BrecherE.M. and the Editors of Consumer Reports, Licit and Illicit Drugs, (Little, Brown and Company, Boston) (1972) pp. 210–213; RublowskyJ., The Stoned Age: A History of Drugs in America, (G.P. Putnam's Sons, New York, New York) (1974) pp. 78–81.
2.
Third Special Report to the United States Congress on Alcohol and Health, (National Institute on Alcoholism and Alcohol Abuse, Washington, D.C.) (1978) p. 23.
3.
Id. at 1.
4.
See, e.g., BonnieR.J. and WhitebreadC.H.II, The Marihuana Conviction: A History of Marihuana Prohibition in the United States, (University of Virginia Press, Charlottesville) (1974); MustoD.F., The American Disease: Origins of Narcotic Control, (Yale University Press, New Haven) (1973); GrinspoonL. and HedblomP., The Speed Culture: Amphetamine Use and Abuse in America, (Harvard University Press, Cambridge) (1975).
5.
Task Force on Nomenclature and Statistics of The American Psychiatric Association, DSM–III Draft: Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (third edition), (American Psychiatric Association, Washington, D.C.) (1978) B:20–23.
6.
The Smoking Digest: Progress Report on a Nation Kicking the Habit, (National Cancer Institue, Bethesda, Md.) (1977) p. 6.
7.
HannonB.M. and LohmanT.G., The Energy Cost of Overweight in the United States, American Journal of Public Health68:767 (1978).
8.
CohenC.I. and CohenE.J., Health Education: Panacea, Pernicious or Pointless?New England Journal of Medicine299:718 (1978).
9.
RossH.L., Law, Science and Accidents: The British Road Safety Act of 19672 Journal of Legal Studies (1973); RossH.L., Deterrence Regained: The Chesire Constabulary's ‘Breathalyser Blitz’, Journal of Legal Studies6:241 (1974).