Pubdate: Sat, 22 Jan 2005 Source: Lowell Sun (MA) Copyright: 2005 MediaNews Group, Inc. Contact: http://www.lowellsun.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/852 Author: David Perry, Sun Staff SUPERINTENDENT'S SON RECOUNTING ORDEAL IN HOPES OF SAVING OTHERS Joel Levine first smoked marijuana at 14 and worked his way to pills to get higher. Levine, 19, had his first snort of OxyContin, the powerful narcotic pain reliever similar to morphine, in his junior year of high school. OxyContin capsules are designed to release the pain reliever oxycodone over time, but abusers like Joel and his friends opened capsules and snorted them, causing a rush of the drug all at once. Abused, OxyContin is potentially deadly and highly addictive. "I'd done Vicodin, Percocet and Valium before and my friends said it was 100 times better than Vicodin," Joel says by phone from his home in Peabody. "The first time, me and two friends shared an 80-milligram capsule." He ended up doing it "my junior year, my senior year, 2 1/2 years in all." The doses escalated. "We'd share one, then 40 milligrams on my own, then 60 and 80. Then two pills a day ..." "It was the biggest mistake of his life," says his father, Herb Levine, Salem's school superintendent. "When you're high, ironically, that's when you think rationally. 'I should stop doing this.' When you're not high, all you care about is getting high." Then came rehab. Joel has been clean for seven months. Since his father proposed drug testing in the Salem schools, Joel has found the spotlight in newspapers and on TV. Had he not wanted it, his dad says, he would have never made his son's addiction public. There was "a letter today from Beverly, thanking me," says Joel. "I've been hearing from a lot of people and everybody's very supportive, thanking me for educating them about drug addiction. They say, 'Keep up the good work.' I'm doing great now." He supports his father's proposal for drug testing. "I know if I was in high school as a freshman or a sophomore, where you're usually not out with hard drugs at a lot of parties, if I was that age, I think (testing) would make me think about it. "But if I was a senior, with an active addiction, it wouldn't have stopped me. Even if I would have been kicked off the baseball team." He was a baseball star at Peabody High School, a three-year varsity second-baseman. He and his father are speaking about drugs and their family "pretty much whenever anybody asks." Joel is studying sports fitness and leisure at Salem State College and plans to be a physical education teacher. He may play baseball next year but will concentrate on his studies for now. "I hurt my knee in rehab playing Wiffleball," he says. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek