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        <title> - Research - Drunk Driving and Alcohol Research</title>
        <link>http://www.dui.com/dui-library/studies/research</link>
        <description>DUI Library: Studies: Research - Drunk Driving and Alcohol Research</description>
        <language>en-us</language>
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                      <title>How Vehicle Registration Locates People</title>
                      <link>http://www.dui.com/dui-library/studies/research/vehicle-registration</link>
                      <description></description>
                      <author>admin</author>
                      <pubDate>Thu, 22 Mar 2007 23:00:00 -0500</pubDate>
                      
     
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        <category>Studies</category>
     
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        <![CDATA[
                          Using Vehicle Registration to Find People 

                          <p>The Foundation for American Communications (FACS)</p>

                          <p>(<em>Excerpted from "Find Them Fast!" (c) Copyright 1994 by Dave
                          Farrell</em>)</p>

                          <p>Reporters spend a good deal of their time trying to find people. One
                          of the best ways to locate people throughout the United States is through
                          the use of driver's license and vehicle registration information.</p>

                          <p>Thousands of "missing" people are located each year through the
                          departments of motor vehicles located in each of the fifty states. If the
                          person you're looking for is of legal driving age, this should be one of
                          the first places you look for them. A driver's license has become one of
                          the most important pieces of identification carried by Americans over the
                          age of sixteen. It is generally the first piece of I.D. asked for by
                          police officers, retailers, bankers and just about everyone else
                          requiring proof of identification.</p>

                          <p>In recent years, a few states have enacted laws restricting public
                          access to driving and vehicle registration records, but in most states,
                          the information is available for the asking (and a nominal fee). One nice
                          thing about driving records: You can get a wealth of information out by
                          putting very little information in. Two pieces of information that are
                          vital to begin the search, however, are the subject's name (make sure it
                          is spelled correctly!) and, if possible, a date of birth.</p>

                          <p>Given a person's name and birth date, the motor vehicle department
                          should be able to give you a current address; last known address;
                          personal information, such as height, weight, eye and hair color;
                          previous names, if any; the numbers and types of vehicles owned by that
                          person as well as any traffic tickets they may have accumulated in recent
                          years. These records also can be used to "skip-trace" missing persons who
                          may have moved in recent years. Each motor vehicle department maintains
                          records going back from two to 30 years, indicating what state the
                          person's license was surrendered to.</p>

                          <p>States also keep records of licenses issued to women under their
                          maiden names, so it is possible to find women whose last names may have
                          changed through marriage. Appendix A lists the address for the agency in
                          every state that handles driver's license records. I've also included a
                          sample letter you can use to request the records for your subject. When
                          writing to obtain driver's license records always ask for all available
                          public information on your subject. You may receive some data you deem
                          unimportant, such as eye color and other physical characteristics, but
                          you also will get much valuable information.</p>

                          <p>If your subject has a common name, it will save you a lot of time if
                          you can provide the DMV with his or her date of birth. That will help the
                          clerks in the computer room figure out which John Smith you're trying to
                          find.</p>

                          <p>Vehicle registration<br />
                           Sometimes, after obtaining a subject's driving records, I discover the
                          address on their license is not current. When that happens, I immediately
                          contact the DMV and request a list of all motor vehicles listed to my
                          subject's name.</p>

                          <p>Vehicle registration records are a great way to zero in on someone.
                          They almost always yield current addresses. That's because driver's
                          licenses are renewed every few years (some states allow eight years
                          between renewals). But motor vehicle registration must be renewed
                          annually. Consequently, the address you obtain from registration records
                          is at most only a year old.</p>

                          <p>To obtain registration records, use the sample DMV request letter in
                          this booklet and modify it to request the appropriate records. You can
                          search vehicle registration records several different ways: By owner's
                          name; by license number and by vehicle identification number.</p>

                          <p>Searching by name is simple. You simply ask the DMV in the appropriate
                          state for a list of all the vehicles registered to your subject's name.
                          If you know the license number of a vehicle owned by your subject, you
                          can ask the DMV to trace that number and give you the address of the
                          person who owns the plate.</p>

                          <p>Finally, if you know the vehicle identification number (VIN) of a car
                          or truck owned by your subject, you can ask the DMV to trace ownership of
                          that vehicle. (VIN numbers are often included in divorce records and
                          bankruptcy filings where assets are listed). Since the ownership of motor
                          vehicles is tracked so carefully by the government, vehicle registration
                          records can also lead you to a subject who has moved some time ago. If
                          you know a specific vehicle your subject owned, even if it was some years
                          ago, you may be able to use that information to find him today.</p>

                          <p>Here's how: Request a "vehicle history" or a "body file" on the
                          vehicle from the DMV. That packet of information will include the names
                          and addresses of everyone who ever owned the car or truck. Working back
                          from the current owner, you should be able to contact all the previous
                          owners of the vehicle. The person who dealt with your subject may recall
                          information about them that can help lead you to them. Appendix B
                          contains the addresses of the agency in all 50 states that handles motor
                          vehicle registration.</p>

                          <p>Case study<br />
                           A colleague once traced a valuable source down using precisely this
                          method. The man he was looking for was divorced. My colleague called the
                          man's ex-wife, who had no idea where he was. She did, however, have
                          information about the sports car he got in the divorce, a car they
                          jointly bought when they were married. My friend obtained the vehicle
                          history and learned that his subject had sold the car to a young college
                          kid. The kid recalled that the man he bought the car from said he had to
                          sell it because he was moving to Wyoming and he needed a truck. Tracking
                          the man down in Wyoming was easy.</p>

                          <p>Traffic tickets<br />
                           If your subject is the kind of person who doesn't give accurate or
                          proper information on licenses or other official documents, check to see
                          if he or she has any traffic tickets. You can do that when you ask for
                          driving records. If there are tickets on your subject's record, write to
                          the city or jurisdiction where the ticket was issued. Ask for a copy of
                          the citation. It will include the make, model and license number of the
                          vehicle involved in the incident.</p>

                          <p>Go back to the DMV and find out who owns that vehicle. Most likely, it
                          will be someone who knows your subject and can supply information about
                          his current address.</p>

                          <p>Accident reports<br />
                           If you discover your subject was involved in an accident, you may be
                          sitting on a gold mine of information, especially if lawsuits were filed
                          as a result of the crack-up. You can find out from the DMV where the
                          accident occurred. Contact that city or jurisdiction and obtain a copy of
                          the police report that was filed for the accident.</p>

                          <p>Note all the parties involved in the accident. The report will include
                          addresses and other information for all of them, of course. You can find
                          out a lot more about everyone involved (including your subject) if any
                          lawsuits were filed as a result of the mishap. Take the names of everyone
                          involved in the accident to the local courthouse. Ask the clerk there to
                          check to see if any of those people are involved in any lawsuits. If so,
                          review all the paperwork involved. It will give you loads of information
                          about each party, particularly if the damage was deemed to be
                          extensive.</p>

                          <p>If the other party filed suit, you can bet that the addresses for your
                          subject in the court documents will be accurate, since the injured party
                          has filed the suit with the intent of collecting damages.</p>

                          <p>RV's, ATV's and snowmobiles<br />
                           Like their on-road cousins, most types of off-road vehicles are also
                          licensed by the state. Recreational vehicles, all-terrain vehicles and
                          even snowmobiles can all be used to lead you to their owners. In most
                          states, the Department of Motor Vehicles licenses these types of
                          vehicles. Check with your state DMV office to see how you can obtain
                          registration records.</p>

                          <p>Boats<br />
                           You can track ownership records for boats much the same way you track
                          motor vehicle records. You can search for people using their names, or
                          you can search for ownership and registration of vessels, using the I.D.
                          number of the boat. You can even order a vessel history and trace
                          ownership of the boat the same way you can for motor vehicles. Appendix D
                          lists the addresses of agencies to write to for boat and vessel
                          registration records.</p>

                          <p>Airplanes<br />
                           Airplane records are kept by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA)
                          located in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. If your subject is a pilot or owns an
                          aircraft (either fixed wing or helicopter) the FAA will have records on
                          him or her. As with cars and boats, you can trace the ownership of
                          aircraft as well as receive license information about pilots.</p>

                          <p>The FAA records on pilots includes the pilot's address, type of
                          aircraft the pilot is licensed to fly and the date of the pilot's last
                          medical examination. Airplanes don't have license plates. They are
                          identified by their so-called "N-number," which is written in large
                          letters on the body and tail of the plane. You can trace planes using
                          that number. As with motor vehicles, you can trace the history of a
                          plane, a technique that can give you past owners and addresses.</p>

                          <p>You can search FAA records by mail. Write Federal Aviation
                          Administration Mike Monroney Aero Center, 6500 South MacArthur Drive,
                          P.O. Box 25082 Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73125. To check pilot records by
                          phone, call (405) 954-3261. To check on aircraft, call (405)
                          954-3116.</p>

                          <p align="center">
                          ----------------------------------------------------------------------</p>

                          <p>3800 Barham Boulevard, Suite 409, Los Angeles, CA , 90068<br />
                           Questions? Suggestions? email us: <a title="FACS"
                          href="mailto:facs@facsnet.org">facs@facsnet.org</a></p>
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                      <title>Driving While Suspended Study</title>
                      <link>http://www.dui.com/dui-library/studies/research/suspended-driving</link>
                      <description></description>
                      <author>admin</author>
                      <pubDate>Thu, 22 Mar 2007 23:00:00 -0500</pubDate>
                      
     
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        <![CDATA[
                          Observational Study of the Extent of Driving<br />
                           While Suspended for Alcohol Impaired Driving 

                          <p>A T McCartt1, L L Geary1 and A Berning2</p>

                          <p>1 Preusser Research Group, Inc, Trumbull, Connecticut</p>

                          <p>2 National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, Washington</p>

                          <p align="center">
                          ----------------------------------------------------------------------</p>

                          <p>Correspondence to:</p>

                          <p>A T McCartt, Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, 1005 North Glebe
                          Road, Arlington, VA 22201&acirc;&euro;&ldquo;4751, USA;</p>

                          <p><a href="mailto:amccartt@iihs.org">amccartt@iihs.org</a></p>

                          <p align="center">
                          ----------------------------------------------------------------------</p>

                          <p>Objective: To determine the proportion of first time driving while
                          alcohol impaired (DWI) offenders who drive while their
                          driver&acirc;&euro;&trade;s license is suspended.</p>

                          <p>Design: Systematic, unobtrusive observations were conducted by
                          surveillance professionals from Pinkerton Investigative Services, Inc, of
                          first time offenders in the City of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and Bergen
                          County, New Jersey. Observations included two four hour periods during
                          suspension (one weekday morning, one Friday/Saturday evening) and two
                          four hour periods after license reinstatement (matched by day of week and
                          time of day). Focus groups of first time offenders were conducted in each
                          site.</p>

                          <p>Setting: New Jersey laws pertaining to license suspension for DWI and
                          driving while suspended are stronger than Wisconsin laws.</p>

                          <p>Subjects: 93 recently convicted first time DWI offenders (57 in
                          Milwaukee and 36 in Bergen County).</p>

                          <p>Main outcome measures: Proportion of subjects observed driving during
                          suspension and after license reinstatement, with reference to all
                          subjects and subjects observed traveling by any means.</p>

                          <p>Results: Of subjects observed traveling while suspended, 88% of
                          Milwaukee subjects compared with 36% of Bergen County subjects drove.
                          Five percent of Milwaukee subjects and 78% of Bergen County subjects
                          reinstated their driver&acirc;&euro;&trade;s license. Bergen County
                          subjects were significantly more likely to drive after reinstatement
                          (54%) than during suspension (25%).</p>

                          <p>Conclusion: Prevalence of driving while suspended among first time
                          offenders is high and can vary substantially between jurisdictions.
                          However, the license suspension can have a positive impact on the driving
                          patterns of offenders during suspension, relative to after license
                          reinstatement. Lower prevalence of driving while suspended in New Jersey
                          may partly be attributable to that state&acirc;&euro;&trade;s tougher
                          laws.</p>
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                      <title>Chances of Getting Stopped for DUI</title>
                      <link>http://www.dui.com/dui-library/studies/research/stopped-for-dui</link>
                      <description></description>
                      <author>admin</author>
                      <pubDate>Thu, 22 Mar 2007 23:00:00 -0500</pubDate>
                      
     
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        <![CDATA[
                          <strong>Measuring the Chances of DUI Arrest</strong> 

                          <p>In a project to measure the probability of getting arrested for
                          driving under the influence of intoxicants as it relates to blood alcohol
                          concentration, the Midwest Research Institute of Kansas City, MO, has
                          explored public awareness about the extent to which <a title="DUI Laws"
                          href="../../states/">DUI laws</a> are enforced. Once discerned, this
                          information could be useful to increase public awareness, help the police
                          force in locating drunk drivers, aid in the evaluation of possible DUI
                          candidates, and help provide quantification of intoxicated drivers on
                          public roads.</p>

                          <p>Alcohol Safety Action Projects (ASAP), a workshop funded by the
                          National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (<a
                          title="http://www.nhtsa.gov/" href="http://www.nhtsa.gov/"
                          target="_blank">NHTSA</a>), conducted interviews of thousands of people
                          in order to ascertain the level of public understanding of DUI law
                          enforcement. Interviewees were asked several questions, including what
                          they speculated the possibility was that they may be stopped by the
                          police after having had several drinks.</p>

                          <p>Unfortunately, the question does not have an accurate answer,
                          especially if the intoxication level, or blood alcohol content (BAC), is
                          not designated. While general ideas of such probabilities do exist,
                          in-depth research had not been previously carried out on this topic.
                          Estimates from previous reports calculate that for a 10-mile ride with a
                          <a title="bac_chart.html" href="resolveuid/4b959a7d233dac6c82b1097c1f7215d3">BAC</a> above
                          0.10% the probability of arrest would be about one in 670, while the
                          Midwest Research Institute states in their recent report that in fact
                          that chances are about one in 200.</p>

                          <p>After measuring this probability of a DUI arrest under controlled
                          conditions of patrolling and traffic counts, then one can also assess how
                          many drivers would possess a set BAC range. A random survey of volunteer
                          motorists driving in the same patrol area provided the outcome of <a
                          title="bac_chart.html" href="resolveuid/4b959a7d233dac6c82b1097c1f7215d3">BAC</a> in drivers
                          who were not arrested, while police records gave the BAC distribution of
                          those who were arrested. Once this probability can be firmly established,
                          then communities without ASAPs could avoid expensive roadside surveys and
                          also be convinced of the value of ASAPs in their communities.</p>

                          <p>This information could greatly assist police patrols with managing DUI
                          patrols as it would offer a fixed standard to use in ascertaining the
                          performance of his unit. More importantly, precise calculation of the
                          probabilities of being arrested for DUI will aid in garnering the trust
                          and confidence of the public in carrying out future public education
                          campaigns against drunk driving.</p>

                          <p>See the entire study from "Injury Prevention Online" (2000;6:158-161),
                          entitled "<a
                          title="Probability of Arrest While Driving Under the Influence of Alcohol"
                           href="http://ip.bmj.com/cgi/content/full/6/2/158?maxtoshow=&amp;HITS=10&amp;hits=10&amp;RESULTFORMAT=1&amp;title=alcohol&amp;searchid=1057414554109_20&amp;stored_search=&amp;FIRSTINDEX=0&amp;flag=&amp;sortspec=relevance&amp;journalcode=injuryprev"
                           target="_blank">Probability of arrest while driving under the influence
                          of alcohol</a>".</p>
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                      <title>State D.O.T./DMV's Online</title>
                      <link>http://www.dui.com/dui-library/studies/research/state-dot-dmv</link>
                      <description></description>
                      <author>admin</author>
                      <pubDate>Thu, 22 Mar 2007 23:00:00 -0500</pubDate>
                      
     
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        <![CDATA[
                          WWW D.O.T. (DMV) Resources: 
                          <hr width="75%" />

                          <p><a title="U.S. D.O.T." href="http://www.dot.gov/" target="_blank">THE
                          U.S. DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION</a></p>

                          <p><a title="Alaska D.O.T." href="http://www.dot.state.ak.us/"
                          target="_blank">THE ALASKA D.O.T.</a></p>

                          <p><a title="Arizona D.O.T." href="http://www.dot.state.az.us/"
                          target="_blank">THE ARIZONA D.O.T.</a></p>

                          <p><a title="CA D.O.T." href="http://www.dot.ca.gov/" target="_blank">THE
                          CALIFORNIA D.O.T.</a></p>

                          <p><a title="CA DMV" href="http://www.dmv.ca.gov/" target="_blank">THE
                          CALIFORNIA D.M.V.</a></p>

                          <p><a title="CA Drivers Handbook"
                          href="http://www.dmv.ca.gov/pubs/hdbk/driver_handbook_toc.htm"
                          target="_blank">THE CALIFORNIA DRIVERS HANDBOOK</a></p>

                          <p><a title="CA Motorcycle Handbook"
                          href="http://www.dmv.ca.gov/pubs/dl655/dl665mcycle.pdf"
                          target="_blank">CALIFORNIA MOTORCYCLE RIDER'S HANDBOOK</a> (from the CA.
                          D.M.V.)</p>

                          <p><a title="DMV Forms" href="http://www.dmv.ca.gov/forms/forms.htm"
                          target="_blank">CALIFORNIA DMV FORMS YOU MIGHT NEED</a></p>

                          <p>THE CONNECTICUT D.O.T.</p>

                          <p><a title="Florida D.O.T." href="http://www.dot.state.fl.us/"
                          target="_blank">THE FLORIDA D.O.T.</a></p>

                          <p><a title="Georgia D.O.T." href="http://www.dot.state.ga.us/"
                          target="_blank">THE GEORGIA D.O.T.</a></p>

                          <p><a title="Hawaii D.O.T."
                          href="http://www.hawaii.gov/transportation/index.html"
                          target="_blank">THE HAWAII D.O.T.</a></p>

                          <p><a title="Idaho D.O.T." href="http://itd.idaho.gov/"
                          target="_blank">THE IDAHO D.O.T.</a></p>

                          <p><a title="Illinois D.O.T." href="http://dot.state.il.us/"
                          target="_blank">THE ILLINOIS D.O.T.</a></p>

                          <p><a title="Indiana D.O.T." href="http://www.ai.org/dot/"
                          target="_blank">THE INDIANA D.O.T.</a></p>

                          <p><a title="Kansas D.O.T." href="http://www.ksdot.org/"
                          target="_blank">THE KANSAS D.O.T.</a></p>

                          <p><a title="Kentucky TC" href="http://www.kytc.state.ky.us/"
                          target="_blank">THE KENTUCKY TRANSPORTATION CABINET</a></p>

                          <p><a title="Louisana D.O.T." href="http://www.dotd.state.la.us/"
                          target="_blank">THE LOUISANA DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION &amp;
                          DEVELOPMENT</a></p>

                          <p><a title="Marland D.O.T." href="http://www.mdot.state.md.us/"
                          target="_blank">THE MARYLAND D.O.T.</a></p>

                          <p><a title="Mass Highway Dept." href="http://www.mhd.state.ma.us/"
                          target="_blank">THE MASSACHUSETTES HIGHWAY DEPARTMENT</a></p>

                          <p><a title="Michigan D.O.T." href="http://www.michigan.gov/mdot/"
                          target="_blank">THE MICHIGAN D.O.T.</a></p>

                          <p><a title="Minn D.O.T." href="http://www.dot.state.mn.us/"
                          target="_blank">THE MINNESOTA D.O.T.</a></p>

                          <p><a title="Montana D.O.T." href="http://www.mdt.mt.gov/"
                          target="_blank">THE MONTANA D.O.T.</a></p>

                          <p><a title="Nevada D.O.T." href="http://www.nevadadot.com/"
                          target="_blank">THE NEVADA D.O.T.</a></p>

                          <p><a title="NJ D.O.T." href="http://www.state.nj.us/transportation/"
                          target="_blank">THE NEW JERSEY D.O.T.</a></p>

                          <p><a title="NY D.O.T." href="http://www.dot.state.ny.us/"
                          target="_blank">THE NEW YORK D.O.T.</a></p>

                          <p><a title="NC D.O.T." href="http://www.ncdot.org/" target="_blank">THE
                          NORTH CAROLINA D.O.T.</a></p>

                          <p><a title="North Dakota&Acirc;&nbsp;D.O.T."
                          href="http://www.state.nd.us/dot/" target="_blank">THE NORTH DAKOTA
                          D.O.T.</a></p>

                          <p><a title="Ohio D.O.T." href="http://www.dot.state.oh.us/"
                          target="_blank">THE OHIO D.O.T.</a></p>

                          <p><a title="Oklahoma D.O.T." href="http://www.okladot.state.ok.us/"
                          target="_blank">THE OKLAHOMA D.O.T.</a></p>

                          <p><a title="Oregon D.O.T." href="http://www.oregon.gov/ODOT/"
                          target="_blank">THE OREGON D.O.T.</a></p>

                          <p><a title="Penn D.O.T." href="http://www.dot.state.pa.us/"
                          target="_blank">THE PENNSYLVANIA D.O.T.</a></p>

                          <p><a title="Rhode Island D.O.T." href="http://www.dot.state.ri.us/"
                          target="_blank">THE RHODE ISLAND D.O.T.</a></p>

                          <p><a title="South Dakota D.O.T." href="http://www.sddot.com/"
                          target="_blank">THE SOUTH DAKOTA D.O.T.</a></p>

                          <p><a title="Texas D.O.T." href="http://www.dot.state.tx.us/"
                          target="_blank">THE TEXAS D.O.T.</a></p>

                          <p><a title="Utah D.O.T." href="http://www.sr.ex.state.ut.us/"
                          target="_blank">THE UTAH D.O.T.</a></p>

                          <p><a title="Vermont A.O.T." href="http://www.aot.state.vt.us/"
                          target="_blank">THE VERMONT AGENCY OF TRANSPORTATION</a></p>

                          <p><a title="Virginia D.O.T."
                          href="http://www.virginiadot.org/default_flash.asp" target="_blank">THE
                          VIRGINIA D.O.T.</a></p>

                          <p><a title="Wash D.O.T." href="http://wsdot.wa.gov/" target="_blank">THE
                          WASHINGTON STATE D.O.T.</a></p>

                          <p><a title="West Virginia D.O.T." href="http://www.wvdot.com/"
                          target="_blank">THE WEST VIRGINIA D.O.T.</a></p>

                          <p><a title="Wisc D.O.T." href="http://www.dot.state.wi.us/"
                          target="_blank">THE WISCONSIN D.O.T.</a></p>

                          <p><a title="Wyoming D.O.T." href="http://www.dot.state.wy.us/"
                          target="_blank">THE WYOMING D.O.T.</a></p>
                          <hr width="75%" />

                          <p align="center"><strong>State Laws</strong></p>

                          <p>Here are some states Vehicle Codes. Unfortunately, all states are not
                          available as yet.</p>

                          <p>Alaska vehicle code (~420k)</p>

                          <p>Arizona vehicle code (~280k)</p>

                          <p><a title="California Laws" href="http://www.leginfo.ca.gov/calaw.html"
                          target="_blank">California laws</a> (searchable index)</p>

                          <p>Colorado laws (searchable index)</p>

                          <p>Florida laws (searchable index)</p>

                          <p><a title="Idaho Laws" href="http://www.legislature.idaho.gov/"
                          target="_blank">Idaho laws</a> (searchable index)</p>

                          <p>Indiana vehicle code</p>

                          <p>Michigan vehicle code (3+ MB)</p>

                          <p>Minnesota laws (searchable index)</p>

                          <p>New York vehicle code</p>

                          <p>Utah laws (searchable index)</p>

                          <p>Washington vehicle code</p>

                          <p>Wyoming laws (searchable index)</p>

                          <p>U.S. Military</p>
                          <hr width="75%" />

                          <p>Last updated on 7/4/05</p>
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                      <title>Is America Sleep Deprived?</title>
                      <link>http://www.dui.com/dui-library/studies/research/sleep</link>
                      <description></description>
                      <author>admin</author>
                      <pubDate>Thu, 22 Mar 2007 23:00:00 -0500</pubDate>
                      
     
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        <![CDATA[
                          America Needs More Sleep, Study Says 

                          <p>Copyright &Acirc;&copy; 1998 Nando.net<br />
                           Copyright &Acirc;&copy; 1998 Scripps Howard<br />
                           * The Web site of The National Sleep Foundation.</p>

                          <p>By MICHAEL DOUGAN, San Francisco Examiner.<br />
                           Distributed by Scripps Howard News Service.</p>

                          <p>(March 27, 1998 01:13 a.m. EST <a title="Nando"
                          href="http://www.nando.net" target="_blank">http://www.nando.net</a>) --
                          Like hypnosis subjects in a campy old movie, Americans are getting sleepy
                          -- very, very sleepy. Meanwhile, they blithely work and drive as if they
                          were well-refreshed. The consequences are predictable.</p>

                          <p>So say the savants at the National Sleep Foundation, which has
                          released a study revealing that 64 percent of people in the U.S. sleep
                          less than the recommended eight hours a night, while 32 percent log fewer
                          than six hours. And how do they feel when awake? Tired, according to the
                          report, based on a nationwide survey of sleeping habits.</p>

                          <p>More than a third said they were drowsy during the day. Nearly that
                          many said it interfered with their on-the-job performance (a figure that
                          rose to more than half for night-shift workers).</p>

                          <p>Of special concern, said experts at the foundation in Washington,
                          D.C., is that people drive when deprived of sleep. Some 100,000 crashes,
                          involving 1,500 deaths and 71,000 injuries, are caused by drivers who
                          drift off, according to an estimate by the National Transportation Safety
                          Board. This is not news to the pros who pilot big rigs on U.S. highways,
                          said Deborah Whistler, editor of Heavy Duty Trucking Magazine, published
                          in Irvine, Calif.</p>

                          <p>"(Sleep deprivation) is a huge issue in the trucking industry," said
                          Whistler. Drivers are particularly prone to "microsleep, where they just
                          kind of go in and out of sleep (while driving)."</p>

                          <p>She said one transportation company is experimenting with a
                          computerized gadget that alerts drivers -- as well as their home office
                          -- whenever they start to sleep at the wheel. "I would hazard a guess
                          that within a couple of years every trucker in America is going to have
                          one of these things, if they work," Whistler said.</p>

                          <p>Lack of sleep also can cause less obvious health hazards, said Clete
                          Kushida, director of the Stanford University Center for Human Sleep
                          Research.</p>

                          <p>"There's evidence that if there's sleep deprivation and a person has a
                          sleep-related breathing disorder, it can make the breathing disorder
                          worse," said Kushida.</p>

                          <p>He said the breathing disorder, known as sleep apnea, afflicts 24
                          percent of men and 9 percent of women between ages 30 and 60.</p>

                          <p>Professional competence is also a victim of short sleep hours, Kushida
                          added. "Your work performance deteriorates significantly," he said. "You
                          become irritable. You have short-term memory problems and concentration
                          difficulties."</p>

                          <p>Just one night of sleep deprivation can bring on these symptoms,
                          Kushida said. For those who routinely cheat themselves of vital slumber,
                          "the sleep debt accumulates over time ... eventually the person just
                          crashes."</p>

                          <p>The foundation survey -- based on interviews with more than 1,000
                          people -- blamed two tools of technological society -- TV and the
                          Internet -- on some of America's collective sleep debt. "Fifty-one
                          percent of men and 42 percent of women would go to sleep earlier if they
                          didn't have a TV or access to the Internet," said the foundation
                          statement.</p>

                          <p>What's more, getting enough sleep is not a status symbol in
                          competitive society, said foundation researchers.</p>

                          <p>Noting that the sleepiest Americans are in their late teens and 20s,
                          Thomas Roth, head of sleep research at Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit and
                          a foundation adviser, said: "Eighteen- to 25-year-olds think they can get
                          by with four to five hours of sleep because Margaret Thatcher can and
                          they are twice the man she is." How can we tell when we've have had
                          enough sleep? That's easy, said Kushida. You've had enough sleep when
                          you're no longer sleepy.</p>

                          <p>The survey was done to launch National Sleep Awareness Week, March
                          30-April 5, which includes National Sleep Day on April 2.</p>
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                      <title>A Complete Reference for Alcohol, Drugs and Tobacco</title>
                      <link>http://www.dui.com/dui-library/studies/research/reference</link>
                      <description></description>
                      <author>admin</author>
                      <pubDate>Thu, 22 Mar 2007 23:00:00 -0500</pubDate>
                      
     
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        <![CDATA[
                          <div align="center">
                            <a id="anchor" name="anchor"></a>Web of Addictions<br />
                             Fact Sheets
                          </div>

                          <p>The fact sheets below were developed by many different authors. In
                          some cases, the fact sheets were placed on the web by a different
                          organization than the one that wrote the document. However, all of the
                          fact sheets are in the public domain to encourage wide distribution. You
                          are free to copy and use these fact sheets.</p>

                          <p>The following list of abbreviations was used to indicate the source of
                          the document in the links provided on this page. Many of the sites listed
                          contain additional information beyond the fact sheets that are listed on
                          this page. We encourage you to explore each site.</p>

                          <p><strong>Alcohol</strong></p>

                          <ul>
                            <li>Alcohol - VATTC</li>

                            <li>Alcohol - CESAR</li>

                            <li>Alcohol2 - CESAR</li>

                            <li>Alcohol - ARF</li>

                            <li>Alcohol - NFIA</li>

                            <li>Alcohol Doses, Measurements, and Blood Alcohol Levels - IPRC</li>

                            <li>Very Low Potency Alcoholic Beverages - IPRC</li>

                            <li>Alcohol, Other Drugs and Driving - ARF</li>

                            <li><a title="Alcohol Intoxication"
                            href="http://www.indiana.edu/~adic/effects.html"
                            target="_blank">Effects of Alcohol Intoxication - IUADIC</a></li>

                            <li><a title="Controlling BAC"
                            href="http://www.indiana.edu/~adic/effects.html" target="_blank">Tips
                            For Controlling Blood Alcohol Concentration (BAC) - IUADIC</a></li>

                            <li><a title="Checklist"
                            href="http://www.indiana.edu/~adic/checklist.html"
                            target="_blank">Personal Checklist Around The Use Of Alcohol -
                            IUADIC</a></li>

                            <li>Alcohol Binge - Alice</li>

                            <li>Blood Alcohol Concentration - BAC - UMH</li>

                            <li>Responsible Drinking Notes - UMH</li>

                            <li>Alcohol Pharmacology - MoDADA</li>

                            <li>Naltrexone (REVIA-&Acirc;&reg;) for the Treatment of Alcoholism -
                            NIAAA</li>

                            <li>Naltrexone DATNet</li>

                            <li>Naltrexone (REVIA-&Acirc;&reg;) - ARF</li>

                            <li><a title="Students Drinking"
                            href="http://www.indiana.edu/~adic/students.html"
                            target="_blank">Responding to Alcohol Problems - IUADIC</a></li>

                            <li>Children of Alcoholics - FF/AACAP</li>

                            <li>Adult Children of Alcoholics - UICC</li>

                            <li>Fetal Alcohol Syndrome/Effects Information Homepage</li>

                            <li>Fetal Alcohol Syndrome - MoDADA</li>

                            <li>Fetal Alcohol Syndrome - CESAR</li>
                          </ul>

                          <p align="left"><a title="Top" href="resolveuid/d6c9b09db221355809ff689d6e8914b6">Go to Main FACT
                          Menu</a></p>
                          <hr width="75%" />

                          <p><strong>Other Drugs</strong></p>

                          <ul>
                            <li><a title="Drug Slang"
                            href="http://www.drugs.indiana.edu/slang/SearchSlang.aspx"
                            target="_blank">Searchable On-Line Dictionary of Street Drug Slang -
                            IPRC</a></li>

                            <li>Drug Slang - CESAR</li>

                            <li>A - Cl</li>

                            <li>Co - Ha</li>

                            <li>Hc - Mi</li>

                            <li>Mo - R</li>

                            <li>Drug Slang by Drug Type</li>

                            <li>Amphetamines - MoDADA</li>

                            <li>Amphetamines - CESAR</li>

                            <li>Amphetamine2 - CESAR</li>

                            <li>Amphetamines - ARF</li>

                            <li>Amphetamines - IPRC</li>

                            <li>Amyl Nitrite - MoDADA</li>

                            <li>Barbiturates - MoDADA</li>

                            <li>Barbiturates - ARF</li>

                            <li>Benzodiazepines - ARF</li>

                            <li>Butyl Nitrite - MoDADA</li>

                            <li>Caffeine - MoDADA</li>

                            <li>Caffeine - ARF</li>

                            <li>Cocaine - MoDADA</li>

                            <li>Cocaine - CESAR</li>

                            <li>Cocaine - IPRC</li>

                            <li>Cocaine - CESAR</li>

                            <li>Cocaine - VATTC</li>

                            <li>Cocaine - ARF</li>

                            <li>Cocaine - NFIA</li>

                            <li>Codeine - MoDADA</li>

                            <li>Crystal Meth - Alice</li>

                            <li>Designer Drugs - CESAR</li>

                            <li>Ecstasy - NFIA</li>

                            <li>DMT - MoDADA</li>

                            <li>Glue - MoDADA</li>

                            <li>Hallucinogens - MoDADA</li>

                            <li>Hallucinogens - CESAR</li>

                            <li>Hallucinogens - ARF</li>

                            <li>Heroin - MoDADA</li>

                            <li>Heroin - CESAR</li>

                            <li>Heroin - NFIA</li>

                            <li>Ice - NFIA</li>

                            <li>Inhalants - MoDADA</li>

                            <li>Inhalants - CESAR</li>

                            <li>Inhalants2 - CESAR</li>

                            <li>Inhalants - ARF</li>

                            <li>Inhalants - IPRC</li>

                            <li>Inhalants - NFIA</li>

                            <li>LSD - MoDADA</li>

                            <li>LSD - ARF</li>

                            <li>LSD - NFIA</li>

                            <li>Magic mushrooms - Psilocybin - Alice</li>

                            <li>Marijuana - MoDADA</li>

                            <li>Marijuana - CESAR</li>

                            <li>Marijuana 2 - CESAR</li>

                            <li>Marijuana 3 - CESAR</li>

                            <li>Marijuana - VATTC</li>

                            <li>Marijuana - IPRC</li>

                            <li>Marijuana - NFIA</li>

                            <li>Cannabis - ARF</li>

                            <li>Marijuana and Cancer - Alice</li>

                            <li>Mescaline - MoDADA</li>

                            <li>Methcathinone - IPRC</li>

                            <li>Ritalin - methylphenidate - IPRC</li>

                            <li>Nitrous Oxide - Alice</li>

                            <li>Opiates - MoDADA</li>

                            <li>Opiates - ARF</li>

                            <li>PCP - MoDADA</li>

                            <li>PCP - CESAR</li>

                            <li>PCP2 - CESAR</li>

                            <li>PCP - ARF</li>

                            <li>PCP - NFIA</li>

                            <li>Psilocybin - MoDADA</li>

                            <li>Rohypnol - Rophies - WOA</li>

                            <li>Rohyphol - CESAR</li>

                            <li>Rohypnol - DATNet</li>

                            <li>Rohypnol - NIDA</li>

                            <li>Rohypnol - NFIA</li>

                            <li>Sedative-Hypnotics - MoDADA</li>

                            <li>Sedative-Hypnotics - CESAR</li>

                            <li>Special K and X - Ketamine and MDMA - Alice</li>

                            <li>Steroids - MoDADA</li>

                            <li>Steroids - CESAR</li>

                            <li>Steroids - CESAR</li>

                            <li>Steroids - NFIA</li>

                            <li>Stimulants - MoDADA</li>

                            <li>Tramadol/Ultram - MSB</li>

                            <li>Tranquilizers - MoDADA</li>

                            <li>Tranquilizers - ARF</li>

                            <li>Valerian - CESAR</li>

                            <li>Vivarin - Caffeine - Alice</li>
                          </ul>

                          <p>Go to Main FACT Menu</p>
                          <hr width="75%" />

                          <p>General Substance Abuse<br />
                           General Information on Addiction - CESAR<br />
                           Teens: Alcohol and Other Drugs - FF/AACAP<br />
                           How to Help Your Friend - IUIDIC<br />
                           Making Decisions About Substance Abuse Treatment - FF/AACAP<br />
                           What is your Risk for Substance Abuse - UMH<br />
                           Alcohol, Drugs and Violence - Alice<br />
                           Treatment Benefits - MoDADA<br />
                           Women and Substance Abuse - MoDADA<br />
                           Go to Main FACT Menu</p>
                          <hr width="75%" />

                          <p>Tobacco<br />
                           Tobacco - IPRC<br />
                           Smokeless Tobacco - MoDADA<br />
                           Quitting Smokeless Tobacco - Alice<br />
                           Cigarette Smoking - MODADA<br />
                           Cigarette Smoking and Adults - Oncolink<br />
                           Health Facts about Tobacco - WHO<br />
                           Tobacco - NFIA<br />
                           Costs of Tobacco Use - WHO<br />
                           The Public Health Implications of the Economics of Tobacco - WHO<br />
                           Smoking and Cancer - Oncolink<br />
                           Environmental Tobacco Smoke - Oncolink<br />
                           Second Hand Smoke: Mothers and Their Children - Oncolink<br />
                           Second Hand Smoke and Cancer - Oncolink<br />
                           CDC Smoking Information Page - CDC<br />
                           Go to Main FACT Menu</p>
                          <hr width="75%" />

                          <p>The Web of Addictions pages Copyright &Acirc;&copy; 1997 by Andrew L.
                          Homer Ph.D and Dick Dillon . All rights reserved. If you have comments or
                          suggestions for the fact sheets - write us. If you would like to develop
                          additional fact sheets, send us a copy.</p>

                          <p>Fact Sheet Citations Alice Go Ask Alice, Columbia University Health
                          Sciences<br />
                           ARF Addiction Research Foundation<br />
                           CDC Centers for Disease Control and Prevention<br />
                           CESAR Center for Substance Abuse Research , University of Maryland<br />
                           DATNet DATNet<br />
                           DEA Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA)<br />
                           FF/AACAP Facts for Families. American Academy of Child and Adolescent
                          Psychiatry<br />
                           IPRC Indiana Prevention Resource Center<br />
                           IUDIC Indiana University Alcohol and Drug Information Center<br />
                           MoDADA Missouri Division of Alcohol and Drug Abuse<br />
                           MSB Medical Sciences Bulletin<br />
                           NCI National Cancer Institute<br />
                           NFIA National Families in Action<br />
                           NIAAA National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism<br />
                           NIDA National Institute on Drug Abuse<br />
                           Oncolink Oncolink at the University of Pennsylvania<br />
                           UICC University of Illinois Counseling Center<br />
                           UMH University of Montana HEALTHLINE<br />
                           VATTC Virginia Addiction Technology Transfer Center<br />
                           WHO World Health Organization<br />
                           WOA Web of Addictions</p>
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                      <title>History of Drinking in America</title>
                      <link>http://www.dui.com/dui-library/studies/research/history-of-drinking</link>
                      <description></description>
                      <author>admin</author>
                      <pubDate>Thu, 22 Mar 2007 23:00:00 -0500</pubDate>
                      
     
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                          <div align="center">
                            <p>Drinking in America<br />
                             A History<br />
                             Mark Edward Lender, James Kirby Martin<br />
                             The Free Press, 1982<br />
                             Copyright&Acirc;&copy; A Division of Macmillian Publishing Co.
                            Inc.</p>
                            <hr width="75%" />
                          </div>

                          <p>"Drink is in itself a good creature of God, and to be received with
                          thankfulness, but the abuse of drink is from Satan, the wine is from God,
                          but the Drunkard is from the Devil".</p>

                          <p>Increase Mather, Wo to Drunkards (1673)</p>
                          <hr width="75%" />

                          <p>p. 2-38<br />
                           Chapter One</p>

                          <p>The "Good Creature of God": Drinking in America.</p>

                          <p>Plymouth, 1621</p>

                          <p>The Mayflower's crew belonged to this tradition. Moreover, the sailors
                          knew that if they continued to share their meager beer supplies with this
                          band of religious dissenters, there would probably be no alcohol left for
                          the voyage home. They were not prepared to take that risk, and matters
                          came to a head. William Bradford, the faithful diarist of Plymouth and
                          for years its able governor, recorded the scene. The settlers "were
                          hasted ashore and made to drink water," he lamented, "that the seamen
                          might have the more beer." Bradford's pleas from the shore for just a
                          "can" of beer brought refusal. If he "were their own father," one sailor
                          responded, "he should have none." It was an inauspicious beginning to the
                          new venture. (Most versions of the Pilgrim story pass over the beer
                          crisis in favor of the traditional tales of Plymouth Rock and the first
                          Thanksgiving. The modern brewing industry has overlooked an advertising
                          bonanza.) The suffering on the beach finally became too much for the
                          Mayflower's captain; he sent word that there would be "beer for them that
                          had need for it," particularly the sick, even if it meant his drinking
                          water on the way back to England. His humanitarian gesture assured the
                          Pilgrims that as they faced the "starving time" of Plymouth's first
                          winter, they would have an occasional taste of the Old World.</p>

                          <p>But the basic problem remained. The last major source of beer
                          disappeared with the Mayflower, and over the rest of the winter alcohol
                          became scarce indeed, nonexistent for many. There was a small supply of
                          gin and other spirits, but not enough to go around, and most of the
                          settlers quickly learned to drink water. The logic that dictated liquor
                          rations aboard ship, however, remained compelling in Pilgrim eyes and
                          prompted efforts to secure a reliable flow of alcohol for Plymouth. This
                          real concern ultimately was shared by all the early colonists.</p>

                          <p>It was clear from the start that the only sure solution lay in local
                          production. Relying exclusively on imports was impractical on a number of
                          counts. England was a long way off, and in the early colonial period
                          contacts with home were irregular at best. Shipping costs were also high,
                          a problem compounded as second- and third-generation settlers moved
                          inland, away from the coastal ports. Besides, the colonial
                          population-even that of tiny Plymouth-quickly grew too large to supply
                          through ordinary shipping channels. In the early 1620s there were only
                          two or three thousand people scattered throughout Virginia and New
                          England. With the Great Migration of the 1630s and forties, the American
                          population rapidly climbed upward (as many as seventy thousand people
                          left England for the New World; many went to the considered themselves
                          until the Revolution - dearly loved their beer. By the time the Mayflower
                          sailed, the most popular brew was a dark, hearty drink, about 6 percent
                          alcohol, that was made from barley malt and flavored with hops (this
                          potion evolved into modern porter and stout). The beers carried to
                          America, then, were hardly similar to the pale brews preferred in the
                          United States today, but they were the most popular beverages in the
                          colonies in the years following the arrival of the first settlers.</p>

                          <p>Local brewing began almost as soon as the colonists were safely
                          ashore. Colonial wives incorporated brewing into their household
                          routines, and beer became a dietary staple. "Common brewers," who sold
                          wholesale and retail, appeared in short order as well, and many tavern
                          owners also produced their own supplies. In addition, the evolution of
                          commercial ties with the Old World generally made some imported beer
                          available to those who could afford it. But while it was soon apparent
                          that nobody was going to die of thirst, quality control was a persistent
                          problem. Although brewers used traditional ingredients when they could,
                          hops and malt from the parent state were not always available, especially
                          inland. Accordingly, the provincials used whatever domestic substitutes
                          they had on hand to fill the gap, even if this meant doing considerable
                          violence to English recipes. A verse from the 1630s applauded this early
                          ingenuity:</p>

                          <p>If barley be wanting to make into malt,<br />
                           We must be content and think it no fault,<br />
                           For we can make liquor to sweeten our lips,<br />
                           Of pumpkins, and parsnips, and walnut-tree chips.</p>

                          <p>One suspects that the beers produced from such recipes were little
                          better than the poetry. Certainly, however, the new American beer rapidly
                          became a highly diverse creature. Tastes varied sufficiently to provoke
                          an official response by the mid-1600s, as local governments, concerned
                          over uniform quality, stepped in more than once to regulate the
                          ingredients of commercial brews. Most beer, however, was made at home,
                          and no government could dictate a housewife's recipe.</p>

                          <p>Nor did official scrutiny discourage some truly searching experiments
                          to replicate the original English product. In 1662, for instance, John
                          Winthrop, Jr., governor of Connecticut and son of Governor John Winthrop
                          of Massachusetts, brewed a palatable beer from Indian corn. This novel
                          contribution ultimately got the younger Winthrop elected to the Royal
                          Society of London -perhaps the highest honor the</p>

