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- From: backpack@access.digex.com (Stuart Reges)
- Subject: Wash Post: Student Drug Use Rises
- Message-ID: <Bxzop0.MA9@access.digex.com>
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- Organization: Express Access Online Communications, Greenbelt, Maryland USA
- Date: Fri, 20 Nov 1992 00:43:47 GMT
- Lines: 59
-
- The following article appeared in the Washington Post on 10/19/92. It is
- reprinted without permission.
-
- DRUG SURVEY SHOWS RISE IN USE AMONG STUDENTS
- White House Aid Reportedly Opposed Release
- by Michael Isikoff
-
- A top White House anti-drug official last week sought to discourage release of
- a survey showing unexpectedly large increases in student drug use, suggesting
- it would "hurt" President Bush's reelection chances, the survey's sponsor said
- yesterday.
-
- The Bush administration has consistently cited lower drug use among teenagers
- as a chief success in the war on drugs. But the survey by the Parents Resource
- Institute for Drug Education (PRIDE), to be released today, shows dramatic
- increases in use of some drugs, including marijuana, cocaine and LSD, among
- junior high school students.
-
- Thomas Gleaton, president and co-founder of PRIDE, said that Terrence J. Pell,
- chief of staff of the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy,
- called him on Friday expressing concern that "the Clinton campaign has asked
- you for your data" and inquiring what the group planned to do with the
- information. After Gleaton said PRIDE was "considering" a public release, Pell
- responded: "You know if you do that, it's going to hurt us," according to
- Gleaton.
-
- Gleaton said Pell made no further attempt to pressure him, but said it was
- "obvious" that the officials' remarks referred to potential political
- consequences to Bush. He said he quickly told Pell, "This is not something
- against [White House national drug control director Bob] Martinez and it's not
- something against the president."
-
- Gleaton, whose organization has received a $150,000 federal drug prevention
- grant and hosted Martinez at its annual conference last April, said the group
- decided to release the information this week in keeping with its past practice.
- He said this year's results were "alarming" and reflected the administration's
- failure to keep the "spotlight" on the drug issue.
-
- Reached last night, Pell said he only called Gleaton for a "heads up" on when
- the survey was going to be released and it was Gleaton--not he--who brought up
- the Clinton campaign's interest in its findings. "I'm dumbfounded at the
- suggestion that I tried to dissuade him from trying to release it," said Pell.
-
- Pell also said the PRIDE survey was not a "nationally representative" study.
- "The totality of all the surveys shows drug use among high school students
- going down dramatically," he said.
-
- In the PRIDE survey, 212,802 students were asked in questionnaires about drug
- use in 10 categories: cigarettes, beer, wine coolers, liquor, marijuana,
- cocaine, uppers, downers, hallucinogens (such as LSD) and inhalants.
-
- The results showed that among students in grades 9 through 12, drug use rose in
- all categories except marijuana, cocaine and wine coolers. The largest
- increase was in LSD use: 5.3 percent of all high school students reported using
- the drug, up from 4.9 percent the previous year.
-
- Among junior high school students, drug use rose in all 10 categories,
- including a 20 percent increase in LSD, 15 percent for cocaine and 7 percent
- for marijuana. Drug use among blacks rose in all categories.
-