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Runaways, Hippies, and Marihuana
JOSHUA KAUFMAN; JAMES R. ALLEN; LOUIS JOLYON WEST
Am J Psychiatry 1969;126:717-720.
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Medical student, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, N. Mex.
Assistant professor of child psychiatry, University of Oklahoma School of Medicine, Oklahoma City, Okla.
Professor and chairman, department of psychiatry, UCLA Neuropsychiatric Institute, 760 Westwood P1., Los Angeles, Calif. 90024
1970, American Psychiatric Association
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Abstract
In the summer of 1967 Haight-Ashbury seemed to offer youth a solution to the ills of modern society. Runaways, who used the district as a refuge from society or home, did not exhibit the delinquent characteristics observed by earlier authors. The complex and cohesive role of drugs, especially marihuana, was unprecedented. The authors feel that further attention should be directed not to the question "Why don't they stop using drugs?" but to "Can we offer them viable alternatives to drugs?"Abstract Teaser
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