                          <p>From the beginning, distilled spirits were potent enough to raise
                          concerns over misuse. Aboard the Arbella Puritan elders noted that some
                          of the youth were ' rone "to drink hot waters very immoderately." But
                          spirits had real advantages in the colonial view. Those who moved inland,
                          for example, could carry a potent beverage with relative efficiency; one
                          cask of hard liquor could have as much absolute alcohol as ten casks of
                          beer and would keep as long as the travelers refrained from drinking it
                          up. The premium placed on distilled beverages also allowed them to be
                          used as wages in the early years. In fact, when the town fathers of
                          Boston moved to halt the practice in the 1640s-it seemed to them that
                          workers became somewhat less productive after a few sips of their "wages"
                          -one group of laborers responded with what may have been America's first
                          strike. The authorities backed down and restored their liquor. So while
                          strong drink was not as popular as beer in the first decades of American
                          settlement, many colonists liked it better than did their Old World
                          brethren.</p>

                          <p>Some of this so-called strong water was probably gin, which, like
                          beer, had deep roots in English culture. Unlike beer, however, gin had a
                          dubious reputation. Introduced in the 1530s by soldiers returning to
                          England from the Low Countries, gin-grain spirits flavored with the
                          juniper berry-was produced cheaply and easily and became highly popular
                          among the urban poor (a profitable mass market for distillers, who could
                          sell gin at prices lower than those of good beer). Gin drinking grew to
                          an alarming extent and, in the view of many Englishmen, was thoroughly
                          out of control by the 1730s. The "gin epidemic" ravaged the poorer
                          districts at least until 1751, when a vexed government stepped in and
                          placed controls on sales. By then, however, the problem, immortalized in
                          Hogarth's Beer Street-Gin Lane series of prints, had caught the public
                          imagination. Gin itself was never again wholly respectable with the
                          middle and upper classes. The drink retained a number of faithful
                          imbibers throughout England, but it never caught on in the colonies: The
                          early colonists drank some, and so did the Dutch in New Amsterdam and
                          elsewhere, but seventeenth-century America lacked a large urban
                          population, the traditional stronghold of gin. (This spirit remained a
                          relative pariah until the twentieth century, when combined with vermouth
                          and optional olives or onions it came into its own as the martini.)</p>

                          <p>As the colonists turned to distilling hard liquor, they proved as
                          adaptable as they had been in their search for bee. In fact, it was
                          technically easier to use local ingredients - grains or fruits - in
                          producing quality spirts than it was in getting a consistenly good beer.
                          In addition of making home brew, many colonial households began to opeate
                          backyard stills called "limbecs." This not only assured a supply of
                          distilled liquors but also generally diffused the skills necessary in
                          production. And as the colonials started to standardize their distilling
                          operations and to introduce their own beverages, a preference for hard
                          liquor developed.</p>

                          <p>The movement toward strong waters in domestic production ws evident by
                          the late 1600s, as witnessed in the rise of respectabel regional liquors,
                          some of which later became popular throughout much of North America. In
                          New England, pears emerged from the vat as "perry", while settlers in the
                          territory that ultimately became Vermont distilled honey into a mead so
                          good, as local tradition had it, that drinkers could bear the buzzing of
                          the bees (indeed, after a quart of so one could probably hear all sorts
                          of buzzing). In the Back Country, which ran down the eastern slopes of
                          the Appalachians from New England to Georgia, grains like corn and rye
                          (as well as potatoes and berries) offered a "buzz" of their own (these
                          grain liquors assumed a central role in shaping American drinking
                          patterns in the eighteenth century - a story to which we will
                          return).</p>

                          <p>p. 9.</p>

                          <p>Even the apple provided a major impetus in distilling. The fruit was
                          not native to North America, but European seeds did well in the
                          hospitable climate, and orchards flourished. Hard cider, naturally
                          fermented to about 7 percent alcohol content, became especially popular
                          in the Northern provinces (although Tennessee took a liking to it later
                          on as well), where the drink ultimately rivaled beer in popularity. By
                          the early 1700s, and probably before, Anglo-Americans were distilling
                          their cider into a potent applejack. Applejack found a particularly loyal
                          following in the Middle Atlantic colonies, and the best came from New
                          Jersey. "Jersey Lightning" was stuff fit for the serious drinker: Too
                          much could bring on "apple palsey," although one aged connoisseur
                          recalled that he downed a quart a day over the years "without the
                          slightest inconvenience."</p>

                          <p>In the South, particularly in Virginia and Georgia, the peach
                          -introduced into Florida by the Spanish and spreading north over the
                          decades -also became a distilling staple. Peach brandies emerged as great
                          favorites, and a bit of this popularity still lingers.</p>
                          <hr width="75%" />

                          <p>"Wo to Drunkards ": Early Use and Abuse</p>

                          <p>All these drinks had their partisans, and drinking constituted a
                          central facet of colonial life. Indeed, two of the key characteristics of
                          early drinking patterns were frequency and quantity. Simply stated, most
                          settlers drank often and abundantly.</p>

                          <p>Most colonial drinking was utilitarian, with high alcohol consumption
                          a normal part of personal and community habits. In colonial homes, beer
                          and cider were the usual beverages at mealtime. In fact, alcohol was more
                          common at the family table in the colonial era than in our own; even
                          children shared the dinner beer. This practice of taking beer or cider at
                          dinner made steady drinkers of most Americans, a pattern reinforced by
                          activities outside the home. In New England, communal projects such as
                          clearing the common fields or raising the town church seldom proceeded
                          without a public cask of spirits to fortify the toiling citizenry.
                          Private labor also called for a steady pull at the jug. Farmers typically
                          took a generous liquor ration into the fields historian of the late
                          nineteenth century, took a dim view of such customs. "You may easily
                          judge the drunkenness and riot," he noted soberly, "on occasions less
                          solemn than the funerals of old and beloved ministers" like ordinations,
                          for instance. After Thomas Shepard was ordained head of the church at
                          Newtowne, Massachusetts, the celebration that followed would have made
                          Dorchester cringe. Attended by local parishioners and civil and clerical
                          dignitaries, the celebrants feasted for</p>

                          <p>The drinking habits of the Founding Fathers attracted the attention of
                          nineteenth-centur ' y temperance advocates, a concern demonstrated in
                          these Currier and Ives prints. In thefirst engraving, from 1848,
                          Washington bidsfarewell to his officers over a toast; a supply of liquor
                          rests on the table. A reengraved versionfrom 1876 reflects the influence
                          of the temperance movement: A hat now graces the table and Washington no
                          longer clasps a glass.</p>

                          <p>The Old Tun Tavern, Philadelphia. The Old Tun was considerably
                          biLT-aer and more elaborate than were small-town drin"i 9 establishments,
                          but it was typical of colonial taverns in that it Offered not only food
                          and drink but also lodgings and aforumfor public gatherings.</p>

                          <p>and they served as rallying points for the militia and as recruiting
                          stations for the Continental army. Innkeepers ideally reflected the high
                          public status accorded their establishments, and in reality they often
                          did. Publicans were commonly among a town's most prominent citizens and
                          not infrequently were deacons. And if they were good hosts, they did
                          their best to make patrons comfortable. While some taverns were only rude
                          structures with plank bars -there were a lot of these in port towns like
                          New York, Philadelphia, and Charleston and on the sparsely settled
                          frontier-others were well-appointed, pleasant places to spend time. The
                          Reverend Dorchester is again helpful at this point, describing a tavern
                          scene common any time between the late seventeenth and the early
                          nineteenth century -although we can doubt that he intended to make the
                          picture as appealing as he did. In the winters, alcoholism did not exist.
                          People have developed problems from drinking only beer and wine (we note
                          in this regard that in 1975 the average American consumed less absolute
                          alcohol overall than the average colonial consumed through only beer and
                          cider). So the potential for alcohol addiction was certainly present.</p>

                          <p>The social standards of the day had an important restraining effect on
                          intemperance. As we have seen, much, if not most, colonial drinking was
                          family and community oriented. And family and community conduct fell
                          under the governance of social norms inherited, like drinking behavior,
                          from England and the rest of Europe. These norms defined a largely
                          traditional society whose members shared a common loyalty to and an
                          identity with the community and its standards of individual conduct.
                          People were taught to accept their stations in life without complaint and
                          to defer in matters of leadership to society's "betters,' whether
                          seventeenth-century Puritan "saint" or eighteenthcentury Southern planter
                          'aristocrat." In sum, prerevolutionary America more often than not
                          represented a traditional deferential society.</p>

                          <p>Most colonials willingly conformed to community values, and if some
                          refused to do so voluntarily, the majority accepted the community's right
                          to compel prescribed behavior. Thus, anything deemed inimical or
                          offensive to the community, be it drunkenness, sexual promiscuity, or
                          even Roman Catholicism, could be restrained for the good and safety of
                          all. Viewed from an egalitarian perspective, the world was inflexible in
                          many ways. Deference, however, characterized the age, although its
                          strength varied in degree from region to region and was probably weakest
                          on the frontier. And it had its advantages: If individual behavior was
                          circumscribed, residents had the security of knowing where they stood in
                          society, of enjoying its protection from internal and external threats
                          (both spiritual and physical), and of knowing what their local
                          communities and leaders permitted or expected of them.</p>

                          <p>Such was the context of early American drinking. The colonials had
                          assimilated alcohol use, based on Old World patterns, into their
                          community lifestyles. As long as mores remained intact, communities held
                          drinking excesses largely in bounds. (Whether these norms could have
                          restrained intemperance in a population favoring distilled beverages,
                          however, is debatable.) Society would simply not allow things to get out
                          of hand, even though it permitted plenty of drinking at the same time.
                          Most people restricted their consumption primarily to the use of beer and
                          cider; they very rarely became problem drinkers. Even</p>

                          <p>Each colony developed an extensive legal code to combat all aspects of
                          liquor violations. These laws told tavern owners, for example, what they
                          could sell, to whom, when, and even at what prices. Plymouth forbade
                          sales to chronic drunkards, and Virginia, pursuing a similar goal, made
                          any credit innkeepers extended topers unrecoverable by law. Authorities
                          also frowned on breaches of the peace in the taverns. In an attempt to
                          maintain decorum, Pennsylvania once outlawed the drinking of toasts. An
                          even more serious expression of concern emanated from Boston in the
                          1670s, when the town exiled Alice Thomas after the courts had had her
                          jailed, flogged, and fined for permitting conduct in her tavern so
                          scandalous that it resulted in the first Massachusetts law against
                          prostitution.</p>

                          <p>Strictures against individual tipplers could be severe. Drunkenness
                          was a crime throughout the colonies, and the penalties against such
                          behavior were potentially extreme. In order to emphasize community
                          control, magistrates could (and did) set examples with jailings, fines,
                          the stocks, and the lash. Recidivism brought heavier fines and longer
                          imprisonments -or brutal corporal punishment. In Massachusetts, the
                          unregenerate ways of one Robert Cole, perhaps a spiritual ancestor of
                          Hawthorne's Hester Prynne, finally provoked the colony to disfranchise
                          him and order him to wear a scarlet "D," for drunkard. Clearly, then,
                          colonial statutes gave officials the power, if they chose to exercise it,
                          to deal sternly with alcohol related infractions.</p>

                          <p>Even drinking at home could become an official concern, especially in
                          New England. The early Puritans stressed the importance of well-ordered
                          families in maintaining stable, godly societies, and they were not about
                          to let excessive drinking disrupt their world. Massachusetts expressly
                          forbade drunkenness in homes in 1636 and again in 1654. But the law
                          apparently had little impact, so in 1675 the Bay Colony established the
                          post of tithingman. These officers, who as "sober and discreet men" were
                          to oversee the conduct of ten or twelve families each, were to report on
                          any liquor violations they found. Later, convinced that the roots of
                          social vice lay in family sin, authorities directed the tithingmen to
                          record infractions of all types. These men, however, were neither
                          primitive secret police nor spies; rather, they did their jobs openly and
                          were appointed to their positions at public meetings. Their neighbors
                          knew who they were, and it is doubtful that they proved effective in
                          checking drunkenness, which perhaps explains why the office was not long
                          continued.</p>

                          <p>The tithingmen were probably unnecessary anyway. As we already Coales
                          for his calling." In spite of other drinking violations, he received at
                          least one other opportunity to cut wood on public lands. We do not know
                          if he stopped drinking. He is found on a list of "disparat debts" in 1680
                          (a debt he might have paid, since he was not on the following lists). The
                          point here is that Puritan selectmen rarely applied the harsh letter of
                          the law. Dorchester authorities looked closely at Birch's conduct and,
                          instead of constant punishment, found understanding just as effective not
                          only in helping him, but also in maintaining good order in the community.
                          And the Birch case was not an isolated instance: Alice Thomas and Robert
                          Cole were examples of others who had regained the good graces of local
                          New England magistrates.</p>

                          <p>One would suspect that the Southern colonies, lacking in well-ordered
                          communities by comparison to New England, were more given to
                          individualistic behavior. However, the evidence on early drinking
                          patterns in that region suggests a strong desire to control the drunkard
                          and "unseasonable drinking." During the 1620s in Virginia, for example,
                          the General Court (and later the county courts) focused squarely on
                          excessive drinking as a threat to peace and harmony among the widely
                          dispersed settlers. Indeed, the fact that settlements were not compact
                          may have made the early Virginians as concerned as New Englanders about
                          controlling deviant behavior.</p>

                          <p>A number of General Court cases are revealing. A decision in 1624, for
                          instance, went against John Roe, James Hickmote, and Nathaniell Jeffreys
                          for "having kept company in drinking, and committing of a riot." It was
                          the rioting that bothered the court, and each man had to pay a heavy
                          fine. In a case heard in 1625, Robert Fytts and John Radish faced not
                          only the charge of drunkenness but also that of being so "disorderd in
                          drink" that they were not "able to go home contrary to the proclamation
                          made against drunkenness." Radish also had to stand up on the charge that
                          he, at an "unseasonable time of the night," had taken Sir George
                          Yeardley's servants to his house "and there gave them entertainment and
                          made them drink." Fytts had to pay a stiff fine. Radish, who must have
                          been the instigator of the reveling, also was fined. Finally, the court
                          mandated that Radish "lie neck and heels or . . . make a good and
                          sufficient pair of stocks" for punishing yet other disturbers of the
                          peace.</p>

                          <p>Early Virginia cases demonstrate that magistrates did not worry about
                          drinking but rather about drunkenness and its impact on cornmunity
                          stability. The strange case of Thomas Godby serves to under canons of
                          wedlock. In the end, the drinking bout and its aftermath had not
                          threatened the public peace, and there was really no basis for judicial
                          action in the name of community stability.</p>

                          <p>It is very important to recognize that colonial magistrates, in both
                          the North and the South, rarely let concerns over excesses in drinking
                          spill over into attacks on the consumption of alcoholic beverages in
                          general. No one, at least no one willing to put themselves on the public
                          record, considered a broad legal prohibition as necessary for communal
                          harmony. That argument would have flown in the face of the entire
                          European heritage. If people denounced cases of individual intemperance,
                          they did not directly intimate that the fault lay in liquor itself; the
                          problem was one of isolated deviants misusing what society viewed as a
                          wholesome, healthful, and even necessary product.</p>

                          <p>The Exceptions: Indians and Blacks</p>

                          <p>While English colonists remained comfortable about alcohol for
                          themselves, they did not see it as a "good creature" for some other
                          groups. In fact, they could be very leary of liquor in the wrong hands.
                          As we have seen, in closely supervised colonial communities, drinking
                          sometimes was associated with social disorder and violence; and colonial
                          leaders feared that drinking-related problems in groups potentially
                          beyond community control could have serious implications.</p>

                          <p>In the port towns, for example, the authorities occasionally had
                          trouble with sailors who did not share the common social concern over
                          chronic intoxication. Plymouth once temporarily revoked all tavern
                          licenses in Yarmouth when some mariners got particularly rowdy; the inns
                          reopened after the seamen sailed away. There was also concern over the
                          behavior of those who slipped beyond the control of established
                          communities to the frontiers. But, most of all, white colonials worried
                          about Indians and blacks-groups not only racially and culturally
                          different but also frequently hostile. The colonists feared that alcohol
                          consumption among these peoples could be dangerous to over all societal
                          stability.</p>

                          <p>The Indians of eastern North America were unfamiliar with beverage
                          alcohol before the invasion of the whites. Most tribes got their first
                          taste from the explorers and adventurers who preceded the influx of
                          settlers, just as they learned about other aspects of European culture
                          from these initial harbingers of change. In some early cases, Indian</p>

                          <p>drinking did not seem to pose a problem. Some Indians appreciated the
                          colonial beverages and did not drink to excess. Samoset, for instance,
                          the tribesman who helped the Pilgrims survive their first winter, was
                          particularly fond of beer. The first Thanksgiving saw red and white men
                          happily downing gallons of liquor together. But the picture changed
                          rapidly as the settlers became convinced that Indians, for reasons the
                          Europeans could not explain, were especially prone to drunkenness.
                          Alcohol seemed to hit Indians hard and fast, and they allegedly became
                          unpredictable and even violent-at least it so seemed in the eyes of
                          whites. The colonial view of Indian drinking, that red men could not hold
                          their liquor, was in fact the beginning of a long-standing stereotype of
                          the impact of alcohol on the tribes. Many early settlers believed Indians
                          to be uncivilized -nothing more than "savages"; therefore, any sign of
                          intemperate behavior served to confirm that image. Some modern
                          anthropologists have termed the so-called Indian drinking problem the
                          "firewater myth." This stereotype not only followed the white frontier
                          line to the Pacific but in many respects has survived into the
                          present.</p>

                          <p>Modern research has failed to explain the firewater myth. Some Indian
                          groups today do have unusually high rates of alcoholism, while others do
                          not. There is no positive evidence indicating a greater physiological
                          propensity to alcoholism in Indians than in whites, nor is it absolutely
                          clear how cultural conditioning factors may have distinguished Indian
                          drinking reactions from those of other groups. Thus, it is difficult to
                          say why the first reports of convivial Indian drinking in early Plymouth
                          (and almost everywhere else) soon gave way to a litany of recorded
                          abuses.</p>

                          <p>One possible explanation is that some tribes learned to drink from the
                          wrong whites: fur traders, explorers, or fishing crews, all of whom drank
                          hard and, frequently, in a fashion not condoned by the social no ' rms in
                          traditional, settled colonial communities. This model might have inclined
                          the Indian-without prior experience with the effects of alchohol-toward
                          problem drinking from the very beginning. But even if true in some
                          instances, this represents at best only a partial explanation of the
                          situation. Indeed, evidence suggests that both reactions to alcohol and
                          drinking behavior varied markedly among tribal groups. At any rate, we
                          know too little about the role of alcohol in initial white-red contacts
                          to reach any solid conclusions. Nor can one be sure that the colonists
                          were not exaggerating their accounts of Indian drunkenness. Perhaps they
                          misunderstood Indian drinking behavior</p>

                          <p></p>

                          <p>11 , "I ,) I)olel liquor, and Indians. Scenes similar to this provoked
                          the Plymouthraid against Thomas Morton @ band at Merrymount.</p>

                          <p>dane poetry in which he satirized the Pilgrims with as free a hand as
                          he gave the Indians drink. Then he went too far; he gave his Indian
                          friends guns. For most colonists, savages with alcohol were bad enough,
                          but redmen with alcohol and guns were intolerable. "0, the horribleness
                          of this villainy!" Bradford wailed, and, after obtaining the support of
                          other settlements, he dispatched Captain Standish (Morton called him
                          "Captain Shrimpe") to clean out Morton's nest. There could have been a
                          nasty fight at Merrymount. When the "invasion force" arrived, Morton's
                          men were under cover and well armed, but they were also so drunk that
                          they could not handle their weapons. Morton was taken and shipped in
                          chains back to England (where he was ultimately freed). Merrymount was
                          finished, but its demise illustrated the gravity of the problem of
                          Indian-colonist relations.</p>

                          <p>Although the authorities fined and jailed many colonists over the
                          years for illegal beverage sales, in general white officials were very
                          inconsistent in enforcing regulations. While they sought to restrain
                          private liquor trade with the Indians, they were not above entering the
                          traffic directly when it suited their purposes. Often they saw to it
                          that</p>

                          <p>Colonial governments also kept a watchful eye on drinking among
                          blacks. The floodgates of black slavery had opened in the English
                          mainland colonies by the end of the seventeenth century. Drinking
                          patterns, like most other aspects of slave life, were largely a matter of
                          what white masters would allow. Like the Indians, blacks were perceived
                          in terms of heathenism. Even more threatening, they lived among the
                          whites, so that the consequences of violence were omnipresent and
                          internal rather than sporadic and external (as in the case of the Indian
                          nations). Furthermore, blacks played a functional role in providing
                          back-breaking labor for whites, while Indians came to be viewed as a
                          menace to be removed or exterminated.</p>

                          <p>But masters did permit a certain amount of controlled drinking among
                          their chattel laborers-normally on special occasions. In the South, the
                          end of harvest and the Christmas season generally saw holiday
                          celebrations, with slave owners providing a day off for music, dancing,
                          extra food, and drinking (largely of cheap distilled spirits). Some
                          masters also used liquor to reward slaves for special service; still
                          others, if they allowed their slaves time to work for themselves, let
                          them purchase spirits with part of their wages (the extent of this
                          practice remains unclear).</p>

                          <p>Unless a master specifically granted his slaves -or for that matter,
                          his white indentured servants as well -permission to drink, the general
                          rule was to keep the alcohol away. The demands of discipline in the slave
                          and indentured labor forces necessitated such a policy. An imbibing slave
                          did less work and was worth much less as a chattel. Thus, from the
                          owner's point of view, keeping the slaves and servants sober was. an
                          exercise in protecting his investments and property while avoiding
                          disruption of the labor force, particularly if drunken slaves fell to
                          fighting among themselves. Overall, bonded laborers probably received
                          just enough alcohol to keep them healthy -as defined by the wisdom of the
                          day -but there were laws to prevent them from getting more than what was
                          minimally medicinal. For example, lest either slaves or indentured
                          servants spend time away from their masters in the taverns, local
                          authorities carefully regulated the circumstances under which they could
                          enter inns and, quite often, barred them altogether. Nor were these
                          regulations confined to the South. A Connecticut statute of 1703, typical
                          of New England policy, called for the flogging of slaves, indentured
                          servants, and apprentices caught in taverns without their masters'
                          permission. Other Northern statutes levied fines (some as high as E 30)
                          on whites selling liquor to any blacks, free or slave groups. They also
                          represented further testimony that if alcohol was all right for the white
                          community, others could only drink by permission. Social control and
                          societal stability remained the preeminent values among free whites
                          attempting to conquer the North American continent.</p>

                          <p>The slave trade, as depicted in a nineteenth-century Print. While
                          historians now doubt the existence of the "triangle trade, "rum and other
                          liquor didfigure in the international commerce in human chattels.</p>

