Pubdate: Sat, 08 Aug 1998 Source: The Examiner (Ireland) Contact: GIRL'S PARENTS WARN OF ECSTASY PLAGUE THE parents of a teenager who died after taking the dance drug ecstasy have spoken publicly for the first time about their daughter's death. They warned other parents of the dangers their children face when they experiment with drugs. ''Parents know they have children going to bars and clubs just like Julia did last Saturday night. "They know their dear lovely children can be foolish, they can succumb to peer pressure, they can be vulnerable and they can die,'' said the teenager's mother. ''Youngsters need to be careful, very careful where they socialise, even in a little town like Perth. "The whole country is plagued by ecstasy and when someone as young and as beautiful as Julia dies it touches hearts far and wide.'' Three days ago, the parents of teenage ecstasy victim Julia Dawes took the heartbreaking decision to switch off their daughter's life support machine. A series of brain scans on the 18-year-old fitness instructor showed she had no hope of recovering. She had been in a coma at Perth Royal Infirmary since Sunday after taking two ecstasy tablets on a night out to celebrate a friend's birthday. Her mother Jacqueline (39) told reporter Gordon Bannerman of the Perthshire Advertiser: ''We had been at the hospital since Sunday morning when Julia was admitted. "All the time Julia was on the life support machine, I think I knew deep down, that we would never have her back. ''She looked so beautiful, so peaceful, as if she was in a deep, deep sleep.'' - --- Checked-by: Melodi Cornett