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A New Course on Campus: AA 101
California
school takes the pledge
At
first glance, the wealthy Los Angeles suburb of Pacific
Palisades seems an idyllic community of winding roads and
ocean-view estates. But in the last 16 months it has been
the setting for tragedy. Ten young residents have died violently,
many in incidents involving alcohol or drugs. Just last
month four teenagers were killed in a fiery crash when their
speeding car struck a light pole on a main boulevard, veered
across the median strip and hit a tree. The driver, 17-year-old
Russell Kantor, was reported to have a blood alcohol level
of .08 percent, just below the state's .10 criterion for
drunk driving.
While many in the community mourn the deaths, Palisades
High School psychologist Linda Levine decided to start what
is believed to be the country's first high- school chapter
of Alcoholics Anonymous. "I think some students have
decided that one way to memorialize the kids who died would
be to get sober in their honor," says Levine. "There's
an instinct to try to keep this thing from having been totally
in vain."
Getting clean. The high school already
has 19 different organizations aimed at students with substance
abuse problems, including a lunchtime support group for
expatients of hospital treatment programs and a mandatory
program after school for students caught using or carrying
drugs. Palisades High also has a two-year- old chapter of
Alateen, for those with alcoholic relatives and friends.
But Levine felt kind needed more. "How do you tell
your dad you want to go clean," she says, "If
you've never confessed that you're not clean?" The
school, following the A.A. credo of anonymity for participants,
allows students to go to once-a-week sessions without informing
their parents, and no records are kept. Levine's only role
is to unlock a classroom door and let A.A. leaders in. About
10 youngsters are attending now, she says, and the turnout
increases every week.
In 1977, Palisades High caught the nation's attention as
the subject of the best-selling book, "What Really
Happened to the Class of 65?", a case study of the
pressures of growing up in a rich community. Young inexperienced
drivers operating fast cars, late- night parties where alcohol
and drugs are used, a lack of parental supervision - these
are the facts of life in well-to-do communities across the
country. Many residents think these are the factors behind
the recent spate of fatalities in Pacific Palisades, where
the median house price is $660,000. Despite the A.A. program's
initial success, some Palisades residents think the drinking
problem won't improve without parental involvement. One
mother, who didn't want her name used, says many parents
feel they've done enough if they hire a driver for their
kids on prom night. Her son's best friend was killed in
a collision a year ago. " I think the adults are very
aggressive and very successful and very much on the fast
track," she says, "these kids have a lot to live
up to."
The A.A. chapter isn't the only new anti-drinking initiative
in the Palisades. A representative of Mothers Against Drunk
Driving will speak to the students next month and bring
along Russell Kantor's demolished car as dramatic evidence.
"Somehow we have to get across to the young people
here that it's not a question of not drinking and driving,"
says Parent Teacher Student Association copresident Sally
Lorillo, "It's a question of not drinking."
Barbara
Kantrowitz with Jeanne Gordon in Los Angeles (Source:
Newsweek, November 28, 1988)
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