celebrat i ng positive choices
Transcription
celebrat i ng positive choices
CELEBRAT I NG POSITIVE CHOICES LOOK A T August 1990, Vol. 43, No. 8 Features Do the Right Thing by Brad Chapman Nobody saw it happen. Darren pulled out of the parking lot like he was trying to shake Rambo off his bumper. Call of the Wild by Luan Miller Experience a wilderness where backpacks are high fashion, blisters are de rigueur, and Eddie Bauer is king. Drug Wars: Can We Win by Giving In? by Kris Coffin Stevenson Lots of people are talking 'bout a revolution in which anything smokable, shootable, or snortable would be legal. Addiction—What a Drag! by Patricia Carroll Think you're not addicted? Just wait until you're sneaking week-old butts out of the ashtray for a fix. Henry Lee Summer: "I've Got Everything!" by Sheryl Elliott Reynolds He started out playing clubs in Mississippi and hearing "boos" when he spoke against drugs. Now Indiana's pride hears cheers about his antidrug message and his hit songs. Delayed Reaction by VeraLee Wiggins Christopher was no rat. And the thought of turning in someone twice his size wasn't appealing—until he got a crash course in speaking out. 16 31 2 • LISTEN • August 1990 3 6 10 14 16 20 Departments Ask a Friend Talking to Parents about the Birds and Bees 19 Kitchen Sink Chorus Line's Last Kick 23 Graffiti Out of Darkness 24 And So Forth At Your Service 26 Puzzles Crazy English 27 Listen Up! Skid Row on the Skids 28 One Last Note Legalization? Just Say No! 30 Poster Courage from the Heart 31 COVER PHOTO COURTESY OF JAMES BOGARD ASSOCIATES AND CBS ASSOCIATED RECORDS Do the Right Thing Crash. Broken glass. Insurance. Dad's anger. Spending money. No one saw. Peer pressure. Notes. Drive-offs. The wrong thing. The right thing. JUST DO IT. When Ciro and I pushed out through the thick glass doors of Tyler Mall, the August air slapped us in the face. "Man, it's hot," Ciro groaned. After spending an hour or two just kind of hanging out in the mall, we had checked our usual places— The Gap, Waldenbooks, and The Sharper Image. In the meantime we'd forgotten how hot it was getting outside. Now, with my new Milli Vanilli Girl, You Know It's True cassette in hand, I beat Ciro back to my black 4X4 in the parking lot. I jumped in and unlocked the door on his side. The engine roared to life and I popped the cassette into the stereo. "Hot tunes, man," Ciro said. Holding a rolledup copy of Guitar magazine in his hand like a microphone, he shook his black, shoulder-length hair back and began to sing along. He has one of the worst singing voices I've ever heard, but that's never discouraged him. Partway through "Blame It on the Rain," the air conditioner began to cool the interior of the truck down a bit. Then I shifted the 4X4 into reverse and started backing out of the parking space. But something—the music or the heat or Ciro's sorry attempts at singing along—distracted me Brad Chapman ILLUSTRATION BY DARREL TANK August 1990 • LISTEN • 3 just enough so that I let the front bumper of my truck catch the rear end of the parked car on my left. I felt the impact, saw the car next to me lurch slightly, and heard broken pieces of glass and plastic hit the pavement. "Did you hit something, Darren?" Ciro asked, turning down the volume until Milli Vanilli was just a whisper. I pounded the dashboard with my fist. "This is all I need!" We jumped out and looked over the damage. My bumper was scratched on the underside a little—no big deal. But I'd broken out the taillight of the car and dented some of its surrounding chrome. "This is going to raise my insurance, and Dad will probably freak out," I fumed. "Why do things like this happen to me?" "Bad break," Ciro said. He traced his finger along the dented chrome. "But who has to know? We can just split! Nobody's seen us. Life goes on." Though we're pretty good friends, in some ways Ciro and I are from different ends of the "How many times have you complained about people wrecking your paint job by banging their doors against your truck? Nobody's ever left a name and phone number for you." universe. Sometimes it's hard to understand where he's coming from. I guess the thing that bothers me most about him is his lack of responsibility about some things. Not that I'm another Mother Theresa or anything like that. Ciro is always there for his friends, but for anyone else he's not overly concerned. He's the kind of guy who knows all the jokes about starving Ethiopians. And he can be kind of mean to people if he doesn't like them. I've never been comfortable with that. We probably wouldn't have hit it off at all if we hadn't been cut from the football tryouts for the Camden High School Cougars on the same day. He was too small and I was too slow. At the time, I thought the coach hadn't really given me a chance to show what I could do. I may give up a step or two against the really fast guys, but I have great hands. I was kind of spouting off about it in the cafeteria the next day when Ciro walked by. "You got cut yesterday too?" he had asked, setting his tray down across from mine. "Coach Walters always put me in against Kyle Anderson, and who's going to do anything against an all-city safety? That guy covers pass receivers like a blanket." Ciro shrugged and took a humongous bite out of his pizza. "I weigh 145 pounds dripping wet, and the coach expects me to block a 200-pound lineman with arms like Arnold Schwarzenegger's," he said. "But that's what the game is all about, I guess. Life goes on." Now, two summers later, here I was, hearing Ciro say the same thing about a broken taillight in the Tyler Mall parking lot. "Hey, look," I said. "I can't just drive away from this deal. It's not right. I've got to leave my name and phone number on a note." "Get real!" Ciro laughed. "How many times have you complained about people wrecking your paint job by banging their doors against your truck? Nobody's ever left a name and phone number for you. Besides, that car has to be 15 years old. It looks like something out of The Road Warrior. I'll bet Mel Gibson himself owned it at one time. It's got dents and scratches all over it. The driver probably won't even notice that you hit him." I fingered a piece of the broken red taillight and thought about how long it would take me bagging groceries at Safeway to pay a hundred dollars' worth of repairs on a 15-year-old heap. It suddenly seemed so needless and unfair. "Even if he does notice it," I muttered, "his insurance will cover it. It won't cost him a cent." Ciro looked at me and grinned. "Works for me!" "Yeah," I said. "Let's get out of here." We jumped into the truck and headed for the exit to the parking lot. But as we sat, waiting for the light to change at the first intersection, I thought more about something Ciro had said: "How many times have you complained about people . . . ?" What right, I asked myself, do I have to complain if I'm going to do the same thing to someone else? If I expect others to do the right thing, the least I can do is expect as much from myself. Ciro was just turning up the volume on Milli Vanilli again when I made a U-turn and headed back for the mall parking lot. "What are you doing?" he asked. "I'm going back," I sighed. "Are you serious?" "As a heart attack," I said. Ciro ran his fingers through his hair. "Darren, you're the weirdest guy I've ever known. Nobody in his right mind would do what you're doing. LISTEN (ISSN 0024-435X), August 1990, volume 43, number 8, is published monthly by Narcotics Education, Inc., 12501 Old Columbia Pike, Silver Spring, MD 20904, U.S.A. For the U.S.A.: one-year subscription $16.95 (U.S.). Second-class postage paid at Nampa, ID. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to LISTEN, P.O. Box 7000, Boise, ID 83707. 4 • LISTEN • August 1990 You were home free, and now you're going back." "I may have been home, but I wouldn't have been free." Ciro blinked and looked at me as if I'd begun to speak Russian or something. He turned away and watched the traffic, seemingly lost in thought for the moment. "A hundred dollars, maybe more," he finally blurted out. "That's what this doing the right thing is going to cost you!" "You know," I said, "a wise man once told me something that makes pretty good sense: 'Life ILLUSTRATION BY DARREL TANK goes on.' You know who said that, Ciro?" He laughed and shook his head. "Words to live by!" By now we were back at the scene of the crime. I scrawled out my name and phone number on the the back of my Milli Vanilli receipt and slipped it under the windshield wiper of "Mel Gibson's" car. When I got back in the truck, Ciro gave me a long look. "Maybe I can loan you a little to help you out for a while," he said. I smiled. "You'll be hearing from me. You can count on it." August 1990 • LISTEN • 5 Call of the Wild After the holler of city living, the call of the wild may sound muffled indeed—until you experience a wilderness where backpacks are high fashion, blisters are de rigueur, and Eddie Bauer is king. Every inch of you is soaked. You have blisters on both feet and scratches running the length of both arms. There's a swarm of hungry mosquitoes humming behind you. This is fun? For thousands of enthusiastic hikers and backpackers, the answer is a resounding Yes! Backpacking gives you the chance to view parts of the country that the people comfortably settled in their cars will never see. You can go at a leisurely pace, taking great photos or just getting the feel of land untouched by human industry. You can develop personal strength—mentally and physically. "I really like being away from the crowds," says Diane Mines, 19, of Idaho. "When you're in the mountains or desert wilderness areas, people are different, nicer. I also like seeing the animals in their natural homes. Just being in the wilderness is an experience." "The time away from today's hustle and bustle is important," says Janet Cooney, a 17-yearold Texan. "I can get away from 6 • LISTEN • August 1990 it all, and the only worry I have is where the next bush will be!" Where to Start Although most of us have pretty well mastered walking, hiking back into a wilderness area is a totally different concept. So how do we proceed? "It seems like I've always been interested in hiking and backpacking," says Marty Ytreburg, 19, a college student from Washington. "My family used to live in India, and there wasn't much opportunity for us to go backpacking. But I read everything I could find on the subject. As soon as we moved back to the States, I got my gear and put into practice everything I'd read." "My dad was an outdoorsman," says Mark Winchester, 24, of Idaho. "I can remember him taking me camping when I was little and showing me how to get along in the outdoors. Later I read some books on orienteering and how to use a compass." Good sources for inspiration Luan Miller and information are hiking groups such as the Sierra Club, which often hosts regularly scheduled hikes throughout North America. Other groups, including scout troops, offer training and experience within the safety of a group situation. "I first got involved when I was in seventh grade. My Girl Scout troop went on an overnight trip into the wilderness area near my home," Diane Mines says. "There were about 20 of us divided into four or five groups, with each group responsible for itself. We had been given some training at home, of course, but this was the real thing. I mean, if we couldn't get our fire started, we ate our food cold, or if we couldn't get our tents up, we slept out in the open." Gearing Up Backpacking does require equipment, but not as much as you might think. From the editors of Backpacking Journal come some tips for pulling together the necessary gear. Overnight trips call for a backpack. With more than 400 Though a purist may scorn anything other than a simple bedroll, a sleeping bag provides more comfort and warmth. A lightweight, compressible bag is best. While it should retain body heat, it should also "breathe," allowing body moisture to escape so you won't wake up chilled. Look for a bag made from down (waterfowl feathers) or one of the new polyester fibers. Consider, too, what your backpacking needs are. Where will you do most of your hiking? Will you be going out year-round or only during the summer months? Can you expect mostly dry weather, or is there a good chance of rain or snow? A little forethought now can make the difference between an experience to remember or one you wish you could forget. What Shall I Wear? A city dweller drops his heavy pack and takes a rest. He's one of many youths enjoying a hiking trip sponsored by San Francisco's police department. different packs currently on the market, finding the right one could take a while. You may want to rent what you need or check out joining a hiking group that provides gear for the first few trips until you find what suits you best. For most people, a simple weekend pack that holds between 1,500 and 2,500 cubic inches, or between 30 and 50 pounds loaded, is adequate. When you're ready to buy, take the gear you plan to use with you to help in choosing a pack. Remember, there's a big difference between how a pack fits and feels when it's empty and when it's loaded. All straps, webbing, and buckles on the pack should be strong and easy to adjust— without breaking off any of your fingernails. The actual material of the pack is less important, since it's usually the fasteners that wear out first, not the fabric. Your clothing is important. It's all that protects you from Two hikers kick back and enjoy the view—and the cooling spray—at the top of Yosemite National Park's Vernal Falls. August 1990 • LISTEN • 7 sunburn, frostbite, skinned shins, sharp tree branches, and hungry mosquitoes. Pants and shirts should be of sturdy, but not heavy, material. In cold weather, you'll want to add some of the new, "breathable" thermal underwear and maybe a sweater under your jacket. A nylon jacket will keep out light winds or rain. If you plan to go out in very cold weather, invest in a good winter jacket tested to the temperatures you expect to experience. Always layer your clothing. That way you can take off or put on a layer and stay comfortable. Pay special attention to your feet. Wearing a pair of underliner socks made of silk or cotton beneath your other socks will provide extra warmth and cushioning. Choosing the right boots or walking shoes makes a difference, too. If you're going out on fairly flat terrain and well-groomed trails, you may be able to get away with a good pair of walking shoes. But if your This tree isn't the Jolly Green Giant, but its soaring height and mammoth girth make a curious hiker look about as big as a sprout. sights are on the faraway peak, you'd better spend time selecting a true hiking boot. Styles, options, and price tags vary, but all the experts agree that finding a good boot is worth the effort. There's nothing like , hiking a few miles in poorly / fitting boots to dull your / appreciation for the most spectacular scenery. Avoid tooheavy or stiff boots. In addition to causing painful blisters, they'll leave you with sore, overworked leg muscles. Buy the boots far in advance of your actual hiking trip. Like a good pair of blue jeans, hiking boots need to be broken in. Place a piece of moleskin at any rubbing points to prevent blisters or cushion the ones you do get, advises Diane Mines. If you don't have enough time to break the boots in before your trip, Backpacking Journal offers this suggestion: Put the boots on and stand in a bathtub full of tepid water until the boots are soaked. Then wear the soggy shoes until they're dry again. (Nobody said this would be fun—these measures are for emergencies only!) PHOTO BY JAN SCHLEIFER Be Prepared After a day of trekking, a group of teens warms up at a campfire in the Oregon wilderness. 8 • LISTEN • August 1990 As any Boy Scout who knows his motto can tell you, preparation is the key to a trip that's memorable for all the right reasons. "Proba'-!y the most important thing to remember, especially when you're just getting into backpacking, is safety," Near the Maroon Bells—mountains in Colorado—a hiker surveys snowcapped peaks and savors her moment at the top. says Marty Ytreburg. "A person should learn how to use a compass and a topographical map, and always include them in his or her gear. I take lots of precautions, packing first-aid supplies, signaling devices, emergency food packs—and plenty of matches." "Go with a buddy; it's the safest way to go," says Erin Ostrom, 17, of Nevada. Also tell someone where you're going and when you plan to return, so that help can be dispatched if you get in trouble. Many wilderness areas have a logbook for people to sign in and out so that the rangers know who's still on the trail and who's come back. It's to your advantage to record your plans. "Listen and be alert," adds Kendra Wise, 15, from Oregon. "If something is making a weird noise, find out what it is. Your senses are your greatest safety instruments." Backpacking is often considered a strenuous, musclestraining activity, but if you're in reasonable condition—and you don't overload your pack—you can slap on your gear and hike comfortably first time out. If you don't partici- pate in any kind of sport, you'll probably want to set up a personal schedule for an allbody activity such as cycling, swimming, or jogging. Hiking and backpacking are, after all, endurance activities, and the greater your endurance, the more you'll be able to enjoy your hiking trips. And enjoyment is the whole idea. "I really love my time in the mountains," says Mark Winchester. "There aren't any distractions. When I go out, I'm just there to enjoy the scenery and relax, not to prove anything. I like to hike in far enough to see the wildlife in their own territory." "Being out in nature, breathing air that's really clean is the best," says Erin Ostrom. "Just be sure you don't quit too soon," urges Diane Mines. "Too many people give up after the first trip. The first time out is kind of scary. Your feet will probably hurt, and you'll get tired fast. Just think positive; go out and have fun! I guarantee the next trip will be much better. Then you'll be hooked." le Backpacker Basics • The Complete Walker, by Colin Fletcher, is considered the hiker's bible. Fletcher, who was the first man known to have walked the length of the Grand Canyon, tells you everything you need to know about hiking and backpacking, including how to stock your pack, select a good campsite, plan and prepare meals, and live off the wilderness. • The Hiker's and Backpacker's Handbook, by Bill Merrill (a former Forest Service ranger), is another practical how-to book. He writes from personal experience and covers almost any situation that might occur on the trail. • From the Sierra Club of America comes Walking Softly in the Wilderness, by John Hart. It offers useful advice in selecting everything from the right gear to the right trail, gives safety tips, and tells how to leave the wilderness the way you found it. • Backpacker magazine, published bimonthly by Rodal Press, is a good source for up-to-the-minute news in the backpacking world. • When you're ready to buy equipment, go to some sporting-goods stores to try things out and decide what's best. Reputable mail-order stores can also outfit you from head to toe. Write to the following for a catalog: Eddie Bauer Catalog, P.O. Box 3700, Seattle, WA 98124-3700; and Recreational Equipment, Inc. (REI) Catalog, P.O. Box 88125, Seattle, WA 98138-0125. August 1990 • LISTEN • 9 Kris Coffin Stevenson Drug Wars: Can We Win by Giving In? When Uncle Sam waves the white flag, when the Statue of Liberty lights a joint instead of her torch, when the American eagle holds syringes in place of arrows, will legalization make us free—or a lot worse off? You pull up to a fast-food drive-through with a car full of kids. Your passengers are shouting their orders at you. Finally, a tinny voice comes through the speaker. "May I take your order?" "Yeah," you call back. "Three burgers, one cheeseburger, four orders of fries, two chocolate milkshakes, and two hits of crack." "Will that be all?" asks the voice. "Yes. No, wait. Add two joints to that order." What? Your mom is driving you home from the school-play practice. "I have to stop at the drugstore," she says. You follow her into the store, where she picks up a box of hair ILLUSTRATION BY DON WELLER coloring, a package of cold medicine, and a bottle of cocaine powder. "It's on sale today," she says, pleased. "Only $1.99 an ounce!" Really! What we're talking about here is the reality of drug legalization—a new idea in the fight against drugs. "It sounds like the idea of some wasted high-school dropout," you say. "Are people actually serious about this?" Yes, they are. And they include a few names you might have heard before, like former Secretary of State George Schultz, Baltimore Mayor Kurt Schmoke, and U.S. District Judge Robert Sweet. Legalization supporters have some surprisingly good reasons for backing the concept. The main argument behind legalizing drugs has to do with crime. Every night when you watch the news on TV, you probably see reports about drug-related crimes like robberies and murders. And of course everybody knows about the big drug cartel in Medellin, Columbia, where all the drug lords have been battling the government for control of the country. Legalizing drugs would result in wiping out all those drug lords and all that crime overnight. Uncle Sam, the Drug Dealer? Some people even go so far as to suggest that this is how it might happen: The U.S. govern- August 1990 • LISTEN • 11 ment would buy the drugs and then sell them for less than what they're going for on the street. No one is going to pay $10 for a hit of crack if the government is selling it for $5. Suddenly there would be no profit in selling drugs. All those drug lords, drug dealers, and drug runners would have no further reason to exist. Drugs would be so cheap and available that people wouldn't have to steal and kill to get them. Legalization would change a lot of yearly statistics: • 750 people wouldn't die from illegal trafficking. •3,000 people wouldn't die from AIDS contracted by using dirty needles, because they'd have easy access to clean ones. •2,400 people wouldn't die from impure drugs or drugs laced with other substances. •1,600 people wouldn't die in drug-related street crimes. U.S. District Judge Robert Sweet says, "I suggest it is time to abolish the prohibition—to cease treating indulgence in mind alteration as a crime." He feels that the war on drugs is being lost and that legalization would result in "the elimination of the profit motive, the gangs, the drug dealers." Democratic Representative George Crockett, one of the latest politicians to join the group urging legalization, thinks that "decriminalization is the only solution. Our courts are burdened down with these drug cases, and there is nothing they can do about it." Those who favor legalization think it would put an end to the billions of dollars spent fighting drugs; the prisons overflowing with drug offenders; the courts backlogged with drug cases; drug offenders getting off on 12 • LISTEN • August 1990 technicalities; drug dealers who are able to shift their base of operation so quickly that they can elude attempts to catch them; and the flood of drugs raised as the national crop in the third-world countries and smuggled by the ton across our vast, unprotected borders. It's hopeless to try stopping drug use, legalization supporters say. By taking the crime factor out of drugs, we can eliminate a lot of our current drug problems and use our money more wisely in drug education and rehabilitation. The people urging legalization attempt to strengthen their case by pointing out the failure of Prohibition. In the 1930s, alcohol became illegal. But enforcement of the new law soon proved impossible. Moonshine (illegally distilled alcohol) was everywhere, and secret clubs selling alcohol to those in the know sprang up all over. Finally the law was repealed. Today we've learned to live with alcohol. We have laws about the quality of alcohol, laws about where it can be sold, and laws about the age of those allowed to drink it. The same thing will happen to drugs, say those in favor of decriminalization. We'll learn to live with the effects of widespread drug use. "So let's go for it, dude," you say. "Legal drugs for everyone!" Why Won't It Work? Well, it's not quite that simple. There are even more arguments against drug legalization than for it. Although drug legalization may stop some of the crime-related deaths, other yearly figures won't be erased: •160,000 drug-related emergency-room visits. •6,700 drug-related deaths. •375,000 or more infants born addicted to drugs. • 75 percent of all children beaten to death being killed by drug-using parents. With these statistics in mind—and they're just a few examples—could we really learn to live with legalized drugs like we did with alcohol? "Alcohol has done quite enough damage, thank you," answers William Bennett, coordinator of the federal government's war on drugs. "We don't need the other drugs legalized." And when you look at alcohol's effect on public health, the figures are alarming. Alcohol causes the deaths of 80,000 to 100,000 people and contributes to an additional 100,000 deaths every year. After Prohibition failed, the numbers of alcohol users rose dramatically, currently standing at 113 million. Tobacco—containing another harmful but legal drug, nicotine—has 60 million users and causes over 300,000 deaths yearly. If other drugs become legal and cheaper, the number of marijuana and cocaine users— currently 18 million and 6 million respectively—will skyrocket to even more alarming levels. Dr. Robert DuPont, former director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse, predicts that the number of users of these two drugs would rise to the 100-million range. And what about the inevitable increases of users of heroin, ice, PCP, LSD, etc.? An important difference between alcohol and other drugs is that only 10 percent of people who drink get addicted, while at least 75 percent of those who try other drugs become addicted—many, the first time they use drugs. Drug legalization creates other problems as well. Just where do you draw the line? Some people propose legalizing only marijuana, claiming it isn't harmful. But most of the crime—and profit—result from the sale of drugs such as cocaine, crack, and heroin. Legalizing marijuana wouldn't do much to take away the profit motive, and would only put more unsafe, spaced-out drivers on the road. If all drugs are legalized, the very real possibility exists of much more dangerous drugs being created and sold legally in the future. If these not-yetdeveloped killer drugs are so lethal that they must be declared illegal, then the government will once again have to start a war on drugs. What about access? Will there be a minimum age for other drugs as there is for alcohol? If so, law officers will have to enforce that minimum age, and underage users desperate for a high will continue the cycle of crime and violence. If we try decriminalization and it's a disaster, how can the government go back to reinforcing the old laws about illegal drugs with so many more millions of addicts in our country willing to commit violent crimes to get the drugs they need? From a political point of view, a majority backing of legalization isn't likely to happen. Surveys show that the American public is against legalization of drugs 9 to 1. So, even those willing to risk their political careers by speaking out in favor of such an idea face strong public opposition. It's not a stand likely to get a member of congress reelected. The Bottom Line When you add up all the arguments against legalizing drugs, it doesn't seem like such a great solution after all. Maybe we don't appear to be winning the war on drugs. But wars take time, and individual battles must be fought and won. Here's a battle we are winning: Among high-school and college kids today, cocaine usage is dropping—the "Just Say No" campaign is working. In 1985, there were 5.8 million users. By 1988, that number had dropped to 2.9 million. Education against drugs is effective. Just look at the antismoking campaign. For 25 years we've been trying to get people to stop smoking. First cigarette ads were banned from TV, then restaurants started providing smoke-free sections, and workplaces became segregated. More recently some airline flights have become completely nonsmoking. It's no longer cool to smoke, and it's a sign of weakness if you can't quit. The percentage of smokers has gone down from 40 percent in 1964 to 30 percent and dropping, today. The most important thing in all this talk about whether we should or shouldn't legalize drugs is people. Whether drugs are legal or not, people suffer from the effects of using drugs. They run the risk of contracting AIDS and hepatitis from dirty needles; they run the risk of overdosing; they run the risk of unknowingly buying drugs diluted with toxic substances; and they run the risk of heart failure—even on the first use. Drug users damage their immune system and become more vulnerable to disease; they miss lots of school and work; and they suffer poor relations with their friends and family because all their time and energy are expended on drugs. Some of them bring innocent babies into the world drug-addicted. The world has enough suffering without adding to it by creating more drug addicts. As columnist Richard Cohen says, "The decriminalization of drugs would be a leap into the unknown. No one knows what would happen." Let's not find out. Fl August 1990 • LISTEN • 13 Patricia Carroll Addiction What a Drag! Nicotine is more addicting than heroin. Find that hard to believe? Just wait until you're driving to 7-Eleven at 3 a.m. to buy smokes, or plowing through the trash looking for soggy cigarette butts. Consider this National Enquirerish story: according to a newspaper report, Thomas Warren chained himself to a 280-pound sofa for three weeks to quit smoking. He used a thin, 25foot-long steel cable attached to the sofa to form a collar around his neck. Outrageous? Ridiculous? Drastic. But understandable to one who is addicted. I started smoking as a teenager. I was sure adults who warned me to stop (lectured, I thought) were trying to ruin my fun, annoyed at my sophisticated look. The unhealthy aspects of smoking hadn't confronted me yet. I could quit any time, right? After all, I'm a reasoning human with will power. What chance does a little white piece of paper stuffed with shreds of tobacco have against me? Well, those little shreds of tobacco have more power than Mike Tyson (or Buster Douglas!) on a good day. When Art Buchwald had to give up his cigars, he noted, "I can smoke without writing, but I can't write without smoking." For me, not only writing, but waking up, driving, socializing, digesting a meal, working, and relaxing all seemed to depend on inhaling that smelly, deadly, 14 • LISTEN • August 1990 and expensive smoke. Determined to quit, I enrolled in a university study for help. I read the material supplied, relaxed with the tape they gave me, and guided my imagination to smoke-free, wooded dells and sparkling, butt-free beaches—to the applause and relief of my friends and family. I kept a record of my smoking habits, read the warnings on the packs seriously, cut down, stubbed out my cigarettes sooner than I used to, changed brands, listened to the encouraging words of those conducting the study, tossed my cigarettes— and went out and bought more. For two years they encouraged and I tried. I was one of their failures. Not ready yet for steel cable, I decided I'd quietly quit on my own—right after the next pack. The next pack extended into another and another. Buying by the carton is cheaper, I reasoned; I'll buy one carton and quit after that. Several hundred cartons later, I admitted that approach wasn't working too well. I went public. The humiliation of failing would help keep me on the straight and narrow, I was sure. I'm glad I didn't bet my house or my car on it. A friend bought me a box of candy. Every day I went without a cigarette, I was to reward myself with a piece of candy. I didn't get fat on that box, believe me. My doctor fortified me with facts, encouragement, and patches for my arm to lessen the withdrawal symptoms. The patches worked, but not well enough. A little patch was no match for the craving that could shake my whole body from toes to scalp. The delight and encouragement of nonsmokers, ex-smokers, and those still smoking—who thought, Maybe if she can, I can—didn't work when the yearning for a hit of nicotine came over me. I tried to stop by thinking of the health consequences of smoking. I pictured black lungs, blood moving sluggishly through my veins, pain in my heart, tubes from an oxygen tank snaking to my nose, cholesterol piling up in my veins and arteries. I saw an older, wrinkled me coughing through the day, unable to climb five stairs at once, wheezing for air from the exertion of getting up off the sofa. Whenever I cleaned the brown film from my windows, I told myself that something like that was in my lungs, on my teeth, in my mouth. I asked myself if I wanted my face to look like a prune in 10 years, looked at my yellow fingers and nails, and reminded myself that I smelled like I'd just been fumigated—no matter how much perfume I dumped on. "Who," I asked myself, "would want to kiss you when you taste like a dirty ashtray?" I threw my cigarettes away. I drank gallons of water to flush out the nicotine, stocked the fridge with low-cal munchies, and piled up busy work for my hands. The first three days are the hardest. I watched the clock: 12 hours, 22 hours. I read to take my mind (now playing tricks on me) off this addiction. I hoped that no one in the book ILLUSTRATION BY STEVE SMALLWOOD would light up a cigarette. I weighed my long list of reasons for quitting against my one reason for continuing—I needed it. Two days and 23 hours passed. The worst was almost over—only one more hour. I'd made it! Not quite. I found myself kneeling on the car seat looking for a long butt in the ashtray. A passing neighbor honked at my derriere sticking out the car door. Red-faced, I still lit the stinking thing and took a long drag. Soon I was waiting in the parking lot for the store to open so I could have my fix. Two days and 23 hours up in smoke! "I'll finish the pack, then quit. They cost too much just to throw away," I rationalized. The next time I quit, each hour I told myself I'd gone too long now to give up. When I had only 30 minutes left to go in that critical three-day period, I found myself scrounging through the car ashtray again. "Why can't I make it?" I asked myself. I lit the butt and wondered if it was even worth trying to quit again after this. Then I coughed and coughed and coughed. "It's worth it," I decided. This time I passed the threeday mark and limped beyond the three-week mark. Now it's been six weeks—and it's going to be forever! The craving still hits me sometimes, but it's getting weaker. I'd sought a sophisticated look as a teenager. I found there's nothing sophisticated about breaking an addiction. A August 1990 • LISTEN • 15 He nry;i7er sam "I've Got Everything!" Henry Lee Summer can live without BMWs or mansions in Beverly Hills. But he loves rock 'n' roll, high-top sneakers, and living drug free. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••004 It's a hot July in Brazil, Indiana, and Henry Lee Summer is coming home. For him, it's quite a change from the hurry and noise of New York and Los Angeles. For the 7,852 residents of Brazil, it's a chance to see a local boy who made good return to his roots. The past several years, Summer has headlined the benefit rock concert which climaxes Brazil's yearly week-long festival hosted by local Rotary Clubs. The benefit now requires something almost unheard of in towns this size—crowd control. Summer remembers attending the festival while growing up. "Everybody went. It was a big deal, you know, to ask a girl to go to the fireworks with you, and I'd always be down to the wire. All of us guys would hold out, and be going for the same girl. When she'd make her decision, about five or six of us would have to scramble." That was then. Now Summer is the one causing the scramble. The big deal is his rock concert; his fans turn out in full force to see him bring the house down as he performs "I Wish I Had a Girl" and other songs from his two albums, Henry Lee Summer, and I've Got Everything. Summer has a straightforward, somewhat bluesy style, and one reviewer called his music "laid-back REO Speedwagon." Summer enjoys these hometown benefit concerts. "I figure after all the years of enjoyment they've given me, I can hopefully give something back. When I see those people, I know that's where I came from—that's where I still am. It's easy to get lost in this business," he says. "I spend a lot of time going back and forth from L.A. to New York. It's nice to have that home base. And my parents keep me in line, too." Sheryl Elliott Reynolds 16 • LISTEN • August 1990 Born Henry Lee Swartz, Summer grew up in this small, Midwestern farming community, the son of devout Nazarene parents. He spent much of his time playing basketball and attending church—he made his singing debut in the church choir. Summer got an acoustic guitar when he was 11 and taught himself to play. Believing he had musical potential, he joined his first band while in high school. Summer played with the local group until a full basketball scholarship took him to Western Wyoming Junior College, where the six-foot-three-inch Hoosier played guard. The love of music had a stronger hold on Summer than the basketball court did. He left college after his freshman year to follow his dream. Heading south to Jacksonville, Mississippi, Summer began his career. He paid his dues, playing night after night in a road house. During the next couple of years, he played with various bands in the South, then returned to Indiana to start putting his own music together. In 1986, he played 222 engagements at various clubs, ballrooms, high schools, colleges, and county fairs. By October of that year, his hard work paid off when he was signed to CBS Associated Records. In February 1988, his first major label album was released internationally. The self-titled album, Henry Lee Summer, was recorded in New York, except for the song "Still Bein' Seventeen," which was entirely produced and performed by Summer, and recorded in his living room. Summer's most popular song, "I Wish I Had A Girl," became a Top 20 single in Billboard's Hot 100, and the video reached number eight on MTV's Video Countdown. PHOTO BYPAULNATKIN / PHOTORESERVE, INC. • • In 1988, CBS sponsored a video debut party for that hit, and Summer was presented an award by the governor of Indiana. He was named a "Sagamore of the Wabash" (one of Indiana's highest awards) for his work with the "Say No to Drugs" program. Long before it was cool to speak out against drug use, Henry Lee Summer talked to concert-goers about alternatives to substance use. "I figured out a long time ago in this business that drugs are all around," he says. "I've seen what they've done to some people I've known. Before some of my songs, I'd say, 'See how much fun I'm having?' And just be kind of tongue in cheek with it . .. telling the audience that you can't have this kind of fun for any length of time if you're on drugs. I try not to get in the position where "You really appreciate the good times after you've had a few bad times. You've just got to get out there and bust right through the bad ones!" I start preaching to them, because I know that'd turn me off. "To tell you the truth," Summer continues, "a few years ago, when I'd talk about drugs, I'd get a few boos, but it didn't stop me. I'd tell them, 'You don't have to listen to me. You'll see it someday.' But anymore, it seems the attitude has changed. I'll say it, and the reaction is positive." 18 • LISTEN • August 1990 Summer loves quality guitars and equipment. Here he mixes a song on his board. Recalling his own teenage years, Summer says, "It's hard. It's hard for everybody, but like the old cliche, you really appreciate the good times after you've had a few bad times. You've just got to get out there and bust right through the bad ones!" Summer feels that although a great deal has been done to educate the public about drug use, still more can be done. "If anything can ruin our country or be a black spot on our future, drugs are it." Summer hopes to show others that "you can have a good time in life" without using drugs. "Not that it's a big deal or anything, but anyone who knows me knows that I don't do drugs. The first thing drugs do is take away your ambition and the ability to enjoy something so simple as the weather and a nice day. Or a good meal! I can have a good meal and I'm trippin'!" Ambition doesn't seem to be a problem for Summer as he sets his career goals. Last year he toured nationally, opening concerts for Richard Marx, John Cougar Mellencamp, Eddie Money, and Chicago. Following a strong, 30minute set by Summer, Eddie Money once said, "Man, he really rock-and-rolled the place. By the time I got out there, the fans were all wrung out." Shaking back his mane of darkblond hair, Summer wows a crowd with his music. Money added, "He's got the goods. He's a breath of fresh air, a natural. I'm sure he's going to make it." Summer began his namesake season in 1989 with the release of his album I've Got Everything. In the words of an old Rick Springfield album, "Success hasn't spoiled him yet." Summer says he's not into material things, claiming that the high point of his day is making music. This would still be true, he says, if he wasn't a professional musician. "I'd like the chance to disprove some of this fame myth. Don't get me wrong, there's nothing wrong with making money and striving to better yourself, but when greed enters in, that's the trap a lot of people fall into." Summer likes good instruments and studio equipment, but says he's not into expensive clothes or fancy cars. "As long as I have a car that starts in the morning and doesn't break down, that's fine with me. Oh, and the radio has to work!" Summer's lifestyle is simple; his music, as one reviewer put it, is "straight ahead." And his message to his fans is clear as well. "They know I'm not telling them not to do it [drugs] ." he says. "I'm just saying, if they're looking for a choice, something to better their lives, drugs definitely aren't it." FA I doubt your parents will scold you for thinking about sex, but they're probably too uncomfortable about the subject to bring it 1.01 paceots aboot bot they don't up. As their kids begin to mature, parents shotAd at ta0cirg to remember how they were afraid to talk to 00c % se0aV0040ta0cto col ickeods their parents and how much information do. % , , % have trovb‘e 0iar % they got from their peers, and they want roother kV vo a g‘0,bot%' to PO rOch Move to make it easier for you. They hesitate 0 0101%k oA roe toc beUletevestedUA WOW ta0c.to col to bring up the subject because they ., West myMy istinev *MO be sAlocKed. don't want to put ideas in your head sev... %She V.00v4 oiSexual What behavior by its very rvature is a very private that might lead you to sexual activiired., scatter arta rot at easY subject to discuss freely With ties. However, the more appropriate 14 knowledge you have about sex, the arvyorve. fiver With your frielvd, ou. reabout reveabsvg your owl" feelings and fears aryd I or your better control you'll have of your ovgrk igrvorarvce about sexual srtatters.NNIhery discuss thoughts, feelings, and behavior. ing sex With your parervts, it becosnes egery zrvore I suggest you go to both of cosrvplicated•liyot.i ve groWsvup iry art av era'ehooe , your parents and ask them to tell sex pcobably has been a taboo csorsvethirvg We just you about sex. It may cause a allt talk abot), certaisvW soOethisvg you°very re supfew minutes of embarrassment posed tobe iryterested in ovvly vsAlel‘you get snarried. for all of you, but you'll soon get more comfortable, and cuyttore,vev though We lige it a very so with vrvovies, bo6V.s, alvd'IN so oyes\ about sex, .N then you can get most of your there are very feW ges‘uirvely apr opriate places to go 01 questions answered by the to get sex educatiory Plot of schools 'OW have this two people responsible for .1 your being here. educatirv, very helyivxl. 'toil! rearta. rightthd in sfeeling you should tall( to you\ 01 If this doesn't work out . Ihey parervts. Sextlal thoughts ark. fee 11V6S are a oska re. or if you're too afraid, part of a specal soclal re1ati.olvshly betvsleerk a at IN then go to one of your AN ana a Worfar, Ova rothing to be asharrved teachers whom you reought to be accepted cortAtortably . NI. our parervts are 0, spect, or a school counin the best positiosv to %node\ for you the servse of selor, or some other security that cosnes WO a Warrn, close aifectioate ''i relatiosyship Which they express sexually isv private. grown-up with whom oN you feel comfortable, 4.01 and present your questions to that person. You might ask the librarian to AI recommend something good to read. Be cautious about getting too much information from your friends, though. They're probably just as ignorant and/or misinformed about sexual matters as you are. Since sexual matters will be a very significant part of your life, you owe it to yourself to get the best and most accurate information available. I wish you success in this most important learning experience. k.1 Jack Anders Have a question about friendships, family relations, drugs and health, or other teenage concerns? Ask a friend—Jack Anders, parent, counselor, and social worker. Address your questions to "Ask a Friend," LISTEN Magazine, 12501 Old Columbia Pike, Silver Spring, MD 20904. Jack is sorry that he cannot answer letters individually. August 1990 • LISTEN • 19 REACTION Christopher wasn't about to pull out a breathalizer to check his fellow racer's intoxication level. If the guy took a few swigs before the race, it was his own responsibility, right? I could hardly believe my eyes when he pulled a small bottle from his pocket and took a swig. Strictly against the rules! He sighed loudly and looked around. I started checking my kart before he caught me gawking at him. It was only my third go-kart race, see? At 17, I was younger than a lot of the other racers. I wasn't the one to start blowing the whistle on anybody. The first day I raced, I came in last every time. Last! I'd dreamed about winning all my races from the very first. I was so happy to be racing, I didn't even care that I lost. It was like Christmas and my birthday all rolled into one. I wish I could describe how it feels. Sitting about three inches from the blacktop, you're flying around the track at high speed, just trying to squeeze another MPH out of your machine. You feel like the wind, only more powerful. The next time I did better—but I came in last again. And I still didn't care. Well, here I was in the pit area, smelling gas and oil, getting my kart ready for the race. Dad had helped me tune it up, so I hoped to do better. I couldn't wait for the race to begin. I kept watching this guy sneaking his bottle, wondering what I should do. Dad had made certain I knew the racing rules and let me know how important it was to obey them. And the rules said NO ALCOHOL. I hadn't thought much about that rule because I never touch the stuff. But now this. And the guy was a racing veteran. All the guys seemed to be great pals. Except me. But they spoke to me and encouraged me, so I figured I'd be part of the gang one of these days. I wondered if I should report this idiot to the management. But maybe everyone did it and nobody really cared. After all, they weren't driving on the highway. I hesitated, not wanting to make a fool of myself. The guy kept swigging. Before I could decide what to do, my race was called. As I crawled into the seat and put on my new black-and-red helmet, I saw him lift the bottle again. Was I glad we weren't racing together! I started my engine and forgot all about him. Nine karts lined up ahead of me as we made our pace trip around the irregularly shaped, hilly track. Then we got the green flag and things started happening. Despite all my efforts, everyone gradually moved ahead of me. I jammed the pedal almost through the floor but couldn't get any more out of it. I came in almost half a lap behind the rest. The whole thing was so exciting that I felt like a first-place winner anyway. You just have to try it to understand. I wouldn't be racing again for a while, so I grabbed a can of root beer and headed for the bleachers. Might as well watch. The people on the bleachers all sat around enjoying the sun and doing their VeraLee Wiggins KAY VEE JAY PHOTO, COURTESY OF THE INTERNATIONAL KART FEDERATION August 1990 • LISTEN • 21 own thing. Some watched the race, some talked—I mean shouted. The karts buzzed like 40 million bees. I could barely hear the loudspeaker, let alone the people talking. One couple sat there kissing, as though they were all alone. Then there was this little 4year-old kid with a spoon and a jar of peanut butter. He scarfed up that stuff like he was eating a bowl of ice cream. The races went pretty fast, each one lasting about 10 minutes. I knew the guys a little, so I cheered for my favorites. The third race after mine, I noticed a red kart weaving around some during the pace lap. Its driver was the guy I'd seen drinking. The flagman made everyone take another pace lap. That time everything seemed cool, so they got the green flag and all took off together. The hardest time in a race is right at thq first, when the karts are all bunched together. As they zapped around the track, they sort of separated, the faster ones taking the lead, the others falling behind. Well, the next thing I knew, several karts spun out of control as the wobbly red one crashed into them. Its front end lifted into the air and ran up over the rear end of another kart. Then the red kart rolled and slammed onto the track upside down, skidding 25 feet on its top. Mom had been complaining because these karts don't have roll bars. Dad said a bar would make them cumbersome and unmanageable. When I saw this guy skidding on his head, I wished he had a roll bar, cumbersome or not. The crowd was silent as the officials lifted the kart off the poor guy. Everyone watched intently except the kid eating peanut butter. He just kept dipping and shoveling. The guy didn't move. He lay so still on that blacktop that he could have been sleeping, or—. Pretty soon an ambulance came and took him away. The races started again, but everyone seemed pretty subdued. The excitement and fun was gone. The next day I heard that the injured driver suffered a broken neck and a severed spinal cord, and would be permanently paralyzed. At the time he crashed, his blood alcohol level had been .23! I felt pretty rotten for the next few days, thinking the guy's injuries were my fault. Finally I had to talk to someone. I waited until my parents seemed relaxed, then I approached them. "Dad," I began, "how much are we responsible for other people's welfare?" He looked surprised. He probably figured I never gave a thought to anyone's welfare, including my own. He rubbed his chin a moment, then scratched the back of his head. Finally he grinned. "I guess as much as possible. Isn't that what you'd say, Jennie?" Mom nodded. "I'd say that's about right. But what did you have in mind?" They sat like statues for a while after I told them the story. Finally Mom slipped to the couch beside me and took my hand. Even though I'm almost 18, I have to admit I liked that quite a bit. "There's no way you can blame yourself for that man's injury," she said quietly. "He's a lot older than you, and if you'd said anything to him, he'd have shut you up in a hurry. Besides, he should have known better." Dad agreed. "No telling whether the officials would've taken you seriously even if you'd reported him. What happened to him isn't your fault, Christopher. No way." "We've all had a real-life lesson about the dangers of alcohol, though," Mom said. I felt a 10-ton weight slip from my shoulders. It wasn't my fault! Both Mom and Dad said so. But as the days went by, another thought drummed into my head. I finally agreed with my folks. It wasn't my fault. He was responsible for his own actions. But even so, I had passed up the chance of doing something to save him from an accident that probably ruined his life. rA 22 • LISTEN • August 1990 KAY VEE JAY PHOTO, COURTESY OF THE INTERNATIONAL KART FEDERATION PLOSKOGORJE s;ovIE'T 0 Rrasnoisnl. Norasib,14 Ararsklice mWe UST OAT Sarowe SEIENIIX6 jAPAU SEJ/ING sea of -: ""'''.... abroad in 1988. record 41.2 million Americans traveled lions The were Bahamas, Mexico, 10 most popular destina Canada, Switzerland,Germany, and France, Great Britain, Hong Kong. Italy, Japan, If you --U.S. Travel and Tourism Administration write a expect $/00,000 hit song these days, you ties for to themake next about 50 can years. a year in As little roya/—USA Today exercise as a 30-minute wall< each can dramatically reduce a day dying from cancer, heart disease, other person's ancl chances of diseases and medical problems. _.,,A„, A _FLA 41 k nyrfa _.9 tsrar rA tis N 1) 1 AP 1, Sk 4 SRI \ MAL1,1, 11.14 -, 60tiato , Hope U ... has 33 filing cabinets .,. Comdian. 'Bob fun of jokes stored in his fire-proof vaults; 17 —Hope ' of these contain. jokes he hasn't usedEnterprises yt. Employers report that one out of five -workers —Youthworker Update has a problem. with. either alcohol or other drugs. . More than 66% of teerts believe young people can help solve their communitys problems; 595o have volunteered for community --Group service. , play in Broadut 15 safter abo A Chorus Line, the longest-running way history closed March 31 Washingt on Post and 6,104 performance.