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Clearly, leaving college can turn into a purposeless drift through trivial jobs and futile distractions. The specter of a dropout's destroying himself on heroin haunts many a parent (though the prevalence of drugs on campus makes life in academe less reassuring than it used...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: As College Starts, There Go the Stop-Outs | 9/27/1971 | See Source »

...authorities arrive at heroin addiction figures? They count known habitual users, of course, such as those who are arrested and those who sign up for treatment programs. But such figures account for only a fraction of the addict population. To arrive at an overall estimate, officials in many cities project from the number of overdose deaths, one commonly used criterion being 200 addicts for each fatality. A new study in Washington, D.C., indicates that because some overdose deaths have gone undetected, the number of active users may be even higher than previously estimated...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: The New Math of Addiction | 9/13/1971 | See Source »

...Robert DuPont of Washington's Narcotics Treatment Administration reports this new math of addiction in a New England Journal of Medicine article. Like most major U.S. cities, Washington is experiencing an alarming heroin epidemic. The number of narcotic arrests in the city rose by 462% between 1967 and 1970; drug-related crimes, such as robbery, theft and prostitution, also increased dramatically. In 1967 a total of 21 Washingtonians were known to have succumbed to heroin overdoses, and using the ratio of 200 addicts per overdose, officials estimated the city's addict population then at 4,200. The figure...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: The New Math of Addiction | 9/13/1971 | See Source »

DuPont's report may have broad implications for authorities in other U.S. cities. Officials in New York City, who base their figures heavily on police, hospital and treatment-program records rather than on the kind of screening now performed in the capital, estimate that there are 150,000 heroin addicts in the nation's largest city. Washington's experience suggests that the New York figure...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: The New Math of Addiction | 9/13/1971 | See Source »

...heart of the population problem is a paradoxical question: Is a growing population a social disaster or a social resource? Or, to put it another way, will a larger population produce more poets or just more heroin addicts? And which of the two will prevail...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Time Essay: POPULATION EXPLOSION: IS MAN REALLY DOOMED? | 9/13/1971 | See Source »

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