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Obviously, one of the obstacles to early detection of heroin addiction in a teen-ager is the unwillingness of middle-or upper-class parents to acknowledge the idea that their son or daughter is seriously hooked on heroin. The customary last resorts in personal crisis are undependable. Parents tend to trust doctors implicitly, for example. But one 17-year-old girl from New York's suburban Westchester County arrived in a New York hospital for a checkup with fresh needle marks all over her arm. "The doctors kidded me about it," she says. "They said, 'Oh, oh, we know what...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Nation: Kids and Heroin: The Adolescent Epidemic | 3/16/1970 | See Source »

...range is almost two octaves, and her appeal spans all generations. Glenn Gould, the pianist and a Clark aficionado, says that she is "in many ways the complete synthesis of the American teen-ager's scramble from the parental nest." Of course, at an increasingly matronly 37, she will have to go beyond such material as Downtown and I Know a Place. These days she is trying to emulate her idol, Piaf. "She didn't just sing," recalls Petula. "She pulled her insides out. She got involved about people going crazy, about death...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: And the Pet Goes On | 2/23/1970 | See Source »

Dramatic Conversion. First in Boston, then in New York as a teen-ager in the early 1940s, he donned a zoot suit and painfully "conked" his hair. He graduated from show-stopping Lindy Hopper to pimp to taker and pusher of marijuana and dope. Malcolm X's scorn for authority, black or white, 30 years ago, presents remarkable parallels to youthful attitudes today. It was not merely that everyone he knew used marijuana and bitterly resented the white cops who tried to deprive them of it. They also regarded World War II as a white establishment disaster, like Viet...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Malcolm X: History as Hope | 2/23/1970 | See Source »

...know how to handle the subject because there was nothing definitive available," says Brown. Another sign was the response to TIME'S Sept. 26 cover on drugs: In addition to several thousand requests for permission to reprint, we were gratified to hear of one suburban teen-ager who told her mother: "If you read only one thing about drugs, read TIME'S cover." The new pamphlet is a collaboration between TIME Contributing Editor Christopher Cory, who wrote the original cover story, and Public Affairs' Raymond Godfrey, who contributed new research, including material for an important section, "Toward...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Letter From The Publisher: Feb. 9, 1970 | 2/9/1970 | See Source »

...mathematical guitar genius" Bob Dylan used to say he was. Levon Helm approaches his drums with what is, in rock music, unparalleled subtlety and restraint. On bass, Rick Danko occasionally puffs his cheeks as if he were playing a horn. At the piano, Richard Manuel looks like a teen-ager masquerading as a pirate...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Down to Old Dixie and Back | 1/12/1970 | See Source »

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