                          <p>Library of Congress</p>

                          <p>has generally received most of the credit for weaning the colonials,
                          once and for all, from the tastes of the Old World. It would be easy to
                          overstate this case, however. Distilled drinks, such as applejack and
                          other fruit brandies, were already popular, as was cider, and many of the
                          colonial beers were not good replicas of those brewed in England. So the
                          triumph of cheap rum seems hardly surprising in retrospect, but it was
                          important nevertheless: This trend indicated that the AngloAmericans were
                          evolving as a separate people, discarding some of their most familiar
                          European cultural baggage. In fact, by the dawn of the eighteenth century
                          (if not earlier), Americans were a people becoming confirmed in their
                          love of hard liquor.</p>

                          <p>Rum found a major competitor as settlement spread to the frontiers.
                          Both molasses and finished rum were too bulky and expensive to ship far
                          inland, and as the eighteenth-century settlement line advanced,
                          frontiersmen shifted their loyalties to grain whiskeys. Indeed, whiskey
                          was particularly suited to the frontier. Grain was plentifulmuch more was
                          harvested than farmers could eat or sell as food -and a single bushel of
                          surplus corn, for example, yielded three gallons of whiskey. This assured
                          a plentiful liquor supply for Westerners and gave them a marketable
                          commodity, which both kept longer and was easier to transport to market
                          than grain. The advantages of whiskey were, therefore, such that it
                          rapidly eclipsed rum as the staple drink in the Back Country. The arrival
                          of the Scotch-Irish, who flocked to the frontier beginning in the 1730s,
                          dealt rum a further blow. These immigrants had enjoyed reputations as
                          whiskey lovers in their northern Irish homes, and they brought their
                          distilling skills across the Atlantic with them. By the late 1700s they
                          had given American grain spirits a new quality in taste.</p>

                          <p>The American Revolution also accelerated the shift from rum to
                          whiskey. During the war years, the Royal Navy blockaded American ports,
                          and both rum and molasses imports from the West Indies (much of which was
                          British and thus enemy territory) became scarce. Domestic grain whiskey
                          stepped in to fill the demand for spirits. And the demand, for both
                          civilian and military purposes, was huge. Profits were handsome indeed,
                          and so much grain ended up as whiskey that the Continental Congress,
                          fearing food shortages, occasionally moved (although in vain) to limit
                          distilling.</p>

                          <p>One of the biggest whiskey consumers was the Continental army, which
                          attempted to provide a daily liquor ration of roughly four ounces.
                          Spirits rations were normal in the armies and navies of the pe-</p>

                          <p>33</p>

                          <p>tionally legislated end of the slave trade in 1808, and thus of the
                          commerce in rum associated with it, also hurt. So by the end of the
                          eighteenth century, rum had passed its zenith; whiskey was fast becoming
                          the premier American beverage.</p>

                          <p>It must be noted that the distiller's art was a highly varied
                          phenomenon. Some vats turned out perfectly awful stuff. "Red-eye" was the
                          slang for much of it, probably after Proverbs XXIII: "Who hath redness of
                          eyes? They that tarry long at the wine." On the other hand, there were
                          excellent spirits whose partisans have become legion over the years.</p>

                          <p>In this latter category, the first distinctly American whiskey was
                          rye. While we do not have the original recipe (if indeed there ever was a
                          formal first one), this whiskey today is distilled from a combination of
                          rye, corn, and barley malt, with at least 51 percent of the mixture rye.
                          Who distilled the first batch is also obscure. One version gives credit
                          to farmers in western Maryland and Pennsylvania-Scotch-Irish territory.
                          On the other hand, a more pleasing account honors none other than George
                          Washington. One of Washington's overseers, a Scot, supposedly persuaded
                          him to plant some otherwise unprofitable land in rye for the express
                          purpose of distilling. The resulting spirit is said to have made a fine
                          impression on Mount Vernon's guests, including the Marquis de Lafayette.
                          Rye whiskey then spread to Maryland, so this story concludes, when the
                          overseer set up shop there after Washington's death. In any case,
                          Maryland and Pennsylvania soon became national centers of rye
                          production.</p>

                          <p>Corn also made fine whiskey. Frontier Kentucky made the best, although
                          colonists since the earliest years at Jamestown had distilled limited
                          amounts. Corn whiskey itself is about 80 percent corn, with a balance of
                          rye and barley malt. Before use, the distillate is stored in oaken
                          barrels to make a clear beverage, but corn whiskey has never been as
                          popular as bourbon, a whiskey of 65 to 70 percent corn and a distinctive
                          flavor and dark color imparted through aging in charred oak barrels.
                          Bourbon was born in Kentucky, taking its name from Bourbon County, where
                          it was first produced in 1789. Allegedly, the original distiller was the
                          Reverend Elijah Craig, and Kentuckians quickly took a liking to his
                          innovation. By the early nineteenth century, bourbon had become an
                          important regional industry, and the renown of the liquor became such
                          that, as much as any single beverage could, it assumed the mantle of the
                          indigenous American national drink. Kentucky still retains a special
                          place in America's heart for its bourbon.</p>

                          <p>35</p>

                          <p>necessary places, but under the influence of hard liquor and a
                          "prevailing depravity of manners throughout the land" they were fast
                          becoming nothing more than dens of iniquity. The future president readily
                          admitted that his concerns carried little weight. In fact, he thought
                          that they were earning him the "reputation of a hypocrite and an
                          ambitious demagogue."</p>

                          <p>If the public generally disregarded the thinking of men like
                          Oglethorpe or Adams, concern over the social ill effects of strong drink
                          soon became more clamorous. In 1774, Anthony Benezet, a Philadelphia
                          Quaker with numerous philanthropic interests, published The Mighty
                          Destroyer Displayed-the first full-scale assault on American drinking
                          habits. Benezet argued that distilled liquor was not only unhealthy but
                          also degrading and ultimately immoral for individuals and society. The
                          Mighty Destroyer was widely read, although with undetermined effect.
                          However, we know that by 1784 both the Quakers and the Methodists had
                          urged their members to abstain from hard liquor and to take no part in
                          its manufacture or sale. Like Benezet, they drew clear connections among
                          drinking, personal moral decline and health complications, and social
                          instability.</p>

                          <p>The bitterest denunciation of distilled spirits came in the immediate
                          aftermath, and as part of the zeitgeist, of the Revolution. The
                          Revolutionary period witnessed heightened concern that society's
                          traditional values were being lost -that luxury and vice were threatening
                          public virtue and liberty itself. A great many people traced these
                          unwanted developments to American links with the British nation, which
                          supposedly had grown increasingly decadent over the years, thus
                          representing a corrupting influence on America. The result was what
                          Revolutionary leaders often described as a rise in social dissipation and
                          a decline in public spirit. The most zealous in this view were the
                          ideological republicans-men like Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, and
                          Patrick Henry-who finally came to agree that national salvation lay only
                          in independence. They hoped that the Revolution would represent a
                          cleansing process for Americans and that it would fire a rebirth of
                          individual and public virtue.</p>

                          <p>"Virtue" was the catchword of republicanism. It dictated that citizens
                          act, vote, and think not out of hopes for personal gain but out of a
                          sense of public duty and concern for the general good. A nation founded
                          on this premise had to maintain traditional concerns about order and
                          stability, and republicans believed that true liberty could exist only in
                          a society composed of such a virtuous people. Providence,</p>

                          <p>37</p>

                          <p>as a Pennsylvania delegate, and served for a time as Continental army
                          surgeon general. Rush enjoyed a reputation after the war as perhaps the
                          new nation's foremost physician. His interests ranged widely- his
                          writings on mental illness earned him the title "Father of Psychiatry"
                          but most Americans of his time came to know him for his work on behalf of
                          temperance. Rush had spoken out publicly against the use of hard liquor
                          since at least 1772, but his masterpiece was the Inquiry.</p>

                          <p>The tract represented a radical challenge to previous thinking; it
                          assaulted the old dictum that alcohol was a positive good. Rush had no
                          quarrel with beers and wines, which he believed healthful when consumed
                          in moderate amounts, but he correctly pointed out that Americans were now
                          drinking primarily "ardent spirits," and, he argued, these did more than
                          cause drunkenness. Consumed in quantity over the years, they could
                          destroy a person's health and even cause death. More important was how
                          alcohol went about its lethal business: For Rush was the first American
                          to call chronic drunkenness a distinct disease, which gradually, but
                          through progressively more serious stages, led drinkers to physical doom.
                          In fact, he described an addiction process and specifically identified
                          alcohol as the addictive agent. As Rush claimed, once an "appetite," or
                          "craving," for spirits had become fixed in an individual, the victim was
                          helpless to resist. In these cases, drunkenness was no longer a vice or
                          personal failing, for the imbiber had no more control over his drinking
                          -the alcohol now controlled him. In Rush's view, the old colonial idea
                          that drunkenness was the fault of the drinker was valid only in the early
                          stages of the disease, when a tippler might still pull back; once
                          addicted, even a saint would have a hard time controlling himself.</p>

                          <p>The Inquiry was a powerful indictment, and it conveyed a sense of
                          urgency. The threat of hard liquor, Rush believed, called for immediate
                          action. As a doctor, he was genuinely concerned about personal health.
                          Drinking habits as they were, many people did risk addiction and a host
                          of related medical complications. Long-standing friendships with Anthony
                          Benezet and early Methodist leaders had also convinced Rush of the moral
                          and social threats posed by hard liquor. His republican ideology,
                          moreover, had so affected his reactions to public behavior that he saw
                          clearly in American drinking patterns what others had only hinted at and
                          what we have traced in retrospect: The Americanization of drinking -that
                          is, the movement from beer, cider, and other light alcoholic beverages to
                          distilled spirits-had not resulted in new social controls to limit
                          drinking excesses. Not only was</p>

                          <p>A MORAL AND PHYSICAL THERMOMETER.</p>

                          <p>Gallows.</p>

                          <p>The "Moral and Physical Thermometer" of temperance and intemperance.
                          Rush did not insist that particular levels of drinking corresponded
                          precisely to the matching vices and medical and legal complications.
                          Ivevertheless, he did try to convey, in a way that a popular readership
                          could understand, the progressive nature of alcohol addiction and its
                          personal and social implications. In this regard, Rush @ news come
                          strikingly close to modern conceptions of alcoholism.</p>

                          <p>gressive nature of alcohol addiction, outlining the disease's social,
                          medical, and moral complications. Rush wrote other tracts on temperance,
                          and he made some headway in pressing his views on the Protestant
                          churches. A minority of the American elite, certainly citizens of
                          republican leanings themselves, adopted his position on strong drink and
                          either banned it from their homes or limited its use. There was some
                          comfort in knowing that men like James Madison had also denounced "the
                          corrupting influence of spiritous liquors" as "inconsistent with the
                          purity of moral and republican principles."</p>
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                      <title>A Good DUI Bibliography</title>
                      <link>http://www.dui.com/dui-library/studies/research/dui-bibliography</link>
                      <description></description>
                      <author>admin</author>
                      <pubDate>Thu, 22 Mar 2007 23:00:00 -0500</pubDate>
                      
     
        <category>Research</category>
     
     
        <category>Studies</category>
     
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[
                          DUI Bibliography 

                          <p>I found this on the Internet and as soon as I remember the 'source'
                          I'll give credit to whomever made this up! ...it was so good I wanted to
                          put it up right away.</p>

