moser of Ashebrook Liquor Outlet.
Grain alcohol is "a decent mover, or it was," said Phyllis Hitchock, manager of classic Liquors in Huntington, Marshall's home. "But the biggest sale of it was for labs and stuff. "It's used as a cleaning solvent."
Moser said officials have begun distributing a 151-proof version of grain alcohol--the same potency as some vodka and rum already sold in West Virginia--through the state's warehouse.
Lofstead said 151-proof isn't as objectionable as the stronger version.
Lapelle added: "Of all the liquors, grain, especially the 190-proof, is purchased solely to get drunk on."
"Black Powder and Alcohol" by Leslie Fish
CHORUS:
Black powder and alcohol,
When the states and the cities fall,
When your back is against the wall;
Black powder and alcohol.
Gimme charcoal to the measure two:
Send the bullet where you want it to.
Gimme sulphur to the measure three:
Make the powder gonna keep you free.
Gimme saltpetre, measure fifteen:
Sweetest shooting that you've ever seen! (chorus)
Gimme water, yeast, and veggie-trash:
Leave it sitting in the slurry-mash.
When it's ready, put it in the still:
If you can't heat it, then the sunlight will.
Draw the alcohol away, and then
Put the slurry back, and start again! (chorus)
Booze'll clean your cuts, or run your car.
You can make it anywhere you are.
Black powder in your cartridge shell
Will send the robbers running clean to Hell.
You can make them if you just know how.
So kids, remember what I tell you now!
(chorus & repeat chorus)
They wernt no beers left, we dun drunk em all!!
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