— addicted to Years r e bo At least 37,000 infants are --(See "Drag Was: Can We Win by Giving Inr page 10) drugs every year. The following high-tech --Sports Illustrated researched and developed for the drugs: vapor sniffers that weapons are gos; war being can against /ocate illegal detect drug carplant laser-assisted radar that can drug SO labs; and genetic alteration of the that it cant yield ocaine. coca IIS. News World Report the earth. About 1,800 working satellites currently orbit The --National Geographic World musical instruments teens most like to play (32, acoustic are synthesizer/keyboards (34%), woodwinds guitar (13%). piano list more (Teens (31%), brass (21%), and than one surveyed instrument.)were atiowed to _American Musk Conference .1s G R ' E A L S GREAT 'v ICTORIA DESERT Great PHOTO BY BETTY Bt..LIE. Ausitafiarqkihr 11.1VIKCA SOitiTH 2 AUSTRAL! t•'. BASIN 4ktok ‘psioto trees green water cool i marvel stretched as far as the eye can see the oasis fades from beneath me desert wasteland barren and old the sun glares down i shiver but am not cold. —Shannon Singleton Las Vegas, Nevada "am Ttstriai The media has too much control and it's taking its toll. We think we are, but we're not free. Someday I hope to be. The advertisers are growing rich by selling us the false hope that if we buy what they have it will be easier to cope. They set our expectations and redirect our goals, Make us think that to be popular we have to play a certain role. I don't want to live their lie. I don't want to wear their disguise. I already know their aim. I don't want to play their game. —Scott Price Angwin, California Of the times we'd met before, Each was yet the first. My heart suddenly swelled, And then it burst. Through the vessels Shot a fiery brew. The tissues welcomed it, And I was new. I became a song of you, My heart on each note hung. I was watching, waiting, Longing to be sung. . . . I love you. —Jenny Waite Gaines, Michigan 11-7i r mr4;14.:r Friend, cross the water You certainly oughta— But you can't get there Log dugout you try Swift current runs by You still can't get there A raft like a feather Gets caught in the weather But your friend still waits there Now concrete and cable You're finally able To touch the gold in her hair. —Amanda Berger Randolph, New Jersey L. .1r- rk atri Sitting in the car, I shivered. I watched the door of the small building, waiting for it to open. I glanced at my watch. Ten minutes after nine. The meeting was running late. I let my head fall back against the seat and closed my eyes. I'd been coming to these Narcotics Anonymous meetings for almost four months with Kevin. I never went in with him; I knew this was something he had to do on his own. But I was always there in the car, waiting if he needed me. The car door opened and Kevin slid into the driver's seat. "Hi," he said, that shy grin crossing his face. "How you doing?" It was a simple question, so full of meaning. "OK," he nodded a simple answer. That was as far as it ever went. He never told me what went on in those meetings, and I never asked. I knew it was enough for him to know that someone was waiting for him when the meeting was over. And I always was. I searched his face, looked deep into his eyes, but could find no other answer. Satisfied, I turned my attention to the night sky. No clouds could be seen, but then neither could the stars. I realized that was exactly .001;.•,;=.• where Kevin was now. Glancing over at him, I wondered if he knew it, but somehow I knew he didn't. I never told Kevin how much those times meant to me, how much I learned. I began to look forward to that hour on Thursday nights. But soon, too soon, it seems, Kevin was strong enough to go to the meetings on his own. When Kevin dropped me off at home for the last time, I started to get out of the car. Kevin grabbed my hand. Looking straight at me, he said, "I'd never have made it through without you. I'd have given up a long time ago." It was hard to believe that words so simple could mean so much. As Kevin drove away that night, I looked up, and for the very first time, I could see stars. —CAT Antioch, California Each month, LISTEN Magazine looks for short, well-written, thought-provoking manuscripts from teenage writers. The subject may be anything that interests teenagers. Limited space lets us print only a few of the best entries, but if we print your poem (no longer than 20 lines, please), you'll receive a $10 prize. The author of a printed story or essay (300-500 words) is awarded $15 to $20. Address your submissions to "Graffiti," LISTEN Magazine, 12501 Old Columbia Pike, Silver Spring, MD 20904. Be sure to tell us your age, and always include a selfaddressed, stamped envelope. 25 nisi • The Duracell Car Four double-A's and you're ready to go. Not quite. This new General Motors prototype car may run on batteries, but it sure won't rev up on anything that fits in a Walkman. The Impact, a futuristically smooth, aerodynamic car, came out in January and is the most advanced electric car ever. It creates no pollution and goes from 0 to 60 MPH in eight seconds (faster than the BMW 325i, according to Time magazine). The batteries need recharging every 120 miles and have to be replaced every 20,000 miles. It's doubtful that Impacts will make it onto the road any time soon, because battery replacement makes them about twice as expensive to operate as a regular car. But with pollution and concern for the Earth's health 26 • LISTEN • August 1990 both on the rise, these George Jetson cars of the future may be your sixteenth-birthday present before you know it. Service with a (GULP) Smile They can earn from $26,000 to $130,000 a year in the Washington, D.C., area for performing tasks once relegated to a 1950s housewife. "The rat race is the raison d'etre for our service," Scott Lowry, president and chief executive of Concierge Services of America, told the Washington Post. "What used to be done by the stay-at-home spouse is no longer done by her. We make your errands go away." Concierges, who are a cross between a hotel hospitality representative and a genie ready to grant your every wish, are literally at your service all the time. They'll walk the dog, run down to the gourmet store for mangos from the Philippines, or buy your spouse's birthday present. And while a hotel or apartment complex may pay a concierge a lot of money to find your favorite ice (imported from a Himalayan lake, naturally), the service is free to you. OK, nothing's free—you'll pay more for a hotel or apartment that offers this, but if you've got more money than time, it's the perfect solution. This detective/travel agent/ personal shopper all-rolled-intoone job originated in medieval Europe, but didn't gain popularity and prestige in the U.S. until the early 1970s, when West Coast hotels began providing the "necessary" luxury to their clients. This luxury can mean some strange—or touching—requests. An employee of Capitol Concierge, a service in Washington, D.C., once made nearly 100 phone calls trying to locate the ingredients for a root-beer snow cone. The request came from a doctor whose 7-year-old leukemia patient craved the icy treat. Diana Nelson of the Hyatt Hotel in San Francisco's Union Square had to find ox gall stones for a Japanese businessman who wanted them for their "healing qualities." Concierges in Washington train for two weeks, learn four three-inch-thick manuals, and take a four-hour written test. They also must be creative, resourceful, and very, very polite. So a concierge spends six hours, makes 45 phone calls, and nearly wrecks his or her reputation trying to get tickets to Phantom of the Opera the day of the performance. The patrons call to say they've decided to visit Aunt Mabel instead. What does the concierge say? "You @$%*!" No such gratification. Try, "I'm terribly sorry you won't be able to make it. Have a nice evening." ILLUSTRATION BY MICHAEL ALAN THOMPSON EARN YOUR WINGS CRAZY ENGLISH Oliveros McLloyd D. A. Stone Control tower to pilot, you're cleared for takeoff. Buzz the rows of letters below in search of the 40 words related to flying. The words may run vertically, horizontally, or diagonally, and forward or backward. What two things do these five words have in common? L LOR J DUS P T B L I AT Bough, Cough, Dough, Rough, Through SEPARATE THEM C TAX I OP S AL I TGX J Rich Latta ✓ OTRAINEROAZALS Separate all of the circles from each other by drawing five straight lines. S EGB L PDX YGENLQG ROTORCVTYLEJEVN YE T A T S I A SDLCDO I G XNLTCWNUWCE S VD ROEABELTARREVEN o0 0 0 0 oo ° 0 O PLNAF I J EHI BCEA 0 o T L CDG T XWZRCHQR L 0 O FWMLIOKFFOEKAT 1177 d) l 7 ' MG I AK PNDCC FMMS F WI YRQEHEKAC I AE I S ACKDWE S T U R T S Y L 'Y‘ \J../A.LkIti.tA k4 TIRES ZQL XEOTES T LEMONADE • le, Word List: altitude, belt, chocks, circle, drift, engine, gale, grid, ice, keel, landing, landmark, level, lift, log, mechanic, motor, nose, oil, oxygen, pilot, plane, power, roll, rotor, sextant, sky, soar, stall, struts, tail, takeoff, taxi, test, time, tires, track, trainer, veer, yaw \k/4.N\ "Dad wants to talk to you." PUZZLE ANSWERS "Separate Them" "Crazy English" - aulAtp maul Jo auoN 7 'Hon° ut Puo iip /Cala .A3 •O 1 MOVING? Please send us your old address label (or a photocopy) and your new address. If your label is unavailable, please print both your old and new addresses clearly, including zip codes. OLD ADDRESS: NEW ADDRESS: Name Name Address Address City CARTOON BY ART BOUTHILLIER State Zip City State Zip August 1990 • LISTEN • 27 Birthdays Thumbs Up Defense contractor McDonnell Douglas already has a reputation for encouraging employee innovation; now it's promoting employee health. In February of 1989, it banned smoking from all its plants, making the air cleaner for 100,000 employees in the Los Angeles basin (an area that needs all the clean air it can get). Smokers can smoke outdoors before and after work and during breaks, but McDonnell Douglas has removed all ashtrays. The company does provide an overhang to protect smokers from bad weather; it also offers classes on how to stop smoking. • -LISTEN • Thumbs