Source: San Francisco Chronicle (CA) Contact: http://www.sfgate.com/chronicle/ Forum: http://www.sfgate.com/conferences/ Copyright: 1999 San Francisco Chronicle Pubdate: 13 January 1999 HORRORS OF HEROIN Editor -- On, no, not the rich kids! My heartfelt sympathies go out to all who love Oscar Scaggs and mourn his tragic death. I must say, however, that your attention paid to the horror of heroin because upper-class kids are suffering from its nasty grip is predictable and very depressing. Poor folks have been abusing, sometimes recovering from and often dying from heroin on a massive scale in the ten years I've lived here. Heroin has been rampant in San Francisco for a long time. Now that it's so strong and cheap I imagine a heck of a lot more poor people are going to be dying from it than wealthy people. KIMBERLY GOSSIN San Francisco MISSING COMPASSION Editor -- Where is the compassion for the family of Oscar Scaggs? The January 8 edition of The Chronicle ran an article about the current heroin problem entitled, ``Young, Rich and Strung Out,'' and the opening words were ``Oscar Scaggs.'' This copy probably fits right into the sensational journalism rules of catching the attention of the reader. But does The Chronicle have to do that -- and add to the unbelievable suffering of this family. Why do Oscar's father and mother have to see their son's name as the lead into a front-page column about drug abuse and death, a scant one week after he died this death? Why add to a suffering that we all know has to be the hardest thing in the world for any parent? Journalists have a responsibility for truth and integrity, but they must also reflect the necessary compassion and respect which should define our culture. ALLAN V. GIANNINI - --- MAP posted-by: Pat Dolan