The current research included 329 heavy drinking (defined as women who reported consuming 4 or more drinks per occasion and men who reported consuming 5 or more drinks per occasion) undergraduate students (74.47% female)from a large public university in the south (total student body N = 39,820 in 2011)who completed study materials as part of a larger intervention. Data were evalu-ated at the baseline assessment of the larger trial. Participants were recruited viaannouncements in classrooms (psychology, education, health, and human develop-ment and family studies) and flyers posted around campus. Participants completedsurveys online via DatStat and received course extra credit as compensation fortheir involvement. Participants’ mean age was 23.11 years (SD = 5.63). Participantsself-reported the following races: 55.73% Caucasian, 11.46% Black/African Ameri-can, 12.69% Asian, 0.93% Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander, 7.12% Multi-Ethnic, 0.31%Native American/American Indian, and 11.76% Other. Additionally, 31.17% of par-ticipants reported as Hispanic/Latino.Measures