Down Tempestt Bledsoe, actress, born in Chicago, Ill., August 1, 1973; Alex Haley, author of Roots, born in Ithaca, N.Y., August 11,1921; Alfred Hitchcock, film director (Psycho, The Birds), born in London, England, August 13, 1899; Earvin "Magic" Johnson, basketball player, born in Lansing, Mich., August 14, 1959; Madonna (Madonna Louise Veronica Ciccone), singer, born in Bay City, Mich., August 16, 1958; Connie Chung, journalist, born in Washington, D.C., August 20, 1946. Maybe the editors of Seventeen should change plus a sidebar about the dangers of drinking. Yet the fiction story the magazine's name to Twenty-One. the editors chose for this issue First, the teen journal's March features teenage drinking promi1990 issue cites a study done at nently in its plot—including teens Washington University in St. riding a motorcycle after spending a bit of time with some Louis, Mo., saying that people blackberry brandy. who've smoked for 10-plus years Come on, Seventeen. are slower and less accurate than By printnonsmokers when doing jobs ing inconsistent messages like which require quick thinking. In these, you're not only confusing another section, the magazine your audience--you're encouragreviews The Pogues' new album ing minors to break the law. Nice and runs a photo of the rock effort warning kids about the band—with a cigarette propped in dangers of lighting up and one band member's mouth. Hmm. drinking down, but fiction and Something's not right here. photos offer not-so-quiet support Then Seventeen of drinking and smoking. On runs the first of second thought, Twenty-One a two-part factual article on isn't such a great idea. How about teenage alcoholism—five pages Mixed Message Monthly? "Nagle" Johnson, born August 14, 1959 O August Politics Connie Chung, born August 20, Skid Row on the Skids Skid Row's lead singer Sebastian Bach has been in the spotlight a lot lately—and he's showing about as much good judgment as a possum blinded by a car's headlights. In the February issue of Metal Edge magazine, he sported a T-shirt imprinted with the words "AIDS KILLS FAGS DEAD," lifted from the commercial slogan "Raid kills bugs dead," reports the Washington Post. AIDS activists were furious, noting that Skid Row's 15to 24-year-old audience, which has a high rate of teen pregnancies and sexually transmitted diseases, is at risk for AIDS—no matter what each person's sexual orientation. Bach's shirt supports the deadly myth that only homosexuals can contract 1946 the disease. A letter to Metal Edge noted that the magazine wouldn't have printed photos of a similar shirt using the words "niggers," "kikes," or "wetbacks." In December 1989, Skid Row opened a concert for Aerosmith. During Skid Row's performance, a fan threw a bottle onstage and hit Bach on the head. Bach threw the bottle back into the audience—and hit a 17-year-old girl in the face. He leaped off the stage and had to be pulled out of a fight by his stage crew. The girl had severe facial cuts and bruises, and Bach was arrested and charged with two counts of assault and battery. Too bad the bop on the head didn't knock some sense into him. It started long before August 1962, but this month marks the beginning of another phase of one man's conflict with his government. He was a lawyer and political activist, the son of a Tembu tribal chief from the Umtata, Transkei territory of South Africa. He established the first black law partnership in that country and fought for black rights and against white-minority rule. He was captured by security police on August 4, 1962, and sent to trial. The trial, widely viewed as an indictment of white domination, resulted in Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela being sentenced to five years in prison. He went to trial again in 1963, charged with sabotage, high treason, and conspiracy to overthrow the government. In 1964, he was sentenced to life in prison. Amid cheers and jubilation from South Africans and people around the world, Mandela was released, after 27 years in prison, on February 12, 1990. August 1990 • LISTEN • 2 °miserOtt Legalization? Just Say No! Two years ago David Aupont and his family left their home in Haiti and came to America. They now live in the East Flatbush section of Brooklyn. Even if it's a rough neighborhood, they reasoned, it had to be better than Haiti. But when David was walking to school on his twelfth birthday, a 13-year-old ordered him to smoke crack. David had heard about drugs—enough to know that he didn't want to smoke crack. Unfortunately, the 13-year-old was big for his age. He grabbed David, dragged him to a nearby garage, tied his hands behind his back, hit him with a baseball bat, threw gas on him, and set him on fire. David ran, burning, to a shop, where he got help. The official report from the burn unit at New York Hospital-Cornell Medical Center was that David suffered second- and third-degree burns on his chest, stomach, arms, legs, chin, and mouth. Tragically, David Aupont is only one of millions of victims in the war on drugs. And with suffering like this, it's tempting at times to get a little discouraged. This is often what motivates people to give up and suggest that maybe drugs should be legalized. They're just plain tired of fighting. Certainly the casualties in this effort will continue to rise, but let's not ever consider surrender as an option. In conventional warfare, surrender means August 1990 Vol. 43, No. 8 that further casualties will cease. In the war on drugs, however, experts estimate that casualties would actually triple or quadruple after surrender. What kind of peace proposal is that? Who would be willing to surrender under conditions like those? "If we treated marijuana and cocaine the way we treat alcohol and tobacco," says Robert L. DuPont, the first director of the National Institute of Drug Abuse, "the numbers of marijuana and cocaine users would rise from about 24 million to the 100million range. How can anyone look at those numbers and believe we should make the illegal drugs as available as we now make alcohol and tobacco?" And names are even more important than numbers. Remember the name David Aupont. Right now our society needs a little of the spirit of David Aupont. Whether we win or lose the war on drugs in the end, any kind of resistance reduces the number of lives ruined by drugs. That, after all, is what the war is all about. EDITORIAL CONSULTANTS Jack Anders, A.C.S.W., L.C.S.W.; Winton Beaven, Ph.D.; Galen Bosley, D.H.Sc., RD.; Carolyn Burns; Don Cooper, M.D.; Robert DuPont, M.D.; Mary Eldershaw; Kevin Freeman; Zhennaa Gallagher; G. Gordon Hadley, M.D.; Patricia Mutch, Ph.D.; G.L. Plubell, Ph.D.; Stoy Proctor, M.P.H.; Gunter Reiss, D.H.Sc., M.P.H.; Francis A. Soper, Litt.D.; Elizabeth Stemdale, R. N., M.S.; Barbara Wetherell, M.A.; DeWitt Williams, Ph.D. Editorial Office P.O. Box 10548, Silver Spring, MD 20904. Subscription Rates In U.S.A., $16.95 for 12 issues. In Canada, $19.95. In all other countries, $20.95. Editor Gary B. Swanson Associate Editor Jan Schleifer Editorial Assistant Janet L. Conley Editorial Secretary Janya M. Mekelburg Marketing Leilani Proctor To Order In U.S.A. (except Alaska), call toll free 1-800-548-8700. In Alaska and Canada, call (301) 680-6740 (not toll free). Or write to P.O. Box 10548, Silver Spring, MD 20904. Payment coming from outside U.S.A. (including Canada) must be in U.S. dollars by bank draft drawn on a U.S. bank, or by international postal money order. LISTEN is a monthly drug-prevention magazine for teens that teaches life skills, success tips, drug facts, and the advantages of a lifestyle free from alcohol, tobacco, and other drugs. Second-class mail privileges authorized at Boise, Idaho. Form 3579 requested. Litho in the United States of America. This publication is available in microfilm from Xerox University Microfilms, 300 North Zeeb Road, Ann Arbor, MI 48106. (313) 761-4700. Write publisher for complete information. Copyright © 1990 by Narcotics Education, Inc., P.O. Box 10548, Silver Spring, MD 20904. Printed in U.S.A. 30 • LISTEN • August 1990 Subscription Queries and Changes of Address Please write to LISTEN, P.O. Box 7000, Boise, ID 83707, or call 1-800-545-2449. EIDPFLE9S3 PHOTO BY NATHAN BILLOW / STOCK IMAGERY Courage from hearts and not from numbers grows. —John Dryden "It is wonderful to know that you are getting out important warnings about drug use in a way that is interesting and attractive for young people to read. You are doing such important work." —Barbara Bush "Many of the problems of students are addressed very clearly and concisely in Listen. Listen is down to earth and meets the needs and interests of teens." —Jack Kidwell Project 714 Drug-Prevention Program Chattanooga, Tennessee "I wholeheartedly endorse Listen magazine as a resource in the schools." —Evan Bayh Governor of Indiana The White House Join Listen's Excellent Adventure V Hip Ways to Spend Your Time V Answers for What Bugs You V Short Takes, News Bits, Stories, and Puzzles VStraight Dope on Drugs V Social Issues Dealt With, Not Dodged V Celebrity Tips on Getting It Together Get ListenToday! YES! 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