                          <p>Reduce Drunk Driving for Everyone's Sake.</p>

                          <p>1 Jacobsen, P. - (American journal of public health. 06/01/96)</p>

                          <p>2 (The reader's digest. 06/01/96)<br />
                           Drunk Driving: A License to Kill.</p>

                          <p>3 Mastrofski, Stephen - (Justice quarterly : jq 06/01/96)<br />
                           Police Training and the Effects of Organization on D..</p>

                          <p>4 Brown, Robert W. - (Southern economic journal. 04/01/96)<br />
                           Endogenous Alcohol Prohibition and Drunk Driving.</p>

                          <p>5 IMiyoshi, Stephanie - (Loyola of Los Angeles law review.
                          04/01/96)<br />
                           Is the DUI double-Jeopardy Defense D.O.A.?</p>

                          <p>6 Applegate, Brandon K (Justice quarterly : jq 03/01/96)<br />
                           Determinants of Public Punitiveness Toward Drunk Dri...</p>

                          <p>7 Gilchrist, Stephen (The solicitors' journal 02/09/96)<br />
                           Crime Reporter.</p>

                          <p>8 (The news media &amp; the law. Fall 95 )<br />
                           Texas.</p>

                          <p>9 (The Bottom line on alcohol in soc... Sum 95 )<br />
                           Alcohol Industry Escapes Criticism at Drunk Driving</p>

                          <p>10 (The Bottom line on alcohol in soc... Sum 95 )<br />
                           Zero Tolerance in One Approach, but Coors Says There...</p>

                          <p>11 (Wayne law review. Spr 95 )<br />
                           Drunk Driving as Second-Degree Murder in Michigan.</p>

                          <p>12 (University of Dayton law review. Spr 95 )<br />
                           On a Collision Course: Procedural Due Process and Oh...</p>

                          <p>13 Sines, Nina J. (Wisconsin lawyer : official publ... 12/01/95)<br />
                           Double Jeopardy: A New Tool in the Arsenal of Drunk</p>

                          <p>14 Hernandez, A. C. R. (Journal of studies on alcohol. 07/01/95)<br />
                           Types of Drunk-Driving Intervention: Prevalence, Suc...</p>

                          <p>15 Taylor, Lawrence (Trial. 06/01/95)<br />
                           Drunk Driving License Suspensions.</p>

                          <p>16 Graham, Sandy (Traffic safety. ... 05/01/95)<br />
                           Do Police Take Drunk Driving Seriously?</p>

                          <p>17 Applegate, Brandon K (Crime &amp; delinquency. 04/01/95)<br />
                           Public Support for Drunk-Driving Countermeasures: So...</p>

                          <p>18 (Restaurant business. 03/01/95)<br />
                           The Waiter Made Me Do It.</p>

                          <p>19 (Juvenile and family law digest. 02/01/95)<br />
                           Parent Child - Generally.</p>

                          <p>20 Yu, J. (Journal of studies on alcohol. 01/01/95)<br />
                           Drunk-Driving Recidivism: Predicting Factors from Ar...</p>

                          <p>21 Kauffman, Myles A. (Widener journal of public law. 1995 )<br />
                           The Coming Of Subsection (A)(5) of Pennsylvania's Dr...</p>

                          <p>22 (The Bottom line on alcohol in soc... Wint 94 )<br />
                           USA Weekend Magazine Reveals Results of Annual Back-...</p>

                          <p>23 (The Bottom line on alcohol in soc... Wint 94 )<br />
                           A Challenge to Current Thinking about Drunk Driving....</p>

                          <p>24 (The Bottom line on alcohol in soc... Fall 94 )<br />
                           Drunk Driving: Still a Killer.</p>

                          <p>25 Kroeker, Bernhard (Guidance &amp; counselling. Fall 94 )<br />
                           Grief, Anger, Social Action: Experiences of the Wind...</p>

                          <p>26 (The Bottom line on alcohol in soc... Fall 94 )<br />
                           Quadriplegic Jockey at the Center of Drunk Driving C...</p>

                          <p>27 Kedjidjian, Catherin (Family safety and health. Sum 94 )<br />
                           Sober facts about drunk or drugged driving.</p>

                          <p>28 (Temple law review. Sum 94 )<br />
                           Criminal Procedure - Pennsylvania's Overwhelming Nee...</p>

                          <p>29 (The Bottom line on alcohol in soc... Sum 94 )<br />
                           Ice beer sweeping the market and higher alcohol cont...</p>

                          <p>30 Haines, Martin L. (St. Thomas law review. Spr 94 )<br />
                           Under The Influence: Responses Of The New Jersey Sup...</p>

                          <p>31 Cochran Jr., Robert (South Carolina law review. Wint 94 )<br />
                           "Good Whiskey," Drunk Driving, and Innocent Bystande...</p>

                          <p>32 Little, Robert (Journal of alcohol and drug educa... Wint 94
                          )<br />
                           Young, Drunk, Dangerous and Driving: Underage Drinki... **FAX 1HR*</p>

                          <p>33 Husak, Douglass N. (Philosophy &amp; public affairs. Wint 94
                          )<br />
                           Is Drunk Driving a Serious Offense?</p>

                          <p>34 Hickey, Mary C. (Ladies' home journal. 12/01/94)<br />
                           Asleep At the Wheel.</p>

                          <p>35 Peck, R. C. (Journal of studies on alcohol. 11/01/94)</p>

                          <p>36 Wolfinger, Nicholas (Journal of applied social psychol...
                          09/16/94)<br />
                           Reexamining Personal and Situational Factors in Drun...</p>

                          <p>37 Valera, Eve M. (Journal of applied social psychol...
                          08/01/94)<br />
                           Parent and Teen Perceptions Regarding Parental Effor... **FAX 1HR*</p>

                          <p>38 Mullahy, John (Economic inquiry. 07/01/94)<br />
                           Do Drinkers Know When to Say When? An Empirical Anal...</p>

                          <p>39 Griffin, Katherine (Health. ... 07/01/94)<br />
                           MASS Again.</p>

                          <p>40 (Safetyline 07/01/94)<br />
                           Navy Releases Drunk-Driving Video Tape.</p>

                          <p>41 Nolan, Yola (Psychological assessment. ... 03/01/94)<br />
                           Personality and drunk driving: identification of DUI... **FAX 1HR*</p>

                          <p>42 (Restaurant business. 01/01/94)</p>

                          <p>43 Davis, Kirsten K. (Ohio state law journal. 1994 )<br />
                           Ohio's New Administrative License Suspension for Dru...</p>

                          <p>44 Yu, Jiang (Journal of criminal justice. ... 1994 )<br />
                           Punishment Celerity and Severity: Testing a Specific... **FAX 1HR*</p>

                          <p>45 Rubin, Elizabeth F. (University of cincinnati law revi... 1994
                          )<br />
                           Trying To Be Reasonable About Drunk Driving: Individ...</p>

                          <p>46 Klitzner, M. (The American journal of drug and ... 1994 )<br />
                           A Quasi-Experimental Evaluation of Students Against</p>

                          <p>47 Stacy, Alan W. (Health psychology : the official... 1994 )<br />
                           Attitudes and Health Behavior in Diverse Populations...</p>

                          <p>48 (The Bottom line on alcohol in soc... Wint 93 )<br />
                           Ignition interlock system catching on as deterrant t...</p>

                          <p>49 Neustrom, M.W. (Journal of safety research. ... Sum 93 )<br />
                           The Impact of Drunk Driving Legislation in Louisiana... **FAX 1HR*</p>

                          <p>50 O'Neil, Shannon (Honolulu. 12/01/93)<br />
                           DUI Gridlock.</p>

                          <p>51 (The Reader's digest. 12/01/93)<br />
                           Drunk Driving: A License to Kill.</p>

                          <p>52 Thurman, Quint (Social science research. 09/01/93)<br />
                           Drunk-Driving Research and Innovation: A Factorial S...</p>

                          <p>53 Rehm, C. G. (Annals of emergency medicine. 08/01/93)<br />
                           Failure of the Legal System to Enforce Drunk Driving...</p>

                          <p>54 Smith, Chris (New York. 07/19/93)<br />
                           The Worst Crimes of '93 (So Far).</p>

                          <p>55 Kenkel, D.S. (Journal of health economics. 07/01/93)<br />
                           Do drunk drivers pay their way? a note on optimal pe...</p>

                          <p>56 Davis, Susan (Step-by-step graphics. 07/01/93)<br />
                           Graphic Themes From Thin Air: See how, year after ye...</p>

                          <p>57 Kenkel, D. S. (Journal of health economics. 06/01/93)<br />
                           Do drunk drivers pay their way? A note on optimal pe...</p>

                          <p>58 Humphrey, Richard S. (Rhode Island bar journal [microf... 05/93
                          )<br />
                           Punishment Before Conviction - The Effect of Automat...</p>

                          <p>59 Nack, William (Sports illustrated. 04/19/93)<br />
                           From Fame To Shame: Bill Shoemaker, a casualty of hi...</p>

                          <p>60 Head, William C. (Trial ... 03/01/93)<br />
                           Five Myths About Defending Accused Drunk Drivers.</p>

                          <p>61 (Safetyline 03/01/93)<br />
                           Motor Vehicles.</p>

                          <p>62 Grasmick, Harold G. (Criminology. ... 02/01/93)<br />
                           Reduction in Drunk Driving as a Response to Increase...</p>

                          <p>63 Pangman, William A. (Wisconsin lawyer : official publ... 02/93
                          )<br />
                           New Law's `Get Tough' Provisions Fall Short of the M...</p>
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                      <title>Driving on the Right Side of the Road</title>
                      <link>http://www.dui.com/dui-library/studies/research/drive-on-right</link>
                      <description></description>
                      <author>admin</author>
                      <pubDate>Thu, 22 Mar 2007 23:00:00 -0500</pubDate>
                      
     
        <category>Research</category>
     
     
        <category>Studies</category>
     
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        <![CDATA[
                          <strong>Why Do We Drive on the Right</strong> 

                          <p>According to Guinness: The Book of Answers:</p>

                          <p>'Of the 221 separately administered countries and territories in the
                          world, 58 drive on the left and 163 on the right. In Britain it is
                          believed that left hand driving is a legacy from the preference of
                          passing an approaching horseman or carriage right side to right side to
                          facilitate right armed defence against sudden attack. On the Continent
                          postillions were mounted on the rearmost left horse in a team and thus
                          preferred to pass left side to left side. While some countries have
                          transferred from left to right, the only case recorded of a transfer from
                          right to left is in Okinawa on 30 July 1978.'</p>

                          <p>Notes from listeners</p>

                          <p>People in much of the Far East pass each other by stepping to the
                          left, and it has nothing to do with swords or Romans - or even cars or
                          chariots. They do it for religious reasons. The right side of the body is
                          the clean side and the left side is the unclean side. By moving to the
                          left when you meet someone coming the other way you present your right
                          side to them. In Nepal, for example, it is good manners even to walk
                          backwards past a prayer wall to keep your right side towards it if there
                          is no way to walk by it on the other side. The clean/unclean idea about
                          the sides of the body is to be found very widely in different cultures,
                          not just in the Far East. The Romans have given us the word 'sinister'
                          from their word for 'left', and we ourselves associate 'right' with
                          things that are good and correct. Surely, the Romans went on the left as
                          a matter of