Pubdate: Mon, 21 Jan 2002 Source: Inquirer (PA) Copyright: 2002 Philadelphia Newspapers Inc Contact: http://inq.philly.com/content/inquirer/home/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/340 Author: Andrea Gerlin A SCANDAL BREWED IN TRADITION Shrugs Greeted Harry's Drinking. Alarms Came With The Hint Of Drugs. LONDON - When Britons learned that teenage Prince Harry spent much of last summer drinking and smoking marijuana while his father was away from the family estate, they also learned that it wasn't the drinking that got him in trouble. "The first hint that something was seriously wrong came when a senior member of [household] staff noticed a strong smell of cannabis and alerted Prince Charles," said the tabloid News of the World, which broke the story Jan. 13 under the headline "Harry's Drugs Shame." But that was long after Harry, who turned 17 in September, had become a fixture at the nearby Rattlebone Inn and also had regularly brought home friends to party in his cellar retreat, which featured a well- stocked bar. Like President Bush's twin daughters, Barbara and Jenna, whom newspapers here hailed as martyrs when they were charged with underage drinking and using fake identification cards last June, Harry is utterly in sync with a generation of British drinkers younger than the legal age of 18. "Imagine telling Britain's teenagers that they cannot drink alcohol until they are 21," mocked London's Daily Telegraph newspaper after the 19-year-old Bush girls were busted. "There would be anarchy. Snarling, howling, thirsty mobs would take to the streets. Country pubs would buck the law. The separation of pint and state would be invoked in lofty speeches about freedom and the menace of teetotallers, from Hitler to Osama bin Laden." "What he's been doing is no different from what people his age are doing," said Helen Youngman, 17, a London student who aspires to be a physician. Oscar Duffy, another 17-year-old Londoner who says he and his friends drink between two and 10 pints of beer apiece on weekend nights, concurs: "It's just been blown out of proportion because the majority of kids drink underage. It is pretty normal. It is what we do on weekends." In fact, drinking is what a great many Britons do, young or not. According to the British government's General Household Survey for 2000, Britons 16 and older drink an average of 12 units of alcohol - a unit is 10 ounces of beer, 4 ounces of wine or 0.8 ounces of spirits - each week. In contrast, the National Institutes of Health's Alcohol Epidemiological Data System last year found that Americans older than 14 consume an average of 2.4 units a week. The World Health Organization reported in 1999 that while adult alcohol consumption declined in a majority of developed nations in the final quarter of the 20th century - including a drop of almost 9.5 percent in the United States - in Britain it jumped 25.9 percent. And with the minimum age set at 18, Britain's tradition of underage drinking allows those habits to take hold early. British children routinely accompany their parents to the local pub from the time they are toddlers. Several years before they reach the legal minimum drinking age, they begin downing their first pints. In villages, pubs are such important social centers that post offices, ATMs and small grocery shops are being relocated within them as part of a national "Make the Pub the Hub" campaign that Prince Charles himself has championed to revitalize the countryside. While Harry may have made the pub more of a hub than his father envisioned, few British parents forbid their underage teens to drink. Many even sanction and finance their children's pub-going, believing they will act responsibly. To Britons, America's stricter laws and attitudes suggest an unhealthy puritanism and lack of trust. In addition to which, Youngman said, "If your parents turned around and said 'No, you're not going to the pub,' they're pretty much cutting off your social life because that's all there is to do." If London teenagers face boredom outside the pubs, consider the plight of those in rural areas such as Gloucestershire, the location of Charles' estate, Highgrove. It was there last summer that Harry, then 16 and enjoying his summer vacation from Eton College after finishing his first major set of exams, indulged in heavy drinking and marijuana smoking. He also marked his informal coming of age on the premises of the local pub, as thousands of other British youths do every year. "It's a rite of passage in this country, just to see when you can get served a pint," Paul Gates, a manager at an accounting firm, said over drinks last week at a London bar. Gates said he was 16 or 17 and working a summer job in a cafe attached to a pub when he learned how cavalierly some establishments ignored the drinking-age law. At the end of the summer, he said, the cafe even threw a party for him "and let me have run of the bar." Like underage drinkers anywhere, British teens occasionally get carried away. Prime Minister Tony Blair discovered that two summers ago when his eldest son, Euan, then 16, was arrested for being "drunk and incapable" after police found him at 1:30 a.m. lying face-down in his own vomit in London's busy Leicester Square. He had spent the night celebrating the end of his first major set of exams. The elder Blair - occasionally seen lifting a pint of stout at a pub in his northern constituency during election campaigns - made his only comment about the matter during a newspaper interview last year just before his reelection. He said the incident now seemed funny enough that he could "laugh about it." "I was very worried at the time," he said. "But now, looking back, it was pretty hilarious." Not to be outdone, Blair's unpopular former Conservative nemesis William Hague sought to prove his street credibility by bragging to an interviewer from GQ magazine that he occasionally drank on the job when he was a student working for his family's beer-distribution firm. Once, he boasted, he downed 14 pints in a day. The same claim might have forced a U.S. politician to do some major backtracking. But Hague merely became the laughing stock of Britain - because no one believed him capable of the